V ti ONU ENJOYS Both the method and results when ' 6jrap of FSgB is taken; it is pleasant Bod refreshing to the taste, and acts , fentlj jet promptly on the Kidneys. Lirer and Bowels, cleanses the sys- j .lam effectually, dispels colds, head aches and fevers and cures habitual ! constipation. Syrup of Figs is the I only remedy of its kind ever pro- j doced, pleasing to the taste and ao : eeptabh) to the stomach, prompt in its action and truly beneficial in its ; ' effects, prepared only from the most ; healthy ana agreeable substances, its j 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 1 Dottles by all leading drug- ' gists. Any reliable druggist who may not have it on hand will pro cure it promptly, for any one who wishes to try it. Do- not accept any i substitute, CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO. SAN FRANCISCO. CAL IQUISVIUE. KY. HEW YORK. N.f HUMPHREYS' VETERINARY SPECIFICS Tor Horses, Cattle, Sheep, Dogs, Bogs, i AND POULTRY. SaOPat Book an Treatment of Aalmala (lad Chart Seat Free. ctom jFeTer,ConBeien,Inflainjnatioa A.A.i 8plaal Keaingitis, Milk Fever. JB.B.Ktralna. Ltmeocm, RbeamatUm, CI. C. Distemper, NasaLDlscharf ee. D.D.Bota ar Grube, worm. X.K.Coagb.n, HeaTea, Pneumonia. F. F. Colic or Gripes, Bellyache. G. G.AHacarrlage, Hemorrhages. H. M.Drlnary and Kidney Distunes. 1,I.Ernptlve D I senses, Mange. .K.Iliaeaaea of Uigcatlon, Paralysis. Elngle Bottle (oyer 50 doses), - - .CO Stable Caae, with Specifics, Manual, Veterinary Cure Oil and Medlcator, 87.00) Jar Veterinary Cnre Oil, 1.00 . Sold br Druggists; or Sent Prepaid anywhere a&din any quantity on Receipt of Price HUMPHREYS' MEDICINE CO., Ooraar William and John St., New York. HUMPH LEYS' HOMEOPATHIC f SPECIFIC Ikfiii ! nan flfl fnsra. TtlA nnlv snAMtsftil Tnmortv In Nervous Debility, Vital Weakness, sad Prostration, from over-work or other causes SI Der VisL br ft vl.L wl l.r.A vial nnwfiar. for A Souk BT Druggists, or sent postpaid onrecelpi f prioe HUMPHREYS' MEDICINE CO., Oor. William and John Sis., N. Y. All of our Veterinary Preparations nan be bad of J. V. Jordan, Druggist, N. W cor. Broad and Middle streets, Newbera.N. O Liquor Habit. MMtfntEWOKlD IJfCAE SSJfT OJTE CURB WWiVi GOLDEN SPECIFIC It ean bo siren In coffee, tea, or in articles of food, without the knowledge of patient if necessary It la absolutely harmless and will effect a perma nent and speedy cure, wbetner tbe patient Is a moderatedrinkeror an alcoholic wreck. IT NEV ER FAILS. Itoperates so quietly and with sucb certainty that tbe patient undergoes no Incon venience, and soon bis complete reform&tloa i affected, it page book free. To be bad of R. N. Dully, druggist, New Berne. N.O. jylSdwy OLD DOMINION Steamship Company, SEMI-WEEKLY LINE. The Old Dominion Steamship Company's Old and Favorite Water Route, via Albc nurle and Cliesapeake Cunal. FOR Norfolk, Baltimore, New York, Phlla delplitJ, Boston, Providence, and Washington City. And all pointi North, East and West. On siid after TUESDAY, APRIL 14, 1891 ..' mini -limner notice, the , Steamer NEWBERNE, Capt. Sontlieate, Will from Norfolk, Vs., for New Borne, .-. N. C, diruct, every Monday and Thursday, uiakiug cfoae connect iou with the A. & N. J. It., for nil Ftations on that road, and with th -Steamers Kinston nnd Howard lor Kin- K.n, Trenton, and all other landings on the , Neuseaml Trent Rivers. ' - KetuniinK.will sail FROM NEW BERNE. FOR NORFOLK direct, at 2 p m., Tuesday and Friday, iiih";iiie connection with the O. D. 8. 8. Co. 'k ships lor New York, R. 8. P. Co. 'a Hennieis for Baltimore; Clyde Line Ships tor ' Philadelphia, M. a: M. T. Co.' skips for Bis. ton snd Providence. fteaiuer Kiniion, Csyt. Dixon, will tail for , ' K Inston on arrival ol steamer Newberne. Cr ier all goods care f O. D. 8. 8. Co., Norfolk, Va. ; ; Passengers will find a (rood table, comfort k sl'le rooms, and eveiy court' ay and attention, 1 .:' : .tvill be paid them by the officer. . E. B. ROBERTS, Agent Mkssrb. CULPEPPER & TURNER ! . Agents, Norfolk, Vs. , W. H. STANFORD. . Vice-President, New York City. :IIRS. J.M. HINElF " Boarding House --REOPENED. I Meb. J. M. HINES has reoponed a i OFirst-Claai Boardiqg House ia the city, oppts te Baptist Church. T16 Pioneer DaSlewiDK MacMne, Can be 1mA at the taint place. V J. Mr H1NE3, Agent. J, Bi BUOWN, " -FIlWT Ct ASS . . BARBER SHOP. Neatly fitted up in the bot of styla. Batk rooms with hot and cold water, ', ; DRICK BLOCK MIDDLE ST. BtWHataSntavaOMMAaJ MAKING MONEY. PBXCUmOXS TAXES TO PEE VSKT 7 BAUD 07 AST 60ST. Following a Note Through Its Vari ous Processes in the Bureau of En graving and Printing at Washing ton. To show what precautions are taken by the Bureau of Engraving and Printing to prevent fraud of any sort, it is neces sary only to follow a bank-note through its various processes before it is issued to the world. The steel-plate which serves as a die is not eugraved by a single hand, but by several, eica man uetug given that part of the work for which hi training has especially adapted him. A putt, indeed, is done by a most delicately adjusted machine, which cuts with a mathemati cal precision that no human hand is deft enough to imitate perfectly a bit of mechanism, moieover, too elaborate fnr counterfeiters to make and too expensive for them to buy. One of the surest means, by the by, of detecting even the best counterfeit is au examination to sec whether the parts of it which would have been assigue 1 to certain engravers bear the marks of their individual workman ship; for each engraver's handling of his tools is so characteristic that an expert can speak for it at a glance. The several engravers having at last completed the dies for the lace and back of a note, excepting only the seal, the signatures, and the check number, each die is put into a press where a steel roller whose surface has been slightly sof tened for the purpose is run over it with very heavy pressure, and beats away an impression of the engraving only reversed and in relief. The roller is then hardened again and put into another press, where it is rolled over a softened plate under eight or ten tuns' pressure, and leaves behind it a fac simile of the engraving on the original die. This new plate is then hardened in its turn, and becomes ready for use in printing notes. From the moment that the original die is finished it passes out of the control of tho Bureau officers proper, and is tin ned over for safe keeping to a custodiau ap pointed by the Secretary of the Treasury. He makes his headquarters ou the low est floor of the Bureau, where ho has a lire-proof and burglar-proof vault in which to store the material intrusted to him. Each roller made from the die nnd each plate made from the roller is given also into his keeping. In order that au additional safeguard may be put over this precious propei ty, the one entrance to the vault is closed by two doors. Each of these has a time-lock, which would prevent its being opened in any event until half-past six in the morning, the hour the Custodian comes to his post. The Custodian possesses the secret of the combination which will unlock the outer door; but eveu he docs not know the combination of the lock of the inner door, which is under the guardianship of his chief assistant. Each of these men being independently responsible, it would not be to the interest of either to share his secret with the other. When the Superintendent of Engrav ing wishes the use of a plate or other material for his men to work on, he must make a wiitten reouisition, to which not only his signature but that of his clerk must be appended, stating in full detail what is wanted. This requi sition, when certified by the custodiau, is tiled as a voucher against the superin tendent, and is not released to him again till he has returned every iota of what has been given him out of the sale. The same is true of the Superintendent of the Printing Division, when he wants plates for use on his presses. He. in his turn, keeps an accurate account with the! pressman to whom each plate is tempo rarily eutrusted for printing. No piess nwin is a lowed to do the lace aud the back of a note both. The pressroom is divided so that all the faces are pr'nted on presses in one row, and all the backs on presses in another row, so separated as to be out of reach of each other, though all are constantly in sight of the oflicer in charge. The notes are printed on distinctive paper, manufactured for the Government under careful restrictions, and furnished to an officer in the Treasury Department directly from the mill. By him it is in spected, and his clerks count it otT into bundles of exactly 1,000 sheets each. These are conveyed, in instalments, to the Bureau for Engraving iu a van built of steel, and guarded by four armed men. The officer of the Bureau who takes charge of the paper has it coun cd again by hia assistants and it is receipted for by number. If there is n miscount, it must be done all over again; but in order to test the accuracy of these counts, it is customary to take out of one of the bun dles in each batch a single sheet and lay it away in a safe. This puts the counters who are generally women on their mettle to see who will get the bundle with the missing sheet. When one of them reports a sheet short, the chief of division takes the reserved sheet out of the safe, consults his tally to see whether it was really abstracted from her pack age, and restores it to her, when she marks her work as correct and passes the paper on to the people who have to wet it down for printing. Here receipts have to pass again as vouchers for every sheet of the paper which changes hands. When the wetters give it in stated tales to the pressmen, there must be another receipt ing. When a pressman turns over his printed work to the people who are to put it into the drying apparatus, every sheet must be receipted for again ; and so on through the processes of stamping the notes with their check numbers, in specting them for defects in printing, and all the rest till they come out in per fect condition for publio use. And the receipts are not given in a perfunctory way, but by actual count at each stage; for the rules of the Bureau distinctly state that if a sheet is lost, no matter iu how imperfect a stage, the person in whose hands the vouchers show it to have been, will be charged with tho full value of the sheet as it wonld have been if ? tinted which may run all the way from our dollars to four thousand. Should the guilty party have succeeded in con cealing or confusing his identity, the chariro will fall on the whole room, and bo divided into equal share. ; It is due to the employees of the Bureau to say that In all the years it has beea In operation that ri)l hi sever had to be enforced. New York Post. JAWS 07 BEASTS. Cueer Ways in Which Same of Them Are Fastens!. "Jaws are funny things. The croco dile's lower jaw is not socketed in the skull, as is the ia-e with other animals, but the skull is socketed in the jaw, so that the animal cau lift the upper part of its head as upon a hinge, and so capture whatever prey may be at hand without going to the trouble of getting upon its legs. This is a great saving of exertion to the saurian, which delights in wooing soft repose upon tbe buxom mud bank. It was Herodotus, the father of history, who first commented in recorded writing upon this surprising circumstance re specting the crocodile." So Osteologist Lucas of the Smith sonian Institution was saying to a Star writer, and he added : "You can rind another example of na ture's adaptation to the jaw to use iu the case of certain carnivores, like the otter - a big weasel that has acquired aquatic habits. The jaws of such i easts are so fixed in the sock' ts that dislocation is im-poss-ible. In .-ome instances you cannot, even after the animal is dead, separate the jaw from the head. This arrange ment is evidently designed to enable the beast to bite to the greatest advantage without danger that tue chewing appa ratus will come loose. 'The elephant's jaw, on the other hand, not being intended for bitiug but for grinding vegetable food, is an appeudiige almost separate from the rust of the skull. Although enormously h avy it hits only a small articulation connecting it with the upper skull, and its whole weight is carried by the muscles, in which it may bo said to be slung, so that it can grind bck aud i forth. i "A snake's lower jaw is attached to a sort of outrigger extending back from ! its skull. Also the two halves of the jaw are connected by elastic ligaments, j so that it rinds no difficulty in so stretch- , ing its mouth sideways and pcrpendicu- ; hrly as to be able to swallow auimals I mueh bigger than itself. Some deep- j sea fishes are similarly rigged. "The human jaw is very loosely sock eted in the skull, so that it is often dis located by the mere act of yawning. Not being intended for biting purposes, offensive or defensive, no attention seems to have been paid by nature iu making it fast. "While we are speaking on this sub ject I may as well show you this Utile stuffed fish, which has no more popular name than 'aulennai ins.'. It angles for smaller fishes with this appendage on top of its head, which is designed to imitate a worm. The autetinarius keeps its mouth and, when a victim comes within reach, it is gobbled promptly, tho ' law of tbe angler being set vertically n stead of horizontally, so that it can re ceive the game by simply opening at the top, a gentle suction assisting the per formance." Washington Star. A Piano with Each Flat. Proprietors of Hut houses have been offering all sorts of conveniences with their apartments to attract house hunters for the last two visum, until now a woman will not look nt a six-room Hat that is not steam heated, lighted by electricity, possessed of a gas range and a patent re frigerator, decorated iu high-art tints, and adorned with laco window curtains Consequently, nearly every landlord in town is ottering all these inducements, and there has been much gray matter wasted in looking up other attractions. A young Napoleon iuHat architecture, who hud just completed u tine-looking row of buildings on the west side in Harlem, has found this attraction, and his nnartments nre coinc otf like the proverbial hot cakes, lie has built in ! the wall of every parlor a good, strong j upright piano, just as other landlords build hat-racks in the hall and china j closets in the dining room. Kvery I woman who goes around to take a look at the apartments jumps for the piano the moment she gets into the front room, and after she has run her lingers up and down the kys and has given the dear old excuse of lack of practice to the jan itor for her bad playing, she savs, "I'll take this flat." And take it she does, even if her hus band complains that the house is five blocks too far away from the elevated station, and vows that the rent is $ 10 more than he will ever consent to pay. It is rumored that the lessees of the piano flats have hired a combination music teacher so that they may learn the "Maiden's Prayer" and "Annie lloonej" altogether, and then in the summer evenings they will play these gems on forty-eight pianos at the same time. They will be obliging enough to leave ail the windows wide open, and so the Park Commissioners will be spared the expense of hiring a brass band to provide music in .Mount Morns Park tor the in habitants of Harlem. New York Times. "Hotch Potch." "The most delicious soup I ever tasted, bar none," said an epicure, "was a con coction that in Scotland they call 'Hotch-Potch.' It was served to me by a lassie with lint-white locks, quite guiltless of such superfluous luxuries as shoes and stockings. As I greedily ladled out every drop of the delicious stuff, two fat porkers watched me with sympathetic interest. 'Hoot awa, pig gies,' said my fair Hebe, as she stood guard until I had finished my repast, din nil interfere with the gentleman.' That I had tramped eighteen miles that morning over the heather may perhaps ac count for my extraordinarily keen relish, but it was certainly excellent in itself, for the damo gave me a list of - its ingre dients, and my wife gives it to me once in awhile. Anglicized, the re cipe runs as follows: 'Cut two pounds of fresh snrtg mutton into small pieces; put them into a stewpaa with three quarts of cold water and a tftblespoonful of salt; set it upon the fire and cook very slowly, letting it simmer and keeping it wall skimmed. After it has simmered ttt hour, add large car rot, two turnips, two large onions, all cut in small pieces, and two heads of cabbage lettuce. Let the whole simmer uurM tender and serve it with the various ingredients. "I knew 'hotch-potch' was an old term in law," went on the gentleman, "and liking my soup so much, 1 had the curiositv to look it up. When undi- vided property is brought iuto the com- I rron lunii it is caiieu noicu-ooicu. aim an old writer on law says'it scemetn that this word is also used asVpudding, for in a pudding is not put commonly one thing alone, but one thing with other things together.' " New York Tribune. THE 030WE DWARFS. A Diminutive People in the Depths of African Forests. At a recent meeting of the Paris (!eo graphical Society a letter was read from M. I'aul Cramoel. the explorer of the Cram pel, the explorer .Ogowe Hasiu, giving an account of the Bayagas, a diminutive people who in hubit the great forests extending to the ! north of Ogowe, and are probably nearly j related to the Wambuttis described by Stanley. The Biyagas live scattered ! among the M'faugs, to whom their rela i tiou is one of semi servitude. When an j M'fang chief becomes powerful enough, I he surrounds himself with a band of these "Bohemians" of the forest; they become his hunters 41ml ivory seekers. In return he supplies them with manioc and bananas. Changing their places of abode every fo.ir or live days, the Baya giis are not able to cultivate the soil. I They are great hunters; tin: elephant is j their principal game, their sole weapon ! of attack beiug a very sharp two-edged I spear about 51 feet in length. Physic ally : there is a great contrast between the I llayagas aud the M'fangs. The former ' are dwarfs compared with the latter, j whose height is often from 5 feet nine inches to .) leet 11 inches. 1 lie y are stout, well proportioned and muscular The color of their skin is a yellowish brown. What strikes the observer most at first sight are the prominence of the superciliary arches, the gnat thickness of eyebrows, which are continuous, and the projection of the cheek bones. The neck is very short, the head set into the shoulders, chest broad aud well de veloped, the arm strong and wrist stout; the legs crooked. The dominat ing characteristic of their physiognomy is au expression of fear. The traveler had not much opportunity of studying the women. He noticed, however, es pecially, the mutilation of their cars, the lobe of which is pierced by pieces of wood or ivory, and in this way is grad ually enlarged until it touches the shoul der. The Bayagas, although polyga mists, do not imitate their neighbors and masters, among whom a large num ber of wives are considered to be the greatest evidence of wealth. Among the llayagas there is a paucity of mar ried women, owing largely to the family organization, whicu tends to prevent marriages, a man has otten only one I wife; the chief two or three. The fam I ily is "patriarchal." The chief (tho patriarch) lives with his children and grandchildren: sometimes, but rarely, one of his brothers joins the community, ; which never contains auy but blood rv ! lutinns. A young liayaga when married 1 stays with his wife's family, and he inly ! has the right to return to his original j community aud remove his wife thither J when he has a son, and when the son : has killed an elephant. The sou always j remains with his mother's group to re I place her. A liayaga woman never marries any one of another tribe. The traveler does not think tint the itayagas. even in numbers, would venture to ut ! tack, but they ate well iic.tiainted with i the art of defense. Their luniruug:; is ! utterly incomprehensible to a stranger, even to the M laii';s. London 1 nuts. Gold-Incased Bodies. Dr. Variot. one of the most distin guished physicians of the Paris hospi tals, makes a striking proposition for tin? transformation of human bodies into indestructible mummies by means of a process of electroplating. Py this means the entire form is surrounded by an en velopc of metal, which preserves each feature in the semblance of life. The process is somewhat complit atcd in practice although simple in principle. The skin of the cadaver is first painted or sprayed w ith a solution of nitrate of silver, which turns the skin au opaque black. The body is then placed under a bell receiver in a partial vacuum, into which vapor of white phosphorus dis solved in bisulphale of carbon is allowed to enter. This reduces the nitrate of silver and leaves the skin a gr tyish white, quite like a plaster iat. The next step is the application of the metallic coating. The frame supporting the body is immersed in a bath of sul phate of copp.T, electrical connection having been made with the top of the skull, tho bottoms of the feet, the bauds and several other portions of the body and limbs. Dr. Variot uses three small Cliaudron thermo-electric batteries to supply the necessary current, the pass age of which causes the uninterrupted ceposition of the metal. A continuous layer is soon formed over the body, and the metallic skin may by made of any thickness desired, but u coating of l-2."ith to l-50th of an inch is sufficient to resist blows and shocks and still preserve the features in every delicate detail. Shot Like a William Tell. General Fournier was an apostle of tbe unique in duelling. The Mayor of Peri gueux, France, was bis bitter enemy, but as they moved in widely different so cial circles, the general found some dif ficulty in picking a quarrel. His oppor tunity came one day as bo was showing oil before some ladies his cxpertness with the pistol. The mayor passed, with a roso in his mouth. It was a considerable distance from the general's balcony to the mayor on tbe other side of the street, but the old fighter knew his skill. "Just notice, ladies," he said, "how I will pick the mayor's rose. " He raised his pistol, Tbe women shrieked that ho should desist, but too late. The ham mer fell, and the rose and the mayor dropped-the latter, however, only from fright. The general's oxpertness de feated his purpose.' The surencss of his aim terrified the mayor out of tending the desired challenge. Argonaut. ' Baw'a TUs f . Wa offer Ona .Hundred DatUsa nwart for f"J,'T(fJTh "" t eared ty taJiias HalTt Catarrh Car. r. J. Cuaxir Co- Propa Toledo. O. we. the undersigned, kara known F. J. Cheney for the law IS yean, and believe him perfectly honorable In all business transac Uooa, and financially able to carry out any ob ligations made by their firm. m Tkca-S, Wholesale Drugg-ista, Toledo, Waum'so. Kixsas a Mahvin. 'VhniBMia ,rr'"a"i u. Hall a Catarrh itum U rl.-n Irimllr nt. tng directly upon the Mood and mucous' sur faces or. me system, 'testimonials sent free, "ice ,5c. per bottle. Sold by all druggists. The degree of aucceas obtained may often be ascertained by the amount of jealousy which it arouses. "The B. et ! eiticlne lie Ever Had." IUfti orr, C'os At ril 11. lftm. I received jour fauile loiilcof. r h'i:;px iou, and hf.VL- i:eil lvo bottles ui your r.oble medicine. 1 u;usl fay it the kest niedicii.c 1 have had yet. hzita V. Bakmm. tuirnpttrum is tbe spet-uv :imi ).-rmauei)t cure for Sick hesuac'ue. Indieestion. ilysnee fia, rMinufcnofis, Liver Comelaint. Nervous Ue bilily anil t'ontuiniition. It i- iliu i nlynure cure for these i omplaints. Ask j our ilrugUt lor It , and get vi ell. If the power to do hard work is not a talent, it is the best possible subui' utc for it. Malaria cured and era'lfl-ated froti the P)-stem by Brown', Iron Hitters, w.iich eu riciieH the blood, tunn ihe nerves, aids diea llou. Aett like a chttrui on persons In irenertU ill hi-altj, giving new u. rsy aud 3lreiij;.li. Thecertnia way to be cheated is to fum y one's sell more running than others. FITB gtopr8'' 7 Dr. Klint's Driai JJekvk EnpTOHIi. No fits aftfr tin-i rin 'e use. Marvelous cures. Treatise and $X trial bottle tree. Dr. Kline, 831 Arch St., PUlla., I'a. Men of character are the conscience of the society to which they belong. Brown's Iron nitters euroi Dyspepsia, Ma laiiii. UH ioiincas tin I lignum'. Debility. Gives MreuKlh, aides Diostiou, lone tu;; nerves erea.es appot lie. Tue oest tonic for Nursiu Moihers, weak womeu and children. He must be mi obscure and commonplace person who has no enemy. If pfTVctMl witit "or'-eyH hs Dr Wn.c Thomp. ion's Kye W m tpr. 1 )ru jtc i st s 1 1 at 2', p - r b.ULl ) The noblest mind the best contentment has Botb the method and results when Syrup of Figs is tak en ; it ia pleasdnt and refreshing to the taste, and act fently yet prom ptiy on the Kidneys, iver and Bowels, cleanses the sys tem effectually, dispels colds, head aches and fevers and cures habitual constipation. Syrup of Figs is fie only remedy of its kind ever pro duced, pleasing to the taste ana ac ceptable to the stomach, prompt in its action and truly beneficial id ta effects, prepared only from the most healthy and agreeable eubstances, its many excellent qualities com mend it to all and hnve made it the most popular remedy known. Syrup oi Figs is for sale in 59o and &1 bottles by all leading drug gists. Any reliable druggist who may not have it on hand will pro cure it promptly for any one who wishes to try it Do not accept any substitute. CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO. SAN FRANCISCO, OAL. UmVIUt. KY. t'flV YORK. N t. Smithdea " Wriilm.Typ rttl , rZ Bhort-bftOd, Telegrft- -J - - S y-5 ttemeQ D aoJ Nlgbl SsfSSJf' ('.ty; a BeMlon.. Sml.bdc.H COLLECE, Richmond, Va. u ru. il "" If YOU WANT T3 M'K MONEY FAST AND DON'T KXOW HO.V. wild I Or. for-tlno,loW. IIAIM K UttLfc.Nt., il Allililsan Ave, Del ro'.l. itltek. BAGGY KNEES POSITITKT.T REMEDIED. Orly fm.nt Ktretclmr, rrtra, Amlient. and oUtof Collrgei, alto, br profcislonai anil buaixwaa moo ovary. woere. II out mr nnie m ruur town ena a. i. uiuuuii, iu ) Waahlnctra, SWai. A I ft If Weak, Neivocs, YVrktched mortals pet VI (iK well and r keep well. Htalth HtXptt V I V 1 tells bow. 50 cts. a year. Sample cop? fret. Dr. J. U. DYE, Editor. Buffalo, N. V. pADTCBUCCiES (JHI1 I O RQAD WAGJNS At WUolennle Price wbero have no Agents, jeiid for Catalogue to O A Y Jt CO., Ottawa. III. EST DOWN WITH HIGH PRICES. """ WHY not buy from the T,arscat Factory cf . tta kind In tlie Pwr Mlddlemrn'n or . T WOlOtRfUt "s'w wrld, and OAYC Dealers' proBti,. RSTRICCRATORI &A(S! OsL Over 1 ,000 Articles Eg YfajpV tfcFCTIES01 dlrwt to eonsumrrt. thereby jSfff J4i JaS a VJvlo30 to 50 per cent. gJljj Ji f S. "" ICI wnrt. TBICYCtfl. SI ' VS rncc tn THE WOflOEnfUL LUBUR8 CHAIR Coaakiae a room-fall T Chair In one, besides making a Loanse. Bed, invalid appliance 0 every UMIRY pent. Fnncy Chain, If or Iters, &0. BT Write at once for Catalogue. Send stamps and THE LUBURC MANUFACTURING CO. PHILADELPHIA. PA. Dept. A 103, Noe. 31, 3il3, 345 North 8 th Street. fchBatgiia laijalSflU b.vv9 ' Best Cough Modicino. Cures wbero all elso fallti. PleRian. r.nd agroeablo to tho 4l taste. Children take it without objection. By druggists. n Cmwtrem English, . , THC OMIQINAANB OCNUINC. M hjr aVaI VrfMUu. There's a patent medicine which is not a patent medicine paradoxical as that may sound. It's a discovery! the golden discovery of medical science ! It's the medicine for you tired, run-down, exhaust ed, nerve - wasted men and women ; for you sufferers from diseases of skin or scalp, liver or lungs it's chance is with every one, it's season always, because it aims to purify the fountain of life the blood upon which all such direases depend. The medicine is Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery. The makers of it have enough co'nfidence in it to sell it an trial. That is -you can get it from your druggist, and i it doesn't do what it's claimed to do, you can get your money back, every cent of it. That's what its makers call taking the risk of their words. Tiny, little, sugar - coated granules, are what Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets are. The best Liver Pills ever invented ; ac tive, yet mild in operation; cure sick and bilious head aches. One a dose. Every Farmer bis own Roofer CHEAPER than Shingles, Tin or Slate. Reduces Tour INSURANCE, and Perfectly Fire, Water and Wind Proof. STEEL ROOFING, u corrugated '15EII0 por Ouailtw Catalogue a prices Our Rooting 1 ready formed for tbe Building-, ana can up any rtonflne npnliPd ny any one. io not nay till yi.u write in u. foroor Tprlp live Catniouu requires Addition of AN' EQUAL PART OFOILlv OBI M.AK1 NG COSTCI- I JwsZTzo in 7.343 rArtrvSJ Whfre whvf no A Rent will arrnnnt wifi any active Merrhnt.-1..4t M. H. It ANew Use for Petroleum The most marvellous results are now I cing obtained from the use of petroleum ,n the It, atnien'i. ot catarrh cf the head mid throat and hint; troubles. Send for pamphlet free di-cnbing the tic.v treat ment to the 111", u.t.i S; lTl.rr.s Co.. 711' hii.adav. New York. I BUY STAMPS. I particularly vwinl Uiv Mtninp med ilurinf llif lair War. It is worth your wlill to look over ymir old paper, ah I jmy an littfh as $5.00 apieca fur Mnu A'MresR R. 'A Ll AN, FparlSirMuNrw York. HEALTH CALENDAR a v. a Hut of lute .i r tiU,'. ; c, tfOr. i cw I 'tf. v.ill mail In. li, . caclt ;o i-U-w. 'JoO.uoy In u designed fuv the mas -ronoiuical I 1891 Cook Book i islies. 10c II minli.V Co., li ;:t 'eior Yf. PENSIONS cToat pension em is Passed tltled to $19 a mo.' Fee Ho when you pet your money. UlanlU IrM. JO&KVB IL IIVTrKU. llO. Vaablwtaa. . C. COCC TO PHIl'LK NOT .1! A If It 1 Ell. I b w semi addn-bH to um.mu Matrimonial Wonij, Omaha. Ni'brai.k. fur 1-RJ.E COPY of tbe test Marr lii.c nl Correfcjiondeiu-o iapr ut,!lshcl. UxS U 3 or Conca? description mmflcn poods vanlL Uoeornmcnded bv Phvsicians. Red Cross 1 Diamond Brah The onlr Baft. Rut. iijnul. Fill a VUTuKtwV77jrlYt PA1KT, 6 J0NES TOM SCALES OF $60 BiNGHAMTON Boam Box Tare Beam V, N. Y. a "aJSiy XJVIOI 6T7JhV t i. 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