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—————— < NAR Mild A yin ills SS of it! and down on a wash-board, with nothing but soap and main strength to get out the dirt. Then think how simple and easy is Pearline’s way —soaking, boiling, rinsing. You need Pearline for all your washing and cleaning. You need something better than With a shar you can turn up the dirt and get ground ready | for planting—but what a clumsy, slow, labori- ous, ineffective way of going to work! much more ‘so, though, than the old- fashioned way of washing. Think stick Not Grinding the clothes up soap or a sharp stick when you're dealing with dirt. we aa a ee ES RE Re te acd YAO) JANOS, The World’s Best Natural Aperient Water. - 25 Years’ Success in U. S. Highest Reputation all Over the World. CAUTION: None genuine without the signature of the firm “Andreas Saxlehner,” On the Label. mb21-sat,26t seeteteteteteenteteeted — WONDERFUL THINGS NEARBY. Peering Over the Edge of the Future in Science and Invention. From Philadelphia Press. Flying is solved. The principle is known. ‘A mechanical expedient is all that is now needed to make it successful. Practical flight is today not more than five or ten year: Commercial flight ought to come by 1925 or so. A glow-worm makes light with about one- three-hundredth part of the force used in ordinary artificial light. When men know how to make light as cheap, streets and homes wil! be as light as for a mere fraction of what light now c ‘This is uum illumination without inean- already in full operation, and in r two should cut down the price of a sixth of its current cost, and in the n known to ly, to store force There is no waste The need is a chi y compresses and no det and effi air to city this ean be done, first the trell=y po nd wires will come xt the horseless, air-compressed » will do aii the work of city the only use for this is not done 0, before many for cooking—i ‘actories, : This has begun to be done, and in to ten years will be completed, and the y fire and boiler will be a thing of the and no very distant ey poles or wires will be on or by horseless All pavements will Unlimited light will be as ch ed water is today. No coal will red at private houses, and no ashes taken from them. With no horses, no coat and no ashes, street dust and dirt will be reduced to a minimum. With no factory fir nd no kitehen or furnace fires, the air will be as pure in the city as in the coun- try. Trees will have a chance. Houses will be warmed and lighted as easily and eheap- ly as they are now supplied with water. A city will be a pretty nive place to live in when the first twenty years of the twentieth century are passed oe ANTS USED BY SURGEONS. An Ant in Timt Saves a Stiteh in the Closing of Wounds. From the Chicago Chronicle. In the Levant the Greek surgeons find a valvable aid in their cperations, and al- most universally employ the busy little creatures. The ant they use is a big, strong fellow, much larger and stronger than the ants we are accustomed to seeing here. *y have particularly large and strong mandibles, which make them of valu the surgeons, who use them in holding ther the sides of an incised wound. Tne Levantine surgeon never goes out to @tterd an ordinary cese without having a = = —= THE LiGuT | be run by transmitted electric | few ants tucked away snugly in some safe place about his person. He produces his knife and his ants at the same time, and the patient regards the knife with horror and the ants with satisfaction. Having made the cut, the surgeon next selgcts an ant from collection. These anis are vicious fello and are fierce fighters among their kind. For that reason the surgeon handles them with a pair of for- ceps. When the forceps close over the ant he begins to struggle at once. As he fights with his mandibles they are thrown wide open. The ant will close them on the first object with which he comes in contact. With his disengaged hand the surgeon draws the edges of the wound to- gether. When they have been properly ar- ranged, he places the ant rear the cut. The ent, eager for the fight, is ready to seize anything. The surgeon holds it down close to the edges of the wound, and the powerful mandibles grip it on either side. ‘Tae surgeon holds the ant thus for a couple of minutes, while the insect, having at last found something upon which to vent his anger, gets a firmer grip. When it has secured 4 good, strong hold it gives up its life for science, because the surgeon very promptly cuts off its head. When the head of the ant is removed the mandibles do not relax the erip they secured before death. Wounds so treated heal rapidly and without any further difficulty to either the patient or surgeon. The Child in Life. Chamberlain's “Childhood From Prof. ‘Thougit."* Upon language, religion, society and the arts the child has had a lasting influence, both passive and active, unconscious, sug- gestive, creative. History, the stage, music and song have been its debtors in all ages and among all peoples. To the child the lan- guage owes many of its peculiarities, and the multiplicity of languages perhaps their very existence. Religion has had the child long as its servant, and from the faith and confidence of youth and the undying moth- er-love have sprung the thought of immor- tality and the Messiah hope that greets us all over the globe. Even among the most primitive races it is the children who are of the kingdom of heaven, and the fall of man is not from a fabled Garden of Eden, but from the glory of childhood into the stern realities of manhood. As a social factor the child has been of vast import- ance; children have sat upon thrones, have dictated policies of church and state, and fromm them the wisest in the land have sought counsel and advice. As oracles, priests, shamons and thaumaturgi chil- dren have had the respect and veneration of whole peoples, and they have often been the very mouthpiece of deity, standing in the very gates of heaven. As hero and 2d- venturer, passing over into divinity, the child has explored earth, sea and sky, de- scending into nethermost hell to rescue the bones of his father, and setting ajar the gates of Paradise, that the radiant glory may be seen of his mother on earth. Fi- nally, as Christ sums up all that is divine in men, so does the Christ child sum up all that is God-like in the child. The man Jesus stands at the head of mankind, the child Jesus is the first of the children of men. All the activities and callings of the child, the wisdom, the beauty, the inno- cence of childhood, find in folk-belief and folk-faith their highest, perfect expression in the Babe of Bethlehem. in Folk SIDE OF NATURE. THE MAILING ROOM. READY FOR THE FRAY Work of the Republican Cengres- sional Committee Outlined. AT THE HEADQUARTERS IN THIS CITY Chairman Babcock Says It Will Be a Campaign of Education. DISTRIBUTION OF SPEECHES HE REPUBLICAN I party will be first in the field this year in opening the political campaign. A piat- form has been adopt- ed, the campaign committees appoint- ed, and nothing re- mains now for the party hustlers but to take off their coats and get to work. Two great commit- tees will have super- vision of the work of bringing about the election of the republican national and con- gressional tickets. These will be the na- tional executive committee and the con- gressioual committee. Their labors will be supplemented, of course, by minor or- ganizations, such as state central commit- tees, district congressional committees, ccunty and city committees, and these, in turn, will also be divided into smaller branches. The national committee will take charge of the task of furthering the election of the President and Vice President. It will Representative Babcock. raise funds and distribute them and be the general steering committee of the cam- paign. The congressional committee will look out almost exclusively for the welfare of the candidates for Congress. Its three principal tasks will be to furnish money, literature and speakers for campaign pur- poses. The national committee will prob- ably have its headquarters in New York, and the congressional committee is located in Washington. The republican congressional committee has outlined for itself this year work upon @ more extensive scale and in a more thor- ough manner than has ever before been at- tempted. Quarters have been engaged at the Hotel Normandie, corner of 15th and I streets, where a suite of several rooms ac- commodate the administrative officers of Representative Apsley. the committee. Just across the way, at 1412 I street, a four-story brick house has been rented, in which will be located the bureau for the distribution of literature and campaign documents. It is estimated that 10,000,000 copies of speeches and other documents will be distributed by the com- mittee from this house, going into every voting precinct in the land. A force of clerks have already been engaged to handle this immense pile of printed matter, and they are now at work upon the task. An Hnportant Place. The chairman of the republican congress- ioral committee is an important personage in the campaign. The fate of every candi- date for Congress is dependent, in some measure, and to a greater or less degree upon his executive ability, tact and indus- try. He must be acquainted with the.con- ditions existing in every congressional dis- trict, the strength of his candidate, the power of the opposition and the elements of uncertainty in the situation which tend to strengthen or weaken his cause. He must be judicious in the distribution of legitimate campaign funds, and the exercise of his authority in this respect must be at- tended with great tact. One of the most sterling attributes of the ideal chairman is the quality of good judgment which will enable him to come to a correct conclusion upon the situation in a given district re- gardless of the over-sanguine hopes on the one hand or fears and discouragements on the other of the candidate and managers here. Representative Babcock of Wisconsin is the chairman of the congressional commit- tee for this campaign, as he was in the last campaign. His unanimous re-election by the committee was hearty recognition of the possession of those attributes of the successful political manager as demonstrat- ed by his handling of the last campaign. His colleague on the committee last year, Representative Apsley of Massachusetts, was also re-elected vice chairman upon the same ground, sharing with Mr. Babcock the credit for the splendid work performed by the committee. Representative Mercer of Nebraska is the secretary of the com- mittee this year, and is assisted in his du- ties by Mr. W. P. Sutton, formerly of the State Department. Chairman Babcock has taken as his assistant Mr. Fred Schrader, a Washington newspaper man, who will do editorial work in the comthittee and handle the news bulletins: Mr. W. B. Thompson will be treasurer. A staff of typewriters and stenographers completes the working personnel of the committee headquarters at the Normandie. Of course, other mem- bers of the congressional committee will be on hand from time to time, and for the greater part of the time a quorum of the cutive committee will be in Washington. Talk With the Chairman. ‘The whole object of the congressional committee,” sald Chairman Babcock to a Star reporter, when asked to outline the work before him, “is to secure a sound money majority in the House. That r&ult is as important to the republican party in my judgment as the clection of President. A Busy Corner. e will be somewhat late this year in get- ting under way, because the conditions dif- fer from those that existed in the last campaign. “When the committce got ready for busi- ness the political issues before the countr: were cl r-cut and well defined, Both par- ties had a platform, for eac under the piatform adopted at the previous national conventions. As it is now we have just got our platform, but we don’t know What the democrats are going to do, and before we make a sortie we would like to know the location of the enemy's lines. The character of the demotratic platform will influence to a considerable degree the nature of our campaign aid methods of vork. ' “One thing is certain’ ov campaign is to be one of education. It will be much easier to educate the people upon the money question than upon the tariff question. It will not be a hard matter by any means to put be- fore the masses of the pe the money question in a form that even the most mediocre inteltect can grasp. This will be Gone by the distribution of speeches made in Congress upon the financial question. I Go net think this committee will publish a operating Getting Posted. handbook, but the national committee may want to do that. We have not had a con- ference yet with the national committee, and there may be an agreement by which we will take all of the literary work of the campaign. Last year we edited 10,000 newspapers in this country through the ‘patent inside’ system, but have not yet made arrangements for such a service this year.” Campaign Literature. ‘The 10,000,000 copies of speeches and docu- ments proposed to be distributed by the committee will include a number of sub- jects. The printing press is already at work upon some of this campaign litera- ture and busy hands are folding and pack- ing the speeches for distribution through the mails. All or nearly all of these thou- sands of tons of printed matter will go through the mails free of charge under congressict al franks. The speeches made in Congress will go this way, of course. Later tt will be found that many of these speeches include insertions of matter never referred to in the halls of Congress, but carried by the speeches to get within the privilege of the congressional frank. This is an old practice and {s resorted to by both of the political parties without hesitation. The favorite speeches being distributed by the committee were those delivered in the House and Senate especially for campaign and education purposes. Mr. Reed's great speech on the tariff, Mt Dingley’s famous speech upon bonds ami finances, Senator Skerman’s speech on finances and Mr. Bab- cock’s “History of Money” will form the most elaborate argumeiits tipon the finan- clal question. Ranking’ with these, how- ever, will be tHe answer of Representa- tive McCleary of Minnesota to the free silver speech of Representative Towne of that state. Mr. Towne’s effoft was re- garded as one of the masterpieces of free silver argument and Mt. McCleary’s an- swer is taken by the republicans to be a complete and adeq te refutation of the free silver theories vanced by Mr. Towne. The speech of Mr. Aspley of Massachusetts on the tariff will form one of the bulwarks of the protection argument. Mr. Sherman of New York has been chosen to dissem- inate ideas upon reciprocity end banking, and the financial speech of Mr. Johnson of North Dakota will also go out. In Popular Vein. As the campaign progresses the commit- tee will get out a number of pamphlets upon finances and tariff written in popular vein and designed to quickly appeal to the urderstanding of men who do not have time to reason upon the great subjects. One of these books already selec! is en- titled “The Poor Looking Forwar printed by Sterling P. King. It is a unique publica- tion devoted to explaining the principles of protection and the gold standard,as against free trade and free silver. After the campaign is fairly opened an important feature of the committee's work will be the designation of speakers. All the great orators of the republican party will be avcilable this year in the fight for protection, reciprocity agd gold and it will be the committee's business to place them in those sections where their efforts are With Mr. Babcock. most needed to influence votes. There is a constant demand for good repeakers, and rivalry between the several state and dis- trict organizations to secure the best ora- tors. The executive committee consists of Sen- ator Pettigrew of South Dakota, Senator Pritchard of North Carolina, Senator Mitchell of Oregon and Representatives John A. T. Hull of lowa, Joseph G, Cannon of Iilincis, Jesse Overstreet of Indiana and James S. Sherman of New York. The full committee is composed as fol- low: Alabama, Representative Aldrich; Lalifornia, Representative Loud; Colorado, Senator Wolcott; Connecticut, Representa- tiv Russeli; Delaware, Representative Willis; Idaho, Representative Wilson; Illi- ncis, Representative Cannon; Indiana,Rep- resentative Overstreet; lowa, Representa- tive Hull; Kansas, Representative Long: Kentucky, Representative Colson; Maine, Representative Boutelle; Maryland, Rep- resentative Coflin; Massachusetts, Repre- sentative Apsley; Michigan, Representative Aitken; Minnesota,Representative Tawney, Missouri, Representative Joy; Montana, ntative Hartman; N ska, Rep- ative Mercer; New Hampshire, Sen- ator Gallinger; New Jersey, Representa- tive Loudenslager; New York, Representa- live Sherman; North Carolina, Senator Pritchard; North Dakota, Representative Jobnson; Ohio, Representative Bromwell; Oregen, Senator Mitchell; _ Pennsylvania, Representative Reybu Rhode Island, Representative Bull; South Dakota, Sena- tor Pettigrew: Tennessee, Representative Gibson; Texas, Representative Nocnan: Utah, Representative Allen; Vermont, Se ator Procter; Virginia, Representatiy Walker; Washington, Wi Vir ginia, Representative Miller: Wisconsin, Representative Babcock; Wyoming, Rep- resentative Mondell; Arizona, Delegate Murphy; New Mexico, Delegate Catron; Oklahoma, Delegate Flynn. X Rays Show the Gold Within, From the San Francisco Examiner. Some very unique cathode-ray experi- ments of extraordinary success have re- cently been made in Oregon City by Dr. J: . Perry, a well-known physician of this city, and W. C. Cheney, superintendent of the Portland General Electric Company. The experiments were made with gold- bearing rock, in which the rays defined the free gold as plainly as if it lay on the sur- face of the quartz. So far as kno’ this is the first successful experiment of the kind with quartz, and the results obtained justify the assertion that the new ray will prove of immense yalue in mining opera- tions. Besides their successful experiments with quartz, Dr. Perry and Mr. Cheney have succeeded in cutting down the time of ex- posure to a quarter of an hour. The im- portance of this decrease in time is sig- nificant, when it is required to retain one position without moving throughout the exposure. Both Dr. Perry and Mr. Cheney explain this decrease by the effectiveness of Mr. Cheney’s induction coil, which was used in all the experiments, and which its owner considers the mest powerful coil west of Chieago. One experiment of peculiar interest was skiagraphing a little chickadee which had been shot through the head. The bird, feathers and all, was laid on the rubber diaphragm that protects the sensitive plate and was submitted to the action of the rays. Morton’s modification of Crooke’s tube was employed, and the subject, which was one of the earliest tried, was exposed for a considerable longer time than fifteen minutes. On developing the plate it was found that every bit of the plumage, ex- cepting a faint trace of some of the coarse wing feathers, had vanished, while on the other hand, notwithstanding the smallness of the bird, the skeleton, excepting the legs and the wings, appeared fairly outlined. st FELS-NAPTHA Sold everywhere, FELS & CO., Philadetphia. IF YOU VALUE YOUR HAIR USE OXLY THE IMPERIAL HAIR REGENERATOR to make GRAY HAIR its natural color or BLEACH- ED HAIR any color de sired. Baths do not affect it, " Neither does curling or crimpit Incomparable for the BEARD on account of its durability and cleanliness. No. 1—Black. No. 2—Dark Brown. No. 3—Mediam _Brown. No. 4—Chestnut. No. B—Light Chest- nut. No. 6—Gold Blonde. je Cendree. Price $1.50 and $3. TradeMark, Imperial“ Chemical Mfg. Co. 202 Fifth Ave., N.Y. Washington sold by: A. LISNER, ED. P. S. THOMPSON.” Applications made In BE MARLBOROUGH © at -ARLORS, 1110 G st. nw. 4e6,13,20,27-32 = Gray Hair A thing of the past when Nattans’ Crystal Dis- covery is used. Guarantecd to restore gray oF faded hair to its natural color in 8 to 10 dars— positively not a dye. Stops the hair from falling out, arrests dandraft gnd makes the nicest dressing for the hair one can use. No poison. No sedi- ment. No stains. Price, $1, ‘Trial size, (Oc. KOLB PHARMACY SOLE AGENTS, 438° 7TH st. N. Sent, express prepaid, to any part of the country on receipt of my7-tf Electric Fans. . No suffering and inconvenience from hot ** weather when there's an electric fan s* nearby. Electric light is cooler than ** gas. ‘Phone us about the current when ** you're ready. S. Electric Lighting Co., U. 213 14th Street. Phone 77. §e18-204 Had Fits if He Couldn’t Play Cards. From the Chicago Record. A man can always get what he goes alter in the right way. One day, on the Union Pacific overland train, a little episode: oc- curred which proved this plainly. A big fellow who had, as we afterward learned, come down from the Oregon horse country, and who was on his way home, weazied, worn and almost delirious with the tedium of the travel through the warty, bare buttes of Wyoming, rose from his seat at the far end of the Pullman, and, awk- wardly working his way up the car, stopped at the elbow of the first man along the aisle. This was an ecclesjastical-looking person- ege, and the rough-looking fellow bellowed at him: “Podner, will you play a game of sixty- six?” ‘The other smiled and murmured a declina- tion, whereupon, with a disappointed look, the horseman addressed the next male pas- senger with a request that he play sixty- six. Another refusal, and a further show- ing of chagrin, were followed by applica- tion to a third and a fourth and a fifth man, until the whole car had been canvassed. At the last negative answer the big fellow turned and looked down the aisle despair- ingly. Then, steadying himself by the backs of two seats, he roared: “Gents, this here's a calamity, I s’pose p'reps f look like a pickpocket or sunthin’, an’ ye're all afeard o' playin’ weth me. I ain't. I’m a deacon in the Hokolope Church an’ mayor o' Hokolope. ‘Only trouble with me is that when I'm disap'nted I has epi leptic fits, an’ I shoots an’ cuts an’ bites an’ geuses dreadful to see, an’ humiliatin’ be- sides, I don’t have them fits only when I ain't humored, an’ a game o’ sixty-six al- ways drives away the inclination. But none o’ you wants to play sixty-six, an’ so they’s nothin’ to do but have my fit. I think the best plan ud be fer the ladies to git into an- other car, an’ fer the gents to craw] under seats, fer I do provokin’ things when I can’t git no one to play sixty-six an’ has to have a fit. Git reaa—* “Hold on! Hey! Stop it!” shrieked the ecclesiastical personage. “I have been wish- ing to play sixty-six for three weeks, and woefully misunderstood you when you asked hare And for eight hours thereafter the rest of the men stood in line waiting to relieve one another at the card table, so as to be sure that the game of sixty-six should not be in- terrupted long enough for the shooting and biting inclinations of the epileptic to get worked up. —_—+e-__ The Value of Hypnotism. From the Philadelphia Times. “I can't understand how it is that young Swiftleigh manages to dress so well. Cec- tainly his salary doesn’t warrant it.” “Oh, that’s easily accounted for. hypnotist.” “But what has hypnotism to do with a man’s clothes?” “Why, every time he wants a new suit he makes his tailor believe that he’s going to pay for the old ones. gtd Hs zs He's a A big factory was brought to a stand- still the other day for want of a com- mon shingle - nail. The trouble was a mystery at first. Even the boss me- chanic could'nt tell what was the mat- ter. They sent for a high-priced ex- pert who charged ten dollars an hour. All he stid was: “Gimme a_ nail.” He drove it in the right place and in two minutes the whole factory was going again. That’s the way with the machinery of the human body. When the stomach and bowels are wrong what seems a mere trifle, blocks the whole system. Every part of the body feels the effects of 4 little constipation. The head aches, the mouth tastes bad; the stomach is distressed, the liver is con- gested and torpid; you feel sluggish and miserable and dowi-hearted; the energies are completely paralyzed—all for want of a little hep to regulate the stomach and bowels. What you want is Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets. They will make you regular and you keep so; they act in a comfortable natural way, not violently but surely, They give the intestines power to move naturally; and also tone the stomach and liver. You don’t become a slave to their use, they cure you so you stay cured. If a druggist makes more money on some violent purging pill he may try to sell it to you. Don't let him. You will be helped to a thorough understand- ing of your own body in every stage of health and disease by Dr. Pierce's Common Sense Med- ical Adviser. This is a great 1008 page book, in lain English and replete with illustrations. he first edition of 660,000 copies was sold for fisocach. The profits were devoted to publish- ing the present edition of half-a-million free cop: ies, to be sent absolutely gratis to everyone whe sends 21 one-cent stamps to cover cost only. Address World's Dispensary sociation, No. 663 Main Street, Buffalo, NY. Great Reduction In Hair. 1,000 Switches, £3.50, formerly §7.00. Switches, 2.50, formerly 5.00. Switches, 6.00, formerly Gray Switches, 3.00, formerly x Gray Switc! 4.50, formerly 6.50. First-class attendants in Hainiressing, Sham. ete. our “Curlette” for retaining curl. S. HELLER’S, 720 7th Street N. W. my7-200 A PEERLESS SEASIDE RESORT CAPE MAY, New Jersey. Perfect Beach. too! Safe Bathing. Splendid New Bocrd Walk. Elegant Ocean Boulevard. Miles of Beautiful Driveways. Largest and Finest Hotels on the Coast, Eight Fast Express Trains Daily from Philadelphia, with close connections with all the Great Truvk Lines of the country. Leading Hotels. Accommodates, Stockton... +1,000 Congress Hall. BEEZEES Brexton Villa, Je22-1m. $100 BICYCLE FREE. With every 20th Century Cigar you Pr shculd receive a ticket in the 20th Cer Guessing Contest. For every five of t you are entitled to ene guess. The firet person guessing the order (or in which the clubs in the Nationa Ball League w stand at the close of t season will recei 100 Bicycle free—either a “Ben Hur” or ting,” for Jady or gentleman, or, if preferred, two “Fairy” children's wheels. The next twenty persons guessing correctly (or nearest to it) will each receive one box of fifty 20th Century Cigars. Return to us five tickets, but fill out only one with your guess, You have ons guess with every five tickets. Guess early and often. No guess will be cosidered if recelved Inter than September 15, 1896. You can purchase 20th Century Cigars and re- ceive tickets from any retail dealer, but returns must be made to us so that they may be numbered in the order in which they are received. These bicycles are strictly high grade—there are bone better on the market ‘They can all be seen at E. L. Chanilee & Co.'s Bicycle Store, 1310 14th street northwest, or the “Keating” can be sech in_ our window. The 20th Century Cigar needs no comment. The fact that we have sold over one-half million of them in this city in the last twelve months is a sufficient guarantee of their superior quality. It is strictly long clear Havana filler, Connecticnt wrapper and hand made, and it is the most lar S-cont cigar in the market today. Your dealer can tell you all about it CHANDLEE & ROWZEE, Sole Wholesale Agents, 1337 Penna. ave.’ n.w., next to “Washington Post” building. 23 STRONG WORDS STATEMENT OF AN OLD SCHOOL DEMOCRAT. Eighty-Years-Old Isaac Eddy Strong Well—Going to Live as Long as I Can.” “ay wf vty (From the Phoenix, Bi A representative of this cently ‘0 call on Isaac Eddy, : of the Broad Brook Farm, ‘two miles fr ro’, Vt Mr. Eddy was found the conver Eddy’s st was with » usual preliminaries, turned upon the subject Mr. and apparent good Surprise that the newapa, old gentleman was in bis eightle Mlness from which he suffered ferred to, and called forth from indorsement of the virtue of I Pills for Fale People. “I was having a hard time with scrofulous swell- ing of my legs,” he said, “when the pills were recommended to me, and I began taking them, and they brought me up'again, and now I am almost as good as new. I Keep to’ work, and am going to live as long as I can. T still ‘take the pills, and believe they have much to do with my jresent gow healt ther members of Mr. Eddy's family were seen, and they were equally emphatic in words of praise for Dr. Willams’ remedies. Isaac Eddy is the youngest son of the late Judze Eddy of Newfane. In 1861 he moved to the Broad Brook Farm, where he now lives. In both towns he has held various town of and is a gool ex- ample of the sturdy New England farmer of the stock. He is & man of strong convictions, his political party is not Mountain state, be alwa: ocratic ticket, ‘being only man to cast # ballot His family suround ind It was with great plea celebrated iu "83 thelr gol . helt three daughter ere present and 2 ing. the scores of f1 Ir resperts. rs of I yo are net a scription used for many 5 titioner, who produced the most. wom: with them, curing all forms of wenk: from a watery cordition uf the blood o nerves, two fruitful causes of almost to which flesh is heir. ‘The pills are al for the troubles peculiar to females, jons, all forms of weakness, bearing down pains, ete., ‘and in the of men will give speedy relief and effe nent cure in all cases arising from men’ erwork or excesses of whatever matur e entirdy barn given and sickly chil slig’ . or Will be sent post: cents a box, or six boxes for $2 ver sold it bulk or by the 100) by ad- Williams’ Medicine Company, S 4 * grai dr couple in re Williams’ Pink Pitts sta nt medi but ap vars by an eminent pra must ase a perma- 1 worry, They dresxing Dr. ectady, N. ¥ $100—BICYCLES—8100 | (OOMTLLY & Des BPG 0, 450 fot RW, OR.CHASES Blood«Nerve Food Ye Wen Fer Weak and Run-Down People from Childhood te Old Age. WHAT IT IS!) The richest of all. ree Foods, because it replaces the saine substan the blood and nerves that are exhausted In these two i ing Guids by disease, indigestion, bigh living, overwork, Worry, excesses, abuse, ote, WHAT IT DOES! “By making the 'p and rich, and the digestion perfect, it en flesh, muscle and strength. ‘The merves being strong, the brain becomes active and clear. For restoring Jost vitality and stoppi drains and weakness in either sex and as a female regulator fn gold. One box boxes $2.00, se pA by mail. all wasting Grateful—Comforting. Epps’s Cocoa. BREAKFAST—SUPPER. “By a thorough knowledge of t which govern the operations of di tion, and by a al applicatic erties of ‘ted Cocoa, M for our breakfast and suppe Hieately las ored erage Which may save Us many heavy doctors’ bits fe as Uy the Fedicious tose off euch anticice of @iet that a constitution may be ally built up until strong enough to resist every tendency of dis- ense. Hundreds of subtie maladies are floating around us ready to attack wherever there in aw natural laws jon and nutri- the tine prop- ys las provided int. We may escgpe mans shaft eeping ourselves Well fortiti blood 2 a. properis nourished fram Service zette. Made simply with beiling water or Soild ‘only in bulf-pound tins, thus: JAMES EITS & CO., Ltd. Homoropathic Chemists, London, ocd-s,m,tu,9m england. Wilson's Retiring ‘Selling Ou = ‘SHOES ‘To Retire! The end of Wilson's Going-out- of-business Sale is pretty ly in sight. Great inroads have been made in the stock, but there is still a good selection for belated buyers. ‘Other and greater redactions are being added ench day to the al- ready enticing Is ‘These prices tell part of the story: eet :$3 Oxfords, $1.95. Ladies’ ‘ine Hand-sewed sct and Black Viet Kid Oxfords Kk has patent long vamp, arched instop—perfect fitting. Been at % 3 $3. Now. se $1.953 = Ladle Russet and Black Oxfords, stylish Do shapes. Reduced from oy 4 + Ladies’ Boots, Patent Leathers, Viet = pt Russet urton and 3 Lace, different toes. Cut @ + from’ $3.50 to. “$2.68% Ladies’ Russet Shoes, large but ‘ tons. Were $8. Now. SLOSS #Men’s Footwear. Men'g Ramet Shor. lace, all stytee ot toe. | Redui rout ., and $4 to. ae $1.95. . Russet - roo, high « Kcaaatesn wate ote $2 85s Lease and Fi cares For Sale. WILSON, High-grade Shoes, 929 F St. apl1-8m-86