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' WAR REMINISCENCES.' IN TH HANDS OF THE ENEMY. llovr n Christian Southern Woman Saved a Union Soldier's Mfc. This Is a Httlo story of tho war, or perhaps it would bo better to call it tho story of an incident of tho war. It deals with persons who nro allvo to day and in whom cx-llegister of tho Treasury Lucius 13. Chittenden, of this city, takes more than ordinary interest. When tho sturdy troops from tho Green Mountain state were in tho Shenandoah valley in the early days of tho great conflict a lieutenant of tho name of Kcdcll was among their num ber. Ho was young and brave, and when the timo for fighting camo went boldly to the front. A shell from tho enemy's works toro through his thigh nnd riddled his hand. They carried him to tho rear, nnd when tho night PZX- THC LITTLE BLACK HOV WENT. had come he was taken to n deserted cabin, where his leg was amputated and his hand dressed. The next morn ing the order came for the army to fall back. Lieut. Bedell was unconscious and too weak to be moved. The sur geon said he could not live more than twenty-four hours. His comrades left a canteen of water by his side, and joining their regiment marched away. Somo little distance from tho cabin 'lived a young woman, tho wife of a confederate soldier named Van Meter. The foragers of the army had taken nearly everything of value about the little farm. Her niece, a childof ten years, and a little black boy were her only companions. When the soldiers had gone tho bov went down the coun try road as far as the cabin. He heard the lieutenant groaning and went in. The canteen was out of his reach and his lips were parched with fever. He could not speak. The lad ran back to Mrs. Van Meter and told her about the suffering soldier who wore the blue. Her heart was touched and she hastened to the cabin. Fresh water was secured and it revived the lieutenant. Then his limbs were dressed and newly bandaged. Mrs. Van Meter sent the boy for a doctor who lived some miles away. When he arrived he said there was very little hope for the wounded soldier unless he had stimulants and none could be se cured. It didn't matter much, anyhow, ho said, for he had no interest in a union soldier. Mrs. Van Meter insisted that it was her duty to save his life if possible, and tho next day bhe harnessed a mule to an old cart and drove to Harper's Ferry to get n supply of whisky and quinine. Tho commander there heard her story, said it was entirely improbable, but ac 4epted it becauso of her frankness. She .did not hesitate to say she was the wife of a confederate soldier. The .stimulant gave Iledell strength, and it was not long before he wns able to sit up. His clothing was badly torn and 'blood-stained, and nothing suitable for 'him to wear could bo found in the jneighborhood. His regiment was at (Winchester, twclvo miles away. Mrs. 'Van Meter drove there and astonished 'Lieut. Bedell's comrades by informing 'them that ohe was alive and on the road to recovery. She secured his portr mantcau nnd returned. When Bedell had recovered sufficient ly to be about he entered into a con tract with a farmer in the neighbor hood to secure tho return of a team of mules which had been confiscated by his regiment in exchange for aid in reaching tho union lines. Bedell was hidden under a jngof hay, and with Mrs. Van Meter as tho driver he reached Harper's Ferry. The com mander accepted the terms of Bedell's contract with the farmer and delivered the mules. Having heard nothing whatever from her husband for several' months, and hearing ho was either in a hospital or a prisoner, Mrs. Van Meter wa3 at a loss what to do. Lieut. Bedell de cided tho matter for her by offering to aid in finding her husband. He entered into communication with President Lincoln, telling what Mrs. Van Meter had done for him. The president wrote an order dircctlug tho officer In charge of any hospital or prison to deliver to Mrs. Van Meter any man she claimed as her husband. Mrs. Van Meter and her littlo nicco joined Lieut. Bedell in Washington and they started on a tour of the several prisons and hospitals. They went through tho prisons of Ohio, New York nnd Pennsylvania, and finally found Van Meter in a hos pital Ho was emaciated and unable to stand. At Lieut. Bedell's expense ho was transferred to a private institu tion, where in a few weeks ho recovered sufficiently to warrant his discharge. Lieut. Bedell took Vun Meter and his wife and tho littlo niece to his home in Vermont, and they remained his guests for soveral months. They then returned south and ure now living in Berryville, Clark county, Va. Mr. Bedell is hob bling around on a crutch in his home. Ex-Congressman John S. Wiso se 'curcd Mrs. Van Motor's address for Mr. Chittenden through Marshal McCor mauk, a prominent citizen of .Clark county. "I have written to Mrs. Van Meter," said Mr. Crittenden, "and her letters show hor to bo a simpl6 Christian woman. She writes that sho did for Lieut. Bedell what her conscienco sug gested was right, and sbo is happy in tho knowledge that ebe saved IiIb life.' N, X. Advertiser, . ; " . - r ENFORCING ORDERS. Mlko Wan Hound to Have tho Counter l(fn. Stories of tho blunders made by green volunteers on guard duty are always in order at tho campfircs of veterans of tho civil war. At such an occasion re cently n member of a middle Tcnncssco regiment, which was commauded by Col. Ulllcm, told tho following story: "For n timo wo wero stationed in tho city of Nashville, doing guard duty. There was a raw recmiit in our ranks an Irishman and a very good fellow whom wo all liked. Ho was bound to bo a good soldier, and hnd the strongest desire to bo eulcient in all things. i.n , , i ' - . I u" Uljy " wns Pn ffiiaru umy , on ono of tho priii jijhii bireuis m uiu i city. Ho had never been in tho same situation, nnd thought it his duty to challenge everyone who camo along, just as he would in camp. "Hy and by a well-dressed citizen ap proached. " 'Haiti "Who goes there?' says Mike. " 'A citizen,' answered the man. " 'Advance, citizen, and give tho countersign!' " 'But I don't know tho countersign,' said the citizen; 'and if I did, 1 think it is very strange and unusual that it should bo demanded in a public place like this.' "'Well, bo jabers then,' said Mike, 'ye don't pass this way till ye'vo said "Honker Hill!" ' " 'Bunker Hill,' said the man, with a grin. ' 'Right! nass on,' said the sentinel at 'present,' nnd tho citizen went on about his affairs." Youth's Compan ion. MEMORIES OF FORT FISHER. A Soldier Who Wu Hurled for Tlilrty. Six Hours In tho Dcbrlft of tho Fort. I'll n f4AMnl x T A.nl . rtf r a 4nnl. -I- i rv i i 1 n i i. I place in Oakland recently, and when ' the coffin j,vas lowered into the grave ho was buried for tho second timo. Tho firstburial was twenty-seven years ago, when he wns entombed nlivc nt the ex plosion of Fort Fisher, where he wns buried in the debris for thirty-six hours before he was found, and then he was dug out for dead. Joseph Nelson was then a lad of twenty-one, a volunteer in Company F of the Sixteenth New York regiment, and attached to Gen. Benjamin F. Butler's division. He was at the storming of Fort Fisher under Gen. Ames, with a fleet under the command of Admiral Terry. Fort Fisher was captured, and when it wns evacuated by the confeder ates the magazine was fired, and when the union forces took possession the fort was blown into the air and the union troops with it. Mr. Nelson was buried many feet under the ruins, and it was thirty-six hours before ho was found. He was paralyzed from tho burial, and became a sufferer from sciatic rheumatism for his entire life from the effects of the shock and exposure. He never recovered, but was for nwhile able to perforin the duties of a conduc tor on a light run on tho Southern Pa cific railroad. Mr. Nelson was not always willing to tell of his unusual experience of being buried alive for such a length of time. Ho was very graphic in his account, however, nnd this is tho way he told it shortly before his death:, "It all seemed like a nightmare, or the things one fancies while in a fever. Fort Fisher seemed to bo on top of me, with all the guns pointed at me. I could neither move nor speak. Slowly I began to grow cold, so cold and numb that 1 began to wonder if 1 were dead. It began nt my feet and crept up through my limbs and up my body un til it almost seemed to clutch at my heart. I thought it was death itself, but I could hear noise. It was very human noise, nnd sounds that told mo only too plninly that I was still alive the erics of the dying and wounded from the battle and the explosion. "They were over me and around mo -erics that made my already chilled body colder. I could hear them every where, It seemed to me, tho cries of those in greater pain than I, for they were wounded and mangled, while I I was only cold. "I was buried up to my shoulders in tho heavy sand of the breastworks, but my head was free. Over it some tim bers and rocks had become crossed and jammed, and they had formed a roof over my head. This I did, not know at the time. I could only feel tho terrible cold that benumbed me, for the pres sure of the sand around my body drove vva out fou dead. the blood back to my heart and left me without feeling. "I could not move; ray arms were buried in tho sand, and Lwns absolute ly pinioned. 1 eould breathe, and that was all. Then there came a fjreat pain in my head. It seemed as if it would burst, and still I was helpless. I hard ly know whether I was olive or not. I was conscious, for I could hear the cries of tho wounded; but that was all I know, save that I could not move, and that I was cold. "Tho fort blew up at seven o'clock In the morning and It was tho following djvy beforo I was found aud dug out. and all that time I was conscious, but helpless." When Mr. Nelson was found ho was taken to the hospital at Wilmington, N. 0., but ho never fully recovered from the Injury to his spine, and during the greater part of his life walked on crutches, San Francisco Examiner. FARM AND GARDEN. FAIR ROAD TAXES. President llutrn Oflfcr Somn Sound Ar(ra incuts on the Suhjcct. I have observed in various papers complaints by farmers that bicycle men all advocate better roads, but bicycle men propose to make the farmers pay for the roads. Hence some farmers pro pose to tax bicycles and apply the pro ceeds to making better roads. If roads are to bo made by taxing those who ride over them no bicycle man will object. Hut such a tax must necessarily bo a special tax, like the And tho only fair tax o t,mt gort is b taU, toll) lAJll lUILUIl Mil IAJ11 lUatUr .. ,,,,. ,,, ,.. . n ..., ., ,. ly for so much as he uses. It must be a toll tax on all vehicles, and all beasts, and all pedestrians. If one, is taxed for using the road, all road users must be taxed alike. Beside, the tax ought to fall heaviest on those who most damage the road by using it. A bi cycle does not damage the road at all: a laden wagon docs. So docs a horse's hoof, or that of any hoofed beast. Further, the law should make a fair distinction in the object and result of road use. The farmer uses the road nnd damages it to make money for him self. So does every business teamster. They get a benefit In actual money gain from every good road. The cyclist uses the road solely for enjoy ment. Ho makes no gain from it, and it would manifestly be unjust to levy a special tax on him. Now, cyclers do not desire good roads at the expense of the farmer. Bicycle advocates of good roads arc generally in favor of the adoption of tho county system of road taxation and management. Under the county bystcm the whole county is made one single read district and the entire property of the county is taxed n . i i i m s equally for the highway fund. This makes the heaviest cost fall upon cities and villages and not upon the farmer. The justification of such a law is that good roads benefit everybody who owns property, whether they all use the road or ndt. The merchant of the village, the man who owns a house or lot in the city, equally with the farmer all have the value of their, property and business increased by good roads. In the orange district, where several mil lions of dollars have been spent in tho last ten years making good roads, the official records of the county show that the value of the property of the whole county has more than quadrupled with in the last eight years owing to theso The total yearly road tax amounts to mori than a hundred and twenty million dollars And these are the roads we get for our money Sceno In the suburbs of Philadelphia In the spring of 1891. Drawn from photograph. road improvements, while the value of the property directly along the lines of the good roads has increased over six times. The official records always show the same cxtrordinary increase in the val ues of property, wherever good roads have been constructed. And this is also noticed: Farmers always resist and complain before the good roads are con structed; but, after the roads are made, they are the strongest supporters of the new system. Nothing could induce them to go back to the old condition; and the oomplniners nnd resisters nre thereafter confined to city and village hang-backs. In Michigan wo have one county that, in spite of resistance by farmers, got the privilege, by special act of the legislature, of spending $100, 000 for stone roads. They spent the money and the supreme court of the state pronounced the net unconsti tutional, and then up rose the farmers, having been convinced by once trying the effect of so much good road, and joined in a strong petition to have the state constitution amended so that their county might be permitted to bond it self for more hundred thousand dollar good road expenditures! Meanwhile those farmers who got the benefit of the first hundred thousand dollars' worth of good roads "cut swells" and chuckled: "Don't you wish you could get it?" over the farmers not on those roads. Well they may, since the official valua tions prove that lands along these roads have enhanced in value more than double any other farm lands in the county. President Bates, in Chicago Bearings." A IVw Hints About diamine A gild edge butter-maker says it is not necessary to the good quality of butter that the cream be churned every day." Three times a week in summer and twico in winter will do, provided tho following points are observed: Not to let the milk btand longer than twenty-four hours in bummer, or thirty-six in winter, without skimming. All tho best cream for butter will rise in that time; and keep better removed from milk than on it. Put the cream in a bright tin bucket, kopt for the purpose. Tin muy bo cleaned more perfectly than either wood or earthenware. Tho cream should be well stirred each timo an addition is made to it, and bhould stand after tho lust cream is added, nt least two hours In summer and four in winter, before churning, to allow uni form ripening and bouring to take place. N. Y. Tribune. Tin: boys should uo taught early how to grow fruit ami the girls how to grow tloweiD. THE U. S. Government Chemists , have reported, after an exami nation of scores of different brands, that the Royal Baking Powder is ab solutely pure, of highest leavening capacity, and superior to all others. BEDROOM FURNISHINGS iorao of tho Popular Styles iff Decora Moil For the summer bedroom, papers in aid chintz patterns and floral designs, such as are used in cretonnes, are in special demand. It should be men tioned with a protest that there is a do niand for striped papers, ns a revival of 1830 fashions. These Btripcd effects are also, for some unknown reason, asso ciated with empire styles, and aro often used in empire rooms, especially in greens. Tftis color now seems to bo the fn.shionnblc fad in decoration, and is found in the delicate, tasteful tints of Wattenu green, as wel as in the dark grass-green brocades, with their set wreathes in gold color, which aro used to upholster empire furniture. The flower effects, however, arc gener ally chosen for country bedrooms. I Nothing can be dninticr than a sum mer bedroom papered with apple blos som paper in the dainty tints of the flowering leaf of the fruit tree, or in honeysuckle pattern, or an all-over pattern in the conventionalized design of the wild eglnntine. Most of these designs may be found In fifty or sixty colorings In slightly varying tints. Cretonnes to match the papers aro shown in a variety of tasteful designs. The familiar pine tree pattern of the Japanese deconrtor is copied in old blues on a pale cream and on silvery grounds for blue rooms. There are primrose papers for yellow rooms, and many papers which harmonize with the fashionable couleur-de-rose hang ings so otten chosen for my lady's boudoir and bedroom. Chicago Jour nal. Although never down on any list of ofllre scekcrs it is by no means Uiiusuul fur a roof to find Itself slated for a good thing. Buffalo Courier. Jokes "Brown, did you ever see a saw fish!" Brown "Nu; bull one saw a sea fish." THE MARKETS. New Youk, Junp 28. FLOUR S 1 03 itt 4 VHEAT No. Sited Winter... Ti'tt "?i N'o. 1 Northern TSUQ K'4 CORN XaS 4SJ'3 49.U OA'IS MIxc'S Western 3BViift 3J RYE Western 58 no" 59 PORK Mess 19 0.) ffi 20 OJ LARD -Prime Western fl W So 9 9') UUTTER Western 14X43 -JIM CHEESE Part skims 1 04 ft EGGS-Wcstern I5yft 1G CATTLE Poorest to best..... 4 75 i7& f 80 bHEEP 3(10 & 5 SJ HOGS B 40 to 750 CLEVEELAND. FLOUR-Country XX White.. 3M m 4 00 Minnesota patents... 4 I! 4 75 Amber -75 lie 3 25 WHEAT-Na 1 65 60 CORN No.2 44 to 47 OATS No.2 30 to 37 HUTTER-Cholce to fancy.... 16 22 CHEESE York Suite 9"-5la 10 Ohio OH'fl 0 EGGS-Strlctly fresh 15 15V POTATOES-In bulk, per bush 63 W SEEDS Timothy 191 to 2 10 Cloer 7 50 7 75 HAY Haled 111)0 15 10 Hulk on market Huo 16 00 CATTLE 350 5 25 HOGS 6 25 0 45 . CINCINNATI. FLOUR Family 2 20 2 40 WHEAT No. 2 60 (id 61 CORN 40 Pfc 4J'i OATS 3iJ 3J'i RYE No.2 54-, 55 HOGS .... 5 33 to 6 15 TOLEDO WHEAT-No. 2 Red Wluter .. C5 65M CORN No.2 40,' 41 OATS L97a 30 HUFFALO. BEEVES Dest 5 10 5 53 Good 4 ,S 4 90 SHEEP-Hc.xt 4 25 to 4 75 Fair to cood 3B 4 0J HOGS Heavy grades 0 4.) do 6 45 Packers anJ mediums 6 40 6 43 PITl'SOUHGH. BEEVES-IlcM 5 30 5 50 Falrtogood 4-15 4 IK) SHEEP Best 4 75 4 90 Fair to pooct 350 4 60 HOGS Una vy weight j 0 CO 0 6 Mediums 6 CO 6 65 PHILADELPHIA WOOL Western. 22 27 Unwashed. 20 22 KNOWLEDGE Brings comfort and improvement and tends to personal enjoyment when tightly used. Tho many, who live bet ter than others nnd enjoy Hfo more, with less expenditure, by more promptly adapting the world's best products to tho needs of physical being, will attest the vnluo to licalth of tho pure liquid laxatiro principles embraced in tho remedy, Syrup of Figs. Its cxcellenco is duo to its presenting in tho form most acceptable and plena ant to tho toatc, tho refreshing and truly beneficial properties of n perfect lax ative ; effectually cleansing the system, dispelling col'ds, headaches aud fevers and permanently curing constipation. It has given satisfaction to millions and met with tlio approval of tho medical profession, becauso it acts on tho Kid neys, Liver and -Bowels without weak ening them and it is perfectly free from every objectionable substance. Syrup of Figs is for sale by nil drug gists in 60c and $1 bottles, but it is man ufactured by tho California Fig Syrup Co. only, whose namo is printed on every package, nlso tho name, Syrup, of Figs, and being well informed, you will not accept any substitute if oftered. PpU. VSAf 3fo VlSITOlt "WllV. Iinw hi IT wmi nrn Drum. 1 ing. Tommy I If you don't, look outyou will I bo getting taller thiui your father." Tom my won't mat oo jouyi Then pap'll nave to wear my old trousers cut down for him." Tid-BUs. F. J. Cncscr & Co., Toledo, O., Proprs. of Hall's Catarrh Curo, offer flOO reward for any enso of catarrh that cannot bo cured by talcing Hall's Catarrh Curo. Sctul for tes timonials, free. Sold by 'Druggists, 75c. The telephone girl, no matter how charm ing bIio may seem to be, la always quito distant iu her conversation. Rochester Democrat. MAKES ITSELF FELT tho great, griping, old-fashioned piH. Not only when you take it, but un pleasant, from first to last, and it only gives you a littlo temporary good. The things to take its place are Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets. One of these at a dose will regulate the whole svstem perfectly. They're tiny, sugar-coated granules, scarcely larger than mustard seeds. They act in Nature's own way. No reaction afterward. Their help lasts and they do permanent good. Consti pation, Indigestion, Blliou3 AttacksJ'Sick or Bilious Headaches, and all derange ments of the liver, stomach, and bowels are prevented, relieved, and cured. They're tho cheapest, for they're tior anleed to give satisfaction or mono' is re turned. Nothing cail bo "just as good." "German 59 yrup My niece, Emeline Hawley, was, taken with spitting blood, and she became very much alarmed, fearing that dreaded disease, Consumption. She tried nearly all kinds of medi cine but nothing did her any good. Finally she took German Syrup and she told me it did her more good than anything she ever tried. It stopped the blood, gave her strength and ease, and a crood appetite. I had it from her own lips. Mrs. i Mary A. Stacey, Trumbull, Conn. Honor to German Syrup. MIICT UAUE Asenta AT JK. famplo mUol riHVC faunlilocka'at.l-tttMrvrlirniiill for2c. Stamp. Immense Unrlvnlletl. UnlyKonl one evcrlnvfiited. UeatitweiphU. H-ileiunpartkllrled. Jliwll.j. Writ t quick. Itroharil Mfc Co., l'hUii. U-.1U1X T1U3 lAIUknij Uo. ipamiu. ,. ygj ti-' ' ' ' ' ' la' ' ' ' ' '"r it A ! i I v I named in the hope of confusing you in the hope that you'll mistake them for Pearline. For most people, that ought to be enough. It ought to convince them that the article so imitated, so copied, so looked-up to, is the one that is the best to use. If your grocer sends you an imitation.be honest send it back demand Pearline. as James rYLE, New York. If You Are Looking for a Pure, Pleasant, Substantial Chew, oust "J.T. IS JUST WHAT YOU WANT! X3X.X7aV0VCO3SrX3 TOBA.OOO oo. (DANflUlJE Ul WhAjmUuriLjOASSO jjl Thp "T TNIRNE" are the Best and Most Econom Illt JLiriEUE ical Collars and Cuffs Worn. Try them. You will like them; they look well, wear well and fit well. Reversible; both sides alike; can be worn twice as long as any other collar. When one side is soiled use the other, then throw it away and take a fresh one. Ask the Dealers for Them. Sold for 35 cents for Box of 10 Collars, or Five Pairs of Cuffs. A Samplt Collar ,iJ a PatreCvJFt stnity mail for ttx dull. AdJrlit, Giving Silt and Stylt Wanttd, REVERSIBLE COLLAR CO., 27 Kilby Street, Boston, Mass. THE POT INSULTED THE KETTLE BECAUSE THE COOK HAD NOT USED SAPOLIO GOOD COOKING DEMANDS CLEANLINESS. SAPOLIO SHOULD be used in every KITCHEN. DO NOT BE DECEIVED with I'nitcK, IChr.niola, and Paints which stain I tho hnmlit. lnlnra thn Iron, unci burn rod. I Tho lilting Sun Btoro Poll Ml Is Jlrllllnnt, Odor. I loss, Durniiio, unci trio consumer pays lor no un I or Einss pockbbo iriin overj purcuaso. Unlike the Dutch Process No Alkalies on Other Chemicals aro used in tho preparation of W. BAKER & CO.'S waMastCocoa tehlcli i nbanlrttelv jturo and MoluVle lltliaijnorefianftreotlnw I thatlrrnyth of Cocoa nilxeil I Willi Starch, Arrowroot nr ' Stmar, nnd is far moro eco nomical, cortfno- less than ono cent a nip. It U delicious, nourishing, and eas:lvt DiacsiED. Sold byOrorcru everrnhcrt. W. BAKER & CO.. Dorchester. Maon, IEW 03 LYE 1 POWDEKSDAIfD PERFUMED Om (PATENTED) Tho strongett and 'purttt Lyo made. Unliltu other Lye, It brlnR n tine powder niul packed In r. can with removable lid, tho contents nre always ready for use. Will ni8l;o tlio belt perfumed Hard Soap In SO minutes tcltAout boil ing. It In tlio lict for cleansing uusto pipes. dWlnfectlng sliikb, closets, vashlnir bottles. P'llntn, trees.ctc. PI:XXA.IT,TM'K"(1 10. Oen.Allciili 1'IXIJLA., laiu gl-NAlU TBI r AFtK IIT7 B jrantlU. RHIiaHEAPOLlS 7 U . . MORTGAGES. . . 1 CALHOUN, THOMSON & CO., Investment Bankers. FUirDS LOANED AND rNVESTED. RENTS AND INTEREST COIJjZCTED. Our pat roim nmy rely upon sate inTeatmenUlhroiip'i uk. Woloan only ou lint mortcaBen nm! I.1U ulcl commercial paper. Wo reter 10 b, cut ley lliuik of MlnncotaL Northwestern I'onpnlldatcd lilllltu; C'o, lHUtur)-"hlnrn Hour HIIH Co. Sin nn.l Hli Uuurnnty l.onif JIiiIMIii. MITtNKAPOLIB, Ml.V). W XAMETniS F4rn,.r7ttnf.urlU. ELECTROTYPES OR STEREOTYPES OK HORSES. CATTLE. SWINE. POULTRY AND MISUKLLANKOUS OUTS. A. N. KELLOGG NEWSPAPER CO., 71 nnd 73 Ontario St., CLEVKLAND, ... OHIO. ACRES OF LAND for etle by the Saint Pabi. &. DULUTI! EilLROAD Company In Minnesota. Seud for Maps and Circu Ian. They will be ent to you jyjHL'Jkajbsi, Addresa HOPEWELL CLARKE, Land Commissioner, St. Paul, Minn. iCtt month. Hum 1 trrfttrtiffUt i I rtc- ildan). NoiUrrlLg. O. V IV KNVnKI tn4 rciniummt .m. i., flinit r)Dt. ait. Mc VlcliorV Thoator. Clilcuuo, Piso'B Remedy for Catarrh is tho I ucst, Easiest to UbC, unu uocaptsi. Sold bv drusKlhts or pent by mill. I 1 Mc E. T. ilazeltlne, Warren, Pa. A. N. K.- 14W. W1IEN WKITINO TO ADVEItTISERS PLEASE atate that yau w the Advertisement In tbht paper. They End this way the names of most so-called washing compounds. And it isn't an accident, either. It's to make them sound something like Pearline. That is the original washing compound the first and in every way the best. These imitations are thus UJlojA fl wmR Pi n lt ' l III m 1M ffearcirj" cDL m Q eQl tw,r" a.'av?: nTrwawjamxvEjEP&issrrcr---: z:v JWhTM "PLUG i COLLARS AND CUFFS. V JL