i Water .miSE$GU«E0 IFBEE itisiStpi ilSiii ”1! iwiii

O 'H E
David kemnedy, ivi. d..
Of Rondout, (City of Kingston,) N. Y.,
jrn m ^S A Y B :
**For over 24 years I have constantly been engaged in the active dis-
AUow no one to deceive yott w ith their crowning efforts, latest achievements
^ f htilitant fr u its ; tcunterfeits, imitations or j u s t as good.
They are but
escperiments and en'ddngeryour health,
f
<*Most physicians are ready enough to give their services when a family
j is too poor to pay, but it occasionally happens that there is a proprietary
i. jnei^cine 'W'hich does all or more than a physician could do, ’ ’
„ ' “ We know of only one such medicine—namely Dr. David Kennedy’s
I' F^VOHte^fteniedy ” for “ such troubles as Kidney and Bladder Complaints,
Khedtoalism, Dyspepsia, Liver complaint, Constipation and the sicknesses
pectiliat to .Women.”
I*’
“ Siiiferers from these difficulties often become so discouraged as to
hare no heart to take any more medicine. To all such, Dr. Kennedy has
hhly to gay that if ha were personally called upon to prescribe at all, he would
k Ipresetibe Favorite Remedy.”
f
“ There are other proprietary medicines in the market, made by a
^^petson With the same name and initial as my own, and I have reason to
believe that the two are often confounded in people’s minds, and that the
other articles spoken of, have been substituted, either through accident or
design, when the latter have been asked for, or desired.
To avoid this,
please ask for Dr. David Kennedy’s Favorite Remedy, prepared in Rondout,
N,
and accept nothing else in its place.”
‘* There are two ptoprietors o f similar names, but they are not connected
or associated in, business, or othenvise. ”
'■ ‘ I
“ Those who wish consultation or advice as to their own special case,
Oanhaye the same entirely free or charge.
Simply direct: ‘ Dr. David
KaAnedy, Rondout, City o f Kingston, N. Y.,’ ” where all communications
will b e treated ivith strictest professional confidence.
“ To avoid mistakes, Dr. Kennedy would beg you to remember that the
o f his medicine is Favorite Remedy, that it is manufactured at
^
m' d'^
not to .forget the Doctor’s name, David
lo n a d i
«5ua.
IiHINilS
fiKCKtilE
LUSTRi
^ ^ F U R N IT U a E jt^ '
HARDW OOD
i
^FLOORS
.
J |r i U N Q .^ ^ f ’*^ALLHAFU»VOODflNlSH
looh^’Mew
THE NEXT THING.
{ In preserving time it is well to re­
“The ftre insurance companies have member that large fruit will keep best
Imd some lar>ge losses in the last 12 in shallow stone pots.
months,’’ said Hojack.
{
"What Is needed, added Tomdik,“is
a company to insure the insurance
companies against loss.”—^Judge.
. _:i^AIN ESS CANNOT BE CURED
> by local applications, as they cannot
%, reach the diseased portion of the ear.
Therelsonlyone way to cure deafness,
and that is by constitutional remedies.
Deafness is causedhy an inflamed condi­
tion of the mucous lining of the Eus­
tachian Tube. "When this tube gets in­
The Emperor of Austria i s paid ?13,flamed you have a rumbling sound or
Imperfect hearing, and when it is en­ 000 a day for governing a kingdom con­
tirely closed deafness is the result, and taining 41,000,000 subjects.
mdesB ‘the inflammation can be taken
out and this tube restorea to its nor­
SOMETHING FOR NOTHING.
mal condition, hearing will be destroy­
ed forever; nine cases out of ten are
caused by catarrh, which is nothing hut
an inflamed condition of the mucous
enrfaces.
will
irrh) that can not be cured by Hall’i
Catarrh Cure. Send for circulars, free
F, J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, 0.
bold by druggists, 75c.
Hall's Family Pills are the best.
Ic. package of “Hubinger s Bes
.starch, with the premiums, two Shak>
peare panels, printed in twelve beau­
tiful colors, or one Twentieth Century
Gill caltndar, embossed In gold, all for
5c. Ask your grocer.
himdred thousand dollars a
Two himdi
vear
the salary of the King of the
ear Is tl
Belgians.
Belgians.
DOBS IT PAT TO BUY CHEAP?
A coteap romeoy ror cougna ana colds
iM all right, hut you want sometbinr
tliat will relieve and cure the more siTwa and dangerous results of throa
and lung troubles. What shall you do.
GO to a warmer and idbre regular cli­
mate? Yes, if possible; if not possible
fiw you, then In either case take the
only remedy that has been Introduced
, In ^1 civilised countries with success in
severe throat and lung troubles, “Boschee’s German Syrup.” It not only
'y heala and stimulates the tissues to de• StrOy the germ disease, but allays int flammatlon, causes easy expectoration,
I gives a good night’s rest, and cures the
patient. Try one bottle. Recommend­
ed many years by all dniggists in the
world. Sample bottles at all drug
Tie a piece of bread about twice the
size of an egg in a linen bag and put
in the pot of boiling vegetables, j. nis
; will absorb all disagreeable odors and
prevent them from permeating the
rooms.
QUESTION ANSW'ERED.
Tee, August Flower euil has the
largeet sftLe of ahy medicine In the civ• lllaed world
Your mothers’ and
grahdonotners never thought of using
anything else for indigestion or bilious­
ness, Dodtora were scarce, and they
seldom hedi’d of appendicitis, nervous
prostration or heart failure, etc. They
used Augusf Flower to clean out the
system and stop fermentation of undiiMted food, regulate the action of the
rivsr, stimulate tho nervous ami organ­
ic action of tho system, and that is all
t h ^ took When feeling dull and bad
With hsadaches and other aches. You
only used a few doses oil Green's Auknst ?Jow«r« In llQiiId form, to make
yon iitUiflsa there Is nothing Borious
tbs taaWsr with you Sample bottles
»t all (Jr«* storfis.
Wbltowftoa Is life to womlwork ami
dM tb to genus.
Rnrofnlu, Roll rhomn, nrynlpDlnti and
(itlier illHtrcifilnn; eriHitlvo (ilfjvKit n
yield liulekly mid pi rm nnrntly to the
ehMtttiklnK, VinltiiUm
ut Ilurdoi It
Bodily pain loses its oerror if you’vt
a bottle of Dr. Thomas’ Eclectric Oil in
the house. Instant relief in cases of
burns, cuts, sprains, accidents of any
The President of Mexico draws ?50,000 a year, the same as President Mc­
Kinley.
The Foreign Powers.
It is our national ambition to main­
tain peaceful relations with the for­
eign pov/evs at all times. Peace with
all nations is according to the Consti­
tution of the United States. A healthy
condition,of our personal constitution
should be, at all times, our greatest in­
dividual desire. How apt are we to
neglect our own health and through
gross carelessness allow our arch ene­
my—disease, to creep in and break
down all of our fortifications and put
our health to an Ignominious rout.
In time of health pi'epare for sick­
ness. One of the greatest and moat ef­
fective means of fighting the ravages
of coughs, colds, bronchitis, la grippe
and all throat and lung troubles is
found in BAUER'S INSTANT COUGH
CURE. It wins the battle every time
-and has never known defeat.
It is sold under a guarantee to cure
that cough or your money refunded.
Tho wonderCul .sale of BAUER’S IN­
STANT COUGH CURB Is proof posi­
tive that it does tho work. You can
procure a gamplo bottle of this famous
I'emedy tree from 0. H. .Jacobs & Oo,
W EIG H T OF AIVlERiGAN COINS.
.m atlon F p r :
ille 31uoh Spec
I American coin!
m tl> %
liE l'X B lIB ,
(T H tf E S I S S t* ,
A M O T H E B ’S S T O E X
T ells A b out H er Daughter’s lUnesfl
and H o w She w a s R elieved —
T wo L etters to Mrs. Pinkhani.
—ir any one to ku.,.. .ru.,
has tho handling of any great quantity
of coin, for weight is one of the best
"Mbs. Pinkham :—I write to tell y
ways to detect counterfeits. It is very
difficult for couatevfeiters to get the
weights of their spurious coins exactly
in line with the legal weights of the gen­
uine coins.
'The weights of American coins now in
tor does her but voi
circulation are as follows:
little good, if any. I.
Gold Coins.-^The $20 goldpiece, or dou­
rough t I would
thought
ble eagle, weigh? 516 grains; the $10
try
Lydia E-. Pink•y Lydi
goldpiece, or eagle, weighs 3o8 grains;
ham’s Vegetable
tho $5 goldpiece, or half eagle, weighs
ipound, but I
129 grains; the .$3 goldpiece (authorized
Peb. ^1. 1838, and discontinued Sept. 26.
ant yoair advice
1890) weighed 77.4 grains; the $2.50 goldbefore beginning its
piece, or quarter eagle, weighs 64.5
use. I have become
grains, and the ,$1 goldpiece (authorized
very much alarmed
March 3, 18-19, and discontinued Sept.
about her, as she is
26, 1890) ^yeighed 25.8 grains.
getting so wefik.”—
Silver Goins.—The silver dollar weigh­
M bs.
M a t il d a
A.
ed originally 416 grains, and then it was
Ca m p ,
Manchester
reduced to its present weight of 412.5
grains. The trade dollar (authorized
•Mill, Macon, Ga.,
Feb, 12, 1873, and discontinued Peb. 19,
May 21, 1899.
1SS7) w-eigbed 420 grains. The silver
half dollar weiglis 192.9 grains; 'the “Co­
“ D e a r M b s . P in k lumbian” silver half dollar weighs 192.9
ham :— I t affoi-ds ine
grains; the common silver quarter dollar
weighs 96.45 grains; the “Columbian”
great pleasure to tell
silver quarter dollar weighs 96.45 grains;
the silver 20 cent piece weighed 77.16
grains (authorized March 3, 1875, and
discontinued May 2, 1878); the silver
dime weighs 38.58 grains; the silver half pound. After beginning
dime (authorized April 2, 1792, discontin­ your medicine she began to mend
ued Peb. 12, 1873) weighed first 20.8 rapidly and is now able to be at her
grains, then changed to 20.625 grains work. Her menses are regular and
and finally to 19.2 grains, and the silver almost painless. I feel very thankful
3 cent piece lautborized March 3, 1851, to you and expect to always keep your
and discontinued Feb. 12, 1873) weighed Vegetable Compound in my house. It
first 12% grains and then 11.52 grains.
is the best medicine I ever knew. You
Nickel Coins.—The 5 cent nickel piece
(75 per cent copper and 25 per cent nick­ have my permission to publish this
el) .wdshs 77.16 grains; the 3 cent nickel letter i f you wish, it maybe the means
piece (authorized March 3, 1865, and dis­ pf doing others good.”—^Mus. Matilda
continued Sept. 26, 1890) weighed 30 A. Camp, Manchester Mill, Ihtacon, Ga.,
grains (75 per cent copper and 25 per September 18, 1809.
cent nickel); the 1 cent nickel piece (au­
thorized Feb. 21, 1857, and discontinued
April 22,1864) weighed 72 grains (88 per
cent copper and 12 per cent nickel).
, Bronze or Copper Coins.—The old fash­
ioned copper cent (authorized April 2,
1792) w'eighed first 264 grains; it was
then changed to 208 grains, tfin to 168
grains, and its coinage was discontinued
SHAKE INTO YOUR SHOES
Peb. 21, 1857. The copper (or bronze) 2
Allen’s Foot-Ease, a powder. It cures
cent piece (authorized April 22,1804, and painful,
smarting, swollen feet and In­
discontinued Feb. 12, 1873) weighed 96 growing nails, and Instantly takes the
grains (95 -per cent copper and 0 per cent sting out of corns and bunions. It’s the
comfort discovery of the age. Al­
tin and zinc); the present copper cent greatest
len’s Foot-Ease makes tight or new shoes
was authorized April 22, 1864, and feel easy. It is a certain cure for sweating,
weighs 48 grains, of which 95 per cent is
copper and 5 per cent tin and zinc; the
copper half cent (authorized April 2,
1792, and discontinued Feb. 21, 1857)
weighed originally 132 grains; then it
Twenty-five thousand acres of the
was changed, first to 104 grains and final­
ly to 84 grains.—Burton T. Doyle in Mourae Mountains, in. County Down,
Ireland, have been scheduled as an area
Leslie’s 'Weekly,
for military maneuvers for troops in
the Belfast dstrict.
T he T u r k e y a n d th e Pencoclc,
“I have always believed,” the colonel
said, "that animals have far more intelli­
gence than they are commonly credited July our baby was teething and took a
with. I am sure they can talk to one an­ running oft of the bowels and slcimess
other. A case in point: You see that tur­ of the stomach,” says O. P. M. Holli­
key gobbler and hen out there? Let me day, of Doming, Ind. “His bowels
tell you an actual fact about them. Last would move from five to eight times a
summer Mr. Johnson presented me with day. I had a bottle of Chamberlain’s
a very handsome peacock. He was a Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy
splendid bird, and the beauty of bis plum­ in the house and gave him four drops
age was the wonder of the neighborhood, in a teaspoonful of water and he got
“One afternoon I saw him strutting better at once.” Sold by C. E. Patrick
around and making a magnificent dis­ and Miller’s drug store.
play of his gorgeous tall feathers. Mrs.
Turkey looked on admiringly for awhilo
and then-trotted over to where the gob­
bler was quietly napping under a poach
tree. They were engaged for n moment
in earnest conversation. Then Mr. Gob­
bler straightened himself up, stiffened his
wings, gave a strut, and proudly spread
his tail feathers. Madam gave a con­
“My baby was terribly sick with the
temptuous toss of her head and evidently diarrhoea,” says J. H. Doak, of 'Wil­
laughed at him. I could see the fire in liams, Oregon. “We were unable to
the gobbler’s eye, and told Mr. Boubel, cure him with the doctor’s assistance,
my engineer, who was with mo at the aud as a last resort we tried Chambertime, to look out and we would see some
Ln’s Colic,- Cholera and Diarrho—
fun. and we did.
"That gobbler i
where the peaco(
and admiring the s—-iridescent plumage, pounced on him and
never lot him up until he had picked out
the last feather of that gorgeous tail.
The poor peacock after the loss of his tail
took no more interest in life, but pined
away and died in less than a month.”—
Galveston News.
“I had a running, itching sore on my
leg. Suffered tortures. Doan’s Oint-.
A F am ous In k
German papers say that additional pre­ ment took away the burning and itch­
cautions have lately been taken to save ing Instantly and quickly efteefw pe
what remains of the famous ink spot on manent cure.” C. W. Lenhatt, Bowlii
c
the wall of the “Lutherstuhe,” '^in the Green, 0.
Wartburg. "When the reformer •hurled
his inkstand at the devil, he had no con­
ception that he -was supplying food for
the relic hunger of thousands of English ___ / the telephone cables through the
and American pilgrims. It is now no conduits. Several rats were turned
longer possible to scratch .the plaster loose in the conduit with a ferret after
in order to get possession of a small them, to which was attached a cord.
portion of dark colored dust. But lor Through 700 feet of the conduit the
carried and
this protection of the material and visi­
ble record of Luther’s spiritual and in­
visible conflict with the evil one there
was a likelihood that the entire wall
would in time have been carried away.
The iron band around the reformer’s ta­
ble in the same room has effectually sav­
ed it from penknives 6f devout Prot­
is Duilcling a large ouet sugar
estant pilgrims; otherwise the table, like
at Lyons, N. Y., has Ordered 10
his bed and Ills chair, would have been autotrucks of five tons’ capacity,which
frittered away into chips and distribut­ are to he used to cart sugar beets from
ed piecemeal into all quarters of the farms to the refinery. The company
has 5,500 acres of land contracted for,
Three electric ominbilses have also
,
Am O ffe r D e c lin e d .
“Now, Mr. Beefy,” coldly said the been ordered to run between Lyons and
handsome young widow who was doing Sodus Point, on Lake Ontario, a sum­
her own marketing, “while 1 am fully mer resort, to compete with the steam
conscious of the honor you wish to confer railroad.
upon me, I must tell you that I h p e no
present intention of marrying again and
am therefore compelled to refuse the
offer of your hand.”
“Bub-bub-but, mum,” stammerod the
astonished butcher, “I have never offered
you my hand, and—ah"—
"Then why are you trying to weigh it
on tho scales with the moat, sir?”—Spare
Moments. ________________
A Fart of the Cost.
Cyclist—Doctor, I wish you'd make out
my bill.
Doctor—I thouglit you weren’t ready to
Cyclist—I ’m not. But n fellow to whom
I'm hoping to Roll my mnehino azkcd m*
whiU my hleyolo cost me, nnd I can't tell
kirn until I hear from you,
From the fMiirt,
Aitoriipy—Wlioi) (lid your liUHimnd llr»t
show sifiiiK of i»H(inliy, nmduw?
Wife 'I’Uo dny Im mimli'd me. I tlieii
dlscovticd Jm wflM jnnklujf miiy fJt) fi
iupk,-»J.'}iUiii)t;l{))iiA Nurtit AtatriCHiii
SARATOGA
V Arondack
i
Water
m is fe s a a
H. H. (lUOBH & noN,
ItoltlO’fi, fUdVD'flvIltoi N. Y.
l^^tTatTSI? n ,
1000.
WOM/>(N’S WEAPON.
“ What is a woman’s weapon!’^
I asked a clmtming gfrl,
She dropped her lashes shyly
And suoked a vagrant curl.
Then consciously she murmured,
This rosebud newly out,
.•
!
>
/' i f ,
'
The
TRAVEIBRS QUIDE
Olofy of
Woman
FONDA. JOHNSTOWN & GLOVBRSVIHLB R. R. COMPANY.
To take effect 12:01 a. m.
Saturday, July 7, 1900.
'rains Moving South.
am. pm. pm. pm. pm.pm
ilS iii
”
1
!
ii
I
12;25|2':i0)|;i0r8;30,
“ tVhat is a woman’s weapon?”
I asked a poet tlien.
With sudden inspirivtion
Ho seized upon his pen.
“ Oh, I could name a thoueandl”
He cried in accents clear.
“ But woman’s surest weapon,
I grant you, is a tear.”
.......
a iS S iis iS M ^
III"
IS
i
-SUPPLY CO.. 853 Broadw ay, N. Y.
SUNDAYS ONLY—Noi
SHE MATCHES BUTTONS.
In a little bouse just off Hester street,
says the New York Herald, dwells an old
woman who carries on a most peculiar
trade. She is Sarah, or “Old Sal,” .as
she is more familiarly called, and east
side residents know her well, and most of
them patronize her.
On the window pane of her little shop
is a sign which reads: “Buttons Sold In­
side. Any Button Matched, Prom One
Cent to a Niekei.” Her stock in trade
is stored up in thousands of buttons in
little heaps—pearl, glass, bone, jet, shell,
brass, cloth, silk, horn and every other
variety of button made.
It is said the old woman’s business is
profitable and that she has managed to
save about ^'5,000 out of her curious occupatior
the case
buttons —^ ____, __ ____ , ------—
loses one, it is difiiciilt to get it matched
at a notion store. .Those who know me
come along here, and I can always do it
from my stock.
“I have my regular customers, for
most storekeepers around here know me
and send their >customers to me when
they are unable to suit them, and they
seldom go away without the very thing
they aye after.
“Where do I get them from? Many of
them come from junkshops, where on the
rags sold are buttons. All the rag deal­
ers know I pay a fair price for buttons,
and they save them until they have a suf­
ficient quantity, and then they come to
Ilf
S E S S '& ii'
.miSE$GU«E0
IFBEE
........
K e?d".;::
ONLY A GLIMPSE.
Papa—'By the way, who is the lady
■that bowed to us as we left the car­
riage?
Dorothy—'The o-n-ewith the black silk
skirt, the rose petticoat, plaifi silk
waist, purple collarette with silver
clasp, tan coat, black hat with purple
tips, carrying a silver-trimmed card
Papa—^Yes.
Dorothy—I don’t know. I just caught
a glimpse of her.—^Tit-Bits.
liarrhoea and summer complai
TO AVOID THE RUSH.
When a dry goods store advertises
that ribbons to-morrow will cost a cent
less a yard than they cost to-day, all
housework in town to-morrow will he
done up early.—-Atchison Globe.
A MINISTER’S GOOD 'WOHK.
“I had a severe attaclc -or hlHous col­
ic, got a bottle oi Chamberlain’s Colic.
id Diarrhoea Remedy, took
“Another way I obtain them is by vis­
and was entirely cured,”
iting tho dressmakers, who often have
buttons left over, aud their customers
seldom ask for them. These 1 can buy
up very cheap. Although my little board
outside says that the highest price 1
charge is 5 cents, my better class of cus­
tomers do not hesitate to offer me a other doctor who treated him for son
quarter, or even 50 cents, for a button days and gave him no relief, so dl:
that they have lost, in order to make charged him. I ■went over to see him
their garments look neat and complete.” the next morning. He said his bowels
were in a terrible fix, xhat they had
A N a r r o w E sc a iic .
been running off so long that it was al­
One morning, in the summer of 1866, a most bloody flux. I asked him if he
portion of the Fifth United States infan­ had tried Chamberlain’s Colic, Cholera
try, while on their way to New Mexico, and Diarrhoea Remedy and he said,
halted on the prairie. 'They were 800 ‘No.’ I went home and brought him
strong, nnd many of them were veterans my bottle and gave him one dose; told
of the civil war. An ominous sound, like him to take another dose in fifteen or
tho muttering of distant thunder, startled twenty minutes if he did not find relief,
but he took no more and was entirely
Soon a scout came in aud reported that cured.” For sale by C. E. 'Patrick and
an immense herd of buffalo was sweep­ Miller’s drug store.
ing toward tbe camp. The roar heard by
the soldiers was the rattling of the herd’s
hoofs. Soon a black mass was seen bear­
ing down, and behind it a cavalcade of
pursuing Indians, 0(10 strong. They had also her lefts.”
“Is that your last joke?” asked tho
maddened the buffalo, hoping to capture
■■er drummer.
the train by stampeding the frightened
loe-er,” answered the shoemaker,
animals and causing them to overrun the
soldiers.
it’s awl right at that.”~Baltimore
Something caused tho herd to open be­
fore it reached tho soldiers. It passed in
two columns, leaving the infantry, their
wagons, mules and horses between aud
not 600 feet from either mass of the mad­
dened beasts.
____
__ p e rs o n s _____ _ .
.
W’hen the savages saw that their tac­ ngrainst the estate of Margaret A, G-roestics had failed, even their natural self lieck, late of the city of Glovcrsvllle, in
county, deceased, to present uie
suppression failed to prevent an exhibi­ said
same, ^dth the vouchers thereof, to the
tion of their rage. They rode off in sullen suhseriber, the administrator of the
[joods, chattels and credits of said de­
fury.—Old Santa Fe Trail.
ceased, at the law office of J. M. & J.
Drury,
in city of Gloversvllle, In '
T l i e S w is s m a d lio T isc .
county, on or before the first day of DeThe little republic of Switzerland is
noted for its democracy, for its pfQteQtion of the rights of all its people, and
Administrator.
yet some of the customs which prevail
J. M. & J. H. DRURY. ^ ^
Attorney for Administrator
in this Alpine land are ludicrous to peo­
ple of other countries because of the total
f liberty.
once, there are no laws reequitable examination before
ireerating a person for insanity.
All that is necessary to rid oneself ol
disagreeable neighbors—to imprison an
enemy for life perhaps—is to secure the
written assertion of any doctor that the
objectionable person is insane. This cer­
tificate of a physician is suflScient to have
any person seized and confined in an
asylum for the insane.
Of course, if the accused has money oi
friends, it is not difllcult to secure con­
tradictory medical statements, but It
sometimes happens tluit the innocent un­
justly suffer.—London Chronicle,
li iiiniP'®
lli
3s
itis iS tp i
C n a d ic s .
The term “caddies,” or “cadies,” or
“cawdies,” is akin to “cad” and “cadet”
and means messengers or unattached
male servants. Caddies, in fact, were
originally a class of men, found in every
.Scottish tow-11 of any size, who were at
the beck and call of everybody who
nted an odd job done. Hence tl
wanted
they
re at the beck and call of everybody
everybi
who was starting for a game of
and
)f golf, aud
now, thanks to the organization of labor,
they are employed solely by the golfer,—
London (3em.
Joy in life is like the oil in the lamp,
Whei
t’^hen the oil commences _ to fail, the
wick burns with a glimmering red flame,
filling tho air about it with a black
smoke, Life, also, without a little joy,
bu);ns unprofitnbly, filling tho air with
iVlpi'ession and sadness.
Ills view ol It.
"Tho mills of the gods grind slowly,” i K i 'l l o V p ^
romarltod tUo philosopher,
"Goai’od too low, porlmps,” replied the
scorchor. _____ _
OccnsloiiH of advoi'slty bout dlscovor
how great virtue or streiiglh oiieli one
hath. For oecasloiiH do not uioko a man
fi’iill, Im t hIiow wlmfc lie |».
jrorsfHli'a's J« (Taimii lire fiii)ii)i,v Hhm
of tw lstiil eirnw. nnd d n iU s u Jimi’iiiw
inimy have in Im mriJitil to fridriiiuli
thONunhh|»«f0 wofhout.
i w
i i i
WEST SHORE RAILROAD.
It has been computed that there are
100,000 railway locomotive^ in the
world at the present time.
More than 100,000,000 Chinese, it l8
said, are engaged either directly or in­
directly in tho ten Industry,
GRAND HOTEL
Broadway ft 81»t„ Niwr York.
Refitted with Eleotrio, lea nnd
'IgemtiiiR plants, modem plumblnf,