THE FUNEREAL MONTH MARCH. OF An obnervant metropolitan bjrie suy< that he can tell one’s physical condition by the state of his hair! The Bible tells us that with his hair gone Samson lost his strength. The Rmiaus considered baldness a seriou affliction and Julius Ca-.ar was never quite satisfied witli himself because his poll was bare. The face, however, is the open book and one can readily trace in its various expressions, lints, changes and com­ plexion the state of the system. The eye that is unusually bright and yet has a pallid brightness, the face upon whose chieks nature paints a rose of singular beauty and flush, more maiked in contrast with the ala­ baster appearance of the forehead and nose and lower part of the face, is one of those whom the skill* d physician will tell you will some day dread the funereal month cf March, because it is then that consumption reaps its richest harvest. Consumption they tell us is caused by this that and the other thing, by microbes in the air, by micro-organisms in the blood, by deti cient nutrition, by a thousand and one things, but whatever the cause, decay begins with a cough and the remedy that will effectually stop the cause of that cough cures the disease of the lungs. That is all there is of it. The cough is an evidence of a wast­ ing. To stop it effectually, a remedy i must be used.that will search out the cause, remove that and-then heal the lung and do away with the cough. This is the power, special to itself, possessed alone by Warner’s Log Cabin Cough and Consumption remedy. This is no new tangled notion of nar­ cotics and poisons, but as old-fash­ ioned preparation of balsams, roots and herbs, such as was used by our ancestors many years ago, the formula of which has been secured exclusively ly the present manufacturers at great trouble and expense. It is not a me:e cold dryer. It is a system-searcher and upbuildcr and a consumption ex- pellant. Where others fail, it wins, because it gets at the constitutional cause and removes it from the system. J. W. Henshaw, of Greensboro, Pa., on Jan. 15, 1888, reported that “he had derived more real benefit for the length of time, from Warner’s Log Cabin Cough and Consumption remedy than he had for years from the best state physicians.” If you have a cough, night sweats, “positive assurance in your own mind that you, oh—you, have no cousump tion,” and yet lose flesh, appetite, courage, as your lungs waste away, you may know that soon the funereal month of March will claim you, unless promptly and faithfully you use the article named. If other remedies have failed try this one thoroughly. If others are offered, imist the more on trying this unequaled preparation. Some persons are prone to consump­ tion and they should never allow tl.e disease to become seated. WIGS AND WIG-MAKERS. Some Facts About tlie Art of Manipulat* lug Human llair. A barber says that one of the few kinds of woman’s work which is not overcrowded, and at which competent girls can always earn good wages, is that which includes the working, cut­ ting and general management of the human hair. The hair trade is dull now. After the holidays people will have more time to attend to their hair. The average pay of female hairdressers is $8 a week. Sometimes it reaches as high as $18 per week, and sometimes goes down to $5. A girl who under­ stands the business thoroughly can command $18 a week anywhere. One hairdresser in this city used to employ 140 girls, and paid out $700 weekly in wages. The p fit lies in false hair. Women that have their hair cut short and are tired of it, buy wigs or “switches” to wear in the street Those- whose hair is poor, or who suffer from baldness, wear false hair at all times. Girls who confine their attention to hair-working alone, earn from $8 to $10 a week. It is an art that needs skill and no small amount of patience and perseverance to succeed witli. The hair with which the wigs are made is collected by com­ mercial travelers in Germany and France. England ana Belgium are poor markets for hair, not becauso of the scarcity, for both English and Bel­ gian women have tine hair, but because they will not sell it. When collected it is put- through a cleaning process, severe enough to fetch the dirt out of an elephant’s hide, and then dyed several times over. The best hair­ dressers never buy hair from the head or from private hands. Perfectly white hair is rare and com­ mands almost any price. Natural curling is also of considerable value. A good wig of white hair costs $40. The material of which these wigs are made is clipped from the goat and seldom from the human head. A plenteously soft silky kind of snow- white hair comes from the Angora rab­ bit A perfectly white and abundant wig of human hair would be worth at least $1,000. Hair cut from the head after death is never used by any good hairdresser. It can not be used to any advantage, as it will neither curl nor twist Hair can be proved by pulling It to its utmost capacity. When tosened it will contract to its former ngth.—X K Mail end Express. A LCCKV TRIAL. The good Fortune which followed fair treatment. San Francisco, February 29,1888. D kab Bn: It affords me great pleasure to send you this voluntary statement of my experience In testing the merits of Joy 's Saraapari Ila. For the past five years I have been troubled with an ex. ceedingly sluggish liver, and within the past two years it has brought* with in its trail a thoroughly disordered stomach. Including io^a of appetite and distress after eating, pains in the back and kidneys, and boi s around my neck and face. I have tried several remedies which are advertise«! as specially f< r the liver, and could never get mor*- than temporary relief of about a week or two. 1 waa recommended to try a bottle of J ot 'a Vegetable Sarsaparilla as a test, and while taking the Aral bottle I became conviarced of its merits for I could feel it was w -rklng a change in me. I have taken five bottles, and d «ring ths’ time my troubles have left me. F. eiyth.ng is workin« fnil and regular, in fact It has Hennaed, purified and hr* M me up generally. I feel like a new man. T'-uare at per fn-t liberty to use thia as yuu see fit, or you can refer whom you please t. With Beamish, corner Third and Market streets, bau V mueiaee. the limekiln club . Resident Gardner Induces a Broth or tn Change His Opinion. “If Jdge P.2a itu W aterfalI ar’ in de h ill dis eavnin’ I should like to hev iiiin step dis way,” laid Brother Gard- eur Art Association (limited) for the best specimen of an axe-handle made by hand, and he went forward under the idea that he was to be compli­ mented before the club. “Brudder Waterfall,” sahl the Presi­ dent, as the member stood before him with Ids weight on his left leg, “I war’ in de back ea- d of a grocery sto* las’ nite, beatin* K irnel Cahoots fo* straight games of checkers, when you cum in. D) fust thing vo i inquir’d fur was white sugar, an I sot dar’ an* heard you purchase mocha coffee, cur­ rant jell an’ ninety-eent tea. Ar’ I k’ rect, Brudder Watcrfall ?’ * “Yes, sah.” “How’s de house rent?” “A leetle behind, sail.” “An’de chill*on’s shoos an’clothes?” “Party bad off.” “An* you*9 in debt to de wood-yard an’ de grocer?” “Slightly, gah; but times is power­ ful liar I dis winter.” ‘ Sirtin; an’ who’s to blame fur it?” “D • rich, sah.** “Exactly. If it wasn’t fur a few rich men in dis ken try who want to show off deir cutters wo shouldn’t hev any winter. If do rich didn’t own houses to rent an’ refuse to rent’em fur nnflin’, we poo’ folks could gil ahead. De rich are to blame dat you h< vn’t got a big woodpile, a cellar full of pork and taters. an’ dat your fam­ ily am not dressed in broadcloth Isn’t dat do way you figger, Brudder Waterfall? ’ “Yes, sah.’* “An* you doan* nrgy dat white su­ gar an’ ninety-cent lea ar’ any to- rich fur de blood of a man airnin sis or seben dollars a weekP” "No, sah. I ain’t rich, but I’ze Ju­ ns good as rich folks.” ••I see. Brudder Waterfall, please step into de ante-room. If, arter <1- lapse of a few minutes, you conclud lat brown sugar an’ apple sass an' Rio c< ff ?e ar’ mo’ in keepin’ wid : poo’ man’s wages, pleaso gin thru« raps on de doah.*’ The audience waited. It wasn’t minute and a half before the rap were heard, and Brother Waterfn stepped out a great deal the worse f<- wear. He closely resembled a ma who had been held by the ear am kicked by a No. 10 brogan. He wn breathing hard ami much excited, bn he managed to say: “My opinyuns hev undergone i complete change, sah.” “Worry well,” quietly replied th president. “Some folks kin be woi ober by argyment, an’ odders need : sudden shock. You kin sot down Judge.”— Detroit Free Press. A LEAP-YEAR ROMANCE. Ernestine’s Wooing, or Love Under th Chestnut Tree. CHAPTER I. It was evening, and the lights froi »he silver candelabra came softl through the rich Venetian glass whic hedged them in, and touched with it lender warmth a youth and maiden standing silent amid the rich appor lionments of the great drawing-roon of the girl’s palatial home. CHAPTER II. “Henry, will you be mine?” It was the girl who spoke, and si lence, shattered into a thousand frag ments, fell crumbling to the floor. The young man blushed scarlet, am quickly hid his face in his hands. With loving, gentle strength sb ook them one by one away and gaze« fondly into his trembling, sweet brow eyes. “Ah, love,” she whispered, “loo’ at me. Look deep into my soul an see the heart that b<^ts its sweeten cadences to the measures of youi mime.” She took his sensitive white hand in her own, and modestly as the dais looks upward to the morning sun he turned his eyes to hers. There was a strange thrill in his hear , a burning in his cheeks, an in- l escribable power 'ifting him upward, upward, into a soft, sweet air, which tilled his very being; as the fragrance <>f fir and balsam comes with life and Ikope to the weak ihd wasted con­ sumptive. chapter in. “With all my heart, Ernestine.” Sweet as the music of rippling waters or muffled silver bells; sweet and low as the organ harmonies whimpering to each other among the carvings and ihe softened frescoes of some grand »Id cathedral choir, were the young man’s word9. and they brought to Ernestine such peace and rest as until this day her heart had never known. •O:i, H’*nry.” she said, and he! I ut her hands to him. Again the bright young blood surged to his cheeks, and wiih a glad liitle cry he threw liims If inio her arms, and like a tired bird, he nestled his head ii|>on her shoulder and shut his eyes to all the world to dream of Heaven. CHAPTER rv. There let us leave them. We can afford to leave them be­ cause neither of them appear to be left — particularly the glrL CHAPTER v. MOTHER OF HEROES. a Nobl« Woman Who Governed ae Well •» Loved Her Children. When the news of Captain Perry*? victory on Lake Erie reached his moth er’s home in Newport, an old farmei on the island said: “It was Mrs. Pern who licked the British.” Living in th« lame village with the Perrys, he had observed the excellent discipline main­ tained by their mother during the ab­ sence of their father on the sea. Then were five boys of them, all govern©'I with firmness and good sense, tempered with tender affection, by one of the best of mothers, and all five became officer* of the United States navy. Sarah Alexander was the maiden name of their wise mother. She was an Irish girl, twelve years of age, living at Newry in County Down, when she first saw young Christopher Perry, an American prisoner of war quartered at Newry. He was a boy of fifteen when the American revolution began, and enlisted at once in the little Col­ onial navy. Captured soon by a British cruiser, he endured for three months the horrors of a prison-ship in New York harbor, anchored near the spot where the great Brooklyn bridge now casts its broad shadow across the East river. He escaped with “little besides his bones,” but was soon afloat again, and remained in the naval service as long as the struggling nation had an armed vessel on the high seas. It was in 1780 that he was captured again while cruising in the Irish Sea,and was carried into Newry, where, being released on parole, he met the pretty Irish girl who was destined to be his wife and the mother of our gallant Perrys. Two years later, drawn by the light of her eyes, he shipped as mate on board a Philadelphia vessel bound for Ireland, where he had the exquisite joy of receiving her on board his ship as a passenger, bound on a vis­ it to one of her uncles living in Phila­ delphia. This was a piece of luck so extraor­ dinary that a novelist would hardly dare to introduce its parallel into a ro­ mance. The young sailor improved the golden chance, and before the ves­ sel reached the American shore thp lovers were engaged. They were mar­ ried at Philadelphia in 1784, when Per­ ry was twenty-three and his bride was sixteen. From her have descended many naval officers, besides the f inious Cap­ tain Oliver H. Perry, whose victory on Lake Erie is one of the most gallant and picturesque exploits of naval war­ fare. She was a lady of beautiful form and face, as well as of vigorous health and great stamina. Her lovely brown eyes, her rich dark hair, her perfect teeth, her firm and graceful carriage of body, are not yet forgotten by the few living persons who had opportunities of see­ ing her. She trained her boys to the practice of virtue, real virtue, courage and fidelity, a just regard for the rights of others, respect for age and services. She was a warm patriot, and felt most keenly the insults to the flag of her adopted country which led to the war of 1812. Her special merit as a mother was that she governed as well as loved her boys. Most mothers are fond and affectionate enough, and she, too, was one of the loving mothers; but she did not permit her fondness to relax her discipline. She exacted a prompt and complete obedience to reasoL.ible commands. She main­ tained in her home the same discipline, just and firm, kind and considerate, which her noble sons were famous for in the vessels they commanded.— Youth's Companion. LEANING * TOWERS. Why They May Be Considered the Results of Accidents. The four furnaces that are in course of con struction at Emsley City, near Birmingham. Ala., are to produce 7*) tons of pigiron a day. Two thousand men will be employed. This great establishment will cost nearly *1,000,000 for construction. _ __________ FISH DESCRIBED BY HUGO, Is not a more tenacious monster than malaria, whether it takes the form of chills and fever, bilious remiltant. ague cake or dumb ague. L ke the octopus of the story it clasp* ths vic­ tim in ite tentacute, and ruds him «loser and closer in a horrible embrace. Attacked with Hoatelter’s Stomach Bitter», however, it grad ually relaxes ite tremendous grip, finally aban­ dons it. «nd the quondam sufferer, liberated at last rejoices in the sense of new born freedom, engendered by the restoration of complete health Dvapcpsia. too, and constipation, those old and remorseless enemies of the human fam­ ily give ground, and are Hnally driven from thè field by this Napoleon of remedies, the greatest, the purest in the family pharmaco IMBia. Kheuniatism succumbs to it. so do kid ney troubles. The nerves, when overstrained, regain quietude and vigor by its aid. and the ability to rest tranquilly and eat with seat are increased by it. Resort to it in time and avoid unnecessary suffering. THE DEVIL A curled walnut tree felled in the Coal River Valley, West Virginia, was cut up into veneer­ ing and sold for *1,600. THE FLYING DOVE OF PEACE. A richly frosted quivering flying Dove. A Dream of Life screen calendar. An im­ ported ideal head. An imported f oeted now scene and a full set of magnificent floral cards. Fourteen artistic pieces. Sent to anyone who will buy from a drug­ gist a l»x of the genuine D b C. M’L ane ’ s C elebrated L iver P ills (price cte.) and mail us the outside wrapper f om the box with 4 cents in stamps. Write your address plainly. F leming B ros .. P itts burgh , P a ._______ ______ In New York city the building trades have forty-five unions, with a membership of 65,000. HAPPY HOMES. M uch has been written and said about how to make home happy. Tht- moralist and the preacher have hacknqyed--|J you are really going to marry old Moneybags?” said a friend to a Now York belle. "Yes. indood; but It’s merely a dollars and sonso ar­ rangement; ho furnishes tlie dollars and 1 the smse, you know." —Tlie Freshness of Youth. — When we're getting along tn years. And more ot the world we see. It almost makes us weep to think How fresh we used to be. Wakelee’s Squirrel and Gopher Exterminator. Try it, and prove the best is the oheapest. Wakelee & Co., San Francisco. Nothing 1» known to science ut all coin;arab!e ( o the cuticura R emedies in their marvellous roperties ut clean ing, [Uiifying and beautifying ho skin, and In curing torturing, disfiguring, itch- ig, scaly and pim; ly disease i sf the skin, scalp and >lood, with loss of hair from infancy to age. C uticura , Pae great Skin Cure, and C uticuea oap , an exquisite Skin B.autifier, pre;>are«Skin Diseases," fid pages, 50 illustrations, and 100 testimonials. HTI SITED with the loveliest delicacy is the skin I 111 bathod with C utiuu & a M kdicatkd S oap . rIIwl D||taPLE9, blackheods, chapjæd and oily akin prevented by Cuncuna M bdioatkd S oap . ALL The United States and Canada export to Eng­ land $750,000 worth of apples a year. A NERl'i TONIC. Paines ♦'KA'WL.I. or IT4 Its thousands of cures are the best advertise­ ment of Dr. .Sage’s Catarrh Remedy. AN ALTERATIVE. Egg stains on silver can be taken off with table salt and a wet rag. It drives out the poisonous humors of tho blood purifying and enriching it, and so overcoming those diseases resulting from Impure or impover­ ished blood. RELIABLE AND ALWAYH THE NAME. B randreth ’ s P ills are the oldest, safest aud best blood purifier and purga- known. They are purely vegetable, there­ fore h xrniless. They »re al wav» the same and al ways produce the same effect. Other purgatives require increased doses and finally cease acting altogether. A course of one or two of B randreth ’ s P ills taken each night is a positive cure f r constipa­ tion, headrehe and a 1 bilious disorders. If you can’t take them plain get them sugar coated. LAXATIVE. Acting mildly but surely on the bowels it cone hubituul constipation, and pramotetaregular hiil.lt. Itstrengtli- ens tho stomach, and aids digestion. (ompound aiil a For The NERVOUS The DEBILITATED Art?n 1 lie riULU. Sweet potatoes require nearly twice the time that Irish potatoes do either to bake or boil. Man want« but littio here below, But wants that little strong. This is especially true of a t.uige. The av erage man or woman does not precisely hanker for it. as a rule, but when taken, wishes it to be prompt, sure and eflbetive. Dr. Pierces Pleasant Purgative Pellets leave nothing to be desired in point of efficacy, and yet their action is totally free from any unpleasant symptoms, or disagreeable after-effects. Purely vegetable, perfectly harmless. Leather chair seats may be revived by rub bing them with well-beaten white of egg. “Brown’« Bronchial Troche«” will relieve Bronchitis, Asthma, Catarrh and Throat Disea es. J. H. Fl MH, Asayer and Analytical Chemist, Laboratory, lOtt First st., Portland. Or. Analyses made of all substances. Rates for ai»aying gold and silver ores >1.50. Pacx ages sent by mail or express promptly attended to, and returns made. Celery and Coca, the prominent ta­ rred lent*, are the best and safest Nerve Tonics. It strengthens and quiets the nervous system, curing Nervous Weakness, Hysteria, Sleep­ lessness, Ac. DIURETIC. In its composition the best and most active dlureticsof the Materia Medica are i< uni >in<’d scientifically with other effective remedies for diseases of the kidneys. It can be relied on to give quick relief and speedy cure. Hundred «of testimonial« have been received from pemons who have uned this remedy with remarkable benefit. HendTor circulars, giviu< ____ _ ’ WELLS, RICHARDSON A CO., Prop*» IiUlU.lNOTON. VT. NEED IT! ure and immedlute relief In all cases of Sprains. Bruises, Contusions, Ahrnlslons, burns, Scalds, etc. Prevents Inflamina- matlon, and effects marvelous cures._____ Those who suffer from Asthma, Plenrisy, Sore Eyes or Sore Throat, will find It an lix-ninparable remedy, as a single trial will prove convincing._________ ne who suffer« from Bolls, Hun Ions, or Painful Corns, cannot afford to be without a bottle of this most soothing remedy, which give» Instant relief, ______________ Piles, Indigestion, Nervous Dyspepsia Tooth­ ache, Earache, Inflammatory Kheumatlsni. and ¡ill Red slid Inflamed Swellings, are S O p fl MEN S FURNISHING GOODS, 232 Kearny St., San Francisco Shirts, Underwear, Suspenders, hosiery, Gloves, Neckwear, The Leaning Tower of Pisa, in Italy, Collars, Cuffs, Etc. is one of the architectural wonders ot Invalids the world. It has been made familiar Mtaff or Eighteen Experienced and hklll- to most readers by pictures and by de­ ful 1'liyalclnu» and Hurgeoua. IlliiHtrated Catalogue, with Rule« __ readily cured by this magic application.___ scriptions. If it were the only ex­ for Self Muawurement. Moiled Free. ALL CHRONIC DISEASES A SPECIALTY.— CONSUMPTION SUBELY CUBED. »THOUSANDS.« I’atientri t r<-nt< A.TETNTE I >. nervous prostration, exhaustion, debility and or stay at home, and in various sixes, that the upper story does not lean so Chronic Caaes 40 Years’Standing Cured ■leepleMnefM, In either æx. Favorite Prescrip­ The only practical Corn Harvester in the world, pat styles and quantities. Just figure out Perinanr n tion Is sold by druggists under our positive much as those below, as if an attempt •■□ted by Win if K tricofe, of Martinsbunrh, W Va what is required to do all those things ffuarantee. See wrapper around bottle. s offered for sale on the Pacifi Hlope Can be manu fMd ly Dru-i(jöYi and Dealer k Evrrywhfre. were made to remedy the defect in the COMFORTABLY, and you can make a fair fact ire-ogress of building. Another circum­ PRICE $1.00, rou «3.00. description and testimonials GUIDE, which will be sent upon Bend 10 cents in stamps for Dr. Pierce’« large stance which leads to the same conclu­ To CA PIT A I.IHTa AWb B a LRAMBN For a good Invest receipt of 10 cents to pay postage, Treatise on Diseases of Women (100 pug« % ment in patents or p »tented articles, add«eMi C HAN sion is the fact that the largest bell, ,overed). Adf which was begun in A. D. 1110. It in» It to all sufferer«. UNH 'w faviwable terms. ShsatelOs UTT à. J. MTOMF.B, l.f)^ is over nine feet out of perpendicular, Vie Pai Siimi DecsHr, III md is one hundred and sixty-one feet r> r ARTI.Bli.IOtn «nd CATHAHT10. PRICE tl.OO. a high. In this case the foundations set- klFINWAY KRA.WM'H, PKAMK A Sold by Druggist» j r<. 11 a 1.1.’H □ ILIUHAL MACH. Gabler. Hoenish led so fast that the tower was nevet SICK HEADACHE, Burdett Orsans. hand Instrumenta Ml A Al O 1* Premium«. ff/Mln ure, IBIMons Headache, completed. The other tow er at Bolog­ PULMONARY «took of Hheet Music and Books Bands si BALSAM Planos; Ml A Nl IK 20 ye‘rl Kotal.ll.lir4 n . W Dlzzlne«*« <’ois«tlpa- Kastern PrioM MATTHIAS GRAY CXA. na is three hundred and twenty-one I I FH Iff Vs Steal Tuning I)e- A BVPBKIOS SBMBbV FOB «traet. Han Fr*nH«rv tlon. Ind Igeallon, Hce, in uar In no other Plano, by which our Plan«« eet high, and leans over six And n hall C0U0H1. COLD’. IVCIPIIHT CORgUMPTIOl« and Bilious Attacks« stand In tune 20 y ears, good for 100 ; not affected promptly cur»-d by Hr. And .!1 Thr.^t n>4 Lun, Tnmblm. cet from the perpendicular. — Youth t by climate. No wood to split, break, swell, shrink, Pierce’s Pleasant Meld V, all l»rw«Blii«- r»r »« «'rate, crack, da<-ay, or wear out ; we guarantee It. He- 1 om panion. Purgative Pellets. 25 gant Rneewood Caaes, 8 strings, dt.uble repeating j. a. cates a co., npnt« « vl'il, bv Br» waists. Setion; finest Ivory keys; the Famous ANTIMELL N S] ’ Hotel and Surgical Institute SHIRTS TO ORDER, |1. The Van Monoiscar MITCHELLS MAGIC LOTION! JUAÇOBS OH O Pierce s . Thu* do we see what tlmre is in L »ap fear to the hungering and thirsting oul of the voting woman who know Antiquarian Lnacovery- rsorziHroBs. trough to embrace hor opportunities. 417 Manaease MtM MAS FRAMI'IIH’O Beneath the Church of flan Giovanni And ei. braces them.— Washington e Peole at Rome. Italy, a Roman hotme ELY’S Critic- erected du ing the fourth century ia living excavated. The walla of the LY’S central apartment are adorned with pio- — Dr. C. A. White thinks he h:i? turea in a fair state of preservation; r’artKr-rw.rktl solved the mystery of what bee m* i two among them represent Christian va» attrrrt i ota of all «he antie.s that deer shed even subjects—namely, Moses taking off his from in Htad and pain veer. A though the antlers when lb« »hoe. in the presence of the Most High, deer is killed before they are removed jnd a woman in prayer, clothed with will withe ami all weathers for year* ■unic, veil, necklace of pearls, with her Cream Balm I va- it is very rarely that a pair that hav arms outstretched. Tnis is the first relvred. Every been -hod are found. Dr. White as I Roman dwelling found adorned with trarr of my rr,/d serfs that he has discovered a • nail Christian pictures, which have hitherto tra» removed. H C. Clark, Id IHvi leen found in the catacombs only. It viern insect that attack the antlers a If. Y dp • to Father Germano, a monk, that praiotVt afire a ithin a short time after they are she lies r yt them by borrowing tbsougi th. world is indebted for these excava­ A „ tions so interesting te the historian anl through the » a . aid aatinnerisa.— t'enrAcsfcv Ctuntr. CREAM BALM. atarr H SEEN QLD SORBS AND ULCERS UU. »« m «tAnling ^ar»d Ly ALLF.X’N IU KMI k R M4LVF.. Ita«v«r' C'ali or write for Catalogue, free. T. M. ANTIMKLL PIANO CO., Mannfartnrers, Odd Fellows’ Hall, Mar. By Me M.4« by J p All«*. A« /«nl. |ist and Msvsnth Mrèsts, fisa Fran< is- o. 4 N AGENT WANTED IN EVERY TOWN \ on the PttcMIc CoMt for Kimball's Liquid Use Star Re Meltim Roller Composition r ISO 5 CURE f ORCONSUMPTION Northwestern Detective Bureau, HKATTLE. W. T. The N»eauttfyfne on r*m->vir< tan. «untan, d rochases of ths atte «Ht« of «neírty and the W at M senta par botua ■rwdhtW M WfRDOM I