Cent'a=Word Column. 



The rate is uniformly one cent for each 

 word, each month; no advertisement however 

 small will be accepted for less than twenty 

 cents, and must be paid in advance. Count 

 the words and remit with order accordingly. 



Ft)R SALE.— 1280 acres Timber Land: plenty of 

 water; fine for im extensive Bee Ranch. Sea.son 

 June to November. Address William Smith, 

 Cameron, Kern County. Calif. 



WILL SELL half interest in my apiary, pineap- 

 ple and orauge plantation. Good apiarist will 

 have exclusive charge. D. DALY, La Gloria, 

 Cuba. 8-2t 



WANTED— To exchange six-month trial »ub- 

 scription to The American Bee-Keeper for M 

 cents in postage stamps. Address, Bee-Keepcr. 

 Falconer, >f. Y. 



FOR SALE— A Htwkeye, Jr. Camera Com 

 plete. Uses both film and plates. Cost $8.86 

 will lell with leather case for $3.50 cash. A^ 

 dress Empire Washer Co., Falconer. N. Y. 



A TANDEM BICYCLE (for man and lady 

 cost $150, in first-class condition, was buili 

 to order for the owner. Tires new. Will sell 

 for $25 cash. Satisfaction guaranteed. Ad- 

 dress J. Claybome Merrill, 130 Lakeview ave.. 

 Jamestown, N. Y. 



AGENTS WANTED to sell advertising novel 

 ties, good commission allowed. Send for ctt»- 

 logrus and terms. American Manufacturing 

 Concern, Jamestown, N Y. 



Send for onr Free Catalogue 



of many useful articles. 



Enclose stamp for mailing. 



MILWAUKEE NOVELTY CO., 

 »tf Milwaukee, Wis 



Trade Marks 



Designs 

 Copyrights Slc. 



Anyone sending a sketch and de»cription may 

 quickly a«cert»in our opinion fp»« whether an 

 invention is probably p»tent«bl». Communica- 

 tions strictly conBdeiitlal. Handbook on Patent* 

 »ent fre*. Oldest asrnicT for lecurine patents. 



Patents taken throneh Munn tt Co. receive 

 special notice^ without o narc e. in th» 



Scientific American. 



A handsomelT illustrated weekly. Lareest cir- 

 culation of any scientific journal. Terms, $3 a 

 year : four months, $1. Sold l>y all newidealera. 



MUNN iCo."'"'"""' New York 



Branch Office. 625 F St., WashLnBton, D. C. 



HE LIBRARY OF 

 ''Modern 

 Eloquence'' 



Stands without a peer. Nothing hke it 

 was ever attempted before. Edited by one 

 of the greatest Modern Leaders of 

 Men, Ex-Speaker xnos. B.Reed, 



(assisted by a corps of editort famous 

 wherever English is spoken), MOUtKrM 

 ti^UQUENCE is the masterpiece of a 

 man who has lived close to those who 

 have made and are making the history of 

 our times. . 



In these volumes the reader runs the 

 whole gamut of eloquence, from laughter 

 to tears, from nathos to ridicule; keen 

 satire is mingled with unctuous humor; 

 the strong, trenchant utterance of the 

 thinker with the droll fancies of the hum- 

 orist. ,11. 



We see the soeaker, we hear the laugh- 

 ter, we surrender to the spell of the 

 words, we feel the tense silence as tlie 

 speaker mounts in his sublimest flights, 

 then hear the outburst of applause as the 

 audience rises with the speaker to his 

 climax. , 



We sit at the banquet board where the 

 greatest after-dinner orators, wits and 

 humorists are at their best. We listen to 

 those maister-minds who from the plat- 

 form have swayed multitudes and _ held 

 men's minds captive by She magic of 

 their words. 



Here DEPEW puts you off your guard 

 with a laugh, before his keen blade, with 

 a quick thrtfet, drives home the truth. 

 Here may be seen something of that mar- 

 velous power and poise by which 

 BEECHER, single-handed and single- 

 voiced, conquered and calmed the howl- 

 ing mobs in English halls, and won from 

 holstile crowas a hearing for the Union 

 cause. Here the reader, as he hears the 

 thrill of GRADY'S immortal words on 

 "The New South," realizes something 

 of the wondrous change of national 

 feeling wrought by "the velvet splendor 

 of that mellow tongue," anu how it was 

 by the banquet speech in a single night 

 the speaker "leapd into national fame." 

 Here such men as GLADSTONE and 

 ChwATE, EVARTS and CURTIS, 

 HILLIS and GOUGH. reveal in their 

 words sometihing of the secret which 

 even' aspiri.e man longs to possess — the 

 secret of power over the minds of men. 



These are the books for the home — for 

 the leisure hour — for the days and nightis 

 of prenaration — for an evening's enter- 

 tainment—for the future. They are filled 

 wifh living thoughts for living men. 



A portfolio of 80 specimen pages and 

 Dhotosravure illu'stratinns, printed on 

 .Japanese voHum will be sent. free. 



JOHN^D. MORRIS & CO., 



Publishers, 



Suite 127 Commonwealth BIdg., 



PHILADELPHIA. 



