That Tired Feeling Just as surely indicates that the blood is lacking in vitality and the elements of health as does the most obstinate humor that the vital fluid is full of impurities. Hood's Sarsapurilla cures that tired feeliug by enriching and vi talizing the blood, oreatinga good appetite 'and invigorating every organ of tho body. Hood's Sarsaparilla "I had that tireil feeliug all tho time. 1 took Hood's Barsaparilla and It made me feel like a new man. My wife was all ruD down aud could not do hev work. She has tnken four bottles of Hood's and is In good health." 0. Bowi-et, Manville, It. I. Hood's Sai-sanarllla l sold by all druggists. Got Hood's and only Hood's. hatred Urountl- The ground on which a foreign leg: - tlon stands is considered as belonging to the country whose flag floats from the legation roof. Supposing a mem ber of a foreign legation In London committed a murder, all we could do would be to "suggest" (a favorite dip lomatic word, always used, except in relation to China) that the offender should be sent back to his native coun try and punished there. Some time ago, when a certain gentleman, whose name was well known at the time, was kidnaped into the Chinese legation, an Inspector from Scotland Yard Imme diately proceeded thither and released the prisoner. Tills was a most serious breach of international law, and was Intensely discussed "in diplomatic cir cles." Since the Chinese legation is part and parcel of China, an invasion of the celestial empire was thus made by a Setoland Yard ofllcial. —Chambers' Journal. Anil Wouldn't Shukct tha Stove. Wife—"l had to discharge the cook today." Husband —"What for," Wife —"Oh, she got too tender hearted t# do her work properly." Husband— "ls it possible?" Wife—"Yes; only this morning she refused to beat the eggs or whip Uke organs." Gained Pounds "DEAR MRS. PINK HAM— I was very thin and my friends thought I was in consumption. "Had continual head aches, backache and fall ing of uterus, and my eyes were affected. "Every one noticed how poorly i looked and I was advised to take Lydia E. Ptnkham's Vegetable Oompound. "One bottle relieved me, and after taking eight bottles am now a healthy woman; have gained In weight from 95 pounds to 140; everyone asks what makes me so stout."— MRS. A. TOLLE, 1946 Hil ton St., Philadelphia, Pa. Mrs. Plnkham has fifty thousand suoh letters grateful women. |Try Crain-O! I vTry Crain-O! Ask yonr Grocer to-day to show I yon a package of GRAIN-O, tho new . . food drink that takes tbe place of coffee. The children may drink it without i injury as well as the adult. All who !j try it, like it. GRAIN-O has that rich seal brown of Mocha or Java, but it is made from pure grains, and the most delicate stomach receives it without distress. the price of coffee. 15 cents and 25 cents per package Sold by all grocers. ? Tastes like CofTee Looks like CofTee Insist that your grocer gives yon GRAIN-O j Accept no imitation. ! RBI IN CHILDREN ARE veritable demons, w S2 ■ S Baud must be quickly WW m IBB4W removed or serious HBBnBHB results may follow. The medicine which for the past 60 years has hold the record for successfully rid ding children of these pests is Frey's Vermifuge—made entirely from vege table products, containing no calomel. 25 ets. at druggists, country stores or by mai I, ■tost paid. E. A 8. Fiiky, Baltimore, Mil. r. N. U. 18, 'OO. DROPSY 5Sr,?" c 1557. : EM" Uookol testimonial* and 1(> days' tosstme.,* Free. Sr. H. H. OILHEN H BOMB, Ho* B. AlisaU. Or THEIR QUARREL. IVhy Hit Sweetheart Couldn't Love Htm ah of Tore, "After all," he said to himself, as lie walked along tbe avenue, "I may as woll give in. It's a small matter, any way, and not worth coming between us, even for an hour." They had quarreled the night be fore. One thing bad led to auotber, until be had left her, outwardly cold and inwardly passionately angry. They wero both a bit obstinate, may be. But be had time to think it over, and tho folly of it burst upon him in all of its ridiculous aspect. Because be had mildly hinted that a first cousin of hers—a ruther aggrossive chap, too —should not, considering their en gagement, take her to the matinee, she had resented the suggestion with some sarcasm. Not that ho particu larly minded, as ho tried to explain, but lie thought she should have told hiin first. He bad replied to her cut ting words that she, of course, could do as she pleased, but that her respect for him should at least have guarded lier from this. Whereupon she had risen upon her dignity and the storm burst in all its fury. But now he would admit he was wrong and have it over with. The first cousin wasn't formidable enough to inspire bim with any jealousy; aud as for tbe principle of the thing, why, that was something that could bo abandoned easily enough. There was a slight strain of pride, mingled with a natural humbleness in his voice, as he came ovor and stood by her as she stiffiy entered the room, with her face averted and no signs of surrender on her part. "Dearest/' ho said quietly, "I was wrong last night. Believe me, I did not mean all that I said. It wasn't that I was jealous, but I thought- Well, never mind what I thought. But, of courso, I had no right to rule you iu such a manner, or to be so ar bitrary. Will you forgive ino?" Her eyes met bis, slowly and in some surprise. There was a slight pause. "Why, yes," she said at last; "I suppose I shall have to." It was natural and proper then that ho should kiss her. What happeuod during the next half hour is of 110 consequence, except in so far as it differed from what usually happens when two people who love each other are alouc. Aud that it did differ he felt acutely to himself, though he was not able to define tho reason. She was not the same. She had accepted his apology with apparent grace, and yet there was lacking that subtle something which she had never before withheld from him. "Dear," he said, finally "what is the matter? Don't you love me?" "Why, of course," she replied. Ho shook bis bead. "You don't love me as much as you did," be per sisted, "before—before last night." "Well, no," she admitted. A tear stood in her eye. "Tell rae, darling," be said, "what is the matter?" "I was only thinking," she said sadly, "how much more I could have loved you if you hadn't admitted that you wero wrong!"— Tom Mas son, in Fuck. Clever I den of tlie New lirhle. Out in a big apartment houso on Columbia Heights, not a thousand miles from the corner of Binney street, thore dwells n young married woman who is as naive as the bride in the comic weeklies. The housekeepers who live in the same house with her have been somewhat annoyed of late by mice. The young woman met one of them in the hall the other day, and the conversation naturally turned on their common pests. "Tbe mico have been so bad lately," said the elder woman, "that I keep everything locked up and all my eat ables in the boxes." The younger woman's eyos sparkled with eagerness. "My!" she said. CI wouldn't daro do that. I wouldn't want to run such a risk. I leave crackers and cheese lying about overy night whon I go to bed BO that when the mice coma hungry they'll find something to eat, and not gnaw things. I'm always afraid they'll bite holes in my new tablecloths and my nice oentrepicees if I don't leave the cheese right where they can find it easily. I feel per fectly safe when I know there's plenty for them to eat light where they can get at it." There's nothing after all like having a clever idea like that now and then. Washington Fost. .J 11 ill tlie Thing. Our colonial roads were usually but rude paths through the woods, oftou made at the time by the traveling emigrant. On such roads the pack horse aud the rude pack-saddlo were indispensable iu all removals of worldly goods. Mr. Thomas Speed, in "The Wilderness Road," thus de scribes the saddle: It was a rude contrivance made of a forked branch of a tree, and was quite in lteepiug with tho primitive simplicity of the times. When fast ened upon a horse, it became the re ceptacle of the goods and chattels 'o be transported. Thus wero carried provisions-for tho journey, and house hold stuff and utensils needed to make life tolerable when the journey was at an end, aud tho place of residence sclectod. The fork had to be of a particular shape, and a branch which could be made into a saddle was an attractive object. It is related that an early preacher once paused in his Sunday sermon with his eyes fixed on tho top of a tree, and said: "< want to remark right here that yonder is ono of the best forks for a pack-saddle that 1" ever saw in tha woods. When services we oyer we will get it." HOW TO RUN CORRECTLY. loine Serviceable Advice bj a Former Champion and Phyalcal Director* Anything faster than a walk in stiff, measured steps is considered by most peoplo undignified, probably because i faster gait than a walk—a good, easy, graceful stride for running—is a thing almost impossible to them. To see many, even of our young men, speeding after a car or attempting to catch the last boat is a sight to make Mercury, the swift messenger of the | gods, weep for very shame and to ! make an old trainer curl his lip with ! honest contempt. A speedy and graceful gait, physical ! instructors say, is easily acquired, j But attention must be paid to the i proper position one should assume in j order to obtain the greatest amount j of progression with a maximum ve locity aud a minimum expenditure of I bodily energy. ] The correct position to be assumed ■ when running is set forth clearly by I Randolph Furies, the intercollegiate I mile and half mile champion runner, • former President of the Intercollegiate j Amateur Athletic Association of America, aud now the director of ! physical education at the University of Pennsylvania. 4 'When running," declares this authority, "no matter what the dis j tance, the arms, or, more properly : speaking, the upper extremities, ! should be used chiefly from the slioul* ! dor with precision, aud should swing | in harmony with the logs or lower ex tremities. The right arm should move | with tho left leg, aud tho left arm i with the right leg, in order to main j tain perfect balance and to gain ! greater speed. The trunk and bead : should bo allowed to assume their i natural position, which, if a person : carries himself properly, will bo in | the erect posture or nearly so. The 1 runner ought never to lean forward. "All distances uuder and including ! one mile should be run upon the toes, | while distances over one milo should bo run upon the ball of the foot, or I tho part just back of tfio toes. Run- I ners should put their feet out in front ■ of them in a perfectly straight line, making the advanced step with one | foot when tho other is directly be- I neath the body, keeping each arm in ; its relative position aud the legs close j together, in order to concentrate ■ energy. A good stride will cover i about seven feot,seven feet two inches, I seven feet four inches or seven feet ! six inches. It is a great mistake to ! overstrido, because in so doing an uu | necessary amount of energy is wasted, and fatigue comos on more quickly. Jf one is able to stride seven feet ul first ho is doing well. It is best 1o ■ increase the stride by inches. In this way a good stride may be obtained without uuduly taxing the muscles. "Never kick your lieels up behind you—that is, behind tho axis of the body—because it will cause a loss of ; locomotion aud also of time by mak : ing the legs trail through a greater space, unnecessarily. As one prog resses, alighting first upon one set of : toes and then upon the other, or ball of the foot, as tho case may be, great care should bo exercised iu coming down upon the ground lightly. If at tention be paid to this tho body will I escape much jarring, which is im ' portant to the muscles and nerves." The Achievement of Health. | Daniel Webster "presevered in liv ing," to use an old Roman expression, j He was born in the depth of wiutor, January 18, 1782, in tbo days when | log-honses were uncomfortable. 'The infant," says Lodge, "was a delicate and rather sickly little body. Some cheerful neighbors predicted, after in spection, that it would not live long, and the poor mother, overhearing them, caught the child to her bosom and wept over it. She little dreamed of the iron constitution somewhere in the small frail body, aud still less of all the glory and sorrow to which her baby was destined. "For many years, although tbe boy disappointed the villago Cassandras by living, he oontinued weak aud deli cate. Manual labor, which began very early with the children of New Hamp shire farmers, was out of the question iu his case, and so Dauiel was allowed to devote much of his time to play of tho best sort, in the woods and fields, whore he learned to love nature aud natural objects, to wonder at floods, to wateh tbo habits of fish aud birds, and to acquire a keen taste for field sports. His companion was an old Rritisb sailor, who carried tbo child on bis back, rowed witb him on the river, and taught him the angler's art." At Fryoburg, where ho taught, at about tho age of twenty-nine, it was his eye people seemed to remember best. He was still very thin in face and figure, and he himself tells us that liß was known in the village as "All-Eyes."—Success. A Character Study. Before Lord Roberts left Cape Towu ho called into his office a certain Col onel. and ohurged him with a certain mission. "Now," said tbo Chief, 'how soon can you pat this through? I know you'll do tbo best you can." "Well," replied the Colonel, "I'll try to do it in a fortnight." "Well," Lord Roberts repeated, "I know you will do the very best you can," aud with a pleasaut smile he dismissed tho officer. Outside tho door ho met Lord Kitchener. "Woll?" said Kitchener, with business-like abruptness. "Oh," said the Colonel, "I havo just seen tlie Chief; he wauts mo to do so and BO." "When are you going to get it through?" "Well," said the Colonel, "I promised to try to do it iu a fort night." "Now, Colonel," was Kitch ener's retort, "if this is cot done within a week we shall have to see about sending you home." Aud done it was. POPULAR SCIENCE. Clourls that move in a contrary di rection to that of the surface current indicate a change of weather, because they prove the existence of two aii currents, one warm and the other cold, and the mingling of these frequently causes rain. The injury to soil from flooding by a bigb tide is variously estimated to last for live to twenty years. A late investigation in Essex, England, showed that the soil was loft with two per cent, salt mostly to the complete destruction of earthworms. An epidemic of typhoid fever liaa recently been traced to the use oi celery growu on some sewage fertil- I ized ground. As it occurred in atiin i stitiitiou it was very easy to trace the ; cause. Owing to the peculiar nature j of the stems it is very easy for them j to become saturated with fertilizing material. j The ordinary hydrometer is a vor tical float, with a scale to measure the depth to which it sinks and the corre sponding dousity of the liquid. A new instrument measures the density i by the inclination of a float, and as tho readings are not afl'ected by capil larity, it is much more accurate than the commou form, and is capable oi wonderful scusitiveuess. I John Murray recently summed up tho latest discoveries concerning the ocean. The deep sea, ho says, is a region of darkness, as well as of low temperature, because tho rays of tho suu are wholly absorbed by the super ficial layers of water. Plant life is absent, but animal life is abundant in those night-haunted depths. The majority of tho deep-sea animals live by eating mud and by catching the minute particles of organic matter which descend from above. Many of the mud-eating animals are of gigantic size compared with their allies in shallower waters, but they are the prey of rapacious enemies armed with peculiar prehensile organs. Some deep-sea fishes are blind while others have very largo eyes. Phosphorescent light plays an important role 111 tho great deeps. Sometimes the animals are furnished with phosphorescent orgaus which recall the use of bull's- eye lanterns. | The Australian insect fauna is esti mated at 10,000 species, but it is be lieved that tho actual number in cou -1 siderably greater. Of these the great j est variety is to be found iu New | South Wales, the scientific collections j formed in Sydney and elsewhere beiug iof singular attractiveness and in j terest. In the vicinity ot streams may j bo found largo and beautiful dragon ! flies, ofteu of considerable size; while ! everywhere during the warmer moutlu | of the year the ceaseless hum of the j cigale reminds the traveler of a similai ; insect experience iu Italy. Native I honey bees are plentiful in man} places and are easily recognizable b} their small size, being little larger than the common house fly. Mos quitoes are practically-unknown in the ! dry interior, but their place is taken by tho sand fly, an equally mio- I chievous insect. There are spiders oi all sizes, a few being poisonous, but their webs are generally of a most fanciful character. Tho splcudid ap pearance of some of tho butterflies rivals that 0/ tho most gorgeous in sects found in South American forests. The Arcli Destroyer. "He is a mean, sneaking, under handed element,the moth is," protests •John Kendrick Bangs in an article on these household pests in the Woman's Homo Companion. "Fire lias a de cent sense of the proprieties. Moths have none at all. When fire attacks you it smokes, and crackles, and hisses, and roars, and lets you know in clarion tones that it has come. The moth steals upon you iu the dead ot night, and chews up your best trou sers, gorges himself upon your wife's furs, tickles his palate with your swell est flannel golf-shirt, munches away on your handsomest rug, punches holes in your best sofa-cushious with hia tusks, and then silently folds hip tent and steals uway without so much as a thank you for his meal. For un mitigated meanness commeud me to tho moth! Alongside of the moth and his nefarious work even a book agen pales iuto insignificance, aud an un paid grocer's bill becomes an absoluti pleasure." Avoid Contact With Sick Pet*. Dogs and monkeys .are subject to tuberculosis and are said to be capable of commuuieating tho infectiou to hu man beings. A large number of the canaries that die iu captivity fall vic tims to tho disease. Carrots sutler from a malady peculiar to them selves. The bacillus that causes it is thought to originate pneumonia in mau. Cats have been known to be the carriers of diphtheria, and possi bly of scarlet fever and other infectious diseases. Great care should be taken during an epidemic to keep pet ani mals out of tho reach of infection, ot else away from tho children, and at any time a bird or animal that seems ailing should be at once isolated.— Ladies' Home Journal. TOOIA and ProgresA. Despite all the attacks upon ma chinery, au age without tools is an age of drudgery and degradation. If once men toiled sixteen hours a day, with a single stroke Watt's engine cut ofT Jtwo hours iu the morning for rest and two hours at night for read ing. Tlio modern home, with a thou sand and one comforts, is tho gift of tools. Wo now compel steel fiugors, steel knives, stool wheels aud steel wires to do our work. Take away our tools, and civilization would go back 3ne hundred years.—Newell Dwight Hillis, in tho Woman's Homo Com panion, Artificial CoaL Oeorge Montag, a German, 19 the !n --rentor of a process for the manufac ture from ordinary earth of a fuel closely resembling coal. So successful have his experiments been that many large German manufacturers are mak Ing arrangements to employ his prod uct in the place of pit coal. Any kind Df earth can bo used in the manufac ture of the fuel with the exception of land and gravel. Certain ingredients, the nature of which is the inventor's lecret, are mixed with the dirt; the material is then pressed into the form Df bricks, which are extremely hard ! ind brittle, and highly inflammable. SEE TO THE WALLS. A Danger In School Rooun and How to Prevent It. Owing to the gathering of so many differ ent classes of persons therein, the interior wulls of churches, schoolhouses, hospitals, etc., are apt to become repositories of disease germs unless preventive measures are taken. These walls should always be coated with a clean and pure cement, such as Alabastiue, which is disinfectant in itn nature and more convenient to renew and retint than any | other wall coating. The first cost is no great er tnan for inferior work, while renewals are more easily and cheaply made. Daily Increase of Misery. It is estimated that 3,000 marriages are daily performed throughout the world. | What Shall Wo nave For Dessert! I This question arises in the family daily. Let us answer it to-day. Try Jell-O, a delicious and healthful dessert. Prepared in 2 rain. No boillngl no baking 1 Simply add a little hot water A set to cool. Flavors: Lemon, Orange, Raspberry and Strawberry. At grocers. 10c. | Photographs of the enemy's cn ' trenchments, taken from the war bal-. ! loon, greatly helped Lord Roberts in 1 his "closuring" of Cronje at Paardc , berg. Ask Tour Doalo '.<r Allen's Foot-Bass, ! A powder to shake into your shoes; rests the 1 feet. Cures Com-. Bunioi .*, Swollen, Sore, , Hot, Callous, AH.ing, Sweating Feet and In growing Nails. Allen's l'oot-Ease makes new or tight shoes easy. At all druggists and shoo stores. 25 ets. Sample mailed FREE. Address Allen 8. Olmstead, Lelloy, N. Y. It is stated that as soon as the war :is over the government intend to ap ' point Lord Kitchener as governor gen eral of the Transvaal and the Orange Free State. The Best Prescription for Chills and Forer is r. bottlo of (iiiOVK's TastblksS CHILL Tohic. l\ LA Simply iron and quinine In a tasteless form. No cure—no pay. I'rice 600. The Canadian Pacific railway is sur veying a new route from Ottawa to Artiprior. The Makers of Carter's Ink Say : "We can't make any better ink than we do; we don't know how to. We can make poorer Ink, but we won't." Carter's Ink is the best. | There arc nearly 2,000 stitches in a pair of hand-sewed boots. Fits permanently cured. No flt. or nervous ness after first day's use of I)r. Kline's Groat Nerve Restorer. $2 trial bottle and treatise tree. Dr. K.H.KuNfi.Ltd.93l Arch St.Phila.Pfc Cleveland painters want $2.40 for the eight-liour day. Pleo's Cure is the best medicine we ever used for nil affections of throat and lungs—Wm. 0. Endslky, Vanburen. Ind., Feb. 10, 1930. j There are 952,000 bank shares in New | York City, assessed at $85,409,846. I To Cnre a Cold In One Day. Take Laxatiyk Rromo Quinink Tablets. All druggists refund the money if it falls to cure. *. W. Grovk's signature Is on each box. Sto, In some parts of Germany schools I have closed for want of coal. Jell-O, the New Dessert, Pleases nil the family. Four flavors:— j Lemon, Ornuge, Raspberry and Strawberry. \ ▲t your grocers. 10 cts. More than 500 Portuguese immi grants arrived in New York one day re- 1 cently. ' 1 1 kneW W,llt WJS tlle mm " H Vc2 TV with me> m y cheeks are so pale, my if 1>P S so white, my muscles so weak, psi /"J VI j unstr v n g- I ,m ) us * about |®| I / V VyJ Vy| V y ,s t' re d and depressed in H f( %_I WW S tflc morn 'ng as lam at ||j i f ■yy n, ght. if i couM only get B ■ some test, but sleep seems to do pp we te " you what is the matter ? II That's Anemia | T . Anemia it's another name for starved blood, thin Dj blood, poor blood. Of course this isn't the kind to have. B What you want is rich blood, red blood. You w.nt the fil old color back to your cheeks and lips. You want your i nerves once more strong and steady. To make this chance 1$ you must take a perfect Sarsap.rilla, a Sarsaparill. made upon If honor, a Sarsaparilla that you have confidence in. || That's AYEB'S 1 -The only Sarsaparilla made under the personal supervision of $1 three graduates : a graduate hi pharmacy, a graduate *'i ~ in chemistry, and a graduate in medicine." s SI.OO a bottle. All druggists. '\: J'l-ri "r 0 ' be "'J C "°- ° f A) "'' Sarsaparill.,. Sinre talung it I B U.ood m P^n " 1 now cn J°j' and V'ofit by my l pin g . My anfetite Hi I. good, my Ocrve. are .trang and steady, and I know my blood is pure I'SAVV B WiNNiaaaao, De. Moine., lowa, Oct. 9l J8 99 . P | 25 cents a box. All druggists |W' sf'tSl K? %?& 1 acts more promptly nnd more thoroughly. H )UM 'ii -I • jffj wßmk\ THAT SPOT. <£-^ How did it get there? Or, to ask a more important question,'" What will remove it ? " This very day stop at the grocer's and get a cake of Ivory Soap. Don't be afraid of the cloth. Rub well, using flannel and hot water, wipe the lather off with a cloth or sponge dipped in clear water. Ivory Soap will not injure anything that will stand the application of water. IVORY SOAP— 99 44 PER CENT. PURE. TEACHING PARROTS TO TALK. An Undertaking That Require* Good ( Judgment. The natural tendency of some spe ;ies of parrots to learn to talk is well illustrated at the zoo, where a col lection of parrots was recently added to the animals and birds on exhibi tion. In the confusion of sounds — the roaring of lions, the trumpeting of the elephant, the chatter of the mon keys, the stentorian commands of the mimal trainers, and the blaring of the band—may be heard the shrill screech of the parrots. An intent lis tener will discover that the birds are Imitating the sounds they hear and tome of them are repeating words which they catch in the general Jargon of the place. Even Lecturer Rollins L Imitated in some of his sentences de scribing the animals or the feats about to be performed. Alexander Day, as sistant superintendent of the zoo,says that, like the wild animals which are capable of being trained, the parrots will early give evidence of their apti tude to learn to talk. The best way to train a parrot to talk is, he says, to keep it in a room away from othei birds or animals, and with its cage covered when the lessons are given This is to teach the bird to distin guish the sounds alone and not the individuality of the teacher. The gray parrots are said to be the best talkers, although the Amazonian 01 green parrot is a good talker and is the one most commonly seen. These come from South America and the West Indies. The rosellas and ma caws, which also come from the West Indies, can rarely be taught to talk.— Baltimore Sun. Cooper Colon. Cooper union, in New York city, had a revenue last year of $58,485.78. Its expenditures were $59,087.09. I Dogs in Hamburg arc taxed accord* ing to -izc—the bigger the dog, the higher the tax. F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo. 0.. Pronn. of ! n.'illY, Catarrh Cm re. offer SIOO reward for .1117 e.'the of catarrh that cannot he cured hy taking ! Hall's Catarrh Cure. Send for testimonials • free. Sold by Druggist*. 76c. A graduate of the Indian Normal I School at Lawrence, Kan., is a newsboy | in San Francisco. J Mrs Wir.idoM YSootlii ngSvrap forchildren j teething, softens the minis, reduces inllammn j tion. allay* pain, cures wind colic.26c a bottle. The life of an Australian native rarc ! ly tAcecds 50 years. $ *B* 1 Double Trouble f 'V- t& 1 1 I The complication of | I SPRAINS | a - I 5 BRUISES 1 6 \i a very sore trouble, but *$ doubly, or separately, as sprain w 5)! or bruise, there is no remedy ty W known the equal of V I St Jacobs Oil f for a g I PROMPT, SURE CURE I •w a % r r>- js Bird. <>r i'mo:. "No, I do not make friends as easily as I used to with my fellow-travelers," j said the man who was relating Euro pean experiences. "It is not because J feci less sociably inclined, but of the cold setback I received at Gi braltar. In the hotel ofiice one morn ing I entered into conversation with an English man and woman who seemed to me to be the right sort. They did not meet my friendly overtures with the usual 'Oh!' and an English stare. ( On the contrary, they seemed anxiom ■ to become acquainted with me. and soon wc were chatting pleasantly. ) congratulated myself upon my good fortune in falling in with such agree able people, who were almost nice enough to &e Americans. We discussed Gibraltar and were just planning a sightseeing expedition for the follow ing day when one of the hotel waiters j thrust his head in the doorway and I said, 'The missus wants the both of , yez.' My new found friends were the maid and man servant of the duchess of Cleveland, Lord Rosebery's mother." SACRIFICE SALE First Class Music. 50 pieces, $2. Tor *lxiy dny* we will hoiiU FIFTY PIFCKN Ol FJIIHT Cl.Ass, FUIX *1351411, blgh Hindi'. Mtiutdnrd Vo.nl mid I ntru mental , carefully alerted, tiu ludlii K Solo*, lu. i-.tiiiartettft, WnU/. n, Polka*, Opernn, Mr 'mmi .llelodle*, ll vimtH, etc., etc., chitr*.* in-'l'iuiid by post or exproxN lo any pari ol (lio United StntON or ('iioiidn, upon receiptor two dollar* in riisli, Mump* onrmnev order. The rrjinlar price ol ilii* mtfdc I* £2O. Addresw PIIA.M'IS WAV l.\Nl> MiN A* CO., I IO Itroiidwuy, New York ( in. W. L. DOUGLAS $3 & 3.50 SHOES 43S:Worth $4 to $6 v Jf/\ with other makes. / x. ijGj] y 1,000,000 "vcaroi-s, KM) ts\, S Mi jjjf Thr ffenu inc. have W. L. jQ M nJ© n " Rl, ' )! ,ulc y a ' 1n ' )C JwrVt, J L ' xtra ' or carriage. Staie kind of leather, JTct Xzay ■ l/ , > an<l width, plain or cap toe. Cat. free. color iyclets W. L. DOUGLAS SHOE CO., Brockton, Mass.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers