THE COLUMBIAN, BLOOMSBURO. PA. IMHI Do not Sleep in Huts, But on Straw; on Bare Ground. STR1NGENTTRIBAL LAWS Trib Hitherto Unknown on Austra lian Coast Who Were Astonished at Appearance of White Explor , era Modes of. Living Language of the People. Dr. Koth, the Queensland protector ef aborigines, who Is familiar with aboriginal lift and character, aud Charles Hedley, the eonchologlst of tho Sydney Museum, have ascertained U existence in the far north of a people who had never previously seen white man, a fact which shows that the days of Australian exploration are not yet at an end. They were making a scientific tour ef the Oult of Carpentaria and of the Wellesley archipelago at the southern and of the gulf. Mornlnfton Island, which has an area of ten by forty aalles, was discovered by Capt. Mat taew Flinders in 1802, while survey. img and mapping out the gulf, but be iott not appear to have landed on it Since that time the Island has been aown only bf natte. It is not an la-' titing place for the settler, the soil bating poor, with extensive tracts of shy country. There is plenty of bash and coarse forest, (and this af- fords shelter to large numbers of , jW&roos and other animals, which j . rtraish a plentiful supply or food for islanders. Ir.. Rot tad Mr. Hedley expert ised no difficulty In effecting a land C u4 found the islanders, sclentle iDy speaking, an interesting people, lelr modes of living and general ! :ka,racterlstlcs showing that they had j Mea separated from the mainland na-1 rtres for many generations. With one ttception, an aboriginal who had vis-' tad the shores of the gulf, none of 'he islanders had ever seen a white -nan, and the use of clothing, how-! 'iTer scanty, was unknown to both ' saaes alike. The visitors, together ttk some "tame" blacks that Is, na '.hrea who have been educated at the aisaion station in northern Queens sad and elsewhere remained on the aland three days, employing the tame" blacks as guides and Bcouts, . Mt it was speedily discovered that ' he latter could converse in a fashion rith the islanders, whose language vaa a dialectical version of that of - he gulf natives. Great caution had a be observed by the visitors, who rere always armed, the islanders laving spears and a few boomerangs, tot always running away as the white nen advanced. At last, however, a couple of the lsl aders were Induced to make frltnds flth the two explorers, whom they re garded with a stolid gaze, as if their nexpected appearance was an evory ;ay occurrence. Their assumed apathy vanished the loment that Dr. Koth and Mr. Hed ey lighted their pipes. They stared i bewilderment and, according to he "tame" boys, declared that the hlte men wore burning their mouths. They were equally astonished when match was used for lighting n tire nd a "billy" employed for lioiling ater. Mr. Hedley distributed nnimijr 'iem a number of penny whistles 'hlch he had brought from Sydney nd soon the bush began to be tiiud lth sounds to which it had previous I been a stranger. The Islanders, who form a race ew to ethnologists, are supposed to s a retrograde type or elne a more rlmltlve type than the ordinary Aus rallan aboriginal. They do not make at8 as do the natives on the main rod, but simply collect heaps of grass ad sleep on the bare ground to the ward of them. Articles which have be carried from one place to an ther are wrapped in bark, the use .baskets being unknown, as is that ,L. . . . ft - n1 1 I i'uuubb, me wkivi until t?iuimiyea aing rudely constructed rafts, con sting each of a couple of logs with me light weed, propelled by branches t paddles. Compared with the na ves on the mainland, the Islanders iemed far behind in a knowledge of Yen the rudest aboriginal appliances, hey have, however, a stringent ays m of tribal classification, intended i represent different degrees of rela onshlp and to assist in preventing o close intermarriage. Chicago chronicle. Vain Man. Mr. Hayseed There ain't nothln" net 81 Peters loves more'n newspaper .otorlety. Mrs. Hayseed What's he bin a-do-n' now? Mr. Hayseed Palntin' bis barn Sin, an' there ain't no occasion fur t, 'cept tew git his name in the pa ,ier Philadelphia Press. Methodical. "I hope Josh will turn out to be Meat and systematic," said Mrs. Corn- -OS8el. "I reckon he will," answered her tusband. "There couldn't be any hlng neater or more systematic than he letters be sends horn sayln' he aeeds money." Washington Star. Kansas harvests more wheat thnn ny other State in the Union. In its wheat belt of thirty counties not one L-ounty raises less than 1,000,000 bush els. Sumner County has a record of ij'12,102 bushels. A press clipping bureau In Genera, Switzerland, forwarded to King Peter f Servla the other day live folio vol umes containing 20,000 newspaper articles relating to himself. PARISIAN TEA ROOMS. Where Smartly Gowned Women Pass a Winter's Afternoon. For the ordinary person, who Is not j given over heart and soul either to milliners or to museums, who does not conceive I'uris to be solely the apotheosis either of chiffon or of cul ture, perhaps the most perfect conso lation to be found In winter Is in the tea rooms. All the more important hotels Imast n tea room, that of the Llysee Palace being notable for Its elegance and enormous extent. Al most the whole of the ground floor of this great caravansary Is set with tea tables arrnnged among a forest of palms and exotic plants. An agreeable orchestra discourses light music, which Invariably in cludes, with thoughtful regard for the American clientele, one or two Ameri can numbers thut Is to say, a coon song and a Souaa march. Every where the Old World conception of what Americans value In art is as painful to our vanity as It is con trary to the truth. One would believe thnt literally tout le monde goes to the Klyscc Pal ace for tea, such crowds of well-turned-out men and women gather there. But this is cosmopolls, and it Is to a smaller, less ornate resort thnt the rale Parislenne will conduct you to Columbln's, a patlnserie Just c!T the Rue de Jlivoli. lUvishlng toilettes, beauties that, after the French fash ion, are often both fearfully and won derfully made, personages distinguish ed In the social world all this is to be seen at Columbln's under condi tions of a peculiar sort of intimacy. Harper's Bazar. Various Items. Australia has the largest duck farm nd the largest incubator In the world. The Incubator has a capacity of 11,440 ducks' eggs and 14.800 hens' fcgfs. San Francisco Chronicle. Willie Harlow, 13 years old, who lives about two miles from Perry vllle, is one of the most enterprising little fellows we bave heard of for some time. Since the rabbit season opened up this fall he has killed Wi cottontails and has walked to Harrods burg twice a week and sold them at 8 1-2 cents each. Harrodsburg (Ky.) Democrat. The fact that rats play an Important part In the spread of disease, more especially the plague, has Induced the port sanitary authority on the Thames to attempt the extermination of rats in the docks. During the last month nearly (1,000 rats bave been destroyed and their bodies burned in ships' furnaces. From the beginning of the year to the end of September nearly t!0,(MK were killed. The total for last year reached 18.",0S2, and the number destroyed up to date has been 24!).71S. London Times. lnktcad of having to carry about with him his pair of old slippers If he Is to have solid comfort at night, the traveler may in the near future find that hotels will supply him with a new pair made from leather paper, manufactured in Dessau, (Jormany. These are not only serviceable and handsome, lieinjr made In a variety of colors, but are also to be recommend ed from the hygienic standpoint. Dr. V. Parke, of Offenbach, testlileu to their value to the traveler. He ob jects to the inclusion of old and dirty slippers in one's traveling out lit, and thinly hotels will soon regu larly provide for their viators clean leather paper slippers. There will then be no danger of spoiling one's linens, and, moreover, Infection will bo guarded against. Chicago Tri bune. An art benefaction of literally mar vellous interest has just been made by Ilerr Kaslmer. Slprlo, for many years a resident of Milan, to the Pin acothek of Krera. The pictures in cluded works of unquestionable au thenticity by Fra Bartolomeo, Titian, Mnntegua and Kapbael. As if this list of great names, each of which stands for the foundation of a school or the opening of a new epoch in art, were not enough, there are, among the sixty-three pictures others attributed by the donor to men scarcely less illus trious, like Orcagua, Glorglone, Crl velli, Francla, Tiepolo, Del Piombo, Boccaccino, Giovenone and Volterra. The value of the authenticated works alone exceeds 30,000. London Globe. Field for Women In Japan. The Japanese Government Railway Bureau proposes to employ young wo men to sell tickets at the central star tion at Yokohama, and if the Innova tion proves a sucoess all the male tick et severs on the government railways will be dlsplaced"by the other sex. At first sight the rapid manipulation of tickets seems to be an occupation for which feminine fingers are peculiarly suited, but there may be objections, and they will no doubt find adequate expression in this country should a similar proposal be made. London Chronicle. The Muzzle Volocity of Rifles. The muzzle velocity per second of the rifles of the large countries are as follows: United States, Springfield 2.3X; French, Lebel, 2.073; English, Le-.Metford 2.000; Spanish, Mauer 2.3S8; Italian, Mannllcher Carcano 2.100; German, Mauser 2.034 feet. Sights on these are now graduated thus: United States, 2.000; France, 2.187; England, 2.800; Spain, 2.187; Italy, 2.100; Germany, 2.187 yards. There are 5,000 negro farmers mem bers of the Farmers' Impovement So ciety of Texas. They own 50,000 eres of laad. U.M1U Its Uses are Varied, and Aany Debts are Paid. A SLAVERY FUND KEPT It Settles Many Old Accounts In Re mote Corners of the World -Contributions to the Expenses of the Family of NationsItems of Ex traordinary Expenditure. Uncle Sam's money finds Its way Into many remote corners of the world, where it settles many odd ac counts. This year's 'Hook of Esti mates,' for example, calls for $350 as our "annual proportion of the ex penses of Cape Spartcl and Tanglera Light, on the coast of -Morocco, In cluding loss by exchange." As if we did not have criminals enough here, $,',000 is asked for the purpose of bringing home persons charged with crime a sum annually appropriated. The African slave trade does not im press one as a living Issue, and yet we appropriate the sum of $100 a year to meet the shure of the United States In the expenses of the special bureau created under the Brussels agreement of 1890 for the repression of that trade and the restriction of the sale In a certain defined zone of firearms, ammunition, and spirituous' liquors. This Is cheap prohibition. Schoolboys who rattle off "oblate spherod," as If that geometrical term settled the question of shape of the earth, forget it Is a continued story, for which Ungle Sam contributes si,. 500 towards each year's Instalment. I This Is really for membership in an association of earth mMlurert, and Is Independent of the much larger sum which the Government, through its own bureaus, each year spends in that Investigation. In fact, like any re sponsible citizen In private life, Uncle Sam has certain subscriptions to make of a public-spirited sort, in the family of the nations. He subscribes $2,300 a year towards an International bu reau of weights and measures, and about half as much towards an inter national bureau at Brussels for the translation and publication of customs tariffs. He gives his share towards the Hague court, $1,250 a year which Is, by the way, the cost of the navy for Just six and one-third minutes. The army, the navy', and pensions to gether, legitimate war expenses, con sume every ninety seconds of the ' year, day and night, holidays and Sun- i days, a sum equalling, to quote the . words of the "Book of Estimates," "the share of the United States in the ' expenses for the year 1003, of the In ternational Bureau of the Permanent Court of Arbitration, created under article 22 of the convention concluded at the Hague for the pacific settle ment of International disputes." Let Congressmen rise to their feet nnd In solemn silence pass this appropriation! .The court has already settled not a few Important questions, some of the first of which got there by the Insist ence of the American Secretary of State. Our membership fee in the Interna tional Prison Association i $2,000 a year. Snmuel .T. Barrows, an officer of the New York Prison Association, and formerly a congressman, is usual ly our commissioner to its annual meetings. We pay for keeping nnd feeding American prisoners In China, Korea, Slam, and Turkey, providing no more than fifty cents a day for each prisoner. We also hire a prison for American convicts in Turkey, and pay wages of keepers there. The wages of our prison-keepers in Korea are Just $000 a year, but no doubt the in cumbent of this strange ofliie would hate, worse to be dismissed than our ambassador at the Court of St. James. Some things come so cheap as to oc casion wonder what we can . get for the money. For example, this great republic annually lays down $25 to ward the support of the Sumerset Hospital at Cape Town, "upon the as surance that suffering seamen and citizens of the United States will be admitted to its privileges." It is to be hoped that they do not fill a arge ward. If our subsidy bill accomplishes all that is intended, we may have to raise the contribution to $45. At I'anama, on the same terms we pay $500 a year, but if we could Insure ourselves sufficient hospital accommo dations there for the next ten years at $50,000 a year, it might be a bargain. Photographs 140 feet Under Ocean. With the aid of a strong electrie light Louis Bonton, of Paris, has suc ceeding in taking photographs 140 feet below the surface of the ocean. With Improved apparatus he expects to be able to take pictures 300 feet below the surface, or 100 feet deeper than divers go. An Exception. "If everybody acted on my motto, 'Let well enough alone,' the world would be much happier." "Make an exception of physicians. Half of them would starve." Kansas City Journal. ' Procrastination, A new word has been installed in 1 the Colombian vernacular. It is "Pan- ' amonann," and means putting off till to-morrow the canal that should be dug to-day. Chicago Tribune. Gone to the tad. "I believe Clarence and Algy are getting to be real wicked." "Yes; I heard taetn talking about their big black pipes in the sassiest Way Imaginable."1 Indianapolis Sun. FORTUNE IN MAINE SKUNKS. Worth Twice as Much In Market at the Honey Bee. It will no doubt surprise many pro pie who learn that tho despised skunk Is worth twice as much In Maine ns Is the much admired honey bee, but such Is the fact; and, count ing things at their actual worth, the skunk Is worth about as much as ail the deer killed In Maine jn a season. The skunk Is valuable both for nls fur and for the oil that Is In him, and both the oil nnd the fur are In ever Increasing demand. Fashion In furs regulates the price of skunk skins. Four years ago the coat of a dark skunk was worth from $2.50 to $3, and the demand exceeded the supply. Since then the muskrat has come Into favor, and the price of skunk skins has fallen to about $2 for the best. When, however, there are a dozen fat skunks to be had on every acre of meadow land, when a hard wood club Is the only weapon needed fo killing them, and when every fat skunk contains at least a quart of oil, worth $3 a gallon at wholesale, there is money in the business. Most of the skunk pelts are shipped to a Philadelphia firm, where they are made up Into furs for export to France and Germany, In which coun tries they pass as money skins. It Is estimated that Maine's revenue from skunks amounts to $150,000 or $175, 000 annually, which is double the sum derived from all the honey bees In the State, and certainly more than all the 8,000 deer shot are worth to the men who kill them. From 100,000 to 150,000 skunks are killed in Maine every fall, Toe demand for oil is steadily In creasing, and the price has advanced 50 cents to $1 a gallon within a year. Tho natives prize the oil for Its vir tues as a cure for rheumatism and stiff Joints, and large quantities of It are bought by country traders and sent to druggists out of the State. It is estimated that the annual pro duction of skunk oil In Maine exceeds 23,000 gallons, and the quantity Is In creased by adulteration with the fatty oils obtained from bens and wood- chucks, a deception which has proved most profitable to the skunk mag nates. Philadelphia Record. A Happy Family. G. W. Matthews, who was convicted of wife murder and sentenced to the penitentiary for life, which Judgment and sentence has just been affirmed by the Court of Appeals, had a family reunion at the county Jail to-day be fore being carried to the penitentiary, and had a picture of his children, grandchildren, and sons-in-law and daughters-in-law taken in a single group, and 'It did not Include three or four sons and daughters and their families, living In the Territory and Arkansas. The children in the group were the children of a former wife. He is seven ty years old, and the wife for whose death he was convicted was only nine teen years old. Ills horaa was at Howland, but the tragedy occurred in this city a year ago. He fatally stab bed his victim with a pockctknifo on a prominent thoroughfare. At the trial, while the jury was out, the mother of the woman he killed knelt in the courtroom and fervently prayed that the jury might not give him the death penalty, aa she considered life Imprisonment a greater punishment. unllas News. An Up-to-Date Idea. Many efforts have in recent years been made to aid the agricultural in terest, but perhaps few have been more full of promise at any rate so far as small cultivators are concerned than a practical step which is being taken by the Great Western Hallway Company in the direction of bringing producers and consumers Into close touch, with the object of facilitating disposal of articles of general con sumption, such as eggs, butter, poul try, vegetables, etc., with advantage alike to producer and consumer. The Great Western Company has done much in the matter of low rates for agricultural and dairy produce, but they are now preparing a pamphlet for public circulation and distribution containing a list of farmers and others residing in districts served by their system of railways from whom dairy, farm, and market garden produce can be obtained direct by the consumer. There are no doubt many agricultur ists who will welcome the arrange ment, and all that it is necessary for any one to do in order to get his name included In this pamphlet Is to apply at the nearest Great Western station for a form which will be provided for the purpose. The London Railway News. Germany's Commercial Harbors. In Germany commercial harbors and seaports are a matter for the state governments (n which they are located to look after. This Is, perhaps, not exactly the case in any other country formed by the union of a number of separate states. Uncle Reuben Says. "Dar' am one good thing about a lazy man, an' de world should gin him credit fur it. He nebber dlBap plrts de firemen by puttin' out do tire befo' de Inglnes git dar'." Detroit Free Press. Smallest Known Thing. The atom of hydrogen is the small est of the "ultimate atoms" of tho lehemlsts, but It Is 1,780 times as large as the corpuscles which have recently Kien demonstrated aa the element! of atoms. BOOZE OR MEDICINE? Which will you have? If a woman suf ferinit from one of the delicate ailments peculiar to your sex It will he well for vou to know that Dr. Pierce's Favorlto Prescription Is the only remedy adver tised for such maladies which Is abso lutely free from intoxicating Hipiors and all other harmful agents. The good you feel from its use Is not, the delusive ex hlleratlon from a tippling leverage, from which the, system reacts Into a worse condition than before. It, may he a little slower In manifesting Its bracing and Invigorating action, hut. its leiielit,s are none the less positive ami, best of all, they are hiHliiiij. It's un honest medi cine not a beverage. 1 " I Imvo lepn taking your medicine for fho Inst three weeks nnd can say I am irniiiliitr strength." writes Mrs. Heneth Klmiy, of tKk'i Kast Miidlson HI reel. Mount, I'leasntil, Iowa. " I have Ih'imi having very ixmr health all win ter. I doctored with our family doctor hut was relieved only while Inklnir the medicine. I took I'r. 1'lerce's niedlcino several years airo. I knew It was itinmI (or any one suffer loir with female trouble. Have taken only onn bottle and am saining at remit h very i fast. 1 could not eat nor sleep when I heiran taking the 'Kavorlm Prescription.' Heart I troubled me and I had cold and ininili spell till my heart would almost, stop Is-atlng. Have had one child since first taking- your medicine If I continue with your treatment am positive I will le cured." Every suffering woman in this land should write to l)r. Pierce and learn how certainly he can help her to health and strength. It costs nothing to write aud receive entirely free the advice of one of the most experienced physicians In this country. His great thousand-imge book the Common Sense Medical Adviser, In stiff paper covers, will be sent free for 21 one-cent stamps the bare cost of mail ing; or, send 3l stamps for cloth bound. Address Dr. R. V. Pierce, Buffalo, N. Y. STY.... These ORIGINAL Little Liver yC?nS pm flrst put up by old Dr. VeA v- Pierce ver 40 years ago. liavo been much Imitated but never equaled. They're made of purely vegetable-concentrated and redned medicinal principles, extracted from native American roots and plant. They speedily relieve nnd cure foul, torpid and deranged 8toniac,b,H Livers and Hownls and tholr attendant nl- trrssful ailment. One or two a laxative, three or four a cathartic. Don't allow the dealer to Insult your Intelligence by offering bis own remedy to you instead of this well-known prep aration of Dr. Pleroe. Work Cure fur Tramps. The Good Results from Matsachuielte Legislation Requiring Hobos to Work. As the result of recent legislation in Massachusetts, making it the duty of the several cities and towns throughout the state to put tramps to work when found within their jurisdiction, the number of vagrants iu that state has been reduced one half. When the knowledge of that unfriendly legislation becomes more general throughout hobo cicles it is safe to say that the numer of tramps in Massachusetts will be still furth er reduced aud if the law is rigor ously carried out that they, will disappear from the commonwealth altogetner. The standing objec tion to severe legislation against tramps is the fear that it may oc casionally bear hardly upon some honest men seeking a job. The Massachusetts plan is not very ob noxious to such men if by error they are condemned under it. It gives them work and board aud lodging for their work. This is infinitely more humane for honest men if a mistake is made than sending them for a term to the work house or county prison, as may be done under the usual provision of law. Tramps do not fear the work house, but they do fear work. A law providing work for the wander ing unemployed may be a kindness to those really seeking employment, while it will drive the professional tramp and chronic vagrant out of the jurisdiction.. In this state we nourish and cherish the tramp. The law for his alleged punishment operates mainly to insure him food and shelter when outdoor life is undesirable from his point of view. The law of 1879 iu this state em powered a judge to send a tramp to jail for twelve months. The act ol 1895 makes the penalty for vag rancy not more than six months. Both acts deal with the tramp evil altogether inadequately. The cure for tramp evil is work. This is demonstrated where ever it has been tried, and this state will not cease to be overrun and its country people annoyed by wauderiug tramps until the work remedy is applied here in all its wholesome and beneficent rigor. The Lindsborg Kan. News tells about a girl that makes two bites out of a caramel in the presence of her beau, but who puts thirteen clothespins at once into her mouth onwash day. HUMPHREY'S' WITCH HAZEL OIL :::::: FOR PILES, ONE APPLICATION BRINOS RELIEFi SAMPLE MAJLID FBEI. At DrumrUU, an mU, or mallM Humpbreyi' Uodlulu Co., Cor. William nd John ItiMU, Now Yurk. NERVOUS DEBILITY, Vital Weakness and Proatra tlon from overwork and other causes. Humphreys' Homeo pathic Specific No. 28, in use over 40 years, the only success ful remedy. $1 pervial, orspeo ial package for serious cases, $5. Bold bj Dr uctliU, or Mat prepaid on raoalpt of ptos. Hwyftrtp' Moi U, William 4 Mm Its., I V. RAILROAD NOTES Special Excursions and Reduced Rates Of Interest to our Many Rtaders. Special Sunday KvcuRStcm To the seashore via Pennsylvania Rail road. The next Pennsylvania Kail road low-rate Sunday excursion for the present season Irom I,ock Haven, Lewisburg, Williamsport, Mocanaqua, Sunbury, Dauphin and principal intermediate stations to Atlantic City, Cape May, Ocean City, Sa Isle City, Avalon, Anjjle sea, Wild wood, or Holly Beach, wilt be run on July 30. Sinjilar ex cur's ons will be run August t$ and 27- Kxcursion tickets, good going mid returning on regular trains within five dayit, will be sold al very low rates. Tickets to Atlautic City will be sold via' the Delaware River Bridge Route, the only all rail line, or via Market Street Wharf, Philadelphia. Stop over can be had at Phila delphia, either going or returning, within limit of ticket. For information in regard to specific rates and time of trains con sult hand bills, or apply to agents, or IJ S. Harrar, Divisiou Ticket Agc"t, 'vVilliamsport, Pi- 2t -1 - The August "Arena" contains a J number of unusually strong papers on civic, political and economic subjects which will challenge the attention of thoughtful Americans. Mr. Blankenburg considers the re cent revolution on the part of the people of Pennsylvania against the ring that has so long robbed and ruled the state. The Hon. J. Hen niker Heaton, M. P., of Loudon, writes a graphic description of the parcels-post in Iiurope, in which lie shows that Germany beads the nations in au efficient parcels-post, Great Britain coming second. The Hon. J. Warner Mills discusses " The Kconomic Struggle in Colo rado." Eltweed Poraeroy makes a clear and admirable presentation of the merits of Direct-Legislation. Linton Satterthwait contributes "A Sane View of the Railroad Ques tion." Folger Barker contributes a thoughtful paper on " What of the Italian Immigrant?" Among the papers of general interest is a delightful brief sketch of the popu lar New Kngland humorous poet, Sam. Walter Koss, by the Rev. R. K. Bisbee. ' Garland in Ghost Land," an extended study of Ham lin Garland's new psychical ro mance, written by the' Editor, is also an interesting feature of this number. In it Mr. Flower gives some reminiscences of Mr. Gar land's early investigations of psy chical matters. "A Lawyer's View of the Divorce Question," by Ernest Dale Owen, a well-known Chicago lawyer and the son of the late philosopher Robert Dale Owen, i:i one of " The Arena's ""best contri butions to the divorce question from a liberal view-point. .The editorial departmeuts are especially strong. "The Arena" under the management of Albert Brandt is more than fulfilling its early pro mises. " The Woman's Home Companion for Auirust. with its nine short stories might well be called a fic tion number were it not for the fact that there seems to be no diminu tion whatever in the quantity of other matter. Among the nine writers of the stories may be men- ' tloned Morgan Robertson, Seumas Mac-Manus, Ella Higginson, Julia Truitt Bishop and Otho B. Senga. More particularly noteworthy of the special articles are " When the Tor nado uoes bkylarking, with some striking photographs : "The Ameri canization of the Holy Land," also illustrated ; " Notes from the Diary of an Employment Agent," "There Ought to Be a Law " and " The American Social Invasion of Eng land." The pages devoted to fash ions aud to vounff rieoDle the former by Grace Margaret Gould, me latter by " Aunt Jauet "are as many and as entertaining as usual. Mrs. Sanester. Mrs. Rich ardson and Mrs. Herrick are repre sented by their regular departments. There are two paqes of the best cat- and-kitten pictures, all from photo- grapns, tnat were ever published. Published by The Crowell Publish ing Company, Springfield, Ohio; one aonar a year ; ten cents a copy. a - . Mark Twain has added two new maxims to the world's already valuable collection. They are as follows: 'We ought never to do wrong when people are looking," and "No reul gentleman will tell the naked truth in the presence of ladies." CASTOR I A For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bossbt Beam the Signature of
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers