THH COLUMBIAN. BLOOMSBURG, PA. XKW TFST FOIt TIVPFH. Lumbermen rialni Timber Seasoned In Wuter liiiNts loner. From a priori reasoning It won Id b quite nalurnl to huppoho that the water would sonk out certain of tliu tummy mnttera of tho wood, espo Mnlly of tho sap wood, mnklnir It more easily dried. Moreover, tho washing out of the sap from tho young wood removes most of the mi liars, protein's, etc., which furnish J'ood for the huctorlu and other fntij;! ' Mch cause the rottln of lumber. ' llureau of Forestry believes that is worth while from a practical t of view to find out the truth it theso Impressions of IiiiiiIiit i nnd reasonings of scientists, I Is beginning a series of tests at i.ow experiment stations In Mlelil . -i and Wisconsin. To make the ! erluienls as pract 'al as possible they will be conduct. 1 on telegraph and telephone poles, articles whoso period of usefulness la a matter of much economic Importance. The poles will first be soaUed In water for varying lengths of time, and then piled nnd seasoned, careful record feeing kept of the time required for seasoning nnd the quality of the sea soned timber. Collier's. Tin More I'seful Sex. Rome Interesting biological nnd so clolou'b al fads have lately been pub lished about women which are cal culated to exalt the ostensibly weak er sex In Its own eyes and also In thoso of men. We have previously pointed out the conclusion reached by certain scientists that the average lite of womnn should and under nor mal circumstances would exceed H,:htly the average life of man in respect of duration. Now comes an English biologist, Mr. T. II. Mont gomery, who, after a general review Of the data presented by tho anatomy and evolution of various invertebrate and vertebrate animals, maintains that the male is less developed and more embryonic than the female. So far aa the Invertebrates and the low er verterbrates are concerned, the female Is clearly superior. When, within this field of observation, one sex Is found to be rudimentary In oomparlson with the other, It Is pointed out that this is almost al ways the male. In size the female Is usually the superior. Sometimes the central nervous system is more high ly specialized In the female, while, as a rule, the Internal productive appar atus Is more complex. In those cases where the male seems, at the first "'mice, superior, the difference turns . to he mainly In unimportant mor iglcal characters. Many species ;"socts seem to get on altogether Jut males for at least a genera The unmatcd queen bee, for .inee, will lay fertile eggs, which .:j ".ever, produce only drones. It Is well known that the working bee is ttie product of the union between a drone and a queen bee. From the female aphis (plant louse) on a rose bus'i will proceed several generations f offspring before the intervention of a male is required. It appears, then, that on certain planes of or ganic existence there is no question i woman's rights. Nature has as signed to tho male a role altogether ecoudary or casual. Accent on the Operatic Stage. No Englishman with daughters ould do a rasher thing than permit them to take lessons from eminent professors with a view of going on the stage. The opera stage in Eng land scarcely exists. At Covent Gar den a woman who can speak good English can only get In by force of fcoclal influence; nnd abroad a for eigner has very great difficulty be cause she cannot speak or sing with a perfect accent. The foreign lady t gentleman comes across here and n occasion will venture to sing In English, and their mistakes bring nothing more than a smile to the faces of the audience. Rut let an English singer go to Franco or Ger Muny and something totally different happens. In 1 897 Tamagno sang at Monte Carlo before an audience which was mainly French. He mispronounced a word, and a peal of derisive laugh ter covered his stentorian notes. In Brussels I heard an American tenor laughed at because some of his vowels were not quite pure Brus sels, where their French is the most rlllnirioiis patois I have ever heard. In Germany I have heard both Trench and English artists laughed at because their accent was not ab aolutoly corroct. Saturday Review. During a Thunderstorm. It is said that in a thunderstorm the middle of a room is much the safest place in a house. A carpeted floor, or one covered with a thick rug, is better to stand on than bare wood It is well to keep away from 1 himneys and out of cellars. In the pen air tall trees are dangerous. If lightning strikes In tho Immediate vicinity it will hit the high trees as a role, with few exceptions. Water is a very good conductor, and it is well therefore to avoid the banks of streams in a thunderstorm. No Kissing in Jnpnn. Japanese mothers and children sever kiss one another, and It is said the fact that the women of Japan ase cosmetics to such a degree is probably partly responsible for the i tint ho Iu 1. i An Odd Scientific Reward. One of the odd rewards offered bv (he French Academy of Science Is that of 120,000, established by Pierre Guzmann, for the discoveries I moans of communication with aiv her plauoW J TIIK KXOUSHWOMAN'S VOICE. Loud Intrusive Speeeh No Longer Confined to Poorer Class, "Low voice nnd eyes that do tint wander" these nro among Oliver Wendell Holmes's points of good manners In conversation. It la only when one Is among a people who !:" learned or not forgotten these p'l'ats that one feels acutely the of f"'i Iveness of the English hnblt. of lu el talking In public, says the Lon don Pally News. It is a habit which hai grown alarmingly of Into years. Formerly It was confined to Harry nnd Harriet, who employed it on holidays, partly as nn expression of good humor, partly ns an evidence of social equality an intimation tmt they were not to bo terrorized by thlr "betters." The habit In them was excusable If deplorable. Hut the habit has sprend. Loud, intrusive speech has become the mark of the West as well as of the East. It has not yet touched the In dustrial or middle class, except that portion of the middle class whose daughters have been to a certain class of "finishing" schools. ll is the strangest perversion of good breeding conceivable. It of fends against the llrst law of be havior, which Is respect, and consid eration for others. In fact. It ob literates others. H assumes that no one else is present, or that, being present, they belong to another hemi sphere of society so remote and so negligible that they do not count. The loud voiced woman is a trying burden at home. Abroad, she la a blot on tho national name. It Is by her vacuous and Insolent shrillness that English character is written down. It Is one of the causes why England, though respected. Is un loved on the Continent. It Is symp tomatic of a certain crude, overbear ing attitude which has other mani festations touched on by a writer in the Saturday Review who, dlsruss ing the manners of English trippers abroad generally, says: "The Ameri can, the German, or the French gen tleman In England Is even more punctilious than when he is travel ing among his own people. We can not say the same of tho English people, though of good breeding or education, when they are taking holiday abroad, and It is painful to add that the women are a trifle worse than the men." In the Newer West. After the war many States were added to the trans-Mlsslsslppi list. Nebraska, the old partner of Kan sas In the fateful territorial organi zation bill of 1 S r 4 . came in in 1SG7, and Colorado, Gilpin's old territory was admitted In 1876 after several attempts to get Into the Union. In lS.Sfl, early in the administration of General Harrison, North Dakota, South Dakota, Montana and Wash ington entered. In the following year Idaho and Wyoming came in, nnd half a dozen years afterward Utah was added to the list, bringing the whole number of States west of the Misssissippi up to nineteen and the grand aggregate of the country at large up to fwrty-flve, where It stands yet. Utah had tho longest con test for statehood of any of the States. It started in 1850, at tho time of California's admission, when Drigham Young's community en deavored to get in. Tho fight against polygamy, which began soon nfter ward, In which the Republican party took a decided stand, kept Utah out for the next third of a century. In the Fremont platform of 1856 thet Republicans coupled polygamy with slavery as twin relics of barbarism. The Republicans opposed Utah's ad mission until after President Wood ruff the head of the Mormon Church, in his manifesto of 1890, declared that polygamy had been given up by the church. As this removed the only objection which could be made to admission, an amnesty was soon afterward granted by the president to all thoso assailed by previous anti polygamy Federal laws, and Utah en tered at the beginning of 1896 with out any opposition. St. Louis Globe Democrat. Hit Them lloth at Once, A good Instance of a double re proof occurred in a Scottish church. A lad named Merryweather was very Inattentive during the service, greatly to the annoyance of the minister. His father always composed himself for a nap directly the sermon was well under way, bo that the boy could do as he liked without paren tal reproof. The minister could stand it no longer one Sunday, so he stopped suddenly in his Bermon and said: "John Merryweather, if you continue to act in such an unseemly manner during divine worship I shall tell your father. I would tell him now, but he happens to bo asleep." From that day Merryweather senior and Junior were model lis teners. Dundee Advertiser. llread Fruit for Us? Consul Anderson, of Hangchow, thinks the pomelo or Chlwse bread fruit would do well in this country.- I The fruit is grown in tho United ' States by a few persons, but not com mercially. Foreigners agree in de claring that the pomolo is tho finest fruit In the Far East. It combines the good points of the orange with the good points of the grape fruit. The Chinese say that a good-sized tree will ordinarily produce from 600 to 700 pomeloes. When it is considered that many pomeloes will run as large as soven or eight Inches in diameter and even larger, It will be appreciated that such a troe is bearing a load. The fruit Is more oval than round. Its color and ap pearance are those of the grape fruit, i OU T TO JAPAN'S EMPRESS. President Scuds A Sewlnii Mnrhlnft to (be Mikado's Wife, Tho Singer Sewing Machine Com pany recently completed a sewing machine for tho Empress of Japan on tho order of President Roosevelt. It Is a present to the Empress by the President In recognition of tho cour tesy extended to his daughter, Miss Alice Roosevelt, during her recent visit, to Japan. The selection of a sewing machine as a gift came nbout from a cor.vcr ratlon Miss Roosevelt had with tho Empress. The latter expressed a de sire to have an American sewing ma chine, nnd Miss Roosevelt communi cated the wish to her father, who Im mediately gave the order. The ma chine' Is of the V. S. pattern and Is probably the most costly thnt has ver been turned out of nny factory. Every part of It where there is no friction Is gold plated. On ono end of the machine at tached to tho gold plated Ironwork are the American and Japanese coats of arms. Underneath the coats of arms of the two countries In Japan ese rharncters is the date and then follows tho reason for the presenta tion. From the time thnt the machine was started until It received Its final test In the operating room the ut most care and secrecy wero main tained ami none but the most trusted employes was allowed to do nny part of the work upon It. Tho machine was placed In a mahogany cabinet In laid with silk and plush in Japanese colors. Huge Manses Employed In Lute War. The great feature of the war has been the huge musses engaged. Leipzig Itself In this respect com pares poorly with Mukden. The hosts of 1 S 1 2 wero not so numerous as those thnt Invaded Manchuria, and Borodtno may outrival Llaoyang in horrors, but not In numbers of guns or men that fought. Yet it is surely remarkable that after an unbroken record of defeat on such a huge scale tho Russians still can show an army fully equipped and organized in posi tion. Llaoyang and Mukden were truly enough to break the spirit and dissolve the ranks of the stoutest troops In the world. In spite of the list of killed and wounded, of the prisoners, of the guns and trophies the war could still have been carried on. Yet Marengo, a mere skirmish in comparison to those battles of giants, decided the fate of a nation. Jena laid a king dom in the dust. Even Frledland compelled a Czar to come to terms. What is it that made Mukden in decisive and could allow the Czar till to dream of victory when for a year and a half not a gleam of suc cess had shone for a moment on his bayonets? The terrane in which the battles were fought had, of course, much to do with It, but the very vastness of the armies had more. An army of several hundreds of thou sands cannot be moved like one of a third the slzo. The telegraph may do much, but It cannot annihilate space where movements of men are concerned, and to pursue a beaten foe requires prompt action and en ergy, which are only possible where events take place under tho eye and within the direction of a supreme leader. Saturday Review. i Effect of Rain Upon Animals. "Tho effects of a rainy day upon animals of a zoo," said a keeper the other day, "are as interesting to watch ns anything I know in connec tion with a collection of beasts. Now, that big wolf over there Just revels in a rainy day, and skips about as gay as you please. All the wolves are the same. Rain cheers them up. But the Hoiib are different. They fret and growl and snarl unless you give them an extra allowance of meat or a big pan of warm milk. Then they will sleep, but a rainy day seems to get on the nerves of a Hon or any of the cat family. Snakes are kept In Just a certain temperature all the time, and you would think that the damp nlr would never reach them. Perhaps It doesn't, but I have always noticed that all the reptiles are ac tive and cheerful, if a reptile can be said to be cheerful, when it rains. Tho deer family, the bears, various sorts of wild goats, and the like, don't seem to mind the rain a bit. Birds, however, are the most discon solate, dreary things in the world on a rainy day. They don't sing, hardly chirp, but Just settle down to be as miserable as possible." Americans Residing Abroad. Year by year the number of Ameri cans residing in the chief European cities has been increasing. Two years ago an estimate of the num ber of Americans living in London web made and the number was shown to be 16,000, with 12,000 in Paris. There are according to the last estimates 26,000 Americans residing in London permanently, 80,000 In Parjs, 6,000 each in Rome and Ber lin, 2,600 In Munich, 1,600 in Flor ence and 1,000 In Venice. There are at all times between 100,000 and 160,000 Americans resi dent in European cities, apart from the number of Americans who make a summer trip to Europe and come under the designation of either transients or travelers. Most Euro pean countries do not include in the census of inhabitants taken unnat uralized foreigners, and for that rea son the figures of the number of Americans are not always easy to get. Ten per cent, of the population of Paris, exclusive of transients, Is made up of foreigners 260,000 for eigners constantly in Paris, of whom 80,000 are Americana. NEVEIl REACH THE llOTTOM. Articles Thrown Dunn n Shaft Found Clinging to Side. It Is an Interesting sclontflc fact, and one not generally known, that nothing that falls from the month of the deepest mining shaft In the world ever reaches the bottom. This has been demonstrated at the famous Red Jacket shaft of the l!lg Calumet nnd Hedn copper ilno at Calumet. The article, no matter what shape or size It may be, Is Invariably found clinging to the enst side of the shaft. One day a monkey wrench was dropped, but It did not get to the bottom. It was found lodged against the east side of tho shaft several hundred feet down. This Incident coming to the attention of (tie Mich I JMtl College of Mines, It. was deel led to make a cnreful test of the appar ent phenomenon. It was decided best to use a small but heavy spherical body, nnd n marble, tied to n thread was suspended about twelve ft-ct be low the mouth of the shaft. When the marble wns absolutely still, as suring that It would drop straight down, tho thread was burned through by the flame of a candle. The marblo fell, but r.t a point mo feet from the surface brought up against tho east wall of the shaft. The same would be the case were a r.inn to fall Into the shaft. While It would mean sure death, the body, badly torn, would be found lodged In the timbering on tho east side. Mem bers of the faculty of the College of Mines are now engaged In experi ments with a view of developing data ns to tho thickness of the earth's crust. It is not hoped to solve the perplexing problem of tho distribu tion of the earth's matter, but It Is hoped to add to tlo Information '' lected concerning it. To this end tho Red Jacket sfnu't presents advantages poss!sed by no other place In tho universe. The deep shafts In other pnrts of the country and in foreign lands generally begin at an altitude and end above or very little below the sea level, whereas at tho Calumet mine the Red Jacket ehaft starts in a comparatively low altitude and pierces the earth's crust deeper and further below the ocean level than any other In existence. It is hoped within a year to be able to give some Intelligent Information re garding the Investigations. St. Louis Dispatch. Pigeon Records. Homing pigeons are the craze in England Just now, and on one recent Saturday between 200,000 and 300, 000 birds wero released In various competitions. A number of these were raced to London from Retford nnd Branston. Tho distances aro 127 and 113 miles, respectively, but no birds of the several thousand re leased made the t rip In the tradi tional mile a minute, although every circumstance of wind and weather was favorable to record breaking; Muyh better time was made in a corrrfst from Templecombe to Lon don, In which one bird made the 108 miles In tilnety-i'our minutes, an average of slxtynino miles an hour, and more than ono hundred exceed ed a speed of sixty miles an hour. Ono of the oldest homers Is a bird which makes Its homo around t he railway station at Liege, In Belgium. There Is a train from Liege to War emmo which starts every morning at ten o'clock. As soon ns the train pulls Into the station the bird com mences to circle In the air, nnd ns soon as headway is gained follows the train to its destination, return ing immediately home, where it flios nbout the station for the rest of the day. It pays no attention to any other of the trains and no one is able to offer an explanation as to why this particular train should be favored. The Swiftest Birds. t Evidence has been collected re cently which shows that the blue throat files from Central Africa to the shores of the North Sea, a dis tance of 1,600 miles, in less than a day and a night, and makes it, more over, in one uninterrupted flight. The storks which spend their sum mers in Austria-Hungary and their winters in India and Central Africa are also marvelous travelers, and make their Journeys twice a year in unbroken flight each time. From Budapest, In Hungary, to Lahore, in India, is 2,400 miles in an air line, and the storks make tho Journey in twenty-four hours, thus traveling at the rate of 100 miles an hour for the whole distance. The Btorks which spend the summer in central Europe and winter In central Africa travel with the same rapidity. Pall Mall Gazette. Wireless to Stop Accidents. Two years ago exhaustive practi cal experiments were commenced and continued until recently on the mili tary railway leading from Berlin to Zossen. Telegraph stations were fitted up with transmitters and re ceivers, while the trains were equipped with the same apparatus. Ordinary telegraph wires along the track were used to facilitate the work. The experiments proved that the stations could at any time communi cate with a train ruuning at full speed and warn it of impending dan ger. The use of wireless telegraphy In this connection would especially safeguard tralus on one-track rail ways. It is not expected that tho expense of supplying the necessary apparatus will be much beyond the budget al lowed each year for repairing old signals and Introducing new Invert. Uons whloh aim to protect Ufa and i umo la railway travel. ANi'Cclable Preparation Tor As -simil.it ing llic Food and llctf tila -ling (lie Stomachs and Dowels of ItoimoIcs I)ic3lioivClkvr(il nesscindnost.Conliuns neillicr Opium, Morphine nor MincruL Kot Nau c otic . ISmifJcm Sir J' ftx .fmrut ,A,II, .fa stttite .Wrf r Jtitrnnin -lit CiiriniHnlfSeaa rmint .lupnP hilttry nnvK Apriferl Remedy forConstipn lion , Sour Similar h, Diarrhoea Worms .Convulsions .Fevrrish ncss nnd Loss of Sleep. Facsimile. Stgnnlure of . NEW YORK. EXACT COPY OF WRAPPER List of Jurtts for Dtcrniber Term tIKAXll .11 HoKS elshline, Lewis, Fishingereek. llower. JI. F. , Ihiiirereek. Carl, Joseph, t'utnwissu twp. Casey, Win. J., liloomsbuitf . Cnpwell, Win. S., Blnonisbiirg. Culp, V. A., lierwick. Kdifar, John, Meiitoii twp. Freas, C. W. llerwiek. Fritz, liny, Jnekson. ( iiiton, A. K., Tine. Hummer, (ieorge, Stigarloaf. llirleinaii, C, 1 ., Hciiton Jloro. Hughes, John, Locust, llnuch. C. It., Main. John, Wesley J , Main. Lemon, Theodore, (Jreenwood. Miller, S. A., Jreenwood. l'eiisvl, Jay, Uloomslnirg. Uhouds, Isaiah, Cleveland. Kilekle, John, JSeiitoli twp. Roberts, W. JL. Catawissu twp. Kunyoii, C. W , r.loonisburg. Kiee. Clms. ltliinmwlninr , - htrauch, Klmer L, Jackson. Jl'KOHS CIHST WKKK Alpeter, Itev. l'etei. Catawissu. Adams, Kmiiiitn'l. Locust. Homboy, 1'uul, lUooinsbiirg. Klank, Levi, Jterwick. Creveling, Itnniel, Kloomslmrg. CoH'iiiiiii, Win., P.loomsluirg. Cadiimii. K. F., Millville. Derr, Calvin, Jackson. Fuil'chilils. .1. M.. lti'iMi-cr,.i.U (toi'dlmit. Win.. Milllin. (iiiton, Clark. Main. iiemt.v, in. .1., Centralia. i inagiaiid, Aiireii, Uoaringereck. Hess, 11. W., Milllin. Hauek, J. S. Milllin. 1 Ingeilhllcli. (). 1).. Ktilluntcr llelwig, Chillies, Locust. llartiiian, Cliaiies, Hemlock. Ikelcr. It. It Itliuuiiuliiinr Johnson, Chester M., Madison. iviine, i larK, tireenwood. Lemon, Klliot, Fisliingereek. Mummy. Albeit. Heaver. Mensch. Win., Montour. Murray, (leo. L.. Catawissa twp. Nllss. J. H.. Main. Oliver, Daniel, Uerwiek. iiu, Austin, (Scott. O'llriau, (). (.;., Jlenton lloro. Huckle, Taylor. Montour. runner, jnram, liiooinslmrg. Khoads, Clark, Cleveland. Keillv. C. M ltliumuhum Koudurmel, Win. O., Conynghani. juciiuri, .ion n a., Jtoaringcreek. KlllstOll. RoV. ltloolllHhlli'ir Shiii:,, I). A., Madison. Miyiier, ilenry YV., Cleveland. Stevens, Klias, Jackson. Vausiekle, Floyd, Kugaiioaf. Whitmoyer, It. F., Pine. Thomas, II. V Madison. I rump, Clias., Orange twp. Yaple, Jeremiah M., Fishingerieek. i oi ks, v.. nugurioai. Yeager. Wilson. Iteru-iek. Hippensteel, Joe, Scott. rerguson, win., isioomsburg, JUKOKH SKCOM) WKKK Ash, W. K., Priarcreek. Pet. Miles W.. lilonniKlinrir Probst, M. L., Ml. Pleasant. Chamberlain, James, Pine. Crawiord. Clinton. Mt. PI Closscn, Pugh, Orange twp. Demott, Cyrus, Millville. I'uvis, u. W., ilriarcreek. KvilllH. Alnicr A Itii II I'i.l'oi.lr I - .... ...VV (k. I'.vims. Wnrbiiiil Mi, nt. ,ii. Oriines, P. K., Millville. Hohlren, (leorge, Pine. Hess, II. (1. perwick. Ikelcr. P. A.. Mt. IMciiMinit Johnson, A. P., Pine. ivusiiner, t'eter, Montour. Kerrigan. James, Conyngham. Kline, Henry, Mt. Pleasant, Kramer, Chus., Madison. i.anor, (ieorge, l-isliingereek. Low, Zcrhin, Orangeville, Llll'ish. C. I... Kiiiriirlont'. La.arus, Kinanuel, Ploonishurg. Marteenle. Clem.. I'.ci u l. l.- IS'uss, Henry, Milllin. Kowan, Dennis, Conyiighitm. Huckle, P. J., Mt. Pleasant. Stnhl, Win., Centre. SaviiLre. John .Inck.im Shaller, K. W.. Mt. Pleasant. i rump, jus., orange twp. elsh, Orvul, Orango twp. Hartmau, Pierce, Bugarloaf. ni For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the Signature of In Use For Over Thirty Years TMt Of MTAU IMMM. NIW TORI OlTT. 3 Sitler, Sylvester, Centre. Zuner, Win. P., Main. - Timely and Valuable Snegestio is. Many people, especially women who lead closely confined domestic lives, suffer from what in general terms is called 'nervousness." A mong all tonus of treatment none lia s even approached in success the intelligent use of Dr. David Ken nedy's Favorite Remedy, of Ron dout, N. Y., which promotes an easy and natural action of the di gestive organs and imparts tone to the nervous system. A man talks about owning- his business- Put, us a matter of fuel his busi ness owns him. His whole life is regu lated by tile demands of the business. The time at which he rises, his break fast hour, the time given to meals, are nil determined by business obligations. He rushes through lunch Ucuiise lie ' eun'l spare the time from business" to eat Msurely. He won't take a rest because lie is needed ut the store or f lice. He is in fact an absolute slave to business. The results which follow this slavery are to be seen on every hiui'l. Men dyspeptic, irritable, nerv ous, withdrawn faces, and holloweyes sit at the desk or stand behind the '.ounter until they collapse in a lit of sickness, or me taken away by heart failure. Those who cannot eM'upe the exactions of business will timl a friend in Dr. Pierce's tloidcii Medical Discov ery. It strengthens the stomach, in creases the action of the blood-making glands, increases the vitality uud phy sical vigor. It makes men strong and prevents those business break downs which so often terniinute fatally. II'I'hk Booth ixo Si-hay of Ely's LL piid Cream Palm, used in an atomizer, is an unmistakable relief to sutlerem of Catarrh. Some of them describe it as a (iodsend. and no wonder. The thick, foul discharge is dislodged and the pa tient breathes freely, perhaps for the llrst time iu weeks. Lliiuid Cream Palm POIltninu nil tlio Iwmfimv ixirifv. lug elements of the solid form, and it .......... i .: i . . . ii.ii i ii i . iicwr mils iu uurt noiu ny an uruy- or mailcrl bv Ely liros., 56 Warren oireei, iew loru. Dnvelopes 7.S.000 Envelopes carried in stock at the Columbian Office. The line includes drug envelopes, pay, coin, baronial, commercial sizes, number 6, 6, 6$, 9, 10 and 11, catalog, &c. Prices range from $1.50 per 1000 printed, up to $5.00. Largest stock in the coun ty to selett from. Kntrance through Roy's Jewelry Store. tf Pfctorrph4 from ur. REVIVO RESTORES VITALITY Made a Well Man of Ma. vnxisa-oxx zixnvEXixaY produces the above result! In 30 days. It sets powerfully tud quickly. Cures when sll others toll laungDiea will regain their lout tosuhoad. sad old tarn will recover their youthful vigor by uslns II E VIVO. It quickly ami surely rentores Nerroos peei, Loi,t Vitality. Iuiputeucy, Nightly Emissions. Lost Power, Fsillng Memory, Wanting IMsesses. and U efiVcta ct Belt-abuse or excexssud Indiscretion, lieu uuOUono lorstudy, bUHiueim or morrlage. It Bot only cures by start in at tho scat o( dlscaiie, but 111 great nrve tonlo and blood bulkier, brim lug back tha pluk glow to palo cberks and re storing ths fire of youth. It wardn off luaaullf oa Conaumptlon. Inslht on having REVIVO. M her. It cio be carried In vent rocket. By mall. 1.00 er package, ot sis (or S.OO. with s puff Written sjoarantee to core or retuM e moury Honk and a.WUe t n-o. AUdrena . imMEDIClNKCO., SeSS$uL For Salelby Mover Brof,, 131oomiburp I At m m mm mwm ii u la ll If H the j .r
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers