-"2 - i 1 I 3 3 --3 13 ; --.-a 1 :c-a "'..-a :-::a -a -a .-'a .-'3 -a -1 .-a 1 :a 1 --a 3 '3 Va PICKED UP. The Brooklyn (X. Y.) bridg-e " cars have carried 2'J7,CX0, Oi 0 w ithout an ac cident. NoRTn Africa, New Zealand. E?ypt. Finland, have elaliorate school systems, says Stanley Hall. The emperor of Germany owns a farm, anil milk is sold from it in full measure, without dilution. Coai. production of the United States in ls2 was lTy.ono.tmo tons, worth four times the product of silver. Ciiai xcky Dkpkw is said to have found jrreat enjoyment in smoking- and to have abandoned the habit as mental ly injurious. To mkkt the r-'schief of railway passes to lejislatoi. in Yirpinia. a law has lteen made requiring- the companies to furnish them. Mil-. M. S. Kap.net, of Nantucket. Mass.. has lcn reelected overseer of the poor: and Mrs. S. O. Jones has Wen elected to the same Ward this year. A Japasksk clergyman, who worked with great success, held that the churches should W self-supporting from the start, and he worked accord ingly. Jamestown. Plymouth and New York were our early settlements. Now Ply mouth has S.Uio inhabitants. New York. l.Ooo.ooo and Jamestown not a dozen. FUR AND FEATHERS. A n.i.n eajrle carried olT a Wittle of hair restorer from IVrryville. Pa. Ski.imin Si-excek. of Essex. Conn., has a hen which lately astonished him hy layin- an err that weijrhs twenty ounces anl measures eiht and one half inches in circumference. Tiikkk's a d.r at Southwest HarWr, Me., which has trotted from Somesville to the UarWr and hack, twelve miles a day, six days in the week, for four years. Thus he has traveled nearly 1.1, noo miles. lion Mawsi.ey, of Jacksonville. Fla., has a pair of younjr eajrles which he lias trained to carry through the air a Wsket containing his seven-year-old Wy. His only regret is that lie can't enjoy a trip himself till he has caught a few more of the birds. A cat owned hy Daniel E. Kowe. of Belfast, Me., dissippeared and was not seen for three weeks. It was finally found imprisoned in a lobster trap, in a very weak condition, where she is W lieved to have Wen all the time, with out nourishment of any kind. She has now fully recovered. PERSONAL NOTES. Prince ('koki;k of Pki ssia isabout to publish his memoirs. Mr. AKTiit'K'AKNoi.n is the leader of the three hundred theosophists in Prance. It is estimated ihat Queen Victoria's visit to Florence and Coburg- will cost her aliout S75.HOO. Mme. Sevekine. the only woman journalist of any prominence in France, lives in Paris, and is able to earn by her writing's ST-'-tioti to .15.0io a .year. The maharajah of Mysore has issued a decree that in future no girl may marry at an ape of less than eight years anil no Wy at less than fourteen. Mu. Uavmoni Bi.athwayt. the well known interviewer, lecturer and man of letters, has Wen commissioned to ex plore Africa. He starts shortly for Cal cutta. Pkincess Stephanie, the widow of the late Crown IVince Rudolph, has just finished a volume of poems, which is to lie issued shortly in German and French. PROGRESSIVE WOMEN. The queen of Corea has a woman physician, who is paid a salary of fif teen thousand dollars a year. Mks. Flemino. the assistant of Prof. Bickering at Harvard observatory, has recently discovered four new variable stars. The president of the First national bank of Lexington. Neb., is Mrs. II. R. Temple, and her daughter, Miss Tem ple, is the vice president. Miss Yosepii. the young- Persian who is aWut to graduate from the New York Women's Medical college, will re turn to the country of her birth as the only native female physician there. Mrs. Kesiai.. who is so justly noted for her lovely complexion, pives the following- as her complexion recipe Ten hours sleep every nipbt. a four mile walk every day, viporous rubbinp in cold water, brown bread, no sweets and no coffee. WORSHIP OF A HERO. The Konuth Mrmrnto That Whm Swurixl by the A Icon hll.lren. A reference to the welcome which Emerson pave Kossuth reminds a Bos ton Transcript writer of a story that Louisa M. A loot t used to tell. The Al cott children, says the writer, were al ways hero worshipers. They had heard from their brave, great-hearted mother the story of Kossuth's work and Kossuth's country, and finally they were taken to hear him speak. Thev caiue home thrilled with the inspira tion of it. and then lamented bitterly that they had secured no relic of the great patriot, however insigaificaut, which they could enshrine and wor ship, as their fashion was. But Anna the pentle, timid Mep of later time drew, exultantly and blushinply, a plass poblet from W-neath her cloak, and whispered: He drank from it!" "She had rushed in," sai.l Miss Alcott. 'where we other vandals feared to tread. Vhile the father was soarinp wit! Kossuth into the heroic empyrean, and we all stood round, ameninp so to speak, Anna had stolen close to the desk, and whipped the poblet under her cloak. We built a little shrine for it, and hunp it on our chamber wall." PEOPLE OF WASHINGTON. President Cleveland uses the very tiniest of stub pens stuck into a mas sive holder, and his handwritinp is small and very distinct. Mrs. Cleve land writes in fine, larpe characters. Mrs. Madeline Vinton Dahi.oken has in the dininp-room of her house in Washinpton the mirror used by Dolly Madison in the white house and after ward in her own home as long as she live-L Coi Daniel S. I.amont, secretary of war, and family will spend a portion of the summer at Sorrento, where they have a cottape. and it is reported that ITesident and Mrs. Cleveland and little Ruth will be their puests for awhile. Mrs. Cleveland's tastes in jewelry are very simple. Althouph she owns a number of rinps she rarely wears any except her weddinp rinp. A favorite ornament on dress occasions is a Wautiful diamond star, which was one of her weddinp gifts. HISTORICAL YEARS. 149. The magnetic clock invented and put in use by Dr. Locke. 141. The calotype process of photog raphy perfected and patented. IsM. Grand Industrial exposition opened in London by the queen. 13'X Sun pictures brought to com parative perfection by Dag-uerre, of Paris. 145. Gutta percha broupht into gen eral use for overshoes, clothing aud other articles. Is4t. Singular discovery of the planet Neptune by two fcstrunuiuers working 3 never wants te learn, but the reads that OkD Honesty CHEWING TOBACCO is the best that is made, and at ON0E tries it. and save3 money and secures more satisfaction than ever before. A.VOID imitations. Insist on having the genuine. If your dealer hasivt it ask him to get it for you. m. FUZER & BROS., LoulrciUe. Ky LADIES Are you reckless enoiinh lo vi nturc v If o s.-n two cents in stamps t the l,trl; l'uhliltini Co . 51 and Wostunirton Stns-t. Ni otk. tin one of their lieautiful illustnitetl .sidle?-. Hooks." It is a novel. iinnii.-. .-mi! ii;ien-s iu)f work to every -rsm of n lim-oa nt. On receipt of ten cents in Mamps they wit wn.l pttpaid a full K.-t of their famous h..use. hold (tame Verba. For ten cents t In -y will ulsosr-nd Nw.k coiitniriiti-r complete word- of Tin- .Vikndo." imd nm-ir t.t it imw-t iiopiilar witiL--. toiretlii rwitli ti n --titii.-'t'-chroiuo cruds. QUlNEPTUS ! A very t-l.-a-ioir. liririiili ! riwi r: h.x, l nrmnti comM.nri. for tin- ini,- i.i niniii.- :n i othr h'-tt-T (Iniirv. -itln r -.i'il rl-.t'. Prire. Out Hr Pint lUiltlr. r Kii hvtli i:.in.o: pliysu i.-iii! in r.ur-HK- nml Aiiit-rira. I i i no ajiupauuut-v.-rylx.ltk-. I". ,r Sal.- Iy IriiL'its. ManntJir;n-..il l.y The Academic Pharmaceutic Co., I.OMl AMI ;iv vii:k. 532-536 WASHINGTON ST., SEW YORK CITY- ELIXIR. An elptrant English h.innar. ;c rrf-paratioi' for bilious, malarial ami I.I.mkI tr ilifc-s ; tli- rv Suit or over twenty-live years f must eiuiiieni Bcientille research. Approver! I.y the highest medical Rut)iorities In use in the hospitals in everv part .f Kurc--Especiallv helj.tul to tallies, clul.lren and -p.w of w-.l. ntary haliits Entirely vegetable ; free fn.m harmful drutrs- Sn Handsome Packages, Price 50 Cts. Prrjiared sole'y by lie JoyM 'liarinrufcutid Co. LONDON AND NEW YORK, Chemists by appointment to Her Majesty the Vuwen and to the koyal Kaniily. NEW YORK liRAXCH: 130, 132, 134 Charlton St ROYAL PILLS. J fcamemeoicmal properties ax Un al Fxixm, in boxes. pills to box, for 2 5 cents. FOR SALE BY ALL DRUCCISTS REMEMBERTiiUIG FOUR! Vinegar Bitters CORDIAL. SOe. Vinegar Bitters P0"WDEES, 50 doses, so. Vinegar Bitters, new style, j v;x J $ I .oo Vinegar Bitters, old style, bitter taste, $ 1 .00 The World's Creat Blood Purifier and Life Giving: Principle. Only Temperance Bitters Known. The past tjfih of n Century Iho I.rmlins Family Medicine oi the World. B. H. McDonald Drag Co., Proprietors, RAN FRANCISCO and NEW TOHK. COPTRICHTS. tJ e or -ninrnuuiTii ana rree Handnook writ to ML.VN St "o S.l Bhoai.w at. New Yokit. ldert bnresa for securtn patent In America. KTerr patent taken out by m 1b broiii-ht bef.r the pubuc by a notice given free of charge In the Scientific JUucricau I divert rlmlatlnn of any nrlpntiflc paper In ttie world. Splendidly tlluntrated. No intelligent man ehould be without it, WeeklT, 8;.H a fear? fl-Vlntx mnnths. Aildreon Mf JCN .t ro XtuxaUMMA, atil iiroadway. Hew York City. THETORNADO Feed and Ensilage Cat CoriML&jka fci iliifif thwnttm eirte a rilema for llnm Cstila ar. . Majinieon A Co., rn pclrm. . CAMION, OHIO." iiualuw i i , -. & Scientific American Agency frl Ji)jk 12r TRADE MARKS, DESICM PATENTS, t .. K A kt at i TJt- iT'11 kli'aMi IN AN ARSENIC MINE. The l'rodiict ion of the IW-mlly Irujr J Not I nhrailhr to tli" Mlnn- Many jints of interest artr broup-ht out in a l:':-ript ion in a teehnieal jour nal of the way in which arM iiie is ol taimil from one of the most famous nines in Knj-Iaml. the Devon t'reat Consols. The mine, says the Montreal l-tur. was orio-inally worke.i for eopjn-r alone, ami w.ull have l.i'i-n abandoned ni ir the discovery that the waste thrown out as wort!il.".ss when copper v.m . s.m-iit proved rich hi ar -eiiie. Al-thoy-o-h eopjH-r is still i-.ii: ed. it is in sin-.'. II .i:iiiii'.ies. an 1 the mi.:e ha- Urn re.-'lvi-l i-i-.i' an arx'iiie works. The ars.-.ie.il pyrites c.:isit of twenty-live t- thir;;." p-r criit. of irn. twelve and .ne-!i:':lf t fourteen per cent, of arsen ic and tiie rest of earthy matter. A1U r l inr eiu-hed this is sorted by rirlr-,.f from thirtei'ii to sixti-en years of a re. Jt i- then washed and "ji.'.ired" r sifted and passed on t the first eal ei:nr. wikto isbtirn-d with low class co.:l. and iriluees ""arsenic sinit" so mixed wilh snioUe sNit from the coal as to K- a frray color. The arsenic and soot, deposited in combination in the chimney or con denser, are s-rajx-.'. out and taken to the s-c !!il calciner for puritieation. Thi calcin.-rs consist of revolvin-r iron (iriuns. throujrh which a tire of anthra cite coal is earrietl on rotating iron farnaces kept red hot. As the arsenic soot is subjected to the inllueiice of this heat t he arsenic, is sublimed and con densed. This operati. n has to lie care fully watched, an I if the workm.'ii burn the arsenic bailly they have to pay f ir it. Three men in four weeks will nrike one liun.lre.l tons of arsenic. Th, v in whk-h the arsenic is condetisi-.l is a mile lono-- It is carried to an incline up a hill, with iron doors in the side. As the. hot blast passes ' upwards it deposits a crust of arsenic ery.-tal.-. on the brickwork all around to a depth of from two to three inches, and minute dn-t of crystals fall to the ll.xir. The smoke has then to pass into an upright chimney one hundred and twciity-:ive feet hih. but just ln-fore doino- so it has t traverse a sh ver of water, which catches what remains of the arsenic, not hi n;? but sulphurous acid In-iuo-allowed t. escape. The arsenic is liable to produce sores if permitted to lodye in wrinkles and folds i. f the llesli. or almut the mouth and nost rils. As a rule, however, this only happens when there is careless ness as to personal cleanliness, and the arsenic workers simply have to wash themselves thoroughly every day on returning fmni work. Otherwise the work is considered healthful. It pre vents all ec.cma. and the f tunes of sul phuric acid, as well as the arsenical lust, are fatal to o-crms of disease. Most workmen remain at the works for i numlK-r of years without sutferinr. but occasionally the symptoms of ar senical poisoning-, loss of appetite, nau sea, frontal hea lache and anaemia de clare themselves. When this takes place tin- work has to lc o-jven up en tirely. The orcatcst danger to which the workmen are exposed is met when it is necessary f r an v ntirixise to enter the upriirht shaft. The effect on the eyes is most painful and a further cu rious evidence of t!i virulence of the pervailiiiir atmosphere lx-conu-s mani fest. The men wear linen o-armetits. lined with flannel, anil the sulphuric acid fumes completely dest r y the linen in a few moment.-, leavino' the tlatiind intact, so that the men ro into the shaft in linen and come out in wool. Fortunately, it is seldom necessary to enter th- shaft, or o-reat loss of sirht would ensue. NERVOUSNESS IN AMERICA. Ir. MibrlM-ll My It I the Characteristic Hisr-a44- of th- Nation. lr. S. Wi-ir Mitchell considers it prov-d beyond any dispute that nerv ousness is the characteristic malady of the American nation, jrrowino- upon them in a frightfully accelerated ratio every year, and threatening them with disaster-eat no distant date which tin mind shrinks from contemplating', says a writer in Mo! "lure" Mairazine. The numlK-rof deaths from this cause is al ready appalling and is steadily and rapid l" increasing. In some of the busy centers the tables of mortality show that the proportion of nerve deaths has multiplied more than twen ty times in the last forty years, and that now the nerve-deal lis number more than one-fourth of all the deaths recorded. What is most sh-H-kinr in these returns, this fearful loss of life occurs mainly amono- you no- people of lwith sexes. This means that the Americans are fast Wconiino- a very short-lived peo ple; an iiii.ii ii iney were shut ill on themselves for only a few years, with out any influx of vitality by immigra tion, the publication of the census wouhS send a panr of horror and alarm thrn'isrhout the land. Wnat is the cause of this? Dr. Mitch ell is clearly of opinion that the first and most potent cause is the climate. How or why the climate of Ann rica produces the effect that it docs has never been explained. Dr. Mitchell says the operation of climatic condi tions in relation to health in this coun try is utterly mysterious: but lie is quite persuaded that the development of a nervous temperament is one of the race changes which are also jrivino- the Americans facial. vocal anil other jH'fiil iarities derived from none of t heir a n cestral stocks. Some scientific ol scrvers have aflirmed that there is an 'electric" quality in the climate here which operates powerfully on the nerves, but it is not clear what they mean by that; and Dr. Mitchell, who has probably iriven the subject more attention than anybody else, does not consider the evidence of this electric agency sutlicicnt to found a theory. What is certain is that people cominjr largely from the phleo-mat ie races un dergo a chano-e of tcmcr:iiiicnt here and Income excitable, emotional and irritable in a decree that is unknown in any other part of the world. An other plainly recognized effect of the American climate is that it makes the strain of either mental or physical lalnir much more severe than it is else where. SPROUTS OF EXPERIENCE. Why kill small reptiles? They are insect eaters and our friends. The Most Pkofitahik Cuop. It is the one which you cannot only raise, but also sell to advantage. Foit Onion Mai:;ot. English par deners recommend the use of soot, both applied to the soil and dusted on the plants. Tiik division of agricultural soils is a brand new branch of the apicultnral department. I'rof. Milton Whitney has Iwen appointed chief. To this ili vision has been assigned the duty to study the climatic conditions of heat and" moisture, under the surface of the frround. and the relation of these con ditions to crop distribution. Ameri can ;ardeninjf. Worst- and Worse. James I'ayn tells, in the Illustrated London News, of a w hist player lcin told by an opponent that he could af- ui.iii-ii nv ins i ace when he had rood hand. This he r.-s-r. t...l . 1 a i mly and applied to his part tu r for a refutation of it. but he was only still more irritated by his form of eorroli- -ration, -that he had never noticed any expression in his countenance whatever." GiA. RL Rry IjNTITJS, PRACTICAL WATCHMAKER & 4E WEtEH, AND DEALER IN 4444e444444eK s ELKH&RT CARRIAGE and lluve old to come mera fur VI year. Bavin them tli ltMlri rtH. We an- the UldrMt udI LvrgrBL m tnulaciurerH in AmT ica tM!!! iiu Wliu'li'H anil liuriuH ibif way t'mi Willi privihttf t exaiun.e hi-lore any nnny 1h paid. V p:ty f rkii;tit Mtth wnvstf rmt Knti!:n t rv. Warrant for 2 ye ir. Why par n airetit s" m t )C.riHMrilTf'r )": Writ ymr twn tr!i. r-;int 1 rev. Wo take alt risk. j! tiuuiH;:e in WHOLEEA- PRICES. Cprins VOgOHE, SZ tO 550. f iuaratrf m..ic ii i..rt:Jt.t... Murreys, SC5 to 5 ICO kj::io a- -M.il f-r e:u t- tt-M. fop tuccirr, r.l". Farm Warons, WoponNtr?, PilH Waar-i;:s,r?cliwr ry WRons "" Road CartS. It'll W 1.1.4 I UK )H, HOUM Illl Ukl . $'.1.00 it iy No. 37. Surrey llnrness. i A. i:r fTT I!.rut-fw . . ... Sk 7Lt'j. Top Biiif y .Ua.nr.M-- $43.00 lun-r. I. rm.mi 7 f JV IMA f I, l I. HIIM; HAHIH.O and FLY M TS. S MTrfnt cr for uh .It h ordr. hrmA 4. la i4iiiNM to pMjr pu-luft' wit No. .'i. Kuiiu Wnuii. 6i Seeing is Believing.,, . Slnd a good lamp must be simple; -when it is not simple it is not P"rnrfl SZimAf' fi'iiitifiif fl.i,i,J lluM words mean much, but to will imnress the truth mor tough and seamless, and made it is absolutely safeacaxX unbreakable. Like Aladdin's of old, it is indeed a "wonderful lamp," for its mar velous lifht IS nitrpr ?nrl tvr-i'rr lsm rrtr. O I softer than electric light and ijxi iw inimt-Tuii Rochester. Tf the Inmpdcalrr hns n t the c-nnltll Kocdcstcr. ana the style you want, send to us for our ot-w illustmttsi catahvae. anil will rn.i y.u a lamp safely bv express-your choice ol over i.OUO varieties from the Lartreit l.,,t. c.,, , 1 ' ltOCllESTEU LAHP CO., 44 I'arlt Place, Net Vorlt City. - "The Rochester." HilEUiMSrVTMD. NEURALGIA 1 Ih-s- ivtin (l!s..s. s cans.- untol.l stifTerlrig. I tio. ii.rs ailiiilt ttiut they are dlfllcult to cure sinlo thi lr p:it! nts. I'alnc's i Celery ( ouipouml bus per- tiianeiilly Ji rot-Kt cases of ruvumntlsm ani, iieuraljla so say those lio' liave used It. llavlnir hen troutileil with rli'Ufnarrs!i: at the kiiee a'ld fiot fur live veiirs. I was aliiMist unable lo u-el anniinl. Hint was very often l ontliieil to my tn-d fnr. weeks at a lime. I useil only oik: IxiU tie of I'allie's 4'elery 4'om p tiinl, and was perteelly enre.l. I ean now Miinp uroiiml. and Ii-el aa lively as ahoy." i'.KANK 'akoij. Eureka. Ni-vada. tl.oo. 81x for .-. oo. Prusvtsta. Inramo'Lh testimonial paper fre , Wki-is. Kicbki90mJo.. Props., liurlltit on, Vt tilt Unun nvrc G'1 Faster and hrirjhter uooiiuiru u i CnLort than anuoOier -. WANT A J FOR SALE. I Inouseto I I OWNER . I 1 b-:-J We have wat-nns, ruieies. suneys. lliv.1i praJr, as liirlrt, strong, durab, si.vlisli. as beautifully UnisiiAi as iiHKlc.-rnii'J nianuf act tire can pr.t!i.e. Built 4.n h..m.r by nun . f !:fe exporic'iu-e. Honesty is our policy; prompt sliipnu-nt ur specialty. We want t know you. Write us. Cos'.s yi-u notiiini;. May lead to business by and by. etJ for our AAialoi'iie. It is tree to every reader of t'ps par jr. tiiiiy, luniton Wavvn Co.. Hint-luii'tori. N. Y. BUILT FOR LThri is a. - ' I.4-, mtkh r f I -nc m w- -m.' r J m i ti r v -t j r . BniiJI-l - WTr 11 cleanliness m&mm OAHt)L ti ll- is csoli.d c&ke irofscouring soa.pi Try ihinyour oexVhouse-cIc2Jiing,a.nd beh&ppy looking out over the many homes of this corjitry , we sen- thousands of women wearing away their lives in householC drudgery that might be materially lessened by the use of a few cakes of S APOLIO. If an hour is saved o-ich time a cake is -used, if one less wrinklo Cathers uraon the face because the toil is lightened, she must be a foolish woman who would hesitate to make the experiment, and ho a churlish husband who would grudge the fv -entR tvhic"c i: co-;- I - the -tsO' i r i n U HAY-FEVER ' COLD-HFAn JUb ELY BROTHERS, 56 Warren Street NEW YORK. I)UC pTCHES, CLOCKS,! JEWELl'.V, SILVERWARE, MUSICAL - INSTRUMENTS! AJil 0PTICAU50ODS. SOLE ACEXT FOU TIIK CELEBRATED BOCKFOEDj WATi'IIES. 2 ColimlJia anfl Fi eflonla Walclie5 In Key and Stem Winder. T LARCH SELECTION fK ALL :KIM.S OK JEWELRY AL- W AYS ON HAND. U" M v line of Jewell y i-siinsur-J passed, t'otne ami se- for your- 4 self before mir iiasinu elsew here t5"AH work Koaranteed. nDT DlTTIWTnCi iiinui raiii'iuo. AAAAAAAA4AAAAAA4AAAA4AAA fffffffffffffffffffffff? HARNESS KFG. CO. t !ttli-. ir (. iu a J tuuLIo ls.SO II Kt-m. Ilarne - . Klkhart liiryrlo. in whoela. piifii mat ir t irf. t- Id t!a I tX-pace rtt1lcM" No. Tsl. Purrpy. No.T'JT. Ui.a.l Wsnoii. ddresa W. B. PRATT, Sec'y, ELKHART, IND. see "The Rochester" fnrr-ibltr All -rrt-iT in three nieces oniv 1.1111 ,3 .1111, more cheerful than either. P.iln l"OlT ninj'Otin I l;:i tt-ti .1 i.m sfnd to nit. Kot iin to ';irs I h .v.- suf f-rtl wltli fifMintiria of lUts . ;rr i--tt 1 . fliMt4ir f:lltllVT -IO CUt I l t .Klt iiforly four lnittl of th 'oniN'in-t .m.i .ii!t fr-' 1 m!h lh fotiipLtliil. I lfl -i i:r.:i--iui to you." CUas. H. Uwis, t't-iitfai Viihic, cu Paine's Celery Compound "I have li-en jnatly aftlli-ti-il with aenta rheumatism, and i-ould ftnd no relief until I usi-d 1'alnes elery 1 otiinuml. After usln six lint ties of this medicine 1 am now cured of rheumatic trimMe? Samukl lliTiiussiis. So. t'ornlsh. N. II. Effects Lasting Cures. Palne's"clcry 'oniound has ("rfoi ined many other cures as niarveimis as t hese. - inples of letters si-tit to any address. I'leasant lo l:ike. does not disturb, hut aids dlo-stlou. and entire ly veiretiil.le: a child ran take It. What's th use of suite-Ins lun-r with rhcuinalLsni or i ueuraJu? I n t nCC Linng uixnt Ixuiaicl Food are Iimltk unuit.o Happy, llem Umriy. It tt IMeijualed. WAGON?' If BUSINESS good revenue! T i a r- Lo nOr J-C, V 'J. . . - . 13 . . rTTI I 7. I t A SACRED MONKEYS. DlnlnrhADK of tti Adjunc-ta to the Itrmh min AVntsihip. In ce rtain parts of India monkeys are n'jr;iriU-l as oVjoets of worship. In KiMiiinisot-noes of Seventy ears' Life, Travfl and Adventure." the author was al-out to eiiUr the court of a larjre monkey temple at Xuddea, when the o1iieiatinr lirchmin said: "Xo ix-rson must visit the eourt of iluniman" the monkey tfod "with his fchoes 4n." Aftt-r some di-ieussion. however, the loint was yielsled. the party entering with.i.it rem:vin-- their shoes. OI an otlu r -easion h writes: In pasMu;' ui the eouutry. when near to Nud.U a". I ha ppenod t i stroll into a Kimlroo tojH-. r junirlo. when the lxiat had put to for the ni'ht. I had n t a.l vaneed fur K-f. re I heard a terrible np n r.r all around, anil was not a little alarmed, on looking up. to ln-hohl a whole rrmy of the largest monkeys makin-; towards me from all quarters. S..iiu jumped on the pround Ik-fore me. others swun;r by the laiiilo.s iver my head, and many closed up the path in my rear. Several ft'iuales had youiir ones elii'.jritifr to them, but this did not seem to render them less afrile than the otlu rs. A few of the largest, and apparently the oldest, chattered for al. ut h ;lf a minute t. .-.'ether; then the win le trilK- responded, while all closetl ii: 11 m tt me. What to lo I knew not. However, I hallooed as loudly as 1 could to make my people hear, and to my jrreat com fort the monkeys retreated a few paces every time I did so. This encouraged me to persevere, but I perceived that when I l-ejran to retreat they closed upon me a.'jin. without lcin; affected by my noise. Once more I stoHl still and pave a tremendous shout, when back they went apain. I pained full twenty yards this time lcfore they came jumpiiip around; and just as I was alout to rejH-at the call, my hojics wi n- raised by lK-holdinp a jXM.r. de crepit old woman some hobblinp throtiph the midst of them. She shook two or three of them by t he paws as she passed; but no sooner had she eotiie within heariiiir than slu- oh-ii-I ii m ni me a torrent of abuse for disturbing the ssiered animals in their ret irement. She motioned me, with almost frantic pesttires. to depart rpiickly. and her tonpue never rra-x-il till I was rpiite out of hcariiip. 1 was not loiip in fultillinp her om inaud.s. as the monkeys all seemed im plicitly to olx-y her biddinp. and made a way for my retreat. When I rpiilteil the jimple I met my servant, who said he w as cominp to tell me not to dis til rl . t he monkeys, as lliiniiuan owned that lamtoo prove. The old woman, "it apH-arel. was employed by the llrahniiiis to pive the monkeys food everv day; ln-side which they were worshicl by all the jieople in the country round, who broupht otTcrinps of rice and sweetmeats to them contin ual ly. SPIDER ON THE WIRES. liit-rriitlon of Ti-la-irtaphlc- Commun-fA-tit.ll I.y Tlx-ir tVrlm. Two of t he main throitph wires lie tweeti New York and Itostoti were re cently ri-jMirti-d "in trouble" -ast of X'W London, says the New York Sim. They positively r-fus-l to work at all i:i th- morn'mp. but from about eleven o'clock in tin forenoon until eleven o'clock at niplit they were found to l all ripht. Krotn this eciiliarity they came to lie known as "the twelve-hour wires." and Lineman Wil liams was di rected to lind out what the matter was with them. lie located "the trouble" as In-inp In-twi-eii Xcank and l'poii nock Lridpe. and thi-ti walked back and forth and forth and back alonp the rails, with his eyes sca-iiiinp the row of tcletrraph p.h-s and wires in a rain search f . -r the misi-hievous cross. lie kept up th- hunt for two or three days, and tinally. just as he had pivcti up in despair, and was swinpinp himself on to a train to po h:m.. he cau 'lil sipiit of a larpe cobweb in the shallow of a bipilni tree, which was 1-oiitid from one of the erratic wires to the other. Williams came back to the cobweb the next inorninp and eyed it caperlj. lie was not loiip in cliuibinp the jile near est to it. and then he saw that the web was the really piantie product of several spiders, iis hip white surface tlappinp idly to and fro ln-tween the two wires which it connected. Its face was liespatiplcd with Lip perns if dew: in fact, tin' condition was the same as if tin" two wires had lecil connected with a sheet of muslin saturated with water. Nothinp will "cross" and "kill" two electrically charped wires more effectually than a wet substance of this kind coiiTiectinp them. When the sun dried the dew off tin cobweb the "cross" tlisapp4ared. and lid not conic back a pa in until a rainstorm came or tin- next dew fell. Wilbams pathercd the cobweb and stuffed it in his coat pocket. It made a larpe handful. Then-was no more trouble with the wires after that. When the lineman rcj-ortcd the matter to the eastern chief of the company at ISoston he pot lauphed at for his pains, but on the followinp day he told his adventure with the cobweb to Superintendent Fred Fairchild, of the New Haven of iice. an expert electrician. who promptly declared that it was the colt web which crossed the wire and at once sat down to a telcpraph machine and talked for half an hour with the llostoti chief. 'xplaininp to him where he was in -rror in assuminp a cobweb could not "cross" a telcpraph wire. Ili lfjlnc ( hlnMM- Wonun. It is possible for any Chinaman. 4r even any Chinese woman, to lieeome a deity by payinp for the honor. A few years apo a rich and devout Chinese holy died in Soochoo. Her friends thoupht that an aix.theosis was no' more than her due. and 4-ouimu nieated with the priests, who interviewed the pods on the subject, and tliscovercd that the pod of the left little toenail had no wife. The old lady was accord inply married to his pod si ii p. and is now enrolled as the "poddess 4.f the left little toenail." The honor cost the old lady's estate over live thousand dollars. Some Onw rrmturni. Not only do certain animals adopt the i-olor of thinps alrout them, but chanpe their habits and the re4.uire lncnts of their nervous system. Thus a Malay bntterlly is well known, which imitates the appearance of a dead leaf on a twip, even to the extent of a transparent spot on its winps. to rep resent the hole nibbled by insects. A certain spider, a class of careful workers, spins a slovenly web, so that its own InmIv may have a proper suf romidinp for imitatinp particles blown in by the wind. Certain fishes stand Hpripht in the water to iep.Vsent rushes. Life In the Sahara. Exploration is improvinp the popu lar knowledpe of the Sahara. Instead of ln-inp larpely In-low the s-a, the preater part of it is from six thousand to eipht thousand f.-4-t atrove that level; instead 4f lc:np rainless, showers make it bloom and cover it with preen prass for a few weeks every year; larpe Mocks and herds are maintained upon its Iror lers: the cklscs are depressions where waU-r can lie coUecUil and sU.reil, and are villainously unhealthy In hot weather 1 .-cause of this stapnant water and the filthy habits 4f the inhabitants; llies, scorpions and frightfully liiph tcm peratnre are the principal drawbacks to travel or life In the grreat desert. printing: THE FKEtZyt. Printing Office1 19 tbe place to Ret yonr JOB PRINTING Promptly sod tM.tl--f ctti Hy twuted. We - I II ni4Mt tu prices .f aill lotinraDle couipetion, Wf don't do any bul firsl-ciiss wok and wnt a liyinit prior br lt Willi Fast Presses sni New Type We are prepared U turn out Jot Pimtinif of every d'fcrlption In the FINEST STYLE and at the v-r Lowest CasJ Prices. Not hi be out the b4st material l used and our work i-p-aks for itself. We are pre pared to print on the stiortes. notice POSTKR?, rROfiRAlUIKf, IUsisess Caki Tags. Bill Heap, Monthly Statkmksts E.NrKin-KS, LAUKLe. ClRCCLAKS. WEIUMSO AND VtbiTiso CAKue. Checks. Xotks. Urakts. Kkckipth, Uosn Work. 1..ettkr and note 1kai!, and Hop and Tarty Invitations Ktc We ran print anything from the emallest and neatest Visiting Card to the latest Poster on tthort notice and at tb most lieasonahle Rales. The Cambria Fiennau EllEXSRITIlO. I'EXX'A. MRS. ELM IRA HATCH. HEART DISEASE 20 YEARS. Dr. MiUm JTeif Ooi C- EUcJmrt, Imtt. Iba k Prj: For 20 yars I troubled with heart dinette. Would frrqiienily have l.ilin aveila uid stnothenne at tnKh. Had to sit up or gr Mit of trd to brrihe. Had fain In my left aide and bark most of tbe time; al UfI I bc-rame dropsi'-al. I was very nervous and nearly worn out-. ha leant excitepient wonld cause me u THOUSANDStS'i-s with Outterlnjr. For tbe last f fteen veara I could Dot sleep oo my left Fide or Iwk unul tx-cmn takinc Jour ee Utmr Cr. I hail not taki-n it very mf ontU 1 fell mnrb better, and 1 ran now rleep on eitber Fide or back vtubirut ti.e least disoom fort. 1 have no pain, pmothcntic. droy . no wind on sumiarb or oilier durrvealiie f- m; i- .ttis. I am Me to do all mv own lur:k wiLiiOul any trouble and considor myself cun-ii Kikbart. Ind . l-sS. Mrs. KijfTBk IIatch. It in now four -.- gjnee I have taken any medicine. Am in' Utter hcullb. than I l.arc tea In 40 yean. I honestlv lo- i-. . . lievetiiat Dr. atilf I IWk j Mrart Cur saved my life v"' w and made me a well woman- I am now f!2 yean of ase. and am able to do a cnod (lav a work. Ma; iUi, li Eutika Hatch. Sold on as Positive. Guarantee. Dr. MALES' PI LLS. 50 Doses 25 Cts. Constipation Demands prompt treatment. The re ulta of neglect may lm serious. Avoid all harsh and tlra.stic purgatives, the tendency 4f which is to weaken the bowels. The best rrmeily is Ayer'i Pills. Being purely vegetable, their action is prompt and their effect always liencticial. Thry aro an admirable Liver and After-dinner pill, and every where c-ndorsed by the profession. " Ayer's Till- are hiirhly an.l tiniver ally siviken of by the "ixi.pli- about here. 1 make daily tise of them in my practice." lr. I.E. i'ow h-r, Iiridge fort, t'oun. " I can recommend Ayer Bills abiire all others, having hii proved tlieir value as a cathartic fur mvsclf and family." J. T. lU-.ss, Lc-ithsville, 1'a. "For several years Ayer's Tills have been used iu uiy family. We liud them an Effective Remedy for constipation and indigestion, and are never without them in the house." Moj-s Greuicr, Lowell, Mass. "' I have used Ayer's Bills, for liver troubles anl indices! ion. during many years, and have always fouud tliciii prompt and 4-t)ici-nt in their action." L. Smith, L'tica, N. Y. "I suffereil from constipation which assumed such au i l.stmate form that I feared it would cans,) a stoppage of the liowels. Two txvx.-s o f Ayer's l'ills f -fn-ted a complete cure." 1. liurke. fcaco. Me. "I have used Ayer's Bills for the past thirty years and consider them an in valuable family medicine. I know of no Iw-ttcr moody for liver troubles, ami have always found them a prompt cure for tlyspepi:i." .lames tjtiiun, J0 Middle St., Hartford. Conn. " Ilavins lteen troubled w ith costive tiess, which seems inevitable with jier ons of sedentary habits, I have tried Ajer's Tills, hoping for relief. I atu clad to sa that they have m rveil me l-tter than any otln-r iin-.iicine. I arrive at tins conclusion only after a failliful trial of llo-ir merits." Samuel T. Jones, Oat si., Boston. Mass. Ayer's Pills, PKKI-AKril KT Or. J. C. Ayer St Co.. Lowell. Masr Bold by rn.il Lrealura In Ulldn, Cnres thonsands anntiallyof IJverCom r.iatnts. Biliousness. Jaundice, DvspeT sia. Constipation. Malaria. More Ills result froraan Unhealthy Liverthanany jHhereause. Why unfTer when you can h cured t Dr. Sanford's Liver fn vigor" ator i, a celebrated f -tmilv rneriieinV THE ra nnim n PATENT VAI?l"Bl.e HklCTION rrro beat Set Won, in tbe World.' " bavMili& Engine Received the Medal and Hiht4J A . j urea tne medal and Hichi at the World s Columbian Exposition r. o. r HMUUnAH CO. YORK. PENNA. A F J. ask a. a . . . . majjaaB. m (TfiP) an expensive dinner It Coot at th Kt4 of So llatdrwi . lr tk l latr. "History of the cuisine fu;trw yvith descriptions of c-stlv n-,-" marked a resident 4f Lro.ki - r" 1.- . . - . t or- f..r- lli.. . . . ; ' . " '-' - ... r i. . . .. . , - "a barS " 1 I'r,,::'-'2V I; sincrle di 'i!' - 1. Roman i. .1 i'.'u lanie another Roman. "tid dL.;ir.an.L siip;-r to a dozen croiii.''rn"- . ipiarter of a millioti 5 1.'.urt'" Vitellius. still aimtlicr K..iu.iri " ciiijx'ror. likewise- r-;, lirotuer at a little s:u;u-; u c.mple of hunilr.-J ' these were ancient f. !i ''at u. A s. HI,.. ""ii-n. I r - i lii-htinvrah-s' tni-ii-s lirds" brains and sin,;;, dainties, t'omiti down t, and plain, ordinary. -v,-r t.jr-s. I ate a supixT oi, i . town that i-ost a frictui te-. n hun lreil d.ilhirs. iiunu-d lark-r kept ;oi . ilcvoted to entr-rtainiiii.' sundry tram. s ..f clia:..-.-the friend I ; jM-ak .f ; killing- an evening here we conceived the id-a :! Barker's wotihl In- jii; put it into execution :iT . never (rambled ill mv frii-nd has n.it dmi.- i s T. upstairs, and eiiterc-l t :.. snpp-r was annoutic.-.l not want ti eat anytii: hungry, and when v.iu,. 4-aI trf a tlealer t;dd in. broiled Mnithtield l.a:i pulh-ts" 4-ri.rs as a sort . '. the otherwise j'or i for the supter room. ... jKiiiiori's ph-adin-s. if lowed me vi lu ll h.- f. tiotis were Us.-l.-ss. ai, ! , f-cd immensely. i, my friend pull.-d out :i bill and said In- ..r.' : two to pay for our si::. him ill turn not to .,. . dIurate as 1 bad !, -: t -iity-si. .liar bill an i back. In tw.r hours f dollars ere t' i'liti.!... never felt so i..ui,r:;!!,' that a sliyht nijiii-i 1:. uaintaiu--cannot k.-, j. a d-ad-h-ad f.--l."" :u:ti,- .'ir,v l" 1 TOO WARM FOR CO V? 07 f A in IVr.ia I., r. it... llMrB,.f Ml 1 3 In tli,. s !,,,. I The In d test r-ri. -ii . .n : , .r. . face is on the s, .u: !, . -, r-:, . j IV-rsia. on the 1 .r. i.-r . f - i rulf. s;iys an - ha n.-.- 1-f :- I Miulivi- .lavs in tin- n,..t;';, ; aii.l Anu-t the m. r, ..... ... ' known to stand al .v .-. i, . . rr--s in t he shad.- t:i-!.i .i:,. ,: i t. run up as hiirh ;s ..:.;.,.;.... j thirty decrees in th- n.i-; -rii.ii. At llaliriii. ii, the most torrid part ..f ' : u. ln-lt.as though it w i.'u-, . timito make the pi.i. . a-i.;.-. as jn ssii le. ttatrr fr. ;n v, ;. . ! tiling unknown. tinitT ! 1 - -1 1 sunk to a ! j'l'i f t.i. !. ; f.-et. but always wiili 'si,, s;i:i- j. Iio water. N..t .-ii.-.i:,.. -.- ; I s4-riotis ilrawlcn-k. a mki:. r-u illation contrives to );v. thanks to copious sjirij, wl.i.-i forth from the b.tt -in ..f ii,.-. ;.: than a mile from th- s!,.,r.-. 1 tT f roin t lu-e sj.riiii's i.i m st curi. .us and n ..v. 1 inn i.i,, or-s. w In s.-s. ., . .i, fiirtiis5iin' i he jN-op!.- : 1.., the lift 'iviiiir thiid. r. ! : r' tioii of the trtilf w i,. r.- V,t--situate!, and brinj- a . v. hti: lib of skill b. each dav. The wal the sirini.'s burst hnn.lr.-.l f.i-t .li .-n. bi: iliv-rs -iiianaire " skin sacks by .i'niii- ' hol.liiiir t h- iii'Hil iis . fountain jets; this. ,, itiLTthe salt wat.-r.-' with it. The souivc rine fountains is 1 1 1 - hills of Osmond, i;-. away. ISeiti:? ;t ua the o-ulf. it is a in;, s-i-ever discovered, bv.t that they have Wen dawn of history story. I RUSSIA'S BOSS UOCIC I-ltlle Keeentrlrltie. lKii Ml.-ll" lijeet of I'rnlr. nl in.. it lrof. Zakharin. of V.. j tended the car liurj- i - !" : ' oils illn.-ss. is almost -,m . , Russia for his .i-c.-ii'.r.. .'. a-' 5 eiiiiiiiice ;.s a poy s;,-,. called to attend to ;i Kritisli Medical .! n:r rancincsits must be n.. all btrs must ii- i.. way. all cl.i-ks nni-t dirs must In- thrown professor on t iit. rinj' ' f gradual uiniress::,.-. in th- hall, .his ov.-r.' r. .in. his -,,!, isli.-s i n : insists on i-rf.-ct si', :.. theaOlicted r.lath.s. to his .jucstioiis. w!,. must Ik- literally "V lie has a theory ill the i ii :i n. i ill ' Taio you are tired. " and a.', ilnnii every i'ht -r tiemeaiior t -war.1 .! he happens to li- una--him yreatly f.-ar-.l by ' ei'ht years a'o a kin ' ti.m was irot up in op;, which many hui.dr. .: part. Resolutions w.-ri tlr-ss-s w-re j.r.s. i,'..-' the rathcriiifT storm i. heard in the press. ! tioiis of feeling were -i in a wav 4-haract. ris; . i 1. -- then (rciu-ral-irov ,-ri " Britice I K.lj-oruUolT. s i of the medical joiiriia: .:. address-s w-re j-rlnT, ! a: that if he published a w Zakharin he would l..oct cow in twenty-four L" " r" eccentricities, how. v. . In-dsi.le of his pain:.. ' courttnus an.l consi.i. r.i'- takino- and minute in ; - v and very thorough ::i ! So suc4essful has he N-cii fession t hat lie i 1 " some half-millioii st.-r. :- A Trait f l'al.l l' l"T The late Iavid !! ; how to treat desert in " his own profession. A from the countrv ha;.;.-' -1 Iotidon at the time . t.-rnat ioiial convent ior Mr. Field was there a- :1 ' .lclccate to the 1" t jrr-at lawyer and the y i ' - aejuaintil. 1-ut the !.i".' r ished and p-rhaps a i-.tfc '-!" , b find not only that 1 . ets to the meet il.v'- of ' " -but was made b take a -the conijuirativelv sin:- -T'!.m. whom the profession s.ni."' . f. to honor. Thes.- uneM" .. ..... n r 1,. r.'sii't ...lis i, or ai, ... from Mr. Field. The Te rlter tu .rer 1.:- ' A woman in l'ai',v 1,.. i..olt io i siie ,-sstin t-c- ...... ,....s - . 1 -! in typewriting has obi.ui;' tittnl with the lireci. I'" iiiathetnatieal sitrin s.s for the K-netit of ma . ...i...v. Tin ,i 11 J . Ull ... -s. 1 1 ..... ' . . ti-nist looks oimdieat ,1 11 .' i - - - f !1 acquire a knowledge 't ' Wfore It-frinnin her earn1"-
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