y i MARINE CURRENTS. Sew Instruments Showing How They Be CU And Are Maintained. The marine jrlobe. an "apparatus to produce currents similar to sea cur rents." consists of a rlass (rlohe, nnler the interior wall of which are con structed the massive outline of conti nents and the hollows of sea basins. The ix.ttom of the sea consists of an interior sphere, concentric with the one of g-lass, inovinp on a vertical axis and worked by a gearing-. The sea basins are filled with water, contain ing particles of sterine in suspension, which render all its movements visible. The osrterior of the apparatus does not diiter much from that of a geographi cal irlole. When the mi r able globe tnms upon itself, says the Cosmopolitan, the water is seen to start. From both extra-tropical regions it advances, along the sea liottom. toward the equator, there the two currents, from the north and from the south, meet, and together rise to the plane of the great circle; reaching the surface in a stream that occupies the equatorial Wit of the oceans, the waters pour southward and northward of their line of emergence; then, almost immediate ly borne toward the west, they produce in their course all the secondary cur rents which are formed by the outlines of the shores and the shapes of the sea lx ittoms. Through the transparent glass one can follow the movements of the liquid mass and get a letter idea of sea cur rents than from the finest map. For the lest specimens of hydrography seem only dead-letter compared with these real, moving currents, emerging, advancing on the surface, then disap pearing in the depths of these minia ture iceans. the capacity of which is scarcely more than a few glasses of water. This apparatus is both a useful play thing for children and an object of serious thought for students. Kvery young geographer in our primary schools would delight to follow with bis eyes, on this little artificial world, the marvelous evolutions of the water of the oceans; every earnest investi gator into the phenomena of nature would le surprised at the facts re vealed by this simple instrument, and would perhaps be disposed to question the value of certain notions on the phys ics of the globe, which till now he has held without questioning. The marine globe would facilitate the teaching of geography, so far as the sea currents are concerned, and the modifications these effect in climate, regardless of latitude; it may also aid navigation, and furnish hydrography with valuable data for the coordinat ing and completing of the experimental study of marine currents, their origin, their mutual relations, their tempera ture, their fauna, etc. Finally, it seems to me. it may promote the science of physics, because it is. as con cerns the liquid element, the material demonstration of this hypothesis which led to its construction: "The liquid element enveloping the solid nucleus of the terrestrial globe, being set in motion by diurnal rotation, receives from this an impulse, which, modified by the outlines of continents, pro duces, in nearly all their details, the currents of the sea." . ACTORS SWEAR BY HIM. A Sn Frnrlco An(l WhoM Pocket booh la Open to the Needy Theepimn. If you n-aut to hear the name of any man mentioned with enthusiasm and reverence go among the actors congre gated on upper 1 'road way. New York, wmie afternoon, says a writer in the Pittsburgh Dispatch, ('runt? Oh, no. Cleveland? Not much. Anyliody you ever heard of before? Never a bit. It's John Uademaker. And who on eaith is John Uademaker? you will wonder. Just ask the first actor you meet. "Why, of course I know John Rade maker! He lives in 'Frisco, and is the Wst man who ever drew breath!" Hut who is he and what does he do and what has he done? That is what you naturally want to know. Then you'll find out from two or three men at the same time that John Uademaker keeps a big saloon in San Francisco and is an "angel." When an actor from the east gets stranded in San Francisco, or indeed anywhere on the Pacific coast, he goes straight to John Uademaker. It appears that John Uademaker has an elastic and sympa thetic auricular appendage that is al ways wide open to the reputable men in the profession who get stuck on the slippery slope. Those who have never lieen stranded two thousand miles from home, with an idle summer ahead and no bank account, will not be able to realize what such friendship means. Imagine 3ourself in London without a friend and without a cent, as some .Americans are always to be found there, and you'll know what the sen sation is to the actor left in 'Frisco at the close of the season. Then imagine a man like John Uademaker in the strand to whom you go and pour out your tale of woe. and who pulls out his roll and says to you: "Well, old man. I don't know you; "but from what I've heard of you 1 think you'll make this good when you're in letter luck. I'll take my chances on you. anyhow. I'll j t,t stake you for a itrip home. Oh, that's all right I don't want any paper if you're not square your paper's no good. Now, what'U you have to drink?" lilalr knd Lincoln. Austin lUair, the "war governor" of Michigan, -who died recently, once told a correspondent how his feelings to ward Lincoln underwent a change. Said he: "I was greatly opposed to his nomination, and it was a long time be fore he won my entire confidence. He was not only a strong, wise man, but he had the great faculty of knowing how to bide his time. I, as well as oth ers, tielieved a proclamation emanci pating the slaves should have been is sued months lefore it was done. Fi nally, weary of urging and waiting, we ailed a convention to meet at Altoo na. la. The very day we met the pres ident issued his emancipation procla mation, leaving us little else to do but send to hiin a delegation thanking him for what he had done. It was hard to get the start of him, and he seemed to know just when the opportune pe riod had arrived to perform a public act." Wutfd Water. During a continued dry spell in south Florida reptiles often are obliged to re sort to unique methods for obtaining fresh water. One need not le sur prised w hile pumping water to see lit tle brown frogs issue from the pump, and one man was rather startled while pumping to see a snake two feet long issue from the spout, and, upon strik ing the ground, quickly crawl under a house. The reptiles crawl into the pump to enjoy the water held up by the valves. It would be impossible for them to come up from below, as the well consists merely of a small pipe, driven deep into the ground, having a strainer over the bottom. Some unr Not Allowable. A workingman of Dresden lately proposed to register his new-born child as Uobespierre Danton. The registrar declined to put down so revolutionary a name, and the father refused to reg ister the child at all, except by num ber. The matter was taken Wfore the courts, the workman was fined, and the decision given that in monarchiai tate suck juuae are sot allowable. SNOBS NOT WANTED. A Kentnokian Story of a Political Cam paign In the Itlae .rs State. John C. Underwood, who was elected lieutenant governor of Kentucky on the same ticket with Luke lllackburn. is an amusing story teller, particularly when he is started on the subject of political stumping in Kentucky. "Our people." said lie to a New York Even ing l'ost man not long ago. "don't like snobbishness. I remember one time when I was stumping one of the moun tain counties I 1 ought twenty-five dol lars' worth of nickels and carried them in my raddle bags. At every log cabin I would ride up and ask for a drink of water. Out would come a little Ix.y or girl with a gourd dipper of warm water. I would take a swallow, then drop a nickel in the dipper. The little one would run in and I would go on. The child's mother would come out and have the generous gentleman pointed out. The consequence was that I got the vote of that house. Well, one morning I rode up to a house and a lit tle girl brought me out a dipper of water. I felt in my pocket and discov ered that I hadn't a copper. "'Little girl,' said I, "I generally have a nickel somewhere about me. but I haven't to-day. so I'll give you what's the next lest thing for a girl, anil tlwtt's a kiss. and I got down off my horse and kissed her for my own little ldue cyed girl at home. Another little black eyed girl here showed up. and I h;ul to kiss her for a niece of mine she looked like. l!y this time, another little girl showed up. half a head taller than the rest. and. not to le impartial. I kissed her; when I found that four or five other girls had gathered, an'l I was in for it. So. In-ginning with the smallest, I kissed each one. The change in stature was so gradual that I didn't notice that the last one was a full grown young woman and right hand some at that until 1 had kissed her. Looking up. I saw that there were two or three old ladies laughingat me. and. thinking I had made a bad break, I lifted my hat to the young ladv and begged her pardon and explained how it was. She didn't seem to mind it much, but the old ladies kept laughing, and one of them said: 'Why, durn it, she's Uill's wife." "'Well. I thought, 'I'm in for it. That knocks out all my votes in this neighlorhcxNl.' I inquired at the next house who Hill was, and was told that it was 'liuck Holmes, the hardest citi zen in Carter county. Next dav I had to speak at the court house, and when I came up I noticed a gang of alioi.it twenty-five rough looking fellows off at one side, and a big six-footer talk ing to them and gesticula ting with loth hands. " 'Who's that?' I inquired. "'That's "Huck" Holmes and his gang," was the reply. Cold chills ran down my back and I shifted my re volver around to where I could reach it without trouble, and then sauntered up to overhear what he was saving. " 'Well. I'm blankety blanked. I heard him say. 'if he don't catch my vote. No snob thar. gentlemen. Jest as soon kiss a poor man's wife as a rich one's!' That settled it. and I got one hundred and fifty more votes in that county than any other man on the ticket." ENGLISH HARVEST SONGS. IMttlea That Are Sang to Lighten Heavy Labor. When the ricks are thatched, when the labor money is paid, when the plow has turned up the soil carpeted with grass and stubble, and the harvest ruoon has risen and lived her short but gloriously golden career, then comes the harvest home and the harvest song. In England, says the Gentleman's Maga zine, we have the harvest sermon in the village church, the supper in the barn, interspersed with many a jest and many a song: and it is of these same songs, so typical of rustic life, that I am going to speak. In those countries where the vine is cultivated there is no end to the merriment which follows the anxious days of moissonage. The fruit is gathered, the winepress trod, the vintage lnuquets put together and presented to the ladies connected with the wine farm, and all the time then is a perfect festival of song, simple and bright and full of harmony. In Tuscany, in France, in Germany, and in Uussia. there are numlers of harvesting songs, all more or less full of poetry, and instinct with charming melody; therefore we should like to think that our own country is not far liehind in this matter of harvest sing ing, although the gleanings are not associated with the romance of the grape. Unfortunately, harvest suppers, and harvest songs with them, are dy ing out, and the sooner we preserve any glamour of characteristic humor or pathos they may have owned the let ter. As the sailors' chanties were used to lighten the lalor of hauling and heav ing before the days of the steam winch anl patent capstan, so were the har vesters' songs required to help the reapers and the gleaners in the times when the sickle had not even given place to the broad hook, ranch less to the machine. The harvest supper was always an occasion for the singing of good, old-fashioned songs, of which each man had his own repertoire, which he gave untiringly year after year. Such standard works as John Harleycorn." "Carrion Crow," and "The Farmer's Hoy are. or rather were, an indispensable part of the harvest-home supper. LOST CARNOT'S HAT. In the Excitement of the Moment Another Man Wore It Away. A strange incident, by the way, marked the last days spent by Mme. Carnot in the palace which had In-en her home for seven anxious years. She desired to preserve as precious relies for her family all the articles of dress worn by her husband at the moment when he was struck down by the assas sin's hand. These were carefully col lected and sent to her, but the hat alone was missing, and it was supposed to have been lost in the confusion of that fatal drive. It appears, however, that among the first to offer medical help as the victim lay on his deathbed at the prefecture was Dr. Girard, the maj'or of Charbonnieres. When other surgeons took charge of the case this gentleman discreetly withdrew and was looking for his hat, whereupon Col. Chamoin handed one to him. He put it on and went home, thinking it was his own, for it fitted him exactly. Not until some da-s later he cast his eyes on this article of head gear as it hung in his hall, examined it more closely and found it marked in side with & "C" did he recognize his mistake. The lost hat was forthwith restored and Mme. Carnot acknowl edged its receipt in a letter expressing her heartfelt thanks. Driving Windmill by Kleetrlrlty. A novel departure has l.een taken by the owner of a windmill at Hremen, Germany. Hitherto it has Wen the custom to use windmills in conjunction with dynamos for the generation of electricity, more especially for lighting purposes, in places remote from a regu lar supply of current, and some most successful installations of this kind have been made. The owner of the German windmill proposes to reverse this process, and instead of making his windmill drive a dynamo he will use an electric motor, connected with the town electric mains, for driving his JJiacUinery when a calm prevails. EARNED HIS LIBERTY. Tactics of a Snake Whoae Kent Had een IHHturtwd. The first law of animated nature is self-preservat ion. The means employed to attain this end are varied and interesting.- Some animals depend upon strength, some upon swiftness, some upon coats of mail, others upon poison glands: but with many the main reli ance seems to le hypocrisy or simula tion. A correspondent of the Popular Science News gives an interesting ac count of the performance of a snake when it found itself suddenly in danger. "While searching for snails I turned over an old log and disturled a snake, called by our negroes a 'spread in ar row.' The tactics pursued by this snake were curious. "First he erected his head and neck, and -flattened them out till they see met 1 no thicker than cardboard, thus increasing his apparent size, and he took care not to le seen edgewise. The shape of his head changed. It took a pronounced triangular form similar to the head of our most ven omous snakes. Then his tail, with the aid of a dry leaf. Was proclaiming that it was the tail of a rattlesnake. "All this, coupled with an ominous hiss, was calculated to strike terror to the heart of his disturln r, as for a mo ment it did. I regained my courage, however, and K'gan to poke the ser pent gently with a stick, when finding 'bluster' of no avail, he sought safety in flight. "Uepeated 'headings off" showed him how futile were his efforts in that line, and he altered his tactics again. He turned on his back anil remained mo tionless. I threw him up six feet from the ground, and so quickly did he turn over that he seemed to strike on his back. "Once on his back, nothing could in duce him to move. Tapping, prodding, twisting his tail all were in vain. Then I suspended him from the limb of a tree, retreated a little and watched. At the end of two minutes the reptile moved. Slowly he turned on his spinal column as on an axis, surveyed the premises and, seeing nothing danger ous, dropped to the ground and was making off. "At my approach he 'died' again. After sundry other proddings. which failed to move him, I rewarded him for his cleverness by giving him the liler ty which he certainly had earned." PETER MINUIT'S MISTAKE. He Loot Money When He nought Man hattan Islam! for Twenty-Four Hollar. History tells us that 208 years ago, or in lt'iL'ti, Peter Minuit liought Man hattan island from the Indians and paid for it S-'4 in merchandise. It has usually K-en thought that Peter took advantage of the ignorance of the untutored savuge and made an excellent bargain for himself. No doubt but that Peter thought it a good trade, particularly when he con sidered the value of lots after the streets would Ik- laid out. Central park improved, Brooklyn bridge built and the island had a population of two millions; for Peter was a shrewd real estate speculator ami looked a long way ahead with a correct, prophetic eye. Notwithstanding all of Peter's shrewdness and foresight he made the mistake of his life and lost millions of dollars by his purchase. He didn't stop to figure interest. Since lVJrt the rate of interest in this country, where money has always lccn in demand.' has ranged from six icr cent, up to highway rohWry. It will Ik- conservative to say that eight per cent, is a fair average. Now, if Peter had loaned his S'Jt at eight per cent, compound interest, from then until this date, what would its value lc. compared with the value of Manhattan island? At eight per cvut. compound interest, money will double once in aKmt nine years. Now, there have leen twenty nine times nine j-ears, and seven years more, since Peter made his purchase. Then, if he had loaned his 24 he would have had nearly $40.0O at the end of the first one hundred years, and more than SJoll.(Hto.(KHi at the close of the sec ond century, while in l"'.i4 his principal of -Jl would have grown to le ?Ji.ikmi, umi.ooo the value of Manhattan island many times over. So, in fact the Indians got the 1 test of the bargain, and no doubt they chuckled over the situation as they walked through Baxter street with the 824 worth of merchandise in their arms. OFFICIOUS FLOOR WALKERS. How Shoppers Are Annnyrd and Lives of Clerks Male M mcralile. The officiousness of floor walkers in certain dry goods stores not often found supplemented by the zeal of young women liehind the counter is sometimes embarrassing. Kven if one projects large purchases one more often than not prefers small fuss alMiut it, but it is awkward and a trifle mortifying if you just want .to look aliout to have some one insist on es scorting you to some particular coun ter. A little of the superflous energy might needfully le absorlted by the shopwomen, who often find it too troublesome to listen attentively to what one wants. Entering a Sixth avenue store one day last week, a lady saw it was not the one she had meant, and naming the store she wanted to an attendant, asked him how many doors away it was. She had not got out of earshot with her directions Wfore the floor walker pounced on the attendant to know how it was he had let a iossible pur chaser escape. "Could you not have told her she'd do lietter here? You're no business man. Don't talk to me aliout simply answering a question. She was a cus tomer, and if you were worth your sal ary you wouldn't have let her go." The lad- in question heard all this. It cost her an embarrassment in feel ing anil threatened to cost the poor at tendant an embarrassment in fact, as she left the floor walker plying the lash with a vigorous purpose which might end in driving his victim out. Ieep Waters. It is a remarkable fact that the deep est parts of the sea are in all cases very near the land. The deepest sounding known, 4,CTt fathoms, or 27,930 feet, was obtained 110 miles from the Kurile islands; the next deepest, 4,.rIU fathoms, was found seventy miles north of Porto Uieo. With a few exceptions like these the depth of the oceans, so far as now known, does not reach 4,XiO fathoms, or four sea miles. The north Pacific has a mean depth of 2..VH) fathoms, the south Pacific of 2.4(H), the Indian ocean of 2,ooo, and the Atlantic, by far the lest investigated ocean, has a mean depth of 2,200 fathoms. REGARDING RAILROADS. Tuk first railroad, three miles long, was opened in iv;5 at Quincy, Mass. Aiiovt twice as much power is re quired to stop an express train as to start one. Tiik railway from Joppa to Jerusa lem is fifty-three miles. The locomo tives were made in Philadelphia. Mk. Joski'ii Wii.i.ktt, who was in timately associated with George Steph enson in the building of the first rail way in Kngland, died in Liverpool recently at the age of ui j-eara. THE NATIONAL FLOWER How the Rose of Sharon Itecame the K one of F.ngland. That the rose is the national flower of England, and was accepted as such at the conclusion of the wars of the roses, when the red rose of Lancaster and the w hite rose of York were united by the marriage of the representatives of the two warring houses, most read ers of history know. How this flower came to lie the badge of either house. Tii't many people even guess. The few students who suppose they know its history si;- that the white rose came to the house of York through the fam ily of Clifford, whose device it had long Wen. and W-yond whom it cannot W traced. The red rose, it is supiosed. dates back to Eleanor of Provence, queen of Henrv III., and was her per sonal device, assumed for love of the Wautiful Provence roses of her native duchy, and transmitted to her descend ants of Lancaster. But in the recently published life of Dean Stanley, a devoted student of historic traditions, a new and pic turesque origiu is assigned to the na Clonal flower. He gathered the story while visiting in a chateau in the little town of Provins, France, and le!ieved it to W correct. According to it, the red rose of England was never a Provence rose, but instead was a rose of Provins. The chateau of Provins W-longed centuries ago to the counts of Cham pagne, and in the time of the Fourth Crusade one of these counts, called Thibaut the Troubadour, W-came a crusader and visited the Holy Land. u his return he brought to his wife a rose-bush with a splendid bright crimson flower the rose of Sharon and this was planted in the castle gar den, where it grew and flourished. Soon it spread to neighboring gar dens, and the town became famous for roses. Wreaths for the great church festivals were made from these roses from the Holy Land; they were used to grace all gala x-easions, and the ginsl French housewives even turned them to more practical account. They made such an apjH'tizing delicacy from rose leaves, put up with sugar or sirup, that its fame spread far Wyoml the imme diate iicighWrhood. and it commanded a ready sale throughout the entire re gion under the name of Conserves de Buses de Provins. A generation later the prosperity of the town received a sail shock, and the preserving industry no doubt suffered with the other industries of its citizens. Provins had a mayor of such oppres sive views on the laWr question t hat he ventured to ring the great curfew Wll. which ended the working day, an hour later than had Wen customary. This the work-people would not en dure. They mobWd the uiqiopiikir magistrate, and killed him in his own house. They did not stop to consider the Missible consequence of such an act. The line of the counts of Cham pagne had Wcome extinct, but Blanche, the widow of the last one, had married Edmund Crouchback, first earl of Ijiii caster. who promptly undertook to punish the unruly inhabitants. lie made such havoc that the town never recovered from it. and had even to submit to having a new Wll made and named Guillonette, in honor of the murdered mayor, Guillaume. This bell, after six centuries, still rings the curfew in Provins every night. When Edmund went back to England, leav ing misery, poverty and terrified quiet Whind him, he carried home, says De .n Stanley, two relics. "One was the yard measure which, for many years, was in France jcciiliar to Provins: the other was the crimson rose, which through him Wcame the rose of Lancaster." The heraldic rose of England is still of blended red and white, significant of the union of the two great houses: but as Lancaster was victorious in bat tle, so also is the red rose the victor in popular favor, and it is of that, not of the stiff parti-colored rosette of tin British eoat-of-arms, that we think a; the emblem and flower of the nation. Tin-old French crusader's holy rose, the rose of Sharon, the rose of Provins, has Wcome the rose of England. A PECULIARSUB3TANCE. Glycerine Hardly AnVt-trtl by F.lther Heat or Cold. One of the great advantages of glycer ine in its chemical employment is the fact that it neither freezes nor evapor ates under any ordinary temperature. No perceptible loss by evaporation has W-en detected at a temperature less than 2oO degrees Fahrenheit, but if heated intensely it decomposes with a smell that few persons find themselves able to endure. It burns with a pale flame, similar to that from alcohol, if heated to about 300 degrees, anil then ignited. Its non-evaporative qualities make the compound ot much use as a vehicle for holding pigments anil col ors, as in stamping and typewriter ril Wns, carWn papers, and the like. If the pure glycerine le exposed for a long time to a freezing temperature it crystallizes with the appearance of sugar candy, but these crystals being once melted it is almost an impossibil ity to get them again into the con gealed state. If a little water W- added to the glycerine no crystallization will take place, though under a sufficient de gree of cold the water will separate ami form crystals, amid which the glycer ine will remain in its natural state of fluidity. If suddenly subjected to in tense cold, pure glycerine will form a gummy mass which cannot be entirely hardened or crystallized. Altogether it is quite a peculiar substance. HOW CHEESE IS MADE. Farts Which Are Not as Widely Known as They Should lie. The first stage in the making of cheese is that by which the curd is sep arated from the whey, says Harper's Young People. This is done by heat ing the milk to a given temperature, varying according to the season, and afterward adding a eertain proportion of rennet. When the cheese is to W colored the dyeing matter is put in In fore the rennet. In less than half an hour after the heat has Wen applied the coagulation has so far piwrpw.l that the curd, from which the whey has Wen drawn, is ready to W cut. Almost the only instrument used in the making of cheese is the eiirdknife, a curious-looking arrangement some thing like a double comb with long teeth. The immature cheese is Wth cut and stirred with this, the curd W ing separated into small its, none of them Wing larger than an ordinary walnut. The stirring and heating must go on until the curd has reached a proper stage of what is called "diges tion." It is then torn into narrow strips like ri hi ions, for the curd by this time is as firm in fiWr as the breast of a roasted chicken and in deed looks like it. These strips are then fed into the salting mill, where they are thoroughly mixed with salt and made ready for the cheese press. Enormous pressure is applied in this cheese press in order that all the whey that by any possibility remains may lie squeezed out. From the press the cheese is taken to drying room, a large, airy ehamWr. where it is left for .lays months, or even years, according to the qualitv tie sired. It is frequently turned and much care is expended on it. All cheese must go through the same stages, the different varieties Wing made by certain combinations of cream, fresh and skimmed milk. FROM THE SHEEP TO THE -v. JIDiitchess Trousers. Captured the mc.lals at the World's Fair. 1S93. Whatever the posture, style and ease are the same Always in shape at work or in play. VEKKQV WH&TTHETRADEDEriUKDS AHD MEET IT. The manufacturers authorize us to give with every pair sold this unheard-of You may buy a pair of Dutchess Wool Trousers at $2.00, $2.50, $3.00, $3.50, $4.00, And wear them two months. For every suspender button that comes off we pay you ten cents. If they rip at the waistband we pay you fifty cents. If they rip in the seat or elsewhere we pay you one dollar or give you a new Best in the World. Try a Pair. For Sale Byi MULLEN, the CLOTHIER, LILLY, PA. CARL RIVINIUS, PRACTICAL WATCHMAKER & 4EWEtEfc, -AND DEALER IN- Xothins: On Earth Will LIK3S Sheridan's Condition Powder! KEEPS YOUR CHICKENS Strong and Healthy ; Prevents all Disease. imooii for JIlntiltiHff Urn. It is l1ut-lr iun. Iltirhly -.in'iitrftt-l. Tn nnn titv t-filh r a -tit it lay. No t-lhrr it--fuii! n lnnif. Mrli-tly a iii-1h-Iii.'. rw l:nr mhv,-I mm. $40: wntliHI tfiorv t. .r-v.'ill lltui," ot .m- t-iit'.m r. II ll -( et It !! 'loll. Axk lirot. Aliit- fur Si ill aiuf. II ftm-k"!. Ijir.i' 2 I I -an. tiv urn il. Ntx 'rk' -ti!-. r-S! preprint. NitiiitJc -iv of Tlit- llwl INiulIrt l'u-r-nl fr-. Kitrm-l'iHiltrr on- -nr ,n-,- ."!. ami lui-.'r i-hii $1 iK Ls. Ji ill SON A x . -r; utm II. .u-.' M.. Ii.wt.11 FOR ARTISTIC JOB PRINTING TRY THE FREEMAN. to Myr HtraiTH rur Livr Muir nr. onorn. Cores thon sands annuallyof UvprCom plaints, Biliousness, Jaundice, Dysnejv sia. Constipation. Malaria. More Ills result from an Unhealthy Uverthanany other canse. Why puffer when von can be cured t Dr. Sanford's Liver Invigor- iir n n iTifiimieti iamuy mef.ictne VOl K IHtrCiblAT WILL, . Ull'l I'LY lUC.i Steel Picket Fence. CHEAPER than t worm r ft h h H ; ft IAUUM KtHKKl, ,BI ftti kind f w-.fi vukK i t-vj n a u CAM, 201. 203 . 205 Market SU Pittsburgh, Pa.. .jtr BUGGIES at h Price '33 lA.as HAK.Nr.-vS waav Vj'l.ip 11-.IKVJ. . :C: .ntthc X. t'luu-tuli . a rJ-. ami 4 fan. l..,Murre.T mmi ALL lUaul Uatrnu. tApiUr. I lt..t fart w, ..f fa.--Iiiriry HanieM ,J.i,n,raa.lmve I" IUiu-i--y " 4lZ.'..X.tMl.iii .n K Ti-niii tr: i- iwrfit. aloivmn Saddle. (tab.latVe Five I. . Ill .'.-' A (MKT 4-. tu IX Uioaa ab.4.tiatauati, U. MEIMS a m II'' U d U 1 t U U : 1 1 1 Ml M 1 -. ' I iiw'iMisi cap I pair. MAN IWiTCHES, CLOCKS,! I JEWELRY, SILVERWARE, IMUSICAL INSTRUMENTS: AM I 0PTICALG0ODS. S ) L K A ( ; LXT I K TIIK CELEBRATED ROCKFORDj WATCIIKS. IColifflMaanilFieilomWalcte: In Key and Siein Windi-r. L.r.:i: SKLLVTIoN U' ALL KINKS OK .IKWKLKY A L- WAYS ON H ANI. IyMv lint-of .li-w-li y i uniir- paM'd. Coiiic and si-e for your- elf In-fore Iiiik lia-illi: elsew here Zfi' All work iruaranteed. CARL EIVINIDS. LARRABEE'S RHEUMATIC LINIMENT OR PAIN EXTRACTOR CURES RHEUMATISM, LUMBAGO. NEURALGIA. TOOTHACHE. BACKACHE. CATARRH, AND ALL KINDS OF PAINS AND ACHES. Lorratcc'n Rheumatic Liniment Is an old and value. i irmol y, which has enjoyed a constant patronaee lor over 6o years, proving Us wondcf tul worth and efficiency In all ailments where pain is attendant. Larrabv" Rheumatic Liniment Is not aliqnid preparation to soil ami tarnish by breaking ; it is put up in wide-mouih bottles and applied with the tinner , rubbing it In with more or less fctc tion. It is CLEAN, PURE, EFFICACIOUS, AGREEABLY SMELLING, QUICK ACTING. Larrabee'8 Rheumatic Liniment i a splendid hoiieholl remedy lor external use in cases f'f burns, scalds, cuts, w ounds. Iroslhites, headache, pams in muscles, joints and limbs, hakarhe. etr. etc. Your dructst sells it. or it can l-e ordered by sending lull name and address and 35 cents lo below address. oli rnomitroum, Winkelmann & Brown Drug Co. BALTIMORE. MD U. S. A. IASKyourHorseshqer FOR THE ONLY Shoe for 1 v m winter usl It ABSOLUTELY prevents slirrlnr, anil iiiNure pe. led tcafety and comfort to horse and dnwr. Shod with thn " Xeverslip, vour home's feet are always in Kn.Mi conidtion kept m l)V not having to conMautly remove the shoes for aliarpenin;r. The CALKS arc REMOVABLE, Steel-Centered and SELF-SHARPENING When worn ont nov- Calks r-.-in 1 eailv In serted without r 1.1..V111K flu-. aviniV an immense amount ..1 tinio uaally loi-t at tlio blacksmith shop. On receipt of wistal will mail free nnr de wnptive circular lOtitaJiiinj-i.ri.v of Calked hliorn. ready to 1m- 11 ilo.1 on. for trial oifored this wintc-r at vtsrv ow ;rc.-s. ! TED BY SAM'L WELLS & CO.. 67 VINE ST, CINCINNATI, a LARGEST EXPORTERS OF CINSERG IN THE U. S.. n rvn rvn sr . WANTED BY Viii 'K AI.bTHK NEWS. KEAII THE FKE:t- MAN. II Ml per year. MPM. MOMBTTiZ S4J This eminent Physician has de voted n lifetime to his Specialty Diseases of the Eye. Ear, Nose, Throat, Lung and ;hronic Diseases. Mondays, J.innarv 1, 2.': F -l.ruary 20. Mar,-h '., April ; v ; . July if., August 13. St-ptfinU-r lO.U-t.J-r N.-t,..,,;.;: Tuesday?, January r t ernary j.., .Man-n .. April I'l. M:iy ALL EYE OPERATIONS SUCCESSFULLY PERFORSiILr A I'uft ol lene ot ver 2' Yearn, Standing For 2i veam or more my hearing fc 'wen Lad. mv eit'ear Imwt deaf. 1 have nee under Itr SaluTi tretinetit lor the pmt five month and mT heartui: has ten ery irreail? ;ur-t1 lS lr. aiui Improved. In liict the rmtn.ee i "ee,. ieu.. Lie 1 m Mill under treatment an. I hope lor an entire cure. imtemi I v. ISAAtJ HtKSON. Bedford. I"a . .sept. (in account of the very ttiiiie explanation ol . the alKive. 1 iclve tne nisu.ry i About 30 yearn aieo Mr. Jii-ron. on account I catarrh. Iiecaroe ra hard ol herln la hi left ear mat the name miht not hare ln there at all lor the actuitl services It did him. The rttfht one lo- the la 2" veir hecinie w.-rseand worse, and It took otne t'rrt load talkinit tor hint to under stand you. low. after hve months' neatinent. he can hear attain with the totally u?e e ir. si if to hv drat for veam. eonveri-atmn "d een whlr-pers menu, and his riKht ear ! a.ra-wt af kimmI a anv jtood er tnlttlit . Friends who know hliu will teMHJ to the e..rr-ctn.-- t uij statement. UK. M. siAI.M. Felt I-!fce Hvlr.g Kather Than to Stand the Ann ny Much L,tnjer, Hut Wa fured Hy It. S!ra. For hve Tears I hare had kidney, stomach and liver troul'le. The fearlul pains m n.y hack and bladder 1 had durlnic that nine trade tne otteo wish tor death I could ar.r.y w..rk. Meep or rest, and had to bo out reuularly every nuhi .our or nr. timea to iroid urin. "ou Id har-lly eat an 1 4 when 1 tried a little ot snmeththr it made me ill. and alter lour il our iti pny , i. i.iii.- na.i mneo cure tne. 1 thought it . about tin e to die Some ol my in-ndv. however, a Ivi.-ed me to ko to Ir. Salui. wh ha.l performed so many won derlul cures In this pari ot ihd ci.-.iritry. Alter I had taken his tretnent b'ur .lays 1 found It d id me some koihI, I have taksn In? treatment n w lor six months and can enjoy life once tnore.at.d I would advise all my iriend-t to to this emi nent doctor U, act cu rod. at'er other hysi.-inn lail. Vour Kta'etully. Somerset. Pa. Kid AS ZKUF 'SS. I.sailllliallon ainirnimiillallon free lo er J l..ty . .4r .iltrrllriiirnf tiiear1lff Krfore i:rli 4 u Adilrrsn al I iiiu.niinlralii.il'. Kwx. ?6t. TAKE 63TIC BEST OF POWER. ELKHART CARRIAGE and HARNESS MFG. C Ho. 17. Surrey Uarnesa. Nt. ;i!f 4. Top BtiK-r, 43,00 & c3sr 'w.. Lurtu Wi Bf PRATT, SSG'Yi .VP-" HAY- FEVER 1 VTaaw AND COLD-HEAD qvtckly almurlMd. JtcUatu-it the htnL. aluiy i n-i '""' - y IZ fl f the ttnrt. bu imnq!.t t tent by tniil on v'-i.t OUG ELY BROTHERS. 56 Warren Street NEW YOr-R. 2r4 NUKrii AVEM'K, AM.VdHKXY. I'A. KtaMishe.l ap J.art the W 1 he nioit t'om.te an.l lte?t riai.e1 Kt.Klith fiaimetcial. n.l Slmrt ,!,r'. Sta.tentH ol Uoth -xe .mltie.i at any time. The latent t'atalue and ItirmatH.n ent Iree to tor address. 1 J. V r-1 7 Profest lit? rlc WS,W Iff CAMBRIA HOUSE, EBENSBURG. Pa. I !.- t-iiiK-r . anu ..i ini .. r. m. THE CAPITAL HOTEL. J0HNST0WX. Pa OpiMiMt.- tli IViinsy Iviima Ii.-...i. 17, August 11, .vpK iiiix-r u, ik-iht'.'. . - i:.i.r , 1 Mt iiilt-r 4. lren KyeSvtit t: K. . Year 01 u1. r:r. i- i For iver U yea-- .r.j -1 tun In in. an.f r.,. eje-l-mll. k-p:n n.e -i.n!e , werj puiQlui. ifi or: r t ,1 had to have the ere la-!.... .i v fa a . .. . . . ' ' . ! d t totally blind, an 1 t' - -. .' . . same way rapidly. I j Ui i,..' of I n. Salui . and i.,-.;, i 4a" . 1 am not troubled l u. r- tney e,,w in tlie.r o siieht ol the r.l.t ee r. tent. 1 am w..Dderrui: t "churn, I'a. Inward Trouble C ure,; tt lr I haie suflere.i w-,-t, ..' al trouble all my li;e. t ut ..tj-, IT. alm ha? entlre n ru' JIMi'-, Manorville, I'a.. .1 UiV . is Catarrh and I-otn Jr. -u: :,r For nearly S y-i I :.., , trouble aDd catarrn 1 ,. our lrt physiciai.. ' u: :r, :u worse, until 1 wa- re'-. tieo lt. . by one ot bt paueht. :i tL t- similar truuMe. I .!-; :,,.) ,, aieain. I lell o r.i.l'v I...... I I 1 I e.io eiij.'j lies i:-, ;t j Hlllard. fa. SilXiV: lMseaefcof w.-.Tnen, .s-t, skill ol other I I.-: t;: cur-d. t'anrerv tuit-.r. f'r .-' growths cured witb'-u: -t.e . caustics. No rum:., r. .l.:,t Manhood perfect ,y tr-t-t.; and certatu K.r lo.p..tet.e , -; t.-rhea l s.-e-. wi-uk ai; 1 r.er.... lor po.tatilis. aTi.-.-f.e i. whelber imm itLjirj i:.t !. t . ual lunctioti.. 'j.'-e.iiiy a w method fcle.-!r-y.: h. . enttncally treated by tif.er ! . FARMERS! When you want GOOD FLOUR take vour.T.:: the OLD SHENKLE MILL in KbensburV. Ti.e FULL ROLLER PROCESS for the manufaeture of Flour has been iut in thr 1 S'nenkle Grist Mill in Kbensburpr anl turns out E''l: but FIRST CLASS WORK C( Brinp in your grain and give us a trial. Knh l-i grdin in ground separately uu-l you gt-t the Flour t y own wheat. If fanners wish to exchange grain for Fi they can do so. The 1 ill is running every ltv wi:L:: COI -1 - s -1 1 -1 -1 D. LUDWIG 1 aiK al. lot w tx 1 J to a PROPRIETOR. Hare awld to rnMnrr. Tor l rr. savina them the otif. pn'Et. We are tne Olde.t wad l.argrkl .cinulttHarers in An er ica selnnii euu-K-a ar.d larno lh way m :. with privilege 1. 1 eran..n. belt-re any Di.'Uff paid. Wc i?iy freight but h ways :f not ai:s.a -t tr. Warrant t.-r i ye.r- V.'hy pay an atfertf : t- t- or-ler f 'T v.;ir XVrite t.'tir t'n i.rder. l x!n f reo. We' lake all r:fi t'l Caa-s.'e p. tlippiDg. WHOLESALE R1CE8. Sprlrtp W3?erl, SSt tO S50. tiitaranteel aaaia .m;:i tor f j-'t -1 -". Si-rrC)S. S65 to sa:;ie u se.l fjr t.:o n t - fro Bur. f cr.5", u r,r.; a n : If. ; .:.. F-ras?!r.&,eG 1f iif---. Fsrin VVef fit, vyetet'e9, t'-lii'.Vavor-.c.Oc.e-J Wstcnt."'- Poed Cart, titi i i.zj i i n ;-, ui mtifkn. 575 mA $23.50 air.fflr. lii-rrt.. rr$aJ3 liH J. I. S and r!am klUt.Vw hlDriLlir aa4 lit MT. t frsreit, fr ea.fc whh ttr4r. a4 - tw tun" JM I CataR COLDi-f; ft. I V7 A'r CL-crni Balm i lu-t a Uquul, tnvJT or p-tntsr. Appd into r- 5! I.KVll.l l'l '1 .r" P e -. 4 77;, t " -HE THAT WORKS EASILY. WOj SUCCESSFULLY." CLEAN HOUSE APOLI0 UM.a.atTTi lara (
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