* . THY » LONG SUFFERING From Stone in the Bladder, It is by no means strange that Dr, David "Ken. nedy, of Rondout, N. Y., should have received the following letter, By reading it you will see in one minute why James Andrews was thankful: De. D. Kennedy, Rondout, N. Y, Dear Sir—Until within a recent 8240, I had for several years suffered greatly from Gravel, called by doctors the Brick dust Sediment, For about a year past this sediment has not passed off’ in the usual quantity, but has accumulated, causing me untold pain. Having heard of Dr. David Keune- dy's EAVORITE REMEDY I tried it, and after using about one and one-half bottles I voided a stone from the bladder, of an oval shape, 7-16 of an inch long, and rough on its surface. 1 send you the largest plece, that you may see of what it is composed, Since then I have felt no pain, 1 now consider myself cured, and cannot express my thankfulness and gratitude for so signal a de- Hverance from a te i You have my ribie disease, 80, for the bonelit of other s srers, Yours truly, JAMES ANDREWS, , Ida Hill, Troy, N. Y. “Favorite Remedy” is especially Af oad Marshal st specific for the cure of nts, constipation and aly ising from impure state of bl who suffer { Favorit self an wu Cir sex a real bl r class of is 10 more disease, 140 fieald i ILsQls certain t wel ider, 3 lief and Dr. David ' of Rondout, cure of such aff “Favorite Remedy, OVER 1000000 BOTTLES SOLD AND NEVER \" FAILS TO CURE COUGHS.COLDS. THROAT AND ALL LUNG TROUBLE DRUGGISTS SELLIT PRICE, Oy 25 CTS. R SW LZ ei TL | Dn. LINOSEYS BLOOD SEARCHER PAIWAYS CURES PIMPLES BOILES SORE EY | MALE RIAMECURIAL AND ALL BLOOD DISEA : "SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS. ERS. —— A Lecture on the Nature, Treatment and Hadics Cure Semios]l Weakness duced by Reif , lmpos teacy, Ner to Mar riage generally P Fy An Mental and Phpsiesl incapacisy, ote, by Ri J. CULVERWELL, MM. 0, The world rer rene 1or in this admirable lee tare clearly i own experience that the swinl cor Ne t{-Aba ss may be afectaslily removed withoat danger as sargical aperstion s, boagies, Instruments, s or gordials. pointing wde of ere at once certain and ofsctaal, by ry suffarer, no malts tb his ¢ dition may care Dimesel{ + Privately and lectare will prove a bhoasa nds and Sent under sal, | dross, most age stamps THE CU RWELI 41 Ann Bt, New York, N. } «may lyr « to any ad. 8 or two poste DICAL CO. Post Ollice Box 450. reelonin $7 tis, Poeun Pulmonary Consumption, 1 81 those duncerons malsd) iar 817 ™ t of Croup, to al the gil ping Cough, and the fnenza, ul it y ehikibioo ef 1 dealing with elf i of the utmost a single day ma: | fatal consequences, time In oxi won of doubt is constantly i at once Lhe sp Tempe aeri Damtinnnt F Cuiwi wii Ayer & Co, Lowsll, Mies The only known specific for Eplleptic Fits. «un =a for Spasms and Falling Sickness. 43 Nervous Weakness quickly relieved and cured. Equalled by none in deliriam of fever~g8 Ea Neu germs of disease and sickness. Cares Ai biolghes and stubborn blood sores. Cleanses 4, quickens sluggish eirenlatio i Fliminntes Bolls, Carbuncles and Bealds “Ge Ra Permanently and promptly enres paralysis. Yes, Ii ia a charming and healthful Aperiont. Kills Scrofuls and Kings Evil, twin brothers. Changes bad breath to good, removing cause, $&" Routs billousness and clears complexion. Charming resolvent and matchlos lagative.<G2 It drives Sick Headache like the wind. “68 wl Contains no drastic cathartic or oplates, romptly cures Rheumatism by ro it-sa Restores Iife.piving to the blood. “ua 11 paaranteed to ctiro all nervous di “5 £¥ Reliable when sll opiates fall. "g3 Refreshea the mind and tes the body. Cares dyspepsia or money refunded. “G8 % In raed in writin overfiity Leading physicians in U. 8. and Furope.~§8 Leading elerevmen ia U. 8. sod Europe. "88 Diseases of the blond own it a conqueror, “gH For gale by ell leading draggiots. §1.5008 The ULL. 8. A, RICHNOND NEGVINE C0,, St. Joseph, Ko Corre dense freciy answered b iclans. vor I CirCUTate 3 amp. ’ Sold by J. D. Murray, TORNADO STUDIES. 4 AN INVESTIGATOR TELLS OF SOME CONCLUSIONS REACHED, Common but Erroneous Theories Mechantioal Effects in the Vortex The Only Rellef Sclence Can Ex- Signals, tend Cautionary * There is a theory that cities are in com- paratively less danger from tornadoes be- cause the heavier and more durable struc tures may be expected to break up the cloud vortex and thwart its fury. Lieut. Finlay, the tornado man” of the signal service, shakes his head and declares that itis a great miiake, “Recall,” he says, “the visitation at Phila- delphia only last August. The tornado which swept through Marshfield, Mo., with such awful consequences, would have plowed a furrow through St. Louis had it struck the city instead of the town. The greatest structures of stone and iron will, inmy opin. ion, melt like wax in fire when the vortex reaches them, New York, with its great en- vironments and its millions of people. may suffer when it least expects. I never see the Brooklyn bridge that I don’t think what a splendid target it would make for a tornado, That vast framework of steel and iron will be torn from its piers and hurled into the East river if the vortex ever strikes it.” “Are tornadoes increasing or decreasing ™ “Neither. There is no change, no pros. pect of change, that we can see in the fre. quency of them or in their violence, As this country becomes thickly settled the losses are greater, because there is move to destroy in the path. Where a few years ago the tornado cloud spent its fury on unoccu- pied prairies or in forests, now it sweeps over cities, valleys and farms.” “You mean to say that you look ahead and figure on a specified number of tornadoes in a given period?” THE AVERAGE IS MAINTAINED, “Precisely, From the data we have we confidently look for about 160 of these visita- tions each year, a2 the western country undergoes transfor- mation through settlement the atmospheric conditions are changing s0 as to affect the number and force of these whirling clouds. Our records and observations do not show such resulta “You remember, went on the Heutenant, “what took place at Grinnell, that beautiful Towa town, in 18572. The cloud encountered in succession three great stones and brick structures of the college and leveled them with the ground vortex! Not at all with strength enough ling match to lift up a sixty-ton engine and a train of freight cars, scattering them out upon the prairie, The cloud swept on wrest fary. “No,” said the lieutenant, “we can’t build big enough or strong enough above ground to defy the tornado. We have material evi dence, and we have mathemationl deductions to demonstrate this. We can figure out a whirling velocity of 2.000 miles an hour for the movement about the vortex. Conceive of that if you can. It means a foros equiva- lent to our atmospheric pressure of fifteen pounds to the square inch. air pump to the capitol there and remove this natural pressure of the atmosphere, and how long do you suppose it. would be before that massive pile tumbled $nto a heap! vet hero to exncute its freaks” “What are you going to deo about it! the signal service a remedy ¥* EXPERIMENTS SUGGEST RELIEY. “Not a remedy exactly, but a plan to warn people when and where tornados may be expected Has that loss of averted. ” “This is feasible!” life and injury to body may be fsfled ourselves that we can do it seasons we have been experimenting work began in March, tinuad through two tornado seasons, ending last month. The country especially subject tornado formations was Our 1 r miles square, and each was cut into four parts. Predictions based on our knowledge of the prevailing condt- tions were made daily for each of these sub- dividons. At first we attempted predictions eight hours in advance, and afterward six- The percentage of verification was 55 We sent out no warnings becanse this was experimental work, but we are en- Sirely satisfied that we can predict and lo- cate tornadoes with considerable accuracy. The results more than satisfied ue” “You would give cautionary signals of tornadoes to the interior sections as you do of storms to mariners on the lates and on the coastal” “That is what we propose to dew. And not the least of the advantages from a system of tornado signals will be the alla ying of anx- fety and fear among the people on those days when we were able to notify th sn tornadoes will not form. The isolated observer or com- munity can not determine or be satisfied from limited observation as to the toruado probabilities, But trusting to tornado wig nals from the service, people will go about their usual occupations without continuous apprehension, and on the days when the cau- tionary signals are givem preparations can be made to protect life wo far as posible,” 5t. Louis Globe-Domoerat. AIA teen hours A Primitive Cure for Rabies, | The old recipe of “a hair of the dog that bit you,” was almost literally realized in a prescription for the cure of hydrophobis much in vogue with the “Pasteurs” of the fifteenth century: “Take a mastiff pup of a month old, and stuff the same with coves, cinnamon, and divers other spices, and | here. after boil the carcass entire, the which, taken warm from the pot and laid un! io the part that hath been bitten, will, without doubt, do much good”—which, somer yw or other, it did not, A more primitive bul more mice meful method was employed within the memo ry.of living men in a remote part of Ireland, the patient being the eldest son of the family, a fine lad of 10. His recovery appearing hope- less from the strong of hydio- phobia which he exhibited, the doctors de- cided upon bleeding him to death a the only alternative to the barbarous plan of smothrs ing under a feather bed, which was then common. A vein was opened and he vias locked into an outhouse and left to die. But toward evening the milkmaid of the house hoid, passing near the spot with her pail, was amasxd to hear the sufferor's voice faintly asking for “something fo drink.” Overjoyed at this unmistakable sigs of re covery, she lost no time in summoning as sistance, and the young man's life wre the physicians ascribing his extra escape to the carrying off of the polsou by tho copious flow of blood, «New York Times. cn ————————— Pyramid lake in Nevada has fallen foot and Mud lake has risen tw outy feet in tho pest year, ~——Whole pepper ground to order at Murray's drug store, pe IN AND AROUND MANDALAY. Doeds of Blood—The Place of FPablle Exeoution—The Callous Burman, But all Mandalay is connected with tales of blood. The trained elephants that are forced to knead prisoners to death, the hired executioner who murderously bludgeons the vertebrae of distinguished offenders, and the crucifier have all given to spots in and around Mandalay a reputation at which it is impossible not to vhudder., The writer has known Europeans who in a morning ride had seen three men crucified in the public thoroughfares, and Burmese men and wornen so accustomed to deeds of bloodshed fat and heard them cry for water, for pity's sake, without moving a helping hand, One morning while riding on the north- western outskirts of the city, the writer ob. served a peculiar artificial bill above which vultures and kites were wheeling with that Inimitable graceful ease which makes them appear to float through the blue empyrean without the jarring movement of a pinion, dama and field of blood, lic executions tgke place. Here culprits are beheaded or tortured; women of royal blood are bludgeoned to death across the throat, and men of equally distinguished birth are bludgeoned across the neck until death ends their sufferings. Vul- larly, expectantly, and leisurely as their brethren watch the grim Parsee towers of silence in Bombay, Nobody can tell what a day may bring forth upon this wretched lit- tle hill N'importe, lot us ride on. We have much todo yet and I think I see in the distance the flashing of some official umbrella to which I do not care to bow the idolatrous knee.” It is a peculiar trait of your true Jurman that, though personally he is a kind- contempt. At all events, the typical Bur his song a the atrocities of that even the deeds of Theebaw do not ser- disturb his equanimity. —Foreign Letter Turkish Baths as a Curative Agent. Your correspondent in Milwaukee speaks end of a stick and placed him in the bot room, temperature 1% dogress At first he was furious and After n while hoe was re turned, and shortly lay down to sleep; this In Paris a prominent whome names at this physician, who had was attacked ns be realised if, knowing tho fate in store for him, thinking moment escapes me, He then set himself to a full in- vestigation of the subject, experimenting on animals, and {f that satisfied himself high disease. And it bs simply upon the principle that beat, which harden albumen or cook an egg, will destroy all animal poisons, And so scarlet-fever, smallpox, measles, will An Ex-Physician’s Gruesome Tale, It was in the spring of 1877 that this man took a fancy to the profession which be he thought in it One night, after the bodyanatcher i heard at the door of be said, than to feast —a knock the dissecting room. was ker out the upper and lower teeth of the dead the dissecting table, who duct on the part of his fellow.-man, never uttered a syllable or moved a muscle in de fonse of his post-mortem rights sans ears, sans teeth, the dead man could not now be recognised even by the mother who were on the trail of the grave robber. This much was horrible enough to shock the cruelest nature, but when this man told me that in his brief career as a medical student be had seen the corpse of a young lady whom he had known in life sacrificed on the altar of science, my heart grew sick at the ghastly tale — Chicago Herald.” A Wonderful Cave In Nevada. | A wonderful cave has recently been ex. plored in Snake valley, Pine county, Nevada, It consists of a great sumber of apartments connected by long galleries and ornamented with beautiful stal- actites of a transparent whiteness, The largest room yet found is 500 feet long, 200 feet wide, and 150 feet in height Fanciful names have been given to the objects met with in the course of the exploration. Solo mon's temple is a magnificent stalagmite col- umn, Cleopaira’s needle is a slender shaft beautifully fluted, and the Grand Cathe drad is an enormous pile of white stalagmites eighty-five feet in circumference and twenty- five feet in height, and surmounted by a dome of good proportions. The cave also contains little lakes and streams, and one seoming waterfall, a vast sheet of shining, icy-looking stalagmite, that has been christ ened Niagara Chicago Tribune, Only "Old Rosin the Bean," I was conversing with Gen. Sherman last summer during his visit at Minnetonka, when the subject of music was introduced. I asked him if the tune “Marching Through Georgina,” which is always associated with his victorious march through the south, did uot revive pleasant memories. “Yes,” said he; “I never bear it without thinking of the ol 1 war times, | remember when | was in Ircdand some years ago, and was stopping at a little hotel near the lakes of Killarney. I beard some one singing the old familiar wir, I thoughtit might be a serenade to me, aa ser enading always honor me by playin g¢ that tane, But I discovered my mistak ». it seems that the aff is an old Irish tu ve, and was utilized during the war for the words of the song “Marching by) rough Georgia Wo Pionoer-Pross Ly | dot ener,” ine Ribbon in New Zealand. ! EI TA SS SR ES NRA 00 ER ISI. © TIMES OUT OF 10 Dr. Thomas’ Eclzctric Oil CURES Rhcumatism ond Neuralgia. ES OUT OF 100 Eclectrie 0Qil og 89 Tin Dr. Thomas’ CURES A Cold or 2 Hoarsences. MES CUT OF 20 amu 1a and Diphtheria, ~~ 49 TIMIES Thomas’ Eclectric 0Qil CURES Croup an. AWlections of the Throat $ Price 50 cents and gr.o0o0. SOLD EVERYWHERE. Ww ARH IRY hn tedd 1 ] anid i mu (i & Bland Pustfer E Hike & Bi AN ABSOLUTS CATA i bes remiss ot for CATANIA ¢ Ahaolute, Vosltl Fuly & blessing to masking hat fs asked for it, O ' nded, Mend for t fod BN 4 me i 4V 4 RHEUMATISHL SCROFULA. SKIN ERUPTIONS YEXEREAL DIS DYSPEPSIA. LOSS OF APPETIN FEELIXG OF 1. BILIOUSXESS, LIYER TROUBLES XERYOU'S WEA FEMALE WEA aTAREN Heweny rite for tesiis Bg For sale by drug § PRICE 81.00 A HOTT? FLES FOR 85.00. ¢ y he manvuiaoturers, N iarrisbang, Pa. six b Ah T 1 WO ip 8 sample 2 how Seedring 65 Money on 8 work's on Miwon! terme, To those without cagdiel. whe san prove ¥, § will fursish machines 9 61 momar ts be paki after my Ad . hh ie Sua £1.00 THIRTEEN WEEKS. The POLICE GAZETTE will be mailed sorure- iy wrapped. to any address in the Usrited States for the ve months on receipt of ONE DOLLAR 1 Ivers] discount allowed to Ee and clubs, Hampie oor walled free, Afdress s orders to IUMARD K,. FOX, Frankils Sgrare, KX. ¥ stmasiers, i bw The HR VES, Heating Stoves, We Id especially «2 CROWNING GL FORT i your aiteution to onr stock ¥ 3 £2 % Ged the t EGULATO A full assortment of Fire Pro} “al i Jersey Bhore,,, iock Haven... HeBOVO..coneines Erie y IeRYes 21 don at wi dX nnd vor maa TBO 3 wy FEN BANG ¢ ¥ Pa. ral Manager - BOOT and SIOE MAK EN, CENTRE HALL, The undersigned has opened a sl t! cur of the bank, on Ch Now boots and shoes made to « repairing done. Satisfac 10n is patronage. A. G. NOLI *: or Commis Good Salaries 0,50 eal or traveling Agents, No exp Bteady work. JAMES E WHIT man, Rochester, New York per.] {outidja’y | Sanyle. or ask your hard | WELCOME HOME. LOE Vas Le : a A POLLA. tes on hand. 1eFARLARE & uy and n ana, bt L oe A Rascal Cung FOR vi NERVOUS , DEBDITY urper's Weakness} FTHYSICAX. 5 DECAY, InVoung & © he ies § Cirenior end Trini Packs and leer buportend 1 The pote i orey. Sh rel f tions of the ha. iuland rapdiygs 8 both TT rien th gad sekiad Vigore TEDDY CO. E'roCursisrs H, Tenids Br, BF, THULE, MO, RED ONS IMot a Truss, . Shih ¥ of one Rpplisnce, TV Ed AOE XN ; Tw, 3 7, SYMPTOR TORPID Losmof appetite, Bowels poet the head, with a dull pq ¢ beek part, Pain wonder tho shoulders biads, Fuliness after cating, with a diss taclinniion to exertion of body er mind, Irritability of cei pery, Low spirits, with aicelingef having negiected some duty, Weariness, Dizziness, Flaeitering at the Heurt, Dots before Lue ey», Hendscko over thy right eve, Dorileseners, with Stull dream Highly colored Urine; end ~ pal Mg 3 CURSTIPATION, TUTTE PILLS are especially ¢ to such ens, one 0 e change of feelings tonish the ! They Increase the Appetite. and conse the body to Take om Flesh, tuus the system is nourished, aod by ‘heir Tonle Action oa the Digestive Oroane, Meguiar Stool ose "re produced, Prios Mee. A Vinay NL. NV. B x EE Ls i § ‘plata Maney ow : re Sl TUTTS HAIR DYE. et sualerer, GRAY Harn Wanexres ehanpged to 0 oy Drurgists, of Lol $i. wt. dow York. trrey 7 address ATHERTON, President, Blate College, Contre Co, = sf 2d fe = - oriing the Principles Tipaper sang Administration, a Demon: Publlsbel ca the City of How York, WILLIAM DORSHEIMER, Editor and Proprietor, Daily, Sunday, and Weekly Edition. THE WEEKLY STAR, A Cixtron-page Newspaper, issued every Wodnesday. A clean, pure, bright and interesting FAMILY PAPER. It containe {he latest news, down 10 the hour of going 1o prees | ricultural As Market, } Fashion, Household, Politieal, Financial and Commercial, Poetical, Humorous and Editorial Departments, all pnder the direction of trained Journalists of the highest poate. Tin wixteen Ey ay wfuuded: wif, good Gigs Original st hy distinguished American snd foreign writers of Sction. THE DAILY STAR, The Daisy, Stan onigine all the news of the day in sitrartive form. 8 Epeial br “cable from lo Dit, Berlin, Vienna and Dil a DOT ! aature, At Washington, Altmay, and other pews centers, the ablewt eult espanden 1s, specially retained by the I Teas yg ee Te a srabonih Financial and Market Reviews are upususily 1 and complete, hpeciad agents and Rin mn Send for ciroulars, TERMS OF THE WEEKLY STAR to Some : in the United Stes SCREENS run or rg roe i. Tox : BENPRA BERLE RUT ER SAF R RARE ER Sa PARR be 3 ea eros s B ba of Fifteen (snd one extra to organizer). 18 00 TERME OF THE DAILY STAR 10 Sue SCRIBES 7 for one year (including Sanday)... Oe a: (including Sunday). ua day mom: * J Sunday, six months... vaniunn ¢ » : Re v 5 0 90d 70 North William 5t., New York.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers