EWHAT STRANGE. ACCIDENTS AND INCIDENTS EVERYDAY LIFE, oF Queer Facts and Thrilling Adven- tures whioh Show That Truth is Stranger Than Fictioa, A masien thief of Teoumseh, Mich. took his degree when he lugged off a beehive with its thousands of inhabit ants, Axprew Cartex, a Texan veteran, after carrying a Minie ball around in his head 29 years, now carries it in his pocket. It scems to be a lasting attach. ment. Ir is only the poorest classes in China who eat the flesh of old and tough dray horses. The well-to-do feast on the meat of a special breed of horses—small, deli cate, and specially fattened for the mar. ket. J. Q. A. Parrersox, of San Fraucisco, builds houses in odd moments out of business hours. He has built fourteen, all withont any assistance whatever, acting by turn as mason, carpenter and painter. A Liaxery preacher recently injured his nose and hastily stuck a piece of paper on the wound before entering the pulpit. When he came down to close range after service it was found that the per was from the end of a spool aud | ore the legend * 200 yards long.” i i i i i i i i Firuiepe Maraaxis, the most famous | brigand of modern Greece, who recently | surrendered to the police, did so at the | request of his wife. The latter wrote | and told him that she was threatened with imprisonment, and to save her and her children she begged that he abandon | his evil life and submit to the authori. | ties. Marganis, who was thrifty, Quixo- | tic and a politician, will be treated very leniently uy the Greek authorities. Souesopy curious in such little things has discovered that the letter N has a place somewhere in the name of each of i the Presidents of the United States ex- | cept Zachary Taylor, Rutherford B. Hayes and James A. Garfield (omitting Vice-Presidents who succeeded to the | Presidency). This industrious person devolves no advantage therefrom, except the possible slight encouragement afl- forded to the small American boy, a natural born eitizen, who has an N in his name, Lisvr. C. L. Covnuixs, Inspector of | Small Arms Practice in the Department | of the Colorado, says in his annual re- | port that the competitions in target shooting have shown that mea with light blue eyes rank highest, followed in | their order by dark blue, slate blae, | light brown, dark brown and black. In the colored troops light blue eyes again stand at the top. How large a propor tion of the colored troops have light blue eyes is not stated in the published ab- | stract of his report. Tall men more accurately chan short meu. shoot A serrrer named Lewis, living in a cabin on a tributary of the McKenzie, nea: Eugene, Ore, who had long been missing from his home, turned up at a settiement a few miles from his cabin last week, al- most dead, and with his mind sadly im paired from the terrible experience of be ing for two months lost in the forest covered mountains of that region, He had nothing with him but his rifle and a box of matches With the one he se- cured game for his subsistence—deer, elk and bear—and with the other built fires for warmth. Part of the time he was in snow several feet deep, with no shelter and bat little clothing Tur African Steamship Company's steamer Winnebah, which has just ar. rived from West Africa at Liverpool, had a most unusual experience when steaming between the latitudes of Cape Verde and 8t. Louis, Senegal. For sixty miles the vessel steamed through locusts, which were so closely packed together on the top of the water that they com- pletely covered the surface for miles around; indeed, they appeared to bely- | ing on the sea as far as the eye could reach. The locusta had, no doubt, been blown from the Morocco coast into the sea. They resembled gigantic grasshop- | pers, and one which was secured was five toches in length. Of coarse, all the lo usts had been drowned. Jaxrrorn Eastuan, of the new school house in Perryville, Me., says that while | the pupils were it play in the yard the | other day he looked out of the window | and saw a number of them gatuered around a little girl. Their actions indi: cated alarm and he went out to see what | the trouble was. He found the child to be sound J while yet standing upon her feet. Janitor Eastman took the girl in his arms and carried her into one of the teachers’ private rooms and fixed up a bed and pillow for her out of shawls and various kinds of wraps. Here she re mained for over an hour, sleeping as soundly and as peacefully as though in her more comfortable bed at home, After her nap she appeared refreshed and was eager for play again, Proroorarny played an important part in a suit at Cincinnati. The suit is one of local standing. involving the title of 1,000 acres of valuable farm fands. It is based on a deed made nearly seventy.five years ago by the owners of the land, and turns on the point whether the deed had five signa. tures or only four. In order to test this question it was decided to have the deed photographed, and the clerk of the court was ordered to give the matter his raonal supervision. For that purpose t war taken to Washington and wub- mitted to an expert photographer of that city. The original deed, discolored and yellow with age, showed traces of four siguatures and 8 space where there might have been a fifth, but no trace of it. The Photographing was done in the presence of the clerk of the clerk of the court, who refused to let the deed go out of his sight. The negative revealed traces of the missing signature, and when it was enlarged ten the entire name becawe as plain as when first writ ten. The court pronounced the evi dence conclusive, and the result will be “the reversal of a former decision and a change in the ownership of the land, _ Prorie passing along the Point des Arty in Paris lately experienced the The combat was between four bargees, who had observed what they call a mac chabee or dead body floating on the sur- face of the Seine. sirous of obtaining the by the river board for bringing the corpses of drowned persons ashore, towards the water, throwing off their clothing as they went, but they were dis- tanced and defeated by the other man, dress, jumped off the parapet of the vridge and seized the corpse in mid stream. make him share profits, but he stead. fastly refused to make any compromise in the mutter, as he desired to have the reward all to himself, The possessor of the doleful derelict was kept dodging about the riverside for nearly a quarter to reach terra firma, At last two police: men went to his rescue, enabled him to land and decided that he alona was en- titled to the premium due for the cap ture of the floating corpse, A raTneR curious lawsuit is reported from Paris. A gentleman living in the Avenue de Neuilly was terribly annoyed with rats in his house. They ware large, ravenous, numerous aad hard to catch Finally he mannged to trap one of the pets, and, equipping bim with a tiny fastened to his neck with a of wire, set him again at liberty. The rat, of course, ran to find his com. bit not a rat left on th: premises. Nearby there lived a nervous gentleman, aud one night he was awakened by a curious tinkling sound, which came on fitfully, and seemed to proceed from avery corner of the room. He lit a candle, and timorously proceeded to search. There was nothing visible, and yet the mystori- ous sound was distinctly audible. He failing, decided it must be ghosts, It was clear his house was haunted —and haunted, by day as well as by night. For weeks he could not sleep, and the anxiety told on his health. At last a gossipiog servant learned the truth, and the victim, instead of laugh ing at his own credulity, has begun an action against the man who belied the rat, A Mrs. Juosnva 8. Parser, of Port land, Me. has discovered an important industrial process in a very extraordi Mrs. Palmer has long been known possess some extraordinary occult powers. It is said that she can take a scrap of any person's handwriting in her hand, or a bit of his clothing, or any obieot intimately associatea with him, and at once give an accurate de scription of his personal appearance too, to history She can take any object in her hand and describe the place whence it came and the associations conpected with This remarkable faculty has been known Mrs. Palmer's intimate i it. to in testing it. One day her husband gave her a bitof dried wood pulp bad never seen any before and did not know what it was, but she at once de scribed its nature and the processes through which it had passed Not only that, but she perceived a simpler and cheaper process by which it could | made, and being something of a chemist she proceeded to experiment Whatever may be thought of the mao ner in which she arrived at the discovery, it appears to be a very valuable one, and a company has been organized in Bangor, with a capital of $100,000, to mania ture wood pulp according to Mrs. Palms er's method She fuer with it Tue British Royal Humane Socicty has just recognized the gallantry of a nurse girl named Esther Grey by presenti her with a gold medal for saviog | The presentation took place at Bristol, and was made by the Mayor, who re- marged that the case of Grey was pe. vy interesting as well as one of great bravery and self devotion uader It appeared that ’ eo { ii i Grey, the nurse, was walking io the gar den of her employer, Mr. J. R. Beanett, her arms, and, stepping upon the stone and contained six feet of water. In the fall Grey struck sgainst an iron bar, and, her arms into the water. consciousness and, after grop. bead downward in the water. She then supported the child with one arm. and clung on to a bar with the other. Her cries for help attracted attention, and at length both child and nurse were brought to the surface. The parents were full of gratitude for the admirable behavior, and the Royal Humane Society had marked their appreciation of her bravery by awarding her the gold medal and certificate, Tue rulers of the miniature republic therefore, was ordered to manufacture one of the most modern type. arrived at its mountain destination short time ago, and was placed on the highest point in the “country,” so that the citizens could see that the valley was well protected. a ball eighteen kilometres. Just as the two artillerymen of Andorra were ready to fire it occurred to one of the prudent citizens thet the shot might cause some trouble, six kilometres. To direct the shot therefore, toward the surrounding moun. tains would be the same as firing at France or Italy, as the ball would nec. essarily fall on the territory of one of these countries, A war might be the re. sult. It wea then d to shoot the ball in the air, Lut someone suggested that it would endanger ths lives of too many people in its descent, and possibly bore a great hole in the Republic of An- dores, Good council prevailed, and ths commanded load the hn rod, ae he good certain what to do wi the expensive gun, 3 A Max in Pennsylvania is the owner of | shrewdly observes that there cannot be many boys in his neighborhood. Tur granite for the mammoth tomb, to be erected to the memory of General U, | S, Grant, in New York City, is being fine gra ned granite that when cut and worked into the walls of a building prc. Two hun- | dred laborers will be employed for two | years in preparing the stone. Wirt the passenger cars reported | owned Inst year we might make a train that would reach from Boston to within 15 miles of Philadelphia. Placing the freight oars together in a continuous | train the train would be 7,028 miles long, and would reach from Boston to San Francisco, from San Francisco back to Boston. and from Bostoa again as far west as Chieago, Tux women of the West are taking ample advantage of their new political privileges. They took an active part in the school elections in Seattle, Spokane, and other Washington towns, going to the polls in companies of from a dozen to a hundred. Candidates of their own sex nominated in several districts, which helped greatly to enlist the inter of worn, A gExtTLEMAN who just returned from Gray's Harlor City, Wesh., states that there are upward of one huudred build ings there, but they are all deserted. A few fishermen dweli near the shore in their own rude shanties, Some of the deserted buildings are handsome struc tures, one business block having cOst up ward of $20,000. were 3 eal the Tue Woman's Suflrage Association of Belgium shows, by the latest census held Europe, that the Continent's population comprises 170,818,561 males and 174,914,119 females, the latter's pluraity being 4,005,588 Among six teen European female sex predominates most strocgly in Portugal nd Norway, le Belgium and France in nations the ast in Tue Federal government has given the brick sand tia battle ship lllinows at the World's Fair to the [llinois naval militia Chicago's now be «bie to familiarize themselves with all the aipments of a modern battie ship and 111 of the features of Jack's life afloat seasick ness and the amateur seamen will except the qualms of art of retaining perpendicularity of per son with a pitching deck under foo? Ripe FEowanp Waris, the great Eng lish railway magnate, is actively engaged in an cffort to promote the cutting of a canal [reland, from Dublin to Galway Bay. [He thinks that a canal “would « arry the largest ships ut for about $40, 0007000, and principal argument in its would materially the 4 BOTOSS which yiilid be ¢ SAYS, a8 the ; shorten I nited favor, that it the route froma England to States Barox Havoex Hickey, formerly a Paris journalist, and now a resident of New York, and son-in-law Joho H Flagler, is maturing a scheme to colonize the Island of Trinidad, hundred miles from the and snincabited, although mies and two ot three miles wide, and having abundant vegetation. The Baron intends to make the « lony A ae parate principa ity, connected with any other goverment + 0s about seven const of Brazil, now entireiy ¥ long bree un 43 ti Tog American Lawyer, a legal journal published in New York City, tells of a iawser of that city who se ured a fee of $260,000 of another who Was paid $950,000 for his services on a celebrated case: while other fees mentioned running from $25.000 to $.20,000) won by lawyers, nbt by « mdocting, but by avoiding, litigation. In fact, it is ap parent that more money is made now adavs by lawyers who settie cases out of court than by those who put their clients to the expense of litigation Bre Tue late consus states the number of Americans {rom the United States resid. ing in France to be 7,024, of whom up wards of two-thirds are domiciled in the Department of the Seine Next in order follow the Department of the Basses Pyrenees, with 280; Alpes: Maritimes, 255: Gironde, 219; Seine-et-Oise, 168; Bouches du Rhone, 157 ;: Seine Infericure, 140, In some of the central departments, few, if any, Americans are to be found. I'he proportion of sexes is 100 women to 25 men, Saxenony has discovered that church sleepiness is to be explained on scientitio | principles, It is, in fact, a condition of shows rather Fixing one's miud on the voioe of the minister, in the otherwise complete silence of the audi ence-room, produces just the conditions necessary to domination by another's | m:nd, and the nodding head and droop- | ing heavy eyelids are not eloquent of the | preacher's dullness, but rather mute testi. | mounials of his powerful influence. Someriixe much akin to consternation has been created throughout Greece by the iste of warrants for the arrest of attention to the sermon, ture on charges of complicity in the acts ing the attention of the Hellenic govern. One of the most prominent sup- yorters of M. Delyaunis, namely, M. P'akis, representing the district of Trik- kala in parliament, has already been lodged in jail, and it is expected that he will shortly be joined there by several of his colleagues who are accused of being in league with the Thessalian banditti. Recexr discoveries In Egypt and Chaldea, says Mr. Boscawen, indicate that, although the monuments there carry us back about 5,000 years before the Christian era, they do not constitute the limit of our sources of history, They in- dicate the origin of these le to have been in western Persia. Kurdistan and Luristan show more ancient remains than have been studied in any part of the world, The old Babylonian civilization and Chinese oivilization both eame prob. ably from this , and it may yot yield us knowledge of times far her than any that we yet know of. Eianr cars loaded with human hair arrived in Paris recently, consigned to dealers in that merchandise. The hair came from India and China, whence thousands of pounds are annually sent to England and France, This traffic, a of the introduction of many diseases to The hair is cut from persons France, it disense in of arrival germs u pon carries the ness, can be purchased cheaply, it sell- The hair of Europeans, however, aver- ages about 100 francs for the same amonnt, For some vears there has been earricd ing the privileges of the institution to fe- male students. Last June the resolution went through the board admitting young ever, that the young ladies of Alabama them, and up to date not asingle girl has applied for admission. That does not show that the Alabrma girls are indiffer ent to educational advantages, for all the young ladies’ seminaries of the State re It is thought that many may be deterred frown entering by the fact that the univer has a disc ipline almost as rigid as that of West Point Tug story of the life of the new Lord Mayor of London (Gx R. Tyler) calls to mind the story of “Dick” Whittington, sometime the incumbent of the same office, He started in life a very poor boy, and when fourteen years old was em ployed as a messenger in the great paper making house of William Venables, the partners in which furnished, it is said, to Charles Dickens the of the Cheeryble Brothers, the philanthropists, in “Nicholas Nickleby.” The boy ad- vanced in position slowly, but surely, nnd hie is now the head of this great manu. facturing concern He is noted {or Lis extensive and he has given many a boy, poor as be himself once was, an oppurtunity to better his condition He is a member of several of the guilds, and his wealth, despite his large gifts to charity, is reckoned atupward of £0 O00 000 : originals charities, City th 18 at the porthwestern i. reporied in the are failing fast, and as a dealers and choppers are happy. Upper Sandusky, which for a long time been supplied with natural gas, to entire exclu. sion of all sorts of fuel, has cut off from the pipe aod is a nate ral gas Lown no more The Pe ople have bren compiled to return to thelr cosl i The event was antic d snd has taken nobody unawares, so there will be no suffering, as would have been the case if the cessation of gas had suddenly A has been organized there to manufacture arti ficisl gas and furnish tt nity, that people may continue their gas-burning fixtures natural pas wells part of Ohio conseqg jence Lhe coal wood past has the almost other wen ine and wood stoves, ts pal come company y the commu 10 use found for Francisco has pract Osi formidable ram with which I'he other day in her voy from New York to Key West she encounts red a dan ict in the shape of the wreok of the lumber laden schooner Drisko Captain Watsou at first rtook tow the schooner to hey West, tnt find ing h tried to blow it up with dynamite, Two attempts were made without success, snd then he de termined to ram it. Taking a good start, hie went ahead at full spead and struck wreck amidships, catting it in two. The lt out of the two halves, and the derelict soon settled be peath the waves This seams to most practicable and expeditious method f Tur cruiser San oul a new and very use the she is armed ire wn FeTOuUs ders upd to im practi that able he entirely imber poured be the of disposing of the dangerous floating wrecks Jrpog Stewant, of the United States district court of the Indian territory, has rendered a decision, theonly logical inter pretation of which is that the Indian territory is a state of the union Two citizens of the Cherokee nation were sen teoced to hang for murder and applied to Judge Stewart for a writ of habeas corpus, claiming that they were not con vieted by * ‘due course of law.” The judge decided that the constitution of the United States were supreme over the five nations, ax elsewhere in the union, and that Indians could invoke its protection He ordered the condemned men to be discharged from custody on account of some informality in the organization of the grand jury, which indicted them. The Cherokee nation will carry the case to the supreme court of the United States, and the relation of the Indian nations to the union is likely to be clearly defined. Tur White City" is being dismantled, and will soon be obliterated. Frank Leslie's Weekly, will remain in mercial and intellectual forces of the world. Unquestionably it has greatly enhanced the world’s conception of American resources and enterprise and the possibilities of our fature, earth so close together and so forcibly illustrated the Kinship of the race, statistics of the fair, as now given out, paid admissions, up to the formal closing, was 21. 477.212. The aggregate receipts from all sources, including the $10,050, tation of the managers, amounting to $4,000,000, as against §800,000 derived from the same source by the Paris Rho sition. After the payment of all debts there will remain in the exposition treasury over one million dollars for dis- tribution among the stockholders, The financial management, spite of some early mistakes, seams to have been in the main exceptionally sagacious and efficient, Sax Fraxcmco Customs officials have just been convinced anew that they have yet much to learn of the trioks and de- vious ways of Ah Sin. Six months ago some three hu Chinese *‘actors” were landed in San Francisco, wader vi mission granted resolution of . gress, to form population of a» 0 | Chinese village at the Chicago Fair. They were carefully examined and trans. | ferred under guard to the train for | Chicago. But only about ove-third of {the number that left Ban Francisco | showed up in the village at the Fair, and {in the closing days of the Fair but thirty could be mustered there, It is time, ac- | cording to the schedule, for the three hundred “actors” to re.embuk for | China, but nothing has been seen of {them in San Francisco, It now tans. | pires that cach of the alleged actors paid {w Hong Kong firm of Chinamen $280 for | the privilege of belonging to the village | party. 1f any succeeded iu eluding the | vigilance of the United States officers tand sctgded safely in this country, the {$80 was to belong to the firm; if com | pelled to return the money was to be re tunded. The firm, Kowoung, Houg, On & Co., has $51,000 on deposit, and as none of the alleged actors seem likely to re embark, the firm is reasonably well os sured of its ultimate possession, Tug people of Fan Francisco boast that their Midwinter Fair will in point of exhibits and attractions any fair hitherto held in the United States, with the exception, of course, the Columbian Exposition Work is being rapidly pushed on the rounds and the buildings, and application for space oo the eighty acres reserved for the fair are comiog in fast that it is now said there will not be room enough for the exhibitors, As nearly evi county the state wishes t a »pecial exceed ol ®O in build rive Lo 4104 ing. the assignment BALL IR tr i » the executive committee n grent desl of Among the attractions siready decided on are an ostrich farm, an loddan trouble thestre, a tamale vil Heidelberg, thie counties in the The advanced, Inid for im Th ine modelled on fatr at Clic the Columbian ex hibitors are being made daily; the Midway Plaisance is to be duplicated. I'he amount of money the exposition will village, an eleotri lage, and a castle of which erected by northern citrus belt of main buildings sre now and water-pipes piel is patting nt ines Contracts with is to be he slate int are lwing case of thie ile use in Every is natural bs the of the successial ago and in the treasury of f soon be a Ol a f yi tig quarics dollars All of this, however been i 3 milion as dollars of has not Thousands ived in British Colombia has Ux the fair, and a British Auxiliary has Deen Francisco given siimcriplions it have Leen re of paviment of { Cass ions saTisTics have beer aitural Departmen 1 that Russian thistle the Northwest ‘his year to the £4,000, 000, and sistant botanist of the ing under orders from Se hus been despatched fo t make further ion. It to the Trenton rue American that the iuced into this country about seventice go in flax secd brought from Russiaand sowed pear A few pro nl Arti sho wit the has damnag is reported department, aci- ret : Marton retary Morton, ’ section Lo investios! N. Jd was nin P Years : appears pest Rcotland, in Seuth Dakota me, bul ple noticed it at theti gave it but 100 abund ensily Now it is bee that if measures are not speedily to be It is ittie little thought until it became ant to be cheeked lieved taken to eradicate it, it promises spresd over the entire « untry, described as an jpnocent lo Kine in May or up a tender hranching shoot row succulent leaves, It makes its growth in July and August, and by has ged into a spreading TO and mass effectual beast Hike 81x from a single balf an inch thick. When is frozen in November, breezes begin to blow, this small root is twisted off, and the whole plant ap an edge and goes off before the wind, soaliering seeds in es dir it has already gained a foothold in six States, and there nothing in the ns ture of the plant to preve it from spreading as far south as Texas, and proving a very scrious esemy to firmers in all the drier regions throughout the entire country It takes completes pos~ session of the land, choking out the wheat and other crops, makes it impossible to run barvesting machinery and sometimes even stops plows, often necessary to bind leather or other protection on the horses’ legs they can be driven smong the spiny weeds, Traine have been stopped by the thisties banking up on the tracks seedling which June grads witli nar rent Sep tember chats vigorous y six feet in di i iense, weed half as high, of rigid branches barrier to the passage Of pinot saucer, eT, ali ameter making a« bushy offering an Ian or shaped two grows fie WH in feet fn intnet to ics thar ground and the prairie fhe turns con ory is nt tar alien fire breaks. In many other ways this terrible weed causes serious damage How to Dry Wet Shoes When, without overshoes, you have | been caught in a heavy rain storm, per haps you have known already what to do with your best kid boots, which have been thoroughly wet through, and which, Lif left to dry in the ordinary way, will be stiff, brittle and unlovely? If not, you will be glad to learn what 1 heard | only recently from one whose ex. | perience is of value, First wipe off gently with a soft cloth ' all surface water and mud; then while still wet, rub well with kerosene oil, using | for the purpose the farred side of Can ton flannel. Set them aside till partially dry, when a second treatment with oil is advieable. They may then be deposited in a conveniently warm place, where they will dry gradually and thoroughly. Before applying French kid dressing, give them a final rubbing with the flan- nel, still slightly dampeoed with kero. sene, and your boots will be soft sand flexible ns new kid, and be very little af- fected by their bath in the rain. —[Har- per's Bazar, The largest law the two s fee on record is undred thousand dol- an dollar embarrassment, month's time. He is at of the he did ina counsel IN HIS NAME. yn — Little Deeds lie This Make Affe Seem flood, The “Phase” man of the Boston Journal witnessed a pretty little in. ‘ident at the corner of Temple and Washington streets the other day | illus! rative of the law of loving kind- ness walch rules some natures That Is always a | There was a little group waiting, as there usually F opportunity to safely run | let of teams and street | tnice of a gentleman one i had evidently been spent amid refin- | ing influences was heard above the { din by those standing there ++] suppose there is a policeinan at ' this corner Lo assist people to cross?” “Oh, yes: there generally is.” The reply came from an | woman, who was herself waiting f Lan openiog in the wall of vehicles { She had not looked, apparently, int | the face of the gentleman | du iw there stood a : woman of a different t An air : of reflnement clung to ber gown, her | hat, and everything in evidence spoke the refined lady sie was an obsery- i ant woman, and hal at discov red what | and woman had failed Lo ser, “May 1 sweelest “Thank you ent your offer Liusy ot is coraer people for an lie gaunt. cars, ‘The whose life average 01 t at my ell ype once the at Assist you gir?” in the gice Imaginan.e madam. [I will ac- I am nearly blind With the grace of a Chesterfield he affered his arm to the ludy and in minute he was safely acre apd ex- pressing his thanks to the Kind un- Known, who at trans- ferred her of OM. that large bodied and kind who finds constant employment at that busy corner w I mused » sillered 4 jag thiat moment charge to the (are er Felt, we hearted officer 4% #1 8 many men would have as I went my no loss of dignity little act to a stranger and did not foolishly hesi- tate and ask What will people sav:" It “inp Hi: name C—————— hers was Living Beyond One's Means, An een Amer: who Is observer, is reporie tn have American represented a an a said that there citizen was not an whose fi who wis lL living And he added man had a famil i ing up that<famiiy wants that he gratify. Our own observation does not hear witness to this assertion But if the alleged fact be true to any may be re- * saiary fis tueans the bevond that, if e was bring standards and could not honestly to considerable extent, it garded as among the causes of the many embezziements and other pe- cuniary delinquencies which have be ome 8a Common iate vears. “Play ing the has been the rain of a multitude iving beyond means must bear part of the b And it is more serious than monly imagined It involves pretenses and fraud. It is a mean species of crime, and yet often com- mitted without any compunction, Men are afraid or ashamed to say “1 *t afford it. "and yet are not afraid i asorg 1 or ashamed to which hristianp rs races’ hut one's ame is com false do ht debts thev cannot honest ay, —I Inte ligencer MANY a man 00 WOrk (+20 for tnat has . 3 Hood's Permanently Cures Hecsuse it roaches (he seat of dissaw in the bisod. By purifying. vita ihe ring and enriching bovesd, iL expels every taint & 1 . and the vital of Scrofala Ustarrh, Malaria, of #0 reaavalss and fluid, and Aas tacks of wirenythens throagh it the whole system, to enable il throw off Toture at. dinsase, and only Hood's, because HOOD’S Sarsaparilla CURES the vd's Pills cure all Liver lie, Sick Headache | Inandice, indigestion. Try a box. Be sure to get Hood s, 25 venta Ve CANNOT SPARE healthy flesh — nature never burdens the body with too much sound flesh. Loss of flesh usually indicates poor as- similation, which causes the loss of the best that's in food, the fat-forming element. Scott's Emulsion of pure cod liver oil with hypo- phosphites contains the very essence of all foods. In no oth er form can so much nutrition be taken and assimilated. Js range of wsefulmess has no limita. tion where weakness exists, Chem ATER AA -
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers