An Outside Pocket, A kangaroo wears aun outside pocket fn his overalls It is a sort of apartment arrangement in which he carries around his whale family, but this is really suggestive as to the use of outside pockets in the overalls of working men, who in machine shops and factories are subjected to sudden hurts and severe bruises. If a Lottls of Bt, Jacobs Oil were stored away in some of these outside pockets, nndy and ready for use when some of these sudden hurts and bruises take place, there would be hardly any loss of tims in the cure of the worst of them. For the worst bruises it is known to be the best remedy, curing the tenderness and 801 eness of the spot very promptly, while inthe pro- cess of curing, the discoloration disappears and the affected parts are fully restored. this world Our happiness in spire, No-To«Bae for Fifty Cents. Over 400,000 cured. Why not let No-To-Bae regulate or remove your desire for Saves money, makes henlth and manhood. Cure guaranteed. 5% cents and $1.00, at all druggists, tobacco? Some London children wear shoes, Run riot in the blood in the Spring. pimples, sores and eruptions appear, and the ystem is in a generally debilitated condition. A good Spring medicine is absolutely neces- sary. Iool's Sirsaparilla expels every trace of humor, gives a grod appetite and tones up the system. Hemember Sarsa- Hood’s parilla I«th fact the One True Hiood Purifier. $1, s.x for 35 mors Hoils, best —in gists, are the best after dinner pills, aid diges.ion. 2c. Potatoes, Tomatoes, Melons, Cabbage, | | | | Improving, A celebrated German physiclan was once called upon to treat an aristocratic lady the sole cause of whose complaint waa high living and lack of exercise. But it would have never done tell her so; so his medical advice ran thus: “Arise at b o'clock, take a walk in the park for one hour, then drink a cup of tea, then walk another hour, and take » sup of chocolate, Take breakfast at 8 o'clock.” Her condition Improved visibly, until one fine morning the carriage of the Baroness was seen to approach the phy- sician’s residence at lightning speed. The patient dashed up to the Doctor's house, and, on hls appearing on the scene, she gasped out “Oh, Doctor, 1 took the first.” “Then drive ean,” directed Aesculapius, rapidly writing a preserip- tion, “and take The ten must be underneath.” The grateful patient is still igpproving. to chocolat, home fast as astute disciple o as you the ’ this emetic omplied She Mad Him, Professor (describing an anciem Greek theater)— And It had no roof. Junior (feeling sure thet he has caught the professor in a inistake) What did they do, sir, when It rained! Professor (taking off his glasses and pausing angrily)-—-They got wet, sir Tit- Bits, It is estimated that the world's en cumbers are worth $8,000,000 annually to the gardeners wh : twice as mucl gists, » ralss them, and the doctors and drug Deafness Cannot be Cured by local applications, as they cannot reach the diseased portion of the ear. There is only one { } i i i : Onions, and all Vegetables, re 1 . 15 1 move large quantities ot Potash > from the soil. ’otash in liberal quantiles by the u of fertilizers containing not less than 10°; actual Pot- ash. Better a ible yields are sure to follow $ of + y 3% Supply QE nd more profit i Deafness is caused by an in. the mucous lining of the Eustachian Tube. When this tube gets in. lsuned you have & rumbling sound ect hearing, aud waen {Lt is entirely Dealness is ths result, and unless the | ’ mation can be taken and this tube stored to 'is normal onnd tion, hearing will b destroyed forever, Nine cases aut of ten caused by catarrh, which ia nothing but an in- famed ¢ 1 of the mucous suriaces, We will give One Hundred Do'lars for any case of Doafness (oansed Ly catarrh) that ean. uot ba cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. Send for c.relars, free, F. J. Coexzy & Co. Toledo, O. Bold by Dr iggista, Toe, Hall's Family Pilis are the best, tional remedies lamed coadition of oul ‘DAracier ins tha . 4B 0 fits after fret Neuve Kew ae, t send to Ail Foreigners, North man hiladelphia caving 4 > saying of & er II ecm Extenuating Circumstances. Robert —What defense are you going make tichard dersta tober it won't they have a time t I * that he 11 4 . tellect Wesley's case? rt Oh, the insanity plea, is deficient are g tichard—1 don’t know. They rt.-—-B ing to bring his wife into con ton Well-Considerel Ma i] Ree 3 e8g {jon moved ig £2 Lae trying Hes nin problem In chess Chivas” Wi A WOMAN'S BODY. , Ye Ly - 4 King's Experience. the repository of the in the nh most delicate mechanism whole 3 women get ler and keep out of f as if it were o and no consequence, he heads throb and They experience extreme lassitude, feeling, nervousness, sleepless- ery, if not death. question of a and it has cured these symptoms above enumerated. 1 attach: For twelve I'had bearing-down feelings. . black specks before my eyes. four and five fainting spells a day. trained nurse. Through her, had to go to bed and have a Pinkham's relief that it has, can truthfully say it has cured me.” THE JACK RABBIT CROP, A Way Discovered for Utilizing It in Kansas, The Kansas jack rabbit, which from time immemorial has been accorded the inguestionable freedom of the prairies, with only an occasional jack rabbit round-up to disturb his peaceful pos- session of the flelds, henceforth must ver on the alert, for a price has #et upon his head Thousands upon thousands of dollars are thrown away every winter because sportsmen do not know that jack rat be e been bits hides are valuable and individual hunters kill many thou sands of the lithe-limbed jacks every winter simply for the gport of killing Sporting clubs Occasionally a cargo of the rabbits thus slain are sent to the relief committees in the larger dis tribution among the poor, and many a family in the tenement districts of the great cities has thankfully to a steaming hot dinner of jack rabbit cities for gratuitous down sat be scorned any But despite the inroads of hunters the ra of the Kansas jack rabbits they have fol- lowed in soup, a dish not to by lover of game meats upon nks the Seriptural injunction to crease and multiply until they are so numerous in some counties garded as pests A number of dealers in hides in vari ous cities in Kansas at last have awak- ened to the fact that jack rabbit hides, American har im great demand in known in commerce as nets peit ern marke f are ts, and notices similar to oliowing are appear ¥ throug! FROC CATCHING FOR MARKET, Marylanders Do a Thriving Business in Capturing the Batrachians. ls kk i recent maott und by thouss flag or coarse has sent to the Baltimore market hun { legs each dreds of has so increased the demand by the s og shipp grass, One fr frogs season, and perior size and flavor of the that he finds it the requirements of Frog by the patrons of the principal uct legs are consumed princi restag- rants dali cate white meat, and much more tender than fried chicken, very nourishing and easily digested, and are recommendad when stewed, as one of the best diets for invalids with stomachs Only the hind legs and eaten, and they are gent to the mar'et ready skinned and salted for cooking The market frog catcher's method of capturing his game {is to secure a small, flat-bottomed boat, easy of manag ment, and in the later afternoon, when everything is still, he noiselessly pushes his little craft along the shore of the small creeks and coves. The bull frogs, as they are mmonly knowa, because of thelr deep, resonant voices, are found sitting in a shallow pool or in tne mud under tufts of heavy grass or flag. The novelty and sport of cap- turing this wily game are worth a row of ten miles on a hot afternoon. Two and sometimas three ordinary sized Frogs when cooked are a delicate quarters are CO { { baited with red flannel. angle rod. Approaching the game a few inches of the frog's mouth. croak swallows bait, hook and all. Then tol- man ever saw with hook and line. The amateur frog hunter usually pro- vides himself with a cat-afid-rat rifle, the shells loaded with mustard seed shot, and shoots his game, but this i« unsportsmanlike and is only popunlar with the uninitiated. Mill ponds, too, are favorite haunts, for the frow, and i i $ i i : i $ i i YANK" AND " JOHNNY." A Pathetic Incident of Ove of the Civil War Battles. Wilkerson, jaller of Fayette noted for his following bull frog chorus may be heard for more than a mile 1ne old-time Kent County cook has William so.ved the m of the pe“foct many preparation of the frog, and those who nd who do not know how delicious frogs’ legs may be made have many a dainty dish tacident of heroism in for them After skinning the hortly after the battle legs should be cold water |, . for hours, plate who was lor ‘stories sleries Years county, was truth, related fidelity to the pathetic which he withiensed te » $ BlLOY( of Richmond placed in then In several hours lay. ready for cooking, The pre | Lattlefleld to ide ntify the Habl jit to his father Aesh Jos lywiv ’ . IOwWly over th \Y., in placed on a “A son BOI weveral of my friend Hon. Cassi killed in nond, and it was my salted unre legs of medium sized frogs the large to be coarse the te I'he ana wa the more they duty are body | aro of to Cook it i Hera able, as very in most popular w them is of please the palatc xture in Kent there ay but groans Ff Td 1 § by frying, are rom a cornfield dishes of the ways making lown the corn epicure FACTS ABOUT CHOCOLATE. Crown on the Cacao Tree. but Weighted | Afterward with the Pipe Clay. Right here let us settle t the he differs lL etween of cocoon Ci name of dices known fiber so ting, hats fruit of another tain chocolate, Ve the ice the Stalking a Deer on We had gone i Oo od naniilion | a ring of skaters : aj id ion with the boiled for a hour he pla; bean. | much as a four-legg We him 2 | we were unable to catch him. for | time any it. that wi the fresh! an expresses vanilla After being certain length got running ne poured into molds and : }- lowe cool, when it becomes ‘he | rarely seen genuine chocolate of com- | some individual either failed get a merce Having once tasted the thick | hold on him, or, succeeding, was hurled delicious chocolate grown, made 21d | a8 from a catapult along the to la Centro Americano. great desight of all the It was the merriest skating party 1 ever witnessed, although the deer might not uave geen much matter for merriment one tried to ice, brewed a yon | the rest named the plant Theo It is not ane {in it 3 # wind siasm which bromo-—"nectar cf the gods.” a stimulant like tea or coffee, but safe, before : which the event proved there was small danger. One wing of the circular trocha we had forsned in the line gut out of breath and slowed up, a gap was formed in the line, and the deer wen! through it like a flash, and the last we saw of him was “hull down,” and ing as merrily as if freshly started. Minneapolis Journal. he was perfectly a mild nourishing food in a very con played out densed form.—Philadeiphia Record The Diver's Heavy Dress. The dress of a fully equipped diver weighs 169 pounds and costs about It is made up, among other things, of 8 1-2 pounds of thick under. clothing. The dress itself weighs 14 pounds, and the heavily weighted boots weigh 32 pounds. The breast and back ZO A Mechanical Baseball, A machine, or rather a gun, which is intended to take the place of a pitcher in base ball batting practice has been invented by Mr. C. H. Hiuton, an Eng- lishman, instructor of mathematics at Princeton University. It is claimed for the Hinton mechani. cal pitcher that it can be made to shoot a base ball 80 as to make it curve in or 356 pounds, The greatest depth at which a diver can ordinarily work is 150 feet, though there are rare instances of work being done at a depth of 210 feet, where the pressure sustained is 88 1-2 pounds to the square inch. It is not generally ing was first suggested by the action of the elephant, which swims beneath the surface, breathing meanwhile throngh ita trunk, which it holds above the witer, required. guns, all proving unsuccessful, that Mr. «ach conviet in the Massachusetls prison costs the state $3.67 a week. gun that did not propel the ball with death-dealing velocity, but which could moderate speed, witn reasonable accur- at the same time curve ft, of a cylinder Behind the and to und The gun consists, first in which the ball is placed all is placed a movable breech At the other the tube of A blank cartridge is placed generates the this Is attached a tube of the barrel, the the barre) fl in a rifle, minus plac © end tube taking the in the gun, whicr, when fired gas the tube all. The powder thus acts to propel indirectly se ball and not directly as It compressed enough in 3] bullet in gun barrel he effect of does on a has more t Shot straight out of the ball would produce fron toward A WOMAN CONSTABLE. She Does Wer Work as a Man Does His The Pet of the Force BE hire I"t ne Een ;erman That table Kest, only wer by with She says ghe ghe would do if she against an ugly customer, but she lares, with a snap of her black eyes, that she would get him. She is the pet of the municipal force, and if she ever sent word for help the entire retinue of clerks, of departments, and underlings would turn out to the rescue heads of Constable Florence, Creen Cross Society. We have a Red Cross Society and a White Cross Society, and now, says the f.ondon Chronicle, there has just boen started at Vienna a new order known as the Green Cross. Its object shoulk be of special interest to the Alpine Club, for its purpose is to render assistance to venturesome ciimbers in the Alps by establishing buts on high mountains as a refuge against the cold at night and to keep supplies and relief stores and boxes containing articles likely to be needed in emergencies at those spots where private resources of the mout- {aineer are likely to fail. The now grader is an offshoot of the Austrian Alpine Club, Large Steamship for invalids, An European ship-owning concern has placed another order for the eon- struction of a large steamer, which is to be specially adapted and fitted for the needs of invalids who want fresa air and a favorable climate. For nine months of the year the vessel will cruise with its sick passengers, the
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers