PP aii MEN WHO WANT YACHTS, INSANITY BETRAYED BY THEIR WILLINGNESS TO PAY A BIG PRICE. — Cartons Evidences of Aberration of Mind, A Man Who Wanted Mr. Vanderbilt's Stew: Yacht AlvasValued His Posses- slons at 635,000,000. on “It's a curious tuing,” said Mr. Hughes, the fest lidutenans in dr, Manning's well known Yacht agency, ton voporter, “that if a man's mania takes tho (oom of his imagining him. self a wealthy porson he is pretiy sure to come to us to buy a yacht, You'd be as tonisted if I were to tell you of all my ex- Periences since I have been here, and some- times so sine have they appeared that 1 have not been ablo to detect the slightest aberras ton of mid, “Last summer a gentleman called and wanted to know what large schooners we had forsale. I shoved him the list and he se keto the Resolute. Heo said ho wanted a Yesscl bn which Le could take bis family to Lurope. told Lim that the Resolute had been across; thet she had been built for Mr, Hatel, the ban of, in the best manner, and Lat sho was just the boat for him; that her captain (Dayton) was an experienced navi- § tor and bad ben in ber on her ocean voy=- tyes. He scorned much interested, and was Apparently as sane as you or I. The first sus- picon I hal was vhien I named the price and be male no objection, but said at once, ‘I'll take her.’ You Luow we seldom get our asking Price right off, nud this eagerness on his part surprised mo, However, as I mentally cal- cnlated the 5 por cent. commission and what I sticuld do with ii, I intimated that a refer LUCE of nu depo it was customary, and he re- Firred me to a well known house up town and ¥ considered the sale made. On going there buey referred me to a certain address which I Cul not Loow tien, but when I went there I found it was an insane asylum, from which, #5 1 found out afterward, my customer had escaped, WANTED VAXDERBILY'S “ALva.” “A fow dys ago a man came in who said his name wns George BE Carbrey. ‘I want,’ sae be, “to buy Mr Vanderbilt's steam yacht Alva’ Toil Lim she was not for sale, and Lo then sald, *What fs the largest steam Yacht you ave? told him, for up to that time [ had no suspicion of his sanity, “What is the price” said he, “Ninety thousand dollars," said I. “ ‘Tl take her,’ said he, and for reference he gave me the National Park bank. ‘I own that bank,’ Le continued; ‘l had a quarrel with the cashier one day, and I just bought the bank and have discharged all the men there and put in new ones. I own all the backs in New York except the Columbia, and I think I'll buy that.’ Pun Pictare of the Lady who Ruled Washington Society Fifteen Yours Ago. | Bome days ago nn afternoon reception wi glven by the wife and daughters of Mullett, formerly supervising architect of the treasury, Anong the ladies receiving with the hostess was Mrs, Kote Chase, as she now calls bersell—the once famous nnd al- ways beautiful Kitty Chase. It was the first time she bad appeared at any socis! gathering in Washington for many years, and this woman, who fifteen years ago ruled Wash. ington society ns it never was ruled before or since, was not personally known to one fourth of the guests present. Beside ber stood { bor daughter Ethel—a slim, indefinite kind of i 8 girl, pusaibly to be pretty, but never to be ; a handsome as bor mother, As for Mrs, Kate Chase, her beauty is of that noble sort that age cannot wither nor custom stale, haw passed through great storms without let. ting them agitate her unduly. She is now nearly 45 years old, but she looks ten yours younger, Sho has lost the first brilliancy of ber youthful complexion, but she can't help being superb and distinguished, In tho day of her power she was intensely feared and swl- mired, but never inspired or seemed to try to Inspire affection, so that the animosity | she awkakened on the part of those who saw | { her for the first time in many years assisting Probable Effects of a European Wareof | O88 Party was of a critical kind. No doubt Advantage to America. | this sulted Ler quite ns well, because pity is If war breaks out it is inevitable that there i something she always disdained, A re 2 sock ’ rn y i out rr £8, E75 M4 | io Caesars ra rupt, and a repudiation by Russia would in. | Hegave. The sum ot . nt ys han mow . the flict terrible losses, not only upon the Russian | ¥0% cdtupetenco left by her father, who people, but upon German and other investors, Sve onl Sad Jpoot is Whatever claim Then, again, the outbreak of h great war o upon Canonchet is worth nothing Of tho time that flies away, Tho last til strand of the cable 1s parting slow and sure, never again to the harbor side My bonnie boat will moor, My bonnie boat, that may come again, God temper the wave and wind! To gladden sad eyes and yearning hearts, That now are left behind May come again, but not to lie Bafe by the old home shore: The anchor of youth in almost weighed; They will cast it never more. And it's oh. and it's oh, for the sinking dread,’ It's oh for the climbing BOrTOW, As over the cruel, ere ping night Brings on the weary morrow! Love that is true must hush itaelf, Nor pain by its useless ory, For the young must go, and the old must bear, And time goes by, goes by, ~All the Year Round, I pi——— IF WAR BREAKS OUT. : i wo gowns witl i so) om Pari Berlin bourse, and possibly also upon that of two go Toa wii al netemmortes: from | “hh Paris. Lastly, it is to be recollected that | POF Many years ago, and repeat the order were a great war to break out the govern. | Whenever she felt like it, appeared the other ments engaged in it would be obliged to issue say in th simplest kind of a black costume. very large loans. If tho war last od long | Bat it was nevertheless elegant and appro- other loans would be fssued in quick succes. | PrA8W. because it couldn't be anything else LH quae in. {| With Kitty Chase as its wearer, She alwavs sion, the national debts of Europe would in } had afoot ‘ loth he i srfoct oi oi a crease enormously, and thus one of the great | 000, e I a Cem, ful ae causes tending to raise prices would be | MORINg beauty gained effect from the style 9 feo . we WY al a stopped; the supply of wecurities would be | ® Which sho dressed. — Washington Letter. immensely augmented all at once, while the | growth of wealth would be checked. | . 11 costs re : Wealth, of coltrse, Would continue to grow who is one of Buffalo Bill's attractions. re. in the countries that avoided war, and also | . in the oc untries which themselves w . t ceived word the other morning of the death J 43 Ve FE J’ H } » made the theatre of war, and which had ” y | Of his brother at Pine Ridge agency, Dakota, too large a proportion of their male po las { and bo began tO mourn his Joss in true Indian ’ - : - Poy { fashion. Ho first uttered a prolonged series tion in the field; but along with this growth A Young Indian's Self Torture. us Mr. A RB i * Besides, she is a woman who She is no longer rich, and inherits Chief E Ow 1 this w who could orde sty. would not improbably cause a panic upon the now, aud this woman who could order twen ¥y- 3 | Muzzah, a promising young Sioux Indian, | of yells, shrieks and groans that brought ail of wealth there won) : i fo Lars 4 he et ould also be a great de | the police in the neighborhood to the garden | and aroused all the inmates of that extens structure who were taking a morning They all knew what the matter struction of wealth, At the very time, there fore, in which securities were being most rap idly manufactured there would be & greaf check to the growth of wealth. There must inevitably, therefore, be a fall in prices; and if the war were protracted the fall might be “Then he sald that be should want four steam launches, and would give me a big comission if I could get them for him. He paid that be was going to South America. and was going to take a dozen priests and two | nuns, in order to form a convent of the | Sacred Heart. The commision promised ma was 810,000, and he afterward increased ] ftto 815000. He wanted a permit to goon | board the yacht at once, but I bad tumbled | 30 his condition and told him we never gave permits for so expensive a vessel, and that | Mr. Manning or niyself would go with him ; the next day. Ho said he had a coupe at | the door and would take me at once. He | said: ‘Town the coupe and I own the man | that drives it." Then he saw the young lady [ who ishere as a typewriter, and ho said: | ‘I'll buy you, too. I have already got twelve i Alenographers nnd I want thirteen.’ Hesaid: | ‘1 am worth 8855 050.000. and [ have made it all since the 1st of January in flour, and the | “wey I made it Is curious. 1 was driving ont ] on the road and fell in with Mr, Vanderbilt, | and we had a brash, I beat him, and be was #0 pleased at having found a man that could i beat him on the road that he gave me some | points, and I acted on them and have mads all this money since. Before that I working for $10 a week.’ god rid of him after a while™¢ thon, “and 1 was glad enon young lady aod myself were alone and there ! was no telling what for tale next. [I have sines heard the been taken to an insane ssylum. 1 « you jot % 0f other anecdotes of this it's» ons was ontinaned | 1, for the of i orld tell | sort, but | fact that as soon as a man gets good and | v be is sive fo come to us to bay a vache” ! Now York World i The Future of Cremation. sationists hold their yearly meeting other night at the mayoralty of the vighth arondissement. In his report on the progress of their work during the past year © the secretary referred in special terms of satisfaction to the act which the chamber of deputies on March 50 passed by a ma jority of 471 votes against 174 to render cremation optional in France, according to the will left by a person. The Holy See has prohibited, that is to say, anathematiznd, this funeral ceremony in Italy, but ils decreo will prob ably remain a dead letter, &8 cremating fs very popular in that country, where no low than sixty cremating societies exist, Fur uaces have also been built at Geneva, Zurich, New York, San Francisco, Buffalo, ete. In Germany a petition to the reichstag for its toleration has obtained 93,000 signatures, In the Mauritius several determined crema tionists have ordered their bodies, in the ab sence of ovens ad hoe, to be burned on com- on pyres, the operation lasting four boars. «Loudon News, Recollections of a Quarrel. “It is mo wonder that Col. Cockerill jumped fu between Pulitzer and Joe Howard in The World office the other day,” suid a St. Louis “newspaper man. “Poor Cockerill knows what such 8 scene is to his sorrow. Bince his killing of Slagback in The Post-Dispatch Bllee Cockerill has never been the sama man, There Is an air of sbatenct on and melancholy About him which even the $5000 a year which Pulitzer Is said to psy bim om The World eannot dispel. the way, did vou ever know who It was thet Belped Cocler 11) ont of that serave pouniariy, and wi bvit whose aid Lie 4 The ¢ tha - but their aid snd sag they | sullerers from the floods in the south. considerable, and the recovery would be long delayed, fz g , Sutouaana as {tain morbid condi There might be an exception in favor of | \"% bis bared breast, arms and logs with it American railroad securities. Even in them there would be a fall at first, but probably they would recover quickly first, becanse a great war in Europe would increase the de. mand for American produce; secondly, be enue there would be tendency to send capital of a lead pencil, which be sharpened to a | No maladies are out of the belligerent countries to the neutral countries for safe keeping and for fuvest. | the population | ment; and, thirdly, becanse and wealth growing so securities is vast, while rarely invest their money in Securities of foreign governments, and they would not be likely to be tempted 8 a time when thos foreign governments were exhausting their resources and ruining their prospecss in a tes ride way. — London Saturday Review. of the United States themselves ——— Charity Entertainment in Paris Everything that brains and ingenuity can | suggest is being done to raise money for the Be sides establishing fendguarters lo all direc tions where voluntary sHisoriptions are ree ceived, nothing Is loft undon forms of Es safe to predict of in the way of nent for snicered, and it §s Fr entert wy taste jae hat haf their senefit it interested in the f RYH ¥ fo contribute will have i who has money it 1 da his tite, The entertainment par excollonce thoy for this fas onable charity is the Eraiuke fotos du soleil—a conglomeration of tions brought together under the roof of the Palais de Vindustrie, and suppossd £4 reves sent the various occupations and amusement of the peopls of the « Artistic or ool brated buildings and structures are here duplicated. A romantic mill here, a famous bridge or a pictaresque wall there; chalets and cottages wattersd about give a pleasing effect, and at the samo time serve as booths or side shows where the small change of the visitor easily finds its way. Various orchestras take turns at one end of the other of the immense hall; a mixed chorus fs sing. ing in one corner the Pilgrim's March from “Taunhauser,” while in another a band of childron ks shouting a familiar hymn. Mme. Theo sings ons of ber wicked songs from one stage while a long haired tenor pours out some sentimental gush from an other; n Punch and Judy amuses the children; a lightning crayon artist pleases the vain by presenting them with Likeness of them selves; a snake charmer and sn armies and Jogles man attract those of morbid Lantos; male and fomale wrestlers, trick hors, dog and goats, a skillful dagger thrower, tum blars and performers generally give exhib. tons on an open platform; views of the de vastations caused by the flood are shown, The dance of the Tarascon is given by alleged men and women of the south: in fact, every form of amusement that can please old and young, Frenchman and stranger, plebedan and aristocrat, is presented at the fetes du soleil. —Paris Cor, New York Star, watt Mistaken Ideas of the Editor, Some peop’s seem to think that the editor of on country nowspaper oyghit to be 4 sort of clown, give open air performances in the Iaogh at all ' owes and bears, and bo 6 sort thot Words, ho nist be & regular bootlioker, tink Jus like you do, nod sanction to ail you say, beg everyone be mets to take his loon sew lari, rapidly that the home demand for | bloon grew larger Amer ins ' | When the sniwers were ready be eanght be allowed to remain for two i | which time none dared to speak 1 | tesopt to interfore. Among the Indians it is lon pain of indant death thet ono fudian spenks to another who is in “mourning™ until | | alter the thin day atitwes | | make life practical of the south | ive sleep was and only the uninitiated in Indian customs gathered | around him to watch the procecdi L% | fervor of bis grief increased he drew his Jong bowie knife from its sheath and began slash { While the blood from half a dos fi wounds was coursing down bis body and f ming red pools at hisfeot, be sat down and wit i suns bloody wy “pon wooden pins about tho thickness and length the point. During the time that it took Lim to | manufacture a half a dozen of thes he kept up the loud, dismal howling, expanding volume as the pain focreased and the Povia the fleshy part of one leg between the thu and the Gogers of the left band and drove the wooden pin into the flees until the pin truded. He did the same to each lin also drove a pin through either cheek, him or at After the Indian drew out the plos be rolled himself from besd to foot in his blanket and oe mang found OOeRonn be thought WOOOe pans weary exhi crawled into one of A he ay all day with where or « i, moe Dressing out nto wild g gus £ His HIKE ® i # to many 5 % $8 | to the garden, and there Were 1 ere Lines Whim {| Kew York 11 A Lady Rallresd Stenographer Talks i have often thought that the bum of a stenographer bad a tenden Teak down and eventually drive ou ®t imaginative amd postical fn one's nature and ail The murmurings of poesy on mgonlicht, violets, memories and hope, grate halehly against the whisperings of the chief clerk on subject of drain tile dnd the tariff rate on wheat in car- £ mitog its details m | loads, with the result of giving the poems | | dry flavor, savoring of owier's risk with a | | rebmte. Leisure hours cammot be devoted to i poetry, becaew thought must be concentrated | upon rate Guotations, billing directions un. | stamped tickets, while one’s dreanw are filled i hot with the beautiful, but with mocking | ghosts of rates, tariffs and way bills {Inspiration may come at times, but so cer i tainly will also come the rate clerk with the } request to make a bektograph copy of a lot of per cent sheets, drondful things witsrings of figures, not nice, even figures, with lots of fractions to them which ml vot be mixed up with the various of her, conta, Most of my working hours are sper? in a rail road ofilco, and 1 have alfost given up my poetion] dreams to look J shipments of water pipes, stove casting? potatoes, butter, | furniture, bams, hides, stoves, oil cakes, i lumber, beer, eggs, live stock, patent medi- , cine, ete, ~Globe-Democrat, Senator Stanford's Wife, It seems Me. Stanford will never bo a great i : Asthe | began whittling out | ins be highly este ered of | Lar ana | MT ER aN Ain] : Soe Max . Established 1553. ais Groceries, cure anything bat Rheamatiom, but that every time, It curd Baste, Brawe, Lancaster, Pa, Ma Hanrsax, $n, Bloomsburg, Pa, Mus, Rov. BH, Ropixsow, Staunton Va, Mua, War, Memano, 10 Wylie Bt, Philsdelphis, J. F, Newrox, Osmden, N. J. Mus, Many Carnoy, Moarestown, N, J Fuaxg Many, Mauch Chink Pa, | SIGNATURE — TITTTIeT™ | HVERY BOX Two this Nise, HAS Borie i Gromtoims with Cie watery Hranuiated Bugar Bc a pound All o lowest prices, Good bargains In all grades, ~=Finet Now Orlane at 300 por gallon, {| COFFUL Fine assortment of Coffs, hoth green ana sumsted, Our roasted Coffees are always fresh, | TOBACCOS ~All the new and desirable brands, AND 5 TRADE MARKS and both Trade Bark, CIO ARR. ~Bpecial attention given to our cigar trade, Wo try to sell the best 2 for be snd bo cigars in town, PER BOX, For compinte information, Deseriptive Pass philer, with testimonials, free, For sale by sll drogeiste 1 one or the other is not in position to farnish It to you, do Bot be fer. susded to teks anything ow, but soply direct to 1 i Genorsl Apetits, PFAELZER BROS. & CO. | 819 & B21 Market Steovt, Philadelphia, i TEAR Young Hysonu, 0c, B0e, $1 per pound. Imper. ial, fle, Bie, £1 per pound, Gunpowder, foe, Mic, $1 per pound. Oolong, Se, 80g, $1 per pound, Mix 4 green and black, Se, Boe, $i per pound A Ory fine nnoolored Japan tea. Also, 8s good bargain in Young Hyson at 40c per pound, oh | CHEESE —Vinest ful] cream cheese at 160 per pound. the —T0 any one seadiig us 8275 i i i BOL coupon, will send them i I 0 . pa hod VINEGAR Pure old cider vinegar made from whole : ( ext Dey erat and Godev's Lady's cider, Ove galion of this goods is worth more than Bonk tor one year. It isone of the 1iowt two gallons of common vinegar, | popular magazines published and the | 1887 -ennenn=-1887. The Pittsbu rgh WEEKLY POST, ENLARGED TO | TWELVE PAGES, Is imparted to the kidneys and bled. | Leni y Hosteiter's Siomach ory 'TheOnlyDemo eratic | borpadily of thease organs, 4 1 Paper in Pitts- burgh, we fsubsoription price is 3200 and with the | Destocnar $2.75. Read the { ment ia snother column of this paper, Bivertise. —— A — seJteh, Man {Kind cured in I Sanitary Lotion. U.e no o Rold hy F. Pa. » 40 F and Soratehes of every 40 Minutes i ods This Pots Green, R-44 ly, y Wooo her { never nile | Drugeist, Bellefonts —— A —— A Gentle Stimulus Hilters, I toot useful euiclen [fusing more aot ivity into them, this ex. ioellent tone them with ad. | { ditional vigor, sud enables them the | | better to und: rego the wear and tesy of | the discharging fund i them by nature the for m SHOWS AFTER JANUARY 1, 1887, “Tux Weekry Post” will be enlarged 10 TWELVE PAGES ne-lnlfl Iarger than jie present i# making it the Largest snd ( Paper in the Country. 12 PAGES, 84 COULMS. Interesting Ressing Matter Svery Week or One Year {ur grealer :/ONE DOLLAR mhial 7 In Clubs of Five or Over 10 Copled for } than | $10.00 And sn Extrs Copy FREE 10 the the kidneys, in i Lreller Up of Club, medicine which sverts the peril should | Dingle Subscription, $1.25 as yenr. All postage prepaid, HOD imposed upon Moreover, ss they are tha e:cape of oe the blood, ine | strengthening and i healthfully stimulating them i obs of these channel certain tmpurities fr Fens es hes pest {their usefulness by in cer myport ant organs, they fall sinte, which is the usual What into 8 singeish | percursor of | ¢ Risen 6, L*n 1 ¢ 1h ($A ERE * 5 service than 3 ty when sl more them to grea tin ¥ i iv IW riines those which alleot | ALL THE NEWS of THE WEEK AND A GREAT VARIETY OF MISCELLANY. C— oh — T | POLITICAL. — Always Democratic, | OSPHA E giving » cordial and cahdid support of ihe | Nations! Administration, i LITERARY —1lustrated tales, sketeh. | es, choice miscellany, biography and | poetry. { WASHINGTON Ample snd reliable £ mail and, telegraphic from figs reports DISSOLVED S$. C. ROC his Article Is not a complete Manure--it fs valoahle fof its Soluble Phosphoric A donly snd eoutsins oo Ammonia. J soften called “Sololie : Bone,” “Miuseral Bone,” * Fossil Bote,” ele, Ig reson ——————— WE OFFER AR A COMPLETE MANURE orn RO Band orders carly 10 your dealer to insgre supply BAUCH & SONS, - the § TACTUREES oF Baugh's 825 Phosphate, FHILADELPIHIA. PA. Ts SBnce, wdnf] Wf Lhe Hii be ound si inter. reading 11 the and § bari toss farmer an, ihe stugant, re«eminentiy cle, ry. ST, am: ’ ratdashat sod y and household cit THE PO PITTSBURGH, hal ai ‘A Valuable Farm FOR SALE Sitnated six miles sunt of Bellefonte, in Marion towmding, oi the Jacksonville rond, containing 120 Acres, sndallowapos, in a HIGH STATE OF CULTIVATION, About 30 acres in GOOD ETANDING TIMBER. J — =n 4 = 8 =v, ¥ pm hi er I Vo) TER TH 3 H A Xe spaper cod ES | ne apporiing tie . oo of nn Demoerdftio Administration, i Piblished In the Clty of Wey York, WILLIAM DORSHMEIMER, | Rottor and Proprietor, | Daily, Suiday, and’ Woskly Editions THE WEEKLY STAR, § | A Sixteen page Newspaper, issued i every Wodnesday. | A clean, pare, bright and interesting | FAMILY PAPER. Tt comtaing the latest pews, dowe 0 the hour of A Good Frome House and New Bank Born, ond all other Necessary Outbuildings. Good Flowing Mountain Water all the year round. CHLER | public; bundreds bave been cured | it when other remedies have failed. i | fair trial will vi Pains, C | rhoea, &¢c., now before the public. | trial will prove the Two Good Fruil Bearing Orchards, " Provisions, FOREIGN FRUITS and CONFECTIONERY. . el, Im connection. BTONEWARE —1u sileives of bent quality of Akron Wars, factory goods in the tarket, FOREIGN FRUITS Oranges and lemons of the freshest goods to be bed, We buy the best and Jociest Jerions we ony fod They are bettar sud chiemper than the very low priced goods, FRUIT JARS We have the now Lightning fruit - sud Mason's poroddsin fined und gluse op furs, hs Bhtuiog jar ie fur shond of anything yet knows It tu Yitele Wigher ig price thas the Mason jar, but ithe worth mors than the difference in price "Buy the lightning jar nod you will BOL regret it. We bare thew in pote, yoarte sud half gallons, MEATS Fine sugarcured Hume, Ehoniders, Break. fast Bacon, sud dried Beet, Naked and CBN Vases We guarantee every piece of mest wo nell, OUR MEAT MARK ET. dress for our warket ell the desirable haps This is the most satie ~We have Bity flue lamb he wanted. We give specie Alen tion 10 petting Soe Int le wud aiways ry to | Baves fine Sock ahesd. Our FHsLaners can depend on geting vice lamb ut aii tisnes, EECHLER & CO., GROCERS & WELT WAREDY Bask House Block Belletonis, Pa. N VEG- AND DR. RYMAN'S INDI ETABLE BALS FOR THE L UN « THROAT. The grestest known remedy fo Consumption, Coughs, Heonrsen, | Bore Throat, Croup, Spitting Blood, and i nll Disenvey arising from an irritated | throst snd 1nflamed Lungs. This Balsam. {de Compound Bes been used in private practice ovey Swenty vesrs guir ug 8 bigh | reputation fofBuring ali Lung and Throat | aflections with those who have Used it. 14 is & sad remlity, yet rue, that two-thirds of the deaths within DUr mids mre caused | from bad colds becoming deeply sented int | the vital . through treatment en A A NS r Colds, ny *, Asthron, portions of the lise ue neglect sod improper care or When besith is destroyed all iife Then, § which lung yment of is lost beesusre of these treacherous ec suck the ave the poor tlle th no chance for re. he reliable WAY I to thoroughly the system Gs, nd na iile-biood by degrees, a | emaciated sufferer wi lief, ¢ | eTndicaieibe destrover from dy Using | J yman’s {P Vv 'Ryman'’s [Pure egetable a Remedy, | You will find it imparis tealth and vigor {10 the whole E¥elem, scting on the | Mucous men brane of the Throst and { Bronchisl Tubes grestly facilitates eX pect. | oration, breaking up s troublesome cough | in » marvelous short period, 81 the same | Ume incressing the Appetite, causing an | enjoyment of food, enabies the su wach 10 | properly digest it, purifies the blood and imparts » healthy complexion, | . ‘ : ' Ryman’s Carminative, For Ds sentery, Disrrhoes and ( bol {era Morbus, This ( erminstive, fonnd { ed on just medical principles, is the i Ep ok y | most positive remedy offered 10 the by ; A prove its eflicacy. FOR | CHILDREN TEETHING, it is the | most pleasant, reli i A F 4 . ay for childres able BLOG Fale reque. io cases of Griy } ic, Chelera Morbus, of this asser. er ghould be without it. NTERY. The most of Dysentery have speedily yielded to the magic power of | carminative. If taken sceordin | directions success is certain. DR. RYMANS «( ELEERATED {CARMINATINE for children teeth | ing greatly facilitates the process of teething, by softening the gums, redo. | cing all inflamotion—wil) eliay Ary | PAIN avd spssmodic action, srd is | sure 0 regulate the Bowels. Depend | upon it, Mothers’ it will give rest to | your-selves aud RELIEF and HEALTH to your INFANTS We bave prepared and sold this vaiuble Medicine for | many years, and can ssy in confidence { and truth THAT IT HAS NEVER FAILED IN A SINGLE INSTANCE 10 EFFper A CURE when timely used. We have vever known of dissatisfact on by any one who ased it, on the « nirary ail are delighted with its operations, and speak in terms of beighest commends. tion of its magical effects and Medical virtue in almost every instance when the infant is suffering from pain and exhavstion, relief wiil be found in $f. teen or twenty minutes after the coAg- MINATIVE is given. This valuable ir i tion. No mot} t FOR DYERE | Violent cofases § ' 4 » glo woman, although this winter, for the | pining myer thelr son's death, she has | Eoing to press: come out of retirersént and bas al enter. | Agriculituraly tained some. But she can't help baving ber | Wirrkot, superb dinmonds remarked on and ber | Fashion, Medicine has been uvsed by wosy EXPERIENCED and SKILFUL At RsEs | with never-failing s.covus. It not only relieves the child fro. prio, bee jo. For further particnlars inquire of H J. TIBRBENS, Or J. Le Boalflor an he prevaiees, gorgeous gems observed. Siw still wears a i kind of ball mourning-the kind which ad streets, toll Yong yarus, say sar things, | mits of lace and diamonds and she wa diz | nified and fine looking woman, Both steand of center {i ure everywhess he goes, In | Senator Stanford have a lie work in per | petaating who toemory of tole som in » way to bemetht other people's sorw—and Mra, Stan- to a ah fs such nn ford sho Is too deeply Interested In that | “rom re va de of ie 88 wey oh STERMS WILL BE BASE, SALESMEY Hougaholt, ix Co a Financia. and Commercia vavical, Humasrous and Taiter al nag Dervrrwres, oll Loader 10 Shoetion of train i arnall of the igloos ablintye Vie sixteen or wi wo Fors fa I i good things *oetiean and Ct —_—————— rr a RR wie of Nursery Bock, tend AROTIN Re, at ANE “ee, N.Y, boo BF evel se Lvs $e 0s. (Heer Yo Te Paper BIOwd 5 1 X00 Linens x yi ! WANTED tn oanviss for the em tuyere gaa old. Sudary meld Bronwen Paid, vigoistes the stomsche and bowels, corrects neidity and gives tone ane aod ener ihe whole system. It will alert insisodly re! in desth, We BEST Si 8 WEST REMEDY IN THE worLD in nll coves of
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers