¥ f / A Mrs. 8. D. Ashley FOR WOMEN IN FEEBLE HEALTH | and have since pitched a great deal with ne | the Hood'sCannot Be Too High-| ly Recommended 11, Mass Sars dd & Co. 1 AWE Apariii the Ix hack tite inereased “ar SUE Rheumatic Troubles Ceased I ha I felt better than for years before and would 1 ted wi R Hood's Pills act ARORTHERN PACIFIC - CEH RAZE" Xl. EL. and EE NDS Millions of nesota tana. dal nd Ore & taaciibit or lar 18 Si ntied FREE General Emigration [gent N. PRR. Se Panky Mine. A.M. LEGE & CO, 7" ¥ ATTORNEY % FOR Fa VENTORS, Ir Cnunbem ade workinz for ne, r 210835: JOHNSON & CO. Richmond, Bn. ¥ 11th and Main Sts, CAKED UDDER AND GARGET = scorT 5 ARABIAN Paste. G ARANTERI Ww o fic w of © £. Sent Va. RCo. BILIST ERS SCAT | and SWEAT, Price 81. 00, Scott's | Paste N. ¥ po - BEE | country for year Can You Losp the Grip? Losing one kind of grip Is worse than tak ing another, and when thousands are in train- ing for the fleld sports of summer months, it is well to be advised by those who know all | about it, Mr. F. O. Ferguson, 1658 Atlantic Avenus, Brooklyn, N. Y,, writes to the point March 1, 1803, He says: “I would lke to add my testimony to your already long list, While playing ball I sprained my arm at the elbow and shoulder, It interfered with my playing considerably and lost me many professionally, I tried everything I think of, but I could got no relief, A advised that the only thing to be coule done was t¢ A friend Jacobs Oil, with the result that I was give the arm n long rost, , however which I tried rompletely cure recommended St, signs of my former trouble, which, by retires many a professional player." way, I GERMANY has #1,155,000.000 invested inthe | banking business Dr. Kilmer's Bwaxr- Roo all Kidney and Bladder troubles, Pamphlet and Consultation free, Laboratory Binghamton, N. Y, FREXOR mated at § smpital invested in 555.000 000, trade is osti- C atarrh Cannot Be ( ured With local applications, as they cannot reach the seat of the disease. Catarrh is a blood or constitutional disease, and it you must take internal atarrh ( ure is taker n intery i remedies, Hall's 5 wally, and acta di rectly on the blood and mucous surf o. Hall's Catarrh Cure is not aquack medicine. It waa ribed by one of the beat physicians in this %, and Is a regular prescription. It is composed of the best k bined with the best blood on the m pres tonics Known, a rifiers, noes, The rectly 1 erode 5 u NE Sold oh ar pl Signs of Health, You d n't have {oO look twice todetect them—bright eyes, bright color, bright THT 'SCOTTS | “| EMULSION; nly when TTT 4 weak Henge) AL B is replaced by the healthy kind. Scott's Emulsion of cod liver oil effects cure by building up sound flesh. It is agreeable to taste and easy of assimilation. wt & Bowna KN. Y. smiles, bright in CVCry tion. Disease 15 overcome Prepared by Be AU Araggieia CHAM’S PILLS (Vegetable) What They Are For t freq | import i Allen WOOK correction the pills w EE EY —— EE e——— Especially for Farmers, Miners, H. B, Hands and others, TRA WEARING this Is the B CM nad don't be persuaded into an inferior article down to the heel, EX YOUR Boot wearers test! Rubber DEALER FOR ™ uent and all of them. CV ryl yoday ial SICK half the treet, New 8 ‘thie not within ill be sent by mail, 25 cents. 5 i ) + ARE THE BEST - Souls sole extending Thousands of ever had, ASK UALITY, CNT the * 1 Good Tale Will Bear Yong Twics.” Use Sapolio! SAPOLIO dnnunry 4 per cent, Vebrunry 1, March IY TOTAL, We have paid io ony castomers “ days, Profits pald twice seach month; money Ti tr withdrawn any time; $3 to $1000 can be invested write for Information, ish AC Sad irk and Brokers, es ~ and rondway, |! New York, PATENT yd Sant. THOMAS PF, SIMPRON, Washington, D. ©. No MET Togs until Fates obtained. Write for Inventor's Guide good chances | doeto) | in order to cure | Cynthia burst out, THE SOLDIERS OF THE Along the margin of the world They march with their bright banners furled, Until, in lnpe of battle drawn, They reach the boundaries of dawn, SUN, They cross the seas and rivers deep, They climb the mountains high and steep, And hurry on until in sight Of their black enemy-the Night, Then madly rush into the fray These armies of the Night Bwiftly the shining arrows go, While bugling Winds their warnings blow, and Day. Btrive as He will, the Night is pressed Farther and farther down the west, With golden spear and gleaming laneco The cohorts of the Day advance, Thus, dally, is the battle won By the brave soldiers of the Sun! «Frank D, Sherman, in Harper's Weekly, orn I~ gtand still and admire; as for them, the world must truly stand still when she left them. “What is it that ie troubling Aunty | Tim?" asked Ruthy, the second night | Mies Timbrook had | Miss Cynthia had Ruby She therefore suntehed opportunity of freeing her after her arrival, retired, and all to herself, at the mind, “Yon!” said Miss Cynthia, ly. *“‘Bybilla Tim's just you for comfort, to BAY helping with the bonnets. And spirit is broke now she knows ain't to be dependod upon.” “Why, how 80?" asked Ruthy, tonished at this personal cr iticism. “How so!” echoed Miss Cynthia. *You ean see for yourself that the business has all gone to pieces. Why, the Kingsburys and the Lennoxes and the Fairfields haven't ordered a bonnet from us for an age! Old Judge Peters's widow is the of the old cus solemn counted nothing on of her you as only one MISS TIMBROOK'S OPENING. T wasn't the first time by any means Miss Timbrook had read her niece's let- ter; nor was it the | first time that Miss | Cynthia Stone figuratively speak- ing, stabbed her! stout, gentle old friend by remar} oracularly, ratitude 1s the had, sin of the crying ng sin of the age was a uo with Miss Cy butchor’s nt uantity able week, when the mtentio change the timid) nthia, had week and even gh New York for I bonding} er out afterward to a high priced woman on sceount of her bein Fit one of them highty-tity millinerd, of! as to have her pick ap dees, and yon all the time hoping that when ‘twas all over she buek here and be the prop of your | age a1 tl } iA thie 151008 three '‘d coms 1 build uj what they style, like trade's to fuss ficials, ain t that vhat the y an artist letter And now that some of her pa's k left her a thinks stead of coming home for good, she'll just make us a little visit, and then go | back to New York aud study what she ealls art. She thinks it's more aplift ing than making Land! 1 don’t like making bonnets myself, but I don't intend being drawn away from my 'lotted duty by something that looks more alluring. She says it's an ‘opening’ to a higher life! . Fudge! 1 say." ! “Speaking of openings,” ventured Miss Timbrook, timidly, ‘there's that Boston woman that's just set up a fine shop on Plum street. They tell me she's sent out ecards to announce her spring millinery opening, and is going | to serve tea to folks; she really is Suppose we have an opening, Cynthy 7" At this rash suggestion, Miss | ‘‘Are you crazy, Sybilla Tim? And what, for the land's sake, wonld you open?” Giving n seathing glance at the four limp bonnets in the window and be- stowing a finsl glare on her friend, Miss Synthia flonnced out of tho room Miss Cynthia might storm and scold, but she only used her temper to cloak the sympathy and love which she was | ashamed to show. Ruthy's unexpected | desertion was a bitter disappo intment to hor, first on account of the sorrow of her friend, Sybilla, aud secondly on her own { coount, Bonnets to her did not represent any form of the ideal, sn they did to good Miss Timbrook, but ss she had said to herself over and over again through the long winter, "Since it must be honnets, I'd like ‘em to be tasty, such as Ruth'll know how to fix." And now Ruthy wasn't coming! When Miss Timbrook's niece really did come for her lit le visit, it seemed to the two ol fashioned, unsuccess ful women that all the world must BAY ¥ 1 has that in legacy, she bonnets | tomers that has stood by us. ] presume it's sheer pity that makes Besides, it | ished, {a trifle more seid than usual, | months, an’ { proachiully on her friend, stopped And 1 her, ain't to make a mourning bonnet homelier than it nat urally ia Well, I guess to shut shop is about all that's left forSyhi Tim and me Miss Cynthia sigh possible up la fd and hoping her rem Rutly unhappy. The young girl ing to reconcile heart with able duty. by the fact that Au her and longing i to her | then AFRE WH ant the POWINE BETIS She desire of disagr rather stunn Tim's need had never The staff had Dax +h ng Was uty for her Curr alore wi | i to ol th would, happily, be always missing. But to-night these fascinating | dreams were oxtinguished by the awful ETS bonnet shop, and by that business’ gap whieh knew herself CATOOT Seer stently were adjusted m n 1nare bys" witl a8 the hall l s blo roused from peaceful’ dreams her shoulders sakes!” chattered the the honse afire, or has the sharp shake of “Lnwful Indy. “ls dam given away ‘Sh! It's LL" said softly. “I want to talk to you “Aint the long enough?" terrupted Miss Cynthia, crossly “Listen!” and Ruthy put her rosy good no, inthy, days in | mouth to Misa Cynthia's wrinkled ear and whisperad mysteriously “You do beat all! this, admiringly, when she at last mas tered the situation, and was capable Then, like two conspirators, said Miss Cyn- | | so large that a single | another delighted look around. homely details of Aunty Tim's forlorn | shape w, stich eurious combinations of | about thirty feet | of doing some whispering on her own | account, they exchanged vows of secrecy, and | Ruthy stole back to her bed. Next morning Miss Cynthia seemed and the minute she had swallowed her break fast she delivered herself of the follow. ing ‘Seems to done Hore's me, Sybilla Tim, you haven't your duty by 'Rastos’s folks, mournin’ hard work, and that youngest child having fits, and you, own cousin ut it seemed thst Miss Cynthia waé on the other side of the fence. So, after much persnasgion, and the assur. ance that visit, Miss Timbrook limply resigned herself to be made ready for an eight days’ sojonrn at Pembroke Corners. No sooner had she set forth on her { travels than | duration. | peared just at nightfall, | man followed her bearing several mys- | richly |] Ruthy took a train for a journey of several hours’ The fourth day she reap- An express New York, terious boxes, All of this kept the ne of curiosity, ighbors in a but the placard an feverish state the next day they beheld tightly closed, and a huge nouncing a Grand Millinery Ope ning’ on Saturday, then indeed they were y with a subject for to this. when blinds furnished gossip In addition sent ont to the select few Ruthy designated as the *‘F, F's Behind the blinds Ruthy and Mise Cynthia worked like The mot whicli Ruthy bad previously erated to had been milli i She had leading shops in New Yo hind tal Ken in cards WET whom bees art nery go visits i 1 rK, 1d her (quick CYes wrinkle and fold. The other lace curtains, she had Leer lornment rage, trinkets for the a apartment in New ( lit } i VI 857 yearing y traly blessed Then she dried her ba took Bach eyes and +h in- dor and materi al, deseribable f Fe dazzling, il, the lik« dreamed of miiiinery Ne had never « it she ven netimes say t “Have I not for that by t quite pers nd made m n, ‘Mrs. Be-done show her her art t nnet utifully n fo ght amial le u-did, en, it pat nave Youth “ Gigantic Leaves, What trees bear th An English botan those that belot First must be palm, of the of the Amazons, the leaves of are no less than fifty feet in length by ten to twelve in width. Certain leaves of the Ceylon palm attain a length of twenty feet and the remarkable width of sixteen The natives use them for making tents, Afterward comes the cocoanut palm, the usual length of whose leaves is The umbrella mag- boars leaves that are may some- times serve as a shelter for fifteen or twenty persons, One of these leaves earried to England as a specimen was nearly thirty-six icet in width. The plant whose leaves attain the greatest leaves? that it is palm family the lnaja Iargest ist tells g to the mentioned na banks which nd lin, of Cevlon, one | dimensions in our temperate climate | is the Victoria regia. A specimen of | this truly magnificent plant exists in | the garden of the Royal Botanical So- | ciety of Edinburgh in "Rastus been dead four | "Rastus’s widow probably | | worn to a shadow through | an’ to 'Rastus, have never been to Pem- | broke Corners to see his folks since { the funeral.” “Why, Cynthia! You know,” Miss Timbrook, fixing her eyes re Then she | from sheer astonishment. Hadn't she urged the making of that | began | Its leaf, which about sever feet in Sinmetes, is capable of supporting a weight of 395 pounds, —Scientifto 33 rei - BE - Yell County His Mownment, Yell County, Arkansas, bears the name of a hero. It was named after Archibald Yell, who wae once a Fed- eral Judge in the Territory of Arkan- sas, says the Arkansus Gazette, and was elected to Congress the year the | Territory wae admitted into the Union {an a State, The year James H. Berry was born Yell was inangurated Gover nor of Arkansas, When Berry ‘was very visit ever since 'Rastus died? But | | learning in Alabama how to speak that Miss Cynthia bad invariably down. into a rage at the mention of it, say- mg that in her state of hoalth it was the foolishest piece of bummness that o liad over heard of. ‘Just because ‘Rastus had died, was no reason why a feeble woman need go tram round the country, when sho yy yg mond matters,” Miss Cynthia bad said. swoet Southern accented language, Yell was again elected to Congress, After serving one year of this term in Congress he resigned to fight for his country in its war with Mexico. He tod the First Arkansas Cavalry st the battle of Buenas Vista, and while en- gaged in a charge at the head of his column he was killed, tuthy would extend her | The Infanta Eulalie is in Paris with { her children, A woman's glee elnb of » been organized st Chicago Of a total of 2631 students nniversities of BPBwitzerland fing ity. IxXtoen nivers 242 women. Antoine fected an electric dimples in The lioration resoly of slender means for the Guizot, of Par J apparat flat checks French Bociety of the Position ed to grant an any desir career of A COT PH of hustont file P En ge) now has in ling funds from $210, Ten years ago Wellesley Colieg had less than half that amount; to<day it haw a fund of not more than $200,000, Mount Holyoke Seminary has prodo MM) to REE she 1s and what ive generations ovement £10 statue to Miss Palestre ‘ortngal She was the tor and =» lowry Was pro 18 DAVIES A YAN arts and 1 She wa besid traveler Chr and enthusiast i Mrs DeCAInY r #lo] her rR The Skill and Knoewicdge y achieve ta remedy laxative. For sale by a Tao je ron \ Throat {1 Brows's Broxomiar Es HOW RE AG imi Fak {oarsenoss, Coughs palsy im Daren Shiloh’ » ‘ ure Ite AL ong jent Cone sumption Ye. $l 1f afMlicted with sore eyes use Dr, Tsase Thomp- son's Eve-water, Druggists sell at 25 per bottle RADWAY'S ILLS, Je sold on a guarantee itis the Bosyg ( ys Care Cunase Per fect Digestion, complete absorption sand healthial regularity Yor the cure of all disorders of the | Stomach, Liver, Bowels, Kidneys, Diadder, Nervous Diseases. LOSS OF APPETITE, SICK HEADACHE, INDIGESTION, DIZZY FEELINGS, FEMALE COMPLAINTS, BILIOUSNESS, DYSPEPSIA,
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers