TITE SCT? ANTON T1?1BTTNE -SATURDAY MORNING. MARCH 10, 1894. IF ANY" GHACIC. Words by FRANK DEMPSTER SHERMAN. Andante tranquillo m I Music by J. E. OSBORN. j) delicate. If a - ny Race. 11 faults DO (omul. To In is i a i p - s I C -s fl A 9 0' mf - - 4 v s jr.:: decres. fit. i could not mis?, 1 rould not miss. .. . What mu-sic slips your hps.... words re - peat, . . , The wordl re - peat,. . , And make sub-lime my rhyme. ij I m s v -a- -o . . . . - - -a- ; . . 7 n-rLn. f - r 3 o it For i i y s me be - long, a - ny line la cong,. Of mine,. Know then your fai e To mar the bound .... Has been to r.je A 01 notes that try To S3 ' inn ii iiw ufta.;Mi. uwrKMana TW3MfMUr iy&i& lllzlll rrrrrrr ' S 9 a' 4 m ' - 0 0 p 9 sempre eyes, vwlto. -fli, N N i - -N - s s - ' animate f pass-ionalo , K4 , 1 - t1 ! . v S key; For pitched in this ; vie With yours, my sweet V Ue Thai, li - cioUS tone, al - wavs true, I ve Do known . you . . . 1 'II, v 1 ec$ pr- . -C 9 4 M g , ' I V ! ; 1 s p F F- 0 ft a f ia 9 ft & t- I S rti ' (' 3 JCL I L 1 pitch'din this Dc - li - cious tone,. . I've known 1 could not miss.... What mu - sic slips your f o t a v a 0 e 000 000I 9 0 0 0 on. animato f 1 ' ; . m& ivj 1 , jj' i decres. dears. I 1" i r- g-a 0- eould not tniss.. words re - peat, . What mu - sic slips your lips, I rould not miss,. And nuke sub-lime my rhyme! The words re - peat,. r.r-i ' errs. ' -N -S-l 0 t I The f.r -.w v r p f f. r cl- 0 00-0-0-0- J 0.4 Utti r 0 Hr? 1 could not miss,. . ttit 1 rould not miss,.. 1 could not miss. . What music slips yourl - mm ifeercs. decres. " ' 0 0 0 t V L tr- 0 1 if .... 0 - .... zjzhtzzgjizzz:- : 9 0 0 0 0 o - -9- . . J 0 00 m 9 Copyri-ht MDCCCXC by J. E. OSEORN. , TV k ' IsB H i : EH " ZZT " " 1 f Ovl L f , 0 ' -1 L I lips. lips j 1 1 j (fo ? .TT: - : . B I It , . v-r - V 0 0 0 0 0 J 0 0 0 0 - ' F 0 J 3 S ',0- I nrrrrr -fJJ ' 2 : S ' ; v . l 7- J lU J. 1 -I 1 I e -e -0- A PRISONER IN A TOMB, HE TRIED TO STEAL THE JEW ELS FROM A DEAD DUCHESS. B Thought That All tbaOnMinrati That AdonMd th f'oppp as It Lay in itatp Win Buried tvith thfl Boil He nrokc 1 1 1 1 thr Ton fa and t'll Into a Trap. Only ft few weeks after her return from Brussels! w hen' she had seen her son. re- tt-iiT iy crowned kinj"f the Belgians, did the Duches.s Augusts of Jaehspn-Coburu die, in her seventy-aixtli your, Nov. 1C, 1881, The admiration and love this admira ble princess hurl Inspired drew crowds to visit the body, hs it lay in state in the resi Ann at Cobnrfj, prior to the funeral, which took place on the 1Mb, before day break, by the li.'ht of torches. Th' funeral Was attended by and women of nil cla-ses, eager to express their attachment to the deceased and respect for the family. A irreat deal w:.s said and fabled con cerning this funeral. It wan told and be Uevad that the dowager duchess had been laic i In the family vault adorned with her diamond rins and richest necklaces, She was the mother of kings, and thu vulgar believed that every royal and princely house with which she was allied bad con tributed some jewel toward the decoration of her body. Amonjj those who were present at the funeral of the Divchera Augusta was a Bavarian named Andreas Btnbenraueh, an wllsMi then at Qoburg. He was the hod of tn armorer, followed his father's pro fusion, and bad settled at Coburg, Btn ben ranch had been one of the crowd that had parsed by the bed on which the dncheSS lay in )nte, and had cast covetous eyes at. the jewelry with which the body was adorned. lie bad also attended the funeral, and hnd OOmc to the conclusion that the .Inch OSS WSS buried With oil the precious arti cles he bad noticed about her as exp ned to view I h fore the burial, and with u great deal more, which popular ROSSip asserted to have been laid in the coffin with her. The thought of nil this waste of wealt h clue;: to hU mind, and 9tUbcnrSUCh re nolvc.l to enter t lie fUSUSOleUm and rob the boil). BHKAXIVO INTO A TOMB. The position of the vault, far removed and conculed from the palace, suited his plan.-, and he made little account of locks ami ban, which were likely to prove small bin deranrcH tn an ncconiplished locksmith. To carry his plan into execution he re solved on choosing the night of Ang. 18 1U, lttt'3. On this evening he sat drinking In a low tavern till LOo'clOCK, when he left, returned to his lodgings, where he collected the tools he believed lie would require, a candle and Bint and steel, and t hefl betOOh himself to the mausoleum. The tomb was closed by an iron gate formed of strong Inns eight feet high, radiating from a een tor in a sort of semioirole aha armed with harp spikes. lie found it Impossible to pntn the lock, and Ht was therefsre obliged to climb over tfaegato, regardless of the danger of tear- big iVnself on the barbs. Hi re he found a double stom oaken door in the lloorTliat gave atiois to the vault The twovalvea Wereso closely dovetailed inlo one another and lilted so exdCtly that bo found 'he utmost dISculty in getting a tool bttWMIt them. He tried his false keys in vain on the luck, uud for a long time his effort! to prise the lock open w it ti a lever wore equal ly futile. At length by means of a wedge be snoceeded in breaking away through the ittnetiOD of tin- doors inlo which ho could insert a bar, and then he heaved at one valve with all his might, throwing his Weight on the icvor. It took him fully an hour botON he could break open the door. Midnight struck as the valve, grattngOn its hinges, w;is thrown back. Then, leaning over thu opening, holding a pole in Inith hands, he ciidcnv ored to Coil the deoth ol the vault n on doing he lost ai.s balance and the weight of the pole dragged him down, and be fell be tween two cotlins some twelve feet below the Ooor of the upper chamber. There he lay for some little while unconscious, stunned by his fall. When he came to himself he sat up, felt ulxmt with his hands to ascertain where he was, and considered what next should Is- done. IS A TRAP. Stubenrauch was not the man to feel either respect for tiie dead or fear of aught supernatural. With both hands he sus tained the heavy lid of the coffin as he peered in, and the necessity for using both to support the weight prevented his pro fane hand from being laid on the remains of an august and pious princess, Btnben rauch did Indeed try more than once to sustain the lid with one hand that he might grope with the other for the treas ures he fai.eie'l ma- ho concealed there, but the moment he removed one hand the lid crashed down. Disappointed in his expectations, St ti benroueh now replaced the cover and be gan to consider how be might escape. Hut now, and now only, did he discover that it was not possible for him to get out of the vault into which he bad fallen. The pole on which he had placed his confidence was too short to reach the opening above. Kvrry "effort made by Stubenranch to scramble out failed. He was caught, in a trap and what a trap: Nemesis had fallen on the ruffian at once on the scone of his crimo und condemned him to betray him self. Morning broke. It was Sunday, and special festival at Coburg, for it w as the twenty fifth anniversary of the accession of the duke, so thai the town was in lively ODtnmOtion, and park and palace were also In a stir. Hnbenraucb oat op and waited In hopes Cf hearing -ome one draw near who could release him, About P o'clock in the morning b' beard steps on the gravel and at once began to shout for assistance. The person who hud approached ran away in alarm, declaring that strange and unearthly noises issued from the ducal mausoleum. The guard was apprised, hut WOUld not at first believe the report. At length one- of i ho seutinuls wfis dispatched to the spot, and he returned speedily with the tidings that there certainly WSS a man in the vault. He had peered t hrough the grating at the entrance, and had seen t he door broken open and u crowbar and other articles lyiug about. The gate was now opened, and Stnbenrauoh removed in the midst of an assembled crowd of angry and dismsysd spectators. Us w as removed to prison, tried and contemned to eighteen months wit h hard labor. Daring (iuuld's Historic Oddities. Dank sr tforgaa's ikui. J. PierpOtlt Morgan smokes it very strong cignr, the Carolina, for which he pays (if teen cents each, Mr Morgan smoke- eon tinually in his office, and ulu uyshasa box near nt hand which he offers to visitors. When Mr. .Morgan does not fool like light ing u cigar he places it bttween his teeth and en joys what Is known an u dry smoke. He probably spoils half a dozen oiars daily in thin way. No v York World. Tables of the density of the atmosphere calculated from telegraphic weather re pOttS have Ih-i-ii found to give a hotter clow to the movements and origin ot cyclones than the u ami mi tbod of a comparison of I h c ollars ami isot bonnes alone. liter's pence have rather declined of late. So far they have yielded 18,000,000 francs a vaof. The pope has already ac cumulated a considerable sum of money, which he has well invested, destined for a reserve fund for the church. The efTect of the electric light current on the compasses of some vessels is so great that it becomes neecssnry to determine how many hours the. dynamo has been running before working out the vessel's reckoning. INDIAN MEDICINE MEN. THEIR PHYSIC IS MAGIC AND THEIR SYSTEM CONJURING. llo the Inillau I'ricsls Look and Drest When They Are MaKine Medicine- Cus toms BeealllDg Some OM Itible Stories Mow They Got Their Name. The fact that Sitting Hull was what, is called a "medicine man'' has been stated In all the notioi of Ids death, but it is a question w hether one in seven of eastern people know precisely what a medicine mat is. Toone who does know, nothing UvmOM amusing than to read the accounts of earl travelers in the Indian country w hen the) come to treat of the making of medkint and the other doings of medicine men Even ('apt. Duller, P, IL (!. S., and I-cwu and Clarke ware very shaky whun the) enme to this subject. Every tribe had, and still has, man., medicine men, some of whom are chiefs, all of whom are very iinKirlatit personages Nearly nil that the writer ever saw havi been old men or men past the middle ago but that is a mere accident, for a man may Ik- made a medicine man while he is young No one can visit any Indiana at any festl VOl time or time of general excitement from any cause without, seeing the modi cine man figuring very conspicuously q whatever hi going on. Sometimes they nre merely beatinf, drums, or perhaps they are only crooning w hile a dance or feast Is in progress. At other times the) appear in the most gro teaqne costumes, painted all over, hunt, w ith feathers and nails and claws, and car rying some wand or staff, gorgeous w ith color and smothered with Indian Query, now Tin; tki:m w as APPtrED, The term "medicine" hi n w hite inan't expression Which the Indians have adopted. It, w;is applied to the priests of the trilie.s- for that Is what they really are because the first, while men often found them milk ing their Incantations at the side of tin sick, the wounded or the dying, in reallt) they were exorcising the evil spirits of dis ease or death, hut t he white travelers, see ing t hem in the precence of the eiok, pn( two and two together and called them medicine men. The term Is two centuries old, and t ho Indians have so fully adopted It ths when one of these officials Is ut his offices they say he is "making medicine'' The medicine man is a conjurer, a magi oion, a dealer in magic, and on Intermedial between the men of this world and the spirits of the other, lie may know some thing of the rude plmrmacoHcia of hit fellows, mid may prescribe certain leave or roots to allay lover, to arrest a cold, m to heal a wound That is not his business, however, mid such prescript ions on mori apt to Is- olfcrcd by t he sqnaWS or by ati member of the patient's family. The medicine man's work eonies in when medicine fails, and il is pursued until deal fa is seen to i.e certain, wlieu among mo . t o! the tribes the sick or wounded man is abandoned to meet his fate. BtU from thinking the only good Indian isadead OQjS, the Indians themselves have little re ganl for one who is half dead or dooms cer tain to die. A UflRD BlOuT, No more weird sighl is to be MOB. on the face of this continent than a view of such a group of medicine men at work to save a life. Seen at night t he effect. h awesome. They sit. in a circle, broken only by the hodv of the invalid Stretched on a lilanket, at the head of the lent opHisite the door or tent Opening, The wavering light, in from a candle stuck ingeniously in n loop of birch bark, fattened tight ma slit In the end of a st ick that has Is-cn thrust in the earth. The medicine men are painted in their own ColoiSigrcon and yellow predom inating, They are in full regalia, but their hair falls over their hideous faces us they bend forward to swing to and fro or to beat their drums. All are singing. Often they sing only the tunes of ancient songs, the words be ing forgotten or having grown tiresome. Now and then one leaps to his foot, waving his befeathered rattle and yelling louder than the others. He sings the words that occur to him as suiting the case. He has on no clothing but moccasins and a breech clout, or "gee string," as they call that gar ment on the plains. Ills thin, bony, bare red legs have the effect of their nakedness Incrohsed by the jumping, dangling tail Of leathers that flutU-rs down (mm his head and mixes its colon with the paint stripes on his tlesb. His dancing is rather more like pounding something beneath him than like w hat we call dancing, lb-lifts his foot by bonding his knees; lifts them and thumps them down monotonously, though he turns his body first to one side and then to the other. When the dancer tired and fell back ill his place in the circle, the spirit moved another to take his place. QUUB Ri;si:Mr.bAM r.s. The queer resemblances between the in dians and those Hebrew bands of WhOM history the Old Testament is a record hau often been pointed out, but the writer hai never teen attention called to the similar ityotoertoin of the Hebrew incidents tc the common pmctires of Indian midline men. In their early bistor) the Hebrew leaders wen- continually holding converse with tlte Almighty. They went apart from their followers up in mountains or in st erol places mid talked with .lohovah. Thai is precisely what the medicine men do to day, or pretend to da Every man whe knows the Indians knows that during al the Messiah craze the medicine men of the various trils-s with great formality pro pared mtaik withQltohe-Manitonorwhsl ever they happen to call the I ioisl Spirit. Income tribsothe) imiii little wick i ups of saplings and livnc-.aud went into 1 hi i Ofld held conversations that wore iiudibh t hough not iuU-lligihlctothcrvd men listen ing outside. The savages heard I ho mod i cine mail's voice and then heard the roll I of some other person replying to him in n jargon they could not unravel. In other tribes the medicifft men merely reported having held such conversations preolsslj as the Israelites!) loaders did. It is not foi us to say that the grounds for such reports of the words of the Almighty were a-, slight in one ease as the other, but it is true that the Indians have Isdlcvod thai their priests Imve really believed such con versalions Uxtk place. Those who foQowed Sitting Boll's his lory know that his tribe was long divided as to his power, lino contingent held that his "medicine" was no good, by whiofa they meant that if he over had genuine power to converse with spirits that power loft him. This often happens. Medicine m-ii have their day and their decline, and hois n very sagacious Indian who can keep up fnilJi lu his ministrations for many years ut a lime or until he dies.- New York Sun. Her superior Knowledge, Maud Have you hoard the now opera fay liullrrsn? .Mildred Ton dear little stupid! Don't yon know that ftulllTAii U an actir, not n writer of upkensf, ftttsburg BnHoMn, MANKIND'S THIHD EYE. and It Is Near .tie Outer of the 1 1 . Is tn nnocuom iesutuile. "There is a kind of lizard found in Vir ginia and Maryland I hat has three eyes -one of them on the top of his head,'' said a man of science the other day Uj u rcpresenta tlve of The Star. "It is generally supposed that they are very rare, hut, on the con trary, they are quite common. You can find plenty of them if you take the trouble to look. Thev are green and about three Inches long. " "Are there any other animals In the world that have throe eyes?" "Iits. For example, you yourself have s third eye, though it tins ln-come rudi mentary through disitso." "Where Is itf" "Just in the middle of your head, as nearly Salts location can bo described olT hand. Anatomists know it as the 'pineal gland,' but it is actually an eye that has the ChOSO WO hot; the policeman had long become rudimentary. Place the tip of your ,, beet distanced and was out of sight. rang man reached her side. tnals. Wit li the cow and other beasts that chew the cud it is a largo sac attached to the stomach, and is utilized as a storage reservoir for fisid t hat is not needed for immediate cousumptiou." Washington Star. Stopping a Park BttnaWajN A few days ago a young man who was riding In the park Ml in the way of a heroic deed. This Is the way it happened. As he was riding easily along there sad denly dashed out of an equestian pnt.h near him a young woman, whose horse was go ing at the top of his speed. Hehiml her I came n policeman in mud pursuit. Dut her horse w as faster than his and his efforts to catch her wore unavailing Hero was a genuine case of runaway and no mistake. So the young man. who was mounted on j an animal that he knew could catch any thai a young woman was likely U ride, i pnt his spurs to his horse's side and dashed after her. Ilor horse whs a good one and I Maae a we Man of we: f war l s aw w i rr t S VmT SI V mWm. I "V X m N. Sfr - i. onus- Kj.me-1 V y INDAPO Mil i.ulat HINDOO REMEDY F H fT CTS Titr Be, t. DMmjM la so SATa Srr- - . u- - t .iiUus- Mlith 1 i . ...... - ,.,.n,, il-M!v Ellllr lon ..c..cuwsltv put busi,prtM tg.-' nsrtw to flinikin rifuif, mil ijtiickly but nun-Is rasfrc; lawt MnkMS tn eld cr venng finllv 0n ledir. t en Mckti I'n ei.se npiu-kw stifrr sa.ee itii: orttK-n iBrleti nr nr moiirj rrniMleS. l'en I let nv emirim-lci-fl Arnestn Fit 1 ?! (n ;.7ti',, lus.-T or. hnvinplNOAPO tie: -..ttltr II hp tins not ir-M It we will f-Tia it V-r ma', -ip'tTiTeis-ipl ofl'TlJe Vnrintilf t in eli .l rnvHope rrr. Adult': OrWi.ml M.di. iU . r-M eviMts, in., H MrofioM SOLD b M.uthea Brot. WhotsatTS und Rtu llnijtiji'sii SCRANTON, F.V, nd other Lea in,! Uruijcitti. Cardinal Newman hiul a quiet humor with which lie haflled men who sought to engage him in argument w hich he thought would bo unprofitable, or at Inconvenient linn's, lie once Maid to an Knglisli clergy man who called upon bun. determined to force him to say what onowM he could make to a certain llicokigienl argument: "It In no (to... I our disputing: it Is liken battle between a dog and a fish wo nre in different elements." A very expensive fad is having yonr por trait out as an onyx enraeo. The work ts very slow, difficult sod laborious. The lmsgo when done U pr.rnmnant and will last for rontnrlae. Thero aro enough people In Now York who enjoy this kind of exbrsvac.meo to give oonutant, omploy- meat to Ave cameo porwait .carvers. nuger just aoove tne onuge ot your noae and on the level with your eyes. Dirts-tly behind that Kiint about tivo itiches, al the base of the brain, is this gland I speak of. which the Snclentfl used to imagine was the center of consciousness and t he seat of the soul, tsstruotura has install resemblance to that of an eve, but you can liiul it re tainiug more of its original development In some tuetles and other reptiles. With them this gland has still, though in the middle of the head, an actual eye socket, an optic nerve connecting with the visual tract of the brain, and even the pigmentary Inner coot, the object of which in all eyes is to absorb light, There Is no retina, but It is an eve for all that In the case of the li.anl l mentioned this pineal eye actually appears at the top of the head and is useful for wing w ith. "There are quite a number of rudiment ary organs in the human body w hich have baWme so because nature has no longer any use for them. Snr example, there is the 'thyroid gland' In the neck, the onlj usefulness of which seems to be in occa sioning the disease known as goitre. I'oo pie in Savoy and t he Tyrol am- worst af flicted with this complaint. It Is supposed that the water they drink, derived from the melting of thogluciers of the Alps, causes the hypertrophy of the thyroid gland, the result of which is an enormous swelling, so that sometimes theunfort.il hate COmes to have a bagUke appendage dangling down as fur as the waist. Then is no known cure for the trouble after it has got well started, though the swelling may be a trifle reduoed by Injections into its substance. It is a very curious fact that if a human lielng or any oilier animal is deprived of this apparently useless gland by Cutting it Out, there always follows a general degotierat ion of all the tissue of the body. " "Another seemin dy useless organ is the 'supra renal capsule' attached to each of the kidneys. Its only purpose in a human being appears to be to occasion what is known as 'Addison's disease, ' In cases where it gets out of order. In such 00010, whi' h aro happily rare, the skin of the body loses Its nat ural color and becomes of a muddy brown hue. This 'capsnle' is ptiMtnaMy the remains of what was once a Moratory organ. ."Then then is tin- mysterious 'vermi form appendix' attached to the small in testine. Once in n while an apple seed or some such thiug gets into il . and onuses Inflammation, t'ntii within the last four or live years such cases were always fatal, but now they are usually cured by cut ting open the Stomach and removing the ap pctiili.x. Until very recently operations re ipiiring the cutting npm of the body in this way invariably resulted in death, for the reason that germs could not Is- pre yonbed from getting into the wnund wul creating sulmoqncnt inflammation. But the bacteriologists hsve taught, through their resean hoH, huw such germs may be killed fay spraying wtth autlseptic solu tious. The vermiform appendix has con .sidooafale uscfuluuss ntuuuir the lower am ago At hist the I Ho throw his hoi scrOSs her path and I caught the bridle in bis bund. Then, as he I (muted and wailed for thanks, the young woman drew herself up and said coolly: j "Don't give yourself the least uneasiness, sir; my hone w as not running away w ith me, This is a put up job between the I policeman and metf to let mo ride faster here than the law allows." Which shows that some things are not to lie Understood at a glance, and that oven park policemen are not always to In-trusted when there is a young w oman in the case. - New York Evening Sun. Beardless Etoldlara. Modern warriors generally wear hair on their frontispieces. It is thought to give them a martial appearance. ButAlexan dor's Invincible soldiers wore all liaro faced. If o compelled them to shave for u sufficient reason, vif., lest the "outside barbarians" of Asia should seize them by their beards, and so capture them. If the emperor of China had been equally wise he would have docked the long tails of his soldiery baton ho sent them out to tight French and English, Etundrsds Of the Celestials were caught Ivy their qnenCR when running away and dragged as prison ers into the camp of the allies. New York lodger, Complexion Preserved DR. HEBRA'S VIOLA CREAM Removes Freckle. PimetM, Lhiee - Melee, Bteoktifsdt, 1i,rk..ra nn.i Tan. n-ut r. f lores the slc.u to its orlrl- nsl heshnesa t-ivlucias a . clear sod hos!thy cont-jjP DlCXlOn. mu'lMUirio.. rroisimtlons and perfectly hsrtnlcss. At all urugglsts,or mailed for 50 ts. Bend for Circular. VIOLA 8KIM SOAP U mi) itmtfnMt u V - i nlOnt Snp, un. ...A1.-1 tW ti e t.SIM. w.l i SrSi 't 5 . ..sT.. 3lllMS jm mTVfmm) nril- , -ird, At .lrn,ftl. Price 25 Cent. G.C. BITTNER CV CO., Toledo, O. For sale by MstthOWl Bros .MorganRr os.sud XI organ Co. Chen lug Gam, The chew ing gum business began on a small scale some I hirty years ago, It was then manufactured and used principally In NSW England. This article was made front the gum of the spruce tree. Another kind of gum was and Is made from pnraf flue. Them' was a prejudice attirst against manufactured chewing gum. and years ego children wen todd that the stuff was made of "niggers' beets." The raw matoriol of rhewing gum modi today comes from the Mexican ehtr.lttfiipote tree. That is the stuff "tuttl frutti" !s made of. The story runs that a Yankee by the name of Adams Imported the. Ifext can gum to liaveil take the place of gutta percha or soft rubber, tint the experiment failed. Accidentally he broke off n hit of the stun" and rhewisl it. Thai gave to him the notion of manufacturing the sub stance Into chewing gum The business is now housed in a six story hnihllng aijd gives employment to over ttO iic-opie. Pittsburg Bulletin, The Way to Tack Apples. Posing through Washington market. I noticed a man In one of ifa big cotmiiisslon stires packing apples in n brrel. What struck me as facing decidedly pcouUarabout t his ordinarily commonplace operation wns the fact Unit he picked out the faiggtiat apples and put. them in the bottom of the barrel, "Why do you put. the big ones tn the bottom?" I mqtitred with no little run osity. He gave me a knowing wink as ho replied: "Oh, they open the tarrohvnt the lottom nowadays." Mo further cr plana tion was necessary. New York Win-Id. ENBOMrn by tut HiosirT Moicii Acnwsrms Jj? M iMIAI.KK will Ttiro tnu. i T (Km iw.huIit;;:'. I'tTn t4i imtTppTi V jf nJ- jg etloHf Srrf lliroi.1. U .stf'sZs, oriiA v rrvr.K. utirh 0&''y ' 'V (mm4lnflWsW An eflrloi. rrmslT. ctnTftrVnt tOfarr In iwrkPt.rpRilr to o" on flrt InttWdoa OXflOW i .ttthiura to I ill-, is fVnpiinrnl Cnro. Sntiffitknnirtrntolor iTi(tii, IOTUII4W Prices VO rl. Trtal ffM nt PhllfltM it"fftitrfl BMtfi ; N OMtaS B. I end IV Mr , tr RW. Xisk , 1. 1. 1 KirMTUm I WWt NBfrrt, rfmMf ferr ITICllI nut 11H Bkln liBt,Mtmi.ia. :toh n t Bh(MinvM Son Horn. Out WoB!frfhl fi I i f. rPll.kV.. V. I. r -: cfi nt I-ii.- pMI M UlstH.TM iv.hi'i prppaitl. AtUfwBMaty-irw. DHL. Ill j For Viy Mittthtnvs BrOfcsMorgm BlHH.MW liOTgM A UO. Every Woman Sometime? needs a reli able monthly regulating medicine. li Dr. PEAL'S PILLS, PENNYROYAL n .irompl, safe nnd i-srtnlr. Id rnfc. TOS OBa in" (IS-. Pesl'! ncrer Slnrpolnt. SSSl snywhore 1 1 "0. l'vwl Medicine Co . DS I ISSlH i W- Hold by JOHN H. PBBUn Phsrrssolst comer wyocnlnf sveane sm opriioo itrest Bormitoa. Pa. WEAK-MAN m mm J"1aV. FIFTEEN DAYS. 1 w U1 sen a t'BEK to nn uiatvj the iiroscrlptjon or a new anuip nn.lllv noneOvfto AnlnrirnainnU. ivesk or(ans, ned snre core for ftU ivenknei lu voitttif nr old men. Onret earns ot os Mnoliooil. HmlssloiM and VavrtouacSs In 11 .ls . illsaaso imvw ratnms. OorrovrxTnO-i-iien private. All leffters Bentlu plato nenlerl mvelope. Andrew. . 0. laaihi. vovu Box aoti News DrnlTjis BUnttoUt MKIi. V