10 THE ' SCR ANTON TRIE ITNE-SATUBDAY MORNING; AUGITS V 8. 1890. INTHE BY H. G. Copyright, 1890, by tie suxorsis. Elstead, a yountf naval offlVer, is going to explore the bed of the ocean In a hol low steH sphere, twenty fee In diameter. The shell Is very thick, has two glass port-holes one for entrance and the In terior Is elaborately padded. It Is fitted with electric lights and contains an ap paratus for renewing ithe oxygen of '.he tr. The sphere is to elnk by uttaohed leaden weights which hunir from It by a cord six hundred feet in lensrth. By this nrrangemnt violent contact with the lot tom is prevented. There Is a mechanical ievlce by which, when Jhe sinkers strike the bottom, the cord will wind up, jjull lntr the sphere down, and then at the end of half en hour, cut the cord and allow it to rise to the surface. At noon Klstead is dropped over the stern of his vessel, which moves off to a safe distance in or der not to be struck by the ."hell when It tomes up. TAKT IT. The ship stenied slowly to her new position. Aboard her almost everyone vlio was unoccupied remained watch ing the breuthns swell Into which the sphere hud sunk. For the next liulf hour It Is doubtful If a word was spoken that did not bear directly or indirectly an Elstead. The December sua was now THE SHIP'S DOCTOtt CRAWLED IN". lilpli In the sky and the lieat very con siderable. "He'll be cold enough down there,"sjiia Weybriilge. "They say that below a certain depth sea water's al ways Just about freezing." "Where'll he come up?" asked Stevens. "I've lost my bearings." "That's the spot," said the command der. who prided himself on his omnis cience. He extended a precise linger southeastward. "And this, I reckon. Is pretty nearly the moment," he said. "He's been, thirty-five minutes." "How long does it take to reach the bottom of the ocean?" asked Steevens. "For a depth of five miles and reckon ing as we did an acceleration of two foot per second, both ways, fc Just about three-quarters of a minute." "Then he's overdue," said Weybrldgo. "Pretty nearly," said the commander. "I suppose It takes a few minutes for that cord of his to wind In." "I forgot that," said Weyblidge, evi dently relieved. And then began the suspense. A minute slowly dragged Itself out, and no sphere shot out of the water. An other followed, and nothing broke the low, oily swell. The sailors explained to one another that little point about the winding in of the cord. The rig ging was dotted with expectant faces. "Come up, Elstead!" called one hairy chested salt, Impatiently, and the others caught it up and shouted as though they were waiting for the curtain of a thea ter to rise. The commander glanced ir ritably at them. "Of course if the ac celeration's less than two," he said, he'll be all the longer. We aren't ab solutely certain that was the proper figure. I'm no slavish believer In calcu lations. " Steevens agreed concisely. No one on the quarter deck spoke for a couplo of minutes. Then Steevens' Watch case clicked When, twenty-one minutes after, the pun reached the zenith, they were still waiting for the globe to reappear, and not a nwm aboard had dared to whisper that hope was dead. It was Weybridge who first gave expression to that reali zation. He spoke while the sound of 8 bells still hung In the air. "I always distrusted that window," he said, quite Suddenly to Steevens. "Good God!" said Steevens, "you don't think?" "Well," said Weybridge, and left the test to his imagination. "I'm no great believer In calculations myself," said the commander, dubious ly. "So that I'm not altogether hope less yet." And at midnight the gun boat was steaming slowly In a spiral round the spot where the globe had sunk and the white beam of the electric light lied and halted and swept discontent edly onward again over the waste of phosphorescent waters under the little stars. "If Ills window hasn't burst and PAIN CURED IN AN INSTANT. Let Radway's Ready Relief Be Used on the First Indication of Pain or Uneasiness; if Threatened with Disease or Sickness, the Cure Will Be Made Belure the Family Docto Would Ordinarily Reach the House. CUP.K9 THE WORST PAIN3 In fro" one to twenty minutes. A CURE FOB ALL 'A half lo a teaspoonful of Ready Relief In a half tumbler of water, repeated us often as the discharges continue, and a flannel saturated with Ready Relief placed over the stomach and bowels will afl'oi'd Immediate relief and scon effect a cure. Internally A half to a teaspoon fid in hnlf a tumbler of water will in a few min utes cure Cramps, Hspasms, Sour Stom ach,, Nausea, Vomiting, Heartburn. Nerv ousness, Sleeplessness, Sick Headache, Flatulency and all Internal pain. Malaria la Its Various Forms Cured and Pre. vented. There Is not a remedial agent In the world that will cure Fever and Ague and all other Malarious, Bilious and other fevers, aided by KADWAV'S PILLS, so quick as RADWAY'S READY RKLIKF. Travelers should always carry a bottle of Radway's Ready Relief with them. A few drops In water will prevent sick ness or pains from change of water It Is better than French brandy or bitters as a stimulant. Price 60 cents er bottle. Bold by all Druggists. SUMMER COMPLAINTS - ABYS WELLS. 1 Bacholler Syndicate smashed him," said Weybridge, "then. It's a cursed sight worse, for his clock work has gone wrong and he's alive now, five miles under our feet,, down there In the cold and dark, anchored In that little bubble of his, where never a ray of light has shown or a human being lived, since the waters were gathered together. He's there without food, feeling hungry and thirsty and scared, wondering whether he'll starve or stlflle. Which will it be? The Myers apparatus Is running out, I suppose. How long do they last?" "Oood heavens!" he exclaimed, "what little things we are! What daring little dovlls! Down there, miles and miles of water all water, and all this empty water ubout us and the sky. Gulfs!" He threw his hand out, and as he did so a little white streak swept noiselessly up the sky, traveled slower, stopped, became a motionless dot as though a new star had fallen up Into the sky. Then It went sliding back again and lost itself amidst the reflections of the stars, and the white haze of the sea's phosphorescence. At the sight he stopied, arm extended and mouth open. He shut his mouth, opened it again and waved his arms with an impatient gesture. Then he turned, shouted "Elstead ahoy," to the Hist watch, and went at a run to Dud ley and the search light. "I saw him," he said. "Starboard there! His light's on and he Just shot out of the water. Bring the light round. We ought to see him drifting when he lifts on the swell." But they never picked up the explorer until dawn. Then they almost ran him down. The crane was swung out and a boat's crew hooked the chain to the sphere. When they had shipped the sphere they unscrewed the manhole and peered into the darkness of the interior (for the electric light chamber was in tended to illuininute the water about the sphere, and was shut off entirely lroni Its general cavity). The air wus very hot within the cavity, and the India rubber at the lip of the manhole was soft. There was no answer to the eager questions and no sound of move ment within. Klstead seemed to be ly ing motionless, crumpled up, In the bot tom of the globe. The ship's doctor crawled In and lifted him out to the men outaide. For a moment or so they did not know whether Klstead was alive or dead. His face In the yellow light of the ship's lamps glistened with perspira tion. They carried him down to his own cabin. He was not dead, they found, but In a state of absolute nervous collapse, and besides cruelly bruised. For some days lie had to lie perfectly still. It wus a week before he could tell his experi ences. Almost his first words were that he was goinj? down ugain. The sphere would have to be altered, he said, ill or der to allow him to throw off the cord if need be. and that was all. He had had the mo:t marvelous experience. "You thought I should find nothing, but ooze," he said. "You laughed at my ex plorations. And I've discovered a new world!" He told his story In discon nected fragmentsand chiefly from the wrong end, so that It Is Impossible to retell It In his words. But what follows is the narrative of his experience. It began atrociously he said. Before the cord -ran out the thing kept rolling over. He felt like a frog In a football. He could see nothing but the crane and the sky overhead,, with an occasional glimpse of the people on the ship's rail. He couhlnt tell a bit which way the thing would roll next. Suddenly he would find his feet going up. and try to step, and over ha went rolling, head over heels and just anyhow on the pad ding. Any other shape would have been more comfortable, but no other shape was to be relied upon under the huge pressure of the nethermost abyss. Sud denly the swaying ceased; the globe righted and when he had picked him self up he saw the water all about him greeny-blue with an attenuated light filtering down from above, and a shoal of little floating things went rushing up past him, as it seemed to him, towards the light. And even as he looked it grew darker and darker until the water below was as dark as the midnight sky albeit of a greener shade, and the water below black. And little transparent tilings in THEN IT CAME INTO THE SPRAY OF LUjHT. the water developed a faint ghost of luminosity, and shot post him in faint greenish streaks. And the feeling of falling! It was just like the start of a lift he said, only it kept on. One has to imagine what that means, that keep ing on. It was then, of all times, that Elstead repented of his venture. He saw the chances against him in an alto gether new light. He thought of the big cuttlefish people knew to exist In the middle waters, the kind of things they lind half digested in whales at times or floating dead and rotten and half eaten by lish. Supppose one caught hold and wouldn't let go! And hud the clock Work really been sufficiently tested? But whether he wanted to go on or to go back mattered not the slightest now. In fifty seconds everything was as black as night outside, except where the beam from, his light struck through the waters and picked out every now and then some fish or scrap of sinking mat ter. They flashed by too fast for him to see what they were. Once, he thinks he passed a shark. And then the sphere began to get hot by friction against the water. They had underestimated this. it seems. The first thing he noticed was that he was perspiring, and then he heard a hissing growing louder under his feet and saw. a lot of little bubbles, very little bubbles they were, rushing upward like a fan through the water outside. Steam! He felt the window, and it was hot. He turned on the min ute glow lamp that lit hia own cavity, looked at the padded watch by the studs, saw he had been trav r " eling now for two minutes. It came ;lnto his head that the win dow would crack through the con flict of temperatures, for he knew the bottom water Is very near freezing. Then suddenly the tloor of the sphere seemed to press against his feet, the lush of bubbles outside grew slower and slower and the hissing diminished. The sphere rolled a little. The window had not cracked nothing had given, and he knew that the dangers of sinking, at any rate, were over. In another min ute or so he would be on the tloor of the abyss. He thought, he said, of Steevens and Weybridge and the rest of them five miles overhead, higher to him than the very highest clouds that ever floated over land are to us, steaming slowly and staring down and wondering what had happened to him. He peered out of the window. There were no more bubbles now and the hissing had stopped. Outside there was a heavy blackness, as black as black velvet, except where the elctrlc light pierced the empty water and showed the color of It a yellow green. Then three thing like shapes of fire swam Into sight, following each other through the water. Whether they were little and near or big and far off he could not tell. Each was oullned in a bluish light almost as bright as the lights of a fishing smack, a light which seemed to be smoking faintly, and all along; the sides of them were specks of this, like the lighted portholes of a ship. Their phosphorescence seemed to go out as they came Into the radiance of his lamp, and he saw then that they were little fish of some strange sort with huge heads, vast eyes and dwindling bodies and tails. Their eyes were turned to wards him, and he Judged they were fol lowing; him down. He supposed they were attracted by his glare. Presently others of the same sort Joined them. As he went on down he noticed that the water became of a pallid color, and that little specks twinkled In his ray like motes in a sunbeam. This was probab ly due to the clouds of ooze and mud that the impact of his leaden sinkers had disturbed. By the time he wns drawn down to the lead Weights he was in a dense fog of white that his electric light failed altogether to pierce tor more than a few yards, and many minutes elapsed be fore the hanging sheets of sediment subsided to any extent. Then, lit by his light and the transient phosphor escence of a distant shoal of lishes. he was able to see under the huge black ness of the superincumbent water an undulating expanse of grayish-white ooze, broken here and there by tangled thickets of a growth of sea lilies, wav ing hungry teiitucles in the air. Fur ther away were the graceful, trans lucent outlines of a group of gigantic sponges About this floor there were scattered a number of bristling, flut isli tufts of rich purple and black, which he decided must be of some sort of sea urchin, and small, large-eyed or blind things, having a curious resem blance, some to woodlice and others to lobsters, crawled sluggishly across the track of the light and vanished Into the obscurity again, leaving furrowed trails behind them. Then suddenly the hovering swarm of little fishes veered about and tame towards him us a flight of starlings might do. They passed over him like a phosphorescent Bnow, and then he saw behind them some larger creatures advancing towards the sphere. At first he could see It only dimly, a faintly moving figure remotely suggestive of a walking man, and then it came into the spray of llgh that the lamp shot out. As the glare struck it, it shut Its eyes dazzled. He stared In rigid astonishment. TO BE CONCLUDED. HARMONY AND CONTRAST. The following Is a list of colors which contrast and harmonize: White contrasts with black, and har monizes with gray. White contrasts with brown and har monizes with buff. White contrasts with blue and har monizes with sky blue. White contrasts with purple and har monizes with rose. White contrasts with green, and har monizes with pea green. Cold greens contrast with crimson and harmonize with olive. Cold greens contrast with white and harmonizes with blue. Cold greens contrast with purple and harmonize with citrine. ('old greens contrast with pink and harmonize with brown. Cold greens contrast with gold and harmonize with black. Cold greens contrast with orange and harmonize with gray. Warm greens contrast with crimson and harmonize with yellows. Warm greens contrast with maroon and harmonize with orange. Warm greens contrast with purple and harmonize with citrine. Warm grens contrast with red and harmonize with sky blue. Warm greens contrast with pink and harmonize with gray. Warm greens contrast with white and harmonize with white. Warm greens contrast with black and harmonize with brown. Warm greens contrast with lavender and harmonize with buff. Greens contrast with colors contain ing red and harmonize with colors con taining yellow or blue. Orange contrasts with purple and harmonizes with yellow. Orange contrasts with blues and har monizes with red. Orange contrasts with black and har monizes with warm green. Orange contrasts with olive and har monizes warm brown. Orange contrasts with crimson and harmonizes with white. Orange contrasts with gray and har monizes with buff. Orange requires blue, black, purple or dark colors for contrast, and warm colors for harmony. Citrine contrasts with blue and har monizes with yellows. Citrine contrasts with blue and har monizes with orange. Citrine contrasts with black and har monizes with white. Citrine contrasts with brown and har monizes with green. Citrine contrasts with crimson, and harmonizes with buff. Russet contrasts with green and har monizes with red. liusset contrasts w'lth black and har monizes with yellow. Bussett contrasts with olive and har monizes with orange. Russet contrasts with gray and har monizes with brown. Olive contrasts with orange and har monizes with green. Olive contrasts with red and harmon izes with blue. Olive contrasts with white and har monizes with black. Olive contrasts with maroon and har monizes with brown. Gold contrasts with any dark color, but looks richer with purple, green, blue, bluck and brown than with the other colors. It harmonizes with all light colors, but least with yellow. The best harmony Is with white. W. Q. Scott, in Patton's Monthly. CASTORIA For Infant and Children. nifu j9 urn STtrf . ODD PHASES OF DIVORCE Laws in All Countries for Undoinf the Ties of Marriage. SOME TRULY QUEER CUSTOMS Distinguished Komaas Who Cast Off Their WivesSpooses of Ctrsar and Anthony and How They Were Got Rid Of. From the New York World. The question of divorce seems to be agitating pretty nearly every civilized country In the world. Just . now. The French statisticians have tackled the subject and show the extent to whtch divorce has grown In France. From 1884 to 1894 applications for divorces in France have exceeded 45,000. of which 40.000 have been granted. M. Naquel, in urging the passage of the divorce law in France, optimistic ally predicted that it would prevent many ruptures and that married couples would remain more firmly united from the fact that their tie would not be com pulsory. Unfortunately, exactly the contrary was the result. The first year after the law was passed showed 1.700 divorces: last year there were over 8,000. When separations alone were permitted they only reached 3,000. While in 1882 the proportion .was only one In 1,000, to day it Is twenty-live in 1.000. From the history of divorces It ap pears that the proportion of unhappy marriages Increases from the day ill vorce is legalized in a country. It ap pears among people of the highest civil Izatlon at the period of their decadence; from that time can be dated a retro grade movement In morals. The Bible says that If a man after marrying a woman and living with her conceives a disgust of her for some shameful fault he shall draw out a decree of divorce, and, putting It into the woman's hands, shall send her out of his house. This was not always easily accomplished because the majority of people did not know how to write and the Levite or priest whom they consulted could re fuse to grant their application if he saw tit. IN ANCIENT EGYPT. In Egypt the laws authorized no di vorce except in certain cases. Infidelity was punished severely; the man re ceived 1,000 stripes and the woman's nose was cut. In Babylon a public auc tion of all the girls of a marriageable age was held once a year. The untying of these knots was even more simple. Confucius, writing on Chinese laws, established seven causes of repudiation, among which it appears that the wife could be put aside for excessive gossip or for not getting along with her father or mother-in-law. But there was this proviso: "The husband Is advised to retain her If she will wear mourning for her mother-in-law for three years." As a matter of fact, the Chinese resort to the divorce courts very little und they hold a widow marrying a second time In the utmost contempt. The custom Is somewhat slmllur to that of the Hin doos In former years, when the widows flung themselves on the burning wood plies upon which their husbands's bod les were being consumed. India recognizes certain causes for di vorce. I'p to the commencement of this century a childless Hindoo was per mitted to lend his wife to a brother or other male relative in order to have children. In Burmah the women when marrying do not tuke their husband's names, but retain their own. with the addendum of "wife of So and So." This makes It convenient for them to assume their previous status In public knowl edge when they come to be divorced, as they are very likely to be, for divorce is easy in that country. THE BURMESE WAV. If a Burmese wife and husband quar rel and determine to separate, the wife, who always does all the marketing, goes out and buys two little candles of equal length, which are made especially for this use. She brings them home. She and her husband sit down on the tloor, place the candles between them and light them simultaneously. One candle stands for him, the other for her. The one whose candle burns out first rises and goes out of the house for ever, with nothing but what he or she may have on. The other takes all the property. This looks fair enough on the face of it, but It often happens that the wife on her way home with the candles takes a tiny scraping from the button of one of them. A very little will be enough. If the husband and the house are emp ty of pretty much everything; but chil dren she takes the shortened candle and walks out free and content. But if the house is well furnished and the husband's possessions are considerable he gets the short candle and does the walking. x In Greece the main Idea in marrying was to bring children into the world males especially for the good of the country; hence the great facility of fered for breaking the marriage tie in case of sterility. The legislators recog nized the right of divorce. At Athens divorce could be obtained by demand of one of the parties or by mutual con sent. The case was argued before a tribunal. The parties on being freed with a person younger than them were expresssly forbidden to marry selves. Grecian wives convicted of breaking the seventh commandment were put to death, after having their hair cut off and their heads covered with hot ashes. ROMAN CUSTOMS. This barbarous custom was also adopted in Rome after the conquest of Carthage and Corinth. The Romans, being masters of the world, only thought of revelling In their riches, and cut themselves adrift from the austere rules of virtue which had been theirs for centuries. Civil marriages and religious mariages were little by little cut Into by divorce, which spread to such an extent as to almost sup press marriage. Nearly every cause was admitted infidelity, sickness, old age, drunkenness, poison (which was very prevalent), going Into the church, the army, and, lastly, mutual consent. The husband had the right to demand a divorce if the wife obtained false keys to the cellar, or If she went "gad ding" to the theater or circus to the neglect of her household duties. All these reasons were but pretexts, after all. The virtuous Cato obtained a divorce in order to marry Marcla, Bcllla remarried with a woman whom he met at the circus, Cicero, repudiated his wife to take Publllla, whose riches would enable his wife to pay off all his tors; Caesar and Antony contracted four successive marriages; Pompey went as far as five. Juvenal felt Jus tified In saying; that faithful spouses were as rare as "white crows," or, as we say today, as "white blackbirds." The law of Mohammed admits of di vorce, though it Is very little reaorted to by. toe Mobmauntdans, but exacts faur mouths' reflection on the part of the husband before ending the letter of re pudiation, which in this case la called tetoik boln: a temporary repudatlon Is called tetoik rid jee, which is used as a forewarning. The nation which grants the fewest divorces Is England. A special court the court for divorce and matrimonial cases, copes with all matrimonial diffi culties. Divorce ran be obtained for ''criminal conversation" and is denied for personal injuiies and neglect. A rup ture of the marriage Is granted only for Infidelity and this is known to the court as the "specific remedy." Switzerland grants more divorces than any other cos n try. Since the fed eral law of 1S74 was passed the propor tion has risen from forty-seven to a thousand. In Sweden since 1831, in Hol land since 1851, and In Saxony since the federal law of -1875 the proportion has Woubled and even tripled. In Belgium It has multiplied sixfold. TALES OF THE TIME. Lord Hutton's sister was often an noyed at her brother's Indiscriminate hospitality. "Do you rember, my dear," he asked her at dinner one day, "wheth er that famous scoundrel X. was hang ed or acquitted?" "He must have been hanged, or you would have had him to dinner long ago," replied the lady. The story as to how the well known actress. Miss Ada Rehau, came to adopt that name is Interesting. Born in Lim erick, her real name is Regan. At an early age she was brought by her pa rents to this country. Upon one oc casion the local printer. In setting out the cast, changed the "g" in her name to "h," and described her as Rehan. The actress attracted some attention, and. not dissatisfied with her new name, decided to adopt it. a a a "It all comes o' being poor," said an old lady, trembling with Indignation, to her invalid husband. "I just stepped In a minute at the vicar's to tell 'em as how you wasn't getting any better, and the vicar's wife said siie was sorry, and wanted me to bring you a bottle of wine." Did you bring it?" asked the sick man eagerly. "No; I heard her say It had been laying down in her cel lar ever since lSBti, and when she offered ed it to me I just walked off without saying a word. I'm sure we didn't want her old stuff." The captain owed a very large bill at his hatter's (Blobbs), who had been de manding the money for some time, and had even threatened legal proceedings. The captain, having no money, was un able to pay. so diligently avoided the shop, and commenced running up a bill at Dobbs' (another hatter). His feel ings may, perhaps, be better Imagined than described when one very windy day his "Dobbs" hat, with the name in side, having been lifted from his head by a gust of wind, playfully danced across the road right into Blobb's shop! Here Is a prety and true story, told by Mr. Clement Scott, of the good old actor lately passed away Henry Howe. It contrasts pleasantly with the tales In circulation of exaggerated salaries claimed and given for poor. Indifferent merit. Some time since Henry Howe lost his wii. and In an Interview with Sir Henry Irving Intimuted to him that, as his wants were now very much less, he considered he was receiving more salary than his work Justified, and therefore asked Sir Henry Irving to re duce it by half, as this sum was more in accordance with the work he was doing. Sir Henry replied: "There Is only one man In England who underrates the service of Henry Howe, and that Is Henry Howe himself. His salary would continue just as it was before until the bell rang down the finaul green cur tain." " And so It was. HUMOR OF THE DAY. French waiter (In London restaurant, to Yabsley, who has been trying to make himself understood In blll-of-fare French) "If ze gentleman vlll talk ze language vot he vas born In, I vlll very mooch better understood." Tld-Bits. "Father, whai Is a luxury?" asked little Johnnie the other night as he wrapped himself round the parlor stove. "A luxury? Why, it's some thing we don't really need, you know a thing we can do without." "Well, then," replied the logical youth, "what a luxury a mosquito net must be in Winter." Harlem Life. Indispensable. "I don't think I want a cyclopaedia," said the Woman of the house, "but If you have got any nice book for children " "Great Scott, madam!" exclaimed the unblushing book agent. "Ve use this cyclopaedia for a children's book at our house al together. They sit on It at the table." Chicago Tribune. At a Hotel. Guest (to waiter) "I can't eat this soup!" Waiter takes it away and brings another kind of soup. Guest "I can't eat this soup!" Waiter, angrily, but silent, for the .third time brings another kind. Guest (again) "I can't eat this soup." Walter, furi ous, calls the hotel proprietor. Propri etor (to guest) "Why can't you eat this soup?" (Guest quietly) "Because I have no spoon!" Texas Sif tings. BAG Quickly, Thoroughly, Forever Cored, Four out of five who suffer nervousness, niontal worry, attacks of "theblues."arebut paying the penalty of early excesses. Vic tims, reclaim your manhood, regain yonr vigor. Don't despair. Send for book with explanation and proofs. Slallod (sealed) free. ERIE MEDICAL CO., Buffalo, N.Y. ON THE LINE OF THE CANADIAN PACIFIC R'Y are located the finest Ashing and hunting grounds in the world. Descriptive books on application. Tickets to all points in Maine, Canada and Maritime Provinces, Minneapolis, St. Paul, Canadian and United States Northwest, Vanvouver, Seattle, Tacoma, Portland, Ore., San Francisco. First-Class Sleeping and Dining Cars attached to all throught trains. Tourist cars fully fltted with bedding, curtains and specially adapted to wants of families may be had with second-class tickets. Rates always less than via other lines. For further Information, time tables, etc, on application to E. V. SKINNER, Q. E. A.. 353 Broadway, New York. SOelofcratsd JowJersBerjr BMUtlll Venule till, uauar ES avlToeoo (lay CooMles nr. V I PerJr la 48 hoars wttheatL2l ahebooaJajectlnaAiEVJ ran niTii I III Dill B !lliiiwMwitCmn iT jJVcgetablcPreparalionfor As similating thcToodandReguta ithcStomaisaiulBoeisQf ftofliotes'Dicstion.ChccrruI ness andRest.Contalns neither SMum.Morpb.ine nor Mineral. otNabcotic. iiuifeauarSMcajuzma. Alx.Stnnm . ' ItdUlUSJtt I struM Snd Jtftmaat . Jh Ckrtmat Stit H'mm StfJ - flmfud Jiiprr . Mjatouniaa nwr A perfect Remedy for Constipa tion, sour 3iuuidcn,jJiarrnoea Worms .Convulsions .Feverish ncss and LOSS OF SLEEP. Tac Simile Signature of .:. . NEW YORK. lajesa anil i EXACT COPrOF WRAPFEB. UP THE lliluiiiimiUmtmiitiiitMHiimiiliinitiiiiiiil Eitibllshid 1866. THE fe: PIANOS fed At a time when many manu facturers and dealers are making the most astounding statements regardingthe merits and durability of inferior Pianos, intending pur chasers should not fail to make critical examination of the above instruments. if EL C. RICKER tieueral Dealer in Northeast era Pennsylvania. . New Telephone Exchange Building, 115 Adams Ave., Soranton, Pa. TTffwnrfiHfnfTTTTfffffffriitTHffTfTfr;nrrTn! luiiiiniuiiii.i.iiiii.iiiiliiiaiiiii.iiiiuiiiimil 61,827 BARRELS OF FLOUR days' run at PMsfcarj's "A Mill, ana over One Jlftl&on barrels in the past six months, running SIX DajSfl Week the highest record of any mill in tho world. Mr. Pills bury, the manager of the Tillsbury "A" Mill, Challenges hay Mill in tho World to come within 15,000 barrels of it in a six days' rnn. Tho Pillabury Washburn Floor Mills Co., Limited, not only own tho largest mill in the world, but make the BEST FLOUR. C P. flatthews Sons & Co., Mill Agents, Northeastern I'tnn'a i?!IEIiniHmKZM2IHNE Csseaats r tmc Hiohmt Midiul AiTMoamm INHALER mm van sjtb nnu iASTnMAvninnn HEADACHE, iNHALCII Will cnr. Tnlt. A wouUerful boon to sufferer! Iroin Cold., SJoreTaroat. nfnRfl.. MrABtthltl.- fr HAY FEVER. AWrrrdl imttudbitirtHtt. Ancfllcleiil " rummy, eonvenlrnt to carry la pocket, nag? to ve oa sm ludmuun of cold, rsntlaaed Ih KSct. Permanent Care, KiirscuonroamnieeaormonRr refunded. Irle. I ets. Trial free at Drufglns. Kwlnlered mall, I u cents, a. s. cuauui, sir., nm Hi nn, sues., B. ft, i, UPUTUni Tho sure.t and aafet remedy for Jlfcrl I nUft. aMnklndlneaiMjRcteirm.lteb.Salt Rheumnld Sore., Burns, Cut. Woa.errul raai ety forPII.Ea. Price, SS eta. at DrarDil U eltteur by mall prepaid. Addrew as above. Dnl Wi For sale by MATTHEWS BROS, and JOHN H. PHELPS. Scranton, Pa, SEE THAT THE FAC-S1MILE SIGNATURE :"op Mis on the WRAPPER OF EVERT. v BOTTLE OF ni yCastorla It put tip la ons-stzs bottles only. It la not sold in balk. Don't allow anyone to sell jvv auyuuiig vise on iu pica vr prviuuo uiat is "just ti good" and "vlll answer CTery par. poae." 8e6 that joa get C-A-8-T-0-R-I-A. : Tfcifu- TO DATE. Ovar 26,000 In Us. QENUINE iUUL SCHANT0N, PA. Complexion Preserved DR. HEBRA'S VIOLA CREAM Remove. Frssklss, Plmplat, Liver . MoIm, BlasfchMo.; Sunburn and Tan, sad re stores trie skin to its oruji- ,--i nal freshnais, producing ,,"5v, clear and healthy .com- vW- 1 preparations and .perertlf fcarmleM. At sU druggists, or mailed for (Oct, tkud fur Circular. VIOLA SKIN 80AP U t"fr tiwanwaM. m a Mi tmrlMni 8Mp, uneqnaM u tolM. wKkoot a rim k U nmT. AftlmAr tmrt ana drikiaMt aaSV aui. AidmuiiM, Price 2S Ccito. G. C. BITTNER 4 CO., Toledo, OY For sale by MATTHEWS BROS, and JOHN H. PHELPS, Scranton. Fa. mm.