HOW ICEBERGS ARE HADE. THE GIANT OFFSPRING OF RIVERS OF SOLID WATER. Glaciers of Greenland and Alaska and Tltoir Annual Output of Mill lons of Tons of Ice Into the Sea. Standing upon the deck of an ocean steamer, passengers see an iceberg sweep ing by in splendid loneliness. Looked at from afar it seems a huge curiously shaped ship with great white hull and great white sails all Bet and blown full with the breeze. But the strongest glass detects no flag floating from its frozen peaks and sees no crew moving upon its glistening decks. It is an enormous, clumsy craft which no passing« Captain hails; it is one of the rovers in nature'} pirate navy which every skipper avoids. An hour and the steamer passengers have seen the ico ship vanish in the distance; it is moved in a current of the ocean,and before long it will pass to warmer waters in the south, and there the frozen craft will end its journey and melt out of com mission. Icebergs arc born every day in every month, but most of them remain in or near their native waters for a long tiraa before they escape and wander to the great lanes of travel between hero and Europe. The bergs which will be seen this summer are from two to ten years old; that is, they have had an cxistenco individually for years, though tho ice from which they are formed is much older, some of it possibly having been frozen first a thousand years ago. Bergs are born of glaciers. Four out of every five floating masses in the Atlantic como from Greenland; tho fifth may be from Spitzbcrgen Sea, Frobishcr's Sound, or Hudson Strait. A glacier is a river of solid water con fined in tho depressions running down the mountain sides. Soft and powdery enow falls upon the summits, and though some is evaporated, the yearly fall is greater than the yearly loss, and so the excess is pushed down the slope into val leys which possiby at the time are cov ered with green and have afforded pasture lands for cattle. Tho tnow gathers in the high valleys and and every day under goes some degree of the change which finally transforms it into ice. Hundreds cf years ago the people who dwelt at the foot of the Alps, in the Engadine valley, went up the green hillside and built new houses. Far above their homes rose the mountain tops, covered with eternal snow. Little by little a glacier was forming upon the lofty slope above the site of these new houses. The surface of the soft snow river forced dowu from the summit was melted day after day, and the water trickling into tho mass beneath froze by night. Thus the flue feathery crystals became changed into sponge-like ice, and as time went on and the quan tity above increased, the pressure grew greater, and the sponge ice became harder and then compact and solid. And all this whilo more snow was falling upon the summits and was driven down tho mountain side, piled on the surface of the growing glacier and forced down into the mass beneath as new ice. Scientists estimate that with the thickening of the rigid stream it extended down the hill side seven inches each year. This was going truly at a snail's pace, but at last the slowly creeping river of ice, crested with melted snow, ap proached so near tho homos built upon tho slope that tho people had to move. Their houses, of course, they had to leave behind them, and in time tho solid river came upon tho buildings and broke them up and smothered tho fragments. This was tho Morteratsch Glacier, and many tourists in Switzerland have looked upon it. In 1868 there were great floods in the valley and many bits of the old dwellings were washed out from under the ice. Now, just as this Alpino glacier grew and flowed down the mountains at the rate of seven inches a year, so have greater glaciers grown in colder Green land and come down the mountains of that country to the sea. And these glacier streams of Greenland are the parents of tho North Atlantic icebergs. So, too, in Alaska thero are tremendous glaciers, and one of the incidents of au ordinary Alaskan journey is the cruising of your vessel along the coast, where the glaciers break off and fall into the water. They arc far more beautiful than the finest of the glaciers of Switzerland, and in size they are so great that tho largest Alpine glacier would make only a fair sized nose, if it could be taken bodily and placed upon the face of one of the Alaskan giants. At Glacier Bay icebergs are being born all the whilo. Muir Glacier, the largest that dips into the bay, piescnts a front of 6000 feet. It is 700 feet thick, five-sevenths of it being under water. It extends back for miles and miles. Each day the central part moves seventy feet into the sea, the dis charge every twenty-four hours being 140,000,000 cubic feet of cloar ice. As this great quantity cracks into pieces from tho glacier the bergs of tho North Pacific begin their life. The separation from the larger mass and tho plunge into the sea cause terrific noises. It is known that the only part of the land which is not covered completely by ice is a narrow belt around the shore. Crossing this belt at hundreds of places are the glaciers. Some arc only a few hundred feet wide and fifty feet thick, whilo others are several miles wide and measure 1500 feet from surface to bot tom. All of these ice streams are mak ing their way to the sen, nnd as their ends are forced out into tho water by tho pressure behind they are broken off and set adrift as bergs. Tho rate of move ment of the glaciers is variously esti mated. Tho central part of a glacier moves more rapidly than the sides. The progress of the Greenland glaciers is in many cases at the rato of forty-seven feet a day in the centre, while at the sides it varies from ten to fifteen. Observations made on a typical Greenland glacier show that its breadth was 18,400 feet, depth UiO feet, and advance per day iorty-scven feet during tho summer sea ton, This would givn about 200,000,- 900 cubic f«et a peat as the product of an average sized ice fjord, which, allow ing fire pounds a day to each person ia the United States would last over 100 yean. This particular glacier, it will be seen, is very much larger than the great Muir* Glacier of Alaska, whose annual output is some 5,100,000 cubic feet a year. Each glacier in Greenland, so far as any estimate has been made, gives birth each year to from ten to 100 icebergs. When these bergs have-plunged into the Arctio Sea they are picked up by the Arctic current and begin their journey to the North Atlantic. But there are thousands of them afloat; they crowd and rub against each other, and fre quently they break into smaller masses. Many go aground in the Arctic basin, others get to the shores of Labrador, where from one end to the other they continually ground and float. Some die appear there, while others get safely past and reach the Grand Banks.— New York Sun. Australia's Drawbacks. "What inducement does Australia offer to a young American in search of a fortune?" was asked of J. H. Mulford, of Rockford, 111., who is registered at*thc Sherman House on his return from the continent in the Southern Pacific. "None," he answered promptly. "Don't hesitate to advise all young and old Americans who desire to make a living to bo satisfied in the finest country God ever made. If a living can't be made here it can't bo made anywhere. Of course if a man has a situation ready for him there it might be all right tor hiin togo there. But 1 doubt if even then he would suc ceed. Very few Americans remain there who can get away. You sec that the business men from Australia are English men who were brought up in English ways, which arc altogether too slow for men accustomed to the business methods of America. Moreover, business is at a standstill there. It has been growing worse for the past four years on account of the big droughts. Water is scarce, there being only a few rivers, and along their banks thero have been this year floods which proved equally disastrous to the droughts. And if these two combi nations were not enough, the labor cle ment is getting restless again. Australia has the strongest labor organization in the world, and when a demand is made by the organization something has got to give way. Eight hours with a half holi day on Saturday is in vogue throughout the colonics, but that is not enough, and tho question of seven hours with a whole holiday on Saturday is being agi tated. Many of the branches have de clared for it, and it will only be a short time when tho entire organization will declare for seven hours and all of Sat urday. The purpose of doing so will be tho hope of supplying work for the thousands of now idle men by lessening the productive power of those at present employed. No—tell young Americans in search of fortunes to stay where they are, or if they are bent on leaving this country togo anywhere but to Australia. I have just traveled all over that conti nent, studying tho situation carefully, and know whereof I speak."— Vhieago I'ost. Drunkenness From Coffee. Dr. Mendel, of Berlin, calls attention to the use of coflce in a manner to make his remarks of importance. The inebri ety of coffee, if not as dangerous to others, may be as harmful to its subject as alcoholism, and generally leads to it. Dr. Mendel's studies have covered Ger many, but he has given special observa tion to the great working force in the gun factories at Essen, where wages are high and employment uninterrupted, and a comparative degree of luxury is within the reach of all. The people of Essen drink immense quantities of coffee, bringing the aver age for a large portion of them up to a pound a week, many men taking much more than that. The result is a form of neurosis, in which the nerves are dis turbed in a degree and manner approach ing delirium tremens. Intoxication is followed by gloom and sleeplessness, and about all the disorders characteristic of acute nervous derangement, added to a hate for work. As in the use of alcohol or opium, temporary relief can be had by more and stronger coffee, by tinc tures of coffee formed by crushing the berries in spirits; but the cure of a con firmed coffee drunkard is next to un known, unless the final change to pure alcoholism be counted as a cure. Troubles of this nature are said to be much more widely spread than one would think from the immediate evidence. Most of the stages of excessive coffeeism arc too obscure to be apparent. And they are increasing. Tea is merely a weaker agent of the same sort, so that in fnct there is no such thing as a cup that cheers without inebriating. Moderation must be the law for tea and coffee as for alcohol.— New York Sun. When Bis Trousers Were the Rage The old Saxon settlers of England de lighted in vivid colors, and the Scandi navian invaders, who came soberly suited in black, learned to surpass them ir. gaiety of apparel. The Normans, in their turn, were remarkable for the vari ety and splendor of their costumes. In the reign of Henry 111., loppery reached its height, and men half ruined them selves to be clothed in tho magnificent and costly stuff called cloth of the Bald erkins. In the reign of James 1., men wore breeches of enormous breadth,and at nn earlier date that fashion was even more extravagantly indulged. "Over the scats in the Parliament House,"says one au thority, ' 'there were certain holes, some two inches square, in the walls, in which were placed posts to uphold a scaffold round about the house within, for them to sit upon 'who ussd the wearing of great breeches stuffed with hair like wool sacks, which fashion being left the eighth year of Elizabeth, the scaffolds were taken down, and never siuce put up," But, as we have seen, the fashion re turned, and ever since men have alter nated between loose and tight trousers. —£fn» OrUam Picayun*, A CRUSTACEAN COLLECTION i __ IN EXTRAORDINARY EXHIBITION OF ORABB AKS LOBBTEBS. "Trllobltes" Twenty Millions ot Yearn Old—A. Forty Pound Lobster— The Biff Oocoanut Crab. The most wonderful exhibition of crabs and lobsters ever seen in this world will be placed on permanent view in Wash ington as soon as the Smithsonian Insti tute gets its new building. At present the collection is stored away out of sight, for want of space to show it properly. In this exhibition will be displayed for the instruction of the nation members of the crustacean family that were actually alive during the earliest geological epochs twenty millions of years ago. These "trilobitcs," as they are called, were contemporary with the earliest creatures that lived upon the earth. They aro taken out of the rock to-day as per fect as when they were inclosed in the shelly mud 200,000 centuries ago; the very facets of their eyes are <is distinct as in life. If you like you may find any number of their direct descendants in the horseshoe crabs on the sea beach. The horseshoe crabs, indeed, may fairly be called the oldest creature in the world, being but a slightly modified trilobite, and thus representing the very most an cient family that anything is known about. In comparatively modern times —only 18,000,000 years ago—some crus taceans attained gieat size. Frogs in those days used to grow as big as men are now, and thought nothing of hopping two or three blocks' distance at one jump; it was the age of things gigantic, and a lobstcr-liko creature, six feet in length, called tho "ptcrygotus," prQwlcd the watery shallows then in search of prey. It is not so very many years now nines lobsters were captured weighing as much as forty pounds apiece. There is ono such in the Smithsonian collection, three feet long in the body and with claws big and strong enough to crush your clenched fist. Unfortunately the business of lob sters has been carried on for a century or so past with so much eagerness that all the big ones pretty nearly have been taken and eaten. To find a giant crustacean to-day you must goto the eastern shore of Asia, where disports himself the enormous Japanese crab, which has claws which spread twelve feet. Even the crabs of Rider Haggard's fancy did not attain the dimensions of this Asiatic realty. Ono of tlic most extraordinary of the Smith sonian's specimons is a ''cocoanut crab" —a tremendously powerful looking crea ture, so big that when tightly folded up it will fill a four-gallon glass jar. This is the crab that climbs the cocoanut tree, and after plucking the fruit tears off the outer husk with its mighty claws and then knocks iu the shell in one of the "eyes," subsequently digging out tho meat with the long and narrow pair of | incers provided by nature for this put pose. This cocoanut ciab inhabits the islands of tho Indian ocean. It accumu lates surprising quantities of the picked fibers of the cocoanut, which it uses as a bed; the flesh is very good to eat, and under its tail is a mass of fat which some times yields as much as a quart of limpid oil. Among other strango crabs in the Smithsonian collection is a smaller va riety of this same species which lives in a burrow at the root of a fruit tree. Then there is the "painted crab'* of tho West Indies, which is a land animal; it used to exist there in countless numbers, and indulged annually iu a migration to the sea coast, moving always in a compact army. During such migrations they were caught in great numbers and so have be come almost extinct. A crab from the Barbadocs is remarkable for its swiftness in running, which has given it the name of the "horseman crab." The "dorippe" is a species of crab quite plentiful on the shores of the Adriatic, which has two legs on its back—a great inconvenience, since, if turned bottom side up, it cau run just as well that way. One remarkable crab in the Smithso nian collection is entirely covered with what looks like whitish moss, but is in reality something between the vegetable and the animal. All crabs of that va riety have a coat of this sort to render them indistinguishable by their enemies and unrecognizable by their prey. An other kind of crab is always covered en tirely with growing sponge, save only his eyes, antenna: and the tips of his claws. He hides in crevices where sponge grows among the rocks, and be comes as much like them as he knows how. A crab from tho Pacific coast is invariably found with sea anemones growing all over his back and legs. Another from the same region has large tubes with which it sucks water into its lungs by way of breathing. Still an other California crab has a very neatly made snuff-box underneath its Lody for holding eggs, which closes wkn a snap fastening j:ist like a real snuff-box. A crab with a long beak and legs that look like straws is also from the Pa cific. One of the fiercest crabs known is plentiful on the coast of South America. It is also called the "rock crab"and hides in crevices among stones. It is captured generally by dropping a hook on the end of a string into its lair, when it will seize the hook in anger and permit itself to be hauled out by its own grip, which is so strong that the claw will still bite pow erfully after it has been pulled off from tho animal. A. funny crab is the "mess mate," which one finds in oysters; it does not hrrtn the bivalve, but merely lives in the shell with it and feeds upon whatever the oyster gets to eat.— Chicago Timet. The government statistician of New South Wales has estimated the population of Australia at the beginning of the cur rent year to be 3,786,798. This is an increase during 1889 of 113,995, or 3.10 per cent. The population of New Zealand 13 now 620,279, an increase during the year of 12,899. Columbia is the wealthiest of Ameri can universities, and Harvard come# MSt. NEWS AND FOB <WOHKN. Lace v is gradually tcroepingjinto favoi again. Save tailor suite Jllnenfcollars are not worn. Children's^dresses^are) longer thaa In past seasons. Silk the fancy ol young ladies. The colored lercthertehoe appears to have come<tc> stay. Women'B v secret b societies are being boomed in vB oston." An effort|will be fmade to introduce colors in the (saddle. Tho dog-noiie is»a newipattern for rich white satin brocades. Two-toned louisine silk para sols are tho most stylish. Cricket is .becoming popular as a ladies' game in^England. Collars aro yeither cut very high or very low. Tlieitalis no medium. Birds arevagai a. making their appear ance amongiashitonable garnitures. Crepe, ruches and picot ribbons are not much used in I the necks»of dresses. Many of the ho use* dresses have a bow ot ribbonj under the ear as a finish. The women's exjehanges in this country nave paid «outv<»l,000,000 in twelve y««irs. Gold-headtAd wmbrellaafare regaining she popularity\ contended' to tho silver landhd ones. Fashion lias i a knew posy—the corn lower, better > know.n as bachelor's but ton, or blucys. The fashion of planting large fuchsias ?n the grass \is popular in lawn decora tion in England. The strongest \ioman now living in Mmo. Victorinie, a* Swiss, who lifts 250 pounds with e:«se. Reefers and blazer jackets are made in lilk, scrgo or flannel, and are tho fa vorites for outdoor wraps. Some of the .most practical papers published of late nn leading bee journaU have been writtenyby women. Ladies' shirts arot in greater variety as the demand increases. Dotted muslin percale and linen arc usedlin negligee at tire. Illuminated nets axe<all!the rage. The iquarc-mashed Greek net,,ribbon-striped or with chenille dots, .is most fashion able. Miss Mary Sharp,»a Brooklyn (N. Y.) school-teacher, has jiist returned from an exploring expedition, in the wilds of Africa. A noticeable feature*of rocent bee keepers' conventions is tho increased number of ladies who take • part in the exercises. Vieux rose broche and forget-me-noi silk is one of the many beautiful com binations displayed on 'the hotel piazzas along tho beach. A. new style of mourning paper drops the band of black all around the sheet, and has it drawn diagonally across the left-hand corner only. A sailor hat is dark blue straw, with baud ot blue ribbon dotted with white, sets off a boating dress of dark blue flan nel with small white dot. Tho Queen of Sweden, who still suf fers from shattered nerves, finds ease in working like a house-maid, and in weed ing and digging in her garden. AQ autumn hat has appeared abovo the horizon of fashion. It is an open steel braid faced nrith velvet, and is large and round and has a medium crown. A Hindoo woman doctor, Miss Jag annudnam, has boen appointed house surgeon at the Kdiuburgh (Scotland) for womentand children. The Primrose League, of England, has a membership of persons. This is the first popular organization for po litical purposes which,lias awarded equal positions to women and men in its ranks. Low-crowncd hats have insertions or edgings of openwork inj passementerie ot embroidery devices ati the edge of the brim, presenting an effect like lace. These hats have wide, flat, projecting brims. A charming little*toque is covered with a wild-rosevinc, with leaves, buds and foliage, and with full-blown roses over tho forehead, and is finished with tics of narrow black velvctiribbon com ing from the back. Gray and black form a stylish com bination. Dresses for cool days are made with gray skirts, around the bottom ot which from three to nine rows of black velvet aro placed, and plain gray basques with black velvet sleeves. Miss May Rogers, of Dubuque, lowa, is the author of a Waverly Dictionary, in which the 1300 or more characters in Sir Walter Scott's novels are described, with illustrative extracts from the text; the book is 6aid to be a complete key to Bcctt's works. Warm Weather Causea That Tired Feeling. To be Strong, Take Hood's Sarsaparilla N Y N K—S3 M X prescribe ana fully n don* Bit » u the only specific (or the certain cara TO & of tb!:> di*paae. ■<«•!>< MI G.H.IN(IRAHAM,M. D, VjnV ■ Amsterdam, N. Y. B3 «rfl out; the V/e bavo sold Big CI for iaction. iaction. DB - DYc c H^ib, ■oMbrOnralsw The yeru bat way to know whether or not Dobbinn's Electric Boap It m on mi Mlt Is nid to be, Is to try tt pmr*. 112. It cant deceive wrm- Be sure to «et Do Imitation. There are lots of tbem. Ask yoor grocer for Inst one bar. AMTNIKCM Is a white metal of bluish tint, wtighinn about one-fourth as much as copper. Albert Burcb, West Toledo, Ohio, say*: "Hall's Catarrh Cure saved my life."' Write hlin for particulars. Sold by Druggists. 76c. AMERICAN vines are being planted In French vineyards. Uraturia* »• All, The high position attained and the universal acceptance and approval of the pleasant liquid fruit remedy. Syrup of Figs, as the moat excel lent laxative known, illustrate the value of the qualities on which Its success is based and are abundantly gratifying to the California Fig Syrup Company. FITS stopped free by On. Kun'i ORRAT XKRVK RESTORER. NO Fits after tint day's use. Marvelous cures. Treatise and 13 trial bottle free. Dr. Kline. MBI Arch St.. Phfla.. Pa. Beecham's Pills cure Bilious and Nervous ills. All the year round , you may rely upon Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery to purify the blood and invigorate the system. It's not like the sarsaparillas, that are said to be good for the blood in March, April and May. The " Golden Medical Discovery " works equally well at all times, and in all cases of blood - taints, or humors, no matter what their name or nature. It's the cheapest blood-puri fier, sold through druggists, because you only pay for the good you get. Your money is returned if it doesn't benefit or cure you. Can you ask more? " Golden Medical Discov ery " contains no alcohol to inebriate, and no syrup or sugar to derange digestion. It's a concentrated vegeta ble extract; put up in large bottles; pleasant to the taste, and equally good for adults or children. The " Discovery " cures all Skin, Scalp and Scrofulous affections, as Eczema, Tetter, Salt-rheum, Fever-sores, White Swellings, Hip - joint disease and kindred ailments. DtllCinil NEW LAW CLAIMS. rtnolUH Milo B. Ste?ens&GJ., A ttornryn, 1419 K At,, Washington* D, C. Hraurh Office®, Clrvrlnmi, Detroit.( hlc«*«. PRUQINUQ °YNK I SRW TA T \V K ° I tNwIUNu finlrtlfrn. Widow* Parenu, Mini for blank application* ana Information. PATRICK O'FARREI-u Pension Agent. Washington, D. C. DC |y Cin Ikl C s/n t r«V. °D •• 17u t »*r • - I tllwillllVll'm «p\"«V. B i f W ! McOornlck * Boat, WftifclagUa, 0.0,4 01»cta»atl, 0. ABIIIIi H A IIIT. Onljr Ortala mud llPIIlm C I lIK In the World. I>r. W ■ Wlfl J. 1,. MTEPIIKNM, l/ebanon, O. WM. FITCH & CO., 10*2 Corcoran Building, Washington. D. C. PENSION AnORNEYS of orer 'J3 ye*™' esperlenoe. Successfully prose cut* pension* *n(l claims of sit kind, la <MHM p.«slbie time. tr-No KRK pin.—s snm.—smi. HCMQIAMJOHI W.MOHKIW. ntlialvll W ashington, D.C. Successfully Prosecutes Claim*. I L&t* Principal Examiner U.S. Pension Bureau. B JyrslnUnt war, 15 a<y udkstlug claims, atty since. rtHolUlld plication. Employ the old reliable firm, J. B. CKAUiK A CO., Washington. D. C. ZjBMID YOUH Bnt Uwl'rir®4 6IIIAX DICTIONARY published, at the rtmiarkablr low prioa / ARvw m of only fl.on, postpaid Thl* Hook con- ■!) talnn 614 finely printed paves of clear IHf type on excellent paper and 1* hand somely rri nervlceaoly bound In cloth. \W^F 4*' It tflve* KufrlUli words with the (*erman vAi \ equivalents and pronunciation, anl ) German words with Rntrllsh deflnitlona \ M It is Invaluable to (iermann who are not r ' \ thoroughly familiar with English, or to % J Americans who wish to learn Herman V, M Address, with 11.no, lOOK PCH. HOI'S, IS* Usasrt 84., Nsw YsrfcCMf. «®w WATERPROOF COLLAR on CUFF ————i THAT CAN BE RELIED ON BE V* ]>Tot to fitoll*! THEMA.K JTQi; xo Dl«oolori I——————J BEARS THIS MARK. # TRADE ELLULOID MARK NEEDS NO LAUNDERING. OAN BE WIPED CLEAN IN A MOMENT. THE ONLY LINEN-LINED WATERPROOF COLLAR IN THE MARKET. «<= j , tell ne'erba marri e< £ Qvie"Ho» Qn " -Bortt* refuse &ll= ®ar Advice ho use SAP© Ll©: this ifflflffsolid cake of-scouring soap, used for cleaning purposes I asked a maid if she would wed, And in my home her brightness shed; She faintly smiled and murmured low, "If I can have SAPOLIO." RADWAY'S II KUI RELIEF. A CURB FOB ALL SUMMER COMPLAINTS! Dysentery, Diarrhoea, CHOLERA MORBUS. From 80 to 60 drop* in half a tumbler of waSer wHI In a few momenta cure Cramp*, Spasms. Soar Ston ach. Nausea, Vomiting, Heartburn, NerromMM, Sleeplessness, flck Headache, Diarrhoea, Dysentery, Cholera Morbus, colic, Flatulency, and all Internal Pah**. For severe eases of the foregoing Com plaints see our printed directions. Applied externally It Instantly relieves Headache, Toothache, Neuralgia, i then mutism end all pains arising from Colds, Sprains, l.ruises or auy cause Price 90* cents per bottle. Sold by druggists. RADWAY'S n PILLS, ./ n Excellent and mild Csthartlo. Purely vegeta ble. The safest and best medicine In tbo world for the cure of all disorders of the iriver, Stomach or Bowels. •ccordlnsr to directions they will restore health and renew vitality. Price Be. a box. Sold by all druggists, or mailed by RADWAY * CO., 82 Warren York. on receipt of price. NYN U—33 NO ONE NEED SUFFER Dr. Tobias' Celebrated Venetian Liniment acts like a charm for Cholera Morbus, Diarrhoea, Dysentery, Colic, Cramps, Nausea, Sick Headache, Ac. Warranted perfectly harmless. (Hie OATH AC COMPANYING each bottle, iilso directions KOU U8B.) Its SOOTHING and PENETRATING qaal lllea are felt Immediately. 'iry it and be con vinced. Price as and 50 cents, sold by all drug gists. Depot, 4" Murray St., N. Y. PlliTinH W. 1.. Douglas Shoe* are Wll»l IUHi warranted. and evrry pair kaa hi* name aud price stamped an bottom. is S3SHOE CENTLEMEN. PTSend address on postal for valuable Information. W. ii, IMItULAS, II rock ton. .Una*. O<C WONDERrUL If BURG\CHAI gMt. sjlijiii J^rrßcr Md.p'pcood^tob^ logus. Name good* d'siTCii. VHy DKMVKttI. LCMUHQ MFG. CO., 145 li. Htb Gt, A'Misd fc ,r». ERAZERq lIKST I*l THE WOULD UII L V t tV Got the Genuine. Sold Everywhere. Tie Mexican Restorative. A new and wonderful remedy for Liver, Kidney, Blood and Female Diseases. Trial package, 26c. by mall. LONE STAB MEDICINE CO., Houston, Texas. d l y o i n m o PENSION Bill I LnOlUrlu is Passed. ———— ■ a. »«i i rn, and Fathers are en titled to $lB a mo. Fee flu when yon get yonr money. Blank* free. JOSKPII 11. HI vmi. Attr- nuliluitt. b. r. PFNSMNS F° R * LL - I LllUlwllU charge. New Law. Application blanks sent free. li. t. TANNER, I'atcnt aud Claim Attorney, 1,11 7 F St., Washington, D. C. diiJLuiLmi.iJi.i.dfc |BCURES WHERE ALL ELSE FAILS. E| ■■ Best Cough Syrup. Tastes good. Use 151 Ed in time. Sold by druggists. Hl_
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers