Sullivan republican. (Laporte, Pa.) 1883-1896, January 11, 1895, Image 4

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    THE BAKER'S BILL
Tellsof Greatly Increased Appetite
"It affords mo groat pleasure to toll not only
tho condition of my present health bat also
thatof my whole fam-
It now of my poor
health advised me to
V use Hood's Sarsapar
■RfcSgT \ ilia. After two bottles
m a great change in my
112 health was noticed. 1
J do not have that tired
f " ot 1 feCl 11110 a D6W
member of my family
is using Hood's Sarsa-
Mrs Mary Ecke parilla and with ben-
Brooklyn, N. Y. cflcial resulis, If I may
judge by my baker's bill each week. Hood's
Hood's Sarßam
1 parilla
Sarsaparilla is wonder- Z' 112 112
fill for purifying the R Lt 1
blood aim aiding diges- ift. V ______
tion." Mit s. >1 An Y
ECKE, 145 Alabama Ave., Brooklyn, "NEW York.
Hood's Pills euro biliousness. 2> cents
Keep On Tlieir Pius.
"Tliero are some horses that havo
nover been seen to lie down in their
lives," says a horse fancier. "Somo
horses that continue to work for
years always sleep standing, but their
rest is not complete, and their joints
and siuows stiffen. Young horses
from the country aro liablo to refuse
to lio clown wbon first placed in a
stable in town, and tho habit may be
come confirmed unless special pains
are taken to prevent it. Sick horses
aro very apt to refui-o to lie down.
They seem to havo an instinctive fear
that if they lio down thoy never will
bo able to get on their feet again. I
onco rodo a horse seventy miles iu a
single day. I put tho animal in as
comfortablo a stable as could be mado
but he stood up all night, goiug to
sleep with his breast against tho
manger."—New York Dispatch.
In August, 189+, there were 57?5
Bteamers flying tho British flag, 810
the Germau, 510 tho Norwegian, 503
the French, -102 the Swedish, J430 the
American, 359 tho Spanish, 213 the
Italian, and 1382 the flags of other
Nations.
la Our Great Grandfather's Time,
«big bulky pills were in
general use. Like the
Assist Nature
a little now and then, with a gentle,
cleansing laxative, thereby removing of
fending matter from the stomach and
bowels, toning up and invigorating the
liver and quickening its tardy action,
and you thereby remove the cause of a
multitude of distressing diseases, such as
headaches, indigestion, or dyspepsia,
biliousness, pimples, blotches, eruptions,
boils, constipation, piles, fistulas and
maladies too numerous to mention.
* If people would pay more attention to
properly regulating the action of their
bowels, they would have less fre
quent occasion to call for their doctor's
services to subdue attacks of dangerous
diseases.
That, of all known agents to acconi
?lish this purpose, Dr. Pierce's Pleasant
ellets are uuequaled, is proven by the
fact that once used, they are always in
favor. Their secondary effect is to keep
the bowels open and regular, not to fur
ther constipate, as is the case with other
pills. Hence, their great popularity,
with sufferers from habitual constipation,
piles and indigestion.
A free sample of the " Pellets," (4 to 7
doses) on trial, is mailed to any address,
post-paid, 011 receipt of name and address
on postal card.
Address, WORLD'S DISPENSARY MEDI
CAL ASSOCIATION, Buffalo, N. Y.
i: Don't j!
I Cheat Your j!
j! Stomach. j!
|| You must have pure,
j) wholesome food, no
|) matter how much of
(i the sham you'll take 4
# in other things. £
|! Buckwheat!
I Is pure 5
|l and wholesome. A
Itnrivrny'H Ready R cliff is safe, tellable and
effectual because of ilic ttlmulattnt* actio i which It
exerts ov« r the nerves am vlt 1 j lowers of the body,
adding tone to the one ami Inciting to rene>v cd a.id
Increased vigor the slumbering vitality of the physi
cal structure,and through thi-healthful stimulation
end lucreased action the CAUSE of the I'niit Is
driven away, and a na-ural con llrlon restored. It
Is thus that the Rendy Itcllet Is so admirably
adapted for the Cure of l*nin. and without the
risk of Injury which U sure to re-<utt from the use of
many of the so-called pain remedies of the day.
It is Highly Important that Every
Family Keep a Supplv of
RADWAY'S
READY RELIEF
Always In th-» houi 1 . Its use will prove beneficial
on all occasions of pain or slekn"«s. There Is
nothing la the world that will stop p tlnor arrest the
progress of disease an quick as the Heady Relief.
STOPS
PAIN
SO cle. a bottle. Sold by diu:<jc'st<.
KADWAY «SL CO., New York.
MINING WHITE! MARBLE.
THE GREEN MOUNTAINS HONEY
COMBED WITH QUARRIES.
The Largest Opening In the World la
In Vermont—The Diamond Drill
Revolutionized the Industry.
VERMONT furnishes more than
sixty per cent, of the marble
used in the United States
for building purposes, and
almost all that goes into graveyards
and [public monuments, and the
greater per cent, of the Vermont mar
ble comes from Rutland County. The
man who first discovered the possibili
ties of the quarries in Rutland County
traded an old horse for the property.
The original owner had beoome dis
gusted with the land, for nothing
would grow on it, and he swapped a
fortune for a decrepit nag which was
dear at sls. The gold craze of '49
urged men to risk their lives and en
dure the greatest hardships to
find the yellow metal, and the marble
craze in Vermont which followed tho
discovery of the rich deposits of pure
white marble oausod men to pour
money into holes and sink fortunes in
the ground. The Green Mountains
are pook-marked with abandoned
quarries, and the quest for the for
tune whioh awaited a man at the bot
tom of a rich marble quarry sent
prospectors into New Hampshire and
all along the backbone of the Qreon
Mountain State.
Until the diamond drill was invented
prospecting for marble was almost
always a matter of But
tho faithful detective which boros its
way into the earth's crust and brings
back a piece of everything it touches
placed marble-hunting in the list of
exact sciences. Tho diamond drill is
a cylinder of steel which has black
diamonds fixed in the edge of its cut
ting surface. The diamond-studded
cylinder is driven into tho earth or
outcropping stone, and as it twists its
way farther into the crust it cuts out
a oore which enables the prospector to
judge of the quality of the marble, if
the drill goes through marble, and the
extent of the deposit. Sometimes,
however, tho enthusiastic prospector
and his moneyed men who are baok of
the enterprise are sadly fooled by the
diamond drill, for the drill might be
bored in the direction of the layer
and not through it. If the layer is
thin, and the drill bored with the
grain, tho core might indicate a thick
deposit, and the truth would not be
known until thousands of dollars had
been spent in oponing the quarry.
Over SIOO,OOO has been expended in
opening a quarry beforo a single dol
lar's worth of marketable stone was
taken out.
When all the tests show that tho
marble is there, and enough of it to
pay for the working, the top rock,
usually of limestone, is first stripped
off. Blasting powder and dynamite
are employed in stripping the quarry,
but the blasts are small, and the quarry
men proceed carefully, for if the
powdor should penetrate tho marble it
would do serious damago. When tho
top stone is cleared away and the top
layer of marblo is exposed, channeling
machines similar to those which aro
at work in the rock cut of the sanitary
canal are started. They are worked
by steam or compressed air, and they
travel back and forth, cutting tho
marble into the widths required.
Sometimes the diamond borer, or
quick-acting diamond drill, is used to
slice up the marble. It makes holes
near together,- the holes being con
nected by webs of marble. These
borers revolve about 1500 times a
minute and when tho mnrblo is not
too hard work rapidly. When the
channeling machines, or diamond
borers, have cut the marblo into sliaes
the stone is cut away at either end bo
that the quarrymeu can got at the
bottom of the layers that havo been
cut. Then steam-drills bore holes
into the bottom of the layer from
eight inches to a foot apart. Iron or
steel wodges are placed in theso bot
tom holes and driven in until the
whole block of marble is broken away |
from its bed and lifted up. Some
times blocks or strips forty to sixty
feet long are thus cut out of the solid
rock. The huge block is divided into
blocks of the required size by boring
holes and breaking it with iron wedges.
If slabs or tiles are wanted the smaller
blocks are taken to the saw and sawod
into strips. Several strips are sawed
at onoe. The saw is mado of steel
strips without teeth. They play back
and . • rth over the block and cut the
stone by means of the sand and water
which are continually fed under the
metal strips.
The marble quarries of Rutland lie
in a valley and extend ever an area of
only about half a mile square. The
layers uncovered vary in thickness
from two to ten feet. In this limited
space the best marble is quarried, but
marble is found over a large extent of
Vermont, The farther south from
Rutland the marble is the coarser
grained it is. On the other hand, the
marble found north of Rutland is
finer-grained than the Rutland mar
bles, but it is full of little cracks, so
fine that they are not noticed in the
quarry, but when the marble cutter
or sawyer take! the block and begins
to work npon it it flies into bits and
acts like a piece of highly tempered
steel which has been plunged into cold
water when it is hot. Geologists say
that in the remote ages Vermont was
an arm of the sea, and that marble
waß made of the remains of corals and
shells which had been subjected to a
great pressure and a high heat, and
that, the reason tho marbles north of
Rutland aro finer-grained and brittle
is becauso the heat and pressure were
greatest there.
Marblo is quarried in New York,
Massachusetts, Maryland, Tennessee,
Georgia and Vermont. Large depos
its are said to exist in certain West
ern States, but they havo not beou de
veloped. The largest single quarry
Opening in the world is said to be in
Proctor, Vt.
Vermonters use machinery to com
pote with Italy in quarrying marble.
The beautiful marble of Carrara,
Italy, is all quarried by hand, but tho
[taliun quarrymen take more risks,
for they do not hesitate to use powdor
{or blasting tho marble itself. The
oowder penetrates the marble, and
;hough it may not be notioed at first
the black specks are sure to come to
;ho surface in a few years. The
The Italian Government has tried to
break the Italian stonecutter* of ttda '
bed habit, bat they persist in hanging
onto primitive methods and doing
what has been done in the 500 quar
ries in the mountains around Carrara
ever since gunpowder was used for ,
quarrying purposes. Tho Carrara
quarrymen literally takes his life in
his hands in many of the quarries, for
he often is swung over the side of the
marble precipice and "chug-ohuga".
Tvith his hand drill suspended in mid-1
air. When this aerial quarryman hai ,
drilled his holes and loaded them with
blasting powder, he is pulled out oi
barm's way and the marble blook,
ripped from its lofty bed by the blast,
tumbles down the mountain side, I
nometimes being shattered into frag
ments. —Chicago Record.
SELECT SIFTINUS.
In Japan the flute is played only by
men of rank. j
The big bridge at Montreal, Canada, :
ie nearly two miles long. i
Artificial bleaching of celery is said
to spoil its taste and crispness.
Big orabs are found in India. Some
of them measure two feet in length. |
Paris connoisseurs affirm that old
horses for food are more tender than
young ones. I
It is said that the gold product of '
Montana for 1894 shows an increase oi
seventy-five per cent, over that of ,
1893. j
Canadian Indians havo the old Ro- !
man habit of alternately gormandizing
and sleeping when there is a moose at
the fire. ]
Old Tom Tudor, of Mount Olivet,
Ky., celebrated his eightieth birthday
by marrying for tho sevonth time. His
children do not object to the matoh. j
Japan is a corruption of the Chi- •
nese word Shi-pon-kue, which moans
"root of day," or "sunrise kingdom," j
because Japan is directly oast of China.
The Philadelphia Graud Jury sug* '
gests that the street railway com- (
panics of tho city be compelled by
law to adopt at once fenders on the :
cars. I
A New York woman is charged with
training her twenty-months-old baby ,
to toddle into the rooms of a larg«
boarding house and steal money and •
jewelry. [
The first surgeon to use the antisep
tic treatment for wounds was Sir Jos
eph Lister, the famous English oper
ator. He is now about to retire from
his profession on account of old age. ■
Although Italians aro very muoh
addicted to quoting, they have nover ,
had a dictionary of quotations. Suoh '
a work, tracing 1575 quotations to
their original sources, has just been
published in Milan.
The most of the officials of Japan
havo somo of these Soshi with them
when thoy go about over the country. :
Iu somo cases they ride on the outside j
of their carriages and in others they |
follow along on foot.
Mound City, Mo., has a thirteen- 1
year-old boy who weighs 242 pounds; '
and Casco, Me., a twelve-year-old girl
who weighs 225 pounds. This may
servo to introduce them one to the
other, and who knows what may hap
pen later?
A model has recently been made to
illustrate the currents of the Atlantic. !
The water is blown out of various noz- ;
/.les representing the mean direction 1
of the permanent winds. The move- j
ment of the water is mado percepti
ble by a dust sprinkled over its sur
face.
Oats somotimos escape from cultiva
tion and grow from year to year so
persistontly as to seem wild. They !
have beeu found thus in regions as j
widely separated as Algeria and Japan, I
the Pyrenees nnd North China, the
Hebrides and tho Desert of Mount
Sinai. I
On the skeleton of a lady who died
at Pompoii were found two golden
bracelets, six of silver, four golden
anklets, four earrings, thirty finger
rings, n golden collar, a golden belt
and a golden band on lior head, while
by her hand lay a purse containing
397 silver coins. j
A singular feature of the decorations '
of the city of Leeds, England, on the I
recent visit of the Duke and Duchess
of York was a triple nrchway formed
entirely of loaves of bread and en- I
closed in a light frame of wood and
iron. Nearly six tons of bread were j
used in its construction, nnd the next :
day it was all distributed among the
poor.
A Singular French Timepiece,
The latest among these curious time
pieces is constructed as follows: A
sunflower of silver protrudes from n
white crystal vase, graceful in shape
and soberly decorated. Tho stolk is \
of brown gilt, tho leaves green, the ,
petals yellow, and the heart of the :
flower oxidized. Hour and minute I
marks are engraved around tho heart |
of this sunflower, which faces the
looker-on. A lady-bird of spotted red
onameled gold apparently rests on the !
flower, on the line dividing the heart
from tho petals. This pretty insect,
which moves imperceptibly by means
of a mechanism hidden within the
flower, shows the time. By only close
inspection oan one detect tho time di- I
visions on this original dial, whioh is
granulated all over and is bluish' |
black. As to the hallow circular line
on which the lady-bird travels, it if
completely invisible.—Jewelerß' Cir
cular. j
Dentists Dreatl Fine Weather.
A Philadelphia dentist says that
dentists always dread fine weather.
"I oan always tell," he explains,
"when a storm is coming without oon«
suiting cither a barometer or the
weather forecasts. My patients are
tho best barometers in the world. The
teeth are peculiarly affected by damp
weather, particularly bad teeth. When
strangers begin flocking to my office
complaining of toothache and pains in
the jaw, 1 know that we are going to
have a spell of bad weather. A good
bit of it is neuralgia, but it is a sura
sign. This rush of business keeps up
until tho stormy weather sets in, and
when business falls off I know the
storm is abating, and that r.e will
have tine weather. When toothache
patients are few and far between you
can rest assured that aseason of ploas
nut weather is at hand."—Now York
Tribune. . . _
Deep laoe collars are the vogue.
Women's work in India has made
great progress.
I There are now 711 women mission
i aries—foreign and Eurasian —in India.
In a single sawmill in Washington
State two women work on shingle ma
chines.
| French law makes it the duty of a
wife to accompany her husband where
ever he goes.
Tho average age at which women
marry in civilized countries is said to
be twenty-three and a half years.
Mrs. Emma Scott, of Birmingham,
| was elected enrolling and engrossing
' clerk by the Alabama State Senate.
| Opalescent colors are again coming
into favor, and garnitures of opales-
I cent beads are in the very height of
' fashion.
j Women have recently been appoint
ed to clerkships in tho Bank of Eng
land, after passing preliminary exam-
I ination.
I Mr. and Mrs. Frank Selous arc now
making a wedding tour in tents
through Asia Minor, attonded by five
| servants.
I Miss Lizzie Darlington, a daughter
; of ex-Congressman Darlington, of
West Chester, Penn., is about to be
, come a lawyer.
! In Paris hair dye is considered so
detrimental to long life that ono in
surance company refuses to insure tho
, lives of women that use it.
j Black and yellow are a favorite com
combination. Fine, soft black not
over lemon-colored silk is specially
j becoming to a spirited brunette,
j Miss Francis E. Willard says that
good cooking is essential to human
• happiness, while bad cooking has
driven thousands of men to drink.
j Bluet blue, cerise and magenta pink
are the threo oolors now most favored
by modistes nnd milliners and tho
: majority of tho fashionablo feminine
world.
| The nogleeted women of India have
• now the prospect of skilled modical
treatment. There aro sixty-five hos
pitals and disponsaries now affiliated
to tho Countess of Dufferin's fund for
, supplying medical aid to them, ten of
' theso having been built, and kept up
by native Princes.
I Mme. Casimir-Perier has received
so many disgnsting and insulting
letters since her husband became
I President of France, and has been so
' upset by the many ugly drawings in
closed, that her correspondence is now
. opened by a secretary before being
I handed to her for perusal,
j It is said that a red parasol destroys
I in a great measure tho actinio power
! of tho sun, and must therefore keep
I the skin from freckles. Photograph
ers long ago availed themselves of
I this peculiarity of light transmitted
through a red medium, and it seems
reasonable to suppose that a rod shale
might protect the complexion.
The most noteworthy feature iu
general style is the continued popu
' larity of tho bodice unlike the skirt,
j With the exception of the huge sleeve,
i which often matches tho skirt, the
! corsago is generally in contrast to it.
As many as three corsages are fur
nished with one expensive velvet skirt:
a low-necked bodice for elaborito
wear, a high-necked bodice, with demi
sleeves, for dinner, and a long-sleeved,
' high bodice.
The collar lias become almost as
much an objective point of tlio waist
ns the sleevos. Large rosettes ou
either side ami at the back, aiul some
times in front, give fulness arouncl
tho throat in the effect of a ruche.
Sometimes a lingo bow of laco and
chifion is placed high up on the left
side of the collar, which no longer lies
in closely-drawn folds, but is often
puffed and fulled in various ways to
increase its size.
t)iuiint Rut Full ol Meaning.
! "A crick"—"a stitoh" —"a twist" —"a
jam"—"a halt"—"a raw spot"—"a bluo
, spot - '—"deatl aches," etc., aro quoor names
1 woll known among tho ills of flosh, bone,
, muscle, nerves and joints, and nre better un
-1 derstood ns being so easily and surely cured
by St. Jacobs Oil. Tho ntimes are pointers
to what it has done and always will do read
ily. None too readily, either, Cor many of
tho Infirmities indicated by theso qtioer
nomenclatures, If neglected, often lead to
very serious results, which the great remedy
for pain stands ready to nisi at and prevont.
None the less useful Is It to have on hand al
' ways ready, for tho sudden pain Is very often
the fatal one.
The enormous supply of Florida oranges
. will make them cheap.
Dr. Kilmer's SWAMP- HOOT euros
t all Kidney and Bladder troubles.
Pamphlet and Consultation free.
Laboratory Binghamton. N. Y.
i Illinois farm lands contain 32,500,000
acres, worth 91,010,000,000.
I v 9100 Howard. 8100.
The reader of tills paper will be pleased to
learn that there Is at least one dreaded disease
that sclenco has boon able to cure In all its
stages, and that is Catarrh. Hull's Catarrh
Cure fs the only positive cure known to the
medical fraternity. Catarrh being a constitu
tional disease, requires a constitutional treat
ment. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken Internally,
acting directly on the blood an t mucous sur-
I faces of tho system, thereby destroying the
| foundation of the disease, and giving tne pa
tient strength by building up the constitution
and assisting nature lnaoing its work. The
proprietors have so much faith In its curative
powers, that they offer Ono Hundred Dollars
for any case that it tails to cure. Send for list
i of testimonials. Address
■» F. J. Chknbt & Co., Toledo, O.
|BF~SoId by Druggists, 75c.
A Child KnJoys
The pleasant flavor, gentle action and soothing
effects of Symp of Figs, when In need of a lax
, atlve, and If the father or mother l>e costive or
, bilious, the most gratifying results follow Its
use; so that It Is the best family remedy known
and every family should have a bottle.
I
I A Cure That Cares
is the kind most people desire. Such a cure is
Itlpaus Tabules, but not a cure for everything.
They are for all liver and stomach disorders
and one tabule glveß relief.
LADIES who possess the finest complexions
are patrons of Glenn's Sulphur Soap.
• Hill's Hair and Whisker Dye, fifty cents.
I Mrs. Wlnslow's Soothing Syrup for children
teething, softens the gums, reduces inflamma
tion, allays pain, cures wind colic. Sftc. a bottle
Karl's Clover ltoot, the great blood purifier,
{[lves freshness and clearness to tho oomplex
i on and curl's constipation. 3ft cts.. W ota., sl.
1 can recommer d Plio's Cure for Consump
tion to sufferers from Asthma.— E. D. TOWN
•IXO, Ft. Howard, Wis., May 4,18M.
lfaffllcted withsoreeyesuse Dr. Isaac Thomp
son's Eye- water. Druggists sell at XSo per bottle
A Savings Bank's Guarded Treasure.
The Old Norwich Savings Society,
the second richest bank of Southern
New England, has about completed its
magnificent building at Main street
and Broadway, Norwich, Conn.; it is
three stories high, of cream-colored,
unfinished stone.
The Norwich Savings Society has
deposits of over $9,000,000, and next
after the Pratt Street Savings Bank,
of Hartford, is the richest savings
bank in Connecticut. The building
will cost about SIOO,OOO. Its style is
Romanesque. The inner walls are of
fire-proof, hollock brick, iron-faoed.
The interior fittings are in marbles
and polished woods. It is absolutely
fire-proof.
The most remarkable feature of the
building, perhaps, is its wonderful
great vault, which embodies the latest
ideas for the construction of burglar
defying devioes. Tho now vault is
fourteen feet six inches long, ten feet
four inches wide, and eleven feet high.
Its walls are five inches thick, being
composed of alternate plates of iron
and steel. Its exterior is of bronze
plating. The massive and immense
out door has an automatic looking de
vice, being equipped with triple time
locks. Fifty seconds after the door
has been closed, twenty great bolts
noiselessly slip into their places, and
thev stay there until the clockwork
relieves them. The massive inner
door is also equipped with a double
combination lock and a triple time
lock. And inside this door is a day
gate of brass and wicket, which is
closed by gravity, and cannot be
opened without a hoy. Tho interior
of the vault is divided into two com
partments. In one are three com
bination safes, and there are shelves
for papers. The other compartment
is reached through a metal door five
inches thick, which has two combina
tion locks and a triple timelock. In
this chamber arc iron shelves pro
tected by gates, and on these shelves,
60 securely guarded by doors and
gates, that a man mnst turn sixtoen
locks in order to enter there, are
stored the securities of tho bank, rep
resenting millions cf dollars.—New
York Tribune.
The New Diphtheria Cure.
The oflicials of tho Marino Hospital
[Service, Washington, have been noti
fied that a firm of manufacturing
chemists at Detroit, Mich., is making
preparations for tho manufacture
of anti-toxin, tho new remedy for
diphtheria which has created such
widespread interest in Europe. This
is believed to be the first house of its
character in the United States to be
gin experiments. It is reported that
this firm has established a bacteri
ological department where tho experi
ments will be carried on under the di
section of competent scientists.
Healthy young horses have already
been inooulated with the toxin, but it
is expected that it will be three or four
months yet before the results of the
experiments can bo announced, as tho
processes are not only delicate, but
tedious. Tho strength of the toxin
obtained from tho cultures o( diph
theria bacilli, and the strength of tho
anti-toxin, is ascertained by experi
ments upon mico and guinea-pigs.—
Now York Post.
Breeches reaching to the midcalf
are mentioned as parts of the Roman
uniform B. C. 67.
BEECHAM'S PILLS
(Vegetable)
What They Are For
Biliousness indigestion sallow skin
dyspepsia bad taste in the mouth pimples
sick headache foul breath torpid liver
bilious headache loss of appetite depression of spirits
when these conditions are caused by constipation ; and con
stipation is the most frequent cause of all of them.
One of the most important things for everybody to
learn is that constipation causes more than half the sick
ness in the world; and it can all be prevented. Go by
the book.
Write to B. F. Allen Company, 365 Canal street, New
York, for the little book on CONSTIPATION (its causes con
sequences and correction); sent free. If you are not within
reach of a druggist, the pills will be sent by mail. 25 cents.
iiMiiwj.'.imii «om« to «BHQotffinn
A'J ■ll ■ t l l nVvrTTrnV should know tbat one hundred dol- \■■ ■| ■
V IVI V■ 1 IS la . 111,1J . ■ isrs pays entire exponas of tuition, U/1 U
IIMWafI nill ra TIIT ■ » I ■■■■ books, sUtionrry. board, room rent,
EASTMAN BUSI NESS COLLEGE offerscourfesof Instruction In Bookkeeping, Banking .Correspond
ence, Com'l Law, Com*l Arithmetic, rtnmanship, Stenography and Typem-Uing,the Academic Branches,
Modem Languages, <*o. Businessmensupplied with assistant*. (Hiinilon* furnUlied romp* eat
stadenta. Terms reduced to a hard times basli. Instruction Individual. Applicants any
N."y
" IF AT FIRST YOU DON'T SUC
CEED," TRY
SAPOLIO
Are You Fortified?
"When you are in a low state of health, and on the verge of
illness, there is no nourishment in the world like
Scott's Emulsion
to restore strength. Scott's Emulsion nourishes, etrength
rp - ens, promotes the making of solid
flesh, enriches the blood and tones up
the whole system.
Tor Oough«, Golds, Bore Throat, Bronohitis,
Weak Lungs, Consumption, .Scrofula, Anuria,
Lom of Flesh, Thin Babies, Weak Children, and
jHEftagS *ll conditions of Wasting.
SEnEifl Buy only the genuine! It has oar trade
mark on salmon-tolored wrapper.
rases suaa. Stndftr pamphlet on St*tfi Emuhitm. FREE.
Soott * Bowns, N. Y. All Druratete. SO oente and SI.
No Substitutes
For Royal Baking Powder. The "Royal"
is shown by all tests, official, scientific, and
tical, stronger, purer, and better in every way
than all other Baking Powders. Its superiority
is privately acknowledged by other manufacv
turers, and well known by all dealers. \
If some grocers try to sell another baking
powder in place of the " Royal," it is because of
the greater profit. This of itself is good evidence
of the superiority of the "Royal." To give greater
profit the other must be a lower cost powder, and
to cost less it must be made with cheaper and
inferior materials, and thus, though selling for the
same, give less value to the consumer.
LOOK with suspicion upon every attempt to palm off
upon you any baking powder in place of the
*' Royal." There is no substitute for the " Royal."
A Kiss Made Ills Fortune.
A kiss onoe playecl fin important
part in the life of the famous Belgian
statesman, Frere-Orban. In bis youth
the future Minister was a poor student,
bearing the simple name of Frere.
He bad great difficulty in earning
enough money to keep him nt the uni
versity till he was ready to pasß his
examination in the department of law.
The young man fell in love with a
Fraulein Orban, the daughter of a
wealthy and aristocratic family, who
opposed his suit.
"If you pass your examination well
to-morrow," said Fraulein Orbau on
the eve of the trial to her lover,
•'come to the theatre and to the box
in which I shall be sitting with my
parents."
"Will they allow me?" asked the
student.
"I shall seo to that," was the de
termined young woman's answer.
Frere was successful and entered
tho box in the evening happy but
frightened. The pretty girl, as soon
as ho had crossed the threshold, stood
up,' rushed toward him before a word
was spoken, and kissed him heartily
on tho lips. The astonished parents
were soon informed of the significance
of the kiss l>y the daughter. As many
other people had seen the young girl's
action, the parents decided to make
the best of and accepted young
Frere as a son-in-liiw on condition
that he add Orban to his name. This
he did as a matter of course and made
it famous.—New York Tribune.
With One Mule.
With one mule Mr. V. A. Hoffman,
near Holly Springs, made the follow
ing crops this season : Throe hundred
and thirty bushels of sweet potatoes,
sixty-five bushels of Irish potatoes,
spring crop, and forty bushels fall
crop ; threo bales of cotton, 100 bush
els of cotton seed, 2000 bushels of
fodder, twenty bushels of peas, five
bushels of peanuts, three tons of bay,
445 bushels of corn.—Jackson (Miss.)
Clarion-Ledger.
Mississippi's Deep Water.
A complete revolution of the Gov
ernment's system of river improve
ment is in prospect. Plans to that
end have already been made, and some
experimental work accomplished
which promises mutual benefit to tho
commercial interests of St. Louis and
the entirs country. The subject of
dredging the Mississippi River along
its whole navigable length is now re
ceiving the earnest consideration of
the Mississippi River Commission, the
members of which are at present on
an inspection tour of the big stream
from St. Louis. Mo., to the Gulf. Ex
perimental work with a dredgo spec
ially constructed promises the success
of extended operations.—New York
Press.
TO SINGERS.
The girls who put up my Medical
Discovery all goto our Warren Street
Methodist Church and two of them sin"
with great pleasure to themselves ana
others. One of them came to me one
day, saying, " Dr. Kennedy, I mustl
tell you what good the Discovery is]
doing in our church." j
" Glad to hear that," said I. '
" Well," she went on, " When I was
so hoarse last Spring, you said it
seemed like INWARD HUMOR and ad
vised me to begin at cnce with the
Discovery. I did so and in one month
the hoarseness was all gone and my
voice had improved so much several of
our church mentioned it. Of course
1 told them you had advised the Dis
covery and I was taking it. In fun,
one of the girls said, 1 want to try it
too, and the fact is that the whole
church, I might say, found out that
KENNEDY'S MEDICAL DISCOVERY
would cure their throats and pimples
and many other troubles."
"All due to Inward Ilumor," said
I, and that's what I explain in my
little book which I send to any one
who asks for it, and my Medical Dis
covery is so'.d in your town
Yours truly,
DONAI.D KENNEDY, Roxbury, Mass.
WALTER BAKER & COr
Tho Largest Manufacturers ct
LA PURE, MICH GRADE
COCOAS AND CHOCOLATES
\3H 0n Continent, hare received
WpF* HIGHEST AWARDS
from the jfreat
I mlndustrial and Food
FFL EXPOSITIONS ,
II ftfVln Eaiope andAmerica.
M 1 i'ffi T T nlike the Dutch l'rocess, no Alkft
-I***' or Other Chemicals or I)ye» ara
u.ed In snv of their preparations.
Their delirious BREAKFAST COCOA 112» absolutely
pure and soluble, and cotti ltu than one cent a cup.
•OLD BY GROCERS EVERYWHERE.
WALTER BAKER&CQ. 00riCHESTER,MASS.
She Is rather good looking
But larks sense!
She dissolves
A • Ripans • Tabule
On her tongue
Instead of
Swallowing It whole.
It does its work
Either way,
But the last is the way intended,
Nevertheless.
j ENGINES j
[ AND BOILERS j
I' For all purposes requiring T
I jiowcr. Automatic, Corliiw A
I & Compound Engines. Hor- T
,| izontai & Vertical Hoiltrs. A
W Complete Steam Plauts. v
112 B.W.PAYNE&SONS, *
5 K.Y.omcJi ,m,r * N ' Y * #
S 41 Ueyß(. A
I X Y N u-3 i
HALMSAnU-tattrrhal Bum
A Cum and Preveuta Kbeumutls.ll, Indirection, Q
I Dyspepsia, Heartburn. C tturrh and Asthma. *
M Useful la Ma'arla and Fevers. Cleans the M
112 Teeth anil l!rom'»teu the Ap» etlte. Bwreleu« \
!the Breath, Cures the Tobacco Habit. Endorsed M
by the Helical Faculty, Srnd tor 10, 13 or » T
cent package- silver. Stnmt* or Pvftoi £ ot *- §
OEO. K. IIAi.M, 140 W. Nt 29th »t.. NHW \ork. W
PHYTOLACCA MKUItV TKKAT.UKNT
for Fat an.t Attendant Ills. Oar l.callct oa this
subject Is seat Fre« and l* well wortn reading; treat
ment inexpensive audouly aafeooe known. Addrcn
BOSHK-KK k TAFKL, Pharmacists. 1011 Arch St.. PMl
adalpbla. Pa. Ritain«*a«» !>>tu hi IN lied l» IHW*