TEA GOWNS. Every woman looks well in a tea frown. Every woman should have at least three. If bho is the least bit tasty and knows anything about plan ning she can get up half a dozen love ly tea gowns for a very short stun. A tea gown of black and white glace silk is not to be despised. A draping of white chiflbn in front makes the gown very dainty and chaste looking. A dahlia-red tea gown, raado a la Medici, looks regal upon almost any woman. The sides and back piece should be tight lifting, and the front fall from tho bust to the hem in a triple box pleat. An Indian tea gown of copper col ored velveteen is something new. It ' is made after a design Indian in treat ment, but much liko tho regular Greek frock. A handsome neck ornamenta tion is mado up of ruchiug of white satin, finished with rosettes of velvet. —New York Mail and Express, "ANGEL OF THE TOMBS." It is not generally known that Mrs. Ernestine Schaffer, tho "Angel of the Tombs,'' Now York City, is a wealthy woman living in a fine house near Central Park. Slio is tho owner of a great deal of property and on Sundays and holidays may bo seen driving a team of beautiful ponies in front of one of tho finest little road carts in town. Mrs. SchatFner's time, however, instead of being spent in idleness or in seeking recreation, is devoted to a canso to which sho has resolved to give tho rest of her life. This is nothing moro or less than the work of helping people unjustly ac oused of crime and assisting others who have been guilty of wrong doing, and whosa sentences have expired. Scarce a day passes without tho "Tombs angel" extending a helping hand to somo unfortunato victim of over-zealous guardianship. She has two offices down town and engages a lawyer by the month to assist her. Oc several occasions sho has loaned out more than $20,000 for bail, and she declares that her losses are less than SIOOO. —New Orleans Picayune. SHE DANCES AND LABORS. There is a type of Mexican woman more Indian than Spaniard, and this mixture produces always a rather stuuted, though interesting, result. These men and women are both short, thick set, with heavy features, black, beady eyes and high cheek bones, but thoir physique does not make them like the corresponding typo of cob horse Englishmen. The woman is livo and a wonderful bearer of burdens, for she has the thews and sinews of a Sandow. Like that littlo Mexican mule which can carry a burden weigh ing three times as much as itself for a day with patience, sho has tho endur ing power which enables her to take upou herself tho arduous agricultural labors of a man. She dances, too, and very well, aud her silk and cotton garments of rainbow hue aro embroid ered in gold patterns. The tiniest feet and ankles ure hers and slim little hands, with tapering, artistic fingers, that tell one she is dainty in feminine arts as well as a sturdy worker.—New York Advertiser. the spinster in SOCIETr. It is difficult to see who would take her place socially, should the spinster vanish from the land. A gracious lady, tactful beyond the dreaming of tho young girl, to whom the world is still a place of enchantment, in which, half unconsciously to herself, she poses as the principal figure, the spin ster smooths away embarrassments, does tho right thing, speaks tho right •word in tho right place, and keeps tho ■wheels of life running without fric tion. To her, serene, well bred, tranquil, awnro of good and evil, tol erant of that which is mere crudity and inexperienc-, severe only where falseness and cruelty challenge, soft spoken, sweet mannered, or possibly brusque and spicy, yet nono the less charming. If a woman of wealth, the spinster holds in her capable hands tho threads of many charities, advising here, be stowing there, withholding or endow ing, ns she deems judicious. Perhaps she develops in her own person rare gifts—music, painting, embroidery— attaining in each a degree of excellence which only leisure aud taste in com bination can arrive at. Very likely she prefers to seek out gifted younger people, boys and girls, who need that some one should believe in and help them on, and to these sue is a patron saint. Many lines of work aro open to her which marriage would have closed, since the wife and mother must exclusively devote to her home sphere of action talents and symjia th:'es which the spinster may use in tho service of her age. Tnotigh the ono be more blessedly happy, the other is not without rewards and com pensations. Poor in this world's goods, tho spin ster tills equally a most important niche. Her modem education makes her an independent factor in many fields, a not-to-be-despisod competitor in the market and the shop. And since probably she need not remain a spifister unless she choose, sooiety owes her its thanks for her generos ity in kcopiug herself at its servioe, and making so winsome a feature of its moving panorama.—San Francisco Chronicle. GOSSII'. The Prin3ess of Wales has a great passion for music and has composed several pretty airs. David Livingstone's sister, Miss Liv ingstone, has just died in Edinburgh at the age of seventy-seven. Even Marion Crawford is amazed at Mrs. Humphry Ward's ability to turn out a 300,000 word novel in a few months. Tho work of photographing the sky at the Paris Observatory is carried on under the superintendence of Mme. Klumpke. Queen Victoria has been making presents of some of lier famous cash mere shawls to the wives of somo South African chiefs. There is a professional woman diver at Graveseud, England, who often makes as much as $35 a day at her submarine pursuit. It is said that the habit of smoking green tea cigarettes, which is exceed ingly injurious, is becoming popular among English women. The two daughters of the late Stephen Freston, who held the title of dean of diplomatic corps at Washington, are about to open a cooking school in Newark, N, J. J list what led up to it is not stated, but the town of Williams, Arizona, has just passed an ordinance prohibiting women from appearing on the Btreets there in bloomers. Mrs. Leland Stanford's jewels aro to be offered at public sale in New York City. The value of the collection is variously estimated at from $1,000,- 000 to $2,000,000. The tablet at retersborongh, re cently erected in memory of Mary, Queen of Scots, was paid for by sub scriptions of English women named Mary, It cost SSOOO. Mamio Newhall Jackson, of Read ing, Penn.. has wagered with a girl friend that she will have proposed to at least one young man before leap year is four months old. A woman, Fratilein Marie Schwartz, has been made director of the girls' public school in Vienna, Austria. AH the male teachers in the city i>rotcsted against the appointment. Mrs. Keeley, the venerable actress whose ninetieth birthday was recently in London, sang the "Mer maid's Song" in a performance of O'o eron, conducted bv Weber himself, in 1826. The dress to be worn by the Em press of Russia to the coronation core monies next spring has just been or dered in Paris. It will bo decorated with pearls and gold, and will cost $200,000. A favorable decision has been arrived at in Hungary with regard to the ad mission of women to thh Budapest University and their participation in the study of medicine, pharmacy and philosophy. A Rushvillo (Indiana) man, after n hard struggle, overpowered a burgler, whom he caught in his house, and dis covered that it was a woman. Jlc chivuronsly let her go without ascer taining her identity. Mrs. Louis Pond, of Dedham, Me., has carried on her farm alone since her husband's death some tinio since. She does all her hauling and plowing with a bull, which she puts in harness like a horse and controls with a rope fastened to a ring in his nose. Mr 3. Elizabeth Anderson, widow of General Anderson, of Port Sumter fame, has the flag which her husband planted over that fortification locked in a fireproof vault in her house in her house in Washington. She ex pects eventually to present it to the Government. Miss Mamie Dickens, the eldest (laughter of the great novelist, makes her home at quaint olil Dunton rec tory, in the town of Brentwood, in Essex, England. The love of flowers, which with her amounts to a passion, is fully gratified in this beautiful coun try. Her real life work consists in ministering to the poor and sick am' needy. FASHION NOTES. Small checks aro much used this winter for the vests of tailor-made gowns. Velvet and thick Indian silks are the handsomest materials for winter tea gowns. Pearls or emeralds in combination with jet can now be worn for mourn ing in Paris. Ostrich feather boas are worn alto gether with opera coats and are of every conceivable shade. Very large side combs in Marie An toinette fashion are replacing tho small aide combs so much worn of late. For dainty outdoor wear, Thibet goat and Korean fox look extremely well on dark colored cloths or brocades". If you have a dress which is very low in the neck, get a Marie Antoin ette fichu and drape it over the shoul ders. Tho bolero front seems to be still such a favorite that one sees in it all sorts of 6tuffs, for women of all sorts of ages. A lovely model for a tea jaoket is made of vieux rose velvet. Tho coat fronts are ornamented with miniature buttons. Gold hatpins studded with stones have become elaborate affairs, and are used instead of the gold hairpins for merly in vogue. In speaking of blouses to wear with skirts, some of tho prettiest are mado with applications of laoo on black mouaseline de soie. A beautiful outside jacket is made of maize-colored brocade with water fall trimmings of fine black net, spangled with jewels. Carved rings of East India gold are straight bands the size of a wedding ring, the color of the metal and the decorations being thoroughly Oriental. A very pretty every-day gown for a woman no longer young is of black cloth, the skirt plain, the bodice made with blaok satin basques and cut bolero in front. Topaz brooches are also in great favor, their golden-browu color com ing out with great beauty when treated, as are amethyst.", with p*arl and diamond frames. White gloves and white veils doited with black show no disposition to be tako themselves to the background of popularity. They hold their own remarkably well is spite of their tnm [ mery appearance. lIOtteKIIOLU AFfAUtS HOUSK PLANT LOU*. Keep them in the aun. Keep them as far as from gas and furnace heat as possible. Keep them wet, warm and clean. Keep soap out of the writer. Keep a brush or carpet-rag to wash them. Keep the soil loose. Never pull off a loaf; the plant may bleed to death. Clip the withered tips of palms New York World. A DELICIOUS SWEETMEAT. Ginger pears aro a delicious swect meat. TTse a hard pear, peel, core and cut the fruit into very thin slices. For eight pounds of fruit after it has been sliced use the same quantity of sugar, the juice of four lemons, one pint of water, and half a pound of ginger root, sliced thin. Cut the lemon rinds into as long and thin strips as possi ble. Place all together in a preserv ing kettle and boil slowly for an hour. —New York Advertiser. IIOW TO BOAST THE SUCCULENT OYSTEK. Select large oysters and have them scrubbed thoroughly, then place them in the oven in a large tin with the round side of the shells down, so that when they open the liquor will not bo lost. As soon as they do open remove the upper shell, sprinkle them with salt, pepper and chopped parsley, add a little butter and servo hot as possi ble on a bed of watercross. Oysters served in this way make an excellent first course at dinner if accompanied by thin slices of brown bread and but ter.—Ladies' Home Journal. CUSf ARD SOUFFLE. A really dainty dessert is custard souffle, which is made by moltiug one ounce of fresh butter, sprinkling into it a half ounce of flour and stirring it till smooth and well blendod. Pour over it a full gill of boiling milk and stir it over the tiro for seven or eight minutes. Beat the yolk of an egg very fresh with one ounce of caster sugar, add this to the milk and turn it all out to cool. When cold, add to it the white of the egg beaten very stiff and bako in a well buttered pie dißh in a very sharp oven. Servo at once, either plain or accompanied by cream or boiled custard sauce.—New Yor> Times. ItICE FOE GARNISHING. A rice border makos an attractive looking dish of any warmed-over meat, fowl or fish. Wash a cup of rice and put it in a double boiler with three cups of white stock ; place over tho fire and cook thirty minutes. Add half a teaspoonful of salt and two tablespoonfuls of butter and let it simmer twenty minutes longer. Beat the yolk of two eggs with three table spoonfuls of cream andonoof chopped parsley, and add to tho rice tivo minutes before it is ready to take from the tiro. Butter a border mould and pack tho rice into it. Let tho mould stand in the heated oven ten minutes and then turn it out on a hot plalter. Fill the centre with tho prepared meat. —New York World. HOUSEHOLD 111 NTS. Variety is the best culinary sluice. A good cleanser for paint is weak lyo or salcratus water. Always buy rye in small quantities and keep it well covered. Butter should be kept in stone if possible and never in tin. Lard and drippings should bo kept in earthorn ware and should not be salted. Sugar is just as cheap in small quantities as in large, and it is better to keep only a little on hand at a time. Provide on Saturday for Monday, so as not to take up the fire with cook ing or time in running errands on washing day. Arrowroot, tapioca, sago and all such articles should be bought in small quantities aud kept in glass jars or covered boxes. Bathe your eyes frequently in weak alum water if they aro weakened by close work, Buch as painting, embroid ery or reading. Buckwheat, rice and hominy skould be kept in small tightly covered boxes or in tin cans, and should be ex amined often as vermin is apt to infest them. Cook a peeled white onion in tho same pot with your mushrooms, and if they do not turn black you may eat them witji a feeling of tolerable se curity. Never put away clem clothes with out examining every piece to see if it is in any way out of order. Stock ings, especially slrjuld bo oarefully darned. Vinegar is best purchased by the half barrel or the keg, nnd should be made of wine or cider. It should never be putin glazed ware, as tho glazing is eaten off anl forms with it a poisonous compound. Entangled Birds. Birds that employ hair in the build ing of their nests sometimes come to grief by hanging, but I should say very seldom, indeed, in the following singular manner: A gentleman who had a number of colts upon his farm one day noticed a small bird entangled in the long hair of the tail of one of them. The little creature had evi dently been in search of material wherewith to line its nest, and, by Bome unaccountable accident, had be come onsnared in the unkempt hair of the colt's tail. Cases of birds getting their feet en tangled in bits of yarn or string are not at all uncommon, especially in the breeding season, and whenever tno victim of this kind of a mishap hap pens to get tho impediments fastened in a tree or among stones, death is pretty suro to bo the result, unless prompt human aid is forthcoming. In the spring of the year, as everybody knows, the dead leaves of tho pampas grass fall to tho ground aud curl up like shavings from a carpenter's bench. A Fiold correspondent mentions find ing a poor robin which had accident ally got one of theso pieces coiled around its neck so tightly that it was unable to feed and died of starvation. —Cornhill Magazine. In 1868 Japan exported 131 toils ol sulphur; in 1892, H,59!) tons. SCIENTIFIC AND uSDUOTKIAL. In large doses mate le said to be strongly emetio. Distilled water is recommended as a solvent to act upon the earth salts in the blood and expel them from tho body. A prize of S3OOO has been offered by the German Hygienic Association for a paper on the efficionoy of electric heaters. That tuberculosis is increased by living in thickly settled communities is shown by statistics nolleoted by Dr. Petit for 662 French towns. A telegram from New York to Aus tralia has togo nearly 20,000 miles, 15,000 of which are by submarine cable, and it is handled by fifteen operators. A Swiss scientist has been testing the presence of bacteria in mountain air, and finds that not a single microbe exists beyond an altitude of 2000 feet above tho level of the sea. ** Attention has been drawn to the fact that the coal oil used in the lamps in the cars of the Manhattan Railway Company, of New York City, is 150 degrees below the test required by law. A new kind of water-color paper, the sheets of which can be warranted to be free from blemishes, is to be mado by a process discovered by Mr. North, ussociate of the Royal Academy. Only the purest water is employed by the Chinese in washing the finer grades of silk. Ordinary well water in its natural state is unsuitable, and is purified by placing a quantity of inollusks in it for a day. These prey on any impure organic matter and act as filters. The island of Zealand boasts of an amphibious boat, which makes a daily trip across threo lakes and the isth muses which separate them, making its land trip on wheels which run on a track. The seventy passengers mako tho entire voyage—if it can be called such—without disembarking. Cripple Creek will bo the first min ing camp in the United States to adopt electricity as a motive power to travel from one mining point to another— a journey that heretofore has been made afoot or by mulebaok. A double track-road is to be built to take in all the surrounding hills and all the mines of importance. J. L. Allen, a telegraph operator at Lorotto, in Marion County, Ky., has invented a railroad clock that is » marvel of ingenuity. It registers each train as it passes and the time at which it passes, and an accompanying device gives warning to incoming trains if anothor train lias passod tho station within fifteen minutes. "Utile Kentucky." "Little Kentucky," as it might bo .tubbed very appropriately, is located opposite Island No. 10, where Ken tucky and Tennessee meet. The river, by gradually cutting out the Kentucky bank, had worn off a narrow strip of land, until one bright morning several people who lived on this side of tho line woke up to find themselves on tho other side. In other word?, the swift current had washed away the neck of earth made tho extreme south western corner ot this State a part of tho commonwealth of Kentucky. The section of territory thus separated from its parent, as it were, is ten miles long and five miles wide--quite a good mouthful to take in at ono bite, even for tho greedy Mississippi. Every well-posted river man and every person who is acquainted with the geography and typography of this State will understand how such n thing could happen. Right at the State line the river forms a loop about ten miles long. The loop extends up into Fulton County. The swift stream has simply drawn this noose tight and formed an island out of what was formerly a peninsula. Hickman is the closest town of any size to tho place where all this land making oc curred. Darnell, a little hamlet over in Obion County, Tennessee, is qnita near the spot. The boundary line between Ken tucky and Tennessee has always been rather complicated down about Island No. 10, owing to the peculiar bend in the Mississippi mentioned above. The lakes, bayous and sloughs which bisect that corner of Fulton County iu all directions also serve to mix matters. The biting off of such a large strip of soil will add to the general confusion, and the question may arise as to whether "Little Kentucky" will here after belong to the domain of the volunteer State or still bo a part and parcel of the dark and bloody ground. —Puducah News. The Shop lias Drains. Tho tendency of successful bnsTness is to enlargement; and with enlarge ment comes a new multitude of agent?, a new varioty of markets, a new Uiml of competitive danger, to avert which absolutely requires mind. The verj number of his employes compels the great tradesman of our day to become a judge of character; the very expan sion of his market drives him to study many countries, many tariff.-', inanj laws; and his extreme danger from competition makeß of him an artist, u chemist, and a critio. The process it slow, beeause lie is always governed by tho idea of selling, and he often learns rather to know public taste than to know what tasto is, and to seek in his purchases the populai rather than tho good; but still the process must dovelop his mind.—The Spectator. Itirds Make a Nest ol Slcal. A curious gift has been made to the Natural History Museum of Boletta. This gift consists of a bird's nest con structed entirely of steel. There ar> a great many watchmakers at Soletta and in the vieinity of the workshop there are always the remains of the ol< springs of watches, which have beei cast aside. Lastßummer a watchmakei discovered this curious bird's nest whioh had been built in a tree in hi court yard by a pair of water wagtails It measures ten centimeters in oiroum ference, and is made solely of watel springs. When the birds had fledgei their brood the watchmakers secure their unique nest, as au interesting proof of the intelligence of birds ii adapting anything which comes with in their reach.—London News. One Woman'* Trio ol Triplet*. In •» almost inaccessible mountain fastness, in Mendoeino Connty, eight een miles northeast of Ukiah, is the home of nine children, all triplets. The mother of this remarkable family is Mrs. George Walters. All the family are well and happy, and the last trio are as healthy a sot of young sters as oan be found anywhere. The Walters home is in an out-of the-way part of the Mendocino forest district. Two of the sets of triplets were by Mrs. Walters's first husband, Orvillo Orrin Oates, a Missonrian, Three years elapsed between the birth of the first and second triplets, and twelve years between tho birth of the second and third sets. Mrs. Walters's maiden name was Ellen Elaine Emmery. She was born in Quebec about 1835. She met her first husband during the Centennial Exposition at Philadelphia. After their marriage they moved to Alton, Mo. It was at Alton in 1870 tho first triplets were born. They were named Wheeler Henry, James Rutherford and Marthn Christine, being two boys and one girl. Tho family moved to Cali fornia in the fall of 1880, and settled at first in Inyo County. Prom thero they moved to tho Little Bear Valley, San Bernardino County. There, in October, 1882, the second triplets were born. They were all girls, and wero named Matilda Ann, Rebecca Elizabeth and Mario Lonise. While out on a prospecting tour, seeking a fortune for his fast-growing family, Mr. Oates became lost in the vast deserts of Western Arizona, and was never again heard from. The widow then determined to move to the upper part of the State with her six children. They traveled north bv easy stages, and on the way she met Mr. Walters. He holped her and her children along tho way, proposed mar riage, and was promptly accepted. They kept on their way north, seek ing for some far-away valley where they could set up their home. They found it in the location already de scribed. There, in June, 1804, the last triplets were born. They were named Grover Eldred, Jasper Otis and Ruth Ellen. Tho children of the first two 6cts of triplets do not resemble one another at all, but the last, the babies, look so mush alike, that they cannot bo told apart. The only way to distinguish them is to dress them differently, and when put to bod they wear different kinds of night dresses, so that the mother in tho morning can tell which is which. -San Francisco Examiner, It Was the Bull. At a village near Accrington thero is a certain Wesleyan chapel where a bass viol has been introduced to assist the choir. On a recent Sunday, while the parson was in the middle of tho sermon, a big bull got out of his pas ture and came swaggering down tho road, growling as ho came. Tho min ister heard the low bellow, and look ing up toward the singers'seats with a grave face, said: "I would thank the musicians not to tune during service timo; it annoys me." The choir was surprised, but noth ing was said. Pretty soon tho bull gavo another grumble, and then tho parson became fruutic. lie stopped short, and looking directly at the bass viol player, said: "I new particularly request Mr. L. that he will not tunc his instrument while I am preaching." This was mo:e than the fiddler could stand. Popping up in his seat, he snapped out: "It isn't me, parson—it isn't me I It's the old town bull."—Loudon Tele graph. The Absence of It. If there is any truth in the saving that hap piness is the absence of all pain, mental and physical, the enjoyment of it can only !>o found iu heaveu. But so far as the physical is concerned, it is within easy reach; at least measurably so, as far us euro will go. Tho sum of human misery in this line is made up of greater or less degrees of physical suffor im.'. The minor aches and paius which afflict mankind are easy to reach and as easily cured. There are none in tho wholo category, which, if taken in time, cannot bo cured. They must insomo form afflict the nerves, the bones, the muscles and joints of tho human body. They are all moro or less hurtful and wastoful to the system. St. Jacobs Oil is mado to euro them, to search out hidden pain spots, and to euro promptly in a true remedial and lasting way. Very, very many have not known happiness for years till they used it.and very many uro Shutting off cure and happiness because they on't uso it. Fifteen million tons of ico woro usod in constructing the ico palace at Loadviile, Col. Dr. Kilmer's SWAMP- KOOT euros ull Kidney and liladdor troubles. Pamphlot and Consultation froo. Laboratory Bimthamton. N. V. Two British military offlcers havo boon detailed to orßauize the British Guiana police. SINGERB AND AIITISTK GENERALLY are users «112 "ifidll'llV Branchial Troches" for Hoarseness and Throat Troubles. They afford instant relief Sparrow heads are still worth a cent apiece in Illinois by way of a bounty. Earliest Vegetables Always Fay. That's so, tho editor hears Mr. Market Gardner say. Well, why don't you have them? Simply becauso you don't plant Salzer's Northern grown seeds. His vegeta bles are bred to earliness and thoy never dis appoint you. Salzer is the largest grower of vegetables, farm seeds, grasses, clovers, po tatoes, etc. Ir YOU WILL CUT THIS OCT AND SEND IT TO the John A. Salzor Seed Co., LaCrosso, Wis., with 10c. postage, you will get sample pack age of Early Bird Itadish (ready iu 10 day?) and their groat catalogue. Catalogue alone, se. postage. (A.) Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup for children teething, softens the gums, reduces inflamma tion, allays pain, cures wind colic. 25c. a bottle Piso'sCure for Consumption has saved m< many a doctor's bill.—S. F. HAKUV, Hopkins Place. Baltimore, Md., Dec. 2,1894. Feed The nerves upon pure blood, and they will be your faithful servants aud not tyrannical masters; you will not be nervous, but stroug, cheerful and happy. To havo pure blood, and to keep it pure, take Hood's Sarsaparilla t-'OOd'S Pill* cure all Liver Ills. gTicciu-. nBIIISI Morphine Ilablt Cured In 10 IIVIIIH to 20 djii. Nona j till rured. VI Iwm DR.J.STEPHEN!, L«banon.Ohi». Rnrr.li For r«nn«yl*Mi,ln. The farmer* of Pennsylvania nro to lie congratulated. M. M. Luther, Kast Troy. Ph., grew over COO bushels Salzer's Silver Mlno Outs on one measured ncre. Think of It! Now there nro thirty thousand farmers going to try and beat Mr. Luther and win S2OO in gold' and they'll do it, In New York. Ohio, Pennsylvania and the east. Will you bo one of them? Then there is Silver King Barley, cropped on poor soil 110 bus per acre in 1895. Isn't that wonderful—and corn '230 bus. and pota toes and grasses and clovers, fodder plants, etc., etc. Freight i; cheap to Now York tuid the cast. IF VOC WILL COT THIS otrr *:;tj SEND it Willi 10c. postage to the John A. Salzer Seed Co., La Crosse, Wis., ynu will receive their mam moth catalogue and ten packages grains and grasses, Including above oats, froo. (A.) STATE or OHIO, CITV or TOLEDO, I LUCAS COUNTY. (**• FRANK J. CHBNEV makes oath that he Is th« senior partner of the firm of F. J. CHUNKY & Co., doing business in the City of Toledo, County and State aforesaid, and that said tlrm will pay the sum of ONK HUNDRED DOL LARS for each anil every case of C itarrh that cannot be cured by tho uso of HALL'S CATARRH CDIIE. , FIIANK J. CHENEY. .•-worn to Vefore me and subscribed In my presence, thijflth day of December, A. D. 1580. ,— *—I A. W. ULEASON, J SEAL F ' —— ' Nntam Pub ic. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally and ucts directly on the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. S.urt for lest'montaU, free. F. J. CHENEY & Co., Toledo. O. tySo'.d by Druggists, 73c. A Good Dog is Worth Looking After, If you own a dog and think anything of him, you should be able to treat him intelligently when ill and understand bim sufficiently to detect symptom!! of illness. The dog doctor book written by II Clay Glover, 11. V. S.. spe cialist in canine diseases to the principal ken nel clubs, will furnish this information, it is a cloth bound, handsomely illustrated book, and will be sent postpaid by the Book Publish ing House, 134 Leonard St., X. Y. City, on leeelpt of 40 cts. in postage stamps. FITS stopped free by l)n. KLINE'S GIIFAT N'LIIVK It ESTOHEH. No lits after lirst dayV use. Marvelous cures. Treatise and f2.no trial ! ot tle free. Dr. Kline, 931 Arch St., Phila., Pa. DON'T Wheeze and cougli when Hale's Honey of Horeliound and Tar will cure. Pike's Toothache Drops cure in one minute. ASK YOUR DEALER FOR W. L. DOUGLAS ®3. SHOE BES «UV HE If you pay •# to •(! for shoes, ex amine the W. L. Douglas Shoe, and 9 see v. hat a good shoe you can biry for ■ OVER 100 STYLES AND WIDTHS, S. CONGRESS, BUTTON, \ mid LACK, made <ll all \ kinds of the best selected leather by skilled work \ ; men. We 53 s,,o * , than any manufacturer In the world. None genuine unless ryme price is stamped on the bottom. i A your dealer for our 85, /aCi Jiff 84. 53.50, 9'4..10, Shoes; and 51.75 for boys. mtr M TAKE NO SUBSTITUTE. If yourdealer / Jf cannot supply you, send to fac tory, enclosing price and 36 cents to pay carriage. State kind, style I jffr of toe (cap or plain), size and E jßf width. ()ur Custom Dept. will fill your order. Send for new lllus trated Catalogue to liox H. W. L. DOUGLAS, Brockton, Mass 112 lesson Cooking* Two Cupfuls of Hecker's Self-Raising Buckwheat, Two Cupfuls of Cold Water, Stir a few times, Bake on a hot griddle. Takes about a Minute. BUCKWHEAT. THE AKRMOTOR {!(,. «W5 b»ii inn «OTtd'« windmill busiuess, because it lias reduced tne cost of Wind power to l.'O what It was.; It bus many branch 112 bouses, aud supplies Its goods and repairs A at four door. It can and does luru'sh a - better article for less money than I VgffLa others. It makes Pumplug and jPBSyi tieared. Steel, Galvanized after* Completion wludmlllSv fflldug r and Fixed Steel Towers. Steel Buzz Saw Frames, Steel Feed Cutters and Feed Grinders. On application It will name one of these artfcles that It wIU furnish uutlt January Ist at 1/3 the usual price. It also makes Tanks and Pumps ot all kiads. Send fur Fsrtsrv: 12th, Rockwell aud Fillmore Streets, Chlcaifr Q UMTm \ »»$.-i a dav*. ah-ohuely sure; we fur nlsh the work aud truch you ti*o jon work ill Ih® lo»«licy where you five; jUA^^a'. 7>i send us your address and we will ezpluiu yWpWjHßgg husiiiPM fullv, rt-meiuber we Kuar> _ M w ork, aWhitely kii'iJj o«r»f P. I. MORUAX, lUmifr. Hmt IF. PfcTKOIT. Best Cough Syrup. Tastes Good. Use PJi iu time. Sold by drupaiHs. m r\ I It's a slow process, )rj / usually—education, development, and . / ' Pearline. Pearline's success has been a wonder, from the start. All the / Ijj /J \\ more so when you consider the I/I \\ many poor imitations of it, which Ifji 1 • \\ claim to make washing easy. * \ \ These things tend to confuse £ V I \\ people, of course. I hey re tII j forced on the public by WL>\ peddlers, prizes, substi ytv 1 ' 1 tution, etc. No doubt _ they're often thought to ' iiiffi be the same as Pearline. \Vc protest. Don't judge Pearline by the company it has to keep. '" 1 44 Thrift is a Good Revenue/' Great Saving Results From Cleanliness and SAPOLIO ©jSTEj ENJOY® Both the method, and results Trlien Syrup of Figs is taken; it is pleasant and refreshing to tho ta?to, and acts gently yet promptly on the Kidneys, Liver and Bowels, cleanses the sys tem effectually, dispels colds, head aches and fevers and cures habitual constipation. Svrup of I'igs is *" only remedy of its kind ever duced, pleasing to the taste p ceptable to the stomach, pr its action and truly beiiefl effects, prepared only fron healthy and agreeable sul many excellent qualities c to all and have made 1 popular remedy known. Syrup of Figa is 112 cent bottles by a)' gists. Any rel> may not have : cure it pi wishes to tr, substitute. CALIFORNIA SAN FRA?.. LOUISVILLE, KY. 25'Sf? POUI lA 10S <*AMILY learned. hrns lay. ( liol< d iterri Cal'l. A.M.IiANO,Box 32 J , CJiioaß« Mr. Charlos S. Fattcrson, tho pub lisher ot Xeiv*;>ap rd >:»», sny.s that it Is not often that he gets so enthusi iistte ;is lio doe.-s over JlipansTnbulea. Almost with the regularity of clock work lie used to feel, at a' out eleven o'clock, that something had gone wrong with his breakfast, especially was tills true if he had had a restless night, as is no uncommon thing with head-workers. "My sto:na.!i,' said Sir. r.Uterson, "is under tho standard as to strength, and it seems nt these times to act only in lifl'er pntiy, and dually to stop. Clouds come beforo my visiou and a .-liglit nausea Is felt. Then I reach out for my Kipans. (Years of the sort or tiling related have made me know the symptoms as we'l as my nam '.I Down goes one of the blessed llttlo concentrated boons, and in a few minutes the visual clouds lift, dis comfort passes away, stomach apparently resumes operations, an 1 at 12.30 or 1 o'clock I go out for my usual rather hearty luueheon — all iu delightful contrast With my former practically ruined afternoons—that ] sought to escape by fasting an I various doses." r.lp.ioa Tubules arc so'd liv ilrugglat*. or by mill If tUt price (50 cents a b.ix) is s.-nt t > Th" tttprn* Chemical Com; any, No. lu Spruca »t., XJW lork. Sample vial. I 1 ) oents. _ MEN AND BOYS! Want to learn all about a Af Horse ? Row to Pick Out a A Good One ? Know itnperfcc tlcns and so Guard against \ Jl. Fraud? Detect Disease an I / X >wm " "/ \ Effect a Cure when same Is / \ / \ possible / Tell the age by 112 \ / V the Teeth? What to call the Different Farts of tu* Animal/ How to Shoe a Horse Proparly ? Allthl and other Va uabls Information can he obtAiueJ by reading our 10fl-I'A(«E 1 ATE II lIOHSR BOOK, which we will forward. pjjß ja.d, on receipt of only '«ij cents in stamp*. BOOK PUB. HOUSE. 134 Leonard St.. Haw York City x v N U-3 Raphael, Angelo. Rubens, Tnijo The M LINEKE" are tho Best and Most EcOftDftnlt cal Collars and Culls worn: they are made of nn« cloth, both sides finished auk A, and beinK reveinfc ble. one collar is equal to two ot any other kiua. '/he,/ fit well, wear well an{ look well. A bo*o. Ten Collars or Five Pairs ol Cufla for Twenty-Fivf Collar and Pair of Cnffs by mall for Bij Cents. Name style and size. Address REVERSIBLE COLLAR COMPANY, 77 Franklin 8t. 112 New York. 27 Kilby St., Boston. DDlllll and WHISKY habtiscnrcO. Book>«n UrIUIH ntF.F. I?r. H. 4. ITQ'JLLEV, ATLANTA, UA KNfflON®« S 3 vl» iik lust wiir. att>
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers