N REALITY. Prices of Ijuid Boom \Tlierev«r Kx-Prell dent Cleveland Realties. Grover Cleveland is a mascot for real estate boomers. He has made money in large sums for landholders in three widely separated parts of the country. When he was married, ten years ago, during his first term, Mr. Cleveland bought for $21,500 a place of twenty eight acres in the suburbs of Washing ton. Until that purchase the sight liness of the locality had not been recognized. The land was in small small farms and there were few Wash ington people whp had homes along the unfashionable pike. The President made some alterations in the com fortable old stone house and lived there in the summer time. When he went out of office, after two or three seasons' occupancy of "Red Top," as the place was called, from the brightly painted roof, he sold his twenty-eight acres for $135,000. But previously thousands of acres surrounding had changed hands. Cleveland Heights had been laid out, an electric road had been built and all of the accessories of real estate speculation on a grand scale had been applied. Mr. Cleveland's next venture was in a desolate tract of land on Buzzard's Bay. He went there on the recom mendation of Joseph Jefferson, found good Ashing and bought liberally of the rocky and sandy acres. The his tory of Red Top repeated itself, save that Mr. Cleveland did not sell whei the boom came. Buzzard's Bay has come into prominence as one of the choicest localities on the Atlantic coast for summer homes. The land has gone up and up until the advances parallel those of the first neighborhood to which Mr. Cleveland lent his name. And now the news is that Princeton acres, and especially that part in which the ex-President has invested, are soaring in values. They Got Jlned. "The most amusing nuptial event 1 ever officiated at," said good old "Squire Hiram Cate, of Kentucky, the marrying magistrate of the Penny rile,' who died not long since, "was in the winter of '7l. I was awakened one cold night alout midnight by vig orous knocking on my front door. I went to the window, and by the light of the moon could see two forms on my front porch. I raised the window and asked what was wanted. A wom an of the backwoods type, answered in about this language: 'Why, hits us, Jim an' me, as wants to git hitch ed.' I hurried down, and on opening the door found a poorly clad, flnnicky looking man of about forty, led by a determined looking woman of perhaps thirty. I could see that the female was the business part of the proces sion, and addressed myself to her, asking why they had chosen such a late hour for their 'hitching affair.' This was the reply in quick, snappy sentences: 'Why, hits this way. Jim Owens is bin a-sparkin' uv me, 1 low, for fo' yeres, an' I got fetched tired uv his mincin' wurds, so tuk an' ast him to-nite, I did, ef he wuz evei gwine ter pop. I tol' him, I did, 1 'spected him 'votedly, and ef he wanted me, to cum on an' less git jlned tonite, er I wuz gwine to take F)etch Bog gesses' boy, Ilez, an' settle down. Jim lowed—he did—he reckined he'd cum, tho' it wuz a long trip. So I took an' fetched him in pap's mill waggin'. Didn't I, Jim? Jim nodded a doleful assent. In answering the questions 1 put to the groom in the ceremony the brawny better nine-tenths gave thf bashful spouse about to be the cue, anc she paid me a half dollar, taking the money from Jim's pocket book. II beat any wedding I ever witnessed, 1 think." CnblndliiK China Women's Feet. Are any Chinese women's feet un bound in consequence of the exertions of foreigners? Ye 3; but no more than European ladies are they going to walk barefoot through the streets to con vince doubters. And what Is far more important,, numbers upon numbers oi little girls are remaining unbound in missionary schools at Amoy. Hang chow and all up and down the river. And at parties ladies who so far as we know are untouched by Christian Influences yet show with pride their soft-footed little girls, saying, "My old people bound my feet, but I will never bind hers." It is the upper circles of China who are giving up binding. The man on the streets yet binds and loves bound feet, just as in Singapore all the Straits-born Chinese have cast off binding, if it be not the very poorest of the poor. Same Pay for Everybody. An aged Georgia negro, Nathan by name, is employed by a gentleman prominent in State politics. That Nathan also has an eye to political favors is shown by the following con versation which recently took place between him and his employer: "Marse Jim," said Nathan, "is you gwine in dis yere race for Governor?" "Haven't thought about it." "Well, ef yer does run, an' gits elect ed, will you give me a job?" "Certainly I would remember you, Nathan. What would you like?" "Well, suh, I'd des like ter black boots roun' de Capitol." "And what would you expect for that service?" "Well, suh," he replied, "I should say $4 a day would be reasonable. Das what de yuther legislators get." Some Day, The Fair One— l suppose jrou will marry, though, when the goideu oppor tunity offers, won't you? The Cautious One—lt will depend upon bow much cold there is In th« opportunity. RUR/ - Postuiusim -1-i.iu . .1 i Uiciti Deal of iutfirrst In t!i« Mutter. Postmaster-General Gary is tailing a great deal of Interest In the matter of the extension of free mail delivery in the rural districts. The Department was given $50,000 with which to make experiments in this line during the present fiscal year, and those already tried have proved very successful. In Great Britain the free delivery of letters was begun about fifty years ago. All mails are delivered at the offices of the addresses without extra charge, the rural postmen making a daily walk of from fifteen to eighteen miles, and receiving a compensation of 18 shil lings, or about $4.50 per week. Pen sions are granted in case of permanent incapacity after ten years of active duty. Rurai posta are believed to be self-supporting. In 1830 rural delivery was establish ed in France. Even the most outly ing hamlets of the country received at least one free delivery per day. The postmen have a right to retire on a pension after serving fifteen years and reaching the age of 45. Eight hours is the maximum time of employment. In the German Empire a small charge of from 10 to 20 pfennings (2 to 4 cents), according to weight, Is made for the delivery of mails in the rural districts. The hours of service of foot carriers are from eight to nine daily. In Austro-Iluugary a small extra charge, ranging from Va cent to lVa cents, is made for delivering letters and small packages in the rural dis tricts. The service is not self-support ing. Rural free delivery prevails all over Belgium, the pay of the carriers be ing graded according to the cost of the living in the localities where they serve. Their average trips are sixteen or eighteen miles daily. Participation in political campaigns is forbidden, and their tenure is secure during good behavior. After a certain term of ser vice they are entitled to a pension. In Switzerland, the home of the Universal Postal Union, there is at least one free delivery a day in every hamlet. The system has been in operation since 1848. Why Beef Was Cheap in Texas. The civil war that raged in our land a third of a century ago operated in a dimetrically opposite manner on the two sections of the United States known as the Southwestern and the Northwestern States. In the former, composed chiefly of the State of Tex as, all access to outside markets was cut off to live stock. The Union forces patrolled with gunboats the Mississippi River, and no herds could be taken across to feed the main rebel armies; cattle could not be shipped to Cuba for fear of almost certain cap ture by war vessels on the Gulf pas sages, and they could not be safely driven north or west. So Texas's 3,000,000 cattle multiplied like vermin in an army camp, upon the ranges of Texas, where they ceased to have a cash value and became only an article of barter, seventy-five head be ing exchanged for a good saddle horse and 100 head for a two-horse wagon. The stoics in the grazing regions ex changed goods and wares for them, fixing a ridiculously low scale of prices for the live stock, payable in goods, &c., from the store. This state of af fairs continued until two years after the war closed. In the Northwest the supply of live stock was depleted to feed the Union armies, atul for two or three years af ter the close of the war remained scarce and dear in price, so that the masses of laboring men and factory operatives could scarce afford beef up on their tables oftener than once a week, and then ii was of the cheaper cuts of the carcass. < until* of the* World. The Suez Canal is about 100 miles in length, and cost $1,000,000 per mile for its construction. The Corinth Canal is 4 miles in length, and cost, com pleted, with its approaches, $1,000,000 per mile. The proposed Nicaragua canal will cost per mile, with its ter minals and approaches, certainly not less, and probably more than the sum named. The canals of Suez and Cor inth are real maritime canals, built without locks, upon the sea-level. The one, that of Corinth, is situated in the temperate zone, where the rainfall is 37 or 40 inches per annum. The other, that of Suez, is located in a region without rain. Neither of these is threatened in its course by streams liable to sudden and perilous floods, so common in the tropical reigion of Central America. These two great works afford no real parallel to the Nicaragua project, either as to cost or feasibility. The one work parallel to this undertaking is very near, very like it, both in place and circumstance; it is that of the Panama Canal across the l6thmus of Darien. A Maddening Ride. For an hour and a quarter a mine engineer near Bourne, Ore., was whirled around with the fly wheel, in to which he iiad fallen, bat when he recovered consciousness after the wheel was stopped it was found that he was not seriously hurt. The wheel was a twenty-foot one and was mak ing 125 revolutions a minute. l)ivor;e Court nt Borne, Judge Macdougall, of Toronto, Ont,, urges that the Dominion of Canada should have a divorce court of Its own, to which the humblest citizen could appeal, and hiive his cast, heard with out going, ai now, to the Dominion Parliament, where the great expense Is almost prohibitive to him. THE LIVING CHURCH. ALONE WITH GOD. As Moses climbed the mountain peak, That he alone with God might speak, I, too, with God do often seek To be alone. And.though I may not find the place Where Moses stood, nor lead a race, God gives me a shining face — His grace I own. Each morning brings me some new care; > To God I go in secret prayer And ask for strength to help me bear My weight of woe. He waits for me. I know that I 1 Shall find Him there when I draw nigh To talk with Him. We can rely On Him I know. Alone with God? Yea, let me spend A moment with my God and Friend, That from His mount I may descend With power divine. How great the privilege to be Sometime with Him who made the sea And earth and sky. Eternity With Him is mine. —Harold McGlll Davis. LOYALTY TO THE TRUTH. "There are not a few Baptists nowa days, it is to be feared," says the New York Examiner (ESapt.), "who are members of our churches not so much because of an intelligent comprehen sion of the peculiar truths for which we stand, as from the circumstances of birth, environment, or some other rea son than the one that should control in so serious a matter—loyalty to the truth as revealed in the New Testa ment. They do not have a firm grip upon the great principles which under lie and compel our separate existence ; as a denomination. In the days when j it cost something to be a Baptist, those who became such did so because con science compelled. They accounted stripes. Imprisonment, fines, social os tracism, the sneering accusation of narrowness and bigotry as nothing In comparison with the joy of obedience to the commands of Christ. Now, when it costs nothing to be a Baptist, many have lost this strong conscience grasp upon the truth, and cast off their allegiance to the denomination —that is, to the principles for which it stands —whenever convenience or inclination prompts, as though It made no real difference whether they were Baptists or something else." A young man who is In charge of a party of gold-seekers on the route to the Klondike sends a full account by j letter to a companion in Spokane of the means by which he has been trans porting his supplies northward. One of these means was a pack-dog which 1 has been denominated, on account of 1 his importance, a "Klondike freight- : var." "He Is not a large dog, either," says j the letter-writer, "but he will pack j seventy-five pounds through the snow after the snow-shoes have made the trail. Dogs that will pack forty or j fifty pounds are common. "The Indians at Madison Creek move everything with dogs. They handled something like a million feet of logs in that way last season. Some Df the logs were forty feet long and five feet in diameter. They use no horses in this country in winter. The dogs ire fed only at night, and then but half of a dried salmon. The natives live on Lhe same food. "The priest is the high ruler among them. It was he who caused this year's *xtra supply of fish to be kept; he told them to put up enough for two years. Now they eat the fish they caught the summer before last. It is not uncom tnon to see fish piled as high as twen ty-five to thirty feet, all dried. It rests on posts set in the ground, and on the top of the posts are kettles to keep mice and squirrels from getting at the fish." Another Klondike "freight-car" which this expedition came across was a "klootchman," or Indian woman, who did not weigh more than one hundred and twenty-five pounds, but who would, nevertheless, carry a bar rel of provisions, weighing not less than one hundred and fifty pounds, nailed to a board and the board strap ped out on her back. With this burden she marched thirty miles between day light and dark, making camp at night, and keeping it up. The Americans who have taken the Klondike trail need no convincing that the notion that "au Indian won't work" is a fallacy. put for Indian packers, male and female, no gold would have been brought out of Alas ka, for no supplies for t..e miners could have been taken In. fCATHARTIC CURE CONSTIPATION 256 506 DRUGGISTS .1. SarKr nirnco. Prto<\ |1«.00. W*g»n«. Send fur larco. freo Mo COOSunrr Pru. »llhcon«im l«rant n , A, C ood .u ..tu tor |ii. Cataloguo cf all our (tjrlu. ibl4 .-, ip„a i'J ELKHART CARRIAGE AM> nimnu urn. Co. w. n. PRATT, ■«>, KLKHART, urn. Snake-Like in its subtlety. It lies bidden for years in the ambush of the blood, and when it strikes it voids its venom alike on strength and beauty, disfiguring the one and undermining the other. Sarsapiniii is a speciflc for scrofula in its worst and most malignant forms. Scrofula is a blood disease. Aycr'a Sarsaparilla is a blood purifying medicine. Mineral medicines only drive scrofula below the surface. Dr. J. C. Ayer's Sarsaparilla is a vegetable remedy and it eradicates the disease. There is no remedy for scrofula equal to Ayer's Sarsa parilla. "l was cured of a long-standing case of scrofula by I)r. J. C. Ayer's far??.pnr!lh. The disease first manifested itself when I was a child, by breaking out in red blotches all over my body. I wa3 not free from the troublo until I took several bottles of Ayer's Sarsaparilla. That effected a per manent cure." —MRS. E. H. SNYDER, ton, Pa. Cnmp Outfit* of Aluminum. Among the new things which are being made of aluminum are camping sets of culinary utensils, advertised as Klondike outfits, which are marvels af lightness. An outfit for six persons consists of thirty-nine separate pieces and weighs complete but thirteen pounds. It comprises four cooking pots, a coffee pot, two frying pans, 3lx cups, six knives, six forks, six spoons and six plates, a salt shaker and a pepper shaker. The pots are oval in form. The biggest one meas ures 10y 2 inches one way by 7*4 in ches the other and the whole set Is made so as to pack into this one. An outfit for three persons, consisting of twenty-one pieces, weighs Gli pounds only, and an outfit for two persons, containing fifteen pieces, weighs only i pounds. It In it Mistake. To sleep exposed to a direct draught at any season; to imagine that what ever remedy causes one to immediate ly feel better, as alcoholic stimulants, for example, is good for the system without regard to the after effects; to eat as if you had only a minute in which to finish the meal, or to eat without an appetite, or to continue af ter it has been satisfied to gratify the taste; to give unnecessary time to certain established routine of house keeping, when it could be much more profitably spent in rest or recreation. A Fleshy Consumptive i Did you ever see one ? £ | Did you ever hcur of one? ; Most certainly not. Con- r > ! sumption is a disease that * | invariably causes less of C ; flesh. ! If you are light in weight, 5 | even if your cough is only > ■ a slight one, you should ;> ! certainly take ;! : Scott's gmaslion : ] of cod liver oil ivitb hypo- ! | < phosphites . No remedy > ! is such a perfect prevent- 5 ; ive to consumption. Just > « the moment your throat > ! begins to weaken and you ? ; find you are losing flesh, ; • you should begin to take it. > ! And no other remedy ; ; has cured so many cases !; < of consumption. Unless ' I you are far advanced with ! ; this disease, Scott's Emul- £ 1 sion will hold every in- 5 ! ducement to you ror a t All Pruf»sri#ts, vie. and it C j SCOTT Sr HOWNE. ChrmiKts. N. Y. C eomething to know! Our very large line of Latest patterns of Wall Paper witn ceilings and border to match. All full measure ments and all white backs. Elegant designs as low as per roll. Window Shades with roller fixtures, fringed and plain. Some as low as 10c; better, 25c, £oc, Elegant Carpets rainging in prices 20c., 25c., }s c., 4 ;c„ and 68c. Antique Bedroom Suits Full suits SIB.OO. Woven wire springs $1 7c Soft top mattresses, good ticks, #2.50. Feather pillows, si.js per pair. GOOD CANE SEAT CHAIRS for parlor use 3.75 set. Rockers to match, l._o.^ w . Large size No. 8 cook stove, $20.00; red cross ranges s2l. Tin wash-boilers with covers, 49c. Tin nails— I4qt, 14c; lOqt, 10c; Sqt, 8c; 2qt covered, sc. Jeremiah Kelly, HUGHESVILLE. HAVING PURCHASED GRIST MILL Property Formerly Owned by O. W. Mathers at this place 1 am Now Prepared To Do All Kinds of Milling on Very Short Notice With W. E. Starr as Miller. Please Give a Trial. FEED OF ALL KINDS ON HAND. W. E. MILLER, FORKSVILLE, PA. N. B. All parties knowing themselves indebted to me will confer a great favor by calling and paying the amount due, as I need money badly at once. Respectfully yours, W. E. MILL R grand spring Shoe Stock: Comprising Correct, Stylish, Comfortable Shoe 9 for every mem ber of the family. We are now ready to show you as fine a line of footwear as was ever shown in town before. We are constantly adding to our stock a higher and better grade of shoes and at ju ices decidedly less than others. That the public appreciates our efforts in this direction is attest ed by our daily increasing sales of high-class footwear. You are cordially invited to call and examine our stock and we are positive that the styles and quality, combined with our usual low prices, will please you. Elegant Spring Shoes for Ladies Our showing of Ladies' Shoes for spring wear will be more appreciated by those who desire Stylish, Comfortable Shoe out paying extravagant prices for them, and we trust to business to make up for reduced profits. A stylish, up to date, tan, cloth top, lace shoe, sc' «v for $1.75, our price $1.25. The same redaced r our $1.75, 2.00, 2.50 and 3.00 lines. We guar from 25 to 75 cents on each pair of shoes. Our line of Clothing, Gents' Furnis I Skirts, Corsets and Shirtwaists is yourself. Jacob r