FOR ALL THESE THINGS. I tharrk Thee, Lord, for wind nnd snow, For the brown wren upon the bough. I thank Thee for the level rnin. For the gray cloud and wrinkled plain, For running water and bright grass, For eyesight that all this joy has. And, most of all, I thank Thee for The thankfulness I have in store. I thank Thee, Lord, for work and rest. For all glad dr«anis within my breast. I thank Thee ,'or the way I win. For my child faults and early sin. For childhood, kisses and the sky, For ehnnce to live and hope to die. And, most of all, I thank Thee for This want of mine to thank Thee more. —Post Wheeler, in New York I'ress. 'f™r~ —I I Strange Development. | ♦ BY Q. E. V. OSBORNE. J Strange happenings arc always doubted, and I shall not feel disap pointed if this story suffers a like fate. Yet I cannot help but tell it as it occurred, and he who will not be lieve may laugh. For some time past I have been an ardent follower of Dauguerrc, and many a leisure hour have I spent in the fascinating study of photography. As most of my time during the day is taken up with business, I have been obliged to do much of my photographic work by means of the flashlight; for behind him, I might be able to strike that purpose I had, previous to the night of my adventure, fitted up the sitting-room to take a series of pictures of the family In such fantastic poses as suited my lancy. The room is a large one, on the ground floor, and I had removed nearly everything from it save the large square piano; this stood in one corner of the room: the other corner was hung with draperies suited to my purpose; which were used as a background for the groups. I usually placed the camera on its tri pod in front of the piano, and used the latter as a table to hold my flashlight powders and other articles I might need. On the night of which I am writing I had taken several pictures, and at about 11 o'clock was about to retire, when an idea came into my mind that I thought would make an effective pic ture. I stopped to re-arrange the draperies, and manoeuvered about con siderably to get the desired effect. All the members of my family had gone to bed. I was about to take a picture of a classical array of flowers and bronze figures, when my wife called to me from the floor above. After at tending to the thing she wanted. I proceeded to lock up the house as usual nnd went to bed, forgetting entirely that I had neglected te put my camera and things away. It was a clear, moonlight night, and before undressing I looked out of the window and admired the beauty of the country landscape, bathed in sil ver. As it was after midnight there was "jot a soul about the streets, and my last thought before dropping off to sleep was of the flowing streams *uul whispering trees. It might have been about two o'clock when I was awaked by a scratching noise that seemed to come from the floor below. I listened in tently for a few moments and then distinctly heard a sound as if some one was opening a window. It was Dut a moment's work to slip on a pair of slippers and a dressing-gown, and 1 silently went out of my room and stood at the head of the stairs and listened again; the light of the moon, now well down, still shone In through the windows, and a moment after 1 beard some one move through the din ing-room and saw a man cross the ball and enter the sitting-room. <i rasping a stout walking stick which stood In the upper hall, I tip toed cautiously down the staris. I had a vague notion that If I could catch the intruder unawares and creep up behind him, I might be able to stun hlii with a quick blow ott the Scad with the stick. As soon as 1 got to the foot of the stairs, I knew that should the man turn he could see Hie in the moonlight, so I quickly slipped Into the room a n d behind the door; thus 1 was right beside the piano. \ What followed happened so quickly j that I hardly knew how it all occurred. The burglar evidently stumbled over some of the loose draperies In the other corner of the room, for 1 heard Mm strike something and then utter a low oatli. 1 suppose I must have made a slight noise -for Im inollately after he culled in a subdued Voice, - "Who's there?" Thinking that he must have seen me 1 started to jump forward, and ns 1 did so a shot rang out. At the same Instant the room was tilled with a brilliant light. It only lasted a mo ment and then all was lu darkness again. I was so startled by the light tliat I Jumped forward again; uiy feet got tangled up In something and 1 tneantired my length on the floor, strik ing my head against the edge of tile piano us I fell. The next thing 1 knew I was up stairs lu bed, my wife ami a physician with me. It was about I** o'clock Itt tli,. morning, and they told uie what they knew; my wife hadbeeii u*vuk"iied »or the revolver allot, and rousing tlio rest of the family she ran iluwu stulra to And me unconscious, lying on the floor with a gush lu my forehead. There was uo burglar near, hut the giaas In one window was broken ami the plants all trampled lu a flower b d Just outahle. V/ tiuou I was able to gel up, Car my wound was not at nil serious. I 4 went down stairs and proceeded to look over the scene of my adventure. Everything was in confusion; the draperies were in a like position; but the strangest thing was a furrow plowed for a little way along the top of the piano, and the box which had contained the flashlight powders was empty and partially burned. On the piano, also, was one of the slides from a plate-holder. A further examination of the camera showed a plateholder in position to take a picture; the shutter in the lens was closed. On the dis covery of these things the brilliant light of the night before was all made clear. I had left the room just as I was about to take a picture; had drawn the slide from the plateholder, opened the shutter, and was just about to touch the flash oft wheu I was called away. The room was, of course, in total darkness, and I had not determined to finish my work. When the burglar had fired, the bul let struck the flashlight powder, and naturally the inflammable stuff had gone off; that made the light. The shutter of the camera had been closed by the jar when I fell over. As soon as these facts came upon me, a most astounding thought took possession 112 me. Could it be possible that a photo graph had been made of the man in the very act of shooting? Incredible as the thing seemed at first, it cer tainly would have been the result of the conditions described. I determined to at once put the matter to the test, and carried camera and plateholder to my dark room. Hurriedly mixing chemicals I proceeded to develop the plate. It was one of the most remark able periods I have ever passed through; my excitement was so in tense that I could hardly handle the chemicals; imagine my feeling when an image actually began to appear! It was only a short time before I had a perfectly developed negative, and two hours later the finished pictures. It showed the man full face, with levelled revolver and drnperies all about him. The rest can be told in a very few words; the picture was turned over to the police, and the man was recog nized to be a noted "crook" who was wanted for several other robberies in the neighboring towns. Copies of the photograph were scattered far and wide, and every effort was made to locate the man. So far as I could find out, however, he was never heard from again.—Wavei'ley. NOT WHAT SHE WAS LOOKING FOK She Wanted l)lre Punishment Dealt Out at Once. The woman stepped inside the station house door and stood looking around the room. It was a pleasant morning, the windows were open, admitting a refreshing breeze, and the trees in front cast a cooling shade over the front of the building. The place seemed more like the comfortable office of a wayside inn than a city j police station. The official behind the j desk took off his cap and bowed, for j the lady was not such as he was wont to receive there. She came over i within conventional conversational j distance and bowed slightly to the j official. "This is the police station house isn't it?" she inquired. "Yes, madam," replied the officer. "This is where they bring prisoners when they arrest them. Isn't it?" "Yes, madam." "Do you keep them in there until i you are through with them?" "Oh. no; we lock them up in the cell j room." "Indeed! May I see that?" "Certainly, madam." and the polito j official, bowing, escorted his strange 1 visitor through the heavy door into j the cell room. > It was empty and still and clean, i and the fresh air or the morning had i got In and made it almost attractive i in its cool cleanness. She looked j around for a minute more. "l>o you shut the prisoners In thpje Iron cages?" she asked. 1 "Yes, madam." "What do you feed them?" "We don't feed them. We do not keep them here long enough for that." j "Where do they sleep?" "On the benches you see In the cells.'' j "How do you punish them?" "We don't punish them at all. That j In not our part of the business." She looked surprised. "Don't you put Irons on them, or 1 gag them, or douse them in ice water, or put them In straight jackets, or tie thetu up by the thumbs, or whip them with a cat-ttiid-nlne tails, or shut them In a dark room, or something like that?" "Certainly not. madam." and it wus | the official's turn to l>e surprised. , "That Is all," she said, and stalled for the other room again. Once there, she stood bv the desk again. "1 have a husband," she said, medi tatively rather than didactically, "who conies home about five nlglils a week drunk and disorderly, and I was thinking of having liliu arrested, as 1 have stood it about as long as 1 can." "You ought to do It, madam, if lie Is ii«ly," suggested the official. "lie is ugly," she said, with eat pita sis. "No," she said, as she started to It'llve; "no, 1 guess I won't. I mil much • blig«*l to you for your polite Hess. but tills Is UI together two gotst for him." Washington Mar. The heat la so great lit Muscat that thr«s> men Ittdoiigiug to the Itrltlali lunn-of war I'osMtek died from heat apople&y while the Ugr at anchor at lb*t port. Exterminating n Bad Weed. Tlie burdock is a weed that Is extermi nated with difficulty, as the plant pro duces a great many seeds and they remain In the soil for years, ready to grow as soon as conditions are favor able. If the plant Is cut off below the ground and a handful of salt thrown on the root the plant will soon die, as the root Is soft and the salt r *t« It Corncob* as Fire Ligliteri. Corncobs make the best fire lighters, and the ashes are richest In potash. Instead of pouring kerosene on a wood lire, which is a dangerous operation, dip two or three corncobs in kerosene and place them aside for use. Apply a lighted match and the cob will give off heat for quite a while, making the matter of starting a fire an easy one. In fact, however, no one should use kerosene for making a fire at all, but the use of corncobs Is the safest meth od. Importunre of the Hired Mnn. The hired man on the farm Is a more Important personage thaij may be supposed. To inform the city labor er that there is "plenty of work on the farms" may be true, but the farm er does not care for a man who does not understand milking, feeding, plow ing, cultivating, planting, harvesting, etc., nor does he have time to show one how to do the work. The city laborer can learn, however, but his wages will be low until he makes him self useful. If he is steady, knows what to do, and at the right time, without being told, he can get good wages, nnd in every neighborhood it does not take long for the farmers to find out who the best farm hands are and by whom they are employed. Growing Plants Under Colored Glass. European experiments with growing plants under grass of different colors may result in Important cliang sin hot house arrangements. Four small green-houses were erected, with glass es of red, green, blue and white. Into these tnlmose seedlngs of uniform age nnd development were planted and cared for In an ordinary manner for three months. At the end of that time the plants In the ordinary conservatory had grown ill a normal manner, and bad attained a height of nearly four Indies. Those In the blue glass had been planted three months before, and can best be described as plants in a trance. They were alive and seeming ly quite healthy, but absolutely un developed. In the green glass house, the plants hail shown a large amount of energy, and had pushed up to a height half as great again as that at tained by those in the ordinary con servatory. There was no doubt that tlie atmosphere of green had stimula ted their growth upwards, though, on the other hand, they were not so well developed or so bushy as the others. But it was In the red glass that the most striking results were apparent. In this the seedlngs had simply leaped Into stature. They were four times as tall as their contemporaries of nor mal growth, and they were actually more than 15 times the size of the little plants which had slept In the blue light. Moreover, they alone of all the seedlings had flowered. Similar experiments with other plants pro duced differences as remarkable. Pure lired Hogs. Tt does not cost any more to raise full blooded stock than half breeds and Inferior scrubs. The only differ ence in the cost Is the initial purchase. The full blooded naturally costs sever al times as much as the inferior ani mal, but in the end one such animal may prove cheaper than three of four of the scrubs. The farmer who starts In with the Idea and buys only a few blooded stock as he can afford it. in creasing his herd gradually, may find in the end that he Is In a much better position than his neighbor who buys any sort of hogs simply because they are cheap. The reason why more do not start 111 with tills idea is because they have the erroneous belief that it costs more to maintain the blooded stock. This Is not true at all, for the tln<>' hogs do not require more food nor bet ter surroundings than should be given to every farm animal that Is worth anything. If the farmer's style of keeping hogs Is to neglect them and let them practically shift for them selves. the scrub stock may be better Huitcd to this purchase, for the half Mild animals are undoubtedly hardier than the well bred ones, and they w ill be able to pick up a living much bet ter ou a cold, cheerless and almost foodies? range. But where the animals are kept carefully, according to modern ideas of bug raising, with sufficient food to nourish them and proper shel ter and protection, the blooded ant main are lust as cheap to support as the pwon st scrub. Swine Advocate. W«rkla« Huii.r, Butter, w ken properly made In the grauulav form, needs no working other than that done in the churn. This saves wore than half the lalior and liiukt'S first clans butter. Salt should be evenly distributed through tin- but ter and the butter freed from the but ternillk ami surplus uiol.iure, v\ tiy cliiiru the butter Into a uiusa and fast en the Until no 111. In? Htlr the creaiu Well together when luore cream Is add ed until eiitiigti Is nuttiered to churn. Chum th« umiu at iU degrees la it re voiving ciiutii witnoni lusine inacmu* ery, until the butter comes in granules about bird shot size. If so done the butter will lie strictly one thing and the buttermilk (mother, and the butter milk will run out If you give It an op portunity. Itlnse the butter twice with pure 'water with salt added. The last rins ing will come out nearly clear of b,.t ; termilk. Drain the butter a few min utes, add about two ounces of good dairy salt to the pound of butter, the butter still being in the churn, revolve the churn a few times and the salt will intermingle evenly with the butter. It is well to allow a few minutes for the salt to dissolve and then give it a good banging In the churn which will give the butter nearly all the needed work ing. New pack th;> bi.tt r soil l'y in tub or crock or work into rolls with tin butter ladle. AbouJ three-fourths of the large amount of salt putin the but ter will come out in the brine In work ing or banging the butter into a solid body. I have practiced tli'.s method over 50 years and can certify to its value for farm dairy use or say up to 30 pounds of b.itter at a churning.— F. C. Curtis, in American Agriculturist. The Duck*. The ducks are now gorging then, selves and growing like weeds. They will eat about all they can get to oat. nnd give a good account of all they dc \cur. The duck's liking for insects .iiekes if a valuable l-.rd on the farm. It will clean a li?lcl of any of tie* larger insects, and no better plan for r : dc!!ng a crop of such insects pro vided it is one that the ducks will not injure—can be adopted. The only trouble is that the ducks will eat al most anything that Is green. It is well to remember that the large money in duck breeding is in the sale of young ducks. The majority of peo ple—as nas be n often said —do not know what :i delicious thing a young di.ck is. Bur a community can b.- idu cated to appreciate it, and the way to do it is to furnish some of the best families of the nearest town with young ducks, even if they are given to them. It Is a pretty blunt palate that will not crave a young duck, once it has tasted one. A large trade has been known to be built up in the way we have suggested, and it was very profitable, for those who appreciate such a toothsome meat, are willing to pay for it. Keep ing ducks until they reach their full weight is not profitable as compared to the sale of young ducks. We often fail to make full profits from a line of production, because we do not properly work an existing market or create a possible new one. We like a good poultry breeder, whom we heard of— who bred tine poultry, sold a hen for 50 cents, that wa# afterwards sold by the purchaser for $7. The first man knows how to produce, but did not know how to sell. Many of us are like him. and it need not be snhl that we ought not to be.—U. H. Dunn, in The Epitomist. lie Regular will* Your Cow. Habit in domestic animals is strong er than in man, because there is less of that thinking power that enables man to turn aside or togo higher. Cattle, horses or sheep are quick to take on habits and slow to throw them off. What is true of their out ward actions is alike true of their in ternal functions. Feed a cow twice a day, at 0 a. m.and »> p. m., for a year, and as regular as a clock she v. ill start home to her stall in time to begin eating to the minute. Milk her with regularity, and with like regularity she will have her milk on tap. Vary the time for either feeding or milking, and she is thrown out of her reckoning—is disturbed In her habits- because ir regular, has to be sent for, does not give down her milk as cheerfully nor In a-- liberal quantities. These are facts similar, of course, to all who have ever handled or observed cows. But the practical importance of regularity in milking is not rightly ap preciated. There is no surer way to reduce the value of a good cow than by irregular milking, unless it be im perfect milking not milking clean—or handling the cow roughly. The Oregon station has been trying au experiment on this point. It took six cows and divided them Into two lots as near alike in condition as to age and length of time In milk as it could. One lot was fed and milked regularly from 5 to 7 a. m.and front •1 to 0 p. in., which last Is a too com mon practice a mon n farmers. This was kept up for three weeks, the amount of feed being the same for each lot. As a result those fed and milked reg uSurly Increased their milk pro duction per cent, while the other h>t shrank 1.1 per cent. This difference of 10 per cent. In tluve weeks between regularity and Irregularity only partially lllti*! rates the value of the one and the disad vantage of the other. Both results tend to Increase and to become fixed habits of the cow. Thus the careful man who Is methodical Will keep his cows Improving, while the COWS of the cureless mail are (ailing off every year. Fl* your hours for milking and feed ing and slick to tliciu, rain or thine. Allow nothing else to Interfere wlt|> theiu. N. It (franklin, in Jersey ItuH tlu. 4 mount IJIIe.I hlrri.l ('.llltoll, t'ldna, possesses the queer tut street In the world. It is roofed ill with glazed paper flistened oil bamboo, ami contains more slgnlioarits to the sqilAt'e fool than any street 111 any other country It contains no other *ho|»s. bill Ihtuu* of apothecaries and dentists. I'hyi '«i si»»( la It* *yyr» pnatc baiue. SCIENCt ANU INUUSTRT, It baa been generally supposed that the evil taste of distilled water is dn<? to the absence of dissolved gases. We are told now that the reverse is the ease, and that the reason is the pres ence of gases generated in the still. Filtration through animal charcoal de stroys these. A substitute for celluloid is now being produced from untanned leather boiled in oil, which is said to resemble celluloid In every particular. It is known as marloid, and shows a tex ture similar to horn, while it can be made flexible and elastic or hnrd and unyielding. It will take a high polish readily, and may be staufpi'd or pressed into any desired shape. Ice has proved successful as an in sulator on Mount Blanc. A double line of ordinary galvunlzed iron wire was laid on the ground between the Grands Mulets at the top of the moun tain and the Tetits Mulets at the base. Each line was 5500 feet long. Mes sages were sent without trouble and the loss of electricity, as measured by the intsrumeuts, was very slight. Professor Simon Newcomb, writing of stars which are so distant that they have no measurable parallax, remarks that one of these, the brilliant Cano pus, can be said, with confidence, to be thousands of times brighter than the sun. "Whether we should say 20,- 000, 10,000 or 5000, no one can decide." The first-magnitude stars, Rigel and Spica, also arc at an immeasurable distance, and must, in view of their actual brightness, enormously outshine the sun. Silicon has been detected by Profes sor J. Lunt in one of the fixed stars. Beta Crueis, one of the stars of the Southern Cross. Three lines of un known origin has previously been ob served in the star's spectrum, and wliileexamining the spectra of tubes of carbonic oxide this observer discovered the same lines. They were seen only when a powerful discharge was used, and they proved to be occasioned by a disintegration of the glass of the tube and to be lines of silicon. A late improvement in trolley ap paratus has been introduced by a Ger man company. It is an ingenious de vice for lubricating the trolley wire of an overhead system of conductors. As an effective lubrication of this sort would lesson the wear on both the wire and the trolley, the device may be extensively adopted, if its efficiency can be established. Many unsuccess ful efforts to attain this end have been made, but the present may be success ful. It is said to enable a thin and uniform coating of lubricant to be spread along the wire, and the lubri cator is of light construction, being of aluminum, and carried either on the trolley-pole or independently. The patterns for castings used in foundries are made of wood, and it Dften happens that a number of articles are made from tile same design. In such a case, if the same pattern is employed, its edges are apt to suffer, and it must either be repaired or re newed. It has recently been suggest ed that aluminum would be available for this purpose, and that from an original pattern in wood one or more copies in aluminum could be east. The aluminum patterns soon acquire a sort of greasy surface, and separate from the moulding sand with peculiar ease. In case the pattern become injured or are no longer needed, they can be melted down without any loss of the material. Heat from the Km ili. "A distinguished scientist has serious, (y suggested the sinking of boilers deep enough to use the heat of the earth as a fuel," said a prominent engineer of the city. "That sounds rather fantas tic, in view of the fact that a depth of 12.000,000 would be necessary to boil water, but a scheme of the same sort was urged with great energy back in the sixties by a Washington inventor named Foraln. "If memory is correct, Foraln was a man of considerable means and a mathematician of ability. The inter nal heat of the earth Is supposed to equal about one degree of the 100 feet of penetration, I ut he claim d to have dis covered that the percentage was very much greater and Increased in com pound ratio after a certain depth was reached. He figured out an elaborate table and prep s d to sink a huge shaft, with accumulator* at the b ittom. from which unlimited steam would be sup plied to lb" service. All that was need ed was a few million dollars capital to pay for the digging of the plant, and he Immediately set to work to raise the amount. "Foraln succeeded In Interesting a number of people of wealth ami formed a Joint stock company, but meanwhile his calculations were assailed l>> scien tists, and it was shown pretty clearly that the figures were Incorrect. He re plied with great bliterueas. and the scheme went to pieces In the shock of the controversy. What U cauic of Kor alu I don't know. If the problem is ever actually solved I suppose he will be fished out of the Umbo of cranks aud missionaries to lake his proper pluce In hlstoiy " III* Or.lei »r "How will V»U have your egg# fried - oil one side or both*" a-ked the wait riss of the youth who spend* nil his spare llloliey for Valid* ville tickets. • I'rye one MM one side and the other on the other." answered the youth, with a real Keahrooklsh expreaalou.— Ualtiniore Amcrlcar Notes From tbc Pari* Exposition. "The Singer Manufacturing Com pany, ot 149 Broadway, New York, show their usual American enterprise by having a very creditable exhibit located In Group XIII., Class 79, at the Paris International Exposition, where they show to great advantage the cel ebrated Singer Sewing-Machine which is used in ev£ry country on the globe, both for family use and for manufac turing purposes. The writer was highly pleased with this display and observed with much s"tisfactlon that it was favorably commented upon by visitors generally. The Grand Prize was awarded by the International Jury to Singer Sew ing-Machlnes for superior excellence in design, construction, efficiency and for remarkable development and adap tion to every stitching process used in either tlie family or the factory. Only One Grand Prize for sewing machines was awarded at Paris, and this distinction of absolutely superior merit confirms the previous action of the International Jury at the World's Columbian Exposition, in Chicago, where Singer Machines received fifty four distinct awards, being more than were received by all other kinds of sewing machines combined. Should It be possible that any of our readers are unfamiliar with the celebrated Singer Machine, we would respectfully advise that they call at any of the Singer salesrooms, which can be found In all cities and most towns in the United States." Bony Material Made Oat of Milk. A Kansas City man lias discovered a way of making billiard balls out of milk. The casein, a hard substance of the milk, is extracted I) 3' coagulation, the powder so produced is combined witli some alkaline substances, and this forms a cement which is water proof. The inventor calls his new prep aration lactite ivory, and expects to use it largely in making billiard balls, combs, brush handles, piano keys and other articles that are now made chief ly of celluloid. Just at present the material is being made into nest eggs for the purpose of deceiving the geutle biddy of the barnyard. Best For the Bowels. No matter what nils you, headache to K cancer, you will never get well until your bowels are put right. CASCABETS help nature, cure you without a gripe or pain, produce easy natural movements, cost you just 10 cents to start getting your health back. CASCARETS Candy Cathartic, the genuine, put up la metal boxes, evory tab let lias C.C.C. stamped on it. Beware of Imitations. A man never knows how badly he feels until he gets his doctor's bill. Deafness Cannot Be Cured by local application?, as tbeycannot reach til ft diseased portion of the ear. There Is only one way to cure deafness, and that is by constitu tional remedies. D •afness is caused by an 'n flamed condition of the mucous linlngofthe Eustachian Tube. When this tube is in flamed you have a rumbling sound or imper fect hearing, and when it is entirely closed Deafness is the result, and unless tbe inflam - mation can be taken out and this tube re stored to its normal condition, hearinc will be destroyed fonver. Nine cases out of ten aro caused by catarrh, which Isnothinn butan in flamed condition of the mucous surfaces. We will stive One Hundred Dollars for nnv case of Deafnes-* (caused bycatarrh) that can not be cured by Hall's Catarrh lure. Send for circulars, free. F. ,1. CHENEY & Co., Toledo, O. Sold by Drucuists, 75c. Hall's Family Pills are the best. Professional matchmakers are invariably employed to arrange marriages in China. "Hunting and fishing in Hi'.' Mouth." A book descriptive of the best localities in the South for various kinds of Knnie and IsK The game laws of Virginia. North Can • mi. South Carolina, Kentucky, Heorgia, Alabama, Tennessee ami Mississippi, the States pene trated by the Southern Hall way. For infor mation address Alex. S. 'l'hweatt, E. P. Agt., 1185 Broadway, New York City. When it conies to hoard every nnm should expect to plank down. 25c. will cure the children of worm Frey's Vermifuge, at druggists, country stores or by mail. E.&S. Frey, Baltimore, .Md. IledgehotT. baked in a clay oven, is a dish any epicure might envy. Mrs. Wlnsiow'sSoothlng >yrup rofcbildrtr teething, softens the gums, reduces iutlammn llon. allays pain, cures wind colic,~ftc.a bottle Octopus is largely eaten in the Isle of Jersey. I am sure Piso's Cure for Consumption saved my life three years ago.—Mils, i lion. Hon BINS. Maple St., Norwich, N. Y., Fab. IT, 190 There are sixty-four monasteries in 110l land. Indigestion Is « bad companion. Got rid ot It by chewing a bar of Adams' Pep sin Tuttl Frutti after each moal. Many of the waiter girls in Swiss hotel belong to well-to-do families. To Cur* a Cold In One Dar- Taks I.AIATIV* HROMO QCIKINI TABI.«T9. A drugtjUl* refund them- >u**y if It falls to cur. K. W livovs's signature 1» on each box. 25 It's when a man buckles down t business that he's least likely to b strapped. Don't worry ovcrmucl about those sharp pains ii your head. Seek their causi in your liver, t One Ayer's Pill at night u u few nights drives awav headaches. J. C. Aver PrMtksl Aysf't a«w»f«riiU I A ym* IMb Afm'% A|u« Can
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers