1 , "COAL MINE RUN BY WOMEN. 1 gletlc Bisteiw Who Cam Farat aa4 p, 8oaMork aa Wall aa Dig CeaU ' i toal mla run by women la aa in ' rttJon to America. In sections of Jrniany. England and Wales it la a Juaoa thing for women to work In Tjlibout coal mines, although of lata this custom has been almost bedlnWa). , j, the Mahoney Valley, sereral miles west of Shamokln, Pa, Uves Jo- iiaua, a usjUts of Germany, who lnrner aiul operator of a coal mne. gn (our grown daughters and thres naiffrt girls help him in operating the pUierj-. Their father consklers them MARIS HAUS. best slate pickers and workers la ,to tatiraclto rotjlaa. He finds them juUful. cheerful workers, and he never ju asy fears of their going on strikes lrt higher wages or from any lmag- juy grievances. jlr. Maus supertntondi the mine and rofks at cutting out the coal. The old it daughter, Katie, 22 years of age, trfonus the duties usually assigned to i outitdu foreman. She supervises M runnlns of the breaker In a very itlsfaetory manner, and attends to riling the coal to the hundreds of miners who live In the valley. Mary, 1 years old, has charge of the mules Filch bokt the coal from the Interior (the mliie by an old-fashioned gin. aw, who is a pretty good mechanic, as the pump that keeps the mine so flUius up with water and feeds t holler and engine that operates tho jrfiinery. Ilzzle Is tho slate picker as and Is assisted by her three young, r sisters and little brothers In clearing iecoaJ of slate as It passes down the lats Into the storage pockets. These energetic young women are specimens of womanhood and arc lns(r than the average man. They almost six feet In height, and well Luportiuned, erect and weigh on nn erase of -00 pounds. They do not aliae their muscles and lungs In cor am! hioe them Into elghteen-Inch Ists, with the assistance of the bod- previous to going to work, and U are satisfied with the fine physl- perfections with whicu nature has plowed them and are content to let urc have her sway which - keons a m penetrt Jieaitu and stranrth i.,!ia.vi iu'ver known a day's illness ttj-.r I. :ind a Visit from a doctor. m o.n .Mi expunence. TVt,.-iif.in'.s are not of the apnroroil J woman order, hut are of servicea- material, the skirt Just reachlne the titles. Thoy wear stout browns rn Yi reet and take turn about helping prmouicr wuu tne woioa the farm a m uie nouse. They are expert pers and housekeepers, airs. Maus pi the farm and her husband claims a 1 better paying Investment than cool mlue. The trlrls work hard uIt iji In Uio week and seem happy and pienicu with their lot A LiaQXboaao GlrL OusUt Kobbe writes a paper on "Heroism In the Lighthouse Service" fov the Century. Mr. Kobbe says: Ser. era! of the violent storms that hava whirled over Matlnlcus Rock have tried the fortitude of the little band of faithful watchers upon It One of these watchers, Abby Burgees, has become famous In our lighthouse annals, not only for long service, but also for briv ery displayed on various occasions. Her father was keeper of the rock from 1S33 to 1861. In January, 1S56, when she waa 17 years old, he left her lo charge of the lights while be crossed to Mattcinus Island. His wife was aa Invalid, his son was away on a cruise, and his other four children were little girls. The following day It began to "breeze up;" the wind Increased to a gale, and soon developed Into a atorm almost as furious aa that which carried away the tower on Minors Ledge In 1851. Before long the seas were sweep ing over the rock. . Down among the boulders was a chicken-coop which Abby feared might be carried away. On a lonely ocean outpost like Matlnl cus Rock a chicken Is regarded with affectionate Interest, and Abby, solici tous for the safety of the Inmates of the little coop, waited her chance, and when the seas fell off a little girl rush ed knee-deep through the swirling water, and rescued all but one of the chickens. She had hardly closed tho door of the dwelling behind her when a sea, breaking over the rock, brought down the old cobble-stone house with a crash. While the storm was at Its height the waves threatened the gran ite dwelling, so that the family had to take refuge In the towers for safety; and here they remalued, with no sound to greet them from without but the roaring of the wind aroundthe lanterns, and no sight but the sea sheeting over the rock. Yet through it nil the lamps were trimmed and lighted. Even after the storm abated, the reaeh between the rock and Matlnlcus Island was bo rough that Captain Burgess could not return until four weeks later. f much attention Is called to the fcsurenient of the strawberry around waist that the fat man Is escaping tment. Hiske Into Tour SboM ln'i Font-Raw, a powder for tho feet It pumnui, rwoiieu, unnnitiK leet, ami iu- hUV tulit-H tilb stinir iit. fif i-iirni Anil ltnn- fc ll'slli Kiu-ntest ninifnrt diHcoverv of lit. Allrli K FiKit-EuHO makes tiKlit-flt.- f or nw (.hoi s feel easy. It III a certain "vtwi-nuni;, railous aim not, tired, ach t Try It unlay. Sol.1 ly all druKKlKts -toe iUn-i'. lw mntl for 36c. in stumps. 'jlhie HIKE. Address, Allen S. Olrn- BODBLESOME PIMPLES K Perfectly Purified by Hood's. " been troubled with small red 'i breaking out on mv faca. The a eri'nt dnnl nf nKln T h PvmhI bottles of Hood's Sarsapnrillo "Ds Biv.'ii mo rellof. I have not been W vita tho plinules since I beean M It " Leer FiBCBEn. 230 West 144th P. New Vorlc City. Itcmembor pod's Sarsaparilla C!!lLa''t " One Trne Hlond Pnrifior. d' Pills euro constipation. Soocats. PA Bicycle rrlcei Fall. After several years of exorbitantly large profits the manufacturers of bicycles have beau compelled to very largely reduco their prices. The pub lic actually refused to longer pay $100 for a machine which can be built for one-quarter thnt amount. A few makers paw this some time ago and put on the market cheaper machines at very greatly reduced prices which so cut into the businens of tho higher pricod manufacturers that in pure nelf-defenso they were cnmpellod to bid good-bye to their old high prices. Why should not the same thinfr oc cur with type-writiiifr machines? They no doubt coat considerably loss to pro duce than bicycles, and yet some of them are selling at the ridiculously high price of $100. It is fair to infer that a machine which sells at $50coBts close to $15 to manufacture. If a few large department stores in New York, Boston, Philadelphia, Chi cago, eto., would arrange .for large quantities to be manufactured for them by some one outside of a Trust the prices would come down to reasonable figures as have those of bicycles. The Oyster. The oyster has no greater enemy than tho starfish. It appears difficult how ever, for a fish to open the ahell of an oyster, which requires a certain amount of skill even with an oyster knife; but the starfish has a peculiar method of leverage upon tho opening of the two shells which the oyster can not resist. Biologists used to think thnt the starfish simply starved tho oyster until it opened of Its own ac cord; but observation has shown that by the pressure it applies the bivalve speedily becomes a victim to its In genious enemy. A Good Excuse, ' "Ilave I dono anything to offend you, darling?" he asked, brokonly. "To-day rou passed mo without bowing and now you sit there with such an air of hau teur and pride that " "George," interrupted the girl, with an unbending air, but In her voice a cadence sweeter than music at night, "I have a stiff neck." Bostun Globe. After a man has lecu sick as long at three weeks, his wife, who nurses him, looks as if ehe had been sick six ream Try Ciraln.Ot TryCrain.Ut Ask your grocer to-day to show you a pack nua of tiraln-O, the new food drink that takes tlio place of coffee. The children may driuk it without injury as well as tho adult. All who try it likii II. Croin-O tins that rit-h (hrowu of Muchn or Java, hut it is made from pure Km I us, anil the miwtdcliinU! Mtoruiu-h re ceives it without diptri'Kx. l)nc-iuartcr the price of coffee. I A cts. and o cts. per puckase. bold by all grocers. ',-1, . r.,i ,--. - f. - r - r - . r.. , f' .- x r:- i' Xejy Ni V:. w N.oas' - ' J.Qi i ; vp) (on i (o) i :if:oi IV Pill Clothes. Tho good pill has a good coat. The pill coat serves two purpoaes; it protects the pill, en abling it to retain all its remedial value, and it disguises tho taste for the palate. Some pill coata are too heavy; they will not dissolve b the stomach, and the pills they cover pass through the system as harmless as a bread Pellet. Other coats are too light, and permit the , Bpoed7 deterioration of the pilL After 30 years exposure, Ayer's Sugar Coated Pills have been found aa effective as if just fresh from the labor atory, it's a good pill -with a good coat. Ask your druggist for Ayer's Cathartic Pills. Mor pl'.l particular In Ayer' Curehook, loo paces. Beat tree. J. C. Ayer Co. Lowell, Mans. ct wm DIB AN ELOQUENT DISCOURSE. ' A Plea For Cheerrulnru Three Freserlp Uona For th Cure of BnatnsM De preulon: Cheerful Converulioa cad Behavior, Proper Chriattaa lareet mea aa a Great Spiritual A wakeainf. Text: "Wherefore doth a living man complain?" Lamentations ill., 3!. A cheerful Interrogatorrin the most mel ancholy book of the B iblut Jeremiah wrote so many gad things that wa have a word named after him, and when anything U surcharged with grief and complaint we call It a jereiqlad. But in my text Jere miah, as by a sudden jolt, wakens us to a thankful spirit. Our blessings are so much more numerous than our deserts that he is surprised that anybody should ever And fault. Having life aud with it a thou sand bleasings it ought to hush into perpet ual silence everything like criticism of the dealings of God. "Wherefore doth a llvlug mnn complain?" While everything In our national finances Is brightening, for the lust few years the land ban beeu set to the tune of "Naomi." There has been here and there a cheerful soloist, but the grand chorus has been one of lamentation, accompanied by dirges over prostrated commerce, silent manufactories, unemployed mechanism, and all those dis orders described by the two 'short words, "hard times." The fact is that we hove been paying for the bloody luxury of war more than thirty years ago. There worn groat national differences, and we had not enougn unrisimn character to settle them by arbitration and treaty, and so we went inio uaciie, expending lireand treasure and wen mgu bwampiug tno national finances and north and south, cast and west, have ever since hecn paying for those lour years' indulgence In burbarism. liut the time has come when this depres sion ought to end yea, when it will cud If the people are willing to do two or three thlugs by way of ilnnncial medicament, lor tho people as well as Congress must join In the work of recuperation. Tho best politi cal economists toll us that there is no good reason for continued prostration. Plenty of money awaiting investment. Tho na tional health with never so strong an nrm or so clear a brain. Yet we go on gronulni; groaning, groaning, as though Hod had iiui ims utiuon upon gruel and allowed us but one deccut breakfast In sir mnxili. The fact Is, the habit of complaining lias prvuiuu ciirouic in mis country, and nfti-r ull these yeursof whimper and walling aud objurgation wo are under such a momentum of snivel that we cunuot stop. There arc uro three prescriptions by which I believe that our individual and National llnauces may bo cured of their present de pression. The llrst Is cheerful conversa tion and behavior. I have noticed thnt tho people who aro most vociferous ui;uiiit the day iu which wo live aro those' who are in comfortable circumstances. I liavo nindo inquiry of those persons who are violent in their jeremiads against these times, and I have asked them, "Now, after all, aro vou not mukiugu living?" - After somo hesita tion ami coughing and elenrinirthoir throat three or four times thoy sny stauimerlnlv "1-e-s." Kothnt with a groat multitude of people It Is not n question of getting a livelihood, but they are dlssatlsllud because, they can't mako us much money ns they would like to muko. They have only C2000 in the bank, whore they would like, to have 4IOO. They can clear in a vear only 5O00, when they would like to dear flO.OOO, or things couio out Just even. Ur in their trade they Kot 3 a day when they wish thoy coul I make 14 or 5. "Oh " suys some ono, "are you not nwaro of tlio fact that there Is n great population out of employment, und there aro J luudreds of the good families of tills cuntry who nro ... mu iiii. ruu, nut Knowing which way luIU' Kst i Kuow.it etter than any man in private llfo nn know that sud fact for it oomos constantly to my eye aud our' hut wlio is rvspousijjla for this stuto of things? Much of. that responsibility I put upon mon in comfortable circumstunces who by an everlasting growling keep publio eoull- ueui-a uepreasuu nuu now enterprises from starting out and now houses from being built. Vou know very well that one de spondent man cnu talk fifty men Into de spondency, whllo ono cheerful physician cun waku up into exhilaration a whole asy lum of hypochondriacs. It is no kindness to tho poor or tho unemployed for you to Join in this deploratlon. If you havo not tho wit aud the common sense to think of something cheerful to sny, then koop silent. Now I will miike a contract, if tho peo ple of tho United States for ono week will talk cheerfully, I will open nil tlio manu factories, I will give employment to ull tho unoccupied men aud women, I will make a lively market for your real fatnto that Is eating you up with taxes. I will stop tho long processions on the wny to the poor house aud t lie penitentiary and I will spread a plentiful table from Jluluo to California and from Oregon lo Sandy Hook, nud thu Whole land shall carol and thunder with national jublleo. Hut says somo win, "I will fake that contract, but wo cau't nITect tho whole nation." My hearers and rend ers, ropres uillng'ns you do ull professions, nil trades und nil occupations, If you should resolve never ugulu to utter a dolorous word about the money markets, but by munnur and .y volco nnd by wit und enricuturo aud. nlovo ull, by faith lu God to try to scatter this national gloom, do you not believe the in fluence would bo instantaneous and wide spread? The effect would be felt around the world. For (lod'ssuke and for tlio suko of the poor nud for tho sakoof the em ployed (iuit growling. Uepond upon it, if you men In comfortable clrcumstnuees do not stop complaining, (iod will blast your harvests and soo how you will get n'long without a corn crop, and Ho will swoop vou with Hoods, and Ho will devour you with grasshoppers, and Ho will burn your city. If you men lu comfortaldo circumstances koep on eoiupluiulng, (iod will give you something to complaiu about. Murk thnt' Tho second prescription for tho allevia tion of financial distress is proper Chris tian investment, (iod demands of every individual state and nation n oertulu Pro portion of their income. We aro parsimo nious. Wo keep back from Ciod that which belongs to him, and when v,o koep hack liny-thing from Ood hn tukos what wo koep back, and ho takes mora. He takes It l.v Storm, by sickness, by bankruptcy, ,y any ono of tho 10,000 wavs which hit ploy. Tho reason many of you uro cramped ui4;.iii.v.n i uocauso you nave never jenrueu mo lesson or Christian generosity l'ou employ an agent. Vou give him a reasonui'io salary, and, lo, you find out t uit ho Is appropriating your funds, be sides the salary. What do you do? bls- cmuibu mm. won, wo are (iod s ogonts. Ho puts In our bands certain mon eys. Part in to bo ours, part is to bo Ills. (Suppose we take all, what then? Ho will discharge us. Ho will turn us over to Ilnnncial disasters and take the trust nway from us. The reason that great multi tudes are not prospered In business is sim ply because they have been withholding from God that which belongs to Him. Xho rule is, give and you will receive, ad minister liberally and you shall have mora to administer. 1 am iu full symputhy with the man who was to be baptized by Immer sion, und some ono said, "Vou had better leave your pooketbook out; it will got wot." "No," said he, "I want to go down under tlu) wave with everything. I want to con secrate my property nnd nil to God." And so he was baptized. What we want In this country Is more baptised pocketbooks. The only safe investment that a mnn can make In this world is in the cnuso of Christ. If a man give from a superabun dance, God may or he mny not respond with a blessing, but If a man give uutll he feels It, If a man give until It fetches tho blood, if a man give until his selfishness cringes and twists and cowers under it, he will get aot only spiritual profit, but ha will get paid back In hard cash or la eon vertlhle securities. We often see men who are tight-fisted who seem to get along with their Investments very profitably, notwith standing all their. parsimony. Bat wait, huddenly in that man's history every thing goes wrong. His health fails, or his reason la dothroued, or a omestle carsd smites him, or a mid night shadow of some kind drops upon bis soul and upon his business. What Is the matter? Uod Is punishing aim for his small beartedneM. lie tried to cheat God, and God worsted him. Ho that one of the re cipes for thecuroof individual and national I uuauuvs u more generosiiT. vvaere you bestowed f 1 on the cause of Christ give a. God loves to be trusted, and he Is very apt to trust back again. He says: "That man .knows how to handle money. He shall have more money to handle." And very soon the property that was on the market for a great while gets a purchaser, aud theboud that was not worth more than fifty ceuts on a dollar goes to par, and tho opening of a new street doubles the value of Ids house, or in any way of a million God blesses him. Unco the man finds out thnt secret and he goes on to fortune. There aro men whom I have known who ftr ton years huvo been trying to pay God 1000. Thoy have never been able to get it paid, for Just as they were taking out from ono fold of their pooketbook a bill mysteriously somehow in some other fold of thulr pooketbook there enmo a lurgor bill. You tell me t hat Chris tlan generosity pay's in the world to come. I tell you it pays now, pays in hard cash, pays In Government securities. You do not bolieve it? Ah, that is what keeps vou back. I knew you did not believe it. The whole world and Christendom is to bo re constructed on this subject, nnd as you are a part of Christendom let tho work begin in your own soul. "Hut." snys Somo one, "I don't believe that theory, because I .have been generous r.ud I have been losing money for ton yours." Thou God prepaid you, thnt is all. I'oople quote as a Joke what Is a divine promise, "Cast thy bread upon the waters, and It will return to thee nftur mauvdnvs." What did Ood menu by that? There Is" an allusion there. In Kgypt when thev sow the corn it Is nt n tlmo when tlio Nile is overflowing Its banks, and they sow tho soi'd corn on the waters, and as tho Nile bo glus to recede this seed com strikes In tho earth and conies up n harvest, and that Is the allusion. It seems ns ii they nro throw ing the corn nway on tho waters, but after awhile they gather it up In a harvest. Now says (iod lu His word, "Cast thy bread upon , tho waters, and It shall come back to thou after many days." It may seem to you thnt you are throwing it nwav ou charities, but it will yield a harvest of green and gold a harvest on earth and a harvest lu heaven. If men could appre ciate that nnd net on that, v would have uo more trouble about Individual or na tional llnnncos. Proscription tho third, for the euro of nil our Individual and national Ilnnncial dis tresses, a great spiritual awakening. It Is uo more theory. The merchants of this country were positively demented with tlio monetary excitement In 1H57. There never before nor since has been such a state of llnnucinl depression as there was at that time. A revival came, nnd 500,000 people woro bora luto tho kingdom of God. What j enmo after tho revival? Tho grandest 1 Ilnnncial prosperity wo have ever ha I iu i this country. The finest fortunes, tho i largest fortunes hi tho United Ktati-s, have i boon made slnco 1S.17. "Well," you say, "what has spiritual Improvement and rii- ! vlvnl to do with monetary improvement nnd rovlvnl?" Much to do. The religion of .Kvois Christ has a direct t iidency to ms'io men honest nnd sober and truth tell ing, nnd nro uot honesty and sobriety and truth tolling auxiliaries of material prosperity? If wo could hnvo nn awakening In this country as in tho days of Jonathan Kd wards of Northampton, ns in tho days of flr. I'liiloy of Husking Itl.lgo, ns in tho ilnysot Dr. Orlftln of Iloston, the wholo hind would rouse to a higher moral tone, and with that moral tone tho honest busi ness enterprise of tho country would como up. You sny n gront awakening has nn Inlluonce upon tho future world. I toll you It has a direct Inlluonce upon tho flnanciul walfare of this world. The religion of Christ Is no foo to successful business. I Ms its best friend. Jfnd If thnru should cdiiio a great nwnkenlng In this coun try, nnd all tho bunks nnd Insurance companies and stores nnd offices and shopsshould close up for two woeks and do nothing but attend to the public wor ship of Almighty (iod, after such a spiritual vacation the land would wako up to such financial prosperity as wo hnvo never dreamed of. Godliness is prolltalde for tho life that now is as well as for that which Is to como. Hut, my friends, do not put too much emphasis on worldly success ns to let your eternal affairs gf at loosa ends. I huvo nothing to sny against money. The more money you get the better, If it comes honestly and goes usefully. For the Inclc of It sickness dies without medi cine, nnd hunger ilnds its colli n la nn empty bread tray, and nakedness shivers for clothes aud lire. All this canting tirudo against money, as though it hint no practi cal use, when I hear a man indulge In H, makes mo think the best heaven for hi in would bo nn everlasting poorhouse. No; tli"re!s a practical use In money, but while we admit that wo must also admit that it cannot satisfy tho soul, that It cannot pay fot our ferriage across tlio Jordan of death, thnt It ojinnot unloose tho gato of heuvcu for our Immortal soul. Yet there nr.) men who net ns though pucks of bonds and mortgages could lo traded off for u mansion In liouveu, and m though gold wero a legal tender lu thnt land where it Is so common that thoy make pavements out of It. Salvation by Christ Is tho only salvation. Treasures In heaven aro the only incorruptible treasures. Have you ever cipiiuroii out ttrit sum lu loss and gain, "What sliall it piollt a tnan if ho gulu tho whole world aim lo-u) his soul '" You may wear Duo uppuroi now, but tin) winds of death will lluttoi it like rags. All tlio mines of Australia -nil llrav.il. strung In ono onrcunct, nro not worth to you ns much as tho pearl of gro.-.t price. You remember, I suppose, some yei rs airo, tho shipwreck of tho Central America? A storm eamo oi that vessel. Tho t urges tramped tho deck nnd swept down tluougli tho hatches, nud there wont iri u hundred voiced death shriek. Tlio Ram on tho jaw of the wave. Tho pitching of tho steamer, ns though it would leap a mountain. Tin glaroof tho signal rocket. The long cough of the steam idpe.i. Tho hiss of extinguished fttrnueivi. Tlio walk ing of God on tlio wave. Oh. it was a stupendous spectacle. Hut thnt ship did not go down without a struggle. The pas sengers stood In long linos trying to hail it out, and men utilise, .) toil tugged until thulr hands wero blistered and their muscles were strained. After awhile a sail cuino In sight. A few passengers got off, but tho most went down. The ship gavo ono lurch aud was lost. i Ho there aro mon who go on In llfo a fine voyage thoy nro making out of it. .All is well till somo uuroclydon of business disaster comes upon them, and they go down. The bottom of this cointiicrctui son is strewn with tho shattered hulks. Hut because your property goes shall your soul go? Oh, uo. Thero Is coming a morn stupendous shipwreck nrter awhile. This world God launched It 00(10 years ago, and It is sailing on, but ono duv It will stagger at the cry of "Flro!" and tho timbers of tlio rocks will burn, nud tho mountains llame Ilka masts, and tho clouds llko sails lu the judgment hurricane. God will tnko n good tunny off the dock, ami others out of the berths, whira they nro now stooping In Jesus. How many shall go down? No ono will know until It is announced in hoavon one day: "Shipwreck of a world! Ho many millions saved! Ho many millions drownodl" Because your fortunes go, because your house goes, uocnuso ull your earthly posses sions go, do not lot your soul go. .May the Lord Almighty, through the blood of the everlasting eovenuut. save vour soulsl TJstag Lea Words. Doctors irfco ara tn the habit of nakic koc wotxls when Tialtluf people may tat a hint from the following little story: Aa old woman whose husband waa aot very twll ecut for the doctor, who cam aud aaw the old wife: "I will send hlui some medk'ine which must be takeu la a reLmnilxiut posi tion." After be had gone the old woman sat down greatly puzzled. "A recumbent position a rpciunbent position!" ahe kept rvpoatlng. "I haven't got one." At last she thought. "I will go and aeeOf Nurse Lowu has got one to lend me." ' Accordingly ahe wont and sold to the nurse: "Ilare you a recumbent position to lend me to take eome medicine in?" The nurse, who was equally as Ig norant as the old woman, replied: "I had one, but to tell you the truth, I haTe lost It." We have not hern without Pj,'s Cure for Consumption for 30 years.- I.ikzir Kkhiiki, Cauip tt.. lliirrisburg. l'n.. May 4. isui. ilchtlng Fires 1st winter WcatHen To stand upon the peak of a ladder, at perhaps the third or fourth story oi a bulldtag. directing the stream of water at the blazing Ulterior, while the thermometer la at about lu lowest point, is not a comfortable task. Pen haps another stream is playing ove your head, and you atand In an Icy apray. Icicles lmiig from every point of your fl re-hat, and tho rublier coat la frozen to your back; and the water thai is falling about you freezes as fast aa it falls. Every movement uiHn the lad der is fraught with danger; for it hi s euorustid with loe that It Is almost bw poss'ble to get a solid foothold, and misstep would hurl y-ju to the ground, forty foet lxdov.-St. Nicholas. Fits pcrmincntlvriired. No fit or nerrons. ness after llrst diiv's use of Dr. Kline's llrrat None Kcstorrr. li'trlal ImlUcaud treatise frr Du. It. 11. K i.i Mi, I.ul.. Kll An h St.,l'hil..l'a. ..J'11- ,firl!,,,n' .J'ksnn. Michigan, writes! 'Suffered with Catarrh for tlltcen Tears. Hull Cnturru Cure cured mo." told by brug- Mrs. Window's Soothing S nip for. hlldren teething. softens the giiiii.rctlu. iio; intlumiiiii. tiou.alliiys pain, cures wind mile. iVa bottli. I897G0WBIAS$76W staii:i or tiii: uoki d, HAVE MADE themselves tho leading bicycles on account of their quality not on . account of their price 1896 COLUMBIAS, $60 1897 HARTFORDS HARTFORDS Pattern 2, . . . HARTFORDS Pattern I, . . . HARTFORDS Patterns 5 and 6, 50 45 40 30 "JiViV(Vi.i POPE MFG. CO., Hartford, Conn. ttrCatalogue free from any Columbia dealer, or by mail from us for a 2-tent .stamp. If Cnliimliliii, arc nul properly r prineuled lu Tour vlrlnll v, n-t i Biiiifliicm By J. Hamilton Ayers, A. M., IT. D. Thin Is a most Valimtilu lino!; for the Household, tenehin ; nn it doo the easily-disliiiRuiiha I Symptom of differont Diseases, th.i Cniifw, and Means of l'revoutiii'; iipm Dm-e.-ies, nnd the Mimplut lU'inoliej which will nllovinteor cure. C98 PACES, rnOFlJSKLY II.I.UKTUATFlY ylfv The Uook is written in pln:aevjry. i3 day English, nnd i fr-s from the L a Leenriiejtl lAemi .vl.o.l. .. j . - ..... ...mm, k-iitjcr most Doctor Hooks go valuJa!u to the generality of readers. Tula Hook is intwided to lie of Service in the Kumily, nn 1 Is so wordoj ai to ha readily understood ty all. Only CO CTS. POST-PAin. 71,or, nnd Afl.r Trttn,.' all0 low ,,ric9 nly ,,,, possible liythe immense edition prints.!!. Not only d'tai this lloolc conUilii so much Information llolativs to IJIsonses, but vor propoily rIvbs a Complete Analysis of everything pertaining to Courtship, Mnrriaja an 1 tho ProJu -Hon and lUanng of Hlthy Families; tocethor with Vnluiljl Kvipos nn I I'r Boriptions. Explanations of Hotanical 1'rnetiee, Currert nso of Ordinary Herbs. Now RdlUon, llevisud and Knlargod with Complete Index. AVith tun Hook in the house there is no siouio for not knowing wht to do in nn emeroney. Don't wit until you liavo illness In vour family before vou nr.l-r hut sen I nt one for this valuable volume. ONLY 0 CKNTS I'O.S l'-I'AII). (Send postal noUs or postage stumps of any deiiorniiia Hon not larger I mm & rent'. BOOK PUBLISHING HOUSE 134 Loonard Stront. N. Y. City. BAP BLOOD PIMPLES, ERUPTIONS, BLOTCHES, SCALES, ULCERS, SORES, ECZEMA, and CHRONIC SWELLINGS. I ARE WONDER WORKERS in the cure of any disc.u caused by bad or im- pure blood. They eliminate all poisons, build 1 up and enrich the blood, enabling it to make 1 new, healthy tissue. PURE BLOOD MEANS PERFECT i Ml? At TII J :t -ii nirninrTA s Jsjb a i, stnu II yuu Will II W lMOLMnt lO I they will give you GOOD HEALTH and a PURE, CLEAN SKIN, tree from f i pimples and blotches, 3 I To TRY CASCARETS is to like them. For never before has i J there been produced in the history of the world so perfect and so harmless a i I BLOOD PURIFIER, LIVER and STOMACH REGULATOR. To use S a them regularly for a little while means .-. f I Ar.TJ5 Pure Blo&d and Perfect Health. ! INVENTORS!,",, I 'lcr'iMii " No I all-in nn inn," HP-it rii In k. i-'i-. Ueil.isi'ir.iilnr Wil'.V nr IIM n I'.i .-ii A;.-i-.-ii-- I'll.... ,,. ,u HP-it rii hin. i-'e. (ril.. ii-i.iila:- -uri-iit Ihi s- y.ii- ;m, Ailiiee tree. 111,-..- t ri li-n-uc 1 1 Virlto Ii". H.VI'MIS r. ( Ill l tlW, sli,-,. turn ul linn ion. m r. htini, H!-litii(:iiii. li.f I SILOS HOW TO BUILD ssk WIUIAMS MfO. C3.. KAUMAZ03. MICH. DRUNK Fiill infonustion (hi pluli Wanted-An Idea s ARDR ran 1 mthI with. cut inrir kin.tlcil)s l.j Alili-Jn- Ids iintrvFl.-us jure lur theilmik lislii;. wrile llriiioa Chrniii-sl tuU Infonustion (in plulu rap,er) iiuuKJ trt,. VTho ran llilnfc of niiuii. sliiiiiln 1 r.11;""1 inrr mny nrinir yuu wi-s i. Wrllo JOHN Wt'DHKimfllis it (., Patent Attor. neys. WsniiliiBKin. I), i!.. for tln-lr i.ttou prize uScr anu now luitut ouu ibouaaudluveutlous wautd. N U30 B7 Ix Hie lict time .i fllllf.il bun MiAntiN III Ml lliini,li,-Hr..lil Clllli-r lV"liet llllisler. K I. lilt) i. II ,!,,.,. 1. . Y. II. H.tUTII Hull hIii, . ., l'rii, . F AnmiLfm iiKaiiaiiiioiKiaiiiaiii4iii.iaiiii.Hiaiiii,saiiii ! A GREAT CHANCE! want nn njrt'M n I'M-i.v tnwn in tlie I'. H, and 1 Cuiiniii. Nit i-xfntni' V i:iit"i 1 .n-.liv4 tutikH iii"M ttin-ct ul ufh. t i or hlicml i ui iitisit in . uii i mi u,r l nil Mm- ii im' r ti-lsiird ; ln-urn. an. I ran nru f.t.in I U. Ill' TO T I J.VI-: i ixu.i.aks j'i;ic i. t -i,;. 11 5 COTTAGE LOTS FREE Tt tnir Ti nt"-f sih'.ost'il r;'piiIi. 'I !. 1 in nrit w.tiIi m.odii , -h now, will ii MMi-th s:t,(Miu W ll"H I Hill's IMI1H'iV Tlir Ill's llH'lllril Mt I'llTIT HNN, Die nttfii I llir Hnim- rnttl. If M'ti iltr tn lli((llll tl UH'I m ill W" tlll'IM iS Itlltt lit lllf n: is' mi- - d r full j nr'i nlur to tin I. U. I.. A. I. COMJMNV, . . KrllnM, Mr. UNIVERSITY e NOTlSTAME Notre Damo, Indiana. i liml', 1.1'tllTM. i ll-UK- Law. I lvil M. l liiiulrill Mini l: i-rll li ul l.nKi rlliu. TliiirmiKli ITi pnritliirv iiikI iiiiniii-n liil Comm.. Ki'i-lcBiiiHtlfiil sluiii-nts lit hiiui-I rail's. Ittinllis Frei1 Kintii t 'oursi't. lllliliT II. 'I Im lo'lli Term will open reptember 7lh, I KIM. I Ittlllnu'llf M-nt I- ree mi lliili'iitliil to liev. A. MurrlnM-y, C. N. C , I'nulili-nt. FOR YOU liiiiiiir nr Senior Ve.ir, Hille. St. Kit aril's Hull inr buys P ENSIONS. PATENTS. CLAIMS. JOHN W MORRIS, WASHINGTON, 0.0 lt rnnclpsl Ciaitlstr U. S.- fenilou Huru. Sjirt. U lut sr, IJuiljuduuius tlniius. uAy. ilu It M uut ( ouiih ryrun. 'I'lmtusUisju. CseM I rfiVsr-iT-ts"is ml IJlr",:" W Well Done Outlives Heath." Even Ycur Memory Will Shine if You Use SAPOLIO 'i 'i s- VI P. , SI V '0. ' ' 1