The Middleburgh post. (Middleburgh, Snyder Co., Pa.) 1883-1916, September 30, 1897, Image 3
INDUSTRIAL ROTES. Mtt m EEC MONEY RETURNED. Aliia Was Vert Tax S Casts a Say te U MTOMM. The county commissioners at Greens- turf reluctantly decided recently that (hey will not attempt to have those em ploying aliens enforce the alien tax vw and collect 3 cents from each for- laner employed. The money collected thui far will be returned to those who paid u. mis action was taken In view f juage uumnirton s recent decision that the alien tax law la unconstltu llonal. The following Pennsylvania pensions rere (rrantea: James H. Grenet. Pitts writ: William McVetta, Harmormburg ptvld Hoover, Reynoldton; Henry vnmonts, monaea; Henry H. Baum jardner, Casey vl lie; William Haney i I lillin t-illaVri Mnl'looaa Ininintn lames Tearney. Hollldaysburg; John v,-. Row. Marion Center; Jeptha L, Ayres, West Pike; Margaret Dubbs, Pittsburg; Mary K. Balsley. union town: Sarah Lang, Altoona; Mary A Hartley. Pittsburg; Joel F. Large, Pittsburg; John R. Means. Unlontown Patrick Leonard, Erie; James Labar. lirrrer; David Bates, Deckers Point; Sancy A. Mounts, Sharon; Martha Gray. Portersvllle; Mary J. Roberts, Beaver f ans; tfeulah Fldell, McKees port: Jonas W. Bare. 8cottdale; John pevore, Allegheny; Joshua Torrance, j,ottdale; John Rankin, Davis; Martin K. Weldner, Clarion; John A. Wherry, pittsDurg; Henry b. Uburn, Irwin; Mo m 'inompson, Allegheny; Johnson C. Akers, Altoona: Harriet P. Smith. Sandy Lake: Evalln A. Gates, Dun- ransville; Eva Flke. Markleygburtr Joseph Hopper, Bear Creek. Lucerne; jieepn H. lang, dead, Altoona, Blair; l,nH Bear, Lltlti. Lancaster: HuKhJt McCleester. Johnstown, Cambria; Ben- Itmln t. Moore, falrmount, Lancaster Emanuel Dltsler, Cornwall, Dauphin; Joseph F. Herron, Ohiovllle; Albert Beckett. Pittsburg; Edward F. Powers, Hickman; John H. Flemm. Freeport; Martin V. R. Oakes; Westmoreland; lames T. Chalfant. Allegheny; Char lotte E. Hammltt, Bellevernon; George Coates, Allegheny; Archibald Cham rs, Allegheny; William Burnett Lock Haven: Jacob W. Beck. Washington: Alfred Hasstnger, Bellefonte; Edmund B. Williams. Union City: Robert G. Scott, Morrisdale Mines; Daniel Fitz- ulter, canton; James F. Collins. New list If ; samuel M. Grace, Adamsburg John ttlmer, Greensburg. Windham: minors of Timothy Fitzgerald, West Newton. With the lives of 200 families tremb Hng In the balance, George Sober nounted a bicycle and. after an exclt ing race of six miles from Shamnkln township, reached Chamokln the other nornlng In time to organize a body of men, wno ran from house to house warning the people not to drink the morning supply of milk delivered by me boner brothers. A fiend, to revenge himself on the Sobers, had poured a lot rari8 green into the m ilk cans. In addition to feeding it to the cows, two uwnicn tiiea as the cyclist was scorch Ing to MiamoKin. Isaac Lepply was ar rested for the crime, and had to be kept from a mob, who wanted to lynch him. George B. Sanbouln was seriously In red the other night while driving irom stoneporo to Greenville. San kouln represents a large eastern rub ber house. While driving along the wad about three miles out of the city (stranger drove up behind Sanbouln, no asKea mm If he wanted to pass Um. The stranger did not reply, but rove tip alongside and struck San tonin s norse a sharp crack with, the hlp. The horse wheeled, throwing Sanbouln out, breaking his collar bone ud rutting a deep gash in his head. Sanbouln was picked up unconscious. There Is considerable activity In the ool business In Washington county )ust at present. G. W. Chaney has liken In 30,000 pounds and at West Alexander. D. M. Cansey took In 12.- HO pounds, while Greene county buyers mve taken rrom 60 to 70,000. The priceg for the most was 25 cents, but 27 vat paid for some. This time two years iso pretty good sheep sold 40 cents a head, and now they can hardly be bought for twelve times and a half that mount. Willie Kordan. aged 10 years, one of II boys who were bitten by a mixd bull tor In West Scranton last March, died me oiner night from what the tffivsl. tltns diagnosed as unmistakable hy drophobia. Death was marked by In- wise, suffering, the boy In his agony Ntlng his mother on the arms. This Is ibeecnnd death, Tommle Uevan, 11 (earn old, dying In April from the effect bites by the same dog. Two men were killed near Johnstown gently on the Pennsylvania Railroad, loteph Hepine, at the famous point, Ptf Saddle, ami a man unknown, at Benns Creek. Repine was the engineer M Booth & Fllnn's stone quarries at """It Saddle. He was aged 30 years wd was a widower with several Chil ton. The unidentified dead Is In the Borgue. John V. Tlnlrrt ntrfA K7 ' n kmocratlc politician or Clarion, was tilled a few days ago. Mr. Baird was lng to Payter township, when his rst: took fright, and he was thrown m the vehicle, alighting on his head M shoulders with such violence as to j'"ak his neck. MISS Klmn fovrtm O Cm A 91 VfiflVa nn "nlHtp Of tho Pnllr aavlnm waa M in her bed the other day. She was merea to deajh while laboring in "epileptic lit. She belonged In Lock "n and was brought to Polk when "It Institution l 1 m mvuuuii no,9 mot uiicneu i ruin A(l Unol trn4 Init,. i j " unci i CLCimy rW.cl VtrU HRl Halt I mora nf 1TraAfr atotn,l eKe tL. " v.4.v j c iri ilia i writer and another, now dead, Mole jvscnooi money from the trunk of ? Pvia. school fund treasurer, at Wlesburg, Bedford county. Dr. Da ,IaH sued to recover the money, 'n was lost In October. 1S95. Ebenezer Daniels, one of the best. Pn and wealthiest citizens of Ven. to county, and one of the first per r w drill for oil on Oil Creek, drop g d'ad from heart disease while eat 2 dinner a few days ago. Ht F wife and family. lr Latchlaw of Clark returned E,.... ..other dy rrn the Stoneboro rr ji poorer than when he start- eul . c almB tnat ne wa" watching nle finish Mkhh torn Knn,a. . ' hi ins yucKei ana 'Wted tha rnll h? steven,n ot Salem township, 1 "-uuijr, was luiauy gorea by a Prank Beebe was awarded $1,000 ciearneid tne other day for i, """ 'n mis city last winter. ff?.1ar.ton- aSed 70 waa burned to kL . Alnen a rew days ago. The """Mroyed Charles Fitzgerald's sta- fl lx horses. . October 22, has been deslg "J the superintendent of public Hon as autumn arbor day. !!ersh- Hickory township, Mer an a waa "erlously stung while J- down a bee tree. It'u 0f Mr- B0k, of Mermihle Coks Orsas Bsiaf Tin aa Kaay Xaa Oivta Work. The 8Ur mines and coke plant at Ftauffer station, near Greensburg. Pa., which have been Idle for a year, will be started up within 10 das, giving employment to 200 men. . Seventy-five additional ovens were Bred at Mam moth during the week, employing 75 men. At Hecla 100 ovens were flred up, making room for 100 additional men at. the plant. The Hecla ovens had been Idle for several years. Reese, Ham mond ft Co. have begun work on a new plant. The Latrobe steel works will be gin at once the erection of 20 new houses. A hotel will also be erected. The new Glen Drilling company's plant at New Kensington will be soon started up. The Metcalf steel works, at Brae burn, are near completion. Over 400 men will be employed. Fifty new dwellings will be erected by the com pany. , lABOXWOBIO. The lrondale furnace property at Klngwood, W. Va.. was sold the other day to the Captain Flicker Taylor com pany for the sum of $6,200. This v'.at:t cost originally $212,000. and was owned by Felix Nemegyle. of New York, who operated the furnace for years. The plant has been Idle for some years. The purchaser expects to Improve and oper ate the furnace. The settlement of the coal strike and the consequent reduction In the price of coal at Akron, O., have enabled a number of large factories, which have been shut down for weeks to resume, giving employment to nearly 2,000 men who have been Idle. The shops will be enabled to run on full time until next spring. , Among the plnnts at Wheeling. W. Va., which have been ordered to work at once are: Top mill blast furnace, Idle two years; sheet mills at Whlttukor iron plant, Bellalre steel works, and portions of the Benwood Iron mill. The Wheeling and Warwick potteries are working day and night. The American wire nail works, em ploying 700 men: the l.tppencott lamp chimney plant, which works 400, and the Macbeth lamp chimney works, with a like number of men on its payrolls, resumed In full blast a few days ago after a shut-down of two months and a half. Contract has been awarded for a C0 ton addition to the Houth Aharon steel mill at Wheatland, Pa. Eighteen more puddling furnaces were fired up at the Sharon iron works, making a total of 38 In operation. An additional force of men will be employed. John H. Waters, on the heaviest stockholders In the- new tln-plnte plant at Johnstown, Pa., received a letter re cently from the New York end of the concern starrng that they would begin work on the plant this week. The Cambria Iron company at Johns town, Pa., paid out $Ufi.0i0 last week. This Is the largest two weeks' pay for a long time. About JW.OuO of this amount was in golc. Orders have been Issued for firing 60 ovens at Trotter, and 2no more will be fired at once by the H. C. Prick and McClure coke companies at Connells- vllle, Pa. All the departments of the Palem, O., Wire Nail company resumed work the other day. On the first of the week the mills will be put on double turn. Fire Deatroya a Georgia Town. Almost the, entire business portion of the town of Arlington, Gn bns been swept by fire. The tire broke out a llftln hnrYirn lnv. light In a restaurant and spread rapidly ami by 7 o'clock only seven stores were standing out ot about thirty. The total loss will bo about 173.000. Woman Dies Laughing. Ida Bolley. wife- of a farmer, died nl T.n Grange, Ind., while in a fit of laughter. A friend told a mtarv wlilni, n.a.Hn n ...u, ,i.-utijr miiuacu Mrs. Bolley. While she was making merry I n i, 1 1 I 1 . . . J it mwuu uurai aaacauseu uuc death. MARKETS. PITTSBUHO. Grain. Flour and Faad. W II EAT No. lred 80 87 311 3i 84 '21 M 90 No a red 8H 37 :iu :is an V!7 03 6 30 S 25 3 75 10 60 N 00 12 00 111 00 13 no n 60 li 00 (1 00 COUN-No. 2 yellow, ear no. 2 yellow, BUelled Mixed ear OATS-No. 1 white No. 2 white BYE Vo. 1 FLOUB Winter putetits 5 62 ur 10 tiO 00 50 00 00 00 25 60 61) rancy struignt winter 0 Bye flour 8 HAY No. 1 timothy 10 Clover 'No. 1 7 Hay, from wagons 11 FEED No. 1 Wbtte Md., ton.. 15 urown middlings i:i Bran, bulk 12 8TBAW Wheat 5 Oat & BEEDB Cover, 60 lbs 4 751 5 00 3M 1 45 iiinulliy, prime 1 Dairy Products, BUTTER Elgin Creamery .... 23ra 2 1 unio creamery ia 20 Fancy country roll 15 It! CUEE8E Ohio, new 0 10 rew lorn, now 10 11 Fruits and Vegetables BEANS Haud-plcked, V bu. . 9 1 20 1 25 l'OTATOEH White, per bu.... liu 75 CABBAGE Homegrown, bbl. 110 125 ONIONS per bu 50 00 Poultry, Eta CHICKENS. V pair TURKEYS. i ti EQUS-l'a. and Ohio, fresh . . . 40(a) 13 15 00 14 16 CINCINNATI. FLOUR ft 4 60 4 85 WHEAT No. 2 red 03 04 RYE No. 2 CORN-Mlxed OATS EOGS BUTTER Ohio creamery 14 47 !U 21 13 16 PHILADELPHIA. FLOUR 9 5 10 5 35 WHEAX No. 2rod .. 95 CORN No. 2 mixed 83 OA'18 No. 2 white 27 BUTTER Creamery, extra 21 EGOS Pa. firsts 18 NEW YORK. FLOUR ratenU 5 8:S 0 60 WHEAT No. 2 red 07 CORN-No, 2 84 OATS W bite Western 35 BUTTER Creamery 10 EGOS State ot Peun 18 LIVE STUCK. CEXTBAI. STOCX YAMa, CAST LIBI1TT, TA. CATTLE. Prime. 1,800 to 1,400 ft $ Good, 1,300 to 1.300 lbs Tidy. 1,000 to L160 lbs Fair light steers, 900 to 1000 Iba Common, 700 to 900 lbs 4 90 6 00 4 76 4 80 4 60 4 60 4 00 4 80 8 M 8 95 BOOS. Medium Heavy Boughs and stags 4 35 4 85 8 35 4 OOtg 4 00 8 40 8 00 1 00 3 60 8 60 4 00 4 40 4 40 3 60 4 10 4 10 8 65 8 25 3 00 4 25 4 85 5 88 BIIEEP. Prime, 95 to 105 lbs, wethers. . Good, 65 to 90 Iba Fair. 70 to 80 lbs Common , Culls Spring lambs. .' Fair to good lambs Veal calves PRECNANT THOUGHTS FROM THE WORLD'S CREATEST PROPHETS. A Hrma mt ThukagWIag-AU Tfclaga la the Hands of the Father A Prayar far RtTengta-Dlerlpllaa llrtaga Caaraga The Kvir Ufa a Baaaer. s For the dear Ioto that kept us through the night. And gave our senses to sleep's gentle sway, For the new miracle of dawning light, Flushiug the east with prophecies of day. We thank thee, O, our Uod! For the fresh life that through our being flows, With Its full tide to strengthen and to bless, For calm, sweet thoughts, uprising from repose. We praise thee, O, our Qod! Thou knowest our needs, tby fulness will supply Our blindness let thy hand still lead us on, Till, visited by the dnysprlnir from on high. Our prayer, oue only, "Let thy will bo done," We breathe to thee. 0. God! -W. II. Burleigh. ' All Thing Inthe Ilamla of the Father. Some feel born to fly, but have no wings. Others think they are made for publio life, but the piibliu thiuks differently. Some have wealth, while others can never gut ahead; their inferiors wear the honors and reap the harvests. Hearts made for homes have no homes. Those not tltted tor re sponsibilities struggle under them. Work, sacrillee, saving, are followed by loss. Tint rainy duy comes, and nothing is laid by. Health goes, mid brave and 'daring spirits are shut wltlilu four walls for years, leaving them only for narrower walls. Today there Is a cloudless sky; tonight a swift shadow) tomorrow all will be dark. These are fre quent experiences. They burn like whlttt hot iron. They startle, then daze; then comes the vague wonder whether there is anything but everluMing disappointment and never-opening mystery. What shall be wild V Tills is the golden key which will unlock all dark doors: Interpret Ood by His fatherhood. Try any other ; the doors move not. Try this ; they swing on silent hinges. Ood is Father. He sees and knows all, and lie allows Hint to come to each which each most needs. His purpose Is blessing. All are In the hands ot One who is doing what earthly fathers do for their children tho very best possible. "But 1 nin iliwip. pointed !" Do you never disappoint your child for his good? "Hut 1 do not get what 1 want !" Do you allow your child to have everything he wants V ''Hut I Buffer terrible agony !" Do you never have to ff-ruilt your child to suffer' "But my leart Is breaking over what can never come tiaek to mo !'' What do you do when your child sobs with a broken heart ' I'o you not take him in your arms ami tslroks the hot head and speak soothing words? Whiit If the heavenly Fat her Is anxious to do the same? Interpret Ood by his father hood. When thenj are limitations wliieh cannot be brokeu, remember the Fatlmr plaeed them there; when ideals are unful filled forever, ask If your ideal for yourself and tho father's are the same. When wealth goes something better will comoin Its plaee. When death Invades, the peaee of Ood waits to come In. If all things are In the Father's hands, they must work for the good of nil. And they do. . Tim hours may seem dnrli, but the years are bright. The years may seem In shadow, but the centuries are in sunlight. Out of tho clurknef J () tonight born the brightness of tomorrow. Into prut Ood by His fatherhood. "No harm from Him enn come to me On ocean or on shore." Rev. Ainory II. Bradford,!). D.,la "The Growing ltevulatlou. A Prayer for Strength. O God, In whose presence Is our love's content, help us so to use all human affec tions that they may speak to us of thee, l'ardou their failures and shortcomings and make them wholly thine. For strength In ministry to thoso we love, for opportun ities ot service and for glad humility in re ceiving, we humbly pray. To love is thy gift. Help us to use it nobly, In all sorrow ami all delight. Choose thou our happiness and suslnln us with thy patience in our grief. When In humility of self-knowledge we are afraid to think of the great love Hint others bring us, muy we grow strong and rmre by the remembrance of their alTeutioii. We are awed and humbled by tne thought ot thy great love In Christ, O Uod. Help us to know Its power fur Joyful righteousness. And may that holy love surround and purify all earthly ties of affection, that they may be as enduring as our Ufa that Is bid with Christ In Uod. And to thee be praise, O Ood. through Jesus Christ, our Lord. Amen. Discipline airings Courage. The life that has not known and accepted sorrow is strangely crudo and uutaught. It can neitnc r neipnor teacn. tor it nag never learned. The life that has spurned the lesson of sorrow, or failed to read it aright, is cold and hard; but the life that has been disciplined by sorrow Is courageous. nnd full of holy and gentle love. Without sorrow life glares. It has no half-tones or merciful shadows. Disappointment In life Is inevi table, l'nin Is tiie common lot of humanity. Hharp sorrow, at one lime or another, will come to each of us, If Indeed It has not al ready come. But this same sorrow is a gentle teacher, and reveals miuiy things tnat it would be hard to understand. Anna ltoburtsou Brown. Universal l.ove the I'lillllmrfil. The universal reign of love, creating now economics, a new commerce, new politics, a new social life, supplanting greed ot gain with passion for service and mutual compe tition with mutual helpfulness, unreal as it seems to us, immersed In the struggle and held by the habits and ruled by tho ideas ot today; Is yet the destined result and fulfil ment of the centuries and ages ot divine teaching. l'hlllp Moxoru. All that we mean by the heavenly Joy and perfection is nothing but tho restoration and the everlasting bloom of that high oapaolty for Ood, In which our normal state began and of which that first state was only the germ or prophecy. Man Muds his paradise when he la iuiparadised iu Uod. II. Bush nelL. It Is one thing to hold the doctrine of Christ's divinity, another to draw from the doctrine its fulness of blessing. "Have 1 been so long time with you and yet thou hast not known me?" George Bowen. Unlovtngness Is unbelief; Untruthful Uvea are heresies. Lucy Laroom. Why dost thou fear to be wronged? It can at the worst kill thoe. Who is born to live forever? Consent to be wronged, be silent under every Injury. But of one thins be sure; do the fullest, the most scrupulous tustloe to all men, and chiefly to those who lave wronged you. Mozootndar. O God, who art the truth, make me one with thee in everlasting love! I am often weary of reading and weary ot hearing. In thee alone is the sum of fey desire! Let all teachers be silent, let the whole creation be dumb before thee, and do thou only speak to my soul! Thomas a Kempls. Bemember your own soul must be Ulumln. ated before you can help others ; the spring does not brim over with refreshlnt waters that has not a hidden source. Light on the Hidden Way. emu mm ira. TOPIC FOR SUNDAY, OCT. 3. "Hew to Vake Ood't Will Oor WilL n the lesalt" rkaU.1-13. DAILY READINGS. Sept. 27. An obstinate will. Jr. xllv. 15-23. Sept. IS. A fatal will. Ex. x. 1-20. Sept. 29. A righteous will. Josh. xxlv. 14-25. 30. God's will. Rom. vlll. 28-30. 1. "Teach me thy will." Fa. cxllil. 1-12. 2. "Not as I will." Matt. xxvl. 3-4ti. S. How to make God's will our Sept. Oct. Oct Oct. will, and the result. Phil. II. 1-13. Scripture Verses. Ps. xxv. 6: cxllil. 10; John vil. 17; Itom. xll. 2: Eph. I. 9; y. 17: Col. 1. 9; 1 Thess. v. 18; Heb. xlll 21; Jas. I. 6. LESSON THOUGHTS. God would not have us destroy our own wills but so to train and cultivate our Inclinations that they may natur ally lead us In the same way with God's will Just as naturally as the current of a river follows the course laid out by Its banks. A father cannot give his child the advantages he wishes, so long as the child distrusts his father's plans; and God cannot give us the Joy and bless edness he would, until we have sur rendered entirely to his will, with per fect confidence in his love and wisdom. SELECTIONS. He gains, forsooth, the lesser part Of self-surrender to the love divine, Who prays with lowly, fervent heart. "Thy will be done, O Lord, not mine!" But he shall have no self to bear, Who, yearning wholly Godward, hath begun To murmur tremblingly this prayer: "My will with thine, O Lord, be one." The surrender that God wants makes us children, not slaves. It does not abolish our wills by making us ma chines, but It makes them In perfect harmony with his. It Is only by such surrender thut duty and hnpplness can become one. Thus, and thus only, a fellowship Is established In which God becomes our close friend and we re ceive at all times the needed strength from him. Thy wonderful grand will, my God! Triumphantly I make It mine; And fulth shall breatlu; her glad "Amen" To every dear command of tiling. Beneath the splendor of thy choice. Thy perfect choice for me, I rest; Outside It now I dnre not live, Within it I must needs be blessed. The Self-Life n Barrier. Ton often see beautiful fruit displayed be hind a plate glass window or In some shop; and the hungry little buys look and long for it, but they cuiiuot reach' It. If you were to toll one ot them who has never seen glass to take snme, he might attempt it ; hut lie llmls something invisible between him ami that fruit. Just so many Christians can see that Ood's gifts are beautiful, but they cannot take, becuuse the self-life comes in between, even though tliey cannot see it. What glo rious blesslugs wo should have If we wero only willing to give up the self-life ami lake) what (iod has prepared for us not only righteousness, not only peace, but the joy ot the Holy titiosl-llcv, Andrew Murray. The Serpent Tlist Kills. An eagle currying a serpent iu its tnlons to its nest on the mountain was bitten to tint heart, and fell to tint ground. Have you ever seen a man or woman iu the cliurch fall in the same way? You do not know tho 'secret of the full, but the omniscient eye of secret dishonesty la business, that stealthy Indulgence iu the intoxicating cup, that licentiousness anil profligacy unseen of men, that secret tampering with unbelief and error, was the serpent at the heart that brought the eagle down. Theodore L. Cuyler, D. D. The Attitude r M ncnjilh. There is another attitude as Important as that of truth and of duty for the develop ment of great personality. It is tin attltudo described iu the word "love." Ever and every wh-tre be a lover! The occupying of such a point of truth and duty and love will make you a personality which shall be lik a cathedral, strong with the strength of but tressed principles, beautiful witli the memo ry of holy deeds, and seen from afar as the svmbol of the presence of tlud. Charles F. Thwiug. A MiniihiK I'lujer. Eternal God, who hast neither dawn nor evening, yet sendest us ulternate mercies of the darkness and the day, there Is no light but thine, without or within. As thou lifU est the .curtains of night from our abode, take also the veil from all our hearts. Illso with thy morning upon our souls; (piickcn all our labor and our prayer; and. though all else declines, let the noontide of thy grace and peace remain. Muy we walk, while it is yet day. In the steps of him who,, with fewest hours, Mulshed thy divinest work. Amen. Ill Health linn to Alcohol. The Into Hir Andrew Clark, the eminent English physician, said: "New let me say that I am speaking solemnly and carefully When I tell you that I um considerably within the mark In saying that within tho rounds of my hospital wards to-day seven out of every ten that Ho there in thoir beds owo their ill health to alcohol. I do not say that seventy in every 100 aro drunkards. I do not know that one of them Is, but they use alcohol. 8o soon asu man begins to take one drop then tho desire be gotten in him becomes a part of his nature, and that nature, formed by his actsjiifllcts curses Inexpressible when handed down to the generations that are to follow him as part and parcel ot their boing." raMab4 Inm Ult, REVIVO RESTORES VITALITY. Made a Well Man ISthDay.fM ofMe TIE ureat soth Iay. Zrt233TOZZ X1.3S3XXSX3'Sr produces the altnva rnull In 30 riaya. It -t Kwrfullr and uulcklr. Oirr Imn all olhtri tall Vouamo will regain their loat manhood and eld rnou will rarovor tlixlr youthful vigor by uains ItSCVIVO. ft nulcklr and aurulr renloraa Ncrvona nraa. Lol Vltalltr, Irapoiaucj-. Maiillr Eralwlona, IxMtlMwar.Faillns M.morj-. WaMlna Ularaira.aad all elforta ot Mltabuno or ncn.fand Imllacretion, whlcb unflta neforrinlj-. bimiiirator aiarrlae. It notoolr cure by Martins at tha n-at of dlaraas, but li a treat nerve tnnlo aud blood linlldnr, bring Ing back the pink glow to pain elierka and ra atortug the lire of voulh. It ward, off fiuuvnlif and Connumptlon. Inalut on bavins IlKVI VO on other. It cab be carried In vet jiorkrt. Dr mall. 1.00 per package, or all for Sff.oo, with a popt live written guaritntoe to rata or refund the money. Circular frie. adduces 10YAL MEDICIHE CO.. 71 Watel At t CHICAGO, EL for sale at allddlelinrgh, Pa., by W. U. 6PANULKR. WANTED-AN IDtt". thing to patent t Protect yonrldmui; they mnjr brinft tou wealth. Write JOHN WSDDKIi BUiUTA CO., I'atent Attorneys, Wuaingum D.O.. for their tWOgprUeoflw, Istney.WlSr ''OB' vff 1 1 'If if I "All the I World Loves r" a Winner" M Our 'Ninety Seven w W Complete Line of y3 I Mlonarcli sasl W are the t i O 8 Yc3rs of jj li 8 Experience l-sJg jfi MONARCH CYCLE MFG. CO. 0 ) CHICAGO HEW TORE 10EDOH )W Mi Retail Salesrooms: J iu) isa Dearborn St. 87-80 A.Otlanil Ave. Zv?A ff Chicago W Baco-Guro Baco-Guro The only scienti fic cure for the Tobacco habit. Has cured thousand where other remedies failed. iWrltu for proofs.) Baco-Guro Baco-Guro Does not depend en the will power of the user. It Is tht Cure. Vegetable Jt Imrmlcvs. Directions are chstr. I 'are IhrTflittrt'ttHt'H trim until Hie n ( uro notifies you to stop. Is the Oriiiiiif HXf. fi n duiiiniilcr Iteiiu ily that refunds 011r mon Baco-Guro ey if It lulls to cure. Iikvestlgato ltiico- uro before taking any remedy IV r t Ilk Toluu Ilabll. AU druggists are authorized to sell ltuco-4'uro Willi our Iron clad written guarantee. One hoi $1.00; 3 luinen itniHrHiitccd euriO tl'.W If Jour ilriiKk'lHl doc not keep it, ne iritl Heml it. U rile nr free iKMiklet iiml proof. t l UKU.M IIKKIc Al. 4 Mrtl. CO., LaCraur, Wle. nlLDOD poison J homeferaameprlionderaamKuarao. IT . If yon prol mr tooome here we wlluSE U,de PotB'. and atlll have arhea and palna, M uooas I'atcbes In mouth, 8ore Throat. I'lmplea. Coppar Colored Spot.. IJlrJS 00 oat. It is this Heooudnry liLoOla FolsoQ natacaaee ami challenge the world for eie weoannotcure. Thla d.am hi baffled the aklll of the moat eTntoau , hl'JE plan.. flOO.OOO o,.ita tMhlnd Si"r uSffi apnlioMinn. Addreaa I'OOft ItrJMKUY ?o Stove : Naphtha Tho Cheapest and Best Fuel on the Market. With It you can run a vapor stove for one half cent per hour. Civo us a call and be convinced. We Ea STAHLNECKER, Middlcburgh, Pa. 0 KIPANS arc intended for children, ladies and rill who prefer a medicine disguised as con fectionery. They may now be had (put up in Tin Boxes, seventy-two in a box), - price, twenty-five cents or five boxes for one dollar. Any druggist will get them if you insist, and they obtained by remitting the price to The Ripans Chemical company - i Wheels, Guaranteed TVint the Best. I UUI -atT''fTTffr,Tr 6TYLC&1 Ladies', Gentlemen's & Tandem. The Lightest Hunnlui; Wheels on Earth. THE ELDREDGE ....AND.... THE BELVIDERE. i We always Made Good Sowing Machines! Why Shouldn't we Make Good Wheels! National Sewing Machine Co., 330 Broadway, Factory! New York. Belvldere, Ills. Na4W" " TAEULES may always be Quality re