I 11 . -i .'5 ' f ,. ' : IB !:; i ! J I, A, CTW TBIUMPS- ( miM rMMMMfllM Cam Cstr. T. ft. BlBonra. th .Ureal "il" 2TJ!fi W til wiiH to SiltTrrer. Till .J"? inn Newly Discovered Uemedle W CUM Vea- (UDipiloM kixl U Lf .rouWse. Nothing could be latrvr. more PllntropJ; " earrv more .y to the ffllemj. then fenor. ou offer ol t be houored end dlaiUigeJahedcben. tat. T. A. Mucum. M. C. ot New Yurll OHJ. He hH dlxoovrrrv a reliable snast'"", tor cmi.iii..iK.n. and ell bronchial. throat, loo and chest nutcase, catarrhal affections, snerai 4ullnni.d weakm, lot of flwb ehd all con 4illoiu) of wasting away, ami iobim ' tr writs known, will iwurt three free bo Ueeofbm aewly dlwovered retnedle to any annexed reaa Ot the Post. Already hla "new scteorMo system ol medl cine" Ii.ii pormanroily cured luoeannda oC ap-pa-ntl.v Impelesa caatw. , . . , The Doctor conlderi It not onlv hl profev lorjsl. bill hi religious duty- duty wn eh he owneatoHnflerlngliuinnnHjr-do donate bis ln- ttilh&N"p7ovded toe "dreaded consumption" to he a curable dla-e beyond a doubt. In any climate, and ha on file In his American and European laboratories thousand of "heart fell teatlmosliilx of gratitude" from those benefitted and cured, in nil paru of the world. Catarrhal ami pulmonary troubles lead tfl eon utnptlon. and cwwumptlon. uninterrupted, mentis spwdy and certain death. Dpn't delay until II In too lute. Simply write T. A. Blneuiu. M. C . IH Pine Street. New York. giving express and pminniceaddrwia, and the tree mw will be pminptiv sent. IMeaae tell the Doctor you saw his oner lu the ". Alaska -Klondykb Gold Mining Co. Capital Stuck, 500,000 Sliarcs of $10.00 t'iicli, fully nntl non-ns-swisiMf, of whirl'i 2;0,000 Shares art- now oili-rod for sulwriptioiis ut jar. SPKCIAL. NOTICE- There ar many persons who desire to go to the gold lleUU of Alaska the coining season, who have nut enough ready money available to enable them to do mi. To nil mieh, we would advice the desirability of forming a local syudlcato of three or more person, and Jointly purchase fK) shares of our atoek. and select one of your number to (to ami pronpect unil mine for Joint occonut. With parties .forming such syndicate, thla Company will contract to Bend out one of tlielr number fur each MO shares of stock purchased fotn it as l i-, a 1 1 m unttln ancli 'party there for one year from the data of arrrivnl at the gold lleld. supplying him with food, tools, and alt thing n-iUlita to ennble dim (to prospect for gold, om I with help todevelop and work all jjood vlikinm located by him tde claims to be located I I the name of the syndicate and the Alttika-Klomlyke tlold Mining Co., and to be owned Jointly and equally, share and share alike Write for Circular Full Particulars. 1)1 IlKI-IOKS. .Tauicn Uieo, Into Secretary State of Colorado ; Wm. Slmw. caiitalint, Chicaxo: K. M. Titconib, i.Vloe Tresident and General Slammer Kantman Fruit Dispatch Co. ; H. V. Kajdi, member Maritime Kxcdanirc, New York ; lco. W. Morgiin, Circle City, Alaska; John 1C. I.owtliur.lNew York ; (ieorKe T. Durfee. Fall ltidor, Mass. ADVlsOUV BOARD. lion. I.. II. Wakefield, Associate Justice, First DM rid Court Houth Framlnirhom, Mass. I Hon. CI. 1. Kicdinond, lato, Prenlileiil Court of Appeal, Denver, Col. ; S. (1. 1'lMleKmlT, Into Treasurer Lycoming Coun ty, Willinmsport, l'enn. ttnmncl M. Bryan, Fresident Chesopeake ond I'liliiiiiac Ted'plinne Co., WoeliiiiKton. D. C ; J)r. It. C. l'mliur, I,:1J1 MicliiKiin Ave.. Chiiuwo III. ; 4'ol. 1 A. lliiTniiin, IVtruit, Mich.; M. it. II. Swift, Atlorncy-nt lJiw, Full Itlvcr, M:.h . laiinc W. S. ott, Dcduty Col lintor, Cedar lEiipiils Imva. Win. I". Mi Kiilubt. Attoincy-at-Uiw. (iriind KapiilH, Mii'b. The lu ilni'KS of the Alankn-Klondyke (iotd Mining Coinpnny will be to run a line.nf nteam cn on the Yukon ltlver, and between Scuttle and the different mrts of Aliuka, open' supply Htorcs at the different camps, do a general transportutioii, commercial and bnnklinr bUf ineiw, nod, in aililition, deal In Mining Claims, and work the mines utready owned and that may hereafter be acquired by the ConiHiny. Tlu' Coiiipuny controls the following properties: ICiglit Cold Placer Claims aggregating H10 Acres In Kitent. located on Forty Mile Creek under United States mining laws. Development has proved the pny streak to be five feet thick and has yielded plsi-or dirt that pans from $10 to 11.1 to the pan. Five Oold Placer Claims, ag gregating 1 Acres in extent, on Porcupine Hiver, tliut pans from 'Si cents to $10 to a wll. Ten (told Placer Claims, aggregating 200 acres on the Tuuua Itiver, panning from $10 to $j0 a yard. A fine gold quart! lode In Alaska, which as ays from IS to $300 per toll. The lode show au enormous outcrop of free milling ore, vein at surface being 12 feet thick ; on this property have miMle VI locations of 1A00 feet by 800 feet, equaling IX acres. We don't Claim that It is the mother lode, but we do know It Is without an equal for prospective values. The exti mates and statement above are of necessity hosed upon Information obtained from our Superintendent, and are believed and accepted by the company. This company having acquired extensive holdings of rich placer and gold quarts proper ties, capable of earning large dividends on Its wtoek. offers to Investors advantage that in auia large and profitable returns. M r. CJeorgs W. Morgan, our Superintendent, lias iH-en on the Yukon for the pant year work ing In the Interest of this company Therefore, we are not asking any one to contribute to a iiroject unplanned, but to one thoroughly ma tured. This company, with Its able aids, ex tensive knowledge, and great resources, Is cer tain lo become one of the ricQeet companies op erating In Alaska. Our J'reHidont takes pleasure In referring you to eke following list of references t James E. Dewey, Mills t Co., Bankers, Detroit, Mich.; S3 Louis C. Tetard, CommiSsiontr World's Fair from Mexico, 'Tde Rookery," Chicago, III Jenstor H. M. Teller, of Colorado ; John Hhafrotb, Representative to Congress, Colorado ; J. M. Bell, Representative to Congrats, Colorado; U. C Clement, Washington Trust Co. Building, Washington, D. C. ; Joseph C. Helm, ex-Chief Justice of Colorado; Charles D. lUyt, Chief Justice Of Colorado ; O. B. Maugham, Jl Times-Herald, Chicago, III.; Maurice Joyce, Rleetra Fteture, Star Building, . Washington, D, C. ; dept. J. J. Lambert, Owner and Editor Chief sain, Pueblo, Col.; AL.HUlegaian.TM AceatM. P. R. R. 8t. Louis, Mo.; U, R. Oowan, Drexel Ce , Philadelphia. "The full-paid stock U now offered Ten Dollabs per share Send joar orders to the ! .. llztMJflBmt Gflli tiBlti Cl.. .' ItskMatreaderax'.ITewTark. ... WHO DIED JUST NOW? Who's dead? Who at thla xeocaeat died. Or far away or close at hand Out where the ocean furl as hid Dr on the crlme-lnfesltd land? Who. when you bend to read this Una (Mo matter whore, do matter how Death com to him and gave the sign Of beckoning), who died Juot aowT Xing, waa ttT Bishop? Robber? Wife? Or babe la some worn mother's arms? Or patriarch Just finding life .Posse seed of newer, fresher ebarma? Perhapo it waa a boy, wboee face . Waa bright with youth perhapo bride- Perhapo a chief of some wild race. Stretched oa hla bullhldo ahleld-who led. And where? la fair and ninny Spain? Or la th endleas northern night? Or oa th parched Sahara plain Or on some atony mountain height? Touched Death soma lalet f th sea. Where ocean part and ocean meet Or did a com a guest to be Within th houo aero th street? Who died just now? Each human breath (So calculating men declare) Is but a tally for a death la this great hive of men. somewhere. Somewhere just now o'er trembling Up There passe forth life's final sigh. Just as the disappearing ships Drop down below th line ot sky. Who died Just now in all the world? For om one, statisticians say, la for each passing moment hurled Down Asrael'a dark and gloomy way. To stand, gaunt-eyed and white and awed. Where Clarion's boatllghts dully shine. Who was It died Just now? Pray Qod Not some one of your kith or mine. Chicago Record. ilTlfSEPlSODEl BY AQUILA KEMPSTER, Ti EMOmER IT? What a Question I It's ten years gone and more, yet 1 wake in the night with the cold sweat pouring1 from me and the echo of that last awful cry ringing in my ears. Forget it? I wish to God that I could, but well, this Is the story: ffe were stationed at Naeslrabad. the hot teat and slowest hole in the whole In dian empire. The only thing; to break the awful monotony was huutlng, and after two years there I was naturally something of an expert, tiame, outside round the Ajmere hills, was pretty thick this is, deer, neilghai and such like while well up Chandl way there were lots of tigers to be hod for the potting. Now, wlien one of the officers goes off n-hunting he generally picks on one of us "Tommies" who knows the ropes and takes us along. As there's gen erally tidy pood picking for Tommy, the job is well liked; so when young Simpson our latent sub. asked me to go along and show him around, why, I naturally jumps at it and packs my kit before I knew where we were bound. When I heard no other place than Chan dl jungle was to be our stamping ground I kind of squirmed a little, 'cause I'd been there before and knew the particular kind of place it was. It's full of tigers, and they're always hun gry. Why, when the locomotive is plugging up the hill at night the stokers have to throw open, the fire box door and let out the light so as to scare the brutes off with the glare on the outside of that little patch of jungle, nnd half a dozen Pnrsee firemen have been clawed off the tender by the brutes as the engine grunted past. The hill Is so steep there that you can't make more than 12 miles an hour with those old rat Up (imp locomotives anyway. Of course I wasn't frightened; but taking a beginner out to a place like that isn't fun. There's no telling what a fel'ow'll do when stacked up against big game for the first time; the finest shots in the world will go to pleees at their first sniff of a tiger or a hatiit not Unit elephants are particularly dan gerous but when your finest pigeon and target shots tremble so that thry can't hit a deer at .50 yards it's no joke to take a beginner up in the woods at Chandl. I tried to hold him, but he wouldn't hear of it; told me as how he had promised a skin to a young lady back home for her birthday, and a skin he was going to have. So we started. We took the night express and dropped off early in the morning at Chandl village, where I got the stuff for our camp, a bundle of bamboos, some stout cord and a young kid for bait. We then struck across country, keeping well in the open, for the Chan dl river, a little hali-dried-up stream that quenches the thirst of more tigers In a week than all the other rivers in a month. We crossed this stream about three in the afternoon, and on the edge of the jungle I found a banyan tree, tip which I scrambled with the help of the youngster, and in a short time had hacked a space clear to fix my bam boos, which I sailed and laahed Into a kind of platform, strong and roomy enough to hold u both com fortably. Then I slipped down by o knotted rope, which waa to serve us as a ladder. Next we drove a stake deep down in the bank of the stream and tied the kid to it, scratching Ita hind leg with a knife so it would bleat; and, having chucked oor grub, blanket and rifle up, wa shinned up tbe rope ourselves and made everything comfortable. Then I began to breathe a little eaaler, for it would take a pretty clever tiger to get at us up there. We were none too toon, for night drop quick out there, and the long gray shadows were creeping over the land before we were safety housed. We made a hearty meal and had a good slug of brandy to keep the chill off; then we lay smoking and talking in whisper, with tw eyes and our Mar tinis sighted oa the vague form of the kid that was dimly risible in the gloom. Later the moon came out, a great, big, round, creamy thing, looking some how awful Miens, saUlsil' up there so still and ciourerml-tUka; and the plain Uve cry of that poor Uttle kid a It sniffed "round after Its mother all added Twi not aupentitioiia, bat 1 awn I did feel naeommea queer that night I think maybe I got a trifle drowsy: anyway, my eyee were o misty that I loot sight of the tip of the gun sad the kid together. Thea there was a loud rustle, and 1 waa back la Chandl Jungle with a jump that fetched my heart into any mouth. Bat it wasnt a tiger, Jnst a ring buck; bat, say, what a buckl In all my bunting days la In dia I never clapped eyes oa bis equal. IX stood for a moment sniffing kind of suspicious, thea walked ap to the kid and began nosing It. X felt Simpson stir la the shadow where he lay, and the next moment his Martini spoke and th buck dropped a fin shot, yes; but he had such good light be couldn't miss It. So far it waa all right, but what next? "Jones," says be, "keep a good watch out; I must have the skin before a tiger spoils it. I never saw such a fine one in all my life, and I wouldn't miss it for a fortune." An' he tip's to go down the tree. Well, 'wel'p met you might have knocked me down with a feather. That kid had been howling for a tiger to come and eat hkn for an hour or more, snd now this crack-brained Idiot must go and add himself to the brute's supper! Well, I raved and I prayed and I cursed at blm; It wasn't a bit of good; his British blood was up, and, like thou sands of other youngsters who make the backbone and glory of our army and navy, he didn't know what fear was, but just grinned. They're great daredevil fighters, but they haven't any more tense than a suckling calf. There' only two plaves on earth where they can be safely trusted In bed snd leading a forlorn hope. When I saw he was bent on it I just gritted my teeth and pulled up my gun a he slid down the rope. Iu two minutes he had skipped over the stream and had his knife at work on the buck, the kid meantime trying to pall up to him as if he were its mother. Well, sir, I Just lay there with the muzzle of my gun sighted on his head when the thumping of my heart didn't shake it off. If the tiger would only try to sneak out on him -for I felt an awful certainty that he would come I could sav.e him; but if the brute sprang, God help html Not a man, la. the empire could pot a tiger on the jump except by a fluke. .1 j- As he knelt there in the moonlight I saw him push back from his side the scabbard of an Indian tulwar a' pres ent, I believe, from the rajah of Ajmere to prevent the blood from staining it. While I was admiring his coolness and cursing his cussedness, even at that mo ment there was the flash of a long black shadow across the moonlit space, the 2lll TUX WHIRL OF A FLYING BODY. whirl of a flying body, and a huge ti gress flung herself onhJm. i( She overshot the mark and would have cleared his stooping form and given me a chance, but he must have felt, rather than seen, the danger.' With one desperate wrench he drew the sword from it sheath in a long up ward sweep that caught the brute fair In the middle and clove it clean through flesh and muscle to the backbone. There was a frightful cry of rage, and as the beast's great hind paw contracted In death agony it caught poor Simp son's skull, literally tearing it off. With an awful haunting cry he fell down across the buck and the three lay there dead, while the kid cowered away, bleat ing with fear. its, I think I went mad then. Hun ger ot last drove ne down front the tree two days after. How I got to the- railroad track I don t know, but 4he express stopped and the hands brought Simpson's body in. I lay in the hos pital with brain fever for nearly three months, then they shipped me home. I'm a married man now and have little ones around me, arid much of the horror has worn away; but the sight of the harvest moon bring on a fit of trem bling that all the love of the wife can scarce quiet. Detroit Free Press. A Clerical JnetlBcatlea. One who ministered In the only mag nificent church north of the Tweed, be ing Rome, had a private Interview with the pope. When he come back, he was severely catechised whether he had knelt down to the 80a of Perdition. "Yes, I did. And I am, prepared to juatlfy it. Kneeling, In Scotland, has no religious significance. That was all right. But if, while the pope was speaking to me, I had lounged, and stared about me, and frequently yawned, and looked in any direction save that of his holiness, that would hsive been most Improper In a minister of the kirk. For that would have been adopting, In speaking to a mortal man, th well-known attitude of publlo prayer." 8everal individuals, hearing this, declared that the eminent preacher would certainly go to perdition for mak ing such an obserraTtlOtt. But nobody attempted to answer it Longman's. ' How easy is the thought, in certain moods, ot the kmllest, most anseliUh devotion! ' How .hard is the dolor of the thought ta the face of thousand unlovely dif&aoitiesv--Oeorp ICsodoa ald. : " J ; !-?: TNK SUNDAY SCMOd atMittaJ ta. lsvawra call 4 iiautki . VlT. . , . . Arranged trvm PsJoobee' Note. ' OOLD EN TKXT.-ToUow saa.-kUtt ML TUB SECTION Include merely th lea se with It parallels: with a glance ale at th oouro of Matthew's story a told la thla chapter. 1AB aLLKl J.-Mara tdt-sl: Luke 117 a TIME. The discourse at Matthew's baa. euot belong to th autumn of A. IX M, after th arsftonv oa th Mount. Matthew' call, given bar to Introduce the feast, took puvo la the provtoue spring. PLACE. Capernaum, at th euatoas house. Matthew' place f business; aad at hie home la th city. EXPLANATORY NOTES. L The Call of Matthew. 0. "And ae Jesus passed forth," from ilia boas In Capernaum, where Be had healed a paralytic (V. 1-9). "Be saw a man," a publican (Luke 8:17). "named Mat thew:" Luke call him Levi, the name be went by when engaged In business, before hie conversion. "Sitting at the receipt of custom:" Toll-house, or cus tom bouse, for the collection of the taxes on flab, or duties on the merchan dise which passed slong the great road to Jerusalem, Tyre and Damascus snd the east, which centered st Capernaum. "And Be aaith unto blm: 'Follow me,' " both in heart as his Saviour, Teacher and Master, and literally by taking his place among our Lord's constant at tendants. "And be arose" from bla place In the office "and' followed him:" Without doubt. leaving his business In competent bands. There were plenty to do the work. II. Tht Unnr;uet and Reception at Matthew's House. Vs. 10-13. 10. "And It came to pa:" Some week after the call of Matthew and his subsequent choice a one of the twelve. "Jesus sat at meat in the bouse" of Matthew (Luke). "Many publicans and sin ners:" Disreputable winners and out casts, notorious offenders. The Phar isees were quite oa great sinners, but in another way. "Came," probably at Mat thew' Invitation, to meet "Jesus . . . and His disciples," lr order that they might come under their influence and be saved. 11. "And when the Pharisees:" They were a large and Influential aect of Jews, who prided themselves on the strictness with which they keptthecer emonlal law, which they often made a substitute for the morality of the heart. "Saw it:" The- Pharisees were not guests, but freely came into the bouse and looked on, according to the custom of the east. "Said unto Bis dis ciple:" Who were probably nearer. "Why eatrth your Master with pub licans and sinners?" The substance of their charge wa not that he taught sin ner, but that he ate with them that is, mingled with them on term of social equality. 12. "When Jean hoard that He sold unto them:" He made two answer to their criticism, one from analogy (V. 12) , the other from the Scripture (V. 13) . It is only "they that are etck" who need a physician. So that the very thing on account of which the Phari sees objected and found fault wfth Jesus were the reason why He should go among publicans and sinners. 13. "But go ye" to the 8eriptures. with which the scribes were familiar; but they often knew more about the husk than the corn, the shell of the nut than the meat. "And learn:" Get at the real meaning. "What that mean eth:" lie quotes from Hosea 6:6. "I will have." I wish in my people, "mer cy," deeds of kindness to those in need, pity and help for the sinful, "and not sacrifice," the external form of reli gion, wftbout the heart and the deed they signify. "For I am not come to call the righteous," those who are al ready good, "but sinners to repent ance," for they need the call. III. New Method for New Time. Vs. 14-17. 14. "Then came to nim:" At the same banquet of Mathhew. "Why do we and the Pharisee fast oft, but Thy disciple fas, not?" Th reply wa by a familiar illustra tion. 15. "Can the children of the bride chamber mourn:" Jesu' reply mean uat fasting, to be real, roust not be a mere form, but the outward expres sion of a deep and sincere sorrow for sin. He, the Bridegroom, wa with His disciple, and they should rejoice rather than fast. "But the day will come." etc., when st Jesus' death they will feel like mourning, so sad and troubled that fasting will be the natural expression of their heart. 16. "No ma putteth a piece of new cloth," unfulled, unlirunk, rather than "undressed," as In R. V.. which is an 'unfamiliar manufacturer's term. "Un to an old garment," as a patch. "Taketh from the garment," etc. The patch, ex actly fitting the rent in the old gar ment, would shrink more and more, till the older and weaker cloth gave way under the strain, and the rent became larger thsn before. 17. "Neither do men put new wine In to old bottles:" R. V. rightly, wine skins, 1. e.. skins of animals from which the body is withdrawn, leaving the skia whole except the neck, which become the mouth of the bottle, and the legs, which are tied up. "Kite the bottle break," with the pressure of the gases produced by the process of fermenta tion upon lesther weakened and e racked by age. Ram's Hera Bloats. Some guns kick. Revenge is one of them. The dullest man has In hkn some thing original. It is sin. The man is usually in th right who owns himself in the wrong. The waters of Lathe drown the past. Th blood of Jaams cleanse It. "Christianity is all tery well, but a man must He." Tea, ta all eternity. For an epitaphs , "H believed In a fro Ooapel; It never eost him a cent.", ;. SaeyoiofwacHas -have to be lewiittaa, every 4m years; the old Bible1 Is etS y to east, . .v (. NoMuns. No Trouble. In Clsrkaburg, W. Va it la reported, the church social has evolnted Into a Mwcighlnanarty.n AUin attendance arc decorated with ribbons, and when the girl is found with ths same color of rlb- Doa that is worn by on of the beaux of the occasion, the aforesaid, beaux and young ladieo sre expected to march up under an evergreen) arch, and both are weighed. Some one quick at figures substrata the difference In avoirdupois, and the gentleman pays for the excess at a penny a pound. That is all therei of It the church get the young man's money, snd he gnu the girl, whose mis sion it is to take him to the dining- room, where a tempting lunch is served. Once upon a time a "blizzard" was a dreadful outbreak of the elements and was supposed to be a native of the wild prairies of the west. People out there probably so regard it still. But news paper in this part of the world had an opportunity to "write up" a genuine blizzard, and ever since that memorable occasion they have employed the term to designate what the Irreverent would call "any old snowstorm." Perhaps the ranchers as tbey fight their war through real blizzards smile grimly st the fervid imagination of easterner. Reuben Lane, a rugged man, walked on crutches from Barnesborough, Pa., to Topeka, Kan., a distance of 597 miles, to marry Mrs. Eliza Ann Parker. When be arrived there she refused to have him. He ha employed a lawyer and will commence action for breach of promise. He is a widower 33 years old. She is a widow 60 years old. They be came engaged through a matrimonial agency. It took Lane 36 days to make the trip. WIDOWff APPRAISEMENTS. Notice Is Here by riven that the following Widows' An- pralgeiuents under tucfaiD law, have been filed with the Clerk ot the Onans' Court of Snyder county for Confirmation on Monday, the 28tb day of Feb., ltWs. AnDraisement of Prnnv Arboorast. widow of Nathan Arhosxst, late of Perry Twp., Snyder Co., Fa., deo'J, elected to be taken under the exemption law. Appraisement of Mary Snyder, widow of 0. U Hnyder, late of Franklin Twp.. hnyder Co , Pa . dee'd. elected to be taken under the tXH exemption law. u. . Mii.Miti., neric, u. v. I KOINTKR'8 NOTICES. Notice 18 bereoy (T1V "en Mint th following mimed Demon have Med their Adinlniai niton.', uiiartlmn. and Kx- pt'titora' account! In I lie KeiflHteiJ8 Office of Hny- rjer county, ana tue mime win 110 prew ntea for continuation und allowance ftl Mie Conn liousti In MlddleburirU, Monday, Feb. Sri. 1MM. Second and final account of Henry T. ('oak and Jesse Cornelius, executors of the estate of ltotiert Cornelius, late ol Jiicloon Iwn.. de- ceaited. Kirst and flna) account of Kpliraini Htuck. administrator of (lie eHtate of Anthony Stuck lute ol nprinu rwp , ucccaeu. Hirst and final account of Ira A. Kline, ad- niluistor of the estate of Josiali Kline, lute of Hprinu; Twp , Hnyuer County, l'a , deceased Kirst and final acoount of P. B. Ilollir and C. M. Showers, adininlstiatnrs of the estate of .lahn K. Lielitenwalter, late of Centre Twp. Hnyder County Pa., deccane l. First and final account of Ilcnrv llostorman. executor of the estate of l'etcr ilosternmn, late of Penn Twp., deceased. John II. Wii.i.is, Resister. GETTING READY Every expectant mother bsi a trying ordeal to face. If she does not get ready for it, there is no telling what may happen. Child-birth is full of uncertainties if Nature Is not given proper assistance. Mother's friend ts the best help you can use at this time. It is a liniment, and when regularly ap plied several months before baby eomssv It makes the ad rent easy and nearly pain less. It relieves and prevents "morning siGhtiess," relaxes the overstrained mot. alee, relieves the distended feeling, short ens labor, makes recovery rapid and cer tain without any dangerous after-effects. Mather's Frisad is good for only on purpose, vis.: to relieve motherhood ot danger and pain. ' tldouTMbottlatandaStoftxa,ersat byjaall on reeelpt of prioa. , rasa Booas, eoetalnln- valnabl tafora. tloa Ter women, will he seat to ear adi4 uses axpUoatioa ta . TBI MtAOflBLO RKRjlJkTM C9 vf I !( VAOHCO 2 DYCO AT ONE OMIMTIOsi ANY COLOR. The Cleanest, Fastest Dra tor felled or Faded Shirt WaaWowMa. Wbbona, Curtains, Undt1inen, etc'! wisawNaK reswlara, Look! Look!! Look at yourself when you bu clothing at my store. I keep con stantly in stock the best and fines line of Hats and Gents' Clothing Furnishing Goods, Underwear aul Caps. Call to see my stock. W. B. BOTER'S BROTHERHOOD STOFJ SUNBCRT, - - PENKa. AM PER DAY SURE S eJALftftV OR COMMISSION DO you uam hcmvblt, sttadf tmpicymA im ytar ronna. et food wants, at your -A kom or to trawl If ta, snd 4c. fa stairl for our wholtsalt price-list and partuulurl Wilunii otsiofbank nfenncu. . AMERICAN TEA CO. Dctroiv. MicmiqaH Doe It Pay to ke Sick f Besides the discomfort and Mifferino;, illnei of any kind is erpenslve. Hundreds of peopj consult the doctors every day about coufrha au colds. This is better than to suffer the disewl to run along, but tbote who use Otto's Cure (4 the throat and lunirs do better .still. It cnaa less than euro is certain- You can vet a trlj bottle free of our afrente, W. H. Herman, Troe elville; Middleswarth Ulsh, McClure; H. A noniint. Aline, utrge atsea aoc ann out. Everybody Say So. Cnscnrets Candy Cathartic, the most wod dat'ful medical discovery of tlio ape, plena ant and relresluntr to wa taste, nciRontil and positively on kidueys, liver and bowels cleaiiHimr iha entire system, dispel cold cuvu limtilnolie. fever. liiiMtiml rnnst.ltmtioi ami lil'inusncHB. Pleuao buy nnd try n bn of t!. (J. O. tn-tlny; 10. a.", nil cents. Boltlnd giiiuiint to euro by till druemis. mm--- WrulwJ'jS5L,i " 31 rr-mi-' ' Aa'aJrVFrfr.rlV ., A SUHHER SAIL in ladies' shoes is a pleasan voyage afoot. For the pleas! ure it gives, there's no saii like our sale. Crowds art enjoying it, and securing thj prettiest, coolest and best fi ting Summer shoes now m ufactured, at prices whic buyeis find it a pleasure pay. For house or stree wear, pleasure or every-da; practical purposes, walJrtn riding, or driving, we suppl the ideal shoes demanded b; rasmonand tne dictates c inrii triatrial faatA. TiaAiAS a awtasM wteuvvi , sfsasi mm a sa w tvi whoever claims your hand: by all means surrender yor feet to these shoes. if pi i MP iniiMTUi: f i mif MtnaM aw a ...,:...: r : '....-.. ' v'rf,vrrV v . I a a. " ' 'i'"M 1