$ON'V SACBIFIGE . . '. " ; Future Coniiort for preseut seeding Kcononiy, but tsu l the Sewing Machine with an established reputation that guarantee you, long and satisfactory. service : iY-r fat- . ' Tr;e Wrjibe." Its beautiful figured wood work, durable construc v Hon, fine mechani- -cal adjustment, coiipkd with the Fuit Set of Steel Attachments, makes it the Est DtsiniDle MacMne in the Market. FBAHK S. RIEGLE, MlDDLEBUitGlI, PA. Sond tor our beautiful half-tone catalogue. iNSURANCEt SNYDER'S OLD, AND RELIABLE Getl'l . Insurance Agency, SEIJ1JSGR0VE, SITYDER COUITTY, PA Ullmar Onydor, .A-eorvt. Saoeessor to the late William II. Snyder. fin. T).M VvaaIImma s ThuiivantA sea rinPAMr. r kf in Ilia fnllnw. lie, of Hiandard Comrjsnras. from which to make a selection. None letter the World over. . SAHK, LOOATIOW, AwSRTB. rrRE-f-Boysl. Liverpool, Eng. (including foreign setb) f,000,000.( Hartford, of Hirtfwxl, Conn., (oldet Amemean Co.) ,64o,735.3 Pbcenix, Hartford, Codu. ,588,058.f7 Continental, New York. Jo.908.r2 German American, . New York, 6.240,008i83 JTE-Mutual Life Ins. Co New York, M,638,983Jr.6 lCCIDENT Employers liability Assurance Corporation, Accident Ins. Co. Sabscnbed Capital of $3,760,000.00 Fire, Life and Accident risks accepted at the lowest possible rate, jus ified by a strict regard to mutual safety. All just claims promptly and tiifaotorily adjusted. Information in relation to all classes-of Insur- Telephone No. 182. Office on Corner Water & Pine Sts. 8e )iBrove. P v KflPANS TABUILES arc intended for children, ladies and all 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 may always be obtained by remitting the price to TheRipans Chemical company at L.m SPRUCE ST- CANDY CATHARTIC mtmUmmmmmmmmmWmmm9mmm trV. mm a . . . tli 2Se 50c . L0 a DRUGGISTS Thotisaricfe upoa THoosancls j M rtitkaa the ravages a tt nnu niafaa, 4ttM aa eartbqaake: la les1e,A reeart tbara ere bow ever tea) Immn orprna. The varioua akaaoaariee eee. Creatly ta Mad of fanea la eapeori tbeavaawe have published. eew Bask. oetltlert INDlflttsM lam obi (fates' oaraelvea la asset a liberal share of ear proSiaoa the mm U the Indie relief fens. Tola took gives aa aaaaiMa mad aathaaUa aaaatpMoa of tba aN taaUy, ahw Um. aaatia iaMB to Mac raiiat, aad la aabaUiabaa wtta ovar 100 oUIom iUattnttoaa Irom aaaal abolagraBba' ' , vlTibhr,! No Othsr Book Lii It . i TUwopriaW otoaaaf a tataaH tallttoa papan ta tha eoaatfy rtallaal ta valuk a ma aaali aaa aaaaa r a, aaaiaar at a to tt to aa wWaa aia aa. Tat tkla. aaak ia aat to proaoto aataaa Ularaala kat to a to ttw paalie i.kaak la at to praaoto I aaaaraarU fa It a kariaf aa TbaafctMt 9 0O4TW wa want aojorra ViaVWMttt . STanr piianair Ummn a ODBUIbBtor. Will yea aatp aa to kaonaaa w iiinlna kakitoja j atotoj at aaa Wokr Praapaataa aaa) atai. Writo aa aaa iov aav uaefal. Teaaia aavAaaata. r t . , , Our Clubbing Liat. J- In order to give all a chance' to get other ' Mipera cheap we have made arrangements with a number of papers to combine them with the Post at special rutes. - The regular rate pel year for the Post is $1.50 but during our special ofler ki will aivept $1.00 per year in advance. Then if any want other papers tht we came below we give them the advantage of special rates." The first column names the publisher's price, the second the amount which ad led to $1.00 will pay for the " Post" and the publication named. The list is as follows. pub. Hie. Com. l'rl-. N.T. Wwkly Tribune. fl.W $ . mil. " proaa. l.oo .M Wanblniton Weeklr Poal, l.oo .40 N. Y. Thrtce-wwmy World. 1.08 jss American Oardenlnf(), l.oo ,TI PhlU. Irniutrer (daily). 00 aw 'armlW8(M), -60 10 Womankind (Mj, .to .10 American AEilculturtat, 1.00 .T5 Pracileal Farmer. 1.00 -T Mayulnee, SortbaWi, .0 M UdlM' Uomo Ideal 1 0 M TUe Arena. t.W . MoUull'i Pasnlot Mi., 1.00 jm Coampolitan. l.oo .M Leslie' Weekly, 0 .0a Uevlew ot Reviews, WO SO Oeotury, 4.00 S-to You inn make a variety of com timitious from the above, for in stance the Post awl N. Y. Tribune for $1.25; the Powt and the Pkila. Press foril.f)0; tlie P()ht, the N. Y. Tribune, Womankind and Farm News and other papers for only $1.45 casli in advance and on combinations caa be made to euit purcliowrs' tastrs. Address all or ders to the Poms' or hand them teour agents. Many old swldim s now feel lb eftVoteof the bard serTice they en duredjiuriiiir tbe war. Mr. Geo. 8. Anderson, of KossviUe, York county, Penoa, who saw the hardest kind of service at the front, is now fre quently troubled with rheumatism. I inula severe muck lately.' he siys, and proouroi'H bttle of Chamberlain's Pain Balm. It did SO .UU" k I I hut I would like to know what you would charge bottles." Mr. Auderson wanted it both for bis own uee anato supply it tohisfrlena and neighbor, as every family should have a bottle of it in their home, not only for rheumatism, but lame back, sprains, swellings, cuts, brutes and burns, for which it is unequall ed. For sate by all Druggists. OLD OOPIES "WANTXD. In order to complete onr file we want the following named issues of the Post: July 8, Sept. 10, 18G9; Oct. 6, 13, 1870; Jan. 20, 1871; Apr. 17, 1873 ; Nov. 4, Dec. 23, 1875 ; Mar. 7, 1878; May 15, 1879; Feb. 17, Mar. 10, 1881; Apr. 23, 1883; Mar. 27, June 12, Aug. 7 and Oct. 30, 1884; Sept 17, 1885; Jan. 28, May 0, Out 28, Dec. 23,1886; Dec. 29, 1887. Any of our readers having copies of the above issues will confer a favor by letting us know. Such copies in good condition will com mand a lair price. tf. Whooping Cough. I had a little boy who wa dead from an attack of whooping cough. My neighbors recommended Chamberlain's' Cough Kemedy. 1 did not think that any medicine would help him, but after giving him a few doses of that remedy I noticed an improvement, and one bottle cured him entirely. It is the beet cough medicine I ever had in the house. J. L. Moobe, South Burgettstown, Pa. For sale by all Druggists. DaatkBlaw t Lev. Father So you think our daughter bat fallen in love witb that young man. Mother She li perfectly Infatuated with him. Father What do you propose to do? Mother That feeling of undying love which she has must be turned to aver sion or she may elope with him la spite of us. We must do it at once. - Father But how? Mother We mutt try to give her the impreailon that none of the other girls wont him. W. Y. Weekly. The Hla-her Walka. ' Mrs. GreeningMrs. Cranston never lets slip an opportunity to boast that she has always been accustomed to as sociating with people In. the higher walks of life. Who were her people, anyway?1 ' Mrs. Jlousely I don't know much about them, except that X believe her father was one of those what-you-call-'ems who wear spurs and walk up tele graph' poles linemen, I believe Js the name they go by -Chicago Daily News. 3 A Caiul OlUM.' Mrsv BymtiwDid you notice file gen tleman who Jdst got off the oar? . Miss Ankahut-The brunette man In a brown 'suit and derby, wearing a polka-det scarf and opal pto, ohrysaM themum, . patent Jeathers, tab gloves and smoking a cigarette? I didn't ob serve him closelv. Did he sneak to usf Wudge.' ; - KftiX IN PREHISTORIC .TIME. 0atrr Dtt4 wttk BfeaBaki Wkaak AvetaUek to AatlttBSv t What were prehiatorio tunea ones are now ao loafer so. 'Their history aaa exfcamed and studied. In India we knew that the aathors of the Vedaa speak about a darker race ot Daayas who were the inhabitant before the Aryans. They lived la cities. But we do not know much about them, although It (a certain that many of the present Inhabitants of India are their de scendants. Some of their mounds hare yielded flint Implements. Those which contain antiquities are scattered all over the country, being altuated In the plains. Whenlhe country' wss first peopled some of the earliest inhabitants made their homes on these sites. The houses were of mud or wood. In the course of centuries the site of a town gTew higher than the plain. Deposits of all kinds were the cause of this ele vation. But In the unsettled condition of those early times no century ever passed without the occasional destruc tion ot the town by raiders or by inter necine warfare. And It must have been the case that owing to famines and epi demics the town was often depopulated and deaerted. Time after time, how ever, the elevated site was again chosen to be a place of residence, and thus in the course of centuries the mound grew In slxa and height. Owing to the re currence of the causes mentioned tbe site was altogether abandoned. One other cause there waa the change In the course of the rivers and the loss of water near the surfuce. All these sites were not similarly situated. Rome were near supplies of stone, and this was utilised In building as civiliza tion spread. Some religionists use stone extensively for temples or stupas as well as for palaces, houses and city walls. When stone waa not available clay was used, the bricks made being of great size and many of them highly or namented. The great archaeologist, Sir Alexander Cunningham, says that the large size of the bricks points to a period before the Christian era. The molded bricks are the moat character istics feature of all the old cities of the Punjaub. The stone used was often sculptured. In the Punjaub these mounds are often rich In architectural remains, which tell their own story of bygone grandeur and cultivation. The abandonment of the sites. .waa. some times sudden in extreme, so sudden that the Inhabitants had not time to remove their hoarded wealth. It waa left be hind and remains there still. Some times the raiders gave the Inhabitants no chance of escape. A town would be surrounded, its inhabitants seized and the place plundered and burned. There is a Persian couplet which exactly de scribes this: Ther came, they uprooted, they burnt. They slew, they carried away, they de parted. After that tbe climate the rains and the;, sandstorms covered the place over. Nothing, however, could destroy the mounds and their contents. Every year the rains disclose numbers of coins, and these find their way into the hands of the money ehaugers in the bazars of adjoining towns. These coins show who waa reigning on the occasion of the last abandonment of the site. In the Pnnjaub the mounds have yielded vast quantities of coins bearing inscrip tions In Greek and Pali. The Greeks were a people given to recording events on stone. As yet, however, no mound has given a Greek Inscription. Only mounds which were regarded as being the deposits of Buddhist remains have been examined by the natives, and those only partially. ' A small parcel of ancient coins from the Akrs mound nesr Bannu, on the northwest frontier, contained one of Eanlahka, and hod on Its reverse the Image ot Nannie. Her hair Is done in a fashion which must have necessitated the use of large pins. Along with the coins was one of the pins. It is fit copper and Is 1 indies long and 0.8 inch thick. It Is surmount ed by an Image of a female 1.6S Inches high. What a story that pin tells of art and vanity 1,900 years a got AH the ancient mounds in India are the prop erty, ot the government of India, which has already at work several archaeolog ical surveys, which have brought many valuable antiquities to light But much sculpture and many antiquities have been quietly taken ont of the country unknown to the government. Year by year collections of coins are mode, and they too disappear without our mu seums being the richer by their ac quisition. St. James Gazette. Bracelets far Menu Bracelets are generally supposed to be ornaments for the exclusive use of women, but It is said that men of fash ion are beginning to wear them, just as they wear rings on their fingers. In no respect, do the bracelets designed for men differ from those worn by women, with the possible exception that the; are a trifle lighter and larger. As a rule they are made to fit the wrist snugly and are partly concealed by tho cuffs One man in this city has worn a bracelet for over three years, during which time it has never been removed. With htm. however, tt ia a matter of sentiment, not of fashion. The ornament formerly adorned the wrist of a fair lady who gave it to him before she had decided to marry somebody else. Other young men saw the bracelet, however, and, supposing the wearing of It was due to the Introduction of a new fashion, pro cured similar adornments for '.them selves. . This is believed to be the origin of the (ad, which is one that Is not like ly to be generally adopted. Philadel phia Press. ) ill.' Steel Caa Balldtaas. ' ' - The modern office building was sub- iected recently to a severe test in a fire a Pittsburgh. It Was found that tbe steal frame resisted tbe fire admirably. Metallic lathing and; plaster was found Ineffectual as a protection for wooden pargMi. Wooden ' shutters ' covered wWr3l sheet koargavt good tem porary protection; large glass windows were an element of danger. Youth's Ci - : ' .si in dyeing H jn if:: A Pleasure atLssL j' v jnw L m t lrxo 1 if ( lTV j i '' yy f -si J I No Muss. No Trouble. V j ! -SEW- t.' . WASH EG DYES i AT ONK pPKRATrON - ..ANY COLOR. The Cleanest, Pattest Dye for Soiled or Faded Shirt Waists, Blouses, Ribbons, Curtains, Under linen, etc., whether Silk, Satin, Cotton or Wool. . , Sold In ill Colon by Groan and Bruggiiit, or mailod free for 15 eonto; AMtmt, THB MA VPOi.fi SOAP DEPOT, UT Ohm Stmt, Ntw rars Southern 1 Progress. A monthly, sixteen-page journal containing in each number some twenty narra tives of the South, chiefly descriptive and pictorial. The paper is undoubtedly the best illustrated journal in the world, and the only publication which presents glimpses of Southern life and Southern people. It is a favorite souvenir with 1 those who have visited the South; and it serves a good purpose, in lieu of a visit, to those who have sever been there. f. The regular price f Southern Progress is fifty cents a year, but to introduce the paper we will send it three months for ten cents. FRANK A. HEYVOOD, Editor and Publisher, 21! S. 10th St, Philadelphia. Look! Look!! Look at yourself when you buy clothing at my store. I keep cotv htuntly iu stock the best and '.finest line of Hats and Gents' OtoUiing, Furnishing Goods, Underwear ami Caps. Call to see my stock. W. B. EOTER'S BROTHERHOOD STORE SCNDCRT, - Penha. . 1 BakJSjanaa asu: SAIL in ladieB1 shoes is a pleaaand voyage afoot. For tbe em urc it gives, there's no sail like oor sale. Crowds axe enjoying it, and securing the prettiest, coolest and best fit ting Summer shoes now mat ufactured, at prices wind buyeis find it a pleasure to pay. For house or street wear, pleasure or every-day practical purposes, walking, riding, or driving, we supply the ideal shoes demanded by fashion and tbe dictates oi ; individual taste. Ladies, ' whoever claims your hands, by all means surrender your feet to these shoes. G.H. WANTED-BRAINS ld ftr eu kulmt rim nWln MUin.i ui i?snM oi wuuifUB city, nil Met cctt 41 aaay tellM. HalUttanttcyotfatiSUiu. WrittukvliJ. CuTftuJaktfMattUafttMttBlt ItoUct yowl i nopp A co, rt -wm WiiMsta TT IktyatytoafrnvMnk. Brim tpplylu to pita, a nr Ubml tn tad bvMtet'i Anlttwt. Btiftr ItMas. Educate Your llowela With raacareta. Candy Cathartic, eurit constipation forever. t0o.SSe 110 O C fall.druii'r'wi'fuD'Inw.- i Dr. Mllea' Nerve Plaetaia. $4 PBR DAY SURG SLARV OA OOMMIOSHOM. DO yon mom kmoroNt, ittttf tmplrmH. tin ytor ronna, at foot wops, tt yvnr oa. kom or to tramlt lto, stud 4c. fa srnmf for our 0tieltuli prin-list aarf porri-i km. Wlflmis mtt ofoanH rrftnmts. AMERICAN TIA CO. Ocvaoiv. SriCHioar Klondyke-Yukon-Alaska International Exploration and Investment Company, ' INCORPORATID CAPITAL STOCK, - - $1,000,000,00. SHARES ONE DOLLAR EA CII. General Offices FULL PAID AND JtOH-ASBKHPABIX 5, 7, 9 & 11 Broadway, New York. Combined (hpital Securex lAirtjf, Profit It Hie Greatest Good to the Grcated Number 1 1 Your limited meam, whrn joined with oth era, will aeoura (or you all' the advantages a lerire aipounl of capital command! when In vented under our co-operative plan iTGOSTSNeTING' to fttnil for our pronprrtna and acaualnt elf with the combined advantavea wa offer. The enormoua profit to he derived f ram development of Alaaka gold-bearing' propel laJut one af the many feature we can y!H. We invert and make money far 1 wherever money ran be made. Let your faw dollar! be the nucleua el a lng fortune. . The Greatest Amount of Benefits the Minimum Amount of Risks. Have you made any money laat year T If ao, we can offer you an opportunity to. do a deul better In the coming year. Have you failed to aava and lay aside a surplus r Than, gin the new year by maklngan Investment in our stock. Our shares are Bold at par, at MS) per share, and are sold in lota of 5 shares and upwards. A quick decision, a wise move In ta proper direction, will always prove beneficial. Ntart the new year right by sending your eaa plua money a hundred dollars, fifty dollars, twenty, ten or even five dollars at once to Co. and receive by return mall your shares of stock.. Ilefore long you may find that while have labored on and tollen, your moqey baa been making money for vou.and whlli not gone to Alaska nor devoted your time and labor to other promising ventures, reaped all the benefits and have enjoyed success. Send your money by check, mobey order, eipress money order or registered letter to International Exploration and Investment Co., 5, 7, 9 & 11. Broadway, New York, N. Y- Responsible agents wanted in every eity and town. $125 Per Month. $15 Per Moult.. WE WANT A FEW MORE M EN. AM TKAVEMNO LOCAL, . QBSERAL, IMG, 1 I ; ' f ,. ' . . '.'v.' " JSnlaii yBiir pi OUTFIT. FREE. . Apply at onoe for territory, of:- A. H. Henderson tt Co., Geneva, IV.TL. IMPORTED STOCK. 8EBD9. SPECIALTIES 3-SfctX