Foul-Smelling Catarrh. Catarrh is one of the mo-t obstinate sMseases. and hence the most difficult to vet rid o(. There in but ono way to cure it. The tlisenne is in the blood, and nil tho prays, washes nnd inhaling mixtures in the world can have no permanent tfltirt whaterer upon it. Swift's Spe cific cures Catarrh permanently, fori! is the only remedy which can reach tho disease and force it from the blood. Mr. B. P. McAllister, of llarrodsburp, Kt., had Catarrh fur yean. He write I 1 ooulrt aee n't Improvement whatever, h I waa eoaataatij Irestes with surar! una waneii. Ma iiinvr put Inhaling remedies In fact. I c.iulil (Ml thai Men winter l waswores timn the year previous, "Finally It was brought to my notice thHt Catarrh Wal u blood dJeireet, and nfier think ing over tin- matt! r. I r;iw it was unreasonable f to expect to be cured hy remedies w hi e li only ii sehed tin surface, I tin ii 4!fi-iilt'il to t rr 8.8. .. ai"! after f''w bottles were uted. I no n i .1 perceptible Improvement. Oontluulug IftM remeily, the ilisen.e vi.s forced otitol my pMtea and a com' !' to cure waa the result. I lie . I who have tills dreadful disease to abandon their local treatment, which hai never done ttmn anycood. and teka B. 8. B.. a rem r!jr that een resell the disease nnd cute it." To continue the wrong treatment for OaJarvh is toeo-it it't'e 1o suffer. Swift's) Specific is a rcitl blood remedy, nnd cures obstinate, deep-seated discuses, which other ran r.-i have no effect whntevr upon, ii promptly reaches Oatarrhi and never fails to cure even the tOMtt agRTavated eases. ,S4 rheJLflUUU is Purely Vegi table, und is the only blood remedy irtiumntced to contain no UUIgcroui lnincru is. , Boohs mailed free by Swift Specific SSompanji Atluntu, Georgia. PEN "SYLVANIA rlAILROA!) S inbliry t LowiBtOWU Division In effect Nov. 20, 1808. inasTwaao l oie. I station, i bastwaso l rn p Q A. I. a m m .Jt 12.15 I.o-rlstown J . ".SO I.Ofi 1 ;ii Main Street ;.::t S.us i.i Lewtatowo T.M s.i 4. 11. i.v 0 Maltland t.m s.ao A (11 IMS ri Palntur T 4 I.M .l.si II stilmllo 7.61 .8I S.BS ll.M Ii WsKUor 7."- J.:t"i :t.- It.' 17 MMIluro tiH MS lbs n.ts in Raab'iMllli s.il bjii 3:m 11 I.' 11 adsnsborg (.19 uj WM it.nfl ill llearnrtewu v."i 4.C4 :t I ; i)M 10 Henl'-r I.SIJ t.U .11 , 11 m ladUbnrgli s.40 i IJM M 1 3d 1 oibor 9 46 4 V '0 .1 l Krssmsr 8 W 41N Si ib.m 3!) Pawling M .:! I. HI lO.lit II r'lirnnr..ro '' M! :si It n rtsllntgroTf .1 9.04 II I o ft ' gaaau r r B-IS s 03 Frnin leaves Bunbury 8 25 o m, ar rives at Selinsgrove " !" i Keeplns: Up Appearanoee. 1 "Astonlshii(f how many people are hanging to respectability by their very eyebrows." rvmnrk"d uu amateur phi- , losopher through the smoke of a post yraiidial elgur. says the New Orleans Times-Dcmoerat. "There are dorens. yts. soores of men in New Orleans, who keep up oppeerauces by the most des perate and inoeasant strategy, and the marvelous part of it is that they suc ceed, year after year in staving off a crush that treini imminent every hour Behind their little veneer Is a plexus of the moat hideous complications intricate liee, debts repaid by other debts, unsuspected habitaand ugly en tanglements of every imaginable de scription all held at bay by dexterous maneuvering, like a juggler keeping halls in the nir. Now and then one of these fellows accidentally lets a ball drop, or breaks) under the strain, or Just gets tired and lets go. and then srerybody is nstonisbed at the velocity with which he scoots down hill. They say that fate has everything greased for the occasion, but it Isn't so. The lubricating process bus icen going on for years, only they didn't see it. I know several chaps In the fix I describe and am astonished at their tranquillity, but I suppose a fellow could smoke a pipe in n powder magazine until he real ly forgot the st u IT was explosive." New Orleans is not nlonc in this rusect. It is reported that the introduction of electricity in the street railroad serv ice has seriously Injured two great American industries, both closely re latedthe breeding of draught bones and the growing of hay. It ia comput ed that the trolley nnd cable can have displaced 300,000 horses in the cities of Philadelphia, Chicago, New York, Itnlli more, St. Louis, Cincinnati, Richmond 1 and Toledo alone. This means a dc- ' crease in the consumption of hay of more than i tons per day. Other cities would nearly treble these figures: In the decade of 1880-1800 the hay crop of the United States nearly doubled; in the period of 1890-1803 the increase was only 1,000,000 tons; and in the calendai year of 1607 the production was more than S.000,000 tons less than that of ISliX The extent of the hay industry indicates the seriousness of electricity's injury. Laat year the pro duction from -IL'.-CJG.TTu acres was CO.- i 604,870 tons, valued at $401,300,728. Craio leave Utwistowu Junotlon s 4 Its m, I" II i w. 1 10 ii in. a -JT ii m l DT II Hp 111 Tor Mcoons, Plttstrani rnl taa vt. ftor Baltimore anil Wsshlagton M s m leg, I SI 4 U, I M n m I'-.r Phllaileliihls snit N ) Vork (Sill IDs m. l l 111 i Bland HH l" I" Jiarils .uri Ills in and 801 r III Philadelphia & Fro R ii Division. aNI MORTH8RN t 'K.N FN A ! I! A' LWAV Trains leave Banbury dally except Buodaj i 1 n in i t Krle and Canandslvun i, in in for Relletonu Brie and Cansnd ilK is sts.i i" toi !.' Hsven, Tyrone ami the Wesi. 1 lOptn lor Hellefnnte Kane A UanacdiilKUs I 41 i i li : kennvo and Kl intra )i-j'i ii in lor Willi iBupori Sn ' i j" B 10 a in tor Krle and !anandnl un 41hd lor Lock Keren an! 9SS'in i"1 "I luta p rt it a m 2 00 ami 543ptnlof wllbes- iwlton a ii in, 'i ns ii re 4' irill il ij ,i in lot v "ke burn r. ii m for Bhain , a ova .1 mctlon irrivlns ni I la! dolphl ll.iltluioro 9 II p i W.I- ; I ,il 0 .11 .,. !ilil.l it ii luiore hlladi Ipl N" MiKiiay V irk U t to : ' i in I i arrtvlns si V . V"ik :t (111 a te H 19 ji in wenlc 'I iW arriving iw nrk ill) ii m I ra'ns iHi leave Bunburr : S S :i in .I lily irrliin.' .it I'll lis leldblS 1 Ualtlrn 1.11 il m Witslll'Kton Tel a m '. .i i ini Weekdeye, 10 tin s m tsnnday ; U i .i week dare arriving ai I'aii.ei. ipi.in ,14 i 'i X York II II in, lliltlni re lift' s iii. v. ; Ington 1 00 i in, );. p in, week dsya arrlvlna si Philadelphia an li ni, Near Ynrk 9 W ;i in, Baltimore t) o.i i m Wa iIiikKi'i ' U P HI Tistnsalso leave Banbury st BIO emend .vj" indKVii in. lor HarHebargi Pblladetphla ami flsjlttnn rn I. R, WOOD, Qen'l Pass Agent ;.ll BUTCHIN80N tlen'l Usnaver i 4 1 IlK? JNn H HH 111 iilb '.!' .LiiLi HUijiiii, ' 'ill aj3i- 1 .. ufl-.k,, '-i -i t I v- 1 ere mi i 'kSU. 3 Ml 3 I J I .'HH r'tOWnS AKD TMOAT IRRITATIONS 3V V,.Toa (iomoY. 3 PACKAGES. f!w York City. BEEDER SUCCEEDS JUDOB REEDER. And Hunk i n i: Commissioner Gllkeson render-. Ills lleslirnatloa. Karrlsburg, Jan. 3. Dimner Peeber. of Philadelphia, was yesterday Appoint ed by Goernor Hastings to the va cancy on the superior court bench cre ated by the death of Judge Howard J. Keeder. of Kaston. Mr. Beeber came to Harrlsburg yesterday afternoon from Philadelphia and received the commis sion from the hands of the executive He met the governor by appointment at the executive mansion, and after re ceiving the commission he took the oath of office. The new Judge's com mission runs until the first Monday of January, 1300. Colonel R. Frank Gllkeson. of Bristol, last evening sent his resignation as hanking commissioner to Governor Hastings, to take effect at once. Colo nel Gllkeson was urged by his friends for the appointment of Buperlor court JuiIkc. Inasmuch as Attorney General McCormick, Deputy Attorney General lleeder and Mr. Gllkeson are the only members of the governor's cabinet who are lawyers, and that the execu tive had offered the position of Judge both to McCormick and Reeder, and that neither had accepted, Gllkeson felt that Hasting! had something personal npainst hltn In not tendering him the appointment. Governor Hastings is considering tin; appointment of George M. Davies, of Carbon count?), as the successor of Mr. Gilki sun. and it is very likely that the Carbon county millionaire coal operator will be named. WILD GEESE Of THE SOUTH. A sick soldier who was ordered to a sanitarium on a mountain summit found on arriving there that but one room in the house waa unoccupied, and that so shut in that no One would take it. A young schoolmistress bad the best room In the house, having engaged it lotifr before because of the nini! view from the windows. When I he heard of 1 lie poor feUow lying in bed all day with only a dense wood for a prospect, sin- had the clerk exchange the occupant! of the two rooms, bar tfiiiniii!,' that her little plan be kept a secret. "If yourwalls arc so nnrrow You cannot see fr.r. Knock n hole la the celling .' i. i look nt a star." The lit:, Rchoolmlstresi did letter. She knocked the hole in a brother's ceiling, and opened up to him a whole constellation of happiness. During the late Spaniah'Amerioan v::r u certain old colonel who had served all through the civil war, und who bad lost one of his eyes :.t the battle of Gettysburg, was very Indig nant because he was put aalde us phys ically incapacitated when he applied for admission to one of the New York volunteer regiments. Killed with wrath, he journeyed to Washington, bent on having a personal interview with the president, lie succeeded in paining an i audience, and the preaident, nfter lis tening to his plea, said, kindly: "Rut. my good Col. .1., you have only one eye." "Just so, sir," was the prompt : rejoinder; "hut can't you sec the preat advantage of my having only one eye? When 1 aim my gun 1 will not have to close the other." He fought at Santiago, i To live in Hawaii, costs, it is said, more than to live In California, otie rea- I son being that few of the ordinary nrti tles of American diet arc produced in 1 the island. Most of the meat is import ed; eggs cost 00 cents a dozen, and chickens n dollar and a quarter apiece, nnd the cheapest fish, the red mullet, sells for L'j cents a pound. These facts explain the warnings which Hawaiian masons und odd fellows have recently addressed to intending emigrants. Even In an earthly paradise men must eat. and a destitute stranger, set down be tween a crowded labor market and a high-priced provision store, would find lumself in no enviable position. r l"1 ft El. . wje CURES WHERE All Ban Cough Syrup. Taatea Uuud. in lime. Solil hr rtruKKIsta. During a recent discussion ns to the advisability of introducing Spanish into t ne public schools a bright but indolent ly inclined youngster in one of the high schools gave as an argument ngalnst the additional study that America had already stripped Spain of her colonies, sunk her vessels and routed her armies, and now wanted to take the language ' out of her mouth to carry on commerce with the eolonies she had "licked her ; to obtain." . A report from Chicago says that only 1,923 women voted in that city this year, as compared with 30,000 four years ago. An explanation oiTered by the Chicago advocates of woman suffrage is the little Importance of the officers for whom the women are permitted to Tots. ITEMS OF STATE NEWS. rhilllpshurK. Dec, 31. Perry Jones, of this place, for many years cashier of the Phllllpsburg Banking company, and sine.- the founding Of the First National bank 'f Phllllpsburg;, cashier of that institution, committed suicide last night by shooting himself. One bullet enter ed the stomach and the other entered near the heart. Bu llnesa worry suc ceedlng a run on the i'.uik caused the act, Reading, Dee. 28. Mra. Jacob Herb, aged years, residing near Sshbach, last night dislocated her lower Jaw while yawning, Mra. Herb lives alone, is feeble and could not communicate vviili any one, Her mouth was wide open, and Bhe was unable to speak or partake of nourishment until this morn ing at 10 o'clock, when a neighbor called to pee to her wants and found her with her mouth open. A physician was s nt for and the dislocation wus reduced, Mahanoy City, Dec. 28. Joseph Kel cer was battered Into a shupeless mass of flesh and bones by falling 420 feet down Tunnel Ridge eoUlary slope last night. With another laborer he was en gaged timbering the slope mi a small temporary platform, It became neces sary tn visit the surface durlnK their labors and upon returning on a ear Ki ! r, not waiting until the car stop ped, leaped down toward the platform. The sudden shuck snapped several boards in twain and he was precipitated to the bottom. Btroudsburg, Dec. 28. As a. result of a disagreement between masi and wife over the approaching marriage of their 20-yearold daughter Annie, Mrs. Caro line Newman, of Panpock, like county, left her home to look out for herself. Yesterday Mrs. Newman Mas found terribly injured on an Kile railroad track nine miles from Mllford. Bhe wai badly bruised and waa taken to a Port Jervls hospital. There are three chil dren In the family, Mrs. Newman had been tramping It tor some days and (.'ai''' -litis i.p jennies for a living by playing i n a street organ. Norrlstown, Dec. SI. William Usher, n farmer residing near King of Prussia, w::s found dead entangled in the shafts of his wagon late last night He was 87 years old and served a meat route. When the team returned to his hor.ie lnst ni;;ht no particular attention was paid at first tu it. After he had de layed an unusual lentth of time be fore going Indoors his wife discovered hla beiiy entangled In the shafts with his head upon the ground, The head was beaten into an unrecognizable mass by the continued kicking of the hers, s' feet. He had been dead for some time. It Is supposed that he died from aji oplexy and fell forward. PittsliuiK, Dec. J. h. Davis, an engineer on the Pittsburg, Port Wayne nnd Chicago Itailrond. wh!l" passing a water tank nt New Wuterford, O., was struck on the head by a piece of pipe Which projected from the tank. The force of the blow knocked him frum his seat In the cab. His scalp was torn from his llRht eye to the base of his skull. There was no member of the crew who was about to take his place, and he jiliiekily bound up the wound w ith n bunch of waste and resumed his pt .-it inn at the thnttle. Weakened und almost blinded by the pain the engi neer kept the train on Its course and reached Alliance on time. Then he dropped unconscious, Wilkcsharre, Pa., Dec. 31. A surface cavcin caused a rush of quicksand Into No. 2 slope of the Lehigh and Wilkes barre Coal company at Wanamle yes terday afternoon. Two hundred men were at work at the time, but all suc ceeded In makliiR their Immediate es eajie but eight Two hours later five of the eight made their way throuEh the sand, and shortly before 7 o'clock last evening the remaining three men came to the surface. The names of the three men who were entombed for over five hours are: William Williams, a miner: Henry Brown, driver, and Joe Zeloskl, laborer. They escaped to one of the breasts till the cave settled, and then crawled through the sand to the foot of the slope. The air current was not cut off, and the men were ap parently none the worse from their ex perience . Ilenth of Ks-Jtiilge Brewster. Charlotte, N. C, Dec. 31. F. Carroll BreWBter, formerly a Judge of the com mon pleas court of Philadelphia, and attorney general of the state under Governor Geary, died yesterday In this city, while on his way to Florida, where he was going to recuperate after an attack of the grip. Mr. Brewster on Wednesday last made a speech at the Philadelphia Kepubliean conference, In which he nominated City Solicitor Kin sey for the city sollcltorshlp. At this conference Mr. Brewster, while making an able speech, appeared to be ill, and after the convention adjourned took the train for Florida, but was obliged to stop at Charlotte owing to a severe turn In his health for the worse. Win Bateey Fowl That Are Dseal Lara Their Oars Kind to the Bsatcrs. In many parts of the south wild geese breeding is carried on for the benefit of sportsmen, especially among the leed-bound shores of Hyde county, N. C. where years ago some one wounded a goose, bred from it. and spread its product through the district. Here sre gvose yards, and as soon ns a hunter enters the yard the inmates know, like dogs, that they are going bunting, and squawk, fight and struggle to be the first to be taken out and placed in the coop or bag in which tbey are carried to the grounds. Pieces of green tough rooted turf are cut and staked out in four or five inches of vvnter, and a goose ir tethered to each stake and allowed to rtand on the sod. Thus placed, the goose has the appearance of resting. The hunter retires to his hlind to watch, not the sky line, but the tethered geese. Puddenly one stirs, nnotheT follows suit, a muffled sound Ik made by one, r.nd then away off will be Fcen a streal; cf moving gray dots which quickly de velop Into a flock, gander and goose in the lead, goslings to the rear. The birds drop well out of shot, to see If the quality of geese on the sods permits r. visit without loss of caste. The gos lings, heedless of social forms, gayly start forward to gossip with the de coys, but the parents head them off, scolding, oackllng with many modula tions and much emphasis of tone, gab hflng wise saws and modern instances innumerable, as wise parents have done o children since the world began, un til gradually the gander himself yields to the clamorous gabble of the deeoy foek. which has kept up a flood of praises of the choicest feeding ground, lie slowly drifts down with much im portance, his females behind, the youngsters In their train. Mis eye is glued on that patch of reeds, and even A man's eye nt un opening no bigger than a dollar, a bright coat button glinting In the sun. the gleam of a dia mond or the lock of a gun, even the awkward flop of a tethered goose from ( ff its sou, is sufficient 1o send them away bag nnd baggage, nnd good day, good day to them. A curious feature of these live decoy geese is that they must not be shot over. The hunter is warned that, no mutter what happens, he must wail un til the strangers paddle to one side or the other of the decoys, nnd failing that, he must let his chance go by. for if once he fires directly over tho tethered birds they are nervous, and et the approach of stranger flocks re member what happened, and. showing fear, disturb and unseltle the strangers. Firing to the side they do not appear to mind, nnd the older birds who have been out one or two seasons, when they see a gun go up, "down charge" like a veteran setter or pointer, on their piece of sod. chattering like parrots after the wild birds have been dropped. Tamed geese have been used on Long Island and other places, but not so gen erally ns In Hyde county. On the great South bay, Long Island, the geese are shot from quaint bo&tS which arc so designed that they will float on water or may be pushed along Oil Ice by the occupants, having steel runners underneath. When the geese pre around, the hunter in a white over suit pushes c IT from the shore and pad dles ever to the floe, his impetus carry ing bim toit. Then with the iron-shod oar he pushes over it. nereis the next open water and the next floe, until he gets to the piece of open water he nittis Rt, far enough removed from the shore. Then be places l is stales, draws his white niron over him, and. with his L'un across his chest, lies back in his lmat to freeze until the geese come. If any arc around tome are generally bagged, but it is eoldi hard work. Nevertheless, the grounds could not be reached by uny other method, the ice being too treacherous to bear an or dinary blind. This thai geese appear to know. Chicago Inter Ocean. Drain Power of Rats, Confronted with the difficulties which modern builders and household era put in the way of rats in drains, floors, and skirtings, the black rat would probably be baffled, while the sagacious gray rat still remains more or less muster of the situation. The case of the rat II typical of the value of brain power. Routine, which is the isual condition of animal existence, !oes not exist for them. They have to face "reconstructions" of their com mon surroundings at any given mo ment, and their resources and adapta bility have seldom been found wanting, Ship rats have survived the era of steam and sterl. nnd only recently thrived so successfully In a big iron clad that they made her majesty's ship Colossus almost, uninhabitable. House rats have learned bow to cope with gas fittings, lead pipes, brick- drains, and cement floors. "Sewer rats" have made themselves a name coeval with modern urban sanitation, and others are now learning to live in "cold stores" and eat chilled meat, and game in an atmos phere where breath turns into snow. London Spectator. Wasn't GnlltyT Inspector (examining class) Who signed the Declaration? (Xo answer.) Inspector (sharply) Who signed the Declaration? Come, come; somebody tell me. (Still no reply.) Inspector (very angrily) Will no boy tell me who signetl the Declaration? Small Boy in Rear (Imagines that something is wrong) riease, sir, it wasn't me, sir. If. Y. World. Sraadalons. Mrs. Witcherly They iay Mrs. Dick son has recently become very econom ical. Mrs. Lanison Yes, she's carrying It to an extreme, it seems to me. I hear that she'a even trying to get her hus band to let his whiskers grow, so as to save laundry bills. Chicago Evening News. OiseasesjLChiite, a pitiarif rniinrnnN in uhiph nc. . PREFERABLE. sasser asssrar mm ateasv asssMajas w A Fflarfiil nicpaca kvhirth ic nactnintim tn'littlo Enllrcr.... wuiiui vwvavv n 1 1 1 w 1 1 i f vwuaauiw lU kllllU I UlRJ I1HI1Q Dames meaicai ireaimeni a nemaniaoie lure. From the Evening Crttoent, AppUton, WU. The story of a remarkable core from a diaesse which has generally wrecked the lives of children, end left them ia a condi tion to which death itself would be preferred bos attracted s great amount of attention umong the residents of the west end of Apple ton, Wisconsin. The cue ia that of little Willarri Creech, sou of Richard 1. Creech, a well known employe nf one of the lame paper mills in the Kox Hirer Valley. The lad was attacked bought some though I hsd no hot- nr , , , . ' ineti. ''Tine was when our boy had lwn stretcher for an entire year and liti,,"01 nine inouthi. In iix week after it the pills we noted aiirna uf vli.i.... : 1 lege, and iu fuur momlm frum thf "t li,'. -Li a1 : . l .:. ,-,""' iv however fearing a relapae ii be retsri? school too early and for a ymr ..... Hi.- m Pn paan l.-irl v. .... It ia to years aince lie tad A. iv snitial iliuiu a.nl n urunli I .... I ' I lit. ttitl nti.l Iim ia tii..t- -- . .11 up all hope of hla ever lieiuir well beam wheu, as by a miracle, he waa hrnleti and is now in school, sa hapjy n any of his mates. Mr. Creech, the father uf the hey, who resides at 1IKI2 Second St reet, Apjiletim, Win cousin, told the following etory : "Our boy hud just become old enough to begin school when he began to net rather lueer und liually we called din-tor who said 'lie trouble was indigestion. The lad grew worse, however, and auoilier doctor waa siiin monsu who st once Bioaoanesd the trou llle spinal disease and put the boy on u stretcher. Other dneton were eelledm and there was S SOntultation. They all called it iplnal disease and for a year one of them e the hoy treatment, "lie grew worse instead of better end wis absolutely helpless. His lower limbs rare paralysed, and when we used elec rleity he could not feel it below Ins hips. I'iimllv we let the doctor go ns he did not lean to help our son and we nenrly gave j ia at . . -1 , .. . 1 mm aitil iiiat a. L... I 1. : 1,4 lk.a 1 . I -i.e.,. ... ...... .-Ml i-M Ulf m tl I)r.Viliani8 Pink Mlk for Ptlf pcoJ All of Mr. Creet'h't neiclilmr.-. u.efc 1. rant of the work dont by Ir. VVjlHiBni i i i us, ano many ui int-m urr ii-ii t' 1 , ;n thoirfarailita. 1 ,pU" The blood ia ttir? viitd element in otr tti uinru ii t ii 1 1 it in im ur itri i iHira. , .. i i.. l a - 1 . . : ' ' .- -- --- ...v. . C . "'unii. 'nuse ui iron umni wvtcn ;,:. . , dinonk'rrd blood. He liuti skill.. f rfiittmttt 1 ii t ilt rii .il tm I eiu.C n . . : . ,v . .7': ''' i miun.R mi rum !r Jajr jv, t,( , unrd atnJ thttt cnrt'd him. This Moves that thin rrrm Am U it . i mpaiiK n imparling mom' eiUientl Hint 1 .1 IIM U P. rum II lilt' U M' Ililic :.!! . ... . - - . r i o i . mi i v luiK'TinnN it i itl ii ! r , i . . . , i ii ti lira i i i ii Hi'iinn n in i 11 . . nope, rinallv inv ninther WOO UTM in 1 to nwllT QINMM. WOT GOOtnri tirftmha tl 1 1 M i i trii.f ii ui vi. i ii rv i in nan .1 r i . w iv nr it FOiQim r pi i.ii i ni i i i i . a .1 1 .1 . i it:K 1 11 m ior i ttie I euuie niiu i , aru su uin vrh.i j i y uiru. jflllE.8LIFE 9 ANDflCCIDEMT - - - . ' A v x X J a V. SNYDEX'S OLD, AND RELIABLE Gen' Insurance Agency, SNYDER COUNTY. PA- Tli ULil 8acce8oro the late William li. Snyder Par-Kvnsllut n, ,.' n. 1.-1.1. i .. . , . . I 1 I .... .......... E .., .1. . I , . .. Hi III 11' I nft "st OulU v the W i: 1 11 rip,,",," , IJitJATIOSl, IMVRTS lr "'' l',,noo'i Em?, (including foreign tvwnrti) mrtfonl, oJ Hiutfordi Conn., (oldest Atnerimn Co.; 8,Oto,73B hat" ford, Cut, 11. -., ',. OonUueutid, New York, L7549 r T1?l, '''; A iii.-1'ii-aii, New York, ,2U),(m iPfmW LilV lD8' Co- New Ytifk, ...... . .'lJ.UJ-.. ! J.liiJ ni Pfs' 1 inllililv AmiMl-.itii'.f'111-iiriv.iti..i, Acoidflui 1 Ins. Co. Stibsonbed CapiUl of $3,750,1 l ire liiie und Accident nsks sccepted ht. the lawat possible :u tiiic. by ; strict regard fo mutusl snfety. Ml uhI claims promptl mnetHcrortlT Hiljiistud. itfortuation in relation t all classes 1 1 I anoe nroiontlv fnrniHhH ELMf-', W, SNYDER A.-.. - - . vum 1- I'll vl'I III ! M Ml Y I H rMV. .-"If- 1 1 1 1 S. 1 1 I VI . f sO v.vw. The Oreeil 5 -i m,.- Itonnehol.l Hesnatne Maimllltfeiitly Illnatrsvte Nothinj; Uke Ii in tlm tVorM. Vnlqua un - Besnilfti It. trits jron iio v 1 1 entpn iln, 1 1 ells yon in. . t 1 ,. l-t,w beSith. H'1 joit a to live cheaply anA at the same tine live well, I' ' ' Ins blllSOM ire fur rv rv il.i' In tile Week, it givi s 1 in' etiquette of the table1 iiei inn"' "" - illnnen, it ooauios iterlen, puems, J''""' ler the mbl . it irivesjron a ivtce about h niiu, Rentl Whs I rtv- Papers snjr : Alninst ml en mirli to e.ir."-.phsdi labia Call. 1 K'i luuy, LoaaiNi upi ui . ffsktueedt'orot tbmaewspsper uijoutlf. do roil iv.vxr bookm 1 pirc-m ire will senil this mnintine (arose yesr BTJinn Or we win 1 nl tbe mac ilna ,i nve 7'ilnmea. I ess nHi'es n-i niimir iiniu ., .7k1 ,. mm ,r . .,.,.. rr- OOOb'iQtnff lllforillatlon :.lii"'l aim Ml evnrv r .11 lllnatv 11 inna 1.,,' alaMfii arnek' .SI uunsr nnifr tu s-m, tj1( while t tor otly one dollar sad tlxtycems ' iiw u 111 im .in, i in-. ,. :l ., ,, . i I It I one v ii- lor t,,vv 11 ., . s I .....' t. . .j I t. nvln'r .' 1 f : i 11 tl . 11 i- i ii. i K- nt-M- r' , 1 1 i t m i it,i';iiivi' it un' ut- ciunuw " mi v wsj " v..- nuoareaa or uiouattiGt, r.m you uronitoioMtniSivPO vur.iiy. Address WbatToSat, Aieapolis, Ai.n.. nam m J- . MMMW t . IbW . - - 1 . - ! ' .IK ar- taw Saw M i nil ; he m i v-wm It Ik La KaTaTHafaaV - J - J- J aam -i j. P sssa i w o ui WHY? 'Ilmliarrrl Imlrl elaobl un I'em 4'Jiioh ! tM. inr nslelela nbea nnri we mt nan inn ill. ejnns Saailrl unrrwiiwl ISIS, ttemallms. THFRE YOU HAVE it, Clear as Mud. The original of the nrjove. written with a pen, when deiuplieri-d wuHseento be only an order for a tvjv-wrlter. it, reads: 'Knelosed find (trait on' New York for S0 for whleh please send me at once ono of your latest Improved type writer." He In ptirehaMlnir a machine nonetw soon, you sny. HOW A R IT Y9V KMELl'T You may not wrltp so poorly ns he does, and your letter-i may not lie UeOlbie, l ut. a type-written rommunlcatloii has a huslni s-llke appearance which a pen-written one hiui not. That's Why YOI' should use a type-writer, That It does i he same work ns the so-called "Mtnndard,, machines, costs hut SM.oo. and Is giving satis faction to 35,000 users Is Why YOU SHOULD USE THE ' 0t)ELL Scndfor a catalogue and sample of Its work. 0DELL TYPE-WRITER CO. 338-3S4 Dearborn St.. CHICAOO. ILI 4-15-emo. REV! t ' ..ui k nr.cTnrte. .';u j ..' ' - -1: lay. ffP J7I. 01 eei -'i. r, ' - Is. r. XS&rr XStSM fHB ;:f?zT XQth nay- Jr. sv-X-JL'V 'w'.-a'- J. I. J. J-" IM ' 'mUh, lf 111 SO 01 ' rnifrtl will NttM tlm.r lout mi!l .inn nlU rTiivi-r tloir yontlitiit t;-c-Rl'VH O. it fmtakly and io.rMv p-- ii- s. Lt Vitality. Ini.MrteHcr. Nik ' 1 i.'.,. I.nv.r I' .alii Mir U.mnrr. Wr.-: '-' 1 aii I'lTt rU or M-ir ahimft or eirfi-R Uil iT1',: 4 lii.-li miUtM nifl forH'i7r.liir.in--orni.11. mt only t-iirrn by utartinir at the pri u u a ureal ncrvfttnnie ana iiioou !. niK bark tho pink fflmr to ial -v;' -'m 'i tr 11, u Am n trnnlh It .T''- C' ..,.A t 1.. aass hevinif 1 ottiur. It caa be carried in vrtt P V 1 INI tine nli'lnirn ns all r Kir M MH'i " la Mal.u. aanaaMa-SkaasaaSSSi mn rlllC f .ndmimrT. urrniarirm. nu"- mvii HPTiimvr un nm Wahoek r. fill J rur naif nt ,niuuit.un B -. - 8PINALS8?S aaar