f"rtPv"V? SB I , 1 i.A;; !'' i'TwVSS i rnii-in nii sar- What is Celery King? Itlann herb drink, nnd Is n positive cure for constipation lii iuliirhi', n. rvousilliwirders, ilisuiinlliiii kidney diseases, and lbs vari ous troubles or loins from o disordered totn seb ond torpid liver. It Is a most agrooobM inedlflni', mid In rcrommenuYtl I y phyitlclani generally Remi rober.ltcurerconitlpotlon. I'clery King lold InSSe. andSOo. packages r drugi?lst ond dialers. 1 v ' in T 9 ' . . ' i b ; u.-cd daily . tl.c ordinary hair c, or hair grow i dc ::ot find, after that 'Scott's . LSCTRIC I 'Ada II wc claim for it send it I your money funded. You the number . )olkr. It h Guaranteed to Cure Nervous Headache in live minutest Uiliouf Headache In five minutes I Neuralgia In five minutes I DanJrulf and diseases of the scalp 1 Prevents falling hair ami baldness! rtakes the hair long and glossy I Tor sale at Dry Goods stores and Druggists or sent on approval, postpaid, on receipt of prii e and ten cents fur postage. ( htrtook, "THK BOCTOhTS STultY." tent free cm rnqneeit, gtvet r-n information eonotrninQ Dr. Hcott't Ktrctnc Utile S3, ,IH lift Electric Cort: II. I LSI J! Hi. f :. J3. Electric flietl flrvl(l, SI. juctrle Safety ffaora,SJ Electric Vlaetert, ltd. AUi fn. I'i-.c'Ii.,, ICI5. . (U.IK . m,r.. eto. 4 w GEO. A. SCOTT, 84J Hrodwr, N.Y. jLOOD POISON lASPECIALTYoT -J.., ....,,,. i-,ri-.,n p,'rmancntlt Mir',! In I . 1 ' 1 .tnvs V.,,, . .n I ... home f c rs.nne price umlpr sumo Kiiaruu- j. 11 y"u pn-irriocnnionoro we wiuron cury, ludldo iicnuHh, and still havo allies ano rains, H ucotis I'liu-h earn mouth. Sore Throat I'lmpl. .. 'np).r Colored Spots, llccrs on an, part Ox the b.nly. Hair Of Eyabroam f.illlni out. It In tlila Secondary lll.ooit ' im-on we guarsntco to cure. Wo s i .1 the n. ,,i 1 obsti nate i'jms and cliallonirii tliu world for r ease weea.nnnt.rere. This tllnrsas h.ia aliry MtDod tbeskill of the most oratnent pnysl clan. i."oil,0(w capital behind our aoeondb llontilimarauty. A haul 11 to Proofs Sent Seal Pd 00 nnplirtitkm. Addr.-n COOK REMEDY CO 907 Aliwouic lew pie, CHICAGO, ILL. TBlGlrTOINf cut thts out and return rttn fi.no (money derorrurreue) 1 snt we will ordir the ioIIowIok "Family combination" aenl repaid 1 NEW Y IKK WEFKIY THIBCNB 1 YBAti. THKOKN I I K V, OMAN I V r 1 1! NA1 H)N v I. I l.l.rs'i If i rKP MAGAZINE I VH AMRItK.'AN HOULTRY ADVOCATE I TEAK, I1APPY 1HI PAMILV KAOAZINE 1 YK. VERMONT K.iltM.lul KS.U. 1 YEAR, Our Price $!.0l). Rennlar Cost $4.00 Tii i i mblnatlnn nils 1 1 imlly need. We win Substitute tbo ClllPaipi l.ilci-O -ean, Toledo Weekh Blade, KanaiifCIti Wi-ekiy star, Denver rVeokl) Tiioes, Twicea-weok liuisvilpi Courier' 0Ur0Hl,8iu Kranulsoo WenslJ Post, or Mon treal We kiy Oi.eiioln place of N, Y. Tribune it desired bui t I her changes sro allowed, Club" , bins iw i 'f a stamp. O. H. JONES, Room 496, lr. nnnsjov V in i I'nrm .lixirtnil, WILMINGTON. VERMONT. Dr. Humphreys' Specifies net tlireetly npo:i tbe (liscase, without exciting disorder in other ports of the system. Tlicj Cure the Sick. V ). CURBS. MUCKS. 1 Frtrra, Congeatlona, Inflammatlona. ii Worma. Worm Fever, Worm Colic. . .'13 3 Teelhlnk. Colic, Crying. Wakef ulncas .'13 4- I)larrhra. of Children or Adulta 43 7 -Cousin. Colda, Ilronchltli 23 H .Xrurnlgla, Toothache, Facrache '43 9-Hradachp, Sick Headache, Verthro . .43 lU-llypepala. Indlgeatlnn.WeakSiomach.'iS 1 l-Huppreaae. or ralnrul I'erloda 43 14-Vhltra, Too Prof uao Period! 43 13 Croup. I.arvnsllla, noaraeneaa 43 lt-hall Klieum. Eryalpelaa. F.ruptlona.. .43 1 a-Rhrumatlam. Rheumatic Pains 25 16-M alarla. Chills, Fever and Ague 45 19-t'alarrh, Influenia, Cold In tbe Read .23 40 hooplng.l'ouf h 43 47-Kldney niacnaea 43 4H-rrvou. nebillty 1.00 30-1 rlnnry Weakoeaa, Wetting Bad... .43 77-Urlp, Hay Fever M Dr. Humphreys' Manual of all Diseases at your DrugihiH nr Mailed Free. Sold ny druggists, or sent on receipt of price. Humphreys' Med. Co., Cor.WIIIUun a JobnSU, Kew York . ClIBfS WHERE ill E1SE FalLS. t Cough Syrup. Tastes Good. C In Una Sold br druggists. -Vttsh H "FLIES AND THEIR WAYS Pests Which Aoitf Hoiienlrri Found la Or ef test Xumhcn la the V Itm!t7 ( Stables. "House flies," said Vr. L. O. Howard, the famous entomologist of the agri cultural department, "come mostly from the stables and the dirt left in the streets by horses. If vc could do awajt With horses we would not have so many flics. A single stable in which a horse is kept will fill an extended neighborhood with Hies. People living In agricultural communities will prob ubly never get rid of the pest, but in cities, with better modes of disposing of garbage and with the lessening of the number of horses in stables conse quent upon the Increased use of elee : trie street railways, bicycles nnd horse ' less carriages, the time may conic when window screens may be discarded' "How fast do flies multiply?" "An ordinary house fly will lay 120 i eggs during its existence, nnd 90 per , cent, of them w ill be hatched out. Dur ing the ordinary summer 12 or 13 gen erations of flies will be produced, so you can make the calculation yourself, Every female fly is the progenitor of millions of flies during a single bum mer. "There tire four or five kinds of house flics. The most common known to en tomologists is the 'musca domestics,' a , medium-sized grayish 11 v with its . mouth spread out for sucking up liquid substances. It cannot bite. There is ! another called the 'stomoxys calcitrans,' which resembles it closely, but differs in having an important appendage that Is built to pierce the skin. It is second in abundance. Both of these flies are I chiefly bred In manure, In our expert : once nnd those of other entomologists j It lias been discovered that they will seldom lay their eggs in anything else, "There are several other kinds of flics, but these two are the most com mon, and to theJi we owe the nuisance I that housewives sutler. The eggs are batched into larvae within 24 hours . after they nre 'laid. They remain in the larval state from five to seven days, 1 und in the papal state a similar time. , The average life of a fly is from ten to I fourteen days." "Iloes the Hy serve nny useful pur j pose?" "Not so far as we have ever diseov I ered," said Pr. Howard, "and it does a , great deal more injury than people ' commonly suppose. We are accustomed ' to think of flies simply as a nuisance, ; but they are undoubtedly the carriers of contagion, as was abundantly proved , during the war of the rebellion nnd ! also in the camps of our army last summer. It Is the judgment of the highest authorities that a considerable part of the typhoid fever was due to the I tlies in the camps." Chicago Daily RoC ! ord. FOLDING PIAZZA COUCH. A Con renlrnrr for l.o u ul oi or Sleep Intf In Open Air Dnrlnu; the Warm Weather. For the summer piaza one of the ', most convenient pieces of furniture is a folding couch that can be raised up j nnd fastened to the side of the house somewhat similar to a mantel folding I bed. The Illustration shows such n couch ' that is attached to the weather boards of the house at the inner side, by means of large strap hinges, while the outer i edge is supported on legs fastened to I the under side of the woodwork, An old hair mattress can be employed I as the topping, and it should be laid FOLDING COUCH FOH THE PIAZZA. on the platform ami held down by means of denim, which is drawn down all around the edges and tacked secure ly to the wootl. The tufted effect shown In the Illus tration is obtained by making holes in the wootl and with a long puck needle string is drawn up through the mat tress and tied at the top through the edge of a metal or eloth-covered but ton. Where the string is tied the jnat tress, is depressed so the bottom is deep seated. A valance of the denim is made and gathered around the front and two ends, as shown. In rainy weather, or when more plaza space is required, the couch can be raisetl, valance tucked in and lke whole thing fastenetl to the weather boards by means of a strap. Louisville Courier-Journal. Pretty Floral Deeorntlona. When flowers are costly a pretty din ner tabic decoration may lie had by using smilax, laurel or asparagus vine made into wreaths and tied with white, scarlet or pink satin ribbon. These wreaths may be placed at the four cor ners of the table, inside the covers, or laid around candelabra placed in the center, at the corners or at each end. Or they may be used at two corners, diagonally, With vases of suitable flowers, daisies or carnations, in two other corners. If violet riblions are used have the dishes for bonbons filled with crystallized violets and mint leaves. Candles with white shades are prettier with violet and green than those of n color, as the light through a violet or green is not becoming. To Clean Plaster Oasts. Plaster busts and statuettes may be cleaned by dippirf them into thick liquid starch nnd drying. When the starch Is brushed oft the dirt comes with it 3HRISTS COMING FORETOLD, latrrnatlonal S. S. Leaaoa for Decem ber 24, tStl! Text, Isaiah Uiil-7 Memory Vs. , T. Specially Arranged from PsIOUbSt'S Notes. GOLDEN TEXT. UntO you Is born this day, la the city of David, a Saviour, which la Christ the Lord Luke 2: 11 READ Isaiah Ul 1 10. TIME. Probably written durlr.g the reign of Aliaz In Juduh, "durir.g tin yn- II Epbrstmltlah war, b. C. 72i-"34."-Driver. PLACE. It was delivered In Jerusalem. the prophet's home, to Judah, the prophet's 1 people. Jerusalem was i.lout lo4 n.ilis from pt. w from Bamaiio, ICO from Da- i mascu.s, 389 tio:n the Euphrates, the bord .- of Ansyrlo. Gtorfe Adams Smith. I I. An Cut lot k t' jion the People Walk- i ing In Darkness. V. 2. The prophecy of which this lesson is a part begins , with chap. 7:1. Israel and Judal were II Hearing ll great political crisis. The j final destruction of Israel was etily 14 I or 15 years in the future, anil the forces ! which wrought that terrible disaster I were actively tit wors, nue tnc ureahing oi a nam in 'i, up among t nc mountains, whence the waters were rolling down in swift disaster. V. 2. "The people that walked in darkness:" The people of Judah at this time were under Ihc two fold darkness described ubove. "The land of the shadow of death:" "Deadly shade, properly a title of the Hebrew Hades; a night like that of Hades." Chej ue. II. A Vision of Dawning Light. Vs. 2-5. "Have seen a great light:" There came to Judah in Ahaz's time the light of great promises. V. 3, "Thou bast multiplied the nation:" So he saw it as he looked upon it in later days, "And not:" Most interpreters think, with the R. V., that the "not" should be "to it," the Hebrew letters being very near ly the same, ami some transcriber made u mistake. In this case the whole sen tence is ii prophecy of the good times referred in V, 2, "They joy before thee:" the giver of the joy, "According to the joy in harvest:" when men see the fruits of their labors and promise of plenty. They bad sown ill tears, but reap in joy, "As men rejoice when they divide i he spoil:" triumphant over ene mies and rich in goods, V.4, "Forthou hnst broken the yoke of his burden:" first, of the Assyrians, who had "stretched out their wings" great armies, and oppressed the land. Sec ond, the yoke of sin, the oppressor Satan. "The staff of his shoulder:" That part of the yoke which rested on the back of tl.e neck and shoulders. "As in the day of Midian:" (Judg. 7:1-23), A total rout, by a small body of selected men, by unusual means, through (lod's help, as when Gideon w ith 300 men, armed with lamps, pitch ers, anil trumpets, completely over threw the Immense host of the Uidiaa ites. V. 5. "For every battle:" etc. Head as in I!. V. The old version misses the full sense and mars the exquisite beauty of this verse, HI. A Vision of the Coming of the Son of God, V. 0, "Kor unto us u child is born:" Only through this child can war cease, ami Israel's redemption be made permanent, "The prophet is un rolling a picture of the future." Cheyne. "The government 6hall be upon Ills shoulder:" That is, He should be the ruler, the king. "And His name:" A name stands for all that is in the man, his character, his principles, and his property. "Wonderful:" because His nature was wonderful, being hu man ami divine) His coming at all was a wonderful manifestation of love; His deeds were wonderful, miracles, full of marvelous meaning ns well as power; His words were wonderful; His aton ing love was wonderful; the kingdom lie set up W08 wonderful, "Counsellor:" One who has the wisdom to guide him self anil others. Jesus was the embodi ment of the wisdom of God, "The mighty God:" The word for "God" here is not the usual Blohlm, which is sometimes used metaphorically, lis for angels, as we use "divine;" but it is 101, "which, whenever it denotes (as it gen erally docs, and in Isaiah always) di vinity, does so in an absolute sense; it is never used hyperbolically or meta phorically." Cheyne, "The everlast ing Father" expressing the divine love and pity for men, a love that can never fail, for it is everlasting. "The Prince of Peace:" The prince who rules in such way that peace and pros perity abide in his kingdom. Peace is used to express all the bless ings that come to a kingdom where there is peace from outward ene mies, peace between rulers, peace be tween the different members of the kingdom; no disorders, no idleness, no criminals. A poetical description is given in lsn. 11:2-10. IV. A Vision of the New Kingdom of Cod. V. 7. "Of llie increase of His gov ernment ami peace there shall be no end:" It shall increase in numbers, in power. "Upon the throne of David, on w hich Jesus sits:" All thesa blessings come from His rule in the hearts of men and in the community. "To order it:" govern, manage, rule it. "Establish it:" make it firm and enduring. "With judgment:" just decisions, and "jus tice:" all manner of right between all classes and nil individuals. "From henceforth even forever:" Only such 0' kingdom can endure. "The zeal of the Lord:" His earnestness, the intensity of His desire. "The Dord of hosts:" who has all created beings, the unseen mul titudes of angels, the forces of nature, nil organized like an army a host to do His will, PRACTICAL. Ood's book of nature agrees with His book of Revelation in this glorious hope. Only with Jesus ns King can these good times come. Every convert to Christianity is another step towards them. "Mighty hopes make us men." Ten nyson. The assurance of a transformed world gives enthusiasm nnd strength, and readiness to deny ourselves for the salvation of the world. It is blessed to hsve such ideals ever before us, toward which we moy labor ns well as hope. em m ' ND 1 iTJ rPTAF T-T TTl f see it flying down the X JL1VJL l J 1? I Jl . street. Jn (h;s of sharp competition it does nut pay you to recover or try to reojver your watch from a thief when you can purchase one at my stora at the same foe it would coat yon to arrest the thief. Fine watches from $2.50 $500 A Rood watch for 2 50. Don't let your sonwant fr a watch when they are so cheap, and make your wife happy for Xmaa when you can boy her a 15 year filled case with a good movement fully guaranteed for $10. . : f iriM y v 1 im hp VanNatta, Watches, Clocks, LEWIST0WN, PA. ffl Genuine Fadsand Fancies in Combs, HatPins and an endless variety of personal adornment. Jewels, rich and rare. Sunburst of Pearl and Diamonds, Ladies' fine Umbrellas and Sun Shades from $2.50 to $12, handles of sterling silver, pearl and real Ivory. They are beauties and cheap. Out gun-sin endless varieties. prices (roin S'J.'iO to $5.00 per half dozen. MILTON'S BLINDNESS, though it eould'nt obscure his geninSwaS a source of mtieh sorrow to him. If he had gone to a skillet! optician like we have, in time, his failinc vision would have been detected and the proper glanscs fitted to them to maintain and strengthen the sight. Proper 'are of the eyes is a duty that, if neg lected, will recoil on you with the irreparable loss, of your sight. (Jo to VanNatta and he will save you many days of sorrow. FINE REPAIRING R SPECIALTY. I have secured the services of an expert Watchmaker and Engraver from Philadelphia, a man of twenty years' practical experience, and rated among tbe finest workmt n in this country. ALL WORK POSITIVELY GUARANTEED TO BE 0E THE HIGHEST ORDER AND AT REASONABLE PRICES FOR GOOD WORK All new goods bought at this establishment engraved in tbe most artistic manner FREE OF CHAKGE. Free Trip to Lewistown. All persons purchasing goods at my. store, according t&Mtft scale. I will refund moncu for return t icket : Middleburg, , $20; Paxtonville. $18; Beaverjown, $15; Adamsburg, $14; McOiure. $10. ffW, this is a golden op portunity and should be taken advantage of. We dotlus in order lo give one J". 353. "V"ai3-2Sra,-b"ba, Jeweler and Optician, I T W ' - C Il -w- rij ,1, v .n kin. T? V W V7S m PRESENTING Our Buburb stock of Holiday Jewelry for your consideration, we invite on inspection whether you buy or not. Oar store ii large enough to hold those that ome to look, as well as those that come to the right place to get values tor their dollars. We are triad to see those who have been our customers for years, and also those W 11ir.it li-itli it - I I 1 '1 1.' 1 11 11' t 1 1 t I iiiii "un r j iiiunju t 1 iv 1 1 UIOI Ml I v 1i1i.11. flv.lv s 1 1 1 v unalm, beauty of desitrn, and worknianshin. and I nn Mil 1 ate prices make this AN IDEAL SHOPPING PLACE. A Designing Rogue Wlin niiojit have any deaigtia on our superb stock of solid silver spoons :itil forks, teaspooiM ami tablespoons, would ha vo the only oew design that we have not secured. Our stock oi hand some silver table ware in lisli knives, dessert, eoflee, tea and bouillon spoons, soup ladles, dinner supper and fruit knives, with pearl, ivory or silver han dles and anything needed lor talile use will Ik- found here at r T - -1 T (. I J r "". egw m i MlC Hf-fJ who are starting on the ! I I l'w: t 1 1 11 i'i 1 1 1 1 1 cm 1 1 nvn -IM . VanNatta, LEW1ST0WN, FA. LEWISTOWN, FA. 31 - tIC
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers