The Cure that Cures i P Coughs, (3 Colds, i re) Grippe, i Whooping Cough, Asthma, Bronchitis and Incipient J Consumption, Is K x German remedy Voi , a uwosAv 25650tAt $9001 siun Yearly Men unl V oiilen of good address to represent is. soros to travel appoint! ng agents, others for tocnl work looking after our i nti-reits. HttOO salary guaranteed yearly; extra commissions end expenses, rapid advanceroent, old esteb llsbed nouso- Grand chance for earnest nun or woman t" secure pleasant, permanent posi tion. Liberal income aud future. New, brilliant lines. Write ''t once. SI I I Oltll I'ltl .s S3 Ctinrcti St., Hew Haven, unn, 4M8t, WRITER fCORRIZSPONDENTS 0r REPORTERS AVuntcd everywhere! StorieB, news, idcuH, poems, iluatrated article advunee Hewn, ilinwings, photo graphy uuiqiie articles, etc., etc , purchased. Articles revised and pre pared for publication. Books pub lished- Send for particulars and full information before sending ar ticles. The Bulletin Press Association, New York. Hew to HI rax taw)' distiorruhed personage wfco bad bean nnnomired as the speaker of the evenlnp was lata in arriving, SJI sn effort hnil been made to en tertain the audience in the meantime By vocal music end short Impromptu speeches. A dozen or more persons began CaWinif for "Goo-Goo Eyes." Somewhat perplexed, the professor of philosophy and belles let t res, who wax acting ns chairman, arose, "If Mr. Qoagoo Wise is in the audr rnce," he said, "be wilt oblige by coming forward."- (Hiicago Tribune. An t Hpntrlotle SasfKesltea. "What I want to do Is to purify hVe psjnticR of mv eommunity." T)ou't let tiny of the mercantile gents hear you say that," responded he friend. "I don't see what difference M can mnVe in my credit." "They are ns likely ns not to take It fcr granted that business isn't good, msl that you want oftice.''--Washington Star. What the Matter Was. "I see Dr. Rkoop baa pot disheart ened " :!h the results of his treatment of Fritters and has p-ivRn up going there. I renllj tlon't suppose h was able to find nut what was the matter nth him:" "(Hi. us; ha found otit all rtjrht enough." "lie did. WhHf was It?" Tmpecnnioalry." Itoston Courier. In the Css.rrTSl.rr. Ifla The grass widow haa not been very successful in her game of snar ing the old banker. Is she very much disappointed? May- Indeed sbje i! One would think she was from Kentucky. Ida Why so? May She is seh a Mm grass Widow. Chicago Daily News. oalrta'l Spare It. Easterner -Why don't yon bmlW your courthouse over there? Westerner Why, if we did we'd have to rut that tree down. "Well, what of itr "What of it! Man olive, that's the only tree in this neighborhood fit to iytroh a man on!" Philadelphia Hec ard. Fnrther Proof. The Music Teacher Just think! That opera wa rejected by 30 mu-B-agers. I'upil Well, its suceeas proves that mnnapers are not infallible. The Music Teacher- -Indeed, they are not! I have had an opera rejected by 35! ruck. PIMPLES "TIf wife had pimples on her face, but he has b taking GABCARBTS and they have ill disappeared. I hid been troubled with constipation tor some lime, but after tak ing the first tlascaret I bare bad no trouble with tbls ailment. We eannot speak too hlgh Ij of Cascarets." Fhep Waimma. 1708 (Jermantown Ave.. I'blladolpbla, Pa. CANDY W "Sny WAT n A KTI C CATHARTIC raaoi mass tiosiwiu Pltaunt. Palatable. I'otent. Taste Good, no Oood, Never Sicken. Weaken, or Gripe. Nc, 36c. 60c. ... CURE CONSTIPATION. ... taritol Bnu4 CMr. tSMMfS. Irl. Tw. tit MTA MP Sold anSgjisratiteed br all droj- I UDAW UM W VVmm Tobacco Uablt. DISAPPOINTMEKT. tl.L Oood Fortune In disguise. Crept shyly to my door; Wsstl In her haggard eyes. Grief In the garb she wore. How should I know the guest Who rami' so poorly dreut? With fear I let her In. Who would not be denied: No greeting did she win. No welcome to my side This uninvited guest. Who stole away my rest. But In the morning light Another fare was there: ' I saw h vlsnge bright. A beauty strange and rare. Mr dear, deceitful guest Hud put my faith to test. Now Joy and I arc friends. Who thought to be estranged! Now Fule hath made amends. And all the WOT US Is changed, for since I knew my guest, I find her gifts the best. -F. W. Clarke, In N. Y. Independent. The End of the Feud at Nome. By Lou Rodman Teeple, IITJOY8," said a miner, elbowing; his L) way through the crowd in the saloon; "boys. Lucky .Tuck's, took up another claim." Teals of laughter greeted this announcement, 'I)is da sevrn claim him pit on an' git off," giggled a low-atatUTed Nor wegian. "You se," a red-shirted Cali fornian explained to a new-comer, "every claim .TaVk has staked out, or went to Htuke, some one hns set up a prior claim to; most of 'em was hold ing the ground for their frienda, but Jack was so good-natured he jest give way; we call him Lnoky .lack now, he's so darned unlucky." "8nys he won't get off this chtim if Billy McKinley wnnte It." This from a slender half -breed from Idaho. ".Shouldn't wonder if he did thmigh, for a fellow did ' stake that claim more'n two months ngo; lie went to the states after his family on' never come back; but 'twould be just Jack's luck if he turned up and rnised a row. I knew a man at Cripp Creek that " But no one ever heard what the bar tender knew of 'that man, for the sound of strife drew the crowd in a body to witness the beginning of the feud at Nome. Lucky Jack was making the dumb stands and qnick rushes of a, pig that is trying to escape; he was evidently trying to snake the cover of his tenti and before him, heading, him off each time he tried to pass her, was a little browned -ered, red-cheeked woman, who, though short enough to havo stood under the big miner's out tretehsd arm, made up far the handi cap In sice by her amaaing quickness sad the bewildering effect ef a steady stream of threats and assertions. She was no other than Mrs. Drier, the wife of the man who months before had staked out that claim. She had already set up. her oven tent a few yards from Lucky's, and now, sup ported by a small boy with snow white hair and a yellow dog with one bins eye, she wss resolutely keeping the miner "off her claim." "Ton hard-faced old antichrist I (she probably meant anarchist); "you've no regard for law or decency. IIow well you waited till Bill Brier was gone before you jumped his claim! Oh, won't he show you, when he gets here? And till he does come, ! ni keep you off!" i "Don't you dodge ahead of me , agio," the miner snarlod, "I'm agpin' to my tent, and you oan go to He didn't finish the sentence, but she did it for him as shs grabbed him by the collar and shook him as vigorously as she was able while art the disadvan tage of standing on the tips of her toes to reach his neck. "I can go to that place, can 17" she screamed. "Well, yon can go there, too, but yon can't go to that tent of yours, Isss'n you want to take H down." The cursed and harried man jerked his coat from her hands, and replied savagely, "Net much I don't take my tent off this claim, but I'll tear years down before morning if you don't Ismme lone." "You wfll, will your As the women spoke she drew a revolver from her dress; and the miner, who was accustomed to seeing a gun need in the same breath it was pulled. seized her wrist and wrenched the weapon from her grasp with no gen- ; tie force. As he did so, the little woman reeled and fell at his feet in a dead faint; the astonished man bend ing over her dropped the gun on her head, which probabry hastened her return to consciousness; and while she was getting upon her feet, he took a run for his tent. She picked up the gun and sobbed out, "You just wait till Bill Brier gets here; thot's all." The while the white haired boy wept dolefully, and the yellow dog accelerated the speed of the retreating foe by snapping his heels at every step. That night the slumbers and ca- rousers in the vicinity of the disputed claim heard a sound that rose even above the voice of the wind that was blowing; a gale. Investigation showed (hat the wind had blown down one side of Mrs. Brier's tent, and she, with her head buried under the blankets, 1 was screaming, "Sick Mm, Bilgerl Sick im! Oh, you murderin', prowlin' old villain, a-tearin' the shelter from over the head of a sleepln' child!" As the wind, even in Nome, was supposed to be sent by the Ahnigtity, Mrs. Brier's address sounded rather blasphemous. After the visitors had succeeded in convincing her that her tent was being yanked out of place by Providence instead of Lucky Jack, and after they had securely pegged the canvas down for her, quiet aettled for the night over the feudal district. But morning saw the beginning of hostilities, that, with brief intermis sions, lasted for long, weary months. Fruit cans were hurled against the base of one tent at night and fired against the other each morning. The man purposely roared out songs, hymns, lullabyes, anything that would keep up a deafening noise at an houV vhen the woman feign would have laid her armor off and slept. He passed unnecessarily near the door wken he creased the claim. And though the woaian was not positively known to hiss the blue-eyed dog on, she certainly laughed heartily every time he got a bite at the foe's heels and openly petted Bilger after such reprisals. Everyday the mnn went to the bench with his rocker to seek for gold, and the woman went to n restaurant, where she washed dishes, and in return received flour and salt; and the white-haired boy, wrapped in a man's old fur overcoat, often sat alone for hours, with no one to speak to but the yellow dog. One day when I.neky .Tack returned to his tent he found Itilger already there, busily engaged in foraging the enemy's stores. Now, Jack's heels were sore from th" morning onslaught of his opponent's henchman, and when he found him thus at his mercy, for the first time he felt that the boys had not misnamed him when they prefixed Lucky to his nnme. Fastening the tent behind him, he Uwk up an ax handle and with the iu qulsitory, "Bite my heels ngain, will ye?" he laid the blows on the intruder thick and fast, resolved to leave not r. breath In him, but to fling his car cass over to the other tent. The dog, n his turn, tore wildly from side to side of the tent, now trying to dodge under a box that served ns n table, now attempting to close in and get his teeth into hii tormentor, and at last, thoroughly beaten, he crouched at his conqueror's feet with such piteous howls that, like Hubert be fore Prince Arthur in the tower of l,ondon, Lucky's pity made him un nble to do the murderous deed he had intended, and nfter some more stern advice to his now bumble foe, the big man sat down and fed him bread dipped in cold gravy. He even patted the animal's head in his restored good humor, remarking as he did so: "I can't strike a woman, no matter how aggrawatln' she is, but, thank Gawd, I kin take it out o' the dog." "Was you a lickin' my mam's dawg?" Jack jumped to his feet as this question was pronounced to him through a hole in 'the tent. Be opened the door and the small boy entered, trailing an old blanket be hind him, and repeated his question. Lucky's big heart melted at the for lorn apparition, and he said deceit fully: "DonH yon see I'm a feedin' him?" "Fought I heerd 'im a cryin'," sus piclrrusly. "Sonny, he he was laughin' at' what I was a rivtn' 'im." "Be yo a tryin' to burn we'a tent?" "Well, no, kid, not unless ewesrin' at ft till the sir Is full o' brimstone might set it blasin'; but if that ud do it It 'ud burned before this." Then there was a pause in which the child watched the dog hungrily; then, with n hopeless little sigh: "Wish I cud a had part o' Bilger's bra-a-id." "Great Manner, baby, are you hun gry nuff to eat with a dawg? Here, wait till I get you some cookies an' coffee." The child munched the cookies in silence, then he said: "Mam says you'r a hardened sinner, a claim jumper, an' a mighty tough ole rooster. Am you?" "No," growled the host, adding, with rising anger, "an your mam's worse than anything she can call me." Then, as the boy wss leaning con fdingly against his knee, he said: "But you're a nice boy." Another long pause, and then, as though he were reciting a lesson, the httle feUow drawled out: "Wait till Bill Brier, my pap, comes he'll show you." "All right, kid; but if It's anything atiout your mother he's goin' to show ire he needn't take the trouble. I've seen enough of her already. But, say, '.here's only four or five months that your dad can come safe on the steam ers; why don't he come?" "Can't; he's got too much dirt to dig." "Uh-huht I thought so; got a claim somewhere else an' workin' it, while bis wife holds this one." The boy had wormed a purple little fist into the miner's hand, and he now observed: "Your hand's warm, ain't it? Nights when I'm awfnl cold mam holds my hands 'gainst her buzom to git 'em warm, an' cries cause she's so cold she cain't git me warm." "Oh, the Devil!" Jack uttered the ejaculation with such vehemence thnt the child looked apprehensively over lis shoulder. "Why don't you put bkmkets enough over you to keep you warm?" "We's on'y got a few, an' they's rag ged." "Well, can't yon keep a fire?" "Mam says coal is $80 a ton up here, an' if she goes an' carries drift wood for a day she can't work at the roos teraint, an' then we's cain't hev aany bread thet day. See?" "Well!" After Jack had made this summing up of the situation there was a silence, during which the sad voiced urchin crowded both hands in to the host's warm hand and the dog licked his boots. "What's your name, little feller?" Jack asked at last. "Charlie, 'n yours am Lnclcy Jack." "Yes; and now, Charlie, I'm goln to bring some things and leave 'em at your ma's tert flap to-night; an' I want you to promise to never say who done It. Will you promise?" "Yep, I'll promise not to tell on you while you'r llvin' If youll swear your cries cross you'll lie an1 aay I wasnt here if you'r ast." That sight Jack made up a bundle ef fur r.ibes and blankets, muttering all the while: "She orter freeze; good nuff for 'er." Nevertheless, he gladly welcomed Charlie the next time he made his new friend a stolen visit, and with the boy on his kueo he asked: "What did yonr mam say about the bundle she found at her door this morning?" "Mam? Oh. first her soys It's a won der ole Lucky .;:iok hadn't seen 'em an' stole 'em; an' then she begins to cry an' kneels down an' says suthin' 'bout 'Him ns has 'membered the wid der an' the fatherless." "Why, you ain't fatherless you've got a father, ain't you?" "Yep, but he cain't come with all thnt dirt o' his'n to d,-." And now It fetl out that every little while Mrs. Brier found food, furs and even money at hr door thnt her un known benefactor placed there and then fled before sho could get a glimpse at him. "Say, Lucky." Charley snld one day, I "them hairin'l all gone, an' I liked 'em ! awfully." "The herring? Oh, yes; well Fd a I brought you some more, but I'm alius I afraid your mam will watch " And watch she did, and one night, seeing Jack (as sho believed) in the very Hot of stenling,j parcel that had betin gen- I erously left for her, she cnught up her I gun, nnd that she fired without aim was perhaps the. reason she brought down her mnn with a bullet In the breast. The sound of shooting brought. j the men from the saloon and little ! Charlie from his bud. "This man was stealing- stealing things from my tent door," cried Mra. i Brier, wringing her hands In an agony of excitement. "Oh, mammy, he wasn't! he wasn't. Twai him that brought all the things to us -the blankets an' everything!" Charlie was wild with grief, snd Bilger licked the white face of the man whose blood was crimsoning the snow where he lay; but ha turned his head and whispered: "Oh, Charlie, you promised not to tell!" "I didn't tell not while yon'B liviu'," sobbed the child, "but look at the bleed oh, Lnoky! you's dead now, sure." "No, no, he isn't dead. He musn't die! Men, carry him into my tout, where I can take care of him. I won't let hrm die." And she was as good as her word. Never had man a more faithful and devoted mirse. For the first time since childhood the big, rough fel low knew the soothing touch of a woman's hand; and her patient sweet ness and Mttle schemes to amuse and Interest him, when in the days of convalescence he began to chafe at his inactivity, were a source of end less wonder to him. And as he watched the qnlck-moving Httle fig ure and studied the brave, bright face of his quondam foe, he realized that though his lung had heeled and was as sound ss ever, his heart bad got a wound frwn which it must ache while he Mved. So he steadfastly re fused Mrs. Brier's offer that he should take half the claim, and insisted that he would return to Tacoma. i "But you are doing well here; why do you go away?" the nnrse asked for the twentieth time. Driven to the wall, he replied: "Well, because oh, hang HI I've used up all my exouaes here's the truth: I love you, MolMe. I just long to work for you, to keep care and trouble away from you. And I could do it. If darn Brier, anyway! Oh, I don't mean that, but, Moille, I want to take you in my arms " "Then why don't you, Johnnie?" she aslasd, demurely. "GresJt St. Benediotl What'd Bill Brier say wtton he comes?" he gasped. "He wont say anything, poor man," she was laughing and crying both together "'cause he'll never come. He died when he came back after us; but we's' all packed up to come, and he said we could hold his olakn; so, after he was buried we coene on en' an' I thought you'd be scared to stsy on the claim If you thought my man was oomin'. Why there you great, big silly man don'tl Charlie'll see you." And when Charlie did pet In an ap pearance Jack privately inquired: "What'd you say your pap was dig gin' for, youngster?" " "Cause, If he were comln', as mam my said, he had ter dig dirt, an' a lot o' it; I seed 'im, an' 'is box Is buried under a nswful heap o' It." Jack comprehensively "Oh," then tenderly, "Did you know your mother was goin' to havo me now?" "Yep, I heerd you a fixin' it up." ' Radford Review. A DUcovermr. Bobby burst into the honee in a state of high excitement. His hands and clothing were smeared with a liberal amount of some sticky sub stance, and his face wore a glow of triumphant satisfaction. "I say, mamma, those new people across the way don't know much!" he exclaimed. "They've got a sign on their front door that saya 'Wet Paint!' " "And yon are covered with It! Yon ought to be ashamed of yourself!" said his mother, severely. "The sign was put up to warn people to keep away from it." "Yes, mamma," persisted Bobby with the enthusiasm of a richly re warded scientific investigator, "but It wasn't paint, and I knew it. It was varnish!" The King. Wlthent Honor at Home, Dakota Farmer (visiting in the east) Yes, sirree; I live right on the grandest and most magnificent atream on earth I Same Dakota Farmer (at home) Darn it, the river has destroyed my best patch of wheat. This yere Mis souri is the dirtiest, meanest, and naggiest stream on earth! Harlem LHe. . j. THE SUNDAY SCHOOL. lesson in the latprnatlonal Series for tiiKii.l 11, lixil Cod's Prom ise to Abraham. THE LESSON TEST. (Oenasls 1S:1-1S.) L After these things the word of the Lord same unto Abram In a vision saying. Fear I iot. Abram; I am thy shield, and thy ex- teedlne STt reward. I 2. And Ahram said, Lord, God. what wilt Thou slve m. seeing I go childless, and the steward of my house Is this Kilt zer of Damascus? 3. And Abram said, Heboid, to me Thou hatt given no seed; and, lo, one born In rny bouse Is mine heir. 4. And, behold, the word of the I.ord rsme unto him, saying. This Fhsll not he thine heir; but he that -hnll come forth out of thine own bowels I hall l thine heir. 5. And h brouaht him forth abroad, and raid, Look now toward Ileavrn. and tell the stars. If thou he able to number them; and He said unto him, So shall thy sped be. 6. And he believed In the Lord; and he rouated It to him for righteousness. 7. And Ha said unto him. I am the Lord that brought thee out of L'r of the ChSldtSS, to give thee this land to Inherit It. (. And he Lord find, whereby e h ill l know that 1 shall Inherit It'.' 9. And He said unto him. Take me an hfelfer of three resn old. and a she goat of :hre years old. ai.d a ram of three years old. nnd a turtledove, snd a young pigeon. 10. And he took unto Him all these, and divided th?m In the midst, and laid each piece one against SO other; but the birds di vided he not. 11. Ar.d when the fowls rame down upon the carcasses, Abram drove them away. 12. Ar.d w hen the sus was going down, a p slisp fell upon Abram; and. lo, an liorror ol BTeaH darkness fell upon him. IS. And He said unto Ahram, Know of a lurely that thy fcetd shall be a strar.gi r In ft land that Is not theirs, and shall IftrVt them; and they shall aflllct them 4-." years. 14. And aUo that nntlon, whom they Shall icrve, will I Jm.ge; and afterward shall they come out with great substance. 15. And thou ihalt go to thy fathers In peace; thou shalt be burled In a good old ags. It. But in the fourth generation they shall come hither again; for the Iniquity of the Amorltes Is not yet full. 17. And It came to pass, that, when the sun went down, and It was dark, behold a imoklng furnace, and a burning lamp that passed between those pleess. 18. In the same day tun Lord made a cov enant with Abram, saying, t'nto thy sued have I glvsn this laud, from lh river of Egypt unto tku great river, the river Eu phrates. coi.ni: TKXT.-I am thy shield. and thr exceeding; (rest reward Gen. 1 .1 1 1 . NOTES AND COMMENTS. Head chapters 15, IS and 17 to make sontinuous the atory of Genesis. Hut for our purpose of impreasing morul and religious truths we need advert to but one incident in these chapters outside of the lesson text printed above. That ene fbcident is the in stitution of the rite of circumcision. Some one haw said that this has ever been the rite of the Jews, as baptism since then has been the sign of the Christian's covenant with God. It waa in a certain sense a symbol of Qod's covenant with Abraham. But it really meant mere to the Jewish nation and people than any ordinary religious rite. It made them in more senses than ene a separate and pe culiar people. It effectually set them spart from their heathen neighbors. It was a sort of recognition of the law of environment. The principle was illustrated when Abraham was called to leave the city of Ur, a cen ter of heathen worship in the very ancient world, and to establish the worship of Jehovah, the only true God, in the wilderness on the east ern coast of the Mediterranean seo. Here it is illustrated again by the in stitution of this rite. Oed foresaw that even here His people would be surrounded by a numerous heathen population. What more effective bar rier to outside influences could He raise than this very rite of circum cision? In connection with the study of the institution of this Jewish site it will be interesting to note Foul's references thereto. 8ae especially, Rom. 3:1; Gal. 5:0; Col. ltU l'hil. 3:3. Abram wns Hrlng childless ia Canaan, with confidence in Ood's promise that his deeoandanta should inherit the land. Dut there are In dications that the situation troubled Abram sometimes. The most open expression of his perplexity is that found in 15:2. 3. The perplexity was met by positive assurance that his own child BhottJsJ inherit the promise, Abram's faith 4u the assurance, so contrary to experience, is striking. Equally striking is the simple state ment that his faith was counted to him for righteousness. The reason for this truth is that sstch faith al ways leads to the obedient spirit. Al though Abram accepted Gwl's assur ance, he still deBlred a visible token of the fact. This token was given ia the symbolism of the covenant, as de ecribel In verses 9, 10 nnd 17. These animals were all recognized aa clean; art the age of three years they are in their prime. The division into parte waa with a view to assigning a part to each party to the covenant. Be fog thua divided and laid down with a apace between the parts, it was cus tomary for the parties to the agree ment to walk together between the pieces. In this case God's presence and His agreement to the covenant was indicated by the flaming torch that passed between (V. 17). The rev elation of the period of trial that waa to precede the fulfillment of the prom ise was made before the promise itself was renewed, t Fla-s and Thistles. Self-seekers do not find salvation. The fear of God cures the fear ef man. A little balm may hold much bless ing. You cannot trust the man who can not trust God. The roots are refreshed by the rain released by the leaves. Every bumble bee thinks he knows how to build the eagle's nest. There has been but one hand that could save the world because there is hut one heart that could embrace it. nam's Horn. The Entsinet T enninti frvatn trtsa K u'ii-,' .... i A aw SIM WW UOeif wuii imb cam wimu uis eyes. The Die and pumole ana roar" of his; Qffj oic w Usui ainvuiaiL- B."CCt;il, um note in tV. : a - -....v Die of sotmiis would ratch car SS quickly a disrr,r.t nke the ear me lender of orchestra. 17.. , ni his . .. nimself. That WtlV he n-.-l. io nottre terns lrhii.1 ncli IU11 OT . . - ine ii u: tim... the bitter sour risings, f undue fi,l t., - ter eating are symptoms of dv rs7 torni r . i r S VOlvlnir tl... arh atnl orifim trition. Is ttma tar heart liv..r or otber organs are Involved nr.il ti engineer nas to iay on. I lr I'terre s I .o Men Sleilir-il n..- cures diseases ol the stomach nt; r j i . : i . j , : . senna neauny nesn. "I sd ten bottles of Dr. Pierrr j g0i ii fi t PflMi'ivnr uni Ihli .iitihd !i. Mr, Irrmhl with In.tlur-.t 1 1 ,11 , . .. - . . . . o -'n W. T. I nompson. 01 TOWSatna, TlronwitrrCn IU'iiiuibb. ""la. .ni. tu I'll n'm initnKIUl 11111 for tri irllrf ni. t hni! .ii-Y. ,-- ......... 1. . 11 mmni insi ine doctors coma 1111 tin 1 got down In weight to i :!',: nri able to work at all. Now i welsh y. no s nay s worn on ine larru. i nave rrcoq mended your medicine to several aoi thai MM N.r, ITihI W.ltil Ii, fc v I. ana his mellcinr.n Ir Pierce's Plrasant Pallets mm sua stipation. Hound to llellete. Y .1.. carry in uui uocaet, you lost al and broke your nrm. 11 . V...4 - 1 , : . ... . . 1 inni iuckv Biuurf iiiiuk 11:11 ilil'.'1. Ii or linnnpniiil t s mm nfhaM!uSI Chicago Post. Feminine Charity. erite. --, i i. ,1.1.1, her innocent ways. V- l : . 1 1 , .. n: HO eoin 11 k- a 1 1111 .411 pub on. uica Daily News. A Victim of Tobaero. Twynn Poor Itickett's death tilt! fr-Mtn bis ftmlnpsR for tohiprA. inmeiii 1 nrHru iiisb lie hsi M....r by an explosion. Awvnn wen. ue mrcnvu ti iot mouth. Leslie's Weekly. Mr Barometer. The sunshine came from my la3r m, Hsr frown was my stormy eeather I dreamed la the light of aray-blus ,.. When h and I were toKethsr. TIlj, Seat frost enwie from thoso rrV SSl skies, A frees from her hand another: Than sero weather from her cold hanltya. And I sm only a brother. -,'. T. Son; RATI HAL GAS EXPI.OMOV Smith Whnt iris the cause of tl fire? Brown There was a woniiej rights meeting, and flnltd At, f net, nntur:i.l is- "' plosion. Chicago Tribune. t aught In Trap. Billings I wish I knew whal atofl mmm Vw., 1 nm not iirrstnlj Tollman They say you are l (rsf Billings Don't you know that U bearer of gossip is just as bad as ; gossiper? Boston Transcript. Mad n Bad Ilreak. The Boarder I protest n?ainj drinking any such water as this- "I Is riositivelv warm! The Lady of the House- (Irtri" man! that's not water! That's 71 coffee! Yonkers Statesman. Mrs. Widder-My first husband wavs worried over the ice bills. j Mr. Widder Well, let us hope M where he has none to bother him Baltimore American. Uennltlon. "How would you define dipw icy?" asked the student. . "Diplomacy," answered the rns" J experience, "is the art of conduct ft. H HU M I CI TiJiUUU -'- v - r angTy.H Washington Star. torni norr. ,.. T-s r : : mMftA-ftftlnff joining a sccrc- aoticvj. jh tees art kigner. JSraoiiijrn uu . - . Vila riO-NTT and SM0 w r - r Youruie" Ton can he cored or aay form oi '"".'r--hs easily, be made well, strong, m-'S'"- new lire ana vigor uy iakiub ssw iisy tea pounds ia ten days. Over BOQi enrarl llldmnwlnta a-IB evil STSU It HOWDY CO, Chicago or Mew Vers. ! S3
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers