SICK, WEAK, AILING WIFE ur, lireene s rvcrvura is tne itemeay sure to Make Her Well. . : The man who has a sick wife baa a great burden upon h!m, but kla burden ia lipht compared to that of hU sick wife. She uiay not be aick abed, but aha la ailing all the time; ahe ia weak, nervous, irritable, and tired. out, , She la aloeplev nights aud wakes mornings feeling tired, without energy or ambition, diacouraed, drajjyed out, and iiiUcsuribublv miserable. Ilcr head aches, her back aches, she cannot cat, is constipated, melancholy, and so net-roue at hn. No doctors have known Just what ailod bar. Bhe was out of her mind most of the true and had constant pain in her side. Bhe has had spasms continually, from six to She to rt'e smallest child for her age that can be found. All medicines could do noth i r for her until I rsvo her Dr. Greene's Nervura blood and nerve ranedy. and then she was rural in a short time. I cannot say enouh in praise of this wonderful medicine, it has done aoaiuch for me and my family. I heartily advise everybody to take it." Do not fall to try this wonderful Dr. Greene's Nervura blood and nerve remedy". You should specially take it now, for everybody needs at this season lAis grandest of spring modtcincs. People have more confidence in it than in any and all other remedies, because it is the prescription of a famous regular priysicinn and therefore perfectly adapted to cure, and because Dr. Greene, 101 Fifth Avenue, New York City, can be consulted at any time free of charge ia rejrard to any case, whether you call or write. Since long before the birth of St. Patrick people have "seen" snakes and Trolley Mania "ocodilcs and myr iads oi oilier ugiy and terrifying rep Is (he Latest. tiles, and some have seen things out aide of the reptilian family whichmade them shudder and shake at the knees; but it remained for Mr. William Hoy t, m,t Ik:. 41.- X7- O..- VII J, 9 UIC 0UU, " ' - A'. cars. Some time ago ' . . . m'uck dj one oi ae cars oi tii - .iropoliUn Street Hallway com- fm Out itLCMl, BVILI M llljaiic about the head and body; and the fact, s alleged, that he is now suffering from a peculiar mental condition de scribed by his physician us "irolley mania" was disclosed in the supreme court, where Hoyt brought suit against the railroad company to re cover $25,000 rinninires. Although, so far as we know, the term "trolley mania" originated in this case, phrases sonicwhut similar to it have been for some time emnloved to rxnress a sort of fear or apprehension felt by many residents of New York whenever they attempt to cross streets traversed by trolley cars. It is indisputable that some persons, generally those from the suburbs, travel several blocks out of their way daily in order to avoid cross ing a street in which the cars are run, and when necessity compels them to cross such thoroughfares they appear for some minutes to be in a dazed and nervous condition. Hoyt, it is said, fancies that everything in motion, from a wheelbarrow to ;m automobile, ii a trolley car, and for trolley cars he is everlastingly on the watch. Trolley ears overtake him on the sidewalk and follow him home; they roll around the ioor of his house like marbles; at night they pn up n the roof, turn somer saults and conic clanging down throiiph the chimney, and, once on the inside, they play tag around his bed and ie with each other in running down frail and unwary pedestrians. The railroad company, it is said, has employed physicians for the purpose f determining whether trolley mania really is a nov and prevalent disease. They will, no doubt, seek to ascertain low many persons, if any, have suf fered from hallucinations similar to those described by Mr. Hoyt, and will endeavor to learn the specific and technical cause of the malady, and also tat percentage of cases wherein It has shown grave and refractory tenden cies. Trolley mania, if it actually ex ists, is not sn affliction to bo trifled with. It should receive the Immediate and undivided professional attention cd those who are best able to deal with iU name Isn't What It Feed ( ne. "Say, Bill, yer mopin' like a sick dog. Wot's eatin'yu?" "Me woman's dead." "Wei, yu didn't do nothln but cuss an' abuse her when she was alive." "Dat's de.trubble ain't nobody to enss and 'buse now." Judge. The Itaramla flea. To read the druirman's various ada Doth brim me rorrow deep. It seems too bad to Nivt my health When cures are sold so cheap. Washington Star. i times that stio reels as II ine snouia ny. one xeeia just good for nothing and is tired all the time. How quickly will ine weigai 01 her burden of disease be lifted if she will use that greatest boon to woman kind. Dr. Greene's Nervura blood and nerve remedy 1 How quickly it will relieve her weakness, her nervous ness, her pains and aches, her hope less depression of mind and heart, and how speedily it will restore her strength, renew her vitality, vigor, energy, power, and the pulsing life which means happiness for women I Dr. Greene'a Nervura is Indeed s blessing for weak, nervous, and de spairing women, for its use means to them health, strength, hope, happi ness, and life itself 1 . Mrs. James Roake, a weit-kaowa lady living at MS YYashlflgtoa Street, Pccksklll, N. Y.,sayst "About flfUja years ago I was taken very sick. After sevn months I got over that, but have never been well since. I have suffered terribly with pains In the chest, bark, kidneys, and head. There was a disagreeable feeling In the eyes and I would do very sick m the morning. If y mind was always gloomy and I felt very low-spirited. 1 had terrible numb spells, and would have to be rubbed some time before I could get around. -Some of these numb spells were so severe my friends thought I would not recover from them. "I tried doctors snd medicines, but rot no better. Finally I began the use of Dr. Greene's Nervura blood and nerve remedy, as my husband bad been most miraculously cured by It. After using it a Short time there was a most wonderful improvement. "I continued to steadily gala in every respect until I was cured of all the terrible aiUngs. This wonderful medicine had now cured my husband and myself of the most fearful suffering, but this was not all. I now want to toll about my little girl. " She has never been well sines she was POLITICS IN ENGLAND. Lord Itoacbery'a Friend Will Try tt Secure Control of Liberals Be fore Kelt Iilectloa. King Edward's opening of parlia ment was nn occasion of even grenter pon:j and ceremony than his lnxt ap pearance in the house of lords, one of the most interesting sessions of re cent yeara wus begun. Ret the conclusion of the present session the whole status of the liberal party is likely to be altered and Lord Kosebery'a future determined. Pres ent indications point to a split which no middle-road pronouncements can heal, and in which Sir Edward Grey, 11. II. Asquith, Sir II. 11. Fowler, It. W. Perks, 11. It. llaldnne aud other im perialists, together with a few union ists, will flock to Lord Kosebery'a I.OUD ItOSEDGRT. (Leader of the Liberal Party ar.d Former rrur.lcT of England.) standard nnd initiate an organization with the hope of Heeiiriugeontrol of nil the liberal eleineiit.H prior to the next general election. Temporarily this diversion of the op position will greatly facilitate the government's programme, the chief item of which is a sweeping reform oi parliamentary procedure. The hope less delay and sonfuMan which nt present characterizes all legislative ef forts at Westminster have reached point where parliament has brconi ridiculous in the eyes of the country In the drastic recasting of the pro cedure many methods employed in tht United States congress will either be adopted or given a trial in modified form. The chancellor of the exchequer, Sit Michael Hicks-Bench, will doubtless get nil the additional war supplies he requires, though special measures will be necessary to raise them, and this will give Sir Henry Campbell-llanner-man's section of the opposition a full opportunity for criticizing the govern ment's policy in South Africa. Some sanguine prophets also believe the war will be sufficiently near its end to enable the government to put before the nation, during the session, detailed plans for the settlement of South Africa. This belief, however, doea not appear to be shared by the war oillce. More Trraaar. Mr. De A moo I see that calling has gone out of fashion. Mrs. De Avnoo Yes; Hhad to. Strr ants have become too tyrannical. . "Tyrannical?" "Indeed they are. One-half of them deliberately refuse to lie to undesirable visitors. N. Y. weekly. IMPROVING A BARN. tost Wladew That Clvea a Chaaee . to Vaload Bar late the Loft from the Outside. I There are thousands ot barns like the original of that shown in the cut scattered throughout the country, the roof space in which ia but little, if at all, utilized, largely for the reason that the roof space is Inaccessible. A barn waa recently seen by the writer In which this difficulty was solved by the insertion of a roof window similar to that shown in the cut, . This gives a chance to unload hay into the loft from the' outside, either by hand or by a hay fork, and wherena the loft be fore was dark and poorly ventilated, it ia now light and airy. The style of window that is shown is much bet ter than the pitched roof dormer win TUB IMPROVED BARN. dow that is sometimes put upon roofs. The style shown admits of having a large square window in front espe cially useful if a hay fork la to be used. The advantage of thtos changing a barn is that the loft can be floored over and the hay and straw stored in the second story, utilizing the space clear to the ridge pole. Thia leaves the first floor clear for a alio and quar ters for the stock, giving mora room for the latter, and affording a warm er barn, since many buildings are kept cold almost wholly because of the big empty space In the top heated air al ways rising because lighter than cold air. With a window in each end of the barn above, and fhe new window in front, the loft will be as light as the first floor, while in summer this means ot ventilation, with tba loft floor to separate the upper part of the barn from the lower, will cause the lower part of the barn, where the stock is confined at night, to be much cooler than it otherwise could be. N. Y. Tribune. THEY NEVER COMPLAIN. But That Is Ha Blaru That BeiM De Nat Feel the Nealeet te Which Their Are Subjected. Horse sre the most abused of ani mals; not only because they happen to be the most used and the moat useful, but also, and perhaps even more, because nature, for some mys terious reason, has denied them the power of audibly expressing pain, such ss is possessed by the cat or the dog. Under extraordinary circumstances, says The Road, they have indeed been known to overcome the impediment. The extremity of terror, aa when they have been attacked by savage beaut or the sudden shock of agonizing pain, as when they have been horribly wounded on the battlefield, has some times extorted from them a piercing, dolorous, almost human scream, which nobody who ha9 heard it can easily forget. Most horses which die In pain expire in silence, or utter merely a moan or whine. The galled jade may wince, but ut ters no ory. The cart horses of our busy cities make no audible com pi a nit under the lash of the whip, the strain of an overload, or the stupid jerking of the reins by the ignorant drivers. It cannot be that they lack the will, but they have been denied the power. A few exceptional instances no more affect the general truth of this rule than the case of Balaam's ass provides a proof that all asses (of the four legged variety, be it understood), pos sess the power of speech. Practically their dumbness is absolute. Feeding Corn to Hoes. ( It is hard to understand why hog growers of the west are rushing hogs to market half finished. The price of hogs Is about $6.40 to 16.50 per 100 live weight, and that, of corn 55 cents a bushel. Experience has shown that a bushel of corn makes about 11 pounds of gain, live weight, when fed to hogs. That would make the corn worth about 70 cents a bushel when so fed. It doesn't cost the difference between 55 cents and 71', cents a bushel to market corn fed hogs, by a good deal. Other wise also it is a mistake to rush hogs to market half finished, as it breaks down the market, both because of quality and quantity. Indiana Farm er. Make the Cellar Fit Welt. A sweat pad is undesirable if a well fitting collar can be secured, says Farm and Fireside. It is warm and it springs the collar ouf of shape. A hard, smooth leather aurface is probably as good as anything for the shoulders. Tht fit ting is best done by soaking the collar and then pounding any place or places that unevenness of the shoulder may demand. The shape of the bainea ha a much to do with the fitting of the ool- lar. Esevelaa the Braatf HaM. The brood mart should hart regular exercise, but It should never be cas A Good, Defease). - Old Mr. Dingbatts (angrily) What do you mean, sir? I come into the par - lor and find you kissing my daughter! Spatts I beg your pardon, sir, but that is the only way in which I could keep her from singing. Harlem Life. Sweeping. "I was just telling my daughter," aid Mrs. Kexdore, "that it's a shame of her to play the piano on Sunday. "lluh!" exclaimed Mrs. Pepprey, "why Sunday, especially?" Philadel phia Press. - " Spoke Right Oat, Belle You weren't so mean as to lead George to infer that I painted, I hope? Blanche 'o, indeed! I always did despise a girl who merely hinted at things. Tit-Bits. Qalte a Difference. Harold She said she would be will ing to go to the end of the world with me. Jerrold Oh! anv eirl would. But. how about aettling down in a Harlem flat? Puck. Readr Demonstration. "Do you think you can make my daughter happy?" asked Miss Thirty- smith's father gravely. "Why, I have already, haven't I?" replied Spooner. "I've asked her to marry me." Smart Set. Wished It Demonstrated. "You look sweet enough to kiss," he said. "Prove it," she returned. Chicago Post. And There Are Others. Young Physician What is your prac tice mostly? Young Lawyer Domestic economy. Chicago Daily News. What this Boy's Mother Says has been laid by the mothers of many other boys and girls, re garding the wonderful curative and strengthening qualities of mIw Nervine Hastwo. Nib. "Our little boy, Harry, had spasms for 3 years aad we feared the disease would affect his mind. Though we doctored continually he grew worse and had ten spasms in one week. Our at tention was directed to Dr. Milet' Nerv ine and we began its we. When he had taken the"urta bottle the spasms disappeared and he hci not had one for Ave years. Hit health now is per fect" ' Mm. B. M. TisdjuI Dr. Miles' Remedies are sold by all druggists on guarantee to benefit or nancy refunded. Or. Mllea Medical Co., Elkhart, Ind. Not to Be Disturbed. "I want a pound o' water crackers," said Mrs. Eorntop. "Well er s'pose I send 'em up to your place?" replied the country store keeper. "I did think to take 'em with me." "Sorry, ma'am, bnt Jake Bullymen'e snoozln' on top o' the bar'lthet they're in, an' he ain't in the best of humor to day." Philadelphia Press. Where They Differ. Though every dog may havs his day There' reason to deplore. The turkey, what with bash and stew. Can count up three or four. , Genu! ttm$t& CCC Never sold In bulk. Sevan cf mesaw who tries to sen eatmlnt: hat as good." Appreciated. Bliffers How do you excuse those mother-in-law jokes to your wife? Funnlman I tell her they refer to her mother-in-law, and she says they are not ' half bud enough. N. Y. Weekly. . WLrn you wko un with r bad taste in jour mouth yu miy know- that you need a done of tnamber lain'a Stomach & Livr Tablets Tbey wi;l cleanse your stomach. improve yuor appetite and make you feci like a new man. J hey are easy to take, being sugar coated, and rjlesennt in effect. Fori ale by the Widdlolurgh Drug Store. fTtterlr Reckless. . Bllllcus Bjones seems very despond' eat. H says h doesn't ear what hap pens to him. Cynicut The first thing yon know he'll be going off and getting married. Philadelphia Becord. !.. ' 1 wanwfaalaaGoolb Baa I latwa. Bold hr droanlits. 1 I I " for Infants and Children. The Kind You Hare Always Bought has borne the signs ' tare of Cltos. 1L Fletcher, and has been made under hi personal supervision for over 30 years. Allow no one to deceive you in this. Counterfeits, Imitations and Just-as-good " ore but Experiments, and endanger tliq health of CLildrcn Experience against Experiment. The Kind You Have Always BougM Bears the In Use For Twr ctrru ee.Niiir. tt New-York Tribune Farme Kor sixty ytmn i A NEW OLD PAPAR vMiinuutur. wno BUNK r AKMKK live. enterDrisin pictures of live capy win aeasaiifja lajroa. Liberal Adjustments- REMEMBER H. HARVEY BCHDCH, 6ENERAL iNSfcrfANCE A6ENGY Only the Oldest, Strongest Cash Companies, Fire, Life, Accident and Tornado. No Assessments No Premium Note The Aetna Founded A. " Home " 44 American " " The Standard Accident Insurance Co. The New York Life Insurance Co. The fidelity Mutual Life Association. Patronage Solicited. DURiNo HOT WEATHER "XJSE- LUEFLAME : "New Rochester" r00EINO under these circumstances ia a pleasure. The Rochee'i LamD Co. stake thfiir reniit.n.t.inn nn tha atnva in nnsafinn. T best evidence of the patisfaction enjoyed is testimonials galore and I pucaie oraers irom ail pans oi me world. Send for literature, both for the "New Rochester" Cook Stove d trie "new Kocnester" Lamp. You will never rogret having introduced these gcods into your Lot hold, The Rocheser Lamp Co., nl ace and 33 Barclay St., New York. THE BEST -SVf LAWN aQNrQV SWUM WINDSOR HOUSE W. it. BV1XEB, Proprietor 418 Market Si., Harrisburg; Pa., (Opposite P. B. R. Depot Entranca) vrmie for All Trnlanv Rooms, 25 and SOc. Good Meals, 25c flood .accommodations. tt DON'T IZftl won can oe carta or any rorta or tobacco asisf easily, ba mads well, atrona;, caigaetic, fall of acw lift aad vigor by taking &TO-MAO, that makes wtix man atraaar. hi n . Many (si tea pounda ia tea dart. Orer Maa'OaA (td. All drurrists. Cure auaranteed. Book. let and advica FKSS. Addnsa btvbt ran 8MBDY CO, Chicago or Mew Yarlb4JI i mil i im Is aiBatan la ea every bos of the geaaiM AXttive Brocio-Quidnc Table fiailJy that mmim a to km mm alaa Signature of Over 30 Years. mim ymcir, ntw to (ha NEW TOKK WEKKLT TRIBUNK hu J i . . i i a . 1 hu enjoyed the eonfldence and support ot the A in er lean ieoc a decree never attained by eny similar publication. THE New-York Tribune Karrru ia made absolutely for farmer and their families. The Bnt was issued November 7th, 1UU1. Every department of arrlcultural Industry Is covered by tJ arv icauera in ineir respective lines, and thiS will tie in every sense a talifh class; up to J airicusturnl naner. nroliuelv IMutrni J stock, model farm buildlutsand homes, ncoJ wavuinery. vie. Farmers' wives, sons and daughters will find special pam their entertainment. Regular price, S1.00 per year, but you can buy It with , favorite home weekly newspaper. The Middlebura Post oim for SI tO. Bend your subscription and money to the Middlebura; Por. Braa jroar name and addrsjaa te the HEW-YOHKH UlTHE FABMEK, Jfew Vark City, aail a free ana Prompt Fayine D., 1819 Assets " 1853 " " 1810 " 11,0 ,1! 9,83,6! 2,40 ,? ) OK STOVES - WICKLES5 SAMPLE. 5AFE A fiCMTC XIT A MTClf AULilUO TTAn 1C1 Laws Swlats aad Settees, Hammock Chain, Camp Chairs aod Stools, troalflg Tables, Wash Benches, Etc. Agents easily make $5 to $10 Per Da Will furnish samples at H duced prices to those dcsiril agency. Exclusive territtf given. Address, Clurfield Woodin-Wan Cj, CIEUFIEID, rt JA& 0. CROUSE, . ATTORN KT AT LAW, MlDDLKBURt All bnaluvis entrasted to bis will reeelve orouiot attention: a. Ii. PottiegcJ Veterinary sUrceoiC StLINSOROVC, PA. J ' AUprofeaatonal buameaa entrosud to an win raeetvs prompt and careful atteouoa O.l. OWENS- ATTOKSEr AT.LAW OCB Braflt AUTTt TT0 i ' Collect loos and Reports. - sUtoreftees, rtrst National Binr. K Towns Reproaanted KeUwaod, AltooM. ried to tba point ot fatlgtiav 9 .....
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers