ence and convert- as at tha 13 croup, nant,” or ; atter I 1d it was vould be, vas down the nigh be, °*-I% after me, 1 it was haarers, -’. = Ww i» , for it is Juniata, 3, or ths and you lown the to angle Ss ago hower of disaster. treesisa il of fish, ong dark is a good People in re not 8d 15 to the 4 of bait. it? My e shall [ rrounds.” 'y had to h> banks » edge of then put tramen- body and ani then Complete structions a Clear the mod- y colored of bait. angle for d of bait, mises, tha xion, the baif, buf ; do any- ld angle- New views Thera ara ig. But - you will saiah and o the hint st and fish wanting et a placs they want r thev will ded Chris stians, It hat will ba lebration. nd line! , corduroy ds leaded ures hung baz filled, the basket tfternoon’s of u hook there will man thal llage Sun- ariel in a before tha y of souls or instru all done 2 by ons, soul may tha light, nas Bilnsy ut it way 1aker was ut it was ord healad lyzed arm at a time, at a time, re the net ice, but do 1 fisheries, or the day much de- [imself de- is like unto d gathered full, they 1 gathered st the bad nd of the forth ang ” 36 to keep aul in the the beach, and if itis ankers are shad pre Galilee the irled back he bank as carp and be carried saints and | the mean, kept in the he division e gatherad many holy rated, and s they may years their wurch rolls, 1d forbid 6 among we do our thoroughl George est angling 1d [sles an who plied of his tima ulpit only stand, and ‘Put on me h my own Bury me my grande n: e slob § : i i 5 ' bilitated condition. Last wint pains and aches, and belie - it to all" - “Writing on the Clouds. This much-talked-of-feat has at last been accomplished in Engiand. Capt. Rorald Scott has succeeded 1n adapt- ing the search-light apparatus to the purpose of advertising. The experi- ment was made at the Acton Hill Electrical Works. Unfortunately the night was absolutely clear, and there were no clouds at all on which the rays of light could be thrown. How- ever, the practicability of the scheme was fully proved by directing the search-light on a cloud of steam and on other material objects—such asa bank - of trees, a house-wall, and the grass lawn—when in each the words stood out clearly and well de- fined in letters of light. Even ai a distance of full half a mile the words did pot appear to lese any of their distinctness. The effect of directing the beam of light on a cloud of €team was very curious, the letters being re- peated again and again, the other, increasing in size as each puff of steam drifted away into the distance. Big Frog—Big Story. During the winter of 1886-87 a petrified frog was found in a quarry near Elmira, N. Y., which was two feet eight inches in length and weighed over 100 pounds. This is the largest specimen of fossilized frog yet brought to light. And All Admire Billy. At the time Shakspeare wrote his plays there were not in ail the world as many English-speaking people as there are now in Ncw York and New Jersey. To-day more than 100, 000,- 000 people speak English. 100 Baa. A Philadelphia candidate complains that so many lics were told about him during the campaign that he caunot uow ged credit from his tailor. British Wrecks. Withir the last thirty years thera have been on the British coasts 66.377 wrecks, with the loss of 22,312 lives. Mr. Geo. W. Cook Of St. Johnsbury, Vt. Like a Waterfall Great Suffering After the Crip Tremendous Roaring in the Head— Pain in the Stomach. * To C. I. Hood & Co., Lowell, Mass.: * Two years ago I had a severe attack of the Grip, which left me in a terribly weak and de- er I had another attack and yas Sein very badly off, yofl. any health nearly wreck: pre petite gone, no strength, oo tired Pye the time, disagreeable Jorn noises in my head, ha a waterfall. oe severe headaches Severe Sinking Fains in my stomach. I took medicines without ben efit, until, having heard so much about Hood's Barsaparilla, I concluded to try it, and the re- sult A gratifying. All the disagreeable Hood’ sum Cu res effects of the Grip are gone, I am free from eve Hood's rilla is surel Jr curing mv catarrh. I recommend . W. Coog, St. Johnsbury, Vt. Hood’s Pi Is cure Nausea, Sick Headache, Indi- gestion, Biliousness. Sold by all druggists. PNU7 93 Unlike the Dutch Proces Xo Alkalies Other Chemicals are used in the preparation of W. BAKER & C0.’S \BreakfastCocoa which is absolutely \ pure and soluble. Ithas morethanthreetimes the strength of Cocoa mixed with Starch, Arrowroot or Sugar, and is far more eco- nomical, costing less than one cent a cup. It is delicious, nourishing, and EASILY DIGESTED. Ta Sold by Grocers everywhere. W.BAKER & CO0., Dorchester, Mass, Piso’s Remedy for Catarrh Is the Best, Easiest to Use. and Cheapest. Sold by druggists or sent by mail, 0c. IE. T. Hazeltine, Warren, Pa. JOHIN W. MORRIS, EN NSIO Washington, D.C. Prosecutes Claims. Louccesst sully Br U.8. Pension Bureau. 3yrsinlast war, DE atin tlm atty since, ATENTS ! PENSIONS !—Send for Invent. ro pas ne Eel ICK O’FA. SRA! ao WwW WASHINGTON. D.a FRUIT TREES. La an 7 Stock in United States. Fianiers d Dealers nth et OUR PR. efore placin ORDERS. E. MOODY & SONS, LOCKPORT, N. Y RE. Nosalve or sneezing. 3! ATA ARE ICUS Brown St., W. Phifadciobia. Every Month many women suffer from Excessive or brig Menstruation; they don't know who to confide in to get proper advices Don't confide in anybody but try Bradfield’s Female Regulator « Specific for PAINFUL, PROFUSE, SCANTY, SUPPRESSED and IRREGULAR MENSTRUATION. Book to ** WOMAN" mailed free. BRADFIELD REGULATOR CO, Atiant, Ga. Sold by all Druggiste. one behind LATE TELEGRAPHIC JOTTINGS ! POMESTIC a7 AND FOREIGN. i Lagat Wheat is Going on The World Over. Important Events Briefly Chronicled. — en Legislative. The Indiana senate passed a bill requiring all corporations, firms and individuals, ex- cept railroad companies and farmers, to : pay their employes at least once a week in’ cash. Contracts for other arrangements to pay wages are made invalid. A bill has’been introduced in the Maine Legislature to require habitual drunkards to be treated by the Keely ‘Care’ at State or county expense. The Maine House of Ribiesatativs adopted a resolution expressing a wish that Mr. Blaine's remains should rest in Maine. The Massachusetts House passed to third reading the bill to abo ish **Fast Day.” In the Illinois State Senate Mr. Brands presented a resolution asking lllinois mem- bers in Congress to urge the withdrawal of all. paper currency and instead issue a like amount of aluminum coin, to protect the people of the country from cholera, which is transmitted by paper morey. The Minneso!a State Senate passed the Leavitt proposition, is amend the Constitu- tion by providing for a tax of not to exceed 5 per cent, on all inheritances above sich sum as the Legislatnre in its discretion may exempt. The bill passed by a vote of 34 to 8. The Oregon sena‘e passel the World's Fair appropriation bill over the Governor's veto. The Oklahoma House has refused, by a Lirge majority, toadopt a resolution intro- iuced by Wallace, the colored member, con- Jdemning lynch law, especially when ad: ministered to colored men without trial. Dirsters. Accidents and Fatlities The charred remains of John Grogan and John Morrissey were found in a shanty near the Pueblo, Col., smelter. They had been drinking and fired their cabin, resulting in their cremation. Both were machinists. Near Fargo, N. D., in the wreck of a snow plow on the Fargo & Southwestern rail road, caused by the breaking of an engine from the tender, Conductor W. G. Crawford and Brakeman W. J. Quinlan were burned to death. A Norwegian bark, bound for New York, went ashore at Long Beach, N. J., and five sailors were drowned. : Spreading rails caused a wreck on the Union Pacific near Pocatilla, Idaho. Eliza Egan, a 13-year-old girl, of Chicago, was killed and about 20 persons injured. Peter Reilly, a laborer employed at the licorice works at Newark, N. J., was boiled to death in a vat of licorice. Kansas City burglars chloroformed Mr. and Mis, Martin Baker, and after robbing the house left the chamber window open. Twin infants frozeto dzsth while the parents were unconscious. aT Crime and Penalties. Wim. Cox is now in jail at Trenton, N. J charged with systematically robbing Prince- ton students, It is estimated that the stu- dents have lost fully $2,000 through his deal- ugs. i The mob at Paris, Tex., has accomplished another lynching. They hanged and shot Will Butler, stepson of their former victim Smith, for claiming to know and refusing to divulge the whereabouts of the man who was afterward burned at the stake. In Greene county, Tennessee, Ed Johnson, bis wife and Tom Hixon were killed in a row over the ownership of a piece of farm- ing land. red iy Miscellaneous. The funeral of a child at Galvin, Ky., bad to be postponed because some one had stolen the coffin. It has beon discovered in Cincinnati that Uncle Sam has been swindled in almost every large city by importers who Lave been shipping in buttons as *‘jet.”’ The Blaine home at Augusta will remain in the family possession, though Mrs. Blaine intends to go abroad. It is said the estate, amounting to $1.000,000, is left unre- tervedly in her possession. di rie tl Washington News. The placards bearing the word ‘‘closed’ which have been displayed on the front door of the White House since Marthena Harrison, the president's grandchild, was stricken with the scarlet fever, were re- moved, and the public part of the house is NOW open to visitors. The President has re- sumed his tri-weekly receptions to the pub- lic, x The question of opening the World's Fair on Sundays is still undecided by the House Committee on the Columbian Exposition. A meeting for the consideration of the mat- ter was calied, but the fact that no quorum materalized is taken to indicate that the measure is dead. rie Capital. f.abor and Industrial. Superintendent Gibson, of the Big Four Railroad, yesterday noon discharged 69 striking switchmen at Springfield, O. They asked pay for overtime. The general manager of the Fast Ten- nessee system has issued an order to the effect that all members of the Order of Railway Telegraphers in the employ of the company must resign their membership or lose their positions. gn Sanitary. The efforts of the health authorities of New York to check the progress of the ty- phus are seemingly meeting with little suc- cess. Fourteen new cases of the plague have been reported, seven of which were in the work-house on Blackwells island and four in Bellevue hospital. ' Ee HA FOREIGN, A cry of fire in a Leipsic restaurant started a panic in which six persons were crushed to death and others wounded. The fire was insignificant. At St, Johns, N. F., while Patrick Sulli- van was endeavoring to rescue his 11 child- ren from his burning dwelling he perished in the flames with four of his children. Learnel Something. Edward Everctt Hale, writing in the Atlantic Monthly the story of his boyhood, says that the members of his father’s family, children inciuded, ‘‘went to meeting’ every Sunday, morning and afternoon, as did all other ‘respectable people.” Any one who had been seen driving out of town on that day would have lost credit in the.commumity. The after- noon service was ten minutes shorter than the morning service, Doctor Hale remernbers, though he has never known what occasioned thedifference. At the close of the afternoon service Sunday school was held —¢‘a very dif- ferent thing from what it is now.” “You were expected to learn some thing, 2nd you did.” Doctor Hale has often said, and still believes it 18 true, that fully one- . half of ali he now knows about the i facts recorded in the Bible was ac- quired in the Brattle Street Sunday- school before he was 13 years ola. *‘We had little books,” he says, ‘which contuined facts on these sub- jects. We had to study these booxs as we dia anv other school-books, and we recited from them as we recited any other lesson. “1 do not thing there was much said or thought about making Sunday- school agreeable to the children. We were told to go. and we went; we were told to learn a lesson, and we learned it. In those days a Sunday evening service was a thing almost uoheard of in Boston—*‘‘quite as much an in- novation as calling an Episcopal minister a ‘rector’ is now to old-fash. ioned Episcopalians.” According te the Puritan theory each family is 2 church, and the father is a priest competent to carry on worship. Any proposal for a Sunday evening service anywhere else except at home was thought to be an interference with the rights and duties of the family. ‘At this moment,” says Doctor Hale, “you will find in old Boston families the habit of going to visit one another on Sunday evening, but not of going to church. Where the people go to church steadily on Sun- day evening, you may generally guess that they are not of cid Boston blood.” Surprise Pies. The surprise pie in old Engiand con= tained a cogen live frogs that leaped over*the table when the cover was re- moved. ONE ENC ovs Both the method and results when Syrup of Figsistaken; it is pleasant and refreshing to the taste, and acts gently ye promptly on the Kidneys, ver and Bowels, cleanses the sys- tem effectually, dispels colds, Ea, aches and fevers and cures habitual constipation. Syzup, of Figs is the only remedy of its kind ever pro- duced, pleasing to the taste and ~c- ceptable to the stomach, prompt in its action and trul beneficial in its effects, prepared only from the most healthy and agreeable substances, its many excellent qualities com- mend it fo all and have made it 4s; most p opujer remedy known. Syrup of Figs is for sale in 50c and $1 bottles by all leading drug- gists. Any reliable druggist who may not have it on hand will pro- cure it promptly for any one who wishes to try it. Do not accept any substitute. CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO. SAN FRANCISCO, Par, LOVISVILLE, KY. ~ WEW YORK, N.Y. ATHE KIND THAT CURESS EB 10 ET 10 TF JEROME BALL, ‘Waterford, N. Y. TORTURING ‘ Headache for 10 Years!” — TY ee be = = a w Dana’s Sarsaparilla “I WAS CURED!” % = MR. BALL WAS THE FIRST MAN TO PURCHARE== DANA'S IN COHOES. LISTEN AS HE TELLS YOU BE THE RESULT. Bm = DANA SARSAPARILLA Co.: 8 GENTLEMEN:--1 have been a sufferer from = e the last ten years. Last= stall I saw in one of our Jocal papers an advertise- == Bl ment of your medieie aud testimonials of it = wonderful ¢ I decided to int fy bottle. The first fo Sl greatly Telisved me, and b; ae time I had taken SE E==two more bottles I WA. URED. I cin = panas B SARSAPARILLA feoesasafe and reliable medicine. Respectfully yours, ‘Waterford, N. i vy JEROME BALL. E The truth af Mr. Ball's statement is certified to y M. MOCDERMOTT, i Cohoes, N. Y. Pharmacist. = Dana Sarsaparilia Co.. Belfast, Maine. ve l a -- Il TERT Ts cm rT Catbage Stalks Sixteen | eet High. The manufacture of cabbage walk. ing sticks is quite a trade in the Isle conversion into these useful. asticles a somewhat easy matter. There isa local song greatly admired by tour- ists containing the words: ‘‘Here we grow the cabbage ten feet high,” and, incredible as this may appear, they have even reached a height of six- teen feet. "These cabbage walking sticks can be bought in London.— Philadelphia Record. THE time when it makes a man the maddest to call him a liar is wo mm—— — Baking Powder. pounded from the purest spoonful in the can is as of Jersey, and the enormous size to | which these stalks grow ree “ers their when be knows vou to tell the truth. | avaled: Orde > We eat too much and te ke too little out-door exercise. Tis is the fauit of our modern civ- iiization. it is c¢launed that Garfield lea, a simple herb remedy, helps Nature to overcome | theseabuses. 3 A canary bird. which died at “Tuntsville. Ga.. last week, was reputed to be over 15 years of age. For CouGH® AND THROAT DISORDERS use BROWN’s BRONCHIAL TroC 1ES. “llave never het my mind Jespecling them, except | think better of that which I hepan by think- ing well of ."— Rev, Uenry Ward Reecher. Sold only in boxes. A Complete Newspaper For One Mene. The Pittsburgh Chronicie-Telegraph is sold by all News Agents and delivered by Carriers evervwhere, for One Cent a copy or Nir Cents a week. It contains daily, the news of the world, receiving as it does, the reports of both the Associated Press and the United Press. No other paper which sells for One Cent receives hoth of these reports, Its Sporting, Financial, ashion, and Household Departments are un- r it from your News Agent. ‘Each Spoonful iad done its Perfect Work,’ Is the verdict of every woman who has used Royal Other baking powders soon deteriorate and lose their strength, owing to the use of inferior ingredients, but Royal Baking Powder is so carefully and accurately com- materials that it retains its strength for any length of time, and the last good as the first,. whicn is not true of any at*-=r baking powder. ‘e fully twenty-five years. thoroughly restored. A Testimonial Worth Reading. M+. Sreniive, Kv. Fes. 11. 1380. I desire to make a brief statement for the benefit of the suffering afflicted with catarrh of the head, throat I had been and nose, and perhaps the bladder for Having tried other remedies without success, I was led by an advertisement in the Sentinel- Democrat to try Hall's Catarrh Cure. 1 have just finished my fourth bottle, and I believe I am right when I say I am I don't believe there 1s a trace of the disease left. Respectfully, WM. BRIDGES, Merchant Tailor, v BEW! ARE OF FRAUD. for, insist on Jhavin o* yi Dovaias SH ESR : uine eh MA and prige n_bottom. t when YOR Days everywhere. > 11 Write for catalogue. ‘Wil 5d size a and width wanted. Postage Free. Ifnot for sale withal a very pleasant rem factory a Medicince for the . Yours very truly Err MARK. IMMEDIATE RELIEF. POSITIVE OURE or money re- ff funded. Always specify “ERIE” Take no other. PLEASANT, HARMLESS, CONVENIENT. 50 Cents by Mail or at Druggists. Sample for § Cents in Stamps. P. HALL, I> ERIE 1.0 L. DOUGLAS 2,$3°S HOE GENTLEMEN A sewed shoe that will not rip; Calf, seamless, smooth inside, more comfortable, ! stylish and durable than any other shoe ever sold atthe price. Every style. Equalscustom. made shoes costing from # The following are of the same high standard of to $5. merit: bE) .00 and $5.00 Fine Calf, Hand-Sewed. .50 Police, Farmers and Letter-Carriers. 2.50, $3.25 and 32.00 for Working Mert. $2.00 and $1.75 for Youths and Boys. $3.00 Hand-Sewed, { $2.50 ang 2.00 Dongola, LADIES. $1.75 for Misses. DUTY represent the best value at the prices adve: as Brale can tes- tity. wear > 0 ame give exclusive sale to shoe dealers and general merchants Fueze Ihave no WL place send divect to to tatin Douglas, Brockton 3 ads. 2 sanng my family with most gratifying results, being effective in its operation, and Y to use. So far as my own cbservation goes I am able to recommend your Remed; mu ever seen, and I feel grateful to you Toe haying prepared so simple and satis- cure of suc ‘have no do:bt all who use it will feel {equally ——. , J. F. DOWNIN! neral Agent insurance Co. of North America. distressing malady as Catarrh, and THE ORIOL AND GENU INE. PA. _& Look Out for Frauds. E ““ Good Wives Crow Fair in the Light of || Their Works,” Especially if They Use SAPOLIO bd I had been troubled five months with Dyspepsia. I had a fullness after eating, and a heavy load in the pit of my stomach. Sometimes a deathly sickness would overtake me. I was working for Thomas McHenry, Druggist, Allegheny City, Pa.,in whose employ I had been for seven years. Iused August Flower for two weeks. I was relieved ofall trouble. I can now eat things I dared not touch before. I have gained twenty pounds since my re- covery. J.D. Cox, Allegheny, Pao PNT 7 Do Not Be Deceived with Pastes, Enamels and Paints pich stain the hands, injure. the iron and burn APIS OS CURE FOR be Best Cong i > 8 b 8. z Hoe VEE fer you CONSUMPTION ‘& a ready made medicine for Coughs, Bronchitis and other dis- eases of the Throat and Lungs. ' Like other so- called Patent Medicines, it is well advertised, and having merit it has attain- ed a wide sale under the name of Piso’s Cure for Consumption. It is now a “Nostrum,” though at first it was compounded after a prescription by a regular physician, with no idea that it would ever go on the market as a proprietary medicine. But after compounding that prescription over a thousand times in one year,we named it **Piso's Cure for Consumption,” and began advertising it in a small way. A medicine known all over the world is the result. Why is it not just as good as though costing fifty cents to a dollar for a prescription and an equal sum to have it put up at a drug store? MEND YOUR OWN HARNESS WITH THomsoN's EE SLOTTED CLINCH RIVETS. No tools required Onlv a hammer needed to drive and cinch them easily and quickiy, leaving the chineh avsolutely smooth. Requiring no ho e to made in ire leather nor burr for the Rivets. They are strong, ough and durable. Millions now in use. it ienzthn uniform or assorted, put up in boxes. = your dealer for them, or send 40c. in pie r & box ul 10U, assorted sizes. JUDSON . oa MSON MEQ, 00 | oo TH MASS. Cures Consumption, Coughs, Croup, Sore Throat. Sold by all Drugeists on a Guarantee. 11011 1D 01 11111 11010 AN ADEAL FAM. 1LLY MEDICINE it] cadnché; Constip hbo gy SeRpistitn; Sirleliiad: ver ROOTeBARK mo BLOSSOM The Bernt teaneh, Liver, Kidne; sniBloed Ii Pains in Bton and Timbs, Tired agged Feeling, Debility and Low Vi tality GQ duicidy Cured as toh poy, In i ree te rn o ism or Catarr] ness, Rheumpsian 8 FAID WEEKLY BAL: RY. box 1) or at mos BX he Month's subpiy | {hts “Try Itand Bo Wel ROOT, BARK « Bom Newark, N. 3, results of Garfield Tea == Cures Sensijpation, = eal JRO pkg tors Bills. Sample free. Cures Sick ‘Headache NESS Life. Agents wanted. Outfit, worth 50c., free. author. Cleveland Pub. Co., 367 Arcade, ea 0. PA TE N TS THOMas P. SIMPSON, Washington, Authorised Life. Bouanza C. No atty’s fee until Patent ob JAS, 8. BLAIN for agents. Quine only To Overcomes tained. Write for Inventor's Guide. Johnson & Co., No. 380. 11th St. HORTHAND BY MA1lL, Thoroughly taught by reporters. Cat. and first leswon free. J. G. Hen der aon, rin. Pott’s Shorthand College, W abdihiny Pn, PATENTS int Aont e: Wastingto mn, A) -page book free. nha it Soe. how to cura Headache} A book About Headaches, free. ¥ B. Simas Co.. Haverhill, Mass : i: Ie any one doubts that wi cure LC LG 0 B P 5 i $0 NE the st obstinate case in 20 to oS0gays let him write for A SPECIALTY. particulars and in- 8 pr ougate o our reli- ability. Our financial backing is $500,0 When mercury,jodide S potassium m,sarsapariliaor LA Bpri of fail, we guarantee acure—and our y Hagl sb PERN ene is THE ONLY THING THAT WIL NENTLY. POSITIVE PROOF SEALE VIER . C20K REMEDY COM ANY Chicage, I. er ee Ri do fe CA
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers