| No & ASAPOGARD RRA BAAR | Ath rtrd a. i tn airZln i In Sh lett © or 2 dati Ad IRR 34 2Se gs st und. ties, i bE thods obtain ase of ES eal : os OTICC od i Grains, s to either tie whole vink ornach, - ry 2 # av people’s business. gives nerve, mental and digestive strength by enriching and wilalizing the biood. Thus it helps overworked and tired people. : = > : . = + = ; : = = ’ : Ti —- - . n -» ‘ : Ee ’ EY - . -. 1 = . - - > > . | THE MARKETS. ; *“Do Not Burn the Candle |THE LOGIC OF EVENTS. | KFYSIOKE SINE KEWS CONDENSED a At Both Ends.” - [7 rs brow wt Foo S————————— | FREE TRADE SOPHISTS COMPLETELY | _— | & et smh ow Don't think you can go on drawing vi- DISCREDITED. RELIGION CRAZED HIM. | gd tality from the blood for nerves, stomach, se —— i 3 : brain and muscles, without doing some- | Impressive Lessons Taught by Our | Ccal Lands inArmstrong County Are Scen te 3 irae thing t Vi it. Hood" i National Experiences in t} Past 2 Pevi 5 Fos + | OA 3 1 ing to replace i s Sarsaparilla al jp by _— ey b2 Developad— Pensions Granled. | 2 Cures all Throat and Lung Affections. Ne genuine iS SURE .S Dr. Bull's Pills cure D; T¥ial, 20 for sta pepsia. ‘he Zulus a Fine Race. The Zulus are said to be the finest specimens of the black race in the world. They are mahogany-colored, stalwart, intelligent and easily gov- erned. Those who pull the jinrikishas put the horns of animals on their heads and fasten wings of large birds to their arms, . Their arms, legs, ears and necks are loaded down with iron and brass ornaments. No one is allowed to sell them any intoxicating drink, conse- quently they are a very peaceful set. Beauty Is Blecod Deep. Clean blood means a clean skin. No beauty without it. Cascarets, Candy Cathar. tic clean your blood and keep it clean, by stirring up the lazy liver and driving all im- pores from the body. Begin to-day to anish pimples, boils, blotches, blackheads, and that sickly bilicus complexion by taking Cascarets,—beauty, for ten cents. All drug- gists, satisfaction guaranteed, 10c, 25¢, 50c. Definition of Bric-a-Brac. Little Dick—Uncle Richard, what is bric-a-brac? Uncle Richard—Bric-a- brac is anything you knock over and break when you are feeling for matches in the dark.—Pueck. Don’t Tobacco Spit and Smoke Your Life Away. To quit tobacco easily and forever, be mag: netic, full of life, n and vigor, take No-To- y hat mekes weak men strong. All druggi orl. Cure guaran- teed. Dooklet and sample free. Address Sterling Remedy Co., Chicago or New York, Fisher Gi cis Travel in Style. So prosperous has been the herring season at Yarmouth that the Scotch fishing girls who have been cleaning, preparing, « and packing the fish were able to accomplish their 500-mile journey hom to Peterhead in a special train, which stop red only twice for changes S. he train con- sisted of tw orridor coaches and three comfortable 1001 and at the rear were four luggage vans, all full of personal belongings of the girls. The ordinary garb of the lasses when pursuing ihe tion comprises short top boois T hing to the knee and 8 with cily frocks over them. ar no hats or bonnets even in the pelting rain.—London Mail. Victoria Not So Wealthy. | | political i | | t | | | | | ! | | | | | | | | | | i | 1 { | | | the direct result of Democratic ‘‘tariff | reform.” | | mated at four to five billions of dol- | It has been stated that Queen Vie. | toria has accumulated a fortune of over $100,000,000. of the queen's savings is knewn to a few people. One of these is Henry Labouchere, the radical, who came by his information officially as member of a special committee of the House of Commons about eight years since. Subsequent N Labouchere wrote: that rge savings, but “The impre queen has effected I that is not the case. of the queen's investments was given to the committee under a pledge of secrecy, I cannot violate this pledge, but I do not think I am breaking faith in saying that the amount is surpris- ingly small.” Why It Was Red. Simkins—What makes your nose red? Timkins—It glows with pride, sir, at not poking itself into other The actual amount 'q the | bariff reform” under Democratic ad- As the sum total | | one, was learned at least for this gen- It is estimated that greater quantities | of gold asl silver have been sunk in the cea than are now in circulation on earth. THE NERVES OF WOMEN Lydia ¥. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound Relieves the Suffering from Oyer- wrought Nerves. “DEAR MRs. PINKHAM:—1 am so grateful for the benefit derived from the use of Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vege- table Compound that I wish you to publish this testimonial that others may know the value of your medicine. I was sufferiug such tortures from nervous prostration that life was a burden. Icould ; not sleep at all and was too weak to walk across the floor without aid. The diseasehad Sa reached a condition where my heart was affected by it, so that often I could not lie down at all without almost suffocating. 1 took Lydia E. Pinkham’'s Vege- table Compound and it worked like magic. I feel that your medicine has been of inestimable benefit to me.”—NMi1s8 ADELE WILLIAM- 8ON, 196 N. Boulevard, Atlanta, Ga. Thin, Sallow and Nervous “Dear Mrs. PINkHAM :—1 was thin, sallow and nervous. I had not had my menses for over a year and a half. Doctored with several physicians in town and one specialist, but did not get any better. I finally decided to try your medicine,’and wrote to you. After I had taken three bottles of Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com- pound and three of Blood Purifier, my menses returned, aad I feel as well and strong as I ever did, and am gain- ing flesh.”—Mrss LENA GAINES, Visalia, Tulare Co., Cal. MILLION DOLLARPOTAIO.S5 Most talked of potato on earth! Our y Catalog tells—so also about Sal- ff . Potatoes, $1.20 an 1d this notice and 5c. id I Bb 2 1 s 2 JOHN A SALTER SEED LA CROSOLWS P.NU.5® E ARN for Railroad and Commer- cial Service. Young Men Wanted Im- mediately. Positions guaranteed. En- o! ose stamp for full particulars. 0, W. Dowell, Manager, Hic ille, Ohio. HOW TO GET OFFIC ARTERS INK it is made to give satisfaction— and it does. Have you used it? Write for Free of Home Instruction by ining School, Washing: Positio TL ie) Bi% GURES WHERE ALL ELSE FAILS. 5 # Best Cough Syrup. Tastes good. Use fa} in time. Sold by druggists. UMPTION BH a | nation have been conservatively esti- 96,000 operatives, while in the South- Economic Systems. Statesmen in forecasting the indus- trial outlook for several years prior to the enactment of the Wilson tariff pre- dicted the defeat of protection to American industries. For decades the country has been filling up with people from foreign shores who, without any refiection upon thei general intelligence and motives in seeking a new place for industrious pursuits, were ignorant of the Government and institutions of this Republic. they easily became the tims of the ! shysts zs magogue. The cry of ‘tariff reforms wa: raise and persistently exploited until a sufficient number of people were de- ceived into voting against the inter- ests of the laboring classes to carry the election. During the campaigns leading up to the catastrophes. of 1890 and 1892 no sophism, false- hood or misrepresentation was un- appealed to for the purpose of mis- leading the workingmen and labor- ers. Peddlers with tinware on their backs were started out over the rural districts with instructions to ask double the usual price for such goods. Upon being inquired of for the cause | of such advanced prices, they credited | them to the McKinley bill. Demo- | cratic campaigners vehemently as- | serted that the dinner bucket would double in price. An ex-Governor of this State held aloft a bin cup while he berated the tariff on tin. Another ex- ©overnor charged the Republicans with admitting diamonds free for the benefit of the plutocrats. Both were false and onlyintended to mislead and deceive the ignorant. Newspapers and magazine writers quoted decis- ions of the Supreme Court of the Uni- ted States against the principle of protection to industries, which bad no more to do with the tariff for pro- tection than Pike's Peak with the Gulf Stream. The flood tide went on and Cleve- land was landed in the Presidenoy. Then the storm began and for four long years the whole people sufferad as never before. Every prediction of Republicans in the press and on stump in the campaigns preceding his election was more than verified in the daily experience of every business man. Laborers were idle, factories | were closed, the consumptive capacity of the people declined more and more, foreign importations grew less, com- merce languished, the national bonded debt largely increased, insolvencies and receiverships were more numer- ous than ever, individual indebted- ness grew as the years rolled by—all The aggregate losses to the lars. The foreign contingent could not be schooled in the economy of protection, except by paying this enormous tuition in the school of experience. The greatest prosperity hitherto attained was in Harrison’s administration after the passage of the McKinley bill. If that was great, the people clamored for still greater figures in trade and commerce and were led to believe that ministration would bring it. In vain history was adduced to prove disaster and ruin always had followed low tariffs, or tariffs squinting toward free trade. ‘Tariff for reyenue,” a sweat political murcel uUnuer remocrauc tongues, always increased the public debt. The lesson, though a long and hard eration, and the majority of voters wanted no more of that kind of ex- perience. That trinity of administra- tions — Harrison’s, Cleveland's and MecKinley’s — prosperity sandwiching dire adversity, should be treasured as a warning precedent by every work- ingman and be handed down to his latest posterity. The lesson of this recent national experience is that men who so recently have been reversed in their prognosti- cations by the trend of political avants cannot in any sense be trusted with the solution and determination of the profounder problems of *he present nor those which will arise in the future. —Topeka Capital. Happy Times For wage Xarners. On the morning of December 18 an advance of ten per cent. in wages went into effect in many of the cotton manufacturing cities and towns of New England. The increase affects from 70,000 to 75,000 hands. The places included in these advances are Lowell, with about 18,000 operatives; Augusta, Me,, with 1100; Lawrence, 12,000; Ohigopee, 8000; Biddeford, Me., 3500; Manchester, N. H., nearly 14,000; Newburyport, 500; Water- ville, Me., 1000; Lisbon, Me., 500; Brunswick, Me., 700; Hooksett, N. H., 500; Suncook, N, H., 1500; Ames- bury, 800, and Nashua, 1500. In ad- dition, an advance goes into effect in a number of cotton mills of Central and Western Massachusetts. Some of the woolen mills also increased wages ten per cent. December 18. These are outside of the American Woolen Company, which made a gen- eral advance on January 1, affecting ern cotton mills an advance is shortly to be made in the wages of about 50,- 000. From the West comes the announce- ment that on January 1 the Elgin Na- tional Watch Company has put in force a new scale of wages amounting to an advance of five to ten per cent., and affecting over 3000 hands. Many thousands of workmen in other parts of the United States started the year 1900 with increased wages. It is Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year for the wage earners in these days of protection and pros- perity. Rapid Transit. Tt is conceded that there has never beon known in the world anything quite so fast as the modern railway train; but fast as that is, prosperity, with the protective tariff as the pro- pelling power, has quite outstripped it. None of our railroads can keep pace with it, and from all over the country come reports of scarcity of cars, of freight receipts too great to pe handled with the desired prompt- ness, of overtaxed capacity, of crowd- ing everywhere. The railroads will need to look out for their laurels Cn It Will Peat Him. No wonder Bryan is loath to recog- nize prosperity, even after he has been introduced to it. He can’t beat it, but it can and will beat him.--Tacoma (Wash.) Ledger. A book published in japan 1,000 years ago notes that at that time good silk In this condition | was already produced in 25 provinces of that country. us revival, Ebe- in South 1 | vn took to emu- | Abraham's e> offering up | 3 = altar. With | + butcher 1} t intl slight woun ed ms but the boy's sc some hunters who reached 1st in time to prevent a trag ndi seized 1 on him, and a dine e During the pas: week the pensions have been grant Loudenslager, Chambersburg, § Philig jos eph Smith, Titusville, $3; John ol e, Pittsburg. $6: Thomas McLenahun. Adamsville. $8; Thomas Fleming, Shelocta, $10 to $ Altoona, $8 to Sic Fairhope, $10 to $ road, Meadville, to"! Hunt, Eldred, $2 to $10; Shipping Port, $6 to $ William L.utz, Braddock, $6 to $8: Nancy ler, Top, $8; Margaret H. Brady, $8: George Petty. Samuel B. Dev i Charles F. Anderson, We $10: Moses Trent. Somerset, Philip F. Golden. Kittanni Charles MH. Eldridge, Beaver $12 7: I ng, Harmony, to $17; C. P. Thoma Edward B. Y $12 to $17: William P. Newton, $6 to $8 i ville, $16 to $1 Monro chman, Levi McFa Saral kers landing, alp Young, Russell, ham. H. Wal ters, Allegheny, $3: Andrew H. Ruff- ner, Purchase Line, $3 to $10; Henry Beitzel, Middlesex, $6 $8: John Wil: Hams, Co § i Stover liam Stevens, K. Ward, Ct Chambers, Hennes hase 3 Chure ; George Runk, dead, Harrisbur George W land, i Pittsburg, brust, Greensbur Brocl 1 Moc Twas Josey i) Point Mar , $12; Levi Waltenbaugh, Top, $12; Sarah C. Runk, Harrisbu $8: Elizabeth Switzer, Mifflintown, §3; Caro C. Bowe Jennett, $8; C. | Campbell, Nelson, 812; ’ross, lewisbu Washingtc Johnstown, $6: Alonza Alexander Powers, Imler o ] Groff. Thompson Piper, B IF. Hawthorn, Smith, dead, Sh Eberts, Shade Pogue, Mantalto, $8 Lewistown, $12; \ per St. Chir, $8: l.evi Johnstown, $10: Duane Wesleyville, $8; Loretta B. St man, $8; Mary M. Cook, William H. Payne, Nescope Samuel Colson, Pittsburg, $6: E uel Lhore, Advance, $10; Jacob C ble, Ripple, $10; John C, Overton, Francis $10; Harriet J. Stone, Mary Miller, Hornerstown, garet Schuster, Erie, $8 A crowd of the women Grove City College made a mild deni stration the other morning against ur of commencing chapel. D this term the chapel begins 72 which is before day 1t, and the y« people do not relish turning out of their beds before this time. This morning just before the last chapel bell rang a large number of the women stu filed into the room, each one ¢ a lighted lantern. They proceedec €, a t th seats, holding the lanters on their ki The evident amusement of the other students embarrassed the mem- bers of the faculty, but President 1. C. Ketler relieved them and rned the jaugh upon the girls by aptly choosing for the text of his morning discourse Matthew 5:16: “Let your light so shine before men that they may see your good works.” The lanterns will not likely appear again. . Options have been taken on about 1. 000 acres of coal land on the farm of Mrs. M. J. Parker and surrounding ter- ritory at Cowansville, and it is said that within a fortnight work.will begin on the mine openings. i | D The property is on the line of the Buifalo, Rocheste & Pittsburg railroad. Tlie ‘deal 1s-s to be financed by Mr. Murray, of the Pine ‘reek Company, now operating at Mos- grove, on the Allegheny Valley railroad. Jacob Merwin and Oscar Bouch, of owing | C, | Solomon Shumaker, ; Jackson D. Stone- | 2: Robert B. | nuel Clear, Io ted two y straigh No. 2 tL winters. Dairy Prod BUTTER—Elgin creame 3 5 G Chio creamery .... . — Fancy country roll ii 2 CHEFESE—Ohto, nev io 1c: New York, n 13 14 HENS—per pair 65 7 HIC — dre 1i i2 dressed dee 9 i a, and Ohio, f 1 18 19 I ruits and Vegetables, 240 9 4) ) 3 8) tra reamery, 3 fir: BUTTER EGGS—VYennsylvania NEW YORK, FLOUR—Fatents.....e.0vvvnen $ 3 3a \ HEAT—No. 2red. N OATS——White W ern BUTTER Creamery.... EGGS-- State and Penn... LIVE STOCK. ¢entral Stock Yard ast Liberty, Pu CATTLE. Prime, 1500 to 1400 Ibs........ $5 4)@ 5 wv | Good, 1200 to 1300 Ib, 13 5 3) Tidy, 160 to 11E0 hs... .... 470 51 Fair light steers, 900 to 1000 Ibs 4 0) 4 65 Common, %00 to $00 ths.... ... 300 37) {| Sylvania, Adrian, have been she prime movers in | the enterprise. Jesse Spencer, formerly of eft Friday evening as the representa- tive of a New Kensington comp: having a gold claim on the Amn side of Prince of Wales island North Pacific ocean. The clair located by James McSherry. who re- cently came home from a ventyresome prospecting tour in northern Alaske being one of a party that founded Pe vy, one of the outposts of civilization in that far country. While D. S. Yoder and his wife and two children were driving to Johnstown their horses frightened at a cow and backed over a 3o-foot embankment, the Dubois. | wanted norses falling on one side of a sapling ! and the wagon on the other. While thus suspended help came and all were take out unhurt, although three oi the occ pants were pinioned under the wagon. Their escape was considered miraculous. Owing to the warm weather, farm all over Fayette county have begun vlowing for the spring. Joseph Campbell, of Fredonia, for whom a search has been on for four dz was found frozen to death within a few yards of his home. The body lay in a poc! of water near a fence which he had tried to climb. Searchers had passed within a few feet many times without-discovering the body. He was 82 years of age. s Andrew Carnegie has made another offer. in which he proposes to give $50,- 000 for the erection of a free library for the benefit of the citizens of California and Coal Center. provided the two cor- porations will furnish a suitable site and guarantee S4.0co annually for the mais enance of the htrary. t John Nathan, thirty rt met cir father at Stony -nsued over a plug of tacked John with a razor. cutti him so badly that it i quired eighty-four stitches to sew up th wounds,. a doctor from Shippensburg being called in. The wounded man is almost at the point oi death. The Pleasant Valley Oil and Gas Company entered cjectment pro- ceedings nst the Elcho Oil Com- pany to recover possession of the Fred- erick Moore farm. of 56 acres, in Econ- omy township. A number of producing wells are ~n the property. ‘Tastes Differ. Chairman Jones, Bryanoorat, is on fire to abolish protective duties. by cutting wage earners’ pay twenty- five to thirty-five per cent. and throw- ing a couple million wage earners out of work he imagines they would vote for the free trade party. But it ap- pears to many people that Americans are sick of soup houses and Wilson tariffs to foster tramps and manufac- ture candidates for the poorhouse and rpublic charity. But tastes differ. Semel T ie Ce India now has 140 colleges and 17,000 students | every | sion of the | will For | | | show Medium Heavy - 4 89) Roughs a 4 15 Prime, $51c110 ibs... 5(0 510 Good, £510 90 Ibs. | 4:75 4M Fair, 70 to SU ths 4 10 mon, 2 uf Comr . Veal Calves fyrirger, 6 8: Springer, g % 679) Common to fai z aah 6 5) xtra year 4 25 Good to « his hey Medizm.. 8:5 45) Semmo= 20. 275 REVIEW OF TRADE. Eia of High Prices—Not Much Buying wa (C= | | o'clock every morning and devotes his | day i | palace and gardens, to personal atten- cetint of Orders Ahead. R. G. Dun & Co.’s “Weekly of Trade” says: New business Revie for man ¢ ufacturers this year has Leen light in | some branches and much below the pro- tion last month. Ir is, perhaps gotten that i i wali of the work of the 1 ordered in advance tinue quite the same acti new buying. Yet there of hesitation caused by ices to make inactivity tryin tribution to consum through the ers were overbuymg, so strong confi ¢ in the “Iron and steel pric ave been yielding fo several weeks, and are a shade lower for products than at any other time the middle of September, though Be senier pi i] billets are still so s and fi that only amounti tons are anywhere reported. Agreements to hold the p ice Gi bars do not prevent sal I phia for $2.07V% of iron 1¢ buyers best r . though sellers c¢ it common, and plates and sheets are both irregular there, with 1 sold at Pittsburg below $2.25. Structur al shapes are not quoted lower, but the New York Central contract for 13,000 tons bridge mate went to the Penn- 3 i Pencoyds and Detroit works, and two orders for 23,0c0 tons rails are taken at Ch st year 13,620,703 tons of pig we two s consid TC nsumptio it has ady © the official record; the ¢ i 7 \V ing ed inst 17.200,257 last year, but exports have been only 7. 1 bushels, flour included, against 23 1 year. 2 in, amout same cific exports ing to 3.311.- four weeks Exports of American food is ing been in four bushels, against 12,- 230 | against 2,17 still abroad, weeks 13,482.7 370,504 price Gl of a cent, about th corn 15 declined although option p same as at the close last week. the week have been 231 in inst 224 last year, ainst 33 last year. ces CYCLING N;T=S. Roller bearing is the latest inventicn to revolutionize the bicycle business, as well as the vehicle business in general. The Rhode Island Division of the L. A. W. has votec inst racing, and will send a dele the Assembly that will work solid] gainst 1t One 1aker constructed a pumyj which gives a pressure oi 600 pounds to the square inch and will fill an au togobile tire with a few stroke ever. Accord to bicycle manufacturers, 1900 promises to be a lively year in cy cledom One prominent dealer says prices will vi for full-size bicycles, from $25 to $75. Inflating of tires has always been much of an annoyance to many, but the disagreeable and laborious part can be ed now by the use of an automatic ycle pump. The New York State Division of the Century Road Club of America has ar- ranged for this year a mileage contest for which gold bars will be oifered for 1,000 miles ridden. One of the strongest started by wheelmen is the one now un- der way for securing sidepaths in such ocalities as will not permit of the imme- diate building of good roads. t is said that the squad of crack American cycle racers, who intend mak- ing a tour of the world at the conclu- i races ins Paris, will be ac- companied by a number of European racers. Summed up, the essential changes in the wheels of the standard makers for 1900 are chiefly in matters of detail that arouse enthusiasm in 1 and intelligent riders, but wi preciable to the newcomer in tl I'he man or woman who has become accustomed to getting out in the : a bicycle quickly realizes the has been done S Of lie vements ever for them ment and physically, and anybody who s: that those same people are going to give up the bicycle simply doesn’t know what he is talking about, is the opinion of a well- known enthusiast. A member of one of the largest chain- making concerns in the country, and one which is in the trust, says that the orders for chains from manufacturers that the tendency toward using small, light chains is increasing, the proportion of three-sixteenth-inch chains to those of one-quarter-inch be- ing larger for 1900 than it was last year. * ced, according tof | at Ghezireh, Cairo, on March 30 and 31 | has been prepared, which may be had | by addressing W. Wilfred Carey, secre- | special articles to be exhibited by flor- | of money are offered. | package of Graix-O, the new food drink {by a | from the traditional usage of his race. : | wife prides hersel?, it is that of having her laundering done nicely, so that the wear- ’hiladel- | rrow plates | | | | any decorations he might be wearing, | so that the attention of those who see | fe I ing soaps and powders, too, With alkali are strong; The dire destruction which they do Is sure to show ere long. But Ivory Soap will never hurt The fabric, howe’er tender; It makes short work of stain and dirt, But zo work for the mender. COPYRIGHT 1898 BY THE PROCTER & GAMBLE CO. CINCINNATE An Egyptian Flower Show. [ REASONS FOR SOME WARS. Under the patronage of the khedive | of Egypt, who is a rare lover of gar- | John Dall to Fight. dening, an exhibition is to take place and April 1, 1900, at which Americans | wars: are especially invited to be competi- | tors. A program in very good Englisi Bull at war. made war on France because | Kasr-el-Doubara, Cairo, Egypt,. to his embonpoint. | tary, More recent wars Carnations, lilies, pansies, phlox, | have been brought about by trivial in- stocks, violets, roses and ‘any good |cidents. In 1840 a large trade in opium thing not specified” are ists, for which silver medals and sums | forbade the importation nicious drug by our sailors. Fry Grain=0! Try Grain=0! : Ask your grocer to-day to show you a trade continued, till that takes the place of coffee, Children may drink it without injury as well as the adult. All who try it like it. GRAIN-O has that rich seal brown of Mocha or J , but is made from pure grains; the most delicate stomach receives it without distress. 3 the price of coffee. 15c. and 25c¢. per package. Sold by all grocers, war. is taken into account. rate hoisted the British flag at The Sultan's Daily Life. n Th § renturer. The sultan of Turkey rises at 6 ve ? in tke seclusion of the Yildiz tion to affairs of state. He is of slight ) to apologize. figure. A pale brown overcoat conceals 2Dol0e him on the one day in seven when he presents himself to the view of the people is not diverted from his pale, wan and careworn face, half-covered thin brown beard, tinged with /, and surmounted by a plain red The sultan has been the” means ef establishing 50,000 schools through- out his empire, not only for boys, but for girls also—a striking departure the cow was a sacred animal. History Repeating 1tself. Houschold EXints. well in my address today, didn’t deacon?” If there is one thing on which the house- ing apparel may be the admiration of all. | sistant, The waching is a small matter, anyone al- most can do that, but to have the linens present that flexible and glossy appear- ance after being ironed requires a fine quality of starch. J. C. Hubinger’s new laundry stareh, “Red Cross” and ‘“Hubinger's Best” brands are his latest inventions and the finest starch ever placel on the market; not a new starch made by a new manufac- turer, but a new starch by the leading and only manufzotnrar of flne laundry starch in the United S*ates. His new method ot introducing this starch with the Endless Chain Starch Book enables yon to get one large 10¢. package of “Red Cross” starch, one large 10c. pack- ago of “Hubinger’s Best” starch, with the premiums, two beautiful Shakespeare panels, or one Twentieth Century Girl eal- endar, all for 5c. Ask your grocer. sistant Rector—“You probably to Paul preaching at Mar’s Hill Deacon Judkins—“Not exactly; 1 was laam’s assistant spoke.” 1s the Body a Battery. statements, “Oxidation of | matter takes place in-the body. cent of the total oxidation. | name of electro-genic There is a similarity between The costliest thimble in the world is | gpimal organism and the cell of | | that which the King of Siam has pre- sented to his wife. It cost $75,000, is of | Apparently Doesn't Take Much to Lead An English paper has the foliowing | to say on the reasons for some British “From all appearances it does not take much provocation to set John William the Conqueror King Philip had made a slighting allusion among the, was done by British traders in China, Lana the Chinese government at length of the per- The edict, however, had little or no effect, and the at length the Chinese imprisoned a number of Brit- ish subjects and we promptly declared Our second war, in 1856, ought never to have come about if its origin A Chinese pi- his | mainmast, and was afterward seized by his government as a bloodthirsty ad- Had he failed to run up our flag his capture would have been re- garded as a good thing here, but as it was, it was taken as an insult, and we made war on the Chinese for refusing The horrors of the In- dian mutiny will still be remembered by a minority of our readers, and the | cause which led to it is a matter of | history. Cartridges greased with cow’s ! fat were served out to the Sepoys, who | refused to use them on the ground that | We in- sisted, and almost without any warn- | ing, the terrible massacres followed, | which were only avenged at an enor- mous expenditure of lives and money Assistant Rector (with self-compla- | cent conceit)—‘Aw—m—I did pretty | Deacon Judkins (who is not a special admirer of the rector’s as- | cautiously)—"“Waal—er—! must say it reminded me of suthin’ | similar I've read in the Scripter.” As- | refer | what thinkin’ of was the time Ba- On the occasion of the presentation to the city of Brussels by M. Solvay of the Institute for Physiological Re- | search, the donor made the following organic )C We know that when the body labors" the muscles come in for some 70 or 80 per This | process goes on in the muscles and | glands, leading us to give to these | SIS lr portions of the organic structure the | How a Millionaire 77 "7 gm His High | apparatus. . { each for preserving, bath, and nursery. infants and children. 1, hair, and hands. BEST baby soap in the world. thickened cuticle, CUTICURA OINTMEN irritation, and soothe and hed blood. SIN E and blood humo! Bn, SIR M2, 0, See uy Ye est Fee. | | When Sir Astley Cooper lived in a | Broad street, london, he had every | day a numerous morning levee of city voltaic battery.” gold set with diamonds and cther pre- | patients, says the Gentleman's Maga- cious stones, and resembles a half-open- ed lotus flower in shape. { House, and they draw $3000 a year | each, in addition to what they can make | by reporting the proceedings of House committee hearings Half a Bottle | | pes a 3 : | There are five official reporters of the | | | $100 Reward. $100. zine. The room into which they were shown would hold from forty to fifty | people, and often callers, after wait- | ing for hours, were dismissed without | having seen the doctor. His man Charles, with more than his master’s dignity, would say to disappointed ap- plicants when they reappeared on the following morning: “I am we shall be able to attend to you, for our list is full for the day; but if you will wait I will see what we can do for you.” During the first nine years | { The readers of this paper will be pleased to | jearn that there is at least one dreaded dis- | ease that science has been able to cure in all | ges, and that is Catarrh. Hall's Catarrh | [ [ re e | is the only posit cure known to | | the medical fraternity. « rh being a con- | stitutional dis uires a constitutional | | tr nt. rrh: Cure ir la i in- | a y on the blood and 3 3 safaces or fhe Lyitom, thereby de | “About thirty years ago I st 1g the foundation of the disease, and > 1 © rength by building up the | bought a bottle of Ayer's Hair isting nature in doing its | : {2 z nature in doing ts | § Vigor to stop my har from failing out. One-half a bottle cured me. A few days ago my hair began to fall out agam. 1 went to the medicine shelf and nials. pg EY & Co, Toledo, O. Sold by Dr D Hall's Far re the best. The marks. > “Your son is devoted to art, isn’t found the old bottle of Hair her Se A “I suppose 80,” Vigor just as good as when 1 replied Easel. e's continually draw- it” ¢ ing on me.” bought ®t — J C. Baxter, Braidwood, IIL, Sept. 27, 1849. To Cure Con‘ tipation Forever. Take Cascarets Candy Cathartic. 100 or 236. if C. C. C. fail to cure, druggists refund money. Two-thirds of the world’s sugar is produced from beets. Keeps Thirty Years Mrs. Winslow teething, softe tion, allaysy ncthing Syrap for children s the gums. redvu inflamma- col c a bottle. cure of his. practice Sir Astley’s earnings progressed thus: First year, £5 bs; second, £26; third, ; fourth, £96; fifth, £100; sixth, £200; seventh, £400; | eighth, £600; ninth, £1,100, Eventu- ally his annual income rose to more than £15,000; the largest sum he ever made in one year was £21,000, A West Indian millionaire gave him his high- est fee; he had successfully undergone a painful operation, and sitting up in bed he threw his nightcap at Cooper, | saying “Take that!” *“Sir,” replied Sir Astley, “I'll pocket the affront,” and on reaching home he found in the cap | a check for 1,000 guineas. * No Fear When Death Draws Nigh. “I have seen thousands of persons die under all sorts of circumstances, | and never yet have I seen one display | the slightest fear of death.” This re- | markable statement was made the | other day by a physician who has prac- i | i | In Chicago there is a woman in charge of one of the street cleaning dis- tricts, and at Yonkers, N. Y., a woman has just been appointed sanitary inspec- tor. Ayer's Hair Vigor is cer- tainly the most economical prep- Piso's Cure for Goosnnption has no _e 1 arson of ue Bind on fhe muker, asa Cough medicine. F. M. Annorr, 383 is A little of 1t goes a long way. eca St., Buffalo, N | 8 And then, what you don’t need now you can use some other time just as well. 1t medicines for headache and has It doesn’t take much of it to stock Bibles and common prayer- | . . *° | § stop falling of the hatr, restore color to gray hair, cure dandruff, and keep the hair soft and glossy. There's a great deal of good and an immense amount of satisfac tion in every bottle of it. $1.00 a bottle. M 1894. An accommodating tradesman in Car- narvon, Wales, announces that he sells wines and spirits of all classes, supplies | How Are Your Kidneys ? Dr. Hobbs’ Sparagus Pills cure all kidney ills. ple free. Add. og Remedy FE oe fo The Congregational churches of} South Caroline composed of colored people, have formed a State association. Fits permanently cured. No fits or nervous- ness after fi day's use of Dr. Kline's Great | Nerve Restorer. $2 trial bottle and treatise All druggists. | who has seen a great deal of hospital | service. “It is a popular fallacy,” he | went on, “to imagine that a deathbed | scene is ever terrible, other than as a parting between loved ones. The fear of the unknown is never present at the last. Even amid ignorance and vice I have never experienced such scenes as a novelist, who strives after realism, will sometimes picture. tient is told he cannot recover and the | | { signed to his fate, and his only thought | | behind. This is true alike of men and | women. Those who become hysterical | and declare they are not fit to die are | the ones who are not as ill as they | think they are. | A psychological reason? oO, free. Dr.R.H.KLINE.Ltd.931 Arch St.Phila.Pa. There was le . poultry buying in Lon- don at Christm poultry b Write the Doctor > than for many years. If you do notobtainall the benefits you desire from the use of the Vigor, write the Doctor about it. Address, Dr. J. C. AYER, Lowell, Mass. Kducate Your Bowels With Cascarets. 10c,25¢. It C.C. C. fail, druggists refund money. | know that there is any. It's just a | human trait.” Wild boars still abound in some parts | 1ately killed over 100 in one week. Candy Cathartic, cure constipation forever. ! Mirzioxs oF WomeN Use CuTicUrRA Soap exclusively purifying, and beautifying the skin, for cleansing the scalp of crusts, scales, and dandruff, and the stopping of falling hair, for softening, whitening, and healing red, rough, and sore hands, in the form of baths for annoying irritations, inflammations, and chafings, or too free or offensive perspiration, in the form of washes, for ulcerative weaknesses, and for many sanative antiseptic purposes which readily suggest themselves to women, and especially mothers, and for ail the purposes of the toilet, No amount of persuasion can induce those who have once used it to use any other, especially for preserving and purifying the skin, scalp, and hair of CuricURA Soap combines delicate emollient properties derived from CUTICURA, the great skin cure, with the purest of cleansing ingredients and the most refreshing of flower odors. toilet soap ever compounded is to be compared with it for preserving, purifying, and beautifying the skin, scalp, No other foreign or domestic toilet soap, ‘however expensive, is to be compared with it for all the purposes of the toilet, bath, and nursery. Thus it com- bines in ONE S0AP at ONE PRICE, viz., TWENTY-FIVE CENTS, | the BEsT skin and complexion soap, the BEST toilet and COMPLETE EXTERNAL AND INTERNAL TREATMENT FOR EVERY HUMOR $1.28, consisting of CUTICURA SOAP (23¢.), to cleanse the skin of on and scales and soften the > i Sv oh MED J), to ,and CUTICURA R :T is often sufllcient to cure the m , with loss of hair, when all else fai DRUG AND CHEM. CORP, Sole Props., Bostou. least came on the e~ | CASCARETS. Th bad I not sure! Sterling Remedy Compa HO-T-BAC | ticed many years in Philadelphia, and | 1 NIA FARMS for sale at rare bar- | Have a few exceptionallv nic: | h good new buildings. Send fo i AT W ART, Car. Vir: When a pa-| end is near, he invariably seems re-| seems to be of those who are to be left | They always get well. | I don’t! | of Morocco, one hunting party having | iamicted with Thompson's Eye Water No other medicated or hing, inflammation, and NT , to cool and cleanse the t torturing, disfiguring skin, scalp, 5. Sold throughout the world. PoT- « Allabout Skin, Scalp, and Hair,” free. TAPE ; long at “A tape worm ef oar $ Ng WO = ealth for the . Cascarets, the tak notice by sensible people." GEO. V 0. W. BOWLES, Baird, Mi CANDY CATHARTIC sant. Palatable, Potent. Taste Good. Do *leas a Good. Never Sicken, Weaken. or Gripe, 10¢. 25¢. 0c ... CURE CONSTIPATION. ... ‘Wieago, Montreal, New York. S13 1 and guaranteed.-by all drug- sto CURE Tobacco Habll ORPHINE:: Cure, We will send anyone addicted to Morphine, Laudanum, or other drug habit, trial treatment, of x y ever of the mos arkalle re medy eve Great 'V ! Principle heretofore unknown. fractory €ases s ted, Confidentisd corresponden: m all, especially Phy Sictuns, ST. JAM , ug BROADWAY, {CW YOR ON 190 DAYS TRIAL. Aluminam Rust Proof Cream Separators, size: 110 16 cows, price from £5 to ®10 a ‘cording to size. Up-to-Date” Charns, siz:s 1 to 15 cows, price 15 per cent move butter, and terms free. Don’t buy yntil you arfr mus. Weare manufactur- and sell direct to the consumer. SON-STEWART MFG CO, GIBSONIA, PA. DR. ARNOLD'S COUGH B Cures Coughs and Celds. KILLER Prevents Consumption. All Druggists, 25¢ yy We wish to gain this year 20,00 customers, and hence offer Jity Garden Beet, ‘merald Cucumber] s arket Lettuce, 13¢ Strawberry Melon, 15¢ 13 Da; adish 1 Above 10 Pkgs. worth 81.00, we will ail you free, together with our grea! n est earliest Tomat LZER SKED CO., LA CROSS NEW DISCOVERY; gives quick relief and cures worst Book of test: monialy and 10 days on! Dr. II. H. GREEN'S SONS, Box B. Atlanta, Ga