ey DENSER port—Big nded granted yurg, $8; George el Silks, Corbin, Pontius, Big Run, Pleasant , Dunlo, Roaring Indiana, est New santville, ¢, Litch- ly, near ike have ich for bers’ re- ved that 1's store, ago was icers ar-< n Spang- zirls, one -year-old ty stolen covered. confess- ilsonville ve prov- ple and of Dau- r before, 5, will be y of the rt to get kinds of man re- noved 12 orchard employ- | portion ds have »f State of busi e in the . The rrent fis- Monday, cgin pay- 1, Pitts- irge dis= its, while ive their they file partment -apitalists town oO and one 1 Central involves eme Jus- rated un- Coal and , under- g in the the Pitts- Railway $300,000. ngth and of Mon- 1e north- 1 county. -apitalists 1g to se Waynes- 1c latter mes Cur- Somerset south of d by fire. s will re onestoga eye as a 1e eclipse losely for ked glass sight be- ew stead- y see with Standard \ethodist e, $10,000 offer has st $25,000. pany has yf 10 per inellsville rick com he ovens a closing | the cur- m 700 to. was sen= y, to the and five He was ‘m of ag- upon his ad during the trial rgest wo= ly in the vhed fully uired the n to carry s. Wilson 1s due to Bellever- s. the J. 0 recover > property a verdict t Greens- and chief Company, 1ina Com- bined, are fine china , formerly Company, statt a Ford City. tte drug= ) damages McPher- plaintiff ous illness d resulted per filling cfendant’e imate that ards with- mailed in Ar. * . ‘ | Co. sis t $ ot f i ¥ { { i i i £ 1 . - - v a rs FAGES IN THE STREET, 3 THE > i "=F X Fz: They lie, the men who téll 0s in a loud, de- ecisive tone | That want is here a stranger, and that mis: own; For wliére the nearest suburb and the city | : - | I t My windowsill is level with the faces in the street— Drifting past, drifting past 'o the beat of weary feet— While I sorrow for the owners of those faces in the street. And cause I have to sorrow. in a land so young and fair, To see upon those fac o I look in vain fortrac and sweet In sallow, sunken faces that are drifting through the street — Drifting on, drifting on, To the scrape of restless feet; I can sorrow for the owners of the faces in the Street. s stamped the look of os of the fresh and fair —Henry Lawton. eV OV VO VV-V DVR THE SOLDIER. ! VV V1-V VV DVD VDT One dreamy, drowsy afternoon to- ward the end of June, having nothing particular to do, I sauntered in the direction of the Chelsea College gav- dens. This shady little nook holds the home of some of our old -sldiers. There they sat in solemn rows of fours and fives on the wooden benches inthe cool, green avenue, dreaming away the long summer afternoons, while they watched the children play on the grass before them. A great longing came over me to learn something of their lives. | If I could cone across one alone, I thought, there might be a chance of it; so, with a lingering, backward look at the old fellows, I walked on till I came to a more secluded part of the gardens, where the pensioners eunlti- vated little plots of ground, and sold flowers and ferns to the nurses and children, the proceeds of which en- abled them to buy tobacco and rum and other small luxuries. It had been intensely hot, but now a refreshing breeze was tossing the lilac and laburnum trees, and in the | cool of the day the old men were hard at work, watering, weeding and rvak- | ing away, while they smoked and changed opinions as to their respec- tive nurseries. Crossing the gravel path, I came upon a bed composed entirely of mignonette. Its fragrance was delight- ful, and I paused a moment to enjoy the scent. This little garden excited my curi- osity and I looked with interest at the gardener. His face was thin and lined, with an expression of settled melancholy on it, but there was some- thing in the large, dark eyes and sen- sitive mouth that’took my fancy. ‘‘Here is an opportunity,” I thought, *‘Hé looks a nice, approachable old man, and I daresay would be glad to have a chat.” At that moment, as if by some sud- den transition of mind, be glanced up and fixed his speaking orbs on me. | “What lovely miguoneite!” I ex- | claimed, by way of opening fire. | He smiled, but it was such a sal smile, I wished he haln’t—it some- how made me feel sick and sorry. “Let me cut you some, madam,” he said, gravely. ‘I will in a moment, if you can wait,” | “Please, oh, I should like nothing | better,” I answerel, seating myself and looking contentedly, while my new friend went to work with a lonz pair of rusty scissors. His face interested me, strangely, none the less when I noticed that the Victoria Cross alorned his breast. How could I get him to talk?” “May I ask why you cultivate only one flower?” I inquired with sudden inspiration. | He looked at me again, in that in- | tense way of his, for at least a minute, | | without speaking, then said irrele- vantly: “You have a good, kind face, lady, and ——"’ He paused. “Thank you for saying so,” I ve- joined, sumewhat tamely, feeling baffled and wondering what was com- ing next. “You asked me just now why I only grew one flower. I will tell you if you care to listen.” “Yes,” I replied, all attention.” “It happened so long ago, yet it seems only like yesterday. Mignon, Mignon!” he half-murmured to him- self. I coughed softly, to remind him of my presence. “Lady, did you ever love anyone very dearly?” he asked abruptly. “Have I?” I returned, somewhat taken aback by this unexpected ques- tion. ‘Well yes, I have been fond of several people I have met at different | times of my life,” was my disc-ect rejoinder. “Those two were the only ones I | cared for in the world —Mignon and | Ralph Stanley.’’ “Who was Mignon?’ I queried, gently, for the old man’s face was full of emotion when he spoke her name. “I always callel her Mignon, and | go did he,” he continued, without | heeding me; ‘‘the name suited her so well. She was never without a slip | of this,” touching the flowers in my lap, *‘in her belt or gown. She had a passion for miguonetie, that is why we called her Mignon, and she was as sweet as the flower itself, with her | blue-bell eyes and nut-brown hair,” | “Who was this other?” I ventured | to ask, after a pause. Again the veteran seemel to forget my existence, as he sighed, and said, musingly: “To think that I never guessed it, and they were such a bonny pair, too. She could not help loving him, the genial, handsome laddie—men and officers alike in our regiment simply adored him.” | ‘He served with you then?” ‘Yes, but I was only in the ranks; while he held a commission,” “Yet you were friends?” “Friend-—aye! that we were; from our schoolboy days we were chums! When Ralph was sent to the Crimean war 1 threw everything to the winds, enlisted in the regiment and went, too, and we fought in many a fierce battle together, but one thought kept us up through all, dear little Mignon, the vicar’s daughter. Ah, whathappy old times they were at the vicarage ! ‘Mignon was an only child; her father, our coach, Ralph’s and mine. What merry little tea parties we had— | just we four; the scent of mignonette everywhere; the garden, the windows and the rooms of the old house were full of mignonette, all mignonette!” My glance wandered to the flowers blooming at my feet, as I tried to pic- ture the liftle scene put before me. ““And Ralph loved Mignon as well as I,” he pursued, ‘‘though neither of us knew the other's secret. Well, those happy days came to an end. Young Stanley left Us to study for the army, while I remained to stagnate in my father’s office in town. ‘““How I envied Ralph’s luck. Not that I grudged him any good luck, but my lot in life did seem hard in com- parison to his. As the time passed eagerly, “I am { Mignon, my humdrum, monotonous | | courage that quailed not before the | There he lay, so white and still, with | into their eager, glittering eyes, as | back, | also reveals their my restlessness and discontent in- | creased, Despite my attachment ta | existence was so hateful to me. So, | when the war “broke out and Ralph | was ordered abroad I made up my | | mind to go, too, in the ranks of the | same regiment. { tunity not to be lost of leading a more | glorious life; to fight for my country, Here was an oppor- my people and for England,’ “dow I dreamt of the home-coming after the work was done. Death had no place in my mind. How I antic- ipated the meeting with Mignon, with the love light that I—poor fool —im- agined she felt for me, shining in her | soft blue eyes. I thought I would pour out ny heart and tell her I had come back to claim her, never to part any more. Ah! if I had but known!” He smiled again in his me!ancholy way, and continued: i “Yes, if IT had only known that she cared for Ralph I should have been | spared many a heartache in after | years.” | The old soldier gazed abstractedly at the love of ‘old [-his mignonette, and, doubtless, lived over again that memorable campaign, | while I wondered if the cross on his breast had anything to do with his- tory. He answered my glance. | “I am coming to that now, lady. | One bitter November night, or rather morning, we awoke to find the enemy | bearing down on us in overwhelming numbers before our camp was astir, | The men, however, soon roused and fought shoulder to shoulder amid the | roar and din of cannon, which mad- dened alike man and beast. After awhile I became consciousonly of one thing—a figare a few yards ahead of me fighting for dear life. I can see the look on his face now! It was trausfigured, shining with dauntless | outslaught of the Russians. I be- lieve, at that moment, Ralph lived in every fiber of his being. He gloried in a fight—no one more. He was sur- rounded and cut off from the rest of us by six or seven of the enemy, double his size. Suddenly he stag- gered and fell; then I found myself | struggling and crushing through | countless forms and brandishing steel, | until I reached the stricken figure. | his brave young face upturned to the leaden sky. My arms went instine- tively round him, and as I turned and faced the lot of them —perhaps it was fancy—but a change seemed to come they involuntarily fell back a space or two. It was only for amoment. They aza'n pressed forward, and no doubt the pair of us would have been quick- ly cut into mincemeat, but for an un- | expected diversion created just then | by the arrival of the Inniskilling Dra- goons. With their aid the Russians were completely routel, and in the confusion of their retreat and flight I managed to carry Ralph back safely to camp. ‘And you escaped unwounded?”’ “No, unluckily, lady, I received some very bad cuts on my head and | which brought about my dis- | charge from the army as being unfit | for active service. When I had some- what recovered Ralph told me that Mignon had promised to become his | wife, and six months later they were married.” “Did Mignon ever know that you | cared for her?’ I asked rather huskily. “Yes; many years after, when they came to see me here, I think, as they carried away some of my mignonette, | they both gnessed it for the first time,’ A bell near by clangel out the tea! hour as he finished speaking, so, with a close clasp of the hand, my old man and I parted. PEARLS OF THO JGHT, | Activity is not always industry. A poor servant makes a hard mas- ter. A quiet mule is better than a balky horse. Patience will cure more pains than physic, | Love that enriches poverishes itself. True self-control handles the guides more than the brakes, v The less you value the world the more it is worth to you. An unregenerated conscience may | make you a conscientious brute. { Be grateul for your blessings and | it will make your trials look small. i not another im- Men famishing for righteousness cannot be fed on tlowers of rhetoric. | People do not grow much in grace | while they are having their own way, | To be contented with what we have | 1s about the same as to own the earth. | Nothing will kill a man quicker than perpetually feeling his own pulse. A flower will have something sweet | to say to you, no matter where you put it. Men shun the light that points out the pitfalls on the way because it rags. Many men ave like most machines — are good for most work when | they make the least noise. One reason why there is not more good being done is because so many | people want to wait until tomorrow to begin. —Ram’s Horn. | - — | The Uses of Shrapnel. When a common shell bursts among walls oc bnildings or in a confined space it is seen at its best. The frag- ments and gases from the shell glance oft the walls and strike those who would otherwise have escaped; men | are blown down who wonld have been untouched in the open, and the moral effect is generally much greater. But even under the most favorable condi- tions a common shell leaves much to be desired, and it has therefore been almost entirely superseded in the field by shrapnel. The common shell fails because of the small number of bits that can be obtained with a single sheil. The shrapnel is designed to carry a large number of bullets, which remain in the shell until it has almost reached the object. The bullets are then blown out by the bursting charge,and act lite a volley from a number of muskets or pistols, so that a hundred hits may be made by a single shell, Novel Method of Shopliftinz. A third arm is the clever device by which a shoplifter in Denver, Col, has succeeded in puzzling the shop- keepers. A bright young saleswoman, from whose counter several pieces of silk had mysteriously disappeared, noticed that a woman upon whom sus- picion had fallen never used her left arm but felt of the silk very carefully with her right, expressing dissatisfac- tion with each piece shown her. The saleswoman in order to trap her finally handed down a handsome piece of silk and turned her back. When she re- turned to the counter the piece, as she had expected, was gone. The woman was searched, and not only the silk but her method of avoiding detection |» | procecdings were of little general inter- | HUNDRED AND EIGHTH DAY. | mission is being used as a Republican | and elections had under consideration | ing exclusion from the privilege of the | stitutional. | mittee to investigate whether such ex- | ders | League to pitch to. | tribe, was discovered. WILLIAM 7 w fr rE 0 er Fim McKINLEY \ NA 0X NW Yi The Republican National convention which will assemble at Philadelphia June 12, will nominate William Me- Kinley to be his own successor as President. educated in the public schools, Poland Academy, and Allegheny College. . 1. June 11, 1361. for gallantry in service. dered district. of 80,995. Blaine. man. In 1892 he was a relegate-at-la convention. refused to permit his name to be used. 661 out of a total of 905 votes. ceived 271 electoral votes against 176 FIFTY-SIXTH CONGRESS Senate. HUNDRED AND SEVENTH DAY. The Senate agreed to the resolution for an investigation by the committee on Cuban affairs of the Cuban postal and other irregularities, authorizing the committee to visit Cuba, if necessary, to pursue the inquiry. Beyond this the est, some time being given to the sundry civil appropriation bill without complet- ng it. A lively debate was participated in the Scnate over the proposition, as an amendment to the sundry civil appro- priation bill, to continue the life of the industrial commission until October 31, 1001. Charges were made that the com- campaign machine and that important testimony had been suppressed. The committee amendment, however, was agreed to, the amount appropriated be- ing increased from $122,300 to $120,500. HUNDRED AND NINTH DAY. The program of the leaders of the House contemplated the launching of the debate upon the anti-trust resolution and bill, but it was withdrawn in order that 190 pension bills might be passed, and after they had been disposed of, as a further mark of respect the House ad- journed. HUNDRED AND TENTH DAY. The Senate committee on privileges Senator Pitchard’s resolution declar- franchise because of race to be uncon- The committee decided by a party vote to recommend the adop- tion of a substitute directing the com- clusion is antagonistic to the constitu- tion. Friends of the Grout oleomargarine bill are discouraged over the outlook and now admit that they are afraid that action on the bill cannot be secured at this session of Congre THE NATIONAL GAME. The Atlantic League apvoears to be upon its last legs Robinson is cs form for St. Louis. Worcester has the highest team in the Eastern League. The Brooklyn motto. “Strengthen at any cost,” is the one that wins. Boston is now playing the poorest engagement of her baseball career. Hickman is being tried at third for New York. Mercer has been shifted to the outfield. Both Barrett and Crawford, the won- of the Cincinnati team, are out of the game. : Nichols says that McGraw, of St T.ouis, is the most difficult man in the hing in his old-time salaried Chicago has a string of six seasoned pitchers in Griffith, Callahan, Taylor, Garvin, Menafee and Killen. Manager Selee, of Boston, has switch ed his outfielders, Stahl going to left field and Freeman to right, which is the latter's home position. Louis Bruce, the Indian pitcher of the Toronto team, is of the Mohawk His people live on the Caughna- waga reservation, Cornwall, Ont. There really are no youngsters on the regular Brooklyn team. Every man on that team has been plaving profes- sional ball for a good many years. The Pittsburg Club has further strengthened its team in its only weak spot—the catching department—by the purchase of Catcher O'Connor from the St. Louis Club. That great baseball city, Washington. is restricted for the season to semi- professional ball, which is to be furnish- ed by the “League of Maryland, Vir- ginia and District of Columbia.” The grand stand of the Cincinnati Baseball Club was almost destroyed by fire a few days ago. he loss is about $15,000. The stand will be rebuilt by the time the club returns from its east- ern trip. “The time will come,” said Manager Hanlon the other day, “when the League will have to legislate against players who stand up at the plate and foul off ball after ball. Roy Thomas, of the Philadelphias, is one of those bats- men. He is as valuable to a team as a .400 per cent. hitter, for he never steps to the plate that he does not worry a pitcher by his persistent fouling.” itants which to New Mexico, Indians- and 50,000 Among the the last census there were 20,00 Mexicans. ve to Britich customs and excise receipts for the fiscal year just closed yielded $10,000,000 each above the exchequer es- timate. lLonden is 12 miles broad one way and 17 the other, and every year sees about 20 miles of new streets added to it. Mr. McKinley was born at Ni ge, and supported Benjamin Harrison. for William J. Bryan. INDUSTRIAL NOTES. A Weekly Review of the Happenings Through- out the Labor World in This and Other Countries. Albion, N. Y., complains of a short- age of laborers. There were no strikes in North Caro- lina last year. Twenty thousand workmen in the building trades have been locked out at Stockholm, Sweden. Oneida Copper Mine, in Keweenaw county, Mich., has been reopened after ten years’ idleness. Carpenters at Hazleton, Penn, have been conceded their demand of $2.25 for a nine-hour working day. The great scarcity of logs has com- pelled the principal mills in the logging districts of Minnesota and Wisconsin to shut down. . Striking masons and bricklayers at Chicago, Ill, have voted unanimously not to withdraw from the Building Trades Council. Nearly 1,000 men have been #irown out of work by the closing of the con- verter and billet mills of. the Illinois Steel Company, at Joliet, IIL The Panama Canal Company has received orders from Paris to resume work on a large scale. A great many mechanics and laborers are being cn- gaged. ! . The Brotherhood of Locomotive En- gineers has decided not to build or buy | an office building for the general offices | of the organization in Milwaukee, Wis. The leaders of the Amaigamated As- sociation of Iron, Steel and Tin Work- ers at Indianapolis have decided to or- ganize union mills at Braddock and Homestead, Penn. 5 . Because of labor troubles, the McKay factory of the United Shoe Machinery Company, at 1 has Winchester, Mc been shut down, throwing out 600 ecm- ployes. oh A committee of the Allied Printing Trades of New York has called on Controller Coler, of New Yo k City, to talk with him about a municipal print- ing plant. Tre Piano-makers’ International Un- jon is growing fast. The organization has now over 1,200 members in good standing, and five branches of the trade are now being formed. The Republic Iron and Steel Com- pany, which operates a large plant at Frankton, Md., has closed the plant. Three hundred operatives are thrown out of work. The plant had been in op- eration only a week after a shut-down of four months. Fn The naval constructors say that it is not impossible to build a ship that will cross the Atlantic in four days, but they do not consider it practicable to mam tain that rate of speed, because it will cost more than it will come to. * During the year 1809 21,080 patents were applied for, compared with 20,080 in 1808 and 18.347 in 1897. Of these, 7, 430 were awarded after examination by the patent office, the corresponding number during last year having been The new twin screw steamship Iver nia, of the Cunard line, is one of the largest steamers afloat. She is exactly three times the length of the first Cun- ard steamer, the Britannia, of 1840, of double speed, and will carry ten times the number of passengers and eighty times the amount of cargo. A wrought-iron gas main, 2 long and 3 inches in diameter between Phoenixville and Roy Pa. The gas is conveyed under pres- sure of 20 pounds. : The Alabama Great Southern Rail- road sent a freight train over half a mile long into Chattanooga, recently. It came from New Orleans aud was drawn by two locomotives. Professor Atwater’s Cluiw.s. Is it not strange that, after mcre than forty centuries have elapsed since the re- sults of Professor Noal’s experiments with alcohol were first given to the world, even great university professors are experi- menting with that mysterious liquid, and that, too, without having in all this time achieved any appreciable results in ad- vance of those which Noah first discovered and his biographer first announced? Surely the persistency of scientific investigators of alcohol is unconquerable! One thing, however, is pretty fully settled, namely, that however capable the human system is of assimilating homampatbic doses of aleo- hol, there is always something about the liquid thus administered which demands at first a frequent repetition of the dose, and later the consumption of it in sueh allopathie quantities as turns men first into spewing idiots, later into fiends and de- mons, and ultimately consiguos them to the drunkard’s grave and the drunkard’s hell —Free Methodist. rr ———— - Temperance in French Army. The French army has taken a hand in the war against alcoholism. Although the great military organization has not de- cided upon any united action in the mat- ter, certain eminent generals have given an example that may be later followed by the supreme heads of the army. The steps taken by these officers are in the direction of restricting the privileges hitherto en- joyed by soldiers for obtaining liquor. H He was promoted to be a commissary sergeant in April, 1862, and was lieutenant in September, 1862, first lieutenant in February, 1863, and captain in July, 1864. 1 on the staffs of Generals R. B. Hayes, George Crook, and Winfield S. Hancock, and in 1865 At this convention he received 182 votes for €he nomination for P On June 18, 1896, he was nominated for Pr He was elected in November, 1896, by a popular plurality of 6oo,000 votes, and re- >s, Ohio, January 29, 1843, and was enlisted as a private in the 23rd O. commissioned second Te served in succession was brevetted a major He was admitted to the bar in 1867, and settled in Canton, Ohio. In 1876 he was elected to the National House of Representatives, and served 14 years im that body, being defea ted in 1890 in a gerryman- He was elected governor of Ohio in 1891 by a plurality of 21,511, and re-elected in 1893 by a plurality He was a delegate-at-large to the Republican National convention of 1884, and In 1888 he was again a delegate-at-large to the Republican National convention, and supported John Sher- supported James G. served as chairman of the . though he had persistently sident at St. Louis, receiving MINES AND MINERS. Pennsylvania Coal Output—State Ranks Next to Great Britain in Amount Pro- duced—Other Items. I's coal exports during April in value than w 2 000,000 greater in the same month of 18¢9, nearly all the difference being due to higher S, hased a large tract of canal lands in the New river district of West Vir- ginia. The company will commence the installation of electric mining ma- chinery and erection of 400 coke ovens about June 1. There are districts in the bituminous coal fields of Pennsylvania alone which produce twice as much coal as the State of Alabama. In fact, only States 1 e Union which produce more than the Second district of Pennsylvania are th of Illirois, West Virginia and Ohio, in the order named. A new company has purchased the blast furnace and coke plant of the Cherry Valley works at Leetonia, O., and intend to enlarge the furnace to a daily capacity of 250 tons. In addition to the furnace the purchasers secured 2,000 acres of good coal land adjoining. The coke plant consists of 130 ovens and likely be enlarged. The struggle now going on between capital and labor in Austria is one of the greatest ever witnessed. There are between 60,000 and 70,000 mine oper- atives in the coal district of her three northern provinces, namely, Bohemi Moravia and Silesia. The miners have been, the past six weeks, on a strike for a reduction of hours and an advance of , as well as for redress of various oT evances. icate of Pittsburg people have ling to Secretary Savage, of the Columbus, O., h quart of the Unit- ed Mine Workers of America, the pres- ent gniners’ situation is the most satis- factory that has cxisted for many months. The min ose A syt Accs ITC rs are apparently in a more confident state of mind now, as there is hardly a settlement in Ohio but that the regular scale of wages is being id. T ne condition of affairs is pai 1€ ‘ comparatively prevalent all over the country. It is true that there are nu- merous strikes in progress among the miners, but when it is taken in consid- eration the multitude of miners and the unlimited number of questions, upon which there is alwavs liable to be dis- pute, then it will be realized how smoothly the big association is being conducted. The State of Pennsylvania produces more coal than any State or country in the world, with the exception of Great Britain. By the returns received from James Roderic chief of the bu- reau of mines, interesting facts are gathered in connection with this im- portant industry. Je says that there were 73.060,043 tons of bituminous coal mined last year. these tons being 2,000 pounds, while there were also 54,034,224 tons of anthracite, of 2.240 pounds, pro- duced ther rear. Of course a great { the nous coal was made into coke, so that 12,196,570 tons ol coke were produced, and 52805.383 te were shipped to market. It will be seen that the total production of coal in the Keystone State runs to nearly 130,000,000 net in the course of a year. The only other country or State doing better than this was Great Brit ain last vear, which made 246,000,000 net tons, of which about 50,000,000 were exported. The next country on the list is Germany, which last year is cred ited with a production of about 120,000,- 000 riet tons of bituminous coal. France, deal of tons { Belgium and Austria follow, none of | which countries produced over 30,000, 000 tons: Made a Drankard by a Prescription. A funeral took place in Paterson, N. J., the other day of a young wile. The phy- sician’s certificate of death was “died of chronic aleoholism.” The husband said: ‘Our marriage had been a happy one un- til my wife was ordered to take whisky. I am not to blame for the scandal. Although I have been a temperance man for fifty- nine years I was forced to give my wile liquor at home or suffer scandal or dis- grace,” The story is a sad one. On the death of her child about a year n evil moment ago she was taken ill, In the attending physician pre: for her. She continued to most before the h nd knew it his young wife was a drunkard. The craving for liquor overmastered her. For more th a half a century her hus- band had been a total abstainer. ~ He has a horror of liquor. He consented to its being administered to his wile because the doctor said it was neces: y When he found the y. it his wife had become a slave to liquor he tried to keep it from her. This was impos not get it le, for it she could at home she would go out for it. nt the husband gave her all she demanded to preven andal, Alo \n improy 1 aking up earth inio fire has a steel frame «i d 1 1 blade, with the interior portion cut away and strung with wi >s. which sre headed in the » of the blade, and have screw-threaded ends which are tighten- ed by nuts to stiffen the spade. One of Artemus Ward's Storles. Artemus Ward used to tell of a lec- | ture experience which he had in a lit- | tle place in the far west. There was a blizzard on the night when he held forth was the audience small. lecture,” said | Artemus, “I ventured to suggest to | the chairman of the committee that | the elements having been against me | that evening I might repeat my talk | later on in the season. After confer- | ring with his fellow commiteemen, | the chairman came back and sald to | me: ‘We haven't any objection at all | to your repeating your lecture, but | i and consequently “After my | the feeling is that you had better re- made 1ansion for What Shall We Have For Dessert) This question arises in the family daily. Let us answer it to-day. Try Jell-O, a delicious and healthful dessert. Prepared in 2 min. No boiling! no baking! Simply add a little hot water & set to cool. Flavors: Lemon,Orange, Raspberry and Strawberry. At grocers. 10c. Padua’s pilgrims to Rome for the jubilee will make the journey on bi- cycles. | Do Your Feet Ache and Barn ? | Shake into your shoes Allen's Foot-Ease, a | powder for the feet. It makes tight or new | shoes feel easy. Cures Corns, Bunions, | Swollen, Hot, Smarting and Sweating Fee and Ingrowing Nails. Sold by all drugg 1’ Address Allen S. Olmstead, LeRoy, N. Y Morocco is famous for its fine mules. The best come from Fez and are worth $200 cach. Piso’s Cure is the best medicine we ever used for all affections of throat and lungs— War. | O. ExpsrLey, Vanburen, Ind., Feb. 10,190. ! Nevada has a population all told of | 45,761—about one-fourth of the aver-| age congressional district. | The Best Prescription for Chills and Fever is a bottle of GROVE'S TASTELESS CHILL ToN10. It is simply iron and quinine in & tasteless form. No cure—no pay. Price 50c. Th > 33 largest towns of England and Wales have a total population of nearly | 12,000,000. Dyspepsia is the bane of the human sys- tem. Protect yourself against its ravages by the use of Beeman’s Pepsin Gum, The bakers’ strike has revealed the fact that London's baking is nearly all done by Germans or other foreigners. | H, M. Nor{on, St. Paul. Minn., says: Please i send me one bottle Frey's Vermifuge for en- closed 25¢. I cannot get a bottle in this city. The population of Edinburgh is now within about 1,000 of 300,000. | Jell-O, the New Dessert, | Pleases all the family. Four flavors:— Lemon, Orange, Raspberry and Strawberry. At your grocers. 10 ats. Cigarettes are smoked almost exclu- sively in Germany, Austria, Russia and Greece, and generally through Europe. Fits permanently cured. No fits or nervous. ness after first day’s use of Dr. Kline's Great Nerve Restorer. $2 trial bottle and treatise free. Dr.R.H. KLINE Ltd. 931 Arch St.Phila. Pa. The fire department of Chicago has 98 steam fire engines. Hall's Catarrh Cure is a liquid and is taken internally, and acts directly on the blood and mucous f surfaces of the system. Write for tes- timonials, free. Manufactured by . J. CHENEY & Co., Toledo, O. California will ra of prunes this year. 000,000 pounds Mrs. V slow’s Soothing Syrap forchildren aething {tens the gums, reduces inflamma- tion, allays pain.cures wind colic. 25¢ a bottle. Better Blood Better Health If you don’t feel well to-day you can be made to feel better by making your blood better. Hood’s Sarsaparilla is the great pure blood maker, That is how it cures tnat tired feeling, pimples, sores, salt rheum, serofula and catarrh. Get a bottle of this great medicine and begin taking it at once and see how quickly it will bring your blood up to the Good Health point. Hood’s Sarsaparilla Is America’s Greatest Blood Medicine. 00 KSY SAMPLES of 6 different | = interesting books wort ®1.50, and illustrated Oatalog sent to = address for 30 cents, stamps. Try us W. ANDERNCH, 436 West 3Sth Sty, No Y. | P. N. U. 2g, 00, DON'T STOP TOBACCO SUDDENLY injures nervous system to do so. I a as that Really Cures BAGO-GURD | and notifies you when to stop. Sold with a guarantee that three boxes will cure any case | BAGO CUR is vegetable and harmless. It has - cured thousands, it will cups you. At all drugg or by mail prepaid, $1.00" a box; 3 boxes, 82.50. Booklet free. Write FAUREKA | CHEMICAL CO., La Crosse, Wis. ts and shoe stores, 25 cts. Sample sent FREE. | | “THE MESSIAH” ON THE PLAINS Annual Musical Event of the West That Attracts Thousands. “Because of {ts Surroundings, and uplifting by its earnest methods and teaching, the Easter performance of ‘The Messiah,” by the Swedish colony at Lindsborg, in central Kansas each spring one of the interesting events of the west,” writes Charles M. Harger in the Ladies’ Home Journal. “A musical festival that, out on the comparatively sparsely settled prairies, | can bring together 10,000 people dur- ! ing holy week, many of them coming 200 miles, must be excellent indeed. The growth of the audiences in this instance, year after year, indicates a thorough appreciation of a worthy rendering of Handel's great oratorlo. The Swedes are a singing people, and the religious sentiment is strong in their hearts. The one cherished day for this colony of perhaps 3,000 fami- lies is Easter,and the chief glory there- of is ‘The Messiah.’ Four hundred men and maidens participate in these renditions. The orchestra numbers 50 pieces, and is supplemented by a three- manual pipe organ. The leaders, di- rectors and soloists are all members’ of the Lindsborg community, teachers in the college there.” and Caltivate a Sweet Voice, Kind hearts are more plentiful than | persistently kind and gentle voices, land yet love loses much of its power when the voice is sRarp and hard. Try, i therefore, most earnestly to acquire | the right tone in speaking, and guard yourself carefully from falling into careless and bad habits of voice. Often a sharp voice shows far more ill-will than the heart feels, but people do not know that the speaker's “bark 1s worse than her bite,” and they be- lieve her to be ill-tempered and dis- agreeable. It is so easy to pick up a sharp and snappish manner of speak- ing. Very often it is acquired in mirth, and in the give and take battles of words in which boys and girls delight. There is no malice in their sallies, and a great deal of fun, but meanwhile the! voice is often acquiring a sharp and shrewish tone which sticks through life, making it stir up strife and ill- will among its listeners. So watch the tone in which you speak, and take care that it is gentle and sweet. A kind voice is like music in the home, and is to the heart what light and beauty are to the eye.—New York Mail and Express. Child Dies from Anthrax. Bridgeton (N. J.) correspondence New York Herald: An eleven-year-old daughter of Frank Hitchner, a farmer who lives in the upper part of Cumber- jand county, is dying from anthrax, having got the disease from drinking cow’s milk. Recently he was visiting at the home of Job Garton, a neighbor, and drank a great deal of milk. Last week it was discovered that four of Mr. Garton’s cows had anthrax and they were put to death. A few days ago the child was taken very ill. The doctors say she is past medical help. It Didn't York. Mrs. Slimpurse—It's all nonsense to talk about managing a husband by si- lent appeals to his good nature. It A Lesson. “Henrietta!” said Mr. Meeckton, ag paused on the front step, “could ou remember what it was you said yesterday when you so properly re- proved me for leaving the door open?” I think I can. But I hope I shall not have occasion to use i again.” “Could vou give me the exact tones and the gestures?” “Yes.” “Well, 1 wish you would. I have an office boy who leaves the door open continually, and if you could teach me to make that speech fi would certainly be a great help ta me in my business.” —Washington Star. To Cure a Cold in One Day. Take LAXATIVE BROMO QUININE TABLETS. AN dru; ists refund the money if it falls to cure, E. W. GRoVE'S signature 1s on each boX. 2c, laims that there is not a 1 her domain who cannot H.H. GREE SONS, of Atlanta, Ga. are the gpiy successful Dropsv Specialists in the world. Ree their liberal offer in advertisement in another column of this paper. The wheat crop in Manitoba 1s ex- pected to exceed last year’s by 2,500,000 bushels, and the oat crop by 600,000 bushels. LIKE MANY OTHERS Clara Kopp Wrote for re Pinkiants Aad. vice and Tells what it did for Her, ‘““ DEAR MRs8. PisknayM :—I have seen so many letters from ladies who were cured by Lydia E. Pinkham’s remedies that I thought I would ask your advice in regard to my condition. I have been doctoring for , four years and have Y : taken different pat- ent medicines, but received very little 8 benefit. I am § troubled with back- ache, in fact my whole body aches, stomach feels sore, by spells get short of breath and am very nervous. Men- struation 1s very ir- fl regular with severe \ bearing down pains, cramps and back- ache. Ihopetohear >) from you at once.”— ~~ CrAra Kopp, Rockport, Ind., Sept. 27, 1898. “I think it is my duty to write a letter to you in regard to what Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound did for me. I wrote you some time ago, describing my symptoms and asking your advice, which you very kindly gave. Iam now healthy and cannot begin to praise your remedy enough. I would say to all suffering women, ‘ Take Mrs. Pinkham's advice, fora wo- man best understands a woman's suf- ferings, and Mrs. Pinkham, from her vast experience in treating female ills, can give you advice that you can get from no other source.” "—CuARA Kopp, Rockport, Ind., April 13, 1899. Try Grain-O! Try Crain-O! can’t be done. If you want anything you've got to say so right out. You know this horrid old hat I've worn for two seasons? Mrs. Makeshift—VYes; and I suggested that you should quiet- ly put it on and let him see you wearing it. Mrs. Slimpurse—That's just what I did; and when I proposed to walk down the town with him he said, “I'm afraid all this finery will make my old clothes look shabby.”— Stray Stories. Parrot Died of Grief. Elmer, Pa., telegram to Philadelphia Times: A parrot belonging to Captain Theodore Jones, of this place, died a few days ago, and the owner is satis- | fied that the bird died from grief. Mrs. Jones recently died, and she had an | attachment for the parrot, which! helped her to while away many hours. Soon after her death the bird began to droop and called for Mrs. Jones re- . peatedly until it died. A Misogynist's Suspicion. During the interval between the sec- ond and third acts at English’s last night the program showed that the or- chestra would play “The Spider and the Fly.” It played Mendelssohn's wedding march. Now, a suspicion might arise—but, of course, only in the mind of a misogynist.—Indianap- olis News. Ask your Grocer to-day to show you a package of GRAIN-O, the new food drink that takes the place of coffee. The 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 Java, but it is made from pure grains, and the most delicate stomach receives it without distress. } the price of coffee. 15 cents and 25 cents per package, Sold by all grocers. Tastes like Coffee Looks like Coffee Insist that your grocergives you GRAIN-O Accept no imitation. 5 Zr HERES Rootbeer 4 il contribute more to it than 2 Puffs under th ing and over-eatin CASCARETS will will clean out the s tem’s rottenness. becomes unshapely, fills up with filth, face look clean, eyes bright. cured or satisfied you get your a week and help the liver clean up the bowels, such troubles. money back. Bile bloat is quickly CURED BY To any needy mortal suffering from bowel troubles and too poor to buy CASCARETS we will send a box free. Sterling Remedy Company, Chicago or New York, mentioning advertisement and paper. 0 blotched, greasy face don’t mean hard drink- ing always as much as it shows that there is BILE IN THE BLOOD, but failure to assist nature in regularly dis- posing of the partially digested lumps of food that are dumped into the bowels and allowed to rot there, is what causes all the trouble. will keep the system from filling with poisons, skin yellow; in fact the whole body kind of help nature you lay the foundation for just CASCARETS will carry the poisons out of the system and will regulate you naturally and easily and without gripe or pain. Start to-night—one tablet—keep it up for and you will feel right, your blood will be rich, Get a 10c box of CASCARETS, take as directed. If you are not e eyes; red nose; pimple- It is true, drink- g overloads the stomach, help nature help you, and ores that tell of the sys- Bloated by bile the figure the breath foul, eyes and Every time you neglect to and permanently ALL DRUGGISTS Address YOUR COW’S PRODUCTION will Te increased 20 per cent. by using | our aluminum Cream Separators and | up-to-date churns. $4 up. ys trial. Catalogue free. Address, Gib- =% sou-Stewart Mfg. Co., Gibsonia, Pa, cases. Tee. quick relief and cures wors Is and 10 days’ treatment Book of testimonia Hore eva nes” { Thompson's Eye Water | NEW DISCOVERY; gives | Dr. H. H. GREEN'S BONS, Box B. Atlanta, Ga. | ISOS CURE FOR CURES WHERE ALL ELSE FAILS. I § Best Cough Syrup. Tastes good. Ut in time. Sold by druggists.