A hy /5 > a. an = [A : : i te - 1 = 'S PR 2 a 5 - - = Until the middle of the last centu LOVE. _ “The Apaches make a fair offer; they | FRIZNDSHIP'S PREFERENCE. Le STi IF NEWS CODERS fH Great Britain imported two-thirds ; _— ” do not wish to shed the blood of their SE ! i the iron she used. The use of coal for Jdfe comes, life goes, brief hours and | white brothers. They have nothing “Perfect strangers,” did you say, id smelting was th. , nine i days Or aking. s > ache re an . g then only beginning. | Consume its scanty breath; worth taking, and the Apache lodges, hence for aye, PENSIONS GRANTED. Eace package of Pursax Faprress Dye | 1-Ove comes but once, and henceforth | are full of white scalps now. Let till we diet The great. trouble in trying to sell what are called patent mdicines is that somany claims have been made for them that p2ople don’t cr won’t believe what Ra makers say. We have been telling our tory sixty years. Did we ever deceive you once? If we make any statement that isn’t so, we will stand the loss. Go to the druggist and get your money back. S Here's an example. Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral is a good cure for a cough that comes from a cold. Your cough, if you have one, may not come from a cold; vour doctor will tell you about that. It is a straight medicine with sixty years of cures back of it. There isn’t a ghost of the ordi- nary patent thing about it. IC. Practical Chemists, Aver Company, Lowell, Mass. Ayer’s Hair Vigor Ayer's Cherry Pectoral Ayer’s Comatone Aver’s Sarsaparilla Ayers Pills Ayer’s Ague Cure Safest, surest cure for all throat and lung 5 D ra Bu i Ps Soo People praise Cough Syrup i ieevreint Refuse heirs. Cet il Bull's Cough Syrup. Vegetables are vsually sold in piles in! Buenos Avres. so that you have toj measure quantity as weil as quality by | the eye; and butchers sell their meat by the chunk rath :r than by weight. $100. ill be pleased to $160 Reward. The readers of this paper wi learn that there is atleast one dreaded disease that science has been able to qe in all its stages, Si that is Catarrh. Hall Cure is the only positiv suctical fraternity. tional disease ui ment. Ha 1" 's Catarrh e cure known to the n the blood and mucous sur- the system, thereby desiroping the foun Rion of the disease, and g g the pa- tient strength by building up i ‘constitution ng nature in doing its wor pri 's have so much faith in its curative er that they offer One Hundred Dollars or any case that it fails to cure. Send for list of testimonials. Address CHENEY & Co., Toledo, O. Sold by Dr ruggis Hall's Family I the best. sts, 7 G:mb'ing in Belgium. Belgium, with all its surface respecta- bility, has hesitated to put down gamb- ling at its pleasure and health resorts, like Germany, but has retained some of the profit by its tolerance of what in E { g called bogus clubs. Spa has been made less like Monte Carlo in this respect, and even Ostend been brought into line with the great army of make-believers. The clubs are not exactly “door-mat” clubs, where members are elected “on the nod,” as they are to the “hace: rat’ rooms at every bathing “casino” from ane end of Holland to the other end of France. A name and address have to] be registered, a mover and seconder are found, as a matter of course, and after forty-eight Lours the applicant is quali- fied to try his luck at rouge-et noir and trente-et-quarante. The establishment of Monte Carlos is not gland are these limited confined to the seacoast or the inland spas, but it has | been allowed to invade a commercial city like Namur, and to follow the course of that pocket Rhine, the Meuse, from Namur to Dinant, and from Din- ant to Chimay, Dinant being a pretty show-place like the Drachenfels, anc Chimay a quite country town as full of | solitude as Rye or Winchelsea-—I.ondon | Dail Mail. © | has | colors more goods than any other dye and colorsthem Detter too. Sold ya all druggists The revenues of the street car com- panies of Buenos Ayres in the month of April in this year amounted to $1,111,- 681.63 Best For the Bowels, | No matter what ails you, headache to a { eancer, you wili never get Well until your bowels are put right. OascareTs help nature, cure you without a gripe or pain, produce easy natural movements, cost you just 10 cents to start getting your health back. Oascarers Candy Cathartic, the genuine, put up in metal boxes, every tab- let has C.C.C. stamped on it. Beware of imitations. The report of the Registrar General shows crime in Ireland steadily on the decline. I do not believe Piso’s Cure for Consumption has an equal for coughs and colds.—Jonx F. BOYER, Trinity y Springs, Ind., Feb. 15, 1900. Eye glasses are adc fiom Brazilian pebble, which is a very transparent rock crystal : The Best Prescription for Chills ' and Fever 1s a bottle of (GROVE'S TASTELESS CHILL ToNIC. It is simply iron and quinine in | a tasteless form. No cure—no pay. Price 50c. t year Germany imported 214,139 metric ton of potatoes and 1,370.850 of wheat. The stomach has to work hard, grinding the food we crowd into it. Make its work easy by chewing Beeman’s Pepsin Gum. 15 5 feet 834 inches. Fits permanently cured. No fits or nervous. ness after first day's use of Dr. Kline's Great Nerve Restorer. trial bottle and treatise free. Dr.R.H. -KLINE.Ltd.031 Arch; St.Phila.Pa More thon 10 per cent of al all idiots are the progeny of intemperate parents. Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrap forchildren teething, softens the gums, reduces inflammo= tion, allays pain. cures wind colic. 25¢ a bottle. x Chaldean Exploration. expedition to excavate the sites of Ur of the Chaldees and other ancient Baby- |lonian cities are making great efforrs ito awaken further interest in the plan tend to complete the fund necessary begin the work. Excavations in the To: ruined cities of ancient Babylonia have | {given the world a long series of sur- {prises during the past few decades. It | j was a surprise in 1842 when the French | Jeopent discovered a palace containing 1 200 rooms and covering 25 acres of ground concealed in a mound north of Nineveh. The beautiful bas-reliets which lined the walls and the carve: stone floors speak of the magnificence of the palace. Another surprise came when the scholars read in the inscrip- tions which were found in the ruins that the ancient builder was the Assyrian king who captured Samaria and took captive ten of the Hebrew tribes. Again the world was surprised among the clay books from the vast h- brary taken from a palace at Nineveh | ! one was found containing a story of the! | flood, another the story of the creation (of the world similar to the Biblical story. | Still another surprise came when the palaces of five kings of Assyria who are ned by name in the Rible were discovered and found to contain records of the Assyrian relations with the He- I brews, supplementing the historical por- {tions of the Old Testament. A few years ago, when it was still generally supposed that the world was created about 6,000 years ago, it was a | surprise to find at Nippur remains of a | developed civilization of nearly twice | that age.—New York Post. , | A Scottish congregation presented | their minister with a sum of money, and sent him off to the continent for a holi- day. A gentleman just back from the | continent met a prominent member of | the church, and said to him: “Oh, by- | the-bye, I met your minister in Germany. "He is looking very well. He didn’t look as if he needed a rest.” “No,” said the | church member, “it wasna him; it was i the congregation that was needia’ a {rest” | Neighbor: “What beautiful hens you { have, Mrs. Stuckup.” Mrs. Stuckup: “Yes, they are all imported fowls.” Neighbor: “You don’t tell me so! I suppose they lay eggs every day?” Mrs. | Stuckup (proudly): if they saw proper, but our circum- stances are such that my hens are not | required to lay eggs every day PURE BLOOD AND STRONG NERVES With glowing health all things are possible, small annoyances fade into Women who are nothingness and real troubles are battled with successfully. blessed with perfect health are a constant joy to themselves and all around them. The beauty which health alone can make permanent is a crown which raises a woman above other women. Such beauty is always accompanied by a sweet disposition, for snappishness is a sure sign of ill-health and leaves its mark quickly on the features. It seems to be the fashion for women to ignore health and sacrifice it to the little every-day trials, or offer it up on the altar Then again the nervous organization of women is con- of devotion to daily tasks. stantly attacked by woman's natural periences, so that it is practically impossi- ble for her to retain the beauty which nature gave her, unless she has diserimi- nating advice and right support. Dr. Greene’s Nervura for the Blood and Nerves. Trials and troubles are easily overcome by whose strength is the genuine Dr. Greene's Ner- blood and nerve remedy, bridges the chasm that separates the sickly woman from It fills her veins with blood that is the women strength of perfect health. yvura happiness. pure and clean. Mgrs. WM. E. Bossg, of 85 Farrington St., Flushing, L. I., says: “In regard to myself, I have suffered for years with disease, having been troubled with great ner- vousness, female complaints, indigestion, reat weakness and prostration. I did not ve strength to do much of anything. Know- ing the great value of health and strength 1 consulted doctors and took many medi- en but they all failed to cure me, nd 1 grew worse rather than better. append to see in the papers how I good Dr. Greene's Nervura, bioed and nerve remedy, was doing in estoring to healtn everybody who took it, or: I thought I would try a bottle. it and to my surprise I began to gain strength eve 4 most rs tonic and Strongih giver. It is certainly t and wish that other people who are troubled ex- and ry day. « I am so thankfnl that I tried it! I recommend it very highly in any way would, take warning and use it.” TO PRESERVE WOMANLY BEAUTY At all the stages of a woman's life Dr. Greene’s Nervura blood and nerve remedy, is shown to be efficient to ward off the results of nervousness, or over- work, or impure blood. From early girlhood to advanced years, this world- renowned medicine builds up the forces destroyed by disease, grief, or over- exertion, and the effects of this great medicine are quickly felt and permanently retained. Let women guard well their health, and consult Dr. Greene freely. Nothing they can possibly do will so surely keep them strong and well, or re- pair the exhaustion from acute illness, nothing will work so continually to the | preservation of beauty as the great health-giving Nervura. is at 35 West 1ith Street, New York City, where he may be consulted either by personal call or by letter Dr, Greene's advice free, The average height of an Englishman Scientists in charge of the proposed | when | “They could do so’ Dr. Greene's office | stays, He knows nor life nor death, Who deem they once have known love's { And seen the phantom go, Have seen a mime love's aspect ape, They never saw love—no! —race Ellery Channing. 20009000000 000000000000000 $ vw - . 2 £ Wild West Story. 2 WI J:3 990096000 00000060000000090 r of the great Apache nation, the sa ro lords of Northern | Mexico, by the clear swift w : the Gila river and within the of the wooded sides of the hold-peaked, | crooked White Mountainrange, a small band of daring. white-skinned adven- turers were encamped. The camp was on a little island center of the siream. Few white men had set that valley: fewer still had lived to tell of it; and yet the lige band —six, all told—lounged as car by the river, s if they were in civilizations center, | instead of being intruders upon the do- main of the bravest race of savages | that tread the soil of North America. Could it be possible that they knew not their danger? Were they not aware that the red Apache braves | In the count in th» foot within guarded their hunting grounds with all | the jealousy of the Eastern monarch Had they not seen the thin columns of smoke stealing upward on the clear mountain air from hilltop after hilltop they were penetrating farther into the wilderness? Did while {and farther they not know that the smoke columns | | told every foe Ww as advancing and warned the | | | | watching over his hundred wives? { | | | | | | | slaughter? Yes, the adventurers knew their dan- ! ger only too well; cool and hardy moun- tain men were they, well used to the custom of the Indians, and not apt to | run heedlessly into danger. They knew the risk and boldly took the chances. A golden vision led them onward, and blindly they followed. | There were rough Ben Todd, little Montana Mike, swarthy Dick Peters, the Kentuckian; old, burly Mountain | Ned, the trapper: huge-bearded John Onderdonk from ‘Frisco and slender, handsome Spanish Charley. “How much farther asked Moun- tain Ned, thoughtfully wicing up at the mountain peak that frowned down upon the little camp. s march and we will Spanish Charley re- | “One more da) strike the mine, plied. | “Are you quite sure there is no mis- take about the location?’ the old ‘mountain man asked, his face grave and his whole manner giving proof ‘of great anxiety. | “Not a doubt of it.” the young man i replied, gayly. “From two different parties I have received descriptions of "the place, and I think you will own that I have exhibited a pretty knowl- edge of the country so far.” : | “Yes, but we're running an awful risk,” the old trapper observed, soberly. “The Indians are hovering around us, thicker'n ’skeeters in a blackberry patch. The first thing we know, they'll try to lift our ha'r.” | “Did the Indians tell you of this mine?’ demanded the Kentuckian, ab- 'ruptly. |, “Yes; perhaps you remember that I had a little Injun wife about a year back.” Spanish Charley said, with a ‘laugh. She was a pretty redskin within sight that a | savage braves to prepare for blood and | little thing. | I picked her out of the Gila one day | { when her pony had upset her into the "drink, and, to make a long story short, she took a notion to your humble ser- ‘She came of good bloed, too: her father | was the old chief of the White Moun- tain Apaches. She told me about the rich placer by the bend of the jo the warriors of her tribe dug out ! the red metal to make bullets for theit | | guns. It must be rich stuff, and pretty | pure, too, for she always said it was { more red than yellow and that her peo- ! ple always termed the slugs red hul- lets. “What ever became of her?” ‘Montana Mike asked suddenly. vant and left her tribe to live with me, | Gila and | little | Spanish Charley appeared confused {and hesitated a moment. “Well, to come to the rights of the "matter," he said, slowly, “we had some I hot words one night when I came home late from a fandango and I jest gave | her a couple of cracks so as to let her | know who was boss of the shanty, and , she got so mad about it that she went | right off and drowned herself in the river.” Then an awkward silence the party for a few minutes. “That was rough,” man observed at last. | “Yes; and the worst of all her tribe accused me of murdering | ber,” Spanish Charley said. “And didn’t none of ‘em try to square the account?’ the "Frisco sharp, John Onderdonk, asked. | “You bet!” responded the bereaved i husband, tersely. “One copper-colored imp lay for me and plugged me with a slug—a regular red bullet, too: thar she 'ig,” and Charley drew the rudely | formed and now flattened slug from his pocket, “The wound didn’t amount | to much, though, but the will was enough.” “And who else fell upon ood told you of this mine?” the old mountain | it was that | asked rough Ben Todd, an old and ex- | perienced miner. “A drunken buck that I came across at Maricopa Wells: he was wonderfully free-spoken, for an Injun.” | “And did he describe the same mine cas the girl?” asked the old trapper. “To an iota,” Charley replied. “Hush! To cover!” the Kentuckian said. “There are Indians yonder!” I The whites at once took the little clump of timber upon the island's center. , Then from the clump of timber gt the foot of the mountain range a Indian advanced, while the | brush seemed alive with the | faces. | Straight to the bank of the river i came the brave, his arms extended, | showing that he was weaponless, ex. cept the broad-bladed knife that he | held in his right hand. : | “He wants a talk,” the trapper ex- claimed. “We're in a regular hornets | nest, and we must fool him if we can.” i The Indian halted at the edge of the | water. He was a tall, | muscular and powerful. shelter in that grew single unde dusky young brave, “Will the white brave, Spanish { Charley, step out and fight the brother | the chief speaking in excellent Jinglish. | Spanish Charley started and turned Women may write in perfect confidence, and ged , pale. | | of the Indian girl that he killed?” eried | Spanish Charley step out, and if he kills the Apache chief in fair fight he is free to depart with his braves.” “If you're afeared, Charley, I'll tackle] the Injine for you,’ marked. The taunt he started stung the guilty to his feet. “No living man ever saw Charley show the white feather yet!” he cried, boastfully. “I'l cut the heart out of this red dog inside of five * the Kentuckian re- | i man and ! Spanish | minutes, and send him to join his proud-hacked sister. Come on; I'm | ready for you!” he cried, stepping down to the water's edge, knife in hand. Tht Indian pointed to a sandy bar about 200 yards down the stream. “Let the white chief meet the Apache brave there,” the warrior Spanish Charley nodded his head, and throwing off his outer garments, red at once into the water. The Indian followed his example. The redskin was not emcumbered with clotl: naked to the waist. The combatants reached the island, both at the same time and as Spanish Charley emerged from che water atone the Indian's tall form came up on the other. Knife in hand, the foemen glared up- said. being side, on each other, With the cautious movement of two angry tigers, they circled around, the advantage. Suddenly the Indian made a spring forward: the white assumed the de- fensive to parry the expected blow, but it was but a feint upon the part of the Apache; for as Charley raised his arm to parry, he uncovered his and the Indian, improving the opportunity, launched his knife full at the heart of the white, throwing the weapon with all the skill of the East- ern juggler. Through Spanish Charley's white flesh and keen blade cut its way until it split his heart in twain. With a hollow groan the unfortunate man threw up his arms and sank down dead. all in a heap. A shrill ery of triumph came from the throat of the Apache as he sprung for- ward and tore the warm and reeking sealp from the head of his fallen foe. Again the note of triumph rang on the air, as the brave stood erect and dangled the curly Spanish Charley's pride in the air; and from the cover of the hills a hundred throats echoed the cry of triumph. And then, all in a moment, the shout of joy changed into a wail of horror. The rifle of Montana Mike spoke, and its bail drilled a round, red hole in the temple of the victor. “ile was my pard, Irishman, in answer remonstrances. The whites expected a terrible fight for life: but contrary to their expecta- tion, the savages did not attack. The Apaches thirsted for revenge, but feared the death-dealing rifles; be- each striving to obtain chest, locks, bays,” cried the to his comrades’ sides, no booty could be got. When 1 itfall came, the whites withdrew from the island and fled down the river, hotly pursued by the Apaches: but they made Fort Goodwin in safety. And to this day Montana Mike exhibits the red bullet, and tells the terrible story of the redskin’s ven- ~New York News. geance.- FEARLS O THOUGHT. In all departments of activity, to have one thing to do, and then do it, is the secret of success.— Menander. The failures of life come from rest- ing in good intentions, which are in vain unless carried out in wise action. —C. Simmons. An inquisitive man is a creature naturally very vacant of thought it- self. and therefore forced to apply to foreign assistance.—Steele. There is no readier way for a man to bring his own worth into question, than by endeavoring to detract from the worth of other men.—Tillotson. Whatever is unjust is contrary to the divine will; and from this it fol- lows that no true and abiding happi- ness can be gained by those who are un just.—Streteh. If men would consider not so much wherein they differ, as wherein they agree, there would be far less of un- chiaritableness and angry feeling in the world.—Addison. Insincere in a man’s own heart must make all his enjoyments, all that con- cerns him, unreal; so that his whole life must seem like a merely dramatic representation.—Iawthorne. Giant Footprints in a Rock. Almost in midstream, in the Loyal- hanna creek, near the old Loyalhanna church, adjacent to Saltsburg, there is a large rock. of which about eight feet square is exposed during the low-water period. In almost the middle of this surface there is an imprint of the foot of a human being or possibly that of a bear. It penetrates the rock to a dis- tance of almost two feet, and the out- lines are as distinet as though chiseled out by hand. This rock is a composite sandstone, and in the shale, about 100 vards away, there are petrified stumps of trees. From the size of the foot- print, if it belongs to man, it must have been that of a giant or a mon- strosity, when compared to our race. If it were a bear's foot that left the mark, it must have belonged to the age of large mammals, and should have been sufficient to frighten the In- dians on their march to the Hannas- town massacre. At any rate the petrified stumps of the two trees in the shale and the im- print of the foot in the rock are freaks in their respective ways, and are pro- nounced as belonging to distinctively different geological periods by all who have observed them.—Westmoreland Democrat. Baby's Head Was “Wobbly.” She is a very little girl, only 5 years old, hut in the short period of her few vears she has enjoyed a large experi- ence of life with dolls of all kinds and descriptions, who, in the course of their existence under her loving but not always kind adminstrations. have undergone many vicissitudes. So the little H-year-old, when there came a real live baby into the house, felt him- self to be something of a connoisseur in children. When it was put into her arms, this real live baby, she regard- ed it with a critical air. “Isn't that a nice baby?’ cried the nurse - with the joyous pride with which a nurse always regards a new baby, in which she feels that she Las a proprietary interest. “yes,” replied the little girl hesita- tingly, “it’s nice, but it’s head's loose.” —New York Times. Nay, perfection, I'm afraid, is for pretty maid, not for ma, Let me be a faulty till the end, if you will For perfection is, I hear, very but it’s dear at any price! Dana, in Life HUMOROUS. “What an energetic reformer Bank is!” ‘She isn't a reforiner; just starts reforms and then she qu “Tommy, you must not ate! your elders when they are talwa.n Wait until they stop.” “They never stop.” “Is she very stylish?” “I should st she was. Her baby is a year half old now and regards her utter stranger.” Buggins—I hear Smifkins ing golf. Does he —Says it's great. three caddies in the enjoy it? He has already hospital. . Customer—I told you I wanted 3 eggs boiled longer than three minutes, These are as hard as rock Wa te —Perhaps the kitchen clock is slow. sir. “Can I get some fresh eggs at your house today?’ asked a n¢ small Harry. “No, ma'am,” the little fellow, “All our gone dry." Wr cof venlicd hens havi “Young man,” said the old gentle man sadly, “I have only one dnu:h ter.” “That needn't worry you,” Ic turned the prospective son-in-law. “1 only want one.” Barber—Shall I take a littl ‘ends of your hair off, —Yes, I think you had better oft at the ends, out of the middle. Cholly—Gwacious! pennies inside the band eof my hat. | wondalh how they got thire iss Kostique—Probably changing your mind. “Do you think deters murderers crime?’ “Well, I believe it particular murderer who may demmned to suffer it.” The timid suitor had his case. “H-m!” be father, looking at him sternly. man, can you support a “Great heavens!” cried the yc “have you lost your job?” “Nettie,” Sir? unless you can ged it Here are five you've been fam Ang ma, said a mother to ner wall daughter, “I hope you will be able Lo | control that little temper of you day.” “Yes, mamma,” replied Nattie, “and I hope you will be able to con- trol that big temper of yours.’ “Well, sir,” remarked the observant passenger after watching the conduc- tor collect eight fares and five, ‘you need never be being struck by lightning.” not?’ asked the trusted employe. cause,” replied the cbservaut pass ger, “it is evident you are not a goot conductor.” FIRST RAILWAY IN THZ WEST. Independence with Vayne City, Mo. One of the first two towns west o the Mississippi river to have a road, now not only has not a ra ( but has long since ceased to exist even as a postoffice and cannot claim the distinction of having so much as a country store or a blacksmith shop, says the Kansas City Journal. This was Wayne City, located a few m down the Mississippi river from K sas City, and it was connected w Independence by railroad in 185i. The road was built by Independence capi- tal, and was projected in an cffo being made at the time by Independ ence to retain its waining influence in the overland trade, Wayne City being the river landing for Independ- ence. The railroad was but lttle more than a mile in length and was built with hewn rails and the t Connected passing over it were drawn by mules. A large, two-story brick depot as built in Independence and used as a warehouse and railway station, but the venture never proved successful | and the first line of railway ever con- structed in the west was early aban- doned. The depot in Independence was long used as a livery stable, but was burned nearly 20 years ago, and the very fact of the existence of the railroad had nearly passed from mem- ory until Commissioner W. P. Trick- ett of the Kansas City transportation bureau, in searching for material for a history of the railroads of Kansas City a few days ago discovered that Jack- son county was entitled to the honor of having been the pioneer in railroad building west of the Mississippi river The chief distinction of Wayne City now is its bluff, which is the highest point of land in Jackson county. I’ is a fesifonne 3 suburb of indepsndenen The Monkey and the Parrot. Here is a Chinese fable with a mozal, which might be expressed in English, “Don’t monkey with the buzz-saw.” But that is getting the cart before the house. It is about a monkey and a par- rot, and is as follows: A sparrow had its nest half-way up a tree, in the top of which dwelt a mon- key. After a heavy rain the sparrow snug and dry in its warm n:st, the monkey shaking his deippi and could not refrain from him thus: “Comrade, your skillful, your strength great, y« tellect clever; why do you live in sucl hands are a miserable state? Why not bulli a snug nest like mine?” The monkey, angered at the com placency of the sparrow, replied: “Am I to be mocked by an evil cr 3 you? Your nest is snug, is it? saying he threw the nest to the Moral: Don’t talk with a passionat man. Possibilities of Peat. There will be joy in Irclaad ani Scot land over the news that © Vienna of the latest peat. year there was a building in which everything, from the carpets on the floor to the curtains on the windows and the paper on the walls, was made from peat. Tha? combustible is now manufactured into fabrics which are said to have the toughness of linen with the warmth of wool, and blankets and other coverings made from it excel in warmth and cleanliness. possi In the Vienna exhibition of j.-t The percentage of increase of white school-children in Mis ippi last year=was 4.34 and of colored children 6.30, i | thee, | Largest Chain Ever Made in Western | friend, serving still | Miss | | come of which may i tion of a | t | land in Blair county |and joined the | P. unxsutawney, enn sylvania—Deserier Fagan Eelieved to be a Former Resident of Westmoreland Co. The follow 2 y Castle, Clearfield, $ Castle, $10; M Robe: rt A. E. Ree ames Nold, C The largest ¢ [ rn Penns “vans Chath Company of David Fagan, serted from the j of general, is belies | resident fo Penn, in county. Ie is thought to be a 1 of George Fagan, r pHy sentenced to the penitentiary for robbery. Apoll That A bitter fight is on between the Water Company and the citizens of town. The cl is made that the er supply is furnished direct from the Kiskiminetas river without any attempt at filtration, and that th ids and rei- use from the paper m and manufactories along that river tributary streams are responsibl cpidemic of typhoid fever and disease Burg PVC broke into the railroad, at West an early hour Monday morning, open the safe and secured maliey papers. From there they went to the office of the West Elizabeth Bridge C blew open the safe, completely wrecke d the building, and obtained money and some valuable papers. The mad d proportions throt blcw and and 0g scare is assuming grave out Ligonier vall and a wholesale s iter of dogs is progress. In the Four Mile run trict no one leaves his house withour a shotgun. It is not hroy yn Ww I » of the dog which bit u not can any estimate the probable number of dogs that v vitten. Hence the crusade. ns Pittsburg Plate Gk uck gas on the dis- at a depth of iy ure on the Lettie farm, : gas in paying quantities it will be pipe to Kittanning, where that company is erecting a large glass plant. The wil of the te Fran Johnstown, which cover iously estimated at from $400,c00, after mentioning a few beques leaves the residue to university, at South Bethlehem, ate the Frank Wil ams minor Lehigh to cre- fund, the in be loaned to poor and deserving students. Big Bald Knob, standing on the bor- r line of Bradford and Somerset coun- 3.000 feet above sea level, has been ertained by E. Mattley, a Pennsyl- vania railroad engineer, to be the high :st point in Pennsylv: Mr. Mattley has furnished his survey to the govern- ment engineers, having in charge the new geological map of the State. The American landed another good contract fc its local plants. The contract calls for 300 tons of structural steel for the erec- foundry and blasksmith shop ior the North German Lloyd Steamship c at Bremen, rmany. Th: been assigned to the Key stone bridge works, Pittsburg. The following postmasters have Been appointed: John ] Shaffer, Cone maugh, Cambria county, vice W. P < » 3ridge Company has ~ Coulter, removed; John H. Shields Shannondale, Clarion county, vice homas Smith, resigned; Levi Blair county, vice removed. 10.000 and the ex of thousands of doilars in fruitless bors ing for oil, the promoters of the under aking have abandoned their operatio The capitalists back of the project w from Johnstown, Spahr, Williamsburg C. A. Patterson, After the leasing of acres ot | county. 3 | The Shenango furnace at Sharon, which was idle on account of a 1 i has resumed operations. Judge S. Miller, who gr: anted a preliminary in- | junction, said: “If it costs every dollar | n the county tre asury and every man in Mercer county, we will protect the hum- blest man who wants to work.” Work has been commenced on the | erection of a new decorating glass plant in Uniontown. The main building wil e a two-story frame structure 110X 140 feet, and will cost about $8.coo. The company was recently organized there. It is expected to have the factory in operation in a few months. . The board of elders of the Irwin Pres- byterian Church are indignant because a gang of hoodlums removed the an nouncement sien from the church door and placed in its stead a tenet s The board has offered a reward of $5 for the arrest and conviction of the vandals. The mine workers employed by the firm of Crawiord & Doorn numbering about 30 men, quit work at the Honey Brook strippings and say they will re- main out until they get 1 10 per cent., which the grant. ot Work on the Youngstown i Shar- on electric railroad is prog ly, 150 men now being construction, Over ile ing has already been done. will be one of the finest in the four The barn of Albert Dick, of iesburg, Indiana cour is contents was destro Thx origin is said to have aris en from over- neated corn fodder stored in ihe mow The loss is $3,000; insuranc The husband of \ fer, whose murdered yw by the roadside near Reading ted suicide with probably the tol which killed the woman. was found in Reading Tuesday. 0. J. Reed. an commit- ex-councilman of Shamokin, who was recently convicted of conspiracy in connection with bor- ough paving contracts and admitted {o bail pending a decision of the superior court for a new trial, disappeared. The Pittsburg Plate which is having the township, near Glass Company, lands in Oliver Punxsutawney, tested for gas and oil, struck gas on the Gas- ton farm in the Bradiord sands at a depth of 2,500 feet. The pressure is 125 pounds. The 20 pot mills at the New C tin plate mill will be started next Mor day. The other departments of the plant are already in operation. Kerschdorf, near Heidelberg, has lively gr1-year-old blacksmith 2 church warden who recently climbe : to the top of the church steeple and tied a new rope to the bell after the younger men in the village had refused to risk! themselves. In China the silver tary unit, but its different cities. foo, on July 1, tael is the mone- value varies in the For instance, at Che- 1900, it was worth 67.8 cents, while at Haikwan it was worth 72.1. The Haikan tael is that used in the official statistics. - Pittsburg and Clarion | c firm declines to | How shall a mother who is weak and sick with some female trouble bear healthy children ? | How anxious women ought to be to give their children the blessing of a good constitution ! Tany women long for a child to bless their home, but be- cause of some debility or displacement of the female organs, they are barren. Preparation for healthy maternity is accomplished by Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound more suc- cessfully than by any other medicine, because it gives tone and strength to the parts, curing all displacements and in- flammation. Actual sterility in women is very rare. If any woman thinks she is sterile, let her write to Mrs. Pinkham, Lynn, Mass., whose advice is given free to all expectant or would- be mothers. Mrs. A. D. Jarret, Bzlmont, Ohio, writes: “Dear MRS. PINREAM 2 must write and tell you hat your Vege- table Compound has done for me. Before taking your medicine I was unabla to carry babe to maturity, havi eg lost two—one at six months and one at soven The doctor said next time I would die, but thanks to Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound, I did not die. bus am the proud mother of a six months old girl baby. She weighs nineteen pounds and has never seen a sick day in her life. She is the delight of cur home.” Mrs. Whitney’s Gratitude. “Duar MR. PINEHAM :(—From the time I was sixteen years old t#ll I was twenty-three 1 was troubled with weakness of the kidneys and terrible pains when my mophiy periods came on. 1 made up my mind to try your Vegetable Compound, and was soon relieved. The doctor said I never would be able to go my full time and have a living child, as I was con- stitutionally weak, I bh: ad lost a baby at seven months and half. The next time I continued to take your Compound: and I said then, if I went my full time and my baby lived to be three months old, I should send a letter to you. Iy baby is now seven months old. and is as healthy and hearty as any one could wish. I cannct express my gratitute to you, I was so bad that I did not dare to go away from home ; > to stay any length of time Praize God for Ns t dA Lydia BE. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com-= MRS.L.Z WHITNEYo® BABY | poun d; and may others w re suffering § = do as iid and find relief. £ you suc- cess in (he future as in the past, and may many homes be brightened as mine has been.” —Mgs. L. Z. WHITNEY, 4 Flint St., Somervills, Mass.” The medicine that curss the ills of women is Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound. Coa! in Arctic Regions. and Coal beds have been found here there near the sea in the Arctic lands, and though the qual of the coal is i not of the best it has been exceeding Se ° PORE *o00S useful to a few Arctic exploring expedi- 3 4 tions. One of the latest examples is og AND oo the steamer which carried fresh supplies ¢ S to Mr. Peary in northwest Greenland 2 3 last year and which found it v oS © venient to take on a lot of coal * © Greenland before proceeding to Peary’s § There is one flavor in pork and 2 headquarters. ¢ beans that all people like. It was n ih European Arctic, on the other 3 devised in the rural homes of New hand, attempts are now making to turn g England. It has made Boston the . the coal found there to commercial ac- @ synonym of beans. 2 @ count. In our kitchen we get ly. & hg exact About half way between Norway and 2 that flavor. Our Bal ry 3 Spitzbergen is an island on which some © by an expert. We put them up in @ polar bears were seen when it was d $ key-opening cans. Your grocer s | covered, and the little speck of land gg will supply you. ® yas accordingly James Beas iene 3 3 Plenty of other canned beans, but : d e caps J) = * v @ that flavor comes only in . driftwood from Siberia that have lodged | @ y In Li's s not only on its eastern coast, but have @ LIBBY, McNEILL & LIBBY © | also been carried inland by big waves : hicago * { that sometimes overwhelm the lowest @ Send a postal for our booklet, “How to S part of the island. Over two years ago | © Make Good Thingsge Eat © the Scandinavian explorer, ntrup, Se, .} made a careful survey and study ofthis] = Fr yYYYy lisland and among the interesting things | = he found were beds of coal, says the New York “Sun.” | Mr. Theodore Lerner and the German Sea Fisheries union conceived the idea that it would be profitable to exploit | these mines, and a company was o n- ized for this purpose. Not a great deal of money wag put into the enterprise, however. and the result of its prelin nary work 1 last year, in view of the inf - | ior quality of the coal. the short work- ing season and long distance transporta- | tion, gave so little promise for the fu- ture that the effort was Don’t Stop Tobacco Suddenly! It injures Qervons System, to do so. BAGO- CURD it Really Cr fires 2 A EUREKA .a Crosse, Wi £2.50. ¢ IEMLC AL CO. My neighbor's child was given up, the family concluded it wounldbeuselessto make furthe: efforts to save it, but on bein persuaded, they administered not renewed | during the past season. A while ago FREY’S YERMIFUGE, the mining property claimed by the and over 100 Worms were ex- company on Bear island was sold at polled The c bild recovered. auction in Hamburg and naturally brought a very small price. A perfect tonic for child E. & 8. FREY, Baltimore, “ina. Treasure Shops ¢f London. Do you know that most of the ol silver you buy in Holland is imported from England? If you have about the Netherlands, be sure have rubbed your inquiring nose against | whe real worth of W. the dim glass of old curiosity shops and L. 3 been tempted in after an old silve windmill, a ship in full sail, an old snuff QUGIAS $30 UNION MADE 1DOL randered wandere SHOES you h other makes is £4.00 to lie box, a sugar sifter, a tinv silver sofa, Cur®4Gi eLine a crowing cock, some dainty trifle that gaunop be auntie at you can carry away comfortably; and| 303 price. Over1,000,- while you have been gazing with delight sanisies caro at these tiny Dutch treasures you have also observed more important treasures, a silver beaker, an old Dutch salver. | In the end you have come away with | valuable and characteristic souvenirs | of Holland; and probably your feet are barely clear of the old storehouse than the London traveler follows you with a fresh supply or to solicit orders for | the same. A wonder city, London! If it does not make everything, as they say Bir- We are the largest makers of me: and $3.50 shoes in the world. We mal ss and sellmore 83 and $3.50 shoes than any other 5H manufacturers in the U. 8. . i 1 mingham does, it makes many arkn- | ringha d on it m kes many rems ark | The ronntnt oy ble things, and deals in every conceiv- | BEST Dotsiss $3.00 and $3.50 shoes for able article under the sun. In nothing] Toh a ress known BEST is it more notable than for its supply $3 5 | Shey have to give better satisfac: 1: ore noah Jt a tion than other makes because $3 00 of ancient furniture and old silver, Ai the standard has alwaye been . a ie ae 2 i placed 80 high that the’ wearers of it made to perfection, with every SHOE. Expect ‘more for theie mones SHOE. mark of age, but, of course, a vast| LE a can get clsewhere. quantity of it genuine. Half a dozen | THE H ON more W. L. Dou, glue $3 an nd $3.50 x Li PES EN 5 { Berlins, New Yorks and Parises io- | ARE Th te SE make ia beta Taub Tener should keep py exclusive sale in each town gether could hardly match the treasure | swe eve o shops of gold and silver work that mz | many of the London streets museums of gs At A walk along Coventry street, | Bond street, Oxford street, down to the i Marble Arch and back by Piccadilly, t. James’ and Pall Mall will set you NEW DISCOVERY; gives wondering how a market can be found SE5ey Bom of tesaoninh ral TO daw bora sufficient to warrant the vast stocks of Free. Dr.E.H.GREEN'S SOX, Box B, Atlanta, Ga. old silver and gold plate on view and | packed away in those localities.—New- castle (Eng.) ( “hronicle. factory, enclosing price and State kind of leather, size, and w Our shoes will reach you yi ere. WW. L. Douglas Shoe Co. Brockton, Mass, 3 oy Igy Good. Use § est Coug! yrup. s se # To Gre a Cola in One Day. Sold by PTI6 9 Take LAXATIVE BROMO QUININE TABLETS. All iP [ Srupgtess refund the money if it fails to cure, E. W. GROVES Signature is on each box. 25c. in time. P. N. U. 45 '00. | Hore svoavaa™{ Thompson's Eye Water | Snails, by means of an acid which | they exude, contrive to bore holes in solid limestone