mm VERS rness— Sev- »n with drivers t Trang- Attacks » squad Me com- ate de- he dis- ns met y Dpick- masters. a few stoned e hors- reets a ompany of an vith an , Sever- ots” cut wagon ing his arrests rns Out ttshurg, * would nd use, in the tim of , For - g about business contri- publican b.”. He oncerns, JO. is trail, it was with the in the convic- d work- urg, but time for jht Near express for Cam- ht train ards, 27 about 15 of them Bradford es Zane, passen- ff with der the : Zane pital and . to the yng with 1 ing the assenger own In week to been a 1 grades 's which > season domestic ased on follows: {X and No. 1, unwash- ]ood un- delaine, delaine, d above, 2, 29@ 1 4 9% @281%¢C; ne wash- TED. t Irons 1es. an at- med Ed- nt of six g. Fifty rricaded. with red- 1 stones, The con- rcements bb with on both the even- of the induced ) arrests the high Africa on ht about grappling daily be- g to the 3s of the . can state e P. Uf dates for president- indorses he nomi- fairbanks » the ad- toosevelt. egistered n for this ge SRA Sst pire eosin SADIE. ROBINSON. Pretiy Girl Suffered From Nerpousness and Pelvic Catarrh—Found Quick Relief in a Few Days, NERVOUSNESS AND WEAKNESS CURED BY PE-RU-NA. Miss Sadie Robinson, 4 Rand street, Mal- den, Mass., writes: “Peruna was recommended to me about a year ago as an excellent remedy for the troubles peculiar to our sex, and as I found that all that was said of this’ medicine was true, I am pleased to endorse it. “I began to use it about seven months ayo jor weakness and nerv- nusness, causad from overwork and sleeplessness, and found that in a few days I began to grow strong, my appetite increased and I began to sleep better, consequently my nerv- ousness passed away and the weal- ness in the pelvic organs soon dis- appeared and I have been well and sirong ever since,” Address Dr. 8. B. Hartman; President of The Hartman Sanitarium, Columbus, O., for free medical advice. All correspond- ence strictly confidential. Distance of Stars. Speaking roughly, we have reason, from the data so far available, to be- lieve that the stars of the Milky Way are situated at a distance between 100,000,000 and 200,000,000 times the distance from the sun. At distances less than this it seems likely that the stars are distributed through space with some approach to uniformity. We may state as a general conclus- ion, indicated by several methods of making the estimate, that nearly all the stars which we can see with our telescopes’ are contained within a sphere mot likely to be much more than 200,000,000 times the distance of the sun. The inquiring reader may here ask another question. Granting that all the stars we can see are contained within this limit, may there not be any pumber of stars ‘without the limit which are invisible only because they aré too far away to be seen?—Simon Newcenth in Harper's Magazine. § .Roses Old as World. Rose culture’s beginning goes” bhaek beyond records, says the Chicago" Journal. The flower is mentioned in the earliest Coptic manuscripts. India’s traditions take the rqge to ‘the times of the gods on earth. Egypt had roses, wild and tame, before the Roman occupation made it, in a way, Rome’s commercial rose garden; yet curiously enough, there is no refer- ence to the flower in painting, sculp- ture or hieroglyplrics.. Japan in our time, parallels Bgypt. Roses flourish there, but do not serve as a motif for | artists. There is this further like- ness—neither Egypt nor Japan has a rose song or a love song proper. ’ Bistop W. W, Cluff, of the Mormon Chueh, at Salt I.ake, has arrived in Mexico, charged with the mission of purchasing large tracts of land upon which Mormon colonies will be estab- lished. SAFEST FOOD In Any Time of Trouble is Grape-Nuts. Food to rebuild the strength and that is pre digested must be selected when one is convalescent. At this time there is nothing so valuable as Grape-Nuts for the reason that this food is all nourishment and is also all digestible nourishment. A wopan who used it Bays: “Some time age I was very ill,with typhoid fever, so ill ‘everyone thought I would die, even myself. I left me go weak I could mot properly digest food of any kind and I also had much howel trouble which left ine a weak, helpless wreck. “I needed nourishment as badly as anyone could, but none of the tonics helped me until I finally tried Grape- Nuts food morning and evening. This not only supplied food that I thought delicious as could be but it also made me perfectly well and strong again so I can do all my housework, sleep well, can eat anything without any trace of bowel trouble and for that reason alone Grape-Nuts food is worth its weight in gold.” Name given by Postum C8, Battle Creek, Mich. : Typhoid fever like some other dis- eases attacks the bowelsand frequently gets up bleeding and makes them for months incapable of « digesting the starches and therefore pre digested Grape-Nuts Is invaluable for the well known reason that in Grape-Nuts all the starches have been transformed into grape sugar. This means that the first stage of digestion has been me- chanically accomplished in Grape-Nuts food at the factories and therefore any- one, no matter how weak the stomach, can handle it and grow strong, for all the nourishment is still there. There's a sound reason and 10 days trial proves. . here t and says that she'd give a penny for WAR. It {ar transcends the interest ¢ Of Russia or Japan. . It’s the men who can’t raise whiskers, Against the men who can, —Puck. BET BY TEN WORDS. Links — “Four thousand Japs were killed by the explosien of a Russian | magazine they had taken.” : Jinks — “Well. they ought to have known better than to try to read a Rus- sian magazine.” — Cincinnati Commer- cint-Tribune. { . er. THEN HE LEFT. “Yes,” said My. Borem, “I'm disap- pointed in these shoes, It’s funny now- adays- how one’s things wear out be- fore one knows it.” i “Yes,” replied Miss Weary, with a yawn, “especially one's iveleoine,’— Philadelphia Ledger. : —- NEXT. Stranger (in Moosup)—“Are you the local judge? ii Judge Mossy—“I reckon I am!” Stranger-*“Well, I am the advance agent for, Percy Van Rocks and his I settle his fines in advance so as to save delay!” —Puck, auto. «MUST: BB. CLEVER. TPassorhy—T thought {hat you were | blind?” i : wt Mendieant—“Well, boss, times is so hard and competition “is so great that even a blind man has to keep his eyes open nowadays if he wants tbo do any business at all.”—Chicago Journal, * SURE SIGN, © “You Say he has a vikionary and ime practical nature?’ : “Yes,” answered the girl who is em- ployed in the postoffice’ “He is one of these people who write ‘Rush’ on an cuvelope “instead of putting én a spe- cial delivery stump.”—Washington Star QUICK COMPREHENSION Mr. Borely—“Don’t you think a great many uninteresting people come to this place?” Mrs. Ketchup—“Oh, I'm comparative. ly a stranger, you know. Do you come every year? —Chicago | Daily News. BRIGHTENING THE PAPER, Bangs—“Wonder what there was in tlie paper to-day about Masterson ?”’ Grimes—"Didn’t know there was any- thing.” ¥ x Bangs—*“0Oh. there must have been. He was saying to me that to-day’s is- sue was unusually interesting.—Bos- ton Transcript. STINGY, “Why did you quit the Richleys, Jane?’ “It was the stinginess of ‘em, mum, I was a-lookin’ out me kitchen window one day, when the mistress comes in me thoughts — and them millionaires, moind you!”’—Detroit Free Press. IN SUMMER, “Where is Boxom?>»’ “He's acting-as clerk in a sumer hotel.” : : “How does he like #7” “Not. at all.” “Why not?’ “Says it’s too hot work.” “Hot work?” “Yes: he has to stand over the vegis ter all day.” —Cleveland Plain Dealer.. TOO. VANITY REPROVED. Centleman (to burglar)—“I say, what are you doing in my house?” ; Burglar (coolly)—"Your house! Is it your house? I thought you only rented it? Gentleman {quite taken aback)— “Why, yes, but, ’pon my word. of ali—" Jurglar—*“Well, don’t you be so ’igh and mighty, talkin’ about your house, indeed. Good night.” — Loadon Tit- Bits. A LIGHT REASON. “Why are ycu so happy, old man? Pay raised?’ “Xope.” “Wife away?” “Nope.” “On your vacation?’ “Nope.” “Then why so joyful ?* “I just got my gas bill and it's only half what 1 expected.” ~ Cleveland Plain-Dealer CURE YOUR KIDNEYS. When the Back Aches and Bladder Troubles Sel In, Get at the Cause. Don’t make the mistake of believing back ache and bladder ills to be local ailments. Get at the cause and cure the kidneys. Use Doan’'s Kidney Pills which have cured thousands. Onptain. 8: DP. Hunter, of En- gine No. 14, Pitts- burg Pa. Fire Department, and residing at 2729 Wylie avenue, “ZZ says: “It was three years ago that I used Doan's Kidney Pills for an attack of kidney trouble that was mostly back ache, and they fixed me up fine. There is no mistake about that, and if 1 should ever be troubled again I would get them first thing, as I know what they are.” ‘ For sale by ail dealers. Price 5H0 cents. Foster-Milburn Co.. Buffalo, N.Y, Heliotropism. Heliotropism is the peculiar proper- ty shown by many plants, notably the sunflower, of always turning toward the sun. o . In the case of seedlings the phenom- ena is especially marked. The cells on the light side are apparently re- tardéd in growth, thus causing a cur- vature toward that side. = Professor Romarses experimented with an -in- i termittent light, such as that of an electric spark discharge, upon mustard i seedlings, and found the heliotropic effect produced in this way far great- : er than that caused by the sun or any other form of light. Strange to say, however, this abnormal influence is unaccompanied by the generation of phlorophyll, the green coloring matter in plants which require sunshine for its proper production.—Pall Mall Ga- zette. A Long Cable. The longest and largest cableway is to be constructed on the Argentine side of the Andes Mountains, to ex- tend from the Chilecito station of the Argentine Northern Railroad for a to- tal of 32 miles. Its termination at this end will be 14,933 feet above sea level, and the cngine: station that will be erected at this point of the cableway will be the highest in the world. A New Mnemonic. A Vienna society has been formed to { aid persons with short memories. A card is issued, upon which the purchas- er writes the date of an engagement and posts to the society’s office. By, the first post on the day of his en- gagement the card is received by the purchaser. rr ————— m——h— BTATE oF OHIO, CITY OF TOLEDO, | vcas COUNTY. Fraxg J. CHENEY make oath that he is senior partner of the firm of I. J, CHENEY & Co., doing business in the City of Toledo, County and State aforesaid, and that said firm will pay the sum of ONE HUNDRED DOL- LARS for each and every caso of CATARRE that cannot be cured by the use of HaLL's CATARRH CURE. FRANK J. CHENEY. Sworn to before me and subscribed in my ~+—, presence, this 6th day of Dacems- {sar t ber, A.D., 1886. A.W.GLEASON, — Notary Public, Hall's Catarrh Cureis taken internally, and &cts directly on the blood and mucous sur- faces of the system. Send for testimonials, free. F. J. CuENEY & Co., Toledo, O. Sold by all Druggists, 75¢. Take Hall’s Family Pills for constipation, SS. Kaiser Adopts British Motto. The German Emperor has ordered from a Berlin firm a quantity of pri- vate notepaper stamped with the im- perial eagle surrounded by the ribbon of the Order of the Garter (of which he is a Knight), with its motto, “Honi soit qui mal y pense.” Capt. Webb Hcids Record. Three more swimmers have failed in thelr attempt to cross the Englis channel. This narrow stretch of wa- ter has been fatal to the’ ambition of a number of those seeking aquatic laurels. Captain Webb, who was un- questionably tne greatest -long-dis- tance swimmer that has ever been be- fore the public, was the only man who successfully fought his way across the English channel. A NEW CRIPPLE CREEK IN OLD MEXICO. The Toltec Mining & Smelting Co. owns NINE PRODUCING GOLD MINES, with fine water power, 'n the State of Oaxaca, Mexico, covering 250 acres. One ledge has 800,000 tons of frees milling ore in Sant above water Jevel, averaging £14.00 per ton, and there are FOURTEEN other ledges. ¥ motion stock. ton . pear value $1.00, for next thirty days, for the purpose of erecting a mill with fifty tons daily capacity. T ill net $500 8 day after paying all ox. ses, or Tr cent. annual dividends on In vahre of all stock issued. Every dollar invested goes to dopo, the Jone Wan MEMBER, our pro erty is in the the hesgrtof a wordertully rich rola district. A few huadTed dollars invested now will soon inoreass ten old in value, and produce an income for life. High- est Bank references furnished Remit by Bank Ex- Change r write for illustrated prospectits, to A. W. NNINGHAM, over First Nat'l Bank, Waco, Tex. NORTH-SOUTH-EAST-NEST 2 YOU Wikk FIND 1sOWER:¢ ® 2 & k Us ppa® WATERPROSF OLED CLOTHING LYERYWMERE: The best materialy, skilled workmen and sixty-seven yeors experience have made 4% TOWER'S Siickers, Goats and Hats famous the world over They are modein black or yellow for all kinds of wet work. : 1 andevery garment bearingthe SIGN OF \ THE 25H 15 guarantead to give sat ABOVE isfaction. All reliable dealers sei them “| AJTOWER CO.BOSTON MASS. USA. ALL OTHERS | 1owze CAADUAN C0. Lined TORONTO, OAK. ANTE AGENTS to sell a reliable house Ww “**hold article Raving a large profi Address, Carrier No. 3. Utica, N. Y. eulieied with Thompsen’s Eye Water Ta2NU Hon 7 FFFISIFFIFFISIIFIIY | FARM TOPICS. 1884440060000 00000400| SELL ONLY THE BEST. Some people take the sweet unction to their sonis that any kind of butter is good enough to trade to the store, and get mad if the merchant sticks his nose to it to see if it is salable. CHICKEN CHATTER. Feed green food daily... Overfeeding means death to poultry. Keep the ves- sels and quarters clean. Plenty of ex ercise often prevents’ feather pulling. Bran and clover mixed is an excellent food for the fowls. WELL FED SHEEP PAY. Well fed sheep always produce the most and best wool: Softness . and plianey of wool usually ‘correspond in i degree with fineness. Ilarshness and dryness are always detrimental.to the quality, even if the fibre is otherwise t wood. . . RULES FOR FEEDING.’ bo Lach farmer must make his own rules . for feeding, _as the amount: of food required by animals, even when of thie’same breed and of ndéarly the same age’ and weight differs “widely, Some auimals-are very: dainty, while others will accept.any kind of food offered. - -The- standard rule for feed- ing according to live weight is valda- ble to a certain extent, but in all flocks or herds some animals will eat much ‘more than others, hence the wants of each individual nifust be observed and the animal fed accordingly. % : WIRE STRETCHER: A good wire gtietcher can be mage cheaply as shown in cut. “Cut a hole five ov six fee: long, and size preferred. Get a bolt, cut off head and bend back: put through hole about twelve ; x ED — 1 Ce — ® inches from butt. Now take a piece of iron ten inches long, link to bolf as shown in cut aid make hook at other end to hold wire. * This ‘stretcher wil do goed work and.work. nicely.—John Jackson, in The Epitomist, CLEAN THE BEGGS, 7 . To give the pigs a thorough secrub- bing may appear to be labor thrown away, but if two lots of hogs are treat- ed alike in cvery respect, except that one lot receives a thorough scrubbing with soapsuds ounce in a while, there will ‘be a marked difference in favor of ihat are washed when the time for slaughtering arrives. A clean bed of straw, with a dry louse, so as the hogs to afford them comfort at night, will also promote thrift and growth. The hog is naturally a clean animal and njoys a bath. If considered a filthy animal that devours filt food it. is secause of the treatment given. Hogs select clean and whelesome food always if given the opporiunity to do 50. rr ie PROFITABLE DUCKS. A number of inquiries have been re- ceived by the editor of this department asking for information regarding the profit in duck raising. The writer has found that raising ducks paid if they could have a considerable range, plenty of green stuff and also grain in con- siderable quantity. To feed at this rate coitld only be done when the bulk of the food was raised ou the farm, and even then the work was not profit- able unless a nearby market could be had at fair prices. es | Fortunately, we are located near a summer resort, where the prices paid for ducks are ¢ood, and we market the birds’ as soon as they are well feaih- cred out. The grain is, of course, of last year's growing, but we keep the ducks in good growing shape by using plenty of green:stuff from the garden and skim milk from the dairy. Unless conditions are unusually favorable, most farmers will find chicken rais- ing more profitable than duck raising. — Indianapolis News. THE COUNTY FAIR. Much may be said in favor of a county fair. Hs educational features are excellent reasons for keeping up the home fair. Improved: live stock of every class is brought before the farm- Interest in improved live stock is strengthened. But there are many hindrances in showing live stock at the county fair. The premium lists are indefinite and may be made to take in all the cross- breeds. In the sheep department they coften’have a downs type, as they call it. This mears that Hampshire downs, Shropshives, Soutirdowns and all their various crosses may compete for the sane prize. The judge knows little or nothing about breeding types. If he sees a Ia well-framed black face, with good lengthy wool (probably a Shropshire, Cotswold cross), it is the ! prize winner, and the man with the ex- ers. jy toward educating the Anderson, in the Inid pure-bred returns home dis- & Not until our county fair i 's are selected from the breed- ing ternity can we expect to make county fair of advantage to the former. Farm products of the high- est type mu n competition with cach other. } ‘e horse draws the crowds, and ofte the farmer's ney, but does ically nothing farmer.—W. B. anapolis News. gets China holds the world's record in the | way of executions. There are at least 12,008 leg -%, . 'e, oy a or wna kay, s Mrs. H askell, Worthy VV oe. T emplar, Teide pendent Order Good Templars, of Silver Lake, Mass, tells of her cure by the use of Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound. ‘“ DEAR MRs. : Four years ago I was nearly dead with inflam- : Pingaau : mation and ulceration. I endured daily untold agony, and life’was a burden to me. friend, medicines and washes internall made up my mind that there was no relief for me. ; noticed a bottle of Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound. and extérnally until X alling at the home of a My friend endorsed it highly and I decided to give it a trial to see if it would -help me. It took patience and used Lydia E. P ham’s rseverence for I was in bad condition, and I egotable Compound for nedrly five months before I was cured, but what®a change, from despair to happiness, from misery to the delightful exhilaratin feeling health always brings. I would -not change back for a thousand dollars, and your Vegetable Compound if & | grand medicine. ‘1 wish every sick woman would try it and be convinced.” — MRs. IDA HAsgEry, Silver Lake, Mass. Good Templars. 4 Worthy Vice Templar, Independent Order of ‘When a medicine has been successful in more than a million cases, is it justice to yourself to say, without trying it, “I do not i .. believe it would help me” ? Surely you cannot wish to remain weak, and sick and dis- couraged, exhausted with each day’s work. You have some derangement of the feminine organism, and .Lydia E.Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound will help you just as surely as it has others. Iirs. Tillie Hart, of Larimore, N. D., says: | cum © “DEAR Mas. PiNkgAM: I might have been spared many months of suffering and pain if I bad known of the efficacy of Lydia ham’s Nogatable Compoun sooner, for ing anything which helped me before I tried the Vegetable Compound. a of the menstrual period every month; aus i$ meant much suffering and pain. Some months the flow was very scanty and others it was gl fuse, but after I had used the Compound 1 8 two months I became regular and natural, and so I continued until I.felt perfectly well, and the’ parts were strengthened to perform the work: without assistance and pain. ent woman now, where before I did not care to live, and I am pleased to testify as to the good your Vegetable Compound has done for me," Sincerely yours, Mgrs. Tinriz HART, Larimore,N.D, Be it, therefore, believed b who are ill that Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vege~ table Compound is the medicine they should take. It has stood the test of time, and it has hundreds of thousands of cures’ “to its credit. Women should comsider it unwise to use any other medicine. Mrs. Pinkham, whose address is L: ’ Mass, will answer cheerfully and without cost all letters addressed to her by sick women. E. Pink- a few months tried many remedies without find- I dreaded the ap I am like a differ- all women Perhaps she has Just the knowledge that will help your case — try her to-day — it costs nothing. : Cost of Warships. A modern battleship costs probabiy 10 times what a Constitution or a Vic- tory cost a century ago, yet its life of active usefulness, even barring de- - struction in a sea figut, is compara- tively brief. Bo rapid are the ad- vances in the science of naval archi- tecture and armament that within 10 years of her launching a Massachu- - setts or an Oregon has become a relic of the past, and is doomed to speedy oblivion in the junk yard. FITS permanentiy cured. No fits ornarvous- ness after first day’s use of Dr. Kline’s Great NerveRestorer,$2trial bottleand treatise free Dr. R. H. KLinE,Ltd., 931 Arch 8t., Phila., Pa, In Quito every one uncovers to ‘a flash of lightmang. TamsurePiso’sCure forConsumptionsaved my life three years ago.—Mrs. Tmomas Ron- EINs, Maple St., Norwich, N.Y. Feb. 17, 1900 The life of a bicycle, if regularly used, is four years. Girl .life Saver. { Miss Norma Hamilton, 19, has en- tered the serviee of the Long Branch life saving corps, and will have to pa- trol the beach in stormy weather as well as the men in the service.. She is an expert swimmer, and an all- round athlete. > Had 13 Children. An immigration record was broken at New York last week when a Scotch woman named Margaret Bell landed with her 13 children. The oldest was a man of 30. There were twins aged seven and another pair four years old. The woman herself is 50. Her hus- band has been in this country six years and two sons have been with him. He is a miner at Pittston, Pa. PILES - weeks shey not trouble me at all. Caxcarets have done wonders for me. I am entirely cured and feel like a new man.” George Kryder, Napoleon, Q. CANDY CATIARTIG, TE TA [ig They Pleasant, Palatable, Potent, Taste Good. Do Good, Naver Sicken, Weaken or Gripe, 10c, 2c, 58. Never sold in bulk. The genuine tablet stamped cog. Guaranteed to cure or your money baek. Sterling Remedy Co., Chicago or N.Y. 503 ANNUAL SALE, TEN MILLION BOXES The Eminent Scotch Physician When all other help fails consult DOCTOR GINNER, He wiil cure you of Cancer, Consumption Nervous Iliseasesa and long. standing come plaints. “Note ‘the address, 703 Pann Avenue, Pitsburg, Pa. - All'advice frees of charge. POPPI PICVVPP POPPE OL PPS WANTED $8 to $15 week: by efther sex kai less hosiery for western market; our iun- proved family machines, with ribbing at- tachment, furnished 1amilies who do net own a machine, on easy payment plan: write at unce for full particulars and cem meoc> making money; ne experience re- * quired. UNITED STATES WUOLLN COM- PANY, Detrolt, Mich. POV 0000000000 0000000000000 asily earned + +000 *0 4 +4444 PEHSIONS on age at §2,—Civil War; or on aiga- bility. any war, and forawi iows. Have records of most loyal soldiers’ service, and ages of Ohio nen, 39 years practice, Laws and advice FRER A. W.McCornick &Soxs, 518 Walnut 5-., CincinnatyC DROPSY Tiscover oy cases. Send for book of testimonials and 1{) drys’ treatment Free. Dr. H. H. GREEN'S SONB Atlagta Ga Hurts, When ad St. Jacobs Oil The old monk cure, strong, straight, sure, tackles 2 in Sprains, | Bruises The muscles flex, the soreness di § ?
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers