ET TERS rere A BR Re A Waa CS 3 " CRE < a THE TONIC quipped with our 1 or beast and 'Y waking record fi . Our line: : RIFLES # PISTOLS # SHOTGUNS Rifie Telescopes, Etc. linsist | Send 4c in stamps for 140 on the STEVENS. 1 : | page catalog desc thing + ENS line. cannot obtain out pop Profusely illustrated, and models, we ship direct, | contains points on Shoot- express prepaid, upon | ing, Ammunition, Proper receipt of catalog price. Care of Firearms, etc. Beautiful three-color Aluminum Hanger will be for- J warded for 10 cents in stamps. J. STEVENS ARMS AND TOOL CO, P. O. Box 4095 FALLS, MASS. U.S. A. ? Ask yourdealeran CHICOPEE Sewing Machine STANDARD GRAND. SWELL FRONT. LOCK AND CHAIN STITCH. TWO MACHINES IN ONE. BALL BEARING STAND WHEEL. e also manufacture sewing machines that retail from £12.00 up. The! ard” Rotary runs as silent asthe Makes 300 stitches while other machines make 2! 4 A707 to oun Teesl Qeilon or if there is no THE Standard Sewing Machine Co., CLEVELAND, OHIO. REICH & PLOCK, AGENTS, MEYERSDALE, PA. Backache Any person having backache, kidney pains or bladder trouble who will take two or three Pine-ules upon retiring at night shallbe relieved before morning. : The medicinal virtues of the crude gums and resins ob- . tained from the Native Pine have been recognized by the medical pro- fession for centuries. In Pine-ules we offer all of the virtues of the Native Pine that ave of value in relieving ail Kidney and Bladder Troubles Prepared by PINE-ULE MEDICINE CO., CHICAGO SOLD BY ELK LICK PHARMACY. -—rz yy Fe wm eewrmy moa = , \ We LRXEYE (UGH SYRL? Cures all Cougis ard The Red i” 2 i lover Bios- assists in expcliing scenand the Colds from the —— , Hovey Eee System by {ety bottle gently moving Fl the bowels. gis A certain cure \% ly for croup and whooping-cough. {Trade Mark Registered.) KENNEDY'S uoume HONEYm™TAR PREPARED AT THE LABORATORY or &. O. DeWITT & CO., CHICABO. U. 8. A. SOLD BY E. H. MILLER. KILL v= COUCH § ano CURE tHE LUNGS wm Pr. King's New Discovery enn fTONSUMPTION Price FOR | oucHs and s0c & $1.00 oLDS Free Trial. i Burest and Quickest Cure for all THROAT and LUNG TROUB- { LES, or MONEY BACK. owns Early Risers The famous little pills. spire Early Risers The famous little plils. todo! Dyspepsia Gure ‘Digests what you eat. Kennedy's Laxative Honey and Tar Suton ail Coughs, and expels Colds from system by gcutly moving the bowels. ! " Crude | A Column Thoughts | Home | Dedicated As They | ait | to Tired | Fall Circle | Mothers From the | @s They Editorial | Join the Pen:— | Depart- | Home Pleasant | ! Circle at Evenin | Evening Reveries. | Ment. | Tie. Be queen of your home. Reign su- preme in the hearts of your husband and children. The average housewife finds more use for a tack-hammer and stove-lid lifter than for algebra and geometry. The humblest home may be made at- tractive with flowers and music, and these are factors of happiness far great- er than the trappings of wealth. Half the joy of life comes from get- ting good out of things as we go along. Some of us are always putting off our enjoyments. After a while we expect to take a rest,see a friend, read a book. But after a while never comes. The good time we are looking forward to lies ns far away as ever. All our life is spent in meaning to overtake it and enjoy it. Meanwhile we toil, drudge, and grow old, passing by with unseeing eye the happiness we might get out of every day. Let us study the value of the beauti- ful. The influence of the beautiful is largely of a subconscious nature, it is silent, permeating and powerful. The ministry of the beautiful has a refining effect. A taste for music, poetry, pic- tures, etc., tends to destroy the attrac- tion for the vulgar. A home of beauty, of taste and refinement always tends to elevate and ennoble the mind, and cultivate the spirit of contentment. Beauty fills the world, if we have eyes to see it. It is open to all. The rose is as fragrant, the lily as white and. the hyacinth as delicately blue, when cul- tivated by the poor, as by the jeweled fingers of the wealthy. GOOD MOTHERS. It is claimed that all the Presidents of the United States had good mothers. It is said that John Q. Adams until the day of his death said the prayer his mother had taught him. Lincoln said, “Allthat Tam I owe to my mother.” Garfield kissed the wrinkled face of his mother on the day of his inaugura- tion and said: “You brought me to this.” Grover Cleveland said, “World- ly honors or worldly perplexities will never cause me to forget the lessons my mother taught me.” As the shad- ows lengthen, the memory of a moth- er’s love becomes intensified. The vision grown dim with age becomes clear, and pictures of childhood days rise before us in their perfection. It is well ro few instances are on record where a mother has failed to impress her children with the value and purity of a mother’s love. Most of our great men accord to their mothers the credit of their best achievements. The moral nature of the child is largely what he inherits from his mother. Genius of- ten comes from the father. We often see sons of plain, uneducated mothers ri