SOME DAY. He’s not at all distinguished, but You want to wait awhile and see, When once that fellow leaves the rut There’s nothing that he couldn’t be. He’s in a rather humble place, But that’s not where he means to stay, He means to strike a swiiter pace And move up to the front—some day. Just now he hasn't had his chance To show the world what he can do. There's so much adverse circumstance To keep his plans from going through. But time will bring his opening And clear the obstacles away; He’s merely crouching for the spring, You'll see what he will do—some day. He’s getting past the flush of youth, At times we think he’s lacking steam— Some people say, to tell the truth, He's less disposed to do than dream. But he has faith that’s fresh and green, Although his head is getting gray, is hope’s sublime, his faith’s serene, He means to do a lot—some day. ia —Atlanta Constitution. £4 {Love and Tight Shoes. Miss Pendleton said to Brownlow as they left the house: ‘You needn't speak to me again, for I shall not answer you.” Brownlow said: ‘That would hardly be polite, would it? I re- member that in my infancy I was admonished to ‘speak when I was spoken to, come when I was called, shut the door after me’—and some- thing else which rhymed, but which I have forgotten. I was told that was ‘manners.’ Now, you wouldn't like me to think that you had no manners, would you?” It is a matter of perfect indiffer- ence to me what you 2? She bit her lip and did not com- plete the sentence. “You were saying Miss Pendleton did not answer. Brownlow looked at her and smiled. 999 i “I don’t want to obtrude my society “If for the moment on you,” he said. you would rather be without me I | mat and statesman, Thiers, which could go back, you know. Or,” he |once belonged to this prominent added, “I might walk behind you a |statesman’s deecased wife. It is few paces—say, twelve feet. strikes me as a respectful distance. Which shall it be?” He stopped, as if to fall back. “I won't have you following me,” “If you wish to leave me you are at liberty to do so. It will look strange, but I don’t suppose you will she said in icy tones. I suppose I can go alone. care for that.” “Well, won't it look strange if you It would look as Be- sides, as I said before, it would hard- don’t speak to me? if you had quarreled with me. ly be polite.” “I shall treat you precisely as I would any other gentleman while we After that I don’t wish to are there. see you.” “Surely, I am to escort you home?” After this “I said ‘after that.’ evening, if you prefer it.” “But I don’t prefer it.” ““Whether you prefer it or not, I And in the meantime I wish to be excused from prefer it—infinitely. conversation with you.” b Miss Pendleton turned to look down the car track. “It’s coming now,” low. As the car stopped Brownlow laid “Wait,” he his hand upon her arm. said in a quick, businesslike way “Do we take an Oakwoods ora Jack- | of a pearl, while the chemical com- son Park car?” She glared at him for an instant but his face showed innocent doubt and only that. “Jackson Park!” she snapped. “Philopena!”’ said Brownlow. mean this is all right.” He helped her aboard, and as he did so he noticed what particularly Well, she was a particularly trim young He could not help feeling trim shoes she was wearing. person. proud of her, although it was all ove between them. “I find these street car signs very when entertaining,” he observed, they had been seated a minute o two. It was a summer car and the had to occupy a seat together. There was no response to this. That said Brown- ory next corner you'll ind me standing there with a glad smile on my face and a pair of three and one-half shoes under my arm. It will make us twen- ty minutes or half an hour late, but that won’t matter.” “I wouldn't think of it,” she began, with cold dignity. “I will not con- sent.” But Brownlow had swung off the car. By the time the car made its cir- cuit and got back at the corner where Brownlow had left it Miss Pendleton seemed to be in a happier frame of mind, for she hailed the appearance of Brownlow with a smile almost as glad as his own. “They're in my pocket,” he whis- pered, as he took his seat beside her. “1°11 smuggle them to you one by one. Are you ready?” “Yes,” she said, with a nervous little laugh, and took a shoe from him. “Now the other. How do they fit?” ‘“Beautifully—and as easy as can be. Oh, Jim, how sweet and noble and resourceful of you! And I was so horrid. Will you forgive me?” “How long have you been wearing that shoe?” Brownlow asked. “All the afternoon,” she confessed. “Then I forgive you,” said Brown- low. “I only wonder how you let me off so easily.” That's right. When Brownlow reached his room that night he took the missing shoe from the breast pocket of his coat and looked at it long and tenderly. Then he put it away in a drawer.— Chicago News. te ——————————— wr Ig DYING PEARLS. The Fate of Necklace Once Worn by the Wife of M. Thiers. In the Louvre Museum at Paris is to be seen a pearl necklace on its deathbed. Not literally on a bed, but on a velvet cushion. It is the great necklace left by the great diplo- mounted in an unostentatious style and has no value as an article de vertu beyond the former value of the pearls, which was about $60,000. It consists of 145 pearls in three rows, which weigh altogether 2097 grains. The largest three pearls weigh thirty-six, thirty-nine and fifty-one grains. The pearls of this necklace are destined to die, says the Deutsche Goldschmiede Zeitung, as they are gradually losing their lustre from day to day, and will during the next few decades turn as black as the faded roses of the much handled wreath. But why? Because pearls will only retain their original lustre when they are worn by beautiful women and come in frequent con- tact with the warm skin of the wearer. When a pearl necklace is removed from the neck, where it has been ex- posed to a high temperature, and is placed in a cold marble tablet, which is of about one-half of such high temperature, it may be justly in- ferred that the scales of the pearls will contract and lose some of their brilliancy. When pearl necklaces are habitually placed on velvet cush- ions after having been worn this circumstance may also well contri- . | bute to the detriment of the beauty position of the color may be an ad- , | ditional factor in this direction, not to overlook the effects of a strong light. The management of the Louvre Museum has held this necklace of M. Thiers in high esteem, and it has probably noticed the gradual deteri- oration with serious concern. The lack of authority to do has no doubt prevented the board of managers from taking the responsibility of ex- r | perimental steps advised by compe- tent experts to save this necklace from further deterioration. How long pearls do live—that is, r | retain their lustre—has not been de- vy | termined. Examples do exist where pearls have retained their beauty for several hundred years. On the other Prizes For Rcadmakers. So successful has proven the scheme of the Toronto Automobile Club to award prizes for the im- provement of the roads that it has been decided to extend it. An addi- tional $200, raised by subscriptions from the members, will be offered in prizes to pathmasters and road com- missioners. It was thought well to start a competition among them, as the work in connection with the original competition will require con- siderable attention from them. The prizes are divided into two classes. In municipalities where the road commissioner has charge of all the roads in the municipality the club will offer three prizes, a first of $50, and two second prizes of $25 each for the road commissioner whose mu- nicipality shows the greatest amount of improvement in connection with the original competition. In mu- nicipalities where the work is in charge of pathmasters, each respon- sible for his own beat, the club will offer a first prize of $50 and two sec- ond prizes of $25 each for the path- petition and show the greatest im- provement in the roads which are entered in the competition. The rules to govern the main competi- tion have just been settled as fol- lows: The prizes shall consist of a first prize of $500, a second prize of $200 and a third prize of $100. They will be awarded for the piece of roadway, a mile in length, on which the greatest improvement is made by July 1, 1907. Parties entering shall designate the road so that inspection of the present condition can be made before the work is commenced. Merits entering into the contest shall be: (1) Proper drainage; (2) serviceable width; (3) finishing of ground; (4) hardness; (5) smooth- ness; (6) permanency of construc- tion. No first prize shall be given unless there are five entries; no second prize unless there are eight entries, and no third prize unless ten. No prizes shall be awarded unless the work is finished to a standard ap- proved by A. W. Campbell, Commis- sioner of Highways for the Province of Ontario.—The Automobile. Are Moncy-Makers. New York sets a good example to Kentucky and all other States in its plan to spend $50,000,000 to $100,- 000,000 on the improvement of iis roads. ’ Good roads are always a good in- vestment, and it is the economic value of the improvements that is appealing so strongly to New York people as to move them to the pro- posed expenditures. The experts have figured that the economic waste caused by bad roads in the Empire State, and which will be eliminated by the new system, amounts to $38,- 600,000 yearly. This is surely worth considering. There is another sub- stantial fact to be borne in mind, moreover. The ‘value, of farm lands contiguous to the improved highways will be increased from $5 to $9 an acre. Thus the outlay will put money into the farmers’ purses as well as render their transportation facilities better, reduce the cost of sending their products to market and make life more pleasant by stimulat- ing social relations among neighbors. Not only will the farmers be bene- fited, for with the system of roads it will be possible for automobiles to travel in any part of the State. New York’s plan is to provide for $50,000,000 of the expense by a State bond issue. The remainder is to be borne by the counties. The re- turns undoubtedly will justify the ex- penditures. Look at France. That country has spent $300,000,000 in highway construction in recent years. It was one of the most profitable in- vestments France ever made. Good roads are bound to pay. No State can lose money spent on them. THE CIRCUS. Once upon a time, a man—in Calcutta, Hindoostan, ; . Thought he’a like to own a circus—just for fu To So he hired from the town a most fascinat- ing Clown Jah To assist him; and he found him just the one— For he'd travel west and east to consult with bird and beast, : : ‘And persuade them, in his charming way, to meet Near the city of Khartoom, where they’d ave abundant room For the cages, rings and side-shows on the street. Now the circus, all confess, was a wonder- ful success, ‘And the Ostrich, with her feathers, proved the belle. . The Orang-outang with ease swung upon a high trapeze, While a kicking Kangaroo performed as well. Some large Bulls, from far Madrid, made a living pyramid— ; : How the leaping Leopard cleared it with a bound! Then an BEL Ape, of course, jumped frrough hoops upon a horse ‘And an Elephant threw daggers at a Hound. People came from near and far just to see the Jaugar : And 5, Tagie trip the trolley, with a eal, And a Salmon shoot the chute; while a Falcon played a flute When the Lion looped the loop upon a : wheel. masters in the municipalities Who | On the whole, they did so well—from the enter their beats in the road com- Gnu to the Gazelle, That it, truly, was a wondrous sight to 1 see! And they all had been so good that their master said he shoul : : Now release them from their promise; they were free. Said the Yak, “We're quite content. No, we really can’t consent, . But Ill tell you what the animals will o-= ‘As we much prefer to roam, and we do not sigh for home, We will travel for, perhaps, a year or dn Wo. All rejoined, “It’s just the thing; we will meet then every spring, Tor we never will be parted from the Clown!” ; So it’s possible vou may see the circus some fine day. And the long procession going through the town. —Cornelia Walter McCleary, in St. Nich- clas. [RIPPLES SI Briggs — “The Highblowers keep sixteen servants.” Griggs—‘That's a good many people to work for.” — Judge. Blobbs — “Remember, my boy, faint heart ne’er won fair lady.” Slobbs—*Yes, but she’s a brunette.” —Philadelphia Record. Repentance for repentance sake Is hard to find to-day, The few bad habits that we break Are those that do not Pa : —8t. Louis Post-Dispatch. going to work?” to come in.”’—Judge. mobile?” “I'm worried. Free Press. you do for me?” “7’d die for you!” —Cleveland' Leader. Twixt optimist and pessimist The difference is droll; The optimist sees the doughnut, The pessimist the. hole. just announced.” zen—‘‘Good heavens, man, fairs? of directors!”—Baltimore American. store clerk.” was a horseman. Jones met Smith. “How are the new football rules “We can't tell until the lists of dead and wounded begin “How do you like your new auto- The man that sold it to me said that it would last longer than I would.”—Detroit The Young Girl—“But what would The Old Suitor— The Young Girl —“That’s all right—but how soon?” Reporter—*‘I called, sir, to ask you if you could tell me anything of the affairs of the bank whose wreck is Substantial Citi- how should I know anything about its af- Why, I'm one of the board “You told me your young man was 2 fine horseman, and I've found out he can’t ride a bit, and that he’s not a rich man at all, but a department “I never told you he All I said was that he had been pronounced an expert . ® 2 nl 7 A Leeds, England, firm of iron mongers has issued a trade circular in what they are pleased to designate as Roosevelt spelling, in which they state they are ‘“‘hofferin spesial bar- gins hin hevery department, inklud- ing henamelwhere, kutlery, gassfit- tings, minsirs, lorne-mowers, etc. ete.” Some of the physicians have dis- covered much regarding the nature of colds, and have learned how to miti- gate the sufferings of those who are attacked, but an absolute means of prevention and a certain cure are yet among the unsolved mysteries of medicine. One cause for this con- fusion is undoubtedly the fact that a “cold” is not a simple disease, like typhoid fever or measles, but that the term is used to cover a number of diseases having similar symptoms but of very diverse origins. Many of the scientific journals in Europe lately have given attention to a curious discovery reported to the Paris Academy of Science by Profes- sor Bouchard. This discovery is that under the action of the X-rays gray hair, on the head and face of a pa- tient treated for lupus, gradually as- sumed its natural color, and retained it with surprising tenacity. But only the hair directly reached by the rays was thus affected, and it was pointed out that it would be dangerous to employ such a method to restore the color of a person’s hair. The fact is regarded as interesting in itself, but should not be accepted as a basis for the operations and claims of quacks. Professor Bouchard said that he did not wish to base any prac- tical conclusions upon it. Astronomers have shown conclu- sively not only that our earth is a sphere on the outer crust of which we live, but they have also by a series of most elaborate calculations esti- mated its weight in tons, its eleven different motions, the speed at which it travels around its axis, and on its orbit around the sun, and the prob- able speed with which the earth, sun and all the planets 'of the solar sys- tem are fiying toward the great star Vega in the constellation of the Lyre. All the so-called fixed stars are moving in various directions with in- credible velocity, though their dis- tances from us are so enormous that the moticn is only apparent to the most acute astronomical observation. The nearest of the fixed stars is more than twenty-five thousand billion miles distant. The two stars Castor and Pollux, known as ‘The Twins,” are flying away from each other at the rate of something like five million miles a day, and yet so infinitely distant are they that there has been no apparent change in their relative positions to each other during the whole period of human observation. FIRST MEN TO FLY. Wright Brothers Explain Why They Do Not Prove ‘Claim. a year ago, October, 1905. say, they are fully cognizant. in handling the ribbons.”’—Baltimore | ments only. ‘American, The Wright brothers say they have : two motives—they wish to be recog- Philolegical. nized as the first men to fly, and they The Wright brothers, of Dayton, Ohio, whose experiments with aero- planes attracted wide attention about have made a statement in which they set forth their reasons why they have not proved by public tests that they are the first men to fly, and why they have not given pub- lic exhibitions of their machines since In brief, they set forth that they need no newspaper notoriety to tell them of their success—of which, they They declare further that they are build- ing scveral of their aeroplanes for sale to the highest bidder, and are negotiating with powerful govern- desire to obtain sufficient money to Not Oid at 70. The Rev. Dr. Clifford, the noted English divine, who has just celebrat- ed his seventieth birthday, says he thinks that at that age a man is just approaching his best. FITS, St. Vitus’Dance: Nervous Diseases per- manently cured by Dr. Kline's Great Nerve Restorer. $2 trial bottle and treatise free. Dr. H. R. Kline, Ld.,931 Arch St., Phila., Pa. English medical men are demand- ing that bakers should deliver loaves in oiled paper bags. Piles Cured in 6 to 14 Days. Pago Ointment is gisfangeed to cure any case of Itching, Blind, Bleeding or Protruding Pilesin6tol4days or money refunded. 50c. The sea-level canal from Marseil- les to the Rhone river is to be com- pleted in seven years at a cost of $13,730,000. NO RELIEF FOR 15 YEARS. ™ All Sorts of Remedies Failed to Cure Eczemz—Sufferer. Tried Cuticura and is Entirely Cured. ©] have had eczema for over fifteen years, and have tried all sorts of remedies to relieve me, but without avail. I stated my case to one of my friends and he recommended the Cuticura Remedies. I bought them with the thought that they would be unsuccessful, as with the others. But after using them for a few weeks I noticed to my surprise that the irritation and peeling of the skin gradually de- creased, and finally, after using five cakes of Cuticura Soap and two boxes of Cuti- cura Ointment it disappeared entirely. I feel now like a new man, and I would gladly recommend these remedies to all who are afflicted with skin diseases. David Blum, Box A, Bedford Station, N. Y., Nov. 6, 1905.” How Tastes Differ. The natives of the Sandwich Is- lands estimate women by their weight. The Chinese require them to have de- formed feet and black teeth. A girl must be tattooed sky-blue and wear a nose ring to satisfy a South Sea Islander. Certain African.princes re- quire their brides to have their teeth filed into the semblance of a saw. . State oF OHIO, CITY OF Lucas CoUNTY, FRANK J. CEENEY makes oath that he is senior partner of the firm of ¥. J.CEENEY & Co., doing business in the City of Toledo, County and State aforesaid, and that said. firm will pay the sum of ONE ZUNDRED DOL~ LARS for each and every case of CATARRH that cannot he cured by the use of HArL’s CATARRE CURE. Fraxk J. CHENEY. Sworn to before me and subscribed in my (~—) presence this 6th day of Decem- 2 SEAL, { ber, A.D., 1886. A.W.GLEASON, l~ Notary Public. Hall’s Catarrh Cureis taken internally, and acts directly on the blood and mucous sur- faces of thesystem. Send for testimonials, free. *.'J. CrEXEY & Co., Toledo, O. Sold by all Druggists, 75¢c. Hall’s Family Pills are the best. ToLEDO, ! ss, Brought Back Alive. Representative Victor Murdock, of the Wichita district, is telling this one as the latest new story in Kan- sas, says the Washington ‘Herald.” A farmer hired a green Irishman. One of the first tasks assigned the new hired hand was to bring into the cow lot, dead or alive, a refractory bull that had broken into the corn- field. The Irishman was given a shot- gun and told to shoot the bull if the animal showed fight. Jauntily he went about his task. The farmer stood at a safe distance to watch de- velopments. As soon as the bull saw the Irishman enter the cornfield, he bolted at him, bellowing madly. The Irishman blazed away with ‘the shot- gun and emptied the load in the beast’s breast. On rushed the bull, madder than ever. The Irishman took to his heels with the bull after him. “What are you doing > screamed the farmer at the fleeing Irishman. “I'm bringing him alive, sir!” shouted the Irishman between breaths. Some Cat Superstitions. Napoleon Bonaparte showed a morbid horror of cats. The night be- fore the battle of Waterloo a black cat passed near him, and at the sight the great warrior was completely un- nerved. He saw an omen of defeat. Henry III. of France swooned when- ever he saw a cat, and one of the Ferdinands of Germany would tremble in his boots if a harmless tabby got in the line of his vision. Among the Romans, the cat was a symbol of lib- ertv. The Egyptians held the animal in veneration under the name of mR Gi. SE SR TE SR RR. - in ‘ 90s iq | enable them to carry on further ex- s : She looked at a passing automo- | hand, it has also been demonstrated | This is something for every Ameri-| eg A - oid ah Ji periments in aerial navigation with- Aclurus, a deity with a human body bile as if she fancied she recognized | that under adverse treatment pearls | can State—and why not Kentucky? |. = out restriction. 25 a Rent Whotver Killed one of the occupants. Brownlow i sly, justify rov- | — i rer.— Louisville Courier- : rl ; ren by acciGent, . was pu looked at her i face, and it ou a ie ne y Hiee Bi a “No. [I've been out in my new zu-| The Wrights decline to permit a) death. Diana assumed the form of seemed to him that a sort of spasm ine.” : Jerrasy tomobile.” committee composed Of men not 20-| a cat and excited the fury = of | the of pain crossed it He ee if di me ment N 1 Roadway Project “Indeed. I didn’t EROW yOu kad a Feintey i oo. mah » sions Tonior Yi Mor : T : ove ¥ o ’ view one o eir flights, even from that inconsiderate remark he had The Tiber is Not All Yellow. fe Ioior car. i i indifor : I waukee a report comes 1 ur , low y a long distance. They are indifferent POSTUM CEREAL made an hour before could have hurt “The yellow Tiber,” as Macaulay rn oraverk Oe diiset . Oe lg ii an ig UM CEREAL CO., LTD. her much. He had apologized for it,| calls it in his ballad, is not always | 40. exclusively for automobiles LE *{ erecy, and point out thet aerial ex- Guarantee On Their Products. though he had not thought it any- | of that color. High up in a peak of Se i th > 5 ts k IV - ——— z reen New York and Chicago, wi a ; . perts know very well that they have thing serious; but now he felt actual- | the Apennines it first emerges 2s “a eg various cities, including the Saloni Eh an oe ishlished thelr claim aa tHe tavent We warrant and guarantee that all ly repentant. bright, crystalline cascade SDTinging |. occ famous” one on the shore of Thor Jy ng, way ors of the first successful fiying ma. | PACKages of Postum Cereal, Grape- Miss Pendleton stole a sidelong |from rock and earth and spreading |; \richigan. Milwaukee automo- yo J chine, Nuts and Elijah’'s Manna hereafter glance at him and then bent over |into a little waterizil Miss Marie bilists are said to be very favorably “Ah, yes. Good car.” From descriptions given by eye sold by any jobber or retailer, com= Van Vorst followed it from its source to its outlet in order to describe the with a rapid movement and did some- . thing to her shoes. Brownlow ap- ply with the provisions of the Na- witnesses of various flights, it is ap- tional Pure Food Law, and are not disposed toward the project, which, parent that the Wright brothers’ “Fine auto.” parently took no notice of the move- and She averted her He kept on sighing at inter- She refused He gave it up at last and rose and went back to the Je was gone three When he returned Miss Pendleton looked very much ment. Presently he turned toward her. head. vals of half a minute. to look around. sighed rear platform. or four minutes. disturbed. for Harper's Magazine. Vorst says: ] Tiber ‘Albula’—white water. journey of the river, and Andre Cas- taigne illustrated its picturesque flow Miss Van “The ancients called the Al- though to the vulgar eye the Tiber is a yellow river—fawn-colored, in- deed, at certain parts of its channel — yet it is pre-eminently white, with the milky mistiness seen in certain jewels, and it is at Rome that the it is proposed to finance by incorpor- ating a company under the laws of Arizona, with capital stock amount- ing to $10,000,000 and a bond issue of $5,000,000. It is proposed to build a roadway sixty feet wide, the middle part to be of amalgam, which is said to be very resilient. The com- pany is to charge toll at the rate of a cent a mile, which would make a trip between New York and Chicago cost about $10 for the use of the roadway. ‘Motor car!” ‘Automobile.” “Priel” “Pub!” Here they fight each other to th: death.—Life. ei —— tr —— Ailment of Heroes. These keen, brisk, invigorating mornings recall the fact that the sauerkraut season will soon be upon about thirty feet long and six fee wide, and separated from each othe by a distance of These surfaces consist of stretched on wood, canva, and the frame ies of trusses. aeroplane has two parallel surfaces about five feet. are very strongly supported by a ser- They are slightly curved from front to back and down- ward, but throughout their length and breadth lie parallel to each other. and shall not be adulterated or mis- branded within the meaning of said Act of Congress approved June 30, 1906, aad entitled, “An act for pre- venting the manufacture, sale or transportation of adulterated or mis- branded or poisonous or deleterious foods, drugs, medicines, liquors, and for regulating traffic therein for other purposes.” 3 t 7 S £ “What is the matter?” he asked. ‘Lily River’ is whitest.” It is rapid | "sc 1c) proposed to establish a ser- us. Throughout the summer that in front of the machine is a rud- eee... POSTUM CEREAL Co., LTD. This time Miss Pendleton spoke. |in current, and at no point very wide. Vike of police and relief cars along | most nourishing and refreshing Jor about six feet syunre, which con. C. W. Post, Chairman, *I've lost my shoe,” she said, with = the road ond also a regular passenger dainty is in retreat, but with the first | gio45 of two parallel surfaces sup- Battle Creek, Mich. forced calmness. “It was a little un- A Printer’s Pranks. frost it resumes its proud piace upon Dec. 12, 1906. ported, like the main structure, by wire trusses. his rudder may be tilted upward to direct the machine service. i 1 e Subscribed and sworn to before me this 15th day of December, 1306. BExsaMIN F. REID, the tempting banquet boards of the great plain people. sauerkraut is ailment for heroes. In the hot “J have played many a practical joke on writers in my time,” said the comfortable and I slipped it off for een y a moment or two, and I—I think it Marchester's Vocal Lord Mayor. has fallen out of the car.” Brownlow was silent for a moment or two as he considered the awful situation. Then his face cleare “What size shoe was it?’’ he aske suddenly, and she was surprised into gaying that it was three and one-half. “Phen here's where I get off,” he “You go on around the loop, and when you get back to the said, rising. veteran compositor. was on a bishop. letter that ended: “But I can write no more. d. d, me, and I go.’ laugh, “made ‘domes’ read ‘dames.’ ’ “My last joke Studying the Rus- sian revolution, he wrote from Mos- cow to a church paper a descriptive The gorgeous dames of the city beckon “1,” said the veteran, with a loud ee | years.—-From Before an audience of slum chil- dren in a grimy street the Lord Mayor of Manchester sang two Songs yesterday evening at a “Court and Alley Concert.” These entertainments gre organized by a committees inter- { ested in the poor and have been car- ried on with great success for eight the London Daily Mail, upward, and when it is tilted down- months, when we are lazy and bil- ious and languid, we do not need it, but at the brink of winter, when cold blasts from the Northwest make our cheeks red and our pulses quick, we feel a fascinating yearning for it creep over us. In brief, sauerkraut — Philadelphia Bulletin. ward the machine necessarily slant toward the ground. swing on its own a boat would be fe is a delicacy that goz2s with mighty effort and high rasolve.—Baltimore Sun. It makes a big iz, as an car in ered, and there- in lies the secret of the Wrights’ suc- cess in maintaining the stability of Notary Public. My commission expires July 1, 1907. Our goods are pure, they always have been and always will be, they are not mis-branded. We have al- ways since the bezinning of our busi- £ their machine, co far be | Ness, printed a truthful statement on learned from wit v York | the package of the ingredients con- Glebe. tained therein and we stand back of every package.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers