I! Both tlio method and results when Syrup of Fig8 is taken; it is pleasant and refreshing to tho tasto, and acts gently yet promptly on tlio Kidneys, Liver and Bowels, cleanses tlio sys tem effectually, dispels colds, head aches and fevers nnd cures habitual constipation. Syrup of Fi'ga ia the only remedy of its kind over pro duced, pleasing to tlio tasto and ac ceptable to tho stomach, prompt in its action and truly beneficial in its effects, prepared only from tho most healthy and agreeable substances, its many excellent qualities commend it to all and havo mado it tho most popular remedy known. Syrup of Fimj is for sale in 50c and 1 bottles by all leading drug gists. Any reliable druggist who may not have it on hand will pro cure it promptly for any one who wishes to try it. Do not accept any nubstitute. CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO. SAN fttANCISCO, CM. toummuE, Kt hew york, h.y. El ck Headache and relieve all tho troubles! (nct dent to a billons etsto of tbe eystom, onoh osJ Slczlncss, Nausea, Drowsiness, distress aftas catlnp. Fain In tho Stile, &c. Whtla tholrmosQ jttmarkable buccmb lias been shown In curinjj . feoaiacbe, yofOittot'a tUUu Liver HIU era equally valnablo in Constipation, curing and pro. entlntf this annoying complaint, whllo thoyalsa correct all dlsordors of thoBtomachtlmulAtotlia aver and rogulale tho bowels. Evoallthoyoalj (Aria they woiUatM) ilmoetprlceloes to thoaowfco isulbr from this distressing complaint; but forts Xiately thclrcoodness does notondbero,and thosa who ones try thorn will find thesollttlo pills valu .eblolnsomany way that thoy will not bo WIN USE to do without thorn. ButafteraUBlclhoe4 ftstbobansof so many Uv83 that horolswnero VfomiAeourgrcat boast. Our pULa euro it whlla Others do not. Carter's Little liver Pills are very small and 'very easy to take. Ono or two pllla makoa doso. They are strictly vpeetablo and do not grlpo os purco, but by Uiolr gentle action pleaso aU who uee thorn. Invlal9at25centsi flvsforfl. Sold by druggists everywhere, or sunt by mail. Carter medicine co., New Yorhi SMALL PILL. SMALL DOSE. SMALL PRICE A FINE SHOW If yo want to see a flne display ol Boats and Shoes, goto W, S, SNYDER'S Boot and Shoe Store, (Mas teller's old stand,) Corner Coal aud JarUlii Sts. Custom "Worlc aud Repairing boneln the beBt stylo. Unlike the Dutch Process No Alkalies on Other Chemicals are used in tbe preparation of W. BAKER & CO.'S BreakfastCocoa tvliMi is absolutely pure, and soluble. ilt lias more f han three timet the strength of Cocoa mliod with Starch, Arrowroot or SSaM sugar, and is far more eco nomical, coiling lest than one cent a cup. It is delicious, nourishing, and easily digested. Sold by Orocers cteryrthers. v W. BAKER & CO,, Dorcherter, Mass. NEW DRUG STORE. Edward A. Morgan & Co. (Formerly Shapiro's pharmacy) 107 South Main Street, NEXT DOOR TO POST OFFICE. Prescriptions carefully compounded by registered pbnrmnciBU), TO PROTECT YOUR LUNGS rrocuro ono of our Chest Protectors. nilfiTllfiP we, tne undersigned, were nltr I IIHr entirely oured of rupture by MUI I UHL Ur, J. 11. Mayer, m Arch Ht., Philadelphia, Pa., H. Jones Philips, Kennet Hquaxe, Pa.i p. A, Kreltz, Hlutlngton, Pa.; E. M. Hraall, Mount Alto, Pa.; llev. 8. II, Hher mer, Bunbury,,Pa.; D, J. Dellett, 211(1. 12th Ht.. Heading, pa.; Wm. l)lx, 1H34 Montrose Ht., i uuuuuiiiuu; ii, ij, aioivo, sun Eim i , Mean ing, Pa.; Uoorgeapd Ph. Uurtcart, 4 .Locust BL. Heading, Pa. Hand for olrculur. men wanted To test a 1'imMrfl Cure for tbe elTecU of self-AbuM. ICerlr JKseeM mlnnluog1NGri oui llt-MUtr, Lcwsof pexuu rower, jmnorener, 0. bo rrtAtls Our rann id our Pjiectflo we wU kfucll VslualiU Infoniuillon F1IKI1 wuiMim one r un .uunlh's If IT I , 11 U, il. CO., SSI. llr.ndw.j, X.w Yerk. HO MANY sB0BS v. , Europo's Drond May Day Passes Qbiotly. DEVERAL EXPLOSIONS AT LIEOE. A House or Two Blown Up, But Nobody Boriously Hurt, Tho Greatest Labor Demonstration In London's History Discovery of an Al leged I'lnt to Mow Up Woolwich Ar senal Not a Disturbance of Any Kind Itepnrted from Paris, Where Dynamite Outrujres Wero Most reared. Likoe, May 2. This city is still panlo- stricken over tho events of yesterday, and further trouble Is feared. Tho day pnsspd without much disorder aud no attempt was made to hold meet ings. After sundown the streets were filled with worklngmen, some lntoxt- cnted, but most of them sober and or derly. A body of mllltla, in marching out to relievo a company on guard nenr the City Hall, came upon a crowd of worklngmen and tried to march through. Instantly tlioro were eries of "Down With the Police," "Kill the Hirelings," and "Long Live Anarchy." The militia charged and dispersed the crowd, hut hardly a minute later an explosion was heard and tho air was filled with splint ered glass. A bomb had been sot oil In front ol a shop about fifty yards off. The pave ment was shattered and all the windows of near-by buildings were blown out. Nobody was injured. Within ten min utes two more bombs wero exploded in the sumo district. The damage was trivial but the excitement was intense. Halt of tho city came out into the streets. Bodies of mounted police and militia marched constantly from ono district to another to relnforco the guards at threatened points. Bombs were exploded last night nt the residences of Senator Baron Belys and his son in Longcbamps. Doors were' blown in and furniture and glassware throughout the house were broken. No body was Injured. An explosion under the wall of the Church St. Martin shattered a famous memorial window near tbe altar und brought down part of tho carved stone from tho roof. Tho shook was terrific, nnd it ia said that not fewer than twelve pounds of dynamite wero used. Win dows for SOU yards wero smashed to small bits. Dynamite cartridges and fuses have been found in several streets. Tho city is patrolled by all tho availatlo police and militia. Most citizens are guarding their own houses. Moro explosions are expected to occur to-day. Fifty arrests havo been mado. A GREAT DAY IN LONDON. JQuoriuous Labor Ueuionstrntlou Dis covery of a UyuBiulte riot. London, May 2. This city saw yester day the greatest labor demonstration in its history. Tho weather was bright aud from early morning numberless proces sions of labor unions and Socialistic so cieties thronged tho streets in the vicinity of Hyde Park. All the men brought out their wives and children nnd choked tho streets from wall to wall. Almost every organization had a band with it, aud at noon t'ue din and confusion became ter rific at the park entrances, although everybody wns good naturod. But one incident of the day betrayed the dangerous undercurrent of tue dem onstration. (Shortly after noon a senti nel in the Woolwich Arsenal discovered at the entrance of the gun factory a bag containing eight canisters loaded with dynamite; gun cotton and cartridges. Ho called ia a policeman and tho bag was removed. No fuse was attached to the canisters, but a detonator was found at tho bottom of the bag. Tho plot was, undoubtedly, to destroy England's greatest arsenal, although thereby 17,000 men would have been thrown out of employment. It bus been a boast of tho War Office that no Anar chists or Socialists could be found in the arsonsal. The police, however, although exceedingly reticent, acknowledge that the dynamite must have been placed by an arsenal workman, as the presence of a stranger would havo been remarked by the. guards. No arrests havo yet been made. Excepting this incident, nothing marred the peaccfulness of the demon stration. By 3 o'clock there were fully 1)50,000 people in the park and between then and 5 tho crowd swelled to 000,000. Scores of meetings were hold. Every ad vantageous point was occupied by a speaKer, and a man had only to begin to talk to collect in no time an audience of 2,000 or 8,000. At Scotland Yard it Is denied that the bag at tho door of the Woolwich gun factory was filled with canisters of dyna mite. The detectives say that the hag contained only gunpowuor whloh was stolen from the Maxim Ammunition Company. They do not believe there wus u dyuamito plot. NO DISTURBANCE IN PARIS. JSvery Public ISulldluo; Wus Guarded and Soldiers Were Uvury where, Paris, May 2. May Day was vory pleasaut and the gay Parisians seem to huye tried to forget the dangers supposed to encompass thorn. The boulevards and parks were orowded, and tho pa tronage of restaurants and cafes was exceptionally large. Women and chil dren walked unterrlfied through tho streets. The churches wero full and tho strain of apprehension seemed to have relaxed. In the barraoks, at the police stations and In the districts around tho public buildings, however, thousands of uriued men stood ready since 1 o'oloak in the morning to march out at a moment's notice and shoot to kill, All day squads of cuvalry and mounted police clattered through tbe streets to the relief of tho troops on guard before daybreak, aud occasionally tha heavy treau or. intau try reminded the promeimders that both services In the garrison had beon mobil ized against expected dancers. Every publlo building was garrisoned with fifty or sixty infantry with ball car trldgcs in their rifles. Ousido sentinels at Intervals of ton yards patrolled the streets. No civilian was allowed to approach wtthlu one hundred yards of any national or municipal building. AU who wished to 30 by were obliged to go Highest of all In Leavening Power. Latest ILS. Gov't Report ABSOlfLifEDf PURS round and nobody domurred, as tho sen tinels wero known to be under strict In structions to shoot upon slight violation of the order. No attempt was made by worklnaraen to hold stroet processions or outdoor meetings. They held, however, several monstor indoor meetings with a total at tendance of 100,000 or more, and at least an equal number were turned away from me overcrowded halls. A LOST ART. The Ancient Keyptlnns Wero Skillful Glass Jllowcrs. Tho glass-blowers of Thobes wero as great proficients In their art as, possi bly greater than, we aro after tho lapsa of nearly forty conturios of progress and rotrogrosslon. They possosscd tho art of staining glass, and they produced this commodity in tho utmost profu sion. Koselllnl gives an illustration of a piece of stalnod glass of considerable taste of design and beauty of color in which tho color is struck through tho wholo vitrified structure, and there aro instances of tho design being equally struck through pieces of glass half an inch thick, perfectly incorporated with tho structure, and appearing tho samo on both tho obverso and the reverse side. Tho priestB of P'tah at Memphis wero rrreat glassmakors, and, says one au thority, "not only had factories for common glass, hut, profiting by their discovery of tho property of oxides of metals, which thoy got from India, of vitrifying different colors, conceived tho project of Imitating all the precious stones which comtnerco brought them from that country." Thoy woro favored by nature, more over, in having at hand an unlimited supply of pure sand and kali; and their glass derived its good quality as well from theso substances as from tho further fact that in its preparation they utilized tho ashes of a peculiar genus of kelp that grow In abundance by tho Lake Mareotis and tho Red sea. They imitated amethysts and other precious stonos with wonderful dexter ity; and besidos the art of staining glass, thoy must havo been a ware of tho use of tho diamond in cutting it and engraving it. For in tho British museum thoro is a piece of exquisitoly- stained glass of the time of Thothmos III. (circa 1500 B. &), skillfully en- graved with that monarch's emblazon ment by tho hand of a master. The priests wero to the' peoplo of early Egypt pretty much what monies like ltogor Bacon wero to tho early middlo ages they wero tho great scholars and oxomplnrs of tho learning of their day, aud held tho keys of aU tho arts then known. But thoy differed from tho monks in this thn& whereas tho latter imparted their knowledge only to a few, the othors taught it broadcast and lot tho peoplo benefit by It. How thoy discovered tho art is a matter concerning which nothing- can ho gathered, probably bocauso tho dis covery went too far hack la tho na tional history," Thoy themselves averred that the great god P'tah, whoso servants they woro, and who invented the unlvorso, had taught them the art; but this la only tradition, and in con formity with a habit men have of as cribing simple luxuries to tho direct mediation of the gods. Chamber's Journal. tfftKE fefl nnirsHT and Htw AI1U MY UUMI-LtXIUN IS UtUCR. My doctor says it nets isratlr on the Ktomitch, Ilernnd k'ilni'H, n 1 , 1 i','iujntlaiatlv. . Tlita dtirilc U mudu It m 1- . in I 1 prepared for Ubd IXl. All driurcitiUi btll It ul.o . and Sl.eu iter u 1 k..t?t-. Ttuy ono tolav. l.iD.fc n -4lnlly Medicine tiinrm lliu Itunril ' .leu uur, uruer w us i.'althy, tuU Is uecetkjuy. SHILOH'S The success of this Great Coueh Cure is without a parallel in the history of medicine. All druggists are authorized to sell it on a pos itive guarantee, a test that no other cure can sue cessfully stand. That it may become known, the Proprietors, nt an enormous expense, are placing a Sample Bottle Free into every home in the United States and Canada. O If you have a Cough, Sore Throat, or Bronchitis, uso it, for it will cure you. If your child has the Croup, or Whooping CourIi, use it promptly, and relief is sure. If you dread that insidious disease Consumption, use it. Ak your Druggist for SIlILOirS CURE, Price 10 cts., 50 cU. and $1 .00. If your Lungs are sore or Back lame, use Shiloh's Porous Plaster, Price 25 cts. For Bale by O. H, Hugenbuch. J, GALLAGHER. Justice of the Peace, Fell Estate and tapes Apiicj. Offlco-Muldoons liulldlDg, Shenandoah, Pa &m at 3 I THE next MnnniNri SJANGER Or POLE HUNTING. Those Who Have rerlihod Have Mado lllnndcrs Hard to explain. Tho popular notion la that arctic ex ploring is a very risky pursuit, but in reality it is not so. Fishing on tho Grand banks is much moro dangorous. As Mark Twain soys: "Tlw greatest peril which peoplo encounter is not met with in travoling on tho railways, but in going to bed. Most peoplo die in bed." Only three expeditions out of tho many which have been mado havo In volved loss of life Franltlln's party starved to death mainly because thero were too many in it, where Schwatka travolcd threo thou sand miles away from any base of sup plies, living off tho country. Greely, whose subordinate officer, Lookwood, attained tho furthest north ever reached, beyond eighty-two degrees north latitude, was subjected to awful Bufferings, mnny of thoso with hlin dy ing, merely because of too much red tapo in Washington. If tho navy de partment had kept tho appointed rendezvous at Capo Sabine, where It had agreed to have a ve&sol with pro visions at a certain dato, there would havo been no trouble. It is tho whalers who encounter most serious perils in tho Arctic ocean. Hardly a year passes when some whaling vessels are not lost. In 1871 only threo ships wero ' saved otit of a fleet of twenty-two. No i lives woro lost, but tho natives on shore have beon using chronometer coses for brass kettles ever since. rigmy Hogs. Specimens of the smallest known spe cies of hogs aro now quartered at tho London zoological gardens. They came from the southern part of Australia, und aro known as "tho pigmy hogs of the antipodes." They aro well formed, frisky, and about tho size of a inuskrat. They aro real hogs, and not to bo con founded with guinea pigs, which are a species of rodent. WANTS, S&o. T OT FOR SALE. A very detdrabla lot, 30x- 1J 1 10 feet, on East Coal street. Apply at iiKUALi) ornoe. 4-23-tr Ci TO Vn FOR SALE. A Kood. noarlv new. O cooking stove. To he sold to malte room for a range. Apply at Hehalu ofllce. 4-28-tf BOY WANTED. A good, strong boy, 10 to 18 years of ago, wanted to learn the printing business. Apply at Herald ofilce. tf -rvESCRAHLE PROPERTY FOR SALE. LJ tub uatner propem-, on west lxik street, for sale. Will be sold whole or in parte to suit purcuaser. Apply on we premises. wi-yi SALESMEN. Energetio men wanted. Free prepaid outllt. One of our agents has earned over in llvo years. P. O. Ilox 1371, NOW Yorlt. 4-27-lW OR SALE. Cheap, a one-horse spring waeon with ton. Also a two-soot surrey wltt .in oxiensLon ion. Anniv to i'rea. uurunart. sjiNoriajuamsiroai. 3-3'ir FOR RENT. Two uvo-roomed houses, newly papered, good cellar and garden. Rent low to good party. Apply to Charles Hatzduho, 4-29-2t Upper patch, Win. Penn. WANTED, SALESMAN. Hulary from start, Permanent place. Good chance for ad' vancctnent. Experience unnecessary- Outllt Iroe. lirown liros. Co., Nurserymen, Koch- oster, N. Y. l-l-lmd&w ITTANTED. Honest, energetio men to VV solicit ordors for Nurserv Htock: ex' pensOB and salary to men who can lcavo home and work steady; also commission to local agents; write for terms and territory. Address It. Q. Chaso & Co., 1130 ti. 1'enn tt.. Phtt'o., Pa. 4-jo-im-eou TMSSOLUTION OF PARTNERSHIP No XJ tlce Is hereby given that I have this day sold out my Interest In tho HehuylliUl Hat and Cap Factory to C. f off. All claims against tho said Arm will bo settled by the remaining mem ber of tho Urm.and said C. Med, and all accounts auc mo to do paia to mo same, Nicholas FREinANn, Bhonandoah, Pa., April 10, 1893. 4-16-3t "PARTNERSHIP NOTICE. Notice is hereby X given mat i navu imsuaysoiu ouv my in terest In tho Shenandoah Roady-Pay Storo, trading under tho firm name of Smith & Swln glo. All claims against the said 11 rm will bo settled by C. W. Smith, tho remaining member of tho firm, and all accounts duo me to ho paid xo mo saia u. y. omun. S. H. SWINGLE, Shenandoah, Pa., April SO, '93. 4-S7-4t-oaw M. P. Conry's Saloon, 31 South Main Street, Next to tho First National Hank, for a cool glass oi uoer ana a good oigar. Ilcst Temp era il cc DrlultH PENNSYLVANIA Telephone Company A N ORDINANCE erantlnff to the Pennsvl J. vanla Telephone) Company the right to oc cupy the streets and hlghwnysof the lloroughof Shenuuduuh with poles ana wires as may be necessary tor ooihiucuiik its ouxmian. Section 1. lie it ordained bv tho Town Coun eil ol the llorouKli of Shenandoah, und it 1 here by ordained bv the authority ot the same, that permission be and Is horeby granted to the Pennsylvania TeloDhone Comnanv. under such conditions and regulations as hereinafter set iorin, to occupy tne streets aaa uignwuysoi tne Ilorough of Shenandoah aforesaid, with poles, neatly trimmed and painted, and wire as muy bo necessary for conducting its business and to maintain the poles and wire in good, safe and serviceable condition. a SBC 2. That all poles shall be located on the ourh line ot properties at a place to bo designat ed by and be erected under tho dupurvislou ot the Committee on Highways, of said borough. Set- 3. That uo poles shall ho creoted under suuu permission without the consent of tbe own ers of proiwrtles abutting the locution ot auld poles, tine. i. That said Telephone Company shall permit the tire alarm and pollee patrol wires and boxes ot said borough to lie run upon all the poles ot said company within the borough lira- 'sbo. 5, That said Telephone Company shall panie expense ol printing and publishing this Muuoted and pasted into an ordluunce at Shanatxloah. Pa,, this eighteenth day ol:Febru ary, A. V. 1K. A. D. a A utjs. President. J AS. 11. Lnttup, Chlat Ilurgeiw. Attest; Vf. J, l'oniz, Tqwn Clerk. 3t A Rich Widow's lTousn Blown TTpt Brussels. Mar 2. May Day was ojuiet here. No attempt was made to hold an open-air demonstration. A despatch from Houdeng-Qcognles, in Hnunut, says that a bomb waa exploded in the afternoon on the steps of tho widow Rowland's house. Tbe house Was dam aged badly but nobody was injured, lime. Rowland Is wealthy. Otherwise there was no motive for the attempt upon her life. Djnnmlte lu a Seville Church. Seville, May 2. Yesterday morning a priest upon entering tho confessional in a church here found a metal tuba with a burning fuse attached. He ex tinguished the fuse and took the tube to the police, who found it was filled with dynamite. The man who piaceu mo bomb is believed to be a foreign huck ster. Five Anarchists Arrested at Toulon. ToULorr, May 2. Five Anarchists wero arrested hero for trying to create disorder. When searched thoy wero found to be armed with revolvers and knives Otherwise there was no disturb ance here. A BRAVE OFFICER'S DEATH. While Savlnn Children at a Fire Ho Is Struck by a Tailing ladder. New Yohk, Hay 2. The West 13th Streot Presbyterian Church, of which the late Rev. Dr. Samuel I). Burchnrd was for many youes pastor, was dam aged $4,000 by Are yesterday afternoon. A largo number of children, both boys and girls had attended Sunday school at the church, and had not yet left the vicinity when the firemen nrrlvod. A ladder which the latter had run up to tho roof of the building commenced swaying and threatened every moment to fall down among the groups of chil dren. Policeman Robert B. Nichol, who hap pened to be passing, though oil duty, began to drive tha chtldred from their position of danger. Ha had just suc ceeded when tho ladder crashed down upon his head, Inflicting injuries which caused his death soon after. PENNSYLVANIA STATE LEAGUE. llaso llulllsts in Session at Jlarrlsburs: Forming the Now Association. Hakrisbdro, Po., May 2. The Penn sylvania State Loaguo will meet at the Franklin House In this city -this after noon. A constitution will bo adopted and a sihednlti committee appointed. Secretary-Tre. . irer Jones has been in formed tliut tiio Pittsburg National League magnate have decided to allow a State League club to play on thoir grounds during tho major club's ab Benco. Johnstown and Norristowu will bo admitted at the meeting, aud this will make the League's composition Pitts burg, Johnstown and Altoona in the west, and llarrisburg, Lebanon, Read ing, Allontown aud Norristowu in the east. Quadrennial 31tliudlst Conference, Omaha, Neb., MuyS. The great quad rennial ilothodist conference was inau gurated yesterday afternoon by a mon ster mass meeting at the Exposition Hall, which was crowded witli people. It was presided over by Bishop Bowman of St. Louis, the oldest bishop in tho church. Mrs. Newmau, wife of Bishop Newman of Omaha, made tha opening prayer, and after the usual devotional services tho mission question was taken up and thoroughly discussed. Nothing was dono boyond tho discussion. Tbe first business session will be held in Boyd's Opera House to-day, when the work will bo launched. Nearly Murderod by Her Husband. Nkwakk, N. J., May 3. William Ran dolph, colored, made a murderous and brutal assault upon his wife, white, last night. The couple wore at supper and Were quarreling. Randolph suddenly sprang up and, seizing a heavy glass butter dish, brought it down with ter rific force upon tho head of his wife. The blow laid open tho scalp to tho bone. Again Randolph ruiscd the dish and struck the woman another blow, Inflict ing a cut as ugly as the first. The woman is in a dangorous condition. Ran dolph was arrested. Tonlntaba Destroyed by the Urltlsh. London, May 2. An official despatch from Bathurst, Gambia, sayB that Ton iataba was destroyed on April 27 after a spirited defense. The town was strong ly fortified aud was taken only after beveral determined assaults. Captain Roberts of tbe First West India Regi ment was mortally wounded, and 10 men serlouslv. Ths enemy lost heavily. The British took 110 women and children to Bathurst to prevent their being soized for slaves. Trotter iynx llurued to Deatli. Baltimore, May 2. The trotting horso Lynx, owned by John P. Qlbbs, of Fleet wood Park, N. V., was burned to death last night at Plmlico. Mr. Qlbbs' striug of trottors bad just arrived from New York, und Lynx hnd bssn In the stable but a few minutes when theflro was dis covered. The other horses wero gotten out uninjured. The stable was destroyed. Lynx was valued ut $0,000. Desperate Crlmluul Killed. CniOAGO, May 2. Joseph Lemontagne, n notorious criminal, was killed yester day in a desperate fight with officers. Lemontagne, pistol in hand, wns strug gling with Detective Howard, who was unarmed, when Policeman Raff erty, who was stauding some distance away guard ing another prisoner, sent a bullet through Lumontagno's breast, killing him almost Instantly; A Wet Banilay la New Turk. New York, May 2. It was an easy matter to get ft drink in Now York yes terday, as all saloons had their side doors open and did not prohibit strangers from entering. Tho oompurlson between this stubs ot affairs and that of the two pre ceding Sundays was so great as to cause much counneut, and conjecture was rite as to what brought about tbe ehange. COFFEE HOUSE. MBS. CONNIOK IN CHARGE, A SQUARE MEAL AT A NOMINAL MCE. Kvorj'thlnp well cooked and clean. An elab orate bill of tare dally. Lodgings for travelers. MRU, COISmCK. J fi, Maltt Bt, AKB WE Right or IV rong? A Shoe Dressing must restore the bril liancy of a worn shoe, and at the same time frtserve the softness of the leather. LADIES will the Dressing you are .using do both? Try it I Pour s dessert spoonful of your Dressing into a saucer or butter plate, set it aside for a few days, and it will dry to a substance as hard and brittle os crushed glass. Can such a Dressing be good for leather? "" ACME BMs will stand this test and dry as a thin, oily film which is as flexible as rubber. 25 Dollars worth of Hew Furniture lor 25 Pettis. HOW? By painting 25 square feet of Old Furnitures with WOLFF 4 RANDOLPH, 087 North Front Street PHILADELPHIA. A Tonic aud A Pleasure: That's tbe happy combination found in (6 ireS' Beer You drink it for pleasure, and get physical benefit. A whole some, refreshing, appetizing, thirst quenching drink. One package makes five gallons. Don't deceived If a dealer, for die salte cf larger profit, tells you some other kind is "justasgood" 'tisfalse. No imitation U as good as the genuine Hians. S3 SHOE CENTLEI71EPJ THE BEST SHOE EN THE WORLD FOR THE MONEY! I it is a seamless shoo, with no tacfcuor wax thretvi i to hurt the feet; mado of tho best lino calf, styllsti , and ea'fy. and because wo make mora shoes of thit grade than any other manufacturer, itcqual3uand , SJM"&JiSn$5l&7iS& Imported blirwd uhtrh pnHt fmm ftJtmtn ftl'i im. tttA. Oil llnnd-Mewed Welt Sune, una calf, PBYe stylish, comfortable and durable. Ihebesi snoo ever onerou at this price i samo grade as custom-made shops costing from $6.00 to $'UW. C20 QO l'ollro Khoei Fanners, Kaltroad Men rj3i4 and LetUTCarriersall wearthem: flnocaltj seamless, smooth Inside, heavy threo soles, eztea elon edKo. one pair win wear a year. CO 3" nuo ralfi no better shoe ever offered at mittEtm this prlco; one trial will convmco thossi who want a shoo for comfort and service. (tin 'J3 nnd b'J.OU Worliinzmnn'R shoes rjs,e are very strong and durable. Those who) Iinve glren t hem n trial will wear no other make. ESnVc' S'.Ot" and 81.75 school shoos am O-S w y O orn by the boys everywhere; they cell on their merits, an tho Increasing sales show. B r4iAC 'lOI llnml-Mf wed shoo, best saUUICO lxmgolo, veryBtylishiequolslTencte Imported shoes costlngfrom $t-Ul to $6.0). . lindlrn' ti.."i(l, fevi.OU uud SI. 75 shoe for Blisses are the best fine bongolo. Ktyllsn aud durable. Cnutlon, ioe that W. L. Douglas' uamo oatl price are stamped on tho bottom ot each shoo. tir-TAKE NO SUnSTITUTE.M Insist on local advertised doalcrs supplying yon. TV. L. UUVOUXa, Urocklon, flioss, l&ldtor JOSEPH BALL, North main St., Slicnnndoalt Healthful, Agreeable, Cleansing. Cures Chapped Hands, Wounds, Burns, Etc Removes and Prevents Dandruff. WHITE RUSSIAN SOAP. Specially Adapted for Use in Hard Water. DR. THEEL, D. ooi gntn Ocratva AaMtrlcui HiaiM in U foiled Sutcc who U tbi to our Blood Polsorti Nervous Debility a4 Spe cial DlnRo or two. mi, hkiii DiattMua. Kt Spota Pftloa la Uli tHsoroThroat Mouth, HI u.ti, l'iiuplr, Krapdoni, toft hunt IhM, SwtlUniij IrriUUoQi, lntlfcmrutuloui fcjid BBuala(it buiuture., Wei&titM ud grl 407 lott wermm w.rt t-fc-V meoUl tvnilttr, Eldnrr n4 ltikt.iir lltM" Mid H Uinc-UM roiuUtOff DOB ElMsMt. Ii, tiivrutiuii nr (hiruurk Heotut hmi cured lu 4 0 W 4 ! r llttf tt oaev To not lose hop, no mitter whit tdtr tiiiot iwtor. ijuuk, I'trally or iluipluJ PtiriloUn k fvUS. Dr. TllKU: ourr positively vtlbovt ttMciliM. No baaiatM. old. touHi tupoia tain axstmoi) ootmumrwm mjuuh rich or poor, teai to. Mmp for DOQk TKUTH" cipofttaf Qnuka undor iwofu UUmobUu. Hoi i, Ully from to S, Rv'ga 6 to 9, Wd. tad Bat. Ii'gt to 10 Haadi S till It. Write v mJ) wd vd. Ttr UofertucM tm YfU. luX ttlordr PU1. dtUljr TlmOsb Q, M. HAMILTON, M.U., PHYSICIAN AUD SURGEON. Offloe-5 WttIdoya Btre, Bfiecanaocdi la, H W. Lb BOUCLAS y -
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers