ON15 I&WJOYSS Both tlio method and results when Syrup of Figs ia taken; it is pleasant and refreshing to tho tasto, and acts gently yet promptly on tho Kidneys, Liver and Bowels, cleanses the sys tem effectually, dispels colds, head aches and fevers and cures habitual constipation. Syrup of Figs ia the only remedy of its kind ever pro duced, pleasing to the tasto and ac ceptable to tho stomach, prompt in its action and truly beneficial in its effects, prepared only from tho most healthy and ngreeablc substances, its many excellent qualities commend it to all and have made it tho most popular remedy known. Syrup of Fig3 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. I)o not accept any substitute. CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO. SAN FRANCISCO. CAL. LOUISVILLE. K1 NEW YORK. N.Y. Healthful, Agreeable, Cleansing. Ourea Chappod Hands, Wounds, Burns, Etc Removes and Prevents Dandruff. WHITE RUSSIAN SOAP. 'Specially Adapted (or Use in Hard Water. Unlike the Dutch Process No Alkalies OR Other Chemicals are used In the preparation ot W. BAKER & CO.'S BreakfastCocoa tchtch it absolutely pure and soluble. It has more than three timet I the strength ot Cocoa mixed with 8tarcb. Arrowroot or ' Suzar. and la far morn errw nouucai, coning less man one cent a cup. It is delicious, nourishing, and easily DIGESTED. Sold by Crorers ertrynhtre. tW. BAKES & CO., Dorchester, Mais. SHILOH'S CONSUMPTION CURE. The success of this Great Cough Cure is -without a parallel in the history oil 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 mar become known, the Proprietors, at an enormous expense, are placing a Sample Bottle Free into every home in the United States and Canada. If you have a Cough, Sore Throat, or Bronchitis, use it, for it will cute you. If your child has the Croup, or Whooping Cough, use it promptly, and relief is sure. If vou dread that insidious disease Consumption, use it. Ask your Druggist for ' SlUUUU'S UUKE, Price iocts., so cts. ana $t.oo. If your Lungs are sore or Back lame, use Shiloh's Porous Plaster, Price 25 cts. For Bale by 0. H. Hngenbucl). nilriTlinP We, the undersigned, were llllr I llHr entirely cured of rupture hy 'U1 I UIIU Ur. J, u. Mayer, 31 Arch Bt., Philadelphia, Pa., K.Jones Philips, Kennet Hnuare, Pa.: T. A. Krettz, Hlatlngton, Ps.j E. M. Hmall, Mount Alto, Pa.: Hev. H. II. Blier. roer, rJuubury.il'a.: D. J. Dellett. Hit 8.12th Ht.. Heading, Pa.; VVm. Dlx, 182-J Montrose at., Philadelphia: 11. U Howe, SOU Elm Ht., Read ing, Pa.; George and Ph. Uurkart, 139 Locust Ht., Heading, Pa. Bend for circular. Act on a new principle recolato the liver, etomacb and bowels through the nervet. Da. Hues' Pnxa speedily cure bUloopnees, torpid liver and constipa tion. Smallest, mildest, enrostl opdoses.aScts. tiamplea (roe at druniosts. Ur. Olio Bod. Co., ClUut,lxl J. GALLAGHER. Justice d the Peace, Rea! Estate ni Insurance Jpncj, Office Muldoon's Building, Shenandoah, Fa MEN WANTED To test a 1'o.lllt " Wo for the elltvtl of BelrtraM. Kuril l.zcewa. lmlJonLNri oui DrbllttT. Louof &vxual 1'ower, Impotnry, 0. Bo frnutls our faith in our Hctno we MnJ one Full Mouth' Medicine eJld tfucu Voluablv Information FJtri Addrou tt. 31. CO., tmliJri.ii.lwuj, Any VorlT mm mm MP 1141 Hi I I I I n a hi HIM 1 1 III Kll m Jin n mnum TWO FATAL WRECKS A Terrific Collision on tlio Big Four at Clovos, 0. FIVE WERE INSTANTLY KILLED A Defecliva Switch in Maryland Causes the Death of Three. The Injured In lloth Accident! Number Over Thirty A Ileuvy lUIn Storm Wi Ilnglng lVhan the Ills Four Kxprell Col llded A Change In the Schedule Mar Have Canted the Wreck List uf the Ullled-Home of the Hurt Mar Die. Cincinnati, May 10. A (rightful col- j llsion occurred on the Big Four road i near Cloves yesterday resulting In the death of Are persons and the Injury of twelve or fifteen. Ths regular Sunday accommodation, which usually loaves Aurora for Cincinnati at 8:30 a. ni., started an hour earlier owing to a chnnge in the schedule which had just gone into effect. The train consisted of a combina tion baggage car, a smoking car and three coaches. When near Cleves tho engineer of the passenger engine saw a freight train ap proaching, but too late to prevent a col lision. The freight crew had forgotten about the change in tho schedule and supposed tho track was clear. The two engines came together with a terrific crash. the killed: W. 0. Edwards, engineer, Greensburg, Ind. William IIiggs, engineer, Lawrence burg, Ind. David IIeywood, conductor, Indianap olis, uggj HmAM BnUCE, fireman, Qreensburg, Ind. Philip Qiueben, baggage master, Law renceburg. lloth engines were battered into shape less masses and rolled off the tracks. The cars behind were smashed into kindling-wood, and the track for 100 feet torn up. Telegraph poles were thrown down, and it was two or three hours after the wreck before word reached this place. and a special train was sent to the scene from Cincinnati. In tne meantime the people from the little village and from tne surrounding country bad gathered, and in the frightful storm were doing all they r.ould. Several of the Injured are seriously nurt, two, It is thought, fatally. WRECKED AT A SWITCH. Three Killed and Many Hurt by u Collision lu Mnryluml. Haoerstown, Md., May 10. The fast train on the Norfolk & Western Rail road, composed of one sleeper, two day coaches, a baggage and an express car, was wrecked 12 miles south of here yes terday morning by jumping the track and dashing Into three loaded freight cars which were standing on a siding. Conductor Hays was killed instantly, and ten passengers were seriously In jured, two of whom are dead. All these were in one of tha day coaches. Those In the other cars only sustained a severe shook. Several legs and arms were bro ken, and one passenger has to have a leg amputated. The injured (all men) were brought back to Uagerstown, where some 11 at the Hotel Hamilton and some at the Baldwin House. One coach and one freight car were smashed to splinters. Yesterday afternoon a jury was empan eled and declared the accident due to a defective switch. Five of the llodles Recovered. Boston, May 17. Superintendent Bradly, of tho Farm School at Thomp son's Island, reports the finding of the bodies of five of tho boys drowned April 10. All the bodies were floating in the water off City Point, and all buve been positively identified as follows: Frank Hitchcock, aged 10 years; Charles II. Craves, aged 17 years; William Curran, aged 17 years; Albert A. Packard, aged 10 years. Hitchcock's body will prob ably be taken away by friends, but the others will be buried on Thompson's Isl and this afternoon. Crushed to Death. Toledo, O., May 10. A wooden bridge over a deep cut by which the Lake Shore Railroad reaches the Union Depot gave way as two electric street cars were crossing it and fell upon a freight train that stood below. The freight train supported the bridge for a time, thus saving the five persons In the street cars from instant death. Frank liennat, a motor man, was caught between the two cars as they went down, and was crushed to death. , Killed Uy a Cave-In. Elizabeth, N. J., May 16. Two Ital ians were burled under tons of earth at the Division street crossing of the New Jersey Central Railroad, by the caving in of an embankment in a cut where tha street was being depressed under the tracks. Frang liavello, one of the men, was taken out dead, and Giovanni Lom badlo, the other man, is fatally injured. Several other men were slightly injured. Misfortune Cautes hulclde. Milton, Pa., May 16. John T. Rose, living in Pipers, an addition to Milton, committed suicide because bis house, a small frame building, was sold at con stables' sale. When It was opened the sui cide's body was found in a corner of the room with his head almost blown off, It Is known that he said that If the house was sold from him he would kill himself. Auatrlu'u Gold taudurd. Vienna, May 10. The cur rency reform bills In the Relchsrath propose to convert Into gold stock at reduced Interest the untaxed S per cent, paper rente, and establish a gold stand ard, the krone beti2 the unit, divided into 100 hellers. Two kronen will equal In value the present Bllver florin. Plating Work Humeri. Philadelphia, Pa., May 10. Flames of unknowu origin broke out lu the plat lug works of Ledlg & Way, rear of $12 248 North Eighth street, aud destroyed property valuod at between $73,000 aud $100,000 on which there is an insurance of only f 35,000. The works employed 110 men. Highest of all in Leavening Power. Latest U. S. Gov't Report ABSOMffElOf pum BRINGING UP CHILDREN. X Wtae mother Opinion ou Utiles und Theories. Every young mother starts on her natural careorwith nfullsotof theories. She wears thorn lileo armor and it often. fairly clanks as sho moves, and it is armor of proof that is, it is proof agulnst every weapon eavo the keen lance of experience. Ono twenty-ycar-olu wiseacre has a theory that babies aro over-fed (so they are, moro than half the time), and sho allows her poor little lamb only flvo minutes for its meals and wonders that it does not grow fat like Mrs. Smith's baby. Another has a theory that tho little bodies are kept too warm and her baby shivers under a thin blanket, with its poor little pink toes all cnrleil up and turning purplo with tho eoldj a third believes that warmth is the ono thing needful, and her child swelters in heavy flannels through tho hottest weather. I never shall forgot how a certain very famous phvsiciau came to seo mo one very hot day in August and found I mv babv wearinir a flannel petticoat, ' and, moreover, wrapped in a flannel blanket. "What have you got this child so swathed up for?" demanded Dr. William of tho nurse. "Flannel on a day like this? Tho child should have nothing on but a slip. I wish I had nothing on but a slip!" I started in mother-llfo with as fine a set of theories as most people and I have been shedding them ever since. When I look at my eldest daughter and remember tho things I did to her I marvel that she is alive and well. How tho "sweet little cherub that sits up aloft" must have shuddered when ho saw that poor baby taking her noon tide nap out of doors in her carriago all winter long! All my friends stood round in atti tudes of horror and dejection, but I pur sued my way with tho intrepid imbe cility of youth. Wrapped in a great quilt with just enough space left for tho puro air to enter, sheltered from tho wind by a thick hedge, that little carriago stood out day by day, from Oc tober till May, with Hrownie, the faith ful St. Ilernard, lying beside it. Brownie never said what he thought, but ho probably felt that I was not to bo trusted with tho child. When it stormed of course tho carriago was brought in and trundled in tho house, which the house being small and many cornered, was not convenient. And well the child lived, and it would per haps bo hard to find a more healthy girl than sho is to-day, but whenever sho has a touch of the neuralgia, which is her one ailment, I think of tho little carriage behind the hedge and beat my breast and say: "Sijeunnetse tavaul" By tho time -my second baby came had learned a little more; by the time tho third appeared I knew enough to regard tho first as a brand snatched from tho burning, and to become restive when any ono broached a new theory, When my seventh baby smiled in my face she found me with hardly a theory left, but ready to give my whole self to tho lovely work of keeping her well and happy. I did not take her up when ever sho cried; neither did I let her cry herself and me into fits, becauso I had a theory that babies must not bo taken up. I fed her when sho was hungry, even if oh, treasonl it was fifteen min utes before tho proper time. I did not weigh her overy week or every month; in fact, I did not care in the least what sho weighed so long as her flesh was firm and hard and her color good, took her out in good weather and kept her at home when I thought tho wind too sharp. And she is as robust and rosy-cheeked as her oldest sister, and I do not believe sho will have neuralgia when sho grows up. Laura E. Rich ards, in Chicago News. FASHIONS AND FANCIES. Things llaro and Antique That Aro Highly Valued. Flat wall vases and fan forms in royal Berlin ware are among tho now import ations. A new white faience in dishes, card receivers, candelabra and lamps is or namented with orchids, tho cotelyea being tho variety chosen, White lilacs, snowballs and hyacinths in relief with green foliage aro intro duced in a now ware. Ornamental fruit dishes havo the spreading legs arranged with arbor wire and underneath is a sprawling or peeping cupid. The demand for pieces of faience, fancy bronzes and bric-a-brac knows no abatement. Grown men and women bending over' and seriously considering and buying what, except for their ox- pense, would bo children's toys, aro among tho sights of tho town. Snow-drop glass it is called. It is of a beautiful green tint with modeled do signs of white snow-drops with palo green calyxes as ornaments. Tho tall, flaring cylindrical vasos aro particular ly handsome Tills dosign is found, however, in a number of forms. Quaint and old-fashioned nro pot pourri jars with perforated lids for per fuming drawing-rooms and boudoirs, A doliclous potpourri is that with tho odor of tho wild rose, delicate and sub tle Among tho daintiest of boudoir writing table ornaments nro tho mlnla- ture Dresden china lamps. Jowelors' Circular. It will pay you to take a walk or drive Into the country. It Is looking raagnlUcently, Advtee Is a most useless tblug. A wise man doesn't need It, and a fool -won't have It. lie Is a mlss-guldod youth ho does every t alng bis sweetheart usks him to do. HOUSEHOLD BREVITIES. A tcaspoonful of alum will make clear four gallons of muddy water. Boiling tho water is necossary to re move disease germs when a farm pump or a town reservoir has a bad name. A Tonle for tho Hair. A good tonic for the hair is salt water, a teaBpoonful of salt to a half-pint of water, applied to tho hair two or three times a week. Tho oifect at the end of a month will bo surprising. Ladies' Ilomo Journal. Chloride of lime is an infallible pre ventive for rats, as they lleo from its odor as from a pestilence. It should bo thrown down their holes, and spread about wherever they aro likely to come, I and should be renewed once a fortnight. 1 -Tomato Soup.-Stew ono can of to- ! t to effervesce, then add a quart of boil uu " ioui.i... i "' ing milk, some rolled crackers, salt and pepper to taste, and a generous lump of butter. Let it boil for a few minutes and serve. Housekeeper. Savory Potatoes. To ono pound of mashed potatoes add a quarter of a tcaspoonful of salt, ono gill of sweet inilk, half an ounco of grated cheese, and mix well. Place tho potatoes smoothly In a small, well greased pie dish, sprlnklo over them one ounce of finely grated cheese and a tablespoon-1 ful of butter in small pieces. Hake In a brisk oven until it is a golden brown and serve very hot. Ilorap, Chocolate frosting. Take the whito of two eggs, ono teaspoonful of light brown sugar, a quarter cako of choco late and half teacupful cold water. Boll tho water and sugar until it threads when raised up with a spoon. Pour this on tho eggs after beating them to a froth and stir rapidly. Flavor with vanilla, then add the grated chocolate and stir until nearly cold, when spread it on tho cake. If for ' layer cake put it on the layers and top, ' or on tho top and sides of a plain loaf. Orange Judd Fanner. j Prince of Wales Cake. Black part Ono cup of brown sugar, one half cup of butter, ono half cup of sour milk, two cups of flour, ono cup of chopped raisins, ono teaspoonful of soda dis-1 solved In a littlo warm water, one tablespoonful of molasses, tho yolks of three eggs, ono teaspoonful each of cloves and nutmeg. Whito part One cup of flour, ono half cup each of corn starch, sweet milk, and butter, ono cup of granulated sugar, two teaspoonfuls baking powder, tho whites of threo eggs. Bake all in four layers, and put together with icing, Springfield (Mass.) Republican. j Apples in Red Jelly. Choose largo ' apples, peel them and take out tho cores: put into each apple two cloves and fill them up with powdered sugar. Place them in a pie dish, add more sugar, the julco of one lemon, and two teacup fuls of water. Bake for about half an hour; lift tho apples carefully so as not to break them, place in a dish to cool. Strain the liquor in which they havo been stewing into a lined saucepan, add to it the rind of 0. lemon, and one table spoonful of gelatine that has been dis solved in cold water, and if not sweet a little more sugar, and six cloves. Boll till quito clear, cool with a littlo cochi neal, and strain the jelly through a double muslin into a bowL Let it cool a littlo and pour it over the apples which have been previously arranged In a deep glass dish. When quite cool put on the top of tho apples the white of an egg that has been beaten to a stiff froth. Housekeeper. DON'T DELAV It Cirri Coldt.Ooarhi.SorsThroat.Oreap.TitflneBiA, Whooping Couh, Bronchi til kqI Asthma. JL cmJ mrfl fbr Conmmption la fint mm, n1 t surt relUf la advanced itagei. Uaottonoe. You will aee tho ex cellent effect after taking the first do, &U 17 ttkltra tTirjwbcrt. Lug 0 uuu tal $1.09. NEW DRUG STORE. Edward A. Morgan & Co. (Formerly Bhaplra's Pharmacy) 107 South RTain Street, NEXT DOOR TO HOST OFFICE. Prescriptions carefully compounded by registered pharmacists. TO PROTECT Y0UB LUNGS Procuro one of our Chest Protectors. JOHN H. EVANS' SALOON, 38 E. CENTRE ST., SHENANDOAH FRESH BEER. PORTER, ALE. Finest brands of clears always on hand, The beat temperance drinks. f1 BOUGH TO KILL THE CZAR Details of Another riot Against Russia's Ruler. OATCHINA PALACE UNDERMINED A Qiantity of Explosives Stored Beneath the Monarch's Bleeping Boom- The Mine Mould Have linen Set Off the Next Time II o Occupied the Chumber. The Conspirator Had Due a Tunnel Over Three Hundred Yard Lone French Detectives Discovered the Work. Berlin, May 10. Details of a plot to kill the Czar have reached here. A week ago two French detectives nrrlved at the Gatchtna and began a careful investiga tion of the palace, one in the disguise of a coachman and the other In that of an assistant cook. Two days after their arrival they re ported that the whole palace had been found to be undermined, that the under ground chumber beueath the Czar's Bleeping room was already half filled witu explosives, and that tho Nihilists back oI llle Plot would have started the explosion doubtlessly the next time the 2? S dlslove 0r their Dlot. The undermining had been done by means of a tunuel which led to a hill not three hundred yards from the paiace and which must have been the labor of many months. Suudcs, picks and bor ing tools were found near the entrance In the side of tho bill. This entrance was concealed by a large rock, around which the sod was laid so carefully as not to betray its frequent disturbance. The plotters must have worked at night and have left before daybreak, as all the surrounding country is carefully wntchod. ihe plot was known in a general way to exist, yet the Czar's police were un able to discover Us details or even to fix its location definitely. The cellars and grounds of the Gutchlna palace were carefully examined, and upon finding nothing the detectives decided that the conspirators had not yet begun to act. The Paris detectives were then sum moned. THEIR ESCAPE FRUSTRATED. DUcuvery of u I'lot by Vhlch Several Con- lr-i. llopt-d to nwcut-e Liberty. Columuus, O., May 10. Through the assistance of two trusty prisoners tho Warden of tho State Penitentiary dis covered a plot by which at least five, but probably more, desperate prisoners were to have escaped from that institution last night. Two were to walk out by the aid of forged passes, relying upon tho inabil ity of the new guards recently put at the outer gates to recognize them, and the others were to cut their way through the roof and lower themselves by means of ropes to the ground. They had a key that would unlock a whole range of cells. In one of the shops an incendiary de vice was found by which, it is supposed, the buildings were to be fired last night, and in the excitement escape would be effected. A candle was arranged so that when it burned it would fire a lot of waste. Upon this waste a large box was piled, mating a very comuustlhle pile. One of the prisoners had $113 in his possession, and the prison authorities are puzzled to know where be got it. To Inveitlcate the Tux Laws. Albany, N. Y., May 10. Pursuant to the concurrent resolution of the Legisla ture providing lor the appointment of joint committee of the two houses to in vtstlgate the State system ot taxation and to revise and modify the tax laws of the state, speaker Hush, of the Assem bly, has appointed Messrs. Qulgley, uuenther, uassln, strananan and Ulf- ford, the latter being president of the state urange, as sucn a committee on the part of the Assembly. Tha Senate committee is composed ot Senators Ahearn, McClelland and Coggeshall The expenses of the committee are lint ited to $0,000. National Art Congress. WAsniNOTOif, May 16. An art con gress to be held under the auspices ot the National Art Association, begins Its sessions to-day In tho Columbian Unl verslty. It will be presided over by Daniel Huntington, president of the Na tional Art Association and ex-president ot the National Academy of Design. Many speakers distinguished in art, architecture, science, education and pol itics have promised to discuss the best way to improve and advance the popular taste in art throughout the country. Abandoned Ulf Divorce Suit. Yankton, S. D., May 10. II. C. Bor stel, ot New York, ex-United States Consul at Pernambuco, Brazil, who has been here for three months and who had applied for a divorce from bis wife. abandoned his suit upon learning that his wife had filed an answer aud would demand alimony. The local newspapers nave been showing up Jiorstel's career since be came to Yankton, and that said to have hastened his departure. Convention of ltallroad Telegraphers. Chattanooqa, Tenn., May 10. Four hundred members ot the Order ot Rail road telegraphers are In the city to at tend the annual convention of the Order. The convention will be in session four days. The principal question to be de elded is whether the membership shull be composed ot commercial and railway men jointly, uther Important meas ures will also be taken up. I.leut. lletherlngton's Future. DcBUQUK, Ia., May 10. It is reported that Lieut. Uetherington will be assigned to duty at a (Jovernment iron works Pennsylvania and will settle down there with his wife. His father stid this morning! "I kuow nothing of his luture plans, nor of any particular service which he may bo assigned." To Trot Tor $10,000. Dbs Moines, Iowa, May 10. Allerton and Deluiarch will trot here next August for a purse of $10,000 and 00 per cent, to go to the winner and 4u to the loser. All the contracts have been signed, VQUR EYES When you ask for a bottle of Wolff's Acme Blacking see that you get the genuine. The real ait.cle made by us cannot be bought for less than 20c. a bottle. It is good material and worth its price. There are imitations offered claiming to be "Just as good" for less money. Don't buy them. If the " Just as good " has any merit it ought to sell without invoking the aid of comparison with our Acme Blacking. WOLFF & HANDOLPII, Phlladolphif . is the name of a paint luch doe work that no other paint can do. Ghm minted with it looks like colored glass. A 10c bottle of I'ik-Hon will d( crMe a market basket full of glassware. All retailers cell it. Outfit that very properly contains a supply of res' 'lltrll nrlrlc in tti.nin.rm.ftt r11 .1 .t . .v. w.tjwjr.Mtiit ui mi iuc UUlCr dainties, and makes a picnic a picnic indeed. o u:m jiutKage maKes 5 gallons ol this very popular beverage. l)on t be deceived If a dealer, for the tale of larger profit, tells you some other Und Is just as eood " 'tis false. No Imitation is as good as the genuine Hires'. S3 SHOE GENTLEMEN THE BEST SHOE If. THE WORLD FOR THE MONEY f it is a seamless shoo, with no tacks or wax thread to hurt the feet; tnado ot the best line calf, stylisU and easy, and because we make more shoes of thit grade than any other manufacture It equals band Bowed shoes ousting from $1.00 to 5.00. cc uinicnuiup iianu-flpivpdt mennestcaii shoe ever offered for $5.U0; equals FrencJi Imported shoes which cost from $3.0) to $U.U. vu iinnu'scwrii ucu shop ono caiu wTa stvllsh. comfortable and durable. Tha beat shoe ever offered at this price t same grade as cu CO 50 l'olico felioe i Farmers, Railroad Men XJ w nntl Irfittppr.irripniftll wear them! flnncalt. seamless, smooth Inside, heavy threo soles, exten sion edge. Ono pair will wear a year. K?n tiu uuv cm i iiu ut'uur bdimj eTeroucrea u SDmZm this nrlcet one trial will convince LhoM who want a shoe for comfort and service. CO 3 nmI cUU worltliiKtimn'fl shoed if) mm are very strong and durable. Those who have given them n trial will wear no other make. Qnucl i?UL" una ,i semxu uwi urn DU lO worn bvtnebovsevervwhere: thevull on their merits, as the increasing sales show. QHjne ciiiuu iinnuMfweu sow, oesc 1m Cl U ICO lionnola. vervstvliah:eaualaFronrJ Imported shoes costing from $i.w to $6.0. ljntllc' '-I.50, S.OU nml 81.75 shoe for Hisses are the best fine Dongola. btyllsh and durabla. fjniuion. oee mat . i. uuuKias- uuuo aua price are stamped on the bottom of each shoe. flTTAKE NO SUI1STITUTE.J Insist on local advert! ed dealers supplying yon. V, I,. JlOlUiLAS, llrochton.niass. Soldby JOSEPH BALL, Xortli Itlfiln St., SliennndoaU SHENANDOAH BOILER WORKS! Xorth JSmrrick Street, Xear Coal, &Jiennndoihf ikf , BEPAIRHSTQ- Of all kinds promptly attended to. Special attention elven to SXEA.HI KITTING, &C. W. E. Smith & Son. FIRE INSURANCE. Largest and oldest reliable purely cash ccm. panles represented by IDJrVXJD FAUST, 120 S. Jardm St., Shenandoah, Pa. IEWIS (- POWSE! 98 LYE F0W2E2S3 TZSniJID (PATENTED) The ttrongeu u4 prtt h emtA. t nltka ether Ltv, it being Boa rowier n4 pcktl In KChu wltbreiuuvftbl HJ, the content irt twa rdv fur u). Will mke th .f por fume I Hard Soap iuWiniaaUHwitkimt baling. IT 13 THE BEST tar oleaailug wurc it.t, dlilnremlng ilnkt, cUtwti, vaiblug boulta, paiau, tret'i, euj. PENNA, SALT M'F'O CO. Cea. Asm., inula., l'a. DR. THEEL, K?Q Worth Fourth 8t., tha on tr genuine German Atairteaa ielaUil Id tblntu-d Hiaua bf U abla to cur- OlOOd Poison, Norvoua Debility wd Spe cial Diseases of twta fciin Dlaw Kd Bpota Palt.1 to lh tuea,8oreThroattMouth lUotihttt I'lmple. Kmpuont toft oi fiard Mem, bwtlungn, Irrktallaui, lutiammattoui and Bnnntsfi, tirumrea, Weaine a&4 Canv fl-flT, ii memory, weak back. mcnUl anxiety KMser aud 'MivMtr Uluuii ail 4 alt DtteaiM reauUiug from fcicriiti, h 'Im-rutluu ur Uvtrwork. Ent cuncur.4 In 4 to 10 flajij fvKu. at unci- Do not loia hop, no matter bat adw Ulug t' 'or, guaok, raoJIj u Btwpltal Pt-yitoitn hu railed. Dr. THKfc.- currt positively wttfcoat detention frou bUflOOM Ot -Oena. M-TXN.I s9$D am VHOl COVtlMrLAVtM Waruda fit or poor, amid U. itamp fcr bQOk TKUTH" "I ftC Quack under iworn teadmorllaJi. llovaidiiir from t to I, I.T i ft to 9, Vad. aad BU Xr i(M 10. BuDdar 9 t!i tt. WrtU ir call and tot aarad. fur Rror&Ma aa M'vda. u-i kUtordajr J'Uia. Oalir Ttacav W. L. DOUCLAS V
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers