. - a (I s OISTIS BNJOYiS Both tho method and results when Syrup of Figs is taken; it is pleasant and refreshing to ,tho taste, and acts fently yet promptly on the Kidneys, liver and Bowels, cleanses. tho sys tem effectually, dispels colds, head aches and fovers and cures habitual constipation, Syrup, of Figs is, , the only remedy of its kind ever pro- .duced, pleasing to the tasto and ac ceptable to tliq Btomacli, prompt in its action and truly beneficial in its effects, prepared only from tho most ineaitny ana ngreeauio substances, its Inany excellent qualities commend it ,o all and have mado it tho most Iiopular remedy known. SvrUD of Firrs is for Rnln in fiOn md SI bottles by all leading drug gists. Any reliable druggist who may not have it on hand will pro cure it nromiitly for any ono who Iwishes to try it Do not accept any CUDStltUtC. CALIFORNIA FIO SYRUP CO. SAN FRANCISCO, CAU LOUISVILLE, K1 NEW YORK, N.Y. Healthful, Agreeable, Cleansing. Cures Vhappod Hands, Wounds, Bums, Etc, Removes and Prevents Dandruff. WHITE RUSSIAN SOAP. pecially Adapted for Use in Hard Water. Unlike the Dutch Process No Alkalies on. Other Chemicals are used' In the preparation of W. BAKER & CO.'S BreakfastCocoa which is absolutely pure and soluble. I the strength of Cocoa railed with Btarch, lArrowroot or flilM.. nml la . ..uiuivui, bvatw.j .coa tiiun vrw cent u Clip. It Is delicious, nourishing, and easily DIGESTED. Sold by Grocers everywhere k17. B AKEE & CO., Dorchester, Mais. SHILOH'S CONSUMPTION" CUBE. The success of this Great .Coueh Cure Is Irithout a parallel in the history of medicine, &dl drugKisis'arcHcuthore4 to sell i onnpos Itiye guarantee, ate$t that no other cure, tan sue. tessruiiy sianu. mi may uctvim.juuwij, rhe Pmniifttors. at an enormous exranse. are placirjg a Sample Bottle Free into every home n the unttea, states ana tanaaa. " ii you nave . CoughtSore Throat, pr Uronchitis, useit, (or t will cure you. If vour child has the Croup. ft Whooping Cough, use It promptly, and relief, i sure. If you dread that Insidious disease Consumption, use it. Ask your Druggist for HlTTtfH'R riIRR Price locts.. Co els." and It m Tf vnnr Tjinrs are sore or Back lame. Vse Shilbh's Torous plaster, itfce as cts, For aale by 0. H. Hugenbuchi Ill nTI in r MTe' the undersigned, were llllr I MHr entirely cured of rupture by IUI U 1 1 U ur. j. n. Mayer, t31 Arch St., 'hlladelnhta.Pa., H, Jones I'lilllps, Kennet fjiiaro, Pa:-. T. A. Krettz, tylatlugfon. 1'u.: K. 1. Hmall. Mount Alto, I'a.: lev. g. II. Slier aer, Huubury.il'a-: D. .1, Dellett,. 211 8. 12tn it., heading, Kl; Wm. Illx, 1S2S MoutroseBt., 'hll&delphla; 11. 1.. Howe. 309 Elm Ht. Bead, nir. Pa.: Oeoiveaud Ph. llurKart. 39.LocuBt pi., Heading, Pa, Bend for olrcular. Act on a new principle refrolste the liver, etooitca and bowels through th tuna. Do, Wins' Fills ipeultly cure biliousness, torpid liver and constlps tlon. Smallest, mildest, euieatl updoses.SSpts. iiaaiploa tree at drueipsis. It, tilei Bed. Co., Ell tut t, tad. J. GALLAGHER. iustlce of the Peace, Deal Estate and Insurance Agency. 3fflce Mulfloon'a Building, Shenandoah, Ja MEN WANTED 1 test a 1'ualtlrn Care lor 1140 street or svir-abtuu, nrlv Kiph.m. llilUioji,ftcMouslrt,Ultr. Losaor bKU&l Tower, Impotcncr, &o. Bo irreat U our faith ill Br hpecino we wuisrnu una run ji ouiira Jieauiat EdUnub VsluitU. Information 1HI 1, Addrnia u. i. a-u BBuriiiwiji.itw aura mm it H mm Looses ijf hyfr SWIFT FLYING WHEELS The Great Relay Bicycle Race in Progress. FROM CHICAGO TO NEW YORK. Tho Stnrt Mndo nt Norm To-Day It U Ex. peeled Thnt Gen. Miles' Messtige Will lie Delivered to den. Howard lijr the J32d--Qreat Interest In the Contest. Chicago, May 18. To-day at noon, from the main door of the Pullman building two men started away on well oiled bicycles, turned south tnto Michi gan avenue and scudded away for dear life on tho smooth boulevard. They rode as no man ever rode before on that street, for they carried an important dispatch to (3tn. Howard of the United States army, at New York. The mes sage was delivered to them by Qen. Nel son A. Miles, Commander of the Depart ment of the Missouri. This was the be ginning of the great relay ride from Chicago to New York. The men who received the dispatch from Qen. Miles are Lumsdon and Bode, two of the best known wheelmen in Amerloa. They "scorched" tho distance between tho Pullman block and Grand Crossing, at which point they turned the dispatch over to two other men, who. without delay, bore it on to the next i stage on its long journey to New York. I All who, are ,to help speed the (lis- patches are now at their posts along the route, and there will be no delay in passing the dispatches from one party to another. About 50 well-known riders will take part in the work. They are all riders with line records. j The heavy rnlns have played havoo ! with some of the finest roads and fast time is therefore not expected. With good roads and no obstacles to meet It is calculated the run will, be made by ' relay riders in from five to seven days. ! The relay ride is made to test the, value of tho bicyclo for military pur poses. Gen. Miles Is deeply interested in the experiment, and is inollned to be lieve that the bltycles will eventually become a factor in military movements. In discussing the question to-day, the General said: "The great advantage to an army equipped with bicycles would be its ability' to reach stragetlo points before tho. enemy,. The , army that gets there first has the battle half won already. It has been found, that a soldier can carry his gun on his wheel and all his equip ment without much distress and go along at a very good rate. The fact is that experiments , have been made with the bicycle in almost every army except that of the United States. They have done very well In, Germany, France, Anstrla,( England and Russia, and offi cers .are apparently satisfied that the bi cycle may be of great use." The) last division between Albany and K()w York,, a distance of 138 miles, Is to be covered in 18 hours and 15 minutes. and twenty-six men to aro to be detailed i for.duty. .In the last.batch wlll.be that famous Western rider, ,N. l. Van Sick leu, who will make the start from Chi' cago. riding to Kensington, and , will then take the train to Now York city, wUere.Jie.Tylll come. in jover -the course of the last ten mile? to the headquarters in Harlem. Ten of the men who are to ride : In the. ast, division, have been, chosen from Albany eyeing clubs. Niagara l'lills' Deadlock. Niaoara Ralls, N. Y., May 18. The deadlock between the Mayor and Alder men over nominations, remains un broken. At the meeting of the City Council the, Mayor read a long letter ext plaining his position in making, nomlpv tlons, which was not very conciliatory to the "combine" Aldermen. The Mayor then presented the same nominations, that the, Aldermen, j,aa; already.rejected,. A heated, discussion followed, and a mo tion was made and carried that they be rejected. Italian Murderer Arrested. Newark, N. J., May 18. James Mar- Frllla, an Italian, is under arrest here, for' I the murder of a fellow-countryman of I Altoona, I'a., on May 8. The Superin tendent of Police received word .from Mayor Jtftrchfleld of Altopna last Satur-. day that it was supposed the man was in this. city. He, could notbe located, how ever, until last evening. Marrilla killed, the, man by hitting him In the head with a brick. Efforts to Capture Garza. Washington, May 18. Qen Schofleld said this mornlun; that he had nq ofll clal Information as to the anticipated arrest of Oarza, hut he was advised that the Texas authorities were using every effort to capture him, and expressed great confidence In their ultimate suc cess, From ,whai he knew about the means that are employed, he thought their confidence vas Justified. Russia's Mllltury Muiimuvres. ' Vienna, May 18. The Czar has or dered the general staff to hold the manoeuvres this year near St. Peters burg and on the western frontier on a less grand scale than usuul in ylew of the inability of tho districts in question to feed a large extra force anil of tho necessity of saving money for the relief of (ho starving. Heirs to 81,U50,000 Kach. Chicago, May 18. A special from Appleton, Wis., say Dr. Einll and Her man 12ru hare fallen heirs to fortucos of I 11,850,000 eaoU by the death o( in Bag- I ' lllh nl.ll,. . 1 Highest of zill in Leavening Power. ASSOiPIEOf PURE WHAT A HAT SHOWS. The Man Often Stamped by the Headgear He Wears, "Whoro did you get thnt hat?" This, question, in this connection, is not in tended to bo in the least dogreo imper tinent. It ia asked merely to show a follow Interest conccrniug tho most im portant article of man's dress and adorn ment. Tho declaration that "the tailor makes tho man" Is slightly misleading and not altogether true, for it is the hat tor that gives the important finishing touch to the attired male adult Wil liam Shakcspcaro, speaking' for Sir Francis Bacon, says: For the apparel oft proclaims the man. ' Had he been speaking- of the modern habiliments of men he would no doubt have declared that the hat always pro claims the man, and in tones that can not bo misinterpreted. The headgear is tho first and often the only portion of a man s dress that impresses an ob server. A man's hat is to lilm what a headline is to an article In the news paper. If it is unpleasantly shocking, 1 wo care to know nothing further of that with which it is connected; if it looks 1 inviting we are willing to cultivate a mora intimate knowledge of Its sur roundings. We can tell by it as tho children of the nursery do by counting tho number of buttons of the waistcoat, whether the wearer is a Rich man, poor roan, beggar man, thief, Lawyer, doctor, merchant, chief. Nature in one of her most Intelligent moods deslgnod the hat as the index or a sort of a tag to be attached to the 'wearer of It, whereby the world may know what and who he is without hav ing to ask impertinent questions to 'satisfy Its consuming curiosity. I The lint and tho manner of wearing it is the, perfectly natural and inevitable product of the brain beneath it, and i 1 shows tho moral and intellectual soil and seed it springs from as correctly as do the fruits and flowers of the garden or the weeds of tho fence corner. More properly it may be said that the stylo or condition of a hat may be tho rosult of circumstances over which tho wearer may have no control, but the manner in which it is placed on the head is the true index to its owner's character. The same style of a hat on a dozen dif ferent heads may express as many pre dominating traits of character. The ordinary black derby hat worn fairly and squarely on tho head may not con clusively prove that the owner is a fair and square man, but it offers no sug gestion to the contrary. A man who wears his hat in this manner Is not handicapped by his appearance; you intuitively arrive at the conclusion that he' may bo a pretty decent sort of a man and you would not much hesitate to trust him in any ordinary business ea-1 poclty. , He is , not above or below the ! common people. If ho1 has idiosyncra- sles and. froaklsn.no tions they are not worn, publicly on tho sleeve nor pro claimed by the manner.. in whioli ho wears his hat. Take the samo sort of a hat and sot it well back on the head and slightly to ,onp side and the' impression it creates on tho mind of the observer is not al- wy8 altogether flattering to the wear- er. XNo one would guess that the brain only partially beneath it is particularly noted for the highly practical, moral, sober thoughts it coins. The man un-der- the hat worn in this way may be wholly upright and scrupulously eor- recr, m nij mora, oeuayior ana 1 again no; may not be; there exists a doubt in your , rauiiL 1 ou iuoi quite suro mat ne is a jolly, happy-go-lucky sort ol a fellow, who would be a pleruant companion on nn.outlnp;, but you are not tju)to certain If he, be the right sort of a person for your younger; brother to ahum with. BtlU he might be, since all appearance, are more or less deaelrlng. Any sort, of a hat brought down over tho forehead till the brim Is almost even ,wlth tho oyes gives the wearer a bus plolous look, and calls to mind' tho old Spanish sombrero a broad, slouched, flapping affair that was often looped down on occasions so as to serve as a mask, and was well adapted to a land and age when seronades.jealousles and mid night stabblnir were of common occur renoe. You would be Just. a Uttlo afraid to meet a man who Tf oars his hat in this way in a dark, lonely place. Ills mind 'may be the homo of honest and noble intentions, yet you doubt It, and you will not fall to give yourself th benefit, of that doubt The hat of the sporting man has an, individuality that is clearly exclusive. Thore soemB to hover about it some of tho associations of its wearer. One can almost see spades and diamonds outlined upon It or hear the rattle of dice when in Its immediate vicinity. No wide awake observer could ever mis take its qwner to be a minister of the gospel or a leader of the Y. M. C. A. bomotlmes men are not so bad as tttiey are painted not so bad even as tliey paint themselves. For example, callow youths will often affect the hat of tho sporting fraternity, and assum ing an air that says, "I would rather be tough than tony," endeavor to persuade tbemselvps nnij tno world that they are indeed "real bad men." They remind one of the dude who, after declaring, "I am a bowible wetch of a waff," .falntod dead away at the sight of a toy pistol, ilia high, silk hat covers a mul titude of sinners and some saints. It has no meaping of a stylo that It can wholly abrogate to itself. It is worn by all classes ami nearly all aces. Min iatcrs and cpnfidanpa ;nn, deacons and the owners of fast horses, judges and youths scarcely out of their snip period an aon it. Hut ivb.Ua ulllc hats aa a dua ara Tint Latest U. S. Gov't Report. Indicative of character, each individual hat is rnoro or less an index to tho na ture of tho man it covers. Shabby gen tility has nothing so characteristic as its old silk hat There is always an un' natural calmness about its nap and an unwholesome gloss Suggestive of a wet brush. Tho waning strength of decay ing fortune is expended in smoothing its dilapidated surface. It Is the last flickering ray of respectability, Thar - is no mistaking tho old silk hat that is 1 b(f ,n td rcaoh Le J"? m- Ge belngworn by the man who did not era !" rePrtfd throughout the buy It originally. It may be much I valler- Iu H probability the river wi l scuffed and sadly out of shape still It 1 vor 80 teel hetore oml"8to a stand- Vin nVimit. It. n rffmMrtn ef liottnr ! Still. times and surroundings that make It appear out of harmony with tho rest oi tho wearer's apparel. It is an odd piece ' of furniture and It knows that tho world , Wows it Tho nico now glossy silk hat Is a thing of beauty and, alas, a joy for a very short time. All of earth, animate and Inanimate, conspires to destroy the comeliness of its shine and shape. Hence a fine now hat of that style indicates that its owner had cash until quite re cently, that his credit is good, or that he may have visited somo public place ' and secured the new hat by mistake, 1 leaving In Its stead one not nearly so igood nor resembling it In the slightest particular. And so, on the wholo, you 'can't tell whether or not tho wearer of a nice silk hat is a better man honestly ,than is tho tramp who is wearing the remnant of a tile ho fished out of a garbage box. As has been before said, a great deal can be told by the way In which men wear hats, and the stylo of liats they wear if one only knows how to tell it. Chicago Tribune. QUEER FISHi Beds Covering Ilundrods of Sqnaro Miles ' Found In Colorado. Superintendent W. C. Hart, of the northern division of tho Colorado world's fair mineral department, recently re turned from a trip In tho northwestern part of tho state During his absence, says tho Roclty Mountain News, Mr. Hart mado investigations leading to ono of tho most rcmarkablo geological dis coveries ever known in tho west. Vast fish beds, covering hundreds of square miles in northwestern Colorado, aro brought to light and cannot fall to awaken a great interest in scientific circles. Tho beds, so far as traced by Mr. llart, extend a distanco of ono hun dred and fifty miles in tho region of tho Green river country and when traced to points more than ono hundred miles toward the interior of tho state Scien tists havo known of tho existenco of primoval deposits of fish in Wyoming, dui tor tno nrst umo a discovery 01 a similar character is reported in this stato. Tho beds aro ono hundred and fifty to two hundred foot thick. To tho ordinary observer their origin would remain forever a mystery; How untold millions of fish could be piled in distinct layers over a largo area of country which is nowflvo thousand to ten thousand feet above sea level is a problem which might stagger tho most profound geologist. Aftor- caroful in vestigation Mr. Haft has arrived at a theory which at least appears plausible. According to his theory,' there was a time when tho region of tho fish de posits formed tho shoro of a salt water ocean. As tho tides swopt tho waters against the rocky Bhoros, marshes were formed on tho opposito side of tho rocky barrler,, Tho Udc3 Barg agatn3t with such forco to fhrow thfl i4 i, ri,n ,,, ntflni the heated temperaturo of tho air, the water, in tho marshes evaporated before the tide again returned, leaving the fish to 'expire in the mud.. . The next flow brought a new supply of flsh,and after many centuries tho beds of to-day wero formed, The tdopoalt of pjuri rat 11 nf tVtn tKAa to lo4lnn41i marked in tho cliffs and on the sides of the .canyons of, tho .mountain streams. The' deposit -was raised to its present elevation by tho same hidden forces whioh formed tho mountalni- AT THE NEXT MORNING f FEEL BRIGHT AND NEW AND MY COMPLEXION IS BETTER. My doctor says It acts g ntly on the stomach, liver and kidnes,fcni tj a pU-aant laxative. This dt ink 1 mado frm Imrln, and t prepared fur utu oa cosily as iva. it ht c iti 'i! AUdnigffUn tU4 h60. uud fi.ui per im"koe. Iliiy ono to-drtv. l.naeit I'limtly Itlrdlclne tIovpu tho ffoweli racU tiny. Id order to ba 1 wall by, tUid la uOLiuary. JOHN H. EVANS' SALOON, 30 E. CENTRE BT SHENANDOAH FRESH BEER. PORTER, ALE. Finest brands of clears always on hand. rug limit temperaiine aringa. It will pay anyone-In WALL PAPER want oi tbscml 8c to par postage on our beautiful Uueof oer 1U) mat.'lii samples at Inwm prices. . Adilrou 1'. U. CAB V, M Ilka rrovldenoe. B. L STILL THE WATERS RISE Immense Damage by the Great Inundation. UNION PACIFIC BRIDGE WRECKED, Its Eastern Aptiretich 'Washed Out and Alt Trnlllo Suspended Water Twenty Five Veot Deep lu Home Towns Alarm lng.Sltnatlon at Many Points. OitAnA, May 18. The eastern ap proach to the great Union Pacific bridge hero has been washed out. All traffic Is stopped. St. Louis, May 18. The flood situa tion is more serious this morning than it has been since the water began rising. The gauge registers 35.4 feet, with the liver stationary, although having rUlng tendency; An Inch of rain fell throughout the- Missouri and upper Miss issippi valleys last night, and this water The greatest danger is In American bottoms on the Illinois side. The levees to tho north have given away and only the Chicago & Alton railroad em' bankment is holding back the floods. A Rreat deal depends on the point at which any break may occur as to tho amount of damago dono. At present three-quarters of tno American bottoms which is a tract of laud 25 miles long by five miles wide, is under water. The prlnoipal cities In it, East St. Louis and Madison, are still safe, they being higher than the surrounding country. The towns of Venice, Brooklyn. East Madison, East Carondolet, Centrevtlle Station, Forest Lawn and Cahokia are under from Ave to twenty feet of water. At least 00 square miles of the most fer tile farming land is Inundated and thousands of farmers have been driven from their homes and forced to seek refuge on the Pittsburg bluffs, which lie east of the flooded district. They are without shelter, food or fuel. They were forced by the sudden rise of the waters to leave all their property be hind them. In many instances the farmers managed to drive their stock to safety, but in many others all they saved was their lives. Their condition has become so desper ato that a committee headed by two Catholic priests Father Dietrich of Ca.- hokia, and Father iluyf us of Centrevlllo Station, went to Bollville, the capital of St. Clair County. lib, and appealed to County Judge Bouoau and Mayor Weber for assistance. Judgo lioneau nas come to St. Louis and has arranged with Gov. Francis to secure the loan of 100 tents belonging to Missouri in order that those people may be sheltered. The two priests while at Belleville said that there were 200 families, constituting about 1.200 people in all, without shel ter of any kind. Alton. 111.. May 18. Numerous res cues of families from the tops of their residences by steamers and other craft are renorted. So far no loss of life has been reported. Tho sufferings of tho uoodIb driven from their homes are in tense. Nearly 1,500 men have been thrown out of employment by the com pulsory suspension of the Illinois Class works. Qreenvillb, Miss., May 18. The Panther Forest levee break on the Ar kansas shore is 800 feet wide, with a volume of water 11 feet deepipouring through. The big plantations now under, water are those ol HE. Craig, B. I II. Smith. W. B. Halllday, W. O. Crit tenden, Gaines Landing place, Chap man. Llnwood and Brink ley places and all the plantations on both sides of Bayou Mason.n The Brooke mill levee break has overflowed, almost the remain der of Chicot County, and when the two bodies of water meet that part of Arkansas will be a vast lake. The water has. already backed thirteen miles into the country. The river ihere is sta tionary .despite the heavy overflow at the breaks. Gainesville, Tex., May 18. From tho southern boundary of Oklahoma to this city the land, which has been flood- ed Blnce Saturday, is just beginning to jUBt beginning show again Miles upon miles of crops HIV ruiucu. UU lilVVI lUW ui vug kjtw V I Fe road has been washed away between here and Furcell. Ntarly all the bridges In this part of Texas nav been washed away by the floods, and no trains from the North have arrived since Saturday. Niw Orleans. May la. Th break in Gypsy levee,- 'thirty miles north of New Orleans on -the left bank,, is nearly 300 j feet wide, and 13 feet deep. The tracks of the N. O. '& T. road are submerged for miles: A large force 'of men were workine last night to stop the gap. Engineers say It Is well nigh impossible to do so. The large plantations ara badly damaged. The levee at the point where It broke was eight feet high. This break will lessen the strain in the lower levees to a great extent. The valley railroad' and farmers will suffer most from - the -crevasse, the latter losing everything;' The Triangular llace. Abandoned. Itiia'ca, N. Y., Muy 18. The exjtected trlangninr race on uayuga L.aite, oe- tw ten. the crows of the Columbia and Cornell Colleges and the University of Pennsylvania bas' been abandoned on accouutof the Impossibility of arranging a date that would suit all of. the crews. Instead of the three cornered event, however, there will be a race between the Columbia and Cornell Freshmen's eltrhU on the 8th of June, and another between the Freshman's eights of the University of Pennsylvania and the eights of the -Cornell college on June 15th. Both races will be rowed here. Shot Ills Wife and Her 1'uramour. Ashland, Pa., May 18. By roturnlng home from work, sooner tnan lie was ex- tiected. John Zserlchs, a workman liv ing at Hid-Valley, near this place, found Samuel ClnltliJa In his wire's room. Se curing a revolver Zeeriehs shot Cintthla in the arm and side, lnfllctlugdangerous wounds. The enraged husband then shot his wife lu the stomach, causing her death soon alter. Zeorlcus has not yet been captured. llelirlng Sea Arbitrators Accept. WASHiMOTo.f, Hay 18. Mr. Justice Harlan and Senator Morgan have form- nllr uotlfled the President of their will lnzness to serve as arbitrators on behalf of the United States in the Pehrlug Sea YO'OR EYES' When you ask for a bottle of Wolff's Acme Blacking see that you get the genuine. The real article made by us cannot be bought1 for less than 20c. a bottle. It is good material and worth its price. There arc 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. WOLPl' & RANDOLPH", Philadelphia is tho name of a paint which docs' work that no other paint can do. Olam painted with it looks like colored glass. A 10c bottle of Pik-Eon will decorate n market basket full of glasb ware. All retailers sell it. S3 SHOE THE BEST SHOE IN THE WORLD FOR THE MONETf it is a seamless stioe, with no tacics or wax tnreaa to hurt tho t eeti mado of tho best tine calf, stllsb and easy, and because ire viake more ehoes or fnU (trade than any other mantifacturer. It equals hand N)wed shoes costing from S1.U0 to $5.00. EZ uu uciiuidd lami-si'ivrii, monnpsicau kD Khoo fvir nfTprml fnr ft!t.(lt! cniiRl Krencb Imported shoes which cose from to $1.00. ,uu iinui-9cvcu licit rmnr, bdo.c&u, Ira' stylish, comfortable and durable. ThebeM shoo ever offered at this price : same Rrado as custom-made shoos oobtln; from C&ou to suix). CEO OU l'ollru Hliuu i. Warmers, itallroad Stea ullli and letter Carriers all wearthprn! flnecalf seamless, sniooth Inside, heavy threo soles, extea sionedge. one pair will wear a year. Sr, uu nuo mill uoucuerenoeeveronereQU this nrlcot one trial will convlnco Lhasa who wans a shoe for comfort and service. (SO i55 nnu 9.OU i orluntrniriivH shoes Sfmmm &re rer? strong and durable. Those who navp given mom atnai win wear no other maice. DnVcl b'J.UO 11 nil SI. 7.5 school shoes era Dwja wprabTtheboyseverywhere: theyMIi on their merits, ns the increasing sales show. rliOCluu iinnn.nrwcu buoo, uvlu ICQ llonfrolft, Tery st llshi equaUFl Imported cboes costing from e4.00 to SJsl. bos' reuclt , .. . ! 1 . . ' .ft ... W ,, I at atiAA rA ulssesare the best Tine Dongola. rityflsh and durable. Camion. See that W. L. Douglas namo as4 price are stamped on the bottom of each shoe. ' IIPT1KE TJfl Wfr llSTTTliTK. are Insle siet on local advertised dealers supplying yon. W. JJOUUfcASi IlrocUtou.Masn. Boldbr nn. jfrortu Mnill St., Slienanrtoall " I EWIS' 98 LYE (patented) The fronffl u4 pvmt hjt mrnJe.' Unlit 9, t-t-Ur Ljt, Hoeing r Dot rwJr n4 pMht to ft eu with removable lid, tht eon ten U ar tlw;tre&4r ur. tTItt mtki tht tettpor' fumeil Utrd Sop laSOtniontei wrffhtmlboffifia. IT 13 TIIK BUT tor clCkVtaiHtfK wite ilpA; dlilnrectlns alnki, clotwtt, naihlng twtUiH pHil.trWtefa Gea. Agts.7rliUa..lia. DR.THBEL, FiJlft. North Fourth nt., Iht only eonin German Amcrletj PpVdkU.Ua tht l-filtwl BtsUei Who u Kbit to our BlOOd PolSOPi Nervous Debility ni spe cial Diseases . 8klD DImmw. Rwl BpoU PaJci la bo uSoroThroat Mouth, Pl)tche, tUalea, rrppUv. oA o InflEtncikUftDi and BoddIdI, btrlcturti, WeUooii and Early JmTi loit memory, wtat back, meoUl anxletr. KUaey n4 la-inr iMKUH ana an piteaf raiuof 1 idiivr. Uun or Urrrwork. Heotot cawa mrM la 4 to 10 aayi ft f at ono. po not Iom hope, do matter wbt .T'l tidnt Uootor, Quack, Family or IloplUl rojifelan baa slM r. TUKUb eurra positively wio oaaugn VIIQCM. CLP, TOUHO), nDl.l llti .idtIIWI ponsmrLii. tnriana rich pr poor, ao4 to. atarap for bOOK. TKUTH iiprt. Qacka nndr awrn toatJawnUia. llot-ai. dally from 9 to I, Kr'ia to f, Wad. ml Sb r r 6 tn l, Sanrta? 9 till IJ, TTrlt er caU and b iad. r r 'cfRDoea VTedJ. ul Batudaf fUla. dUy Tim. 3Cm. SANDEN'B ELECTRIC BELT UTiSTPATUTS. BIST ' IMPROVEMENTS, WITH UtCTM MAQHUIO SUSrtHSMT. Win sr vlttioat i&e4Ulo sll 1tkBM molting from at irUittloii f brftlB. serv fare,!, szaeiiel or ladlitretlao. o txusl iibsusttoB, dr,lBi, Iomos, otrroui dbUUr, tUf p. Una,,,. UosBor. rbttiiuuU.m, kldBir, Mvtr and tudd,r cm IB1Q1I, IBBlt BSCS, IIIBBBSO, SriBMBB, SIBIFB, ,.IKI1B t. hli ClaDtrlB ball eaniAina HaBdirrful lB,nr,Bi,8la OTar Bll olharl. SBd llrca o eurraut that It Inattotlr fall br th araarar crB farrtlt SM10U.UO. ,bd vlll CBCt all of th bbbi- dlaas aaanrBObar. thouaaodi bBTt bru eurad by tbli maraaloBS lBau'laofter oil otbar ramadlaa faild, sod lv oso orasa or '.iniivoiBla la mi aoo arary oinar aiait. OBr M, ,fBl Improvad aLfCTRU1 MSFfcAMlRT ll tfas (raalaai boao etarolferad I.IB.CB i I Hltllttl BIL1S. Ilaallk sad 'rbaa SIrrB,th lIUKHTlfU la 60 lo 81 D4TS. 8aBd for arS lt"atrat,d (amphlaui, sealad, (raa. S7 tuail. Addraaa I Morning I Noon i I Night I Good all the time. It removes 5 the languor of morning, sus- 9 S tains the energies of noon, lulls S V the weariness of night. r Hires'! P delicious, sparkling, appetizing. 9 A Don't be deceived If a dealer, for the take i of larger profit, tell you lome other kind t? a Is 'justas good "-'tis false. No imitation & i Is as good as the genuine Hires. 4 W. L. DOUGLAS No.eiw 3roadwar, NEW YOrtK. matter.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers