t ' WOMAN'S WORLD. 80ME GOOD ADVICE TO MOTHERS WON A VITAL SUBJECT. Hint, to Womrn Hhrm Jnntlre Fnr the Knmmn Olrl Womr-n nnd the nprr-me Court Mary Hnllmk Fnote Changed Jirvnnrn at the ltllrr. Thorn nro ninny pnrenf who seem to have no renlir.iiiK senso whatever of tho proper diet for children. They u;ivo hem whiUoviT they hnppon to havo at hnnd, or, wlint in mneh to the snnio pur pose, miytliiiiK (hoy cry for. Tho infant mortality of the country Is soniotliiiiR j awful, when one considers it. Iliinilrt'rts ! of thonsands of children die every your, j mimy of tliom from tho efforts of inju dicious fccdiiiK nlono. In hot weather children slionld 1)0 carefully watched and never permitted to touch nrticles of food t hut nro at nil qnestioimble. A little perfectly ripo fmit, either with a little rnel or other Bnitablo diet, slionld bo (riven. If a child is nt oil delinnto or the dilution seems to bo at fault, cooked fmit may be (riven. This is eminently safe and al ways relishahlu, Umo as littlo snRiir as mny bo in order to render the snuee pal atable, and carefully select tho kind to bo (riven. Cooked strawberries and blackberries, with tho seeds strained ont, nro excellent nnd may lo eaten freely. Raspberries are usually safe to give without rooking, provided they nro perfectly ripo nnd thoroughly washed. Very ncid fruits nro not to bo given to young children. The reason for this is that, U'iiig largely on a milk diet, tho acid in the fruit makes a thick, tough enrd in tho stomach, which, in many cases, it is impossible to digest. Oranges disagreo with a great many persons, and although they nro nlmost universal ly recommended for children tho ntmost euro should bo observed as to whether they disngreo, for thero 1b probably no form of indigestion so distressing an that produced by oranges. Pineapplo has npon boiiio persons a somewhat simi lar effect, only usually less Bovero. Thoro nro many persons who nro op posed to tho nso of moats, especially in hot weather. It is, however, safo to say that properly mado simps nnd a small bit of well cooked meut cut into tiny shreds nnd thoroughly masticated can do no harm to del tea to children and often produeo tho happiest results. Thero 1b in many vegetables an olo mout that, in itself harmless when it exists in tho digestive organs in any quantity yot furnishes nutriment for a deadly germ. This germ will not flourish unless this substance is present Vegetables of varions sorts oro special ly productivo of thia olemcnt; therefore tho best authorities on cholora and kin dred diseases havo found it necessary to restrict tho uso of certain vegetables in extremely hot weather. Whatever is given, however, must be thoroughly cooked and should be kept ns complete ly excluded from outside air as possible. If children nro feverish, cross and un manageable, it is woll to try a diot of gluten bread and carefully propared broth or soup. Tho meat should be per fectly fresh and cookod a long time. Vegetables may bo added, but should be strained out before tho soup 1b served. Milk, if there is any doubt about it Whatever, should bo storilizod beforo using. All uteusils used for cooking children's food ought to receivo tho most rigid inspection, and no question should bo allowed as to their perfect cleanliness. Fow peoplo realizo that a dish of milk standing in a tainted ice box may in a few hours collect disease germs enough to poison on entire family, and, while tho robust constitutions of adults may bo nblo to resist tho poison, delicate children succumb to it. It 1b not necessary that a child's diet bo extremely varied. It is much hotter to restrlut it during tho hot season to certain urtielcs that oro known to be , easy of digestion and to muko dietotio experiments at other seasons of tho year, if thoy are mado nt all. Now York Ledger. : niut to Women Bathers, ' Do not place too much trust in but- I tons and strings. Ro-euforoe all fasten ings by safety pins. You will enjoy your bath much bettor if not oppressed by a conviction that whon yon leave the briny deep for the beach your stockings will be a wad of wet cloth around your 'ankles. Whon the eventful moment arrives when you oro ready to opeu the door of , your bathhouse and appear before a orit- ioal oompany.you will probably be seized j wim a uisioBK) lor your oosinine. x ou will long, quite absurdly, but neverthe less strongly, for long skirts and sleeves. Remember at suoh oruoial periods that ' matters will not be improved by delay, and that the best place in wbioh to hide your abbreviated draperies is in thews tor, not in front of the bathhouse door. ' Brown looks or goldon done up in coquettish knots are pleasonter to look upon than oilskin caps. But salt wr.ter plays havoo with ooquettlsh knots. Un less yon are propared to follow every sea hath by a shampooing period of greater or less length, cover your crown ing glory with an unpioturesque oap. The woman who is "learning to wim" is thereoipient of mnoh more at tention than she who knows how to wim. If the society and advloe of men are dear to you even in the vast doep, aver quite master the gentle art of wimiulug, but always be about to mas ter it. - Don't venture beyond your depth and allow yourself to bo resoned more than anoa or twiue during the season. It's pomantio, of course, but even a ronian :tio thing oan be done often enough to I become merely monotonous. . Don't show your love of the water by staying in very long. It is a pleasant thing to talk about, one's love of the water, but to display it by remaining in ifor over SO minutes merely makes one's 'lips blue and one's complexion mottled. Do not promenade the beach or lie in ithe sand after your bath. You have seeu obi ok ens and other animals whose nat nrnl element 1 notwutor after a drench ing shower. Bo warned by those hnm blo inenibcni of rrention nnd betnke yonrsnlvos directly from the waves to the drossing room. New York World. Justice For the Rammer Olrl. The American girl is showing her amazing address and aptitude at a thou sand spots by tho seaside nnd mountain this summer, as in a score of summers before. As tho "summer girl, " sho hns her rattling flroof criticism to fane, bnt the astonishing thing is not that she makes a few blunders in her social code or shows too littlo restraints in her beha vior, but that sho does not fall into worso pitfalls nnd cast all restraint to tho winds. Of tho thousands and tens of thou sands of American girls whoso behavior amazes and whose bennty charms by every beach and on every hillside, tho great mass have seen littlo or nothing of any bnt the narrowest social conditions in village, town or tho restricted circlo of a small city honso until they find themselves in a big hotel lending a lifo of unmitigated publicity and living in tho midst of strangers. Most of these girls havo had no social experience. Their mothers have had as little. Their men folk are away. On tho instant they havo to adjust a codo of villago liehavior to gregarious condi tions nnd a free contact which wonld bo trying to one of experience. Thoy muko blunders and do much that is foolish, but their blunders are for tho most part trivial and thoir folly mero plnyfnluess which rarely brings them into harm. Yet if they understood how much ro servo, restraint and a rigorons solf con trol do for a woman in public and pri vate, how quickly it wins a respect which passes into admiration, nnd an admiration which ripens into something warmer, the American summer girl would add tho only charm sho now lacks. Philadelphia Press. Women nnd the Supreme Court. "As a matter of fact, " says Once a Week, "although eight women now havo the right to practice beforo tho suprome court, no woman has ever availed herself of that right in a prac tical way. The law admitting women to , supremo court practice was passed in 1870 and signed by President Hayes on the 15th of February. John M. 0) lover of Missouri introduced the bill in tho house Nov. 6, 1877. Benjamin Butler reported it to the house from the com mittee Fob. 21, 1878, and it passed the house the same day. The vote was 160 to 87. "The law says that 'any woman who shall have been a member of the highest court of any state or territory or of the suprome court of tho District of Colum bia for tho space of three years and shall have maintained a good standing before such courts, and who shall be a person of good moral character, shall, on notice and the production of suoh record, be admitted to praotioo beforo the suprome court of the United States.' Mrs. Lookwood was eligible immediate ly after the pnssagn of the law, and she gave due notice, and on the 8d of March, 1870, was admitted to the supreme court bar. "No othor member of her sex was ad mitted to tho supremo court for nearly six yenrs. Mrs. Laura DoForoe Gordon of California was tho next to apply. She was admitted Feb. 9, 1885. Then followed Mrs. Ada Hittenbender of Ne braska Oct. 15, 1888; Mrs. Carrie B. Kilgoro of Pennsylvania Jan. 8, 1800; Mrs. Clara S. Foltz of California March 4, 1800; Mrs. LelinR. Sawtello of Mas sachusottH April 8, 1800; Emma M. Oillett April 8, 1800, and Miss Kate Kano of Chicago Mny 86, 1800." Mnry Hnllock Footo. Mrs. Mary Hal look Footo, tho artist author, 1b by birth a New Yorkor, al though since her marriage she has re sidod in Boise City, the seeno of nearly all hor recent stories. Hor art education was chiefly acquired nt Cooper insti tute, the mooca of so many aspiring geniuses. For years aftor her success was assured Mrs. Footo refused to let a curious public know anything of her personality. Even now but little is known of the woman, however general is the appreciation of hor work. Her likeness has never appeared in print but ouoe and that was only after long and urgent persuasion on the part of the magazine to which all hor work, both literary and artistio, is by contract pledged, and which was then publish ing an illustrated artiole upon its con tributors. Since that time Mrs. Foote has been obdurate to all appeals for her portrait, although she is besieged from every quarter. While never permitting her home duties to interfere with the natural ex pression of her genius, yet, after all, it is as one of the many happy wives and mothers of Amorioa that she prefers to be known. She has three charming daughters, the eldest of whom, although yot very young, already displays a marked artistio talent Mrs. Foote's work has confined itself almost wholly to illustration iu black and white, oud one of the greatest compliments ever paid her was that "she produced bettor color effects with a pencil than most art ists did with a brush." Philadelphia Times. Cbanswd Drwni at the Baoaa, The fashionable womon of England, it would seem, have plenty of time to think of dress. At Ascot recently there was a hoavy downpour of rain one day, and some of the ludles, thinking, doubt less, that the bad weather would con tinue, started the next duy in cloth and serge costumes, but when they reached the raoe track, behold, the sun was shin ing, and there was not a oloud iu the sky. So, with commendable prompti tude, they telegraphed home for the re luctantly surrendered gowns of the morning and soon emerged like so many butterflies from so many chrysalides. Borne exquisite toilets were seen. The Princess of Wales was costumed in bleak. She wore a cream lace ruff round her throat During the drive she had on a very becoming slate colored cape. The Princess Beatrice of Battonborg's cos tumo was of soft cream material strap ped over the shoulder with deep red bands. The Princesses Victoria and Mand of Wales wero dressed alike in palest aroain, trimmed with blue; bon nets to match. Tho Duchess of Saxo-Cobnrg-Ootha's gown was of dark stool blue silk, with a running pattern of pinky sprays. There wore a large number of Amer ican visitors present, all gorgeously ar rayed in pnrplo and fine linen. New York Commercial. Kngilnh Women's Itonnrts. A private letter from England de clares that women thero aro wearing their bonnets nnd hats perched on the back of tho head, whero they look for all tho world as if they were likely to fall off any moment. This is csjiccially true of the small bonnets, of which Eng lish womfti nro so fond, nnd they nro worn hanging on tho cushion of hair, which is gaining steadily in favor. It isn't probablo that tho fashion will reach hero for two seasons yet, ns it takes nliont that timo for a stylo in mil linery or hnirdressing to get to this conn try. To prove that it is only necessary to look at tho Alpine, Tyrol or English walking hat, as it is called, which has been adopted this summer by New York Women. Three years ago similar shapes Wero seen in all tho London shops, but not more than half a dozen American women would bring them home. It has taken ever sincofor tho stylo to get here A Word Agalnnt Suffrage. Tho most of tho advocates of woman sufl'rago in tho United States are wom en who, from tho very circumstances of thoir lives, hardly know for what they clamor. They are not usually tho wom en who have beeu thrown into most rontnet with tho world. Tho littlo local suffrago clubs here and there, if analyzed without prejudice, will be found to consist of tho womnn physician, tho womon who have not married and are victimaof a "conserved longing" which thoy hope to satisfy by intellectual pur suits, nnd women disappointed in mar riage. It is to mo tho "beating of tho bird against tho bars" to see those wom en long so ardently for woman's suf frage, bocanso I fear that it will not give them what they need, but be a burst balloon when once possossed. Womankind. Ituriyard Kipling's Wife. On Jan. 18, 1803, Mr. Kipling was married nt All Souls' church, in Lon don, to Caroline Starr Balestior, a sister of C Woloott Balestior, the American novelist who died abroad in 1802, and with whom Mr. Kipling wrote in col laboration. Mrs. Kipling 1b small nnd slender, with dark brown eyes and hair. She was educated in Rochester, whore she was born. Mr. and Mrs. Kipling have one child, a daughter, born in De cember, 1808. Since thoir marriage Mr. and Mrs. Kipling have mado their home in Brattleboro, Vt, where they have built a charming country house, which, from its mountainous situation, has been named "Crow's Nost." La dies' Homo Journal. Women Rale In New Zealand. Woman continues to pnrsuo her con quering way in New Zealand. All the ladies of that colony who have attained the ago of 21 aro legally qualified to vote at parliamentary elections. A lady, Miss Yates, is tho duly elected mayor of an important borough. Another lady, Miss Lillian Edgar, lias recently beeu elected a member of the governing body of tho University of Auckland, and by tho lost mail we hear of tho Indies se curing thrco out of tho seven seats on a school board. Furthermore, ouo of tho threo ladies has beeu chosen as presi dent of tho board for the ensuing year. Loudon Star. Not So Easy to Kntertain Royalty. Apparently tho ontertaining of royal ty has its little disadvantages. Wheu tho Prinoess of Wales acooptod Lady Dudley's invitation to hor danoe last week, she Btipulutod that only 150 peo ple were to be askod. When the list of the chosen was sont to Marlborough House, so many wore struck off that only 80 unmarried girls wore left, several of the hostess' own near relatives being ruled out. The consequence was the ball was a failure, for the few guests in vited oould hardly find each other in the vast rooms of Dudley House. Lon don Correspondent An English Federal Club, There is a movement on foot in Lon don to start a woman's federal club. The promoter is a New Zealand lady now in London, and her desire is to es tablish a club with branches in the chief towns in the empire. Members will meet to dismiss questions of a so cial imperial character, and in what ever part of the empire they may find themselves they will find also a social center to which they have the right of approach. The federation of clubs sup plies this want on this side of the water. San Francisoo womon have requested the mayor to appoint a woman health inspector, offering to pay three months' salary, as an experiment The mayor referred the request to the board of health. To keep your fruit jellies from mold' ' ing put an even half inch of sugar over the top after the jelly has cooled, and then cover the glass with thick paper that has been coated with white of egg. Buttermilk is a most exoollent rem adv in oases of sickness due to irritable stomach, and also in the sickness aud nausea incidental to motners. Throw spoonful of sugar in the fire instead of a shovel ol coal oil 2 ne sug ar is safe and sure, and the coal oil is neither. According to the last oensus, 04 out Of every 100 women marry. THE OLD LADY'S VISIT. Waiting W a City Friend With Three Jars of Ilnttrrmllk. Tho last passenger to leavo tho 4:30 train on the Michigan Central railroad after it drew to a standstill one summer afternoon was a littlo old woman in black. A wisp of gray hnir straggled from under an old fnshioned poke bon net, and a pair of kindly bluo eyes looked ont from behind her steel rimmed spectacles. In one hand sho carried a huge, shiny vnliso, tho key of which Was tied to tho handle with a strip of calico rloth. When she was part way up tho platform, sho stopped, with a trou bled look, nnd watched tho baggagemen toil by with their loaded trucks. Pres ently she dropped the valiso and opened I a big black fan which wns fastened to j her waist by n velvet ribbon. After sho : had waited some timo ono of tho depot i ushers rame along and asked if ho could ; be of any service to her. "Why, thnnk yon, I think not," she : answered. "I am waiting for Dick Rob inson. " The depot usher hurried on and paid no nioro attention to tho httlaold wom an. When ho camo back a half hour later, she was still standing where ho had left her, .gently fanning herself with tho black fan. "lias your friend come yet?" asked tho Usher. "No," rho answered. "His watch must hnvo been slow. " "Did ho expect you by this trnin?" "Well, yon see, it's this way: Last summer Dick and his wife camo over to Briggsbnrg to visit tho Coopers. Whilo they wero thero they camo over often to my place to get a drink of buttermilk. Well, wo got friendly, and Sarah told mo a lot of things alxmt Chicago, nnd that sho couldn't by no manner of means get buttermilk in tho city. Be foro Dick went back ho camo around and says: 'Mrs. Beggs, just take a run up to Chicago next summer nnd visit us. Let ns know whon yon'ro coming, and I'll meet yon at the depot. ' And so I'm here, nnd I'vo got threo jars of fresh buttermilk for them in thnt bag." Tho depot usher helped the littlo oM woman to a seat in tho waiting room, and then ho searched the directory for Richnrd Robinson. His charge couldn't help him much, because sho didn't know Dick's occupation. "All I know," she explained, "is that bo's a genuine gentleman, nnd if he had got my letter ho'd 'a' beeu here. " Tho usher mado a list of two or threo addresses nnd put tho womnn in charge of a trusty cabman, with instructions to find Dick. Two hours later tho driver came back with the report that his fare was delivering her buttermilk. Chi cago Record. Aeorplons. Tho nntives of Lucca, in Italy, assert that tho scorpion will destroy itself if exposed to a sudden light and a writer in Nature said that his informant and her friends, whilo residing during tho summer months nt tho baths of Lucca, were much annoyed by tho intrusion of small black scorpions into the honso and their being secreted among the bed clothes, in shoes and in other articles of dress; that thoy soon bocanio adepts in catching tho scorpions and disposing of them in tho manner suggested. "This consisted in confining tho animal under an inverted drinking glass or tumbler bolow which a card was inserted when tho capture was mado and then waiting till dark, suddenly bringing tho light of a candle near to tho glass in which tho animal was confined. No sooner wns this dono than tho scorpion invariably showed signs of groat excitement, run ning round nnd round tho interior of tho tumbler with reckless velocity for a numler of times. "This state having lasted for a minute or more, the animnl suddenly became quiet, and turning its tail, or tho hinder part of its body, ovor its back, brought its rcenrvod sting down upon tho mid dlo of the head, and piercing it forcibly in a few seconds becamo qnito motion less, nnd, in fact quite dead. This ob servation was repeated very frequently in truth, it was adopted ns tho best plan of getting rid of tho pests, aud the young peoplo wero in tho habit of han dling thorn with impunity immediately aftor thoy wero so killed and of preserv ing many of them as curiosities. " It is known that scorpions kill themselves whon surrounded by a ring of fire. Ammunition la Africa. "All of the native Uganda soldiers, I notice, had well filled cartridge belts round their waists. In my innocence, as I thought of all the thunders of the general act of the Brussels conference and all the ordinances, enactmonts and regulations which had been published thereafter by different powers having possessions on the African ooast, I won dered how, In the very center of Africa, those people were enabled to keep their belts so well replenished with cartridges of different and of the most modern patterns. "I had not boon a month in the conn try before I leornd that, for those who hud the wherewithal to trade, guns, powder, lead aud all the Instruments of destruction thereunto appertaining oould be as easily purchased in Uganda as in Pall MalL ""The British Mis sion in Uganda, 1898," Reuuoll Rodd. Thirty Mile la the Earth. Rev. Osmond Fisher, in a very reli able work entitled "Physios of the Earth's Crust, " says that "the rate of increase in temperature as the distance beneath tho surface is augmented is, on the whole, an equable one aud may be taken to averuge about a degree for each 61 feet" Figuring on this state ment as the most reliable, we find that at a depth of 80 miles below the sur face all known metals aud rooks are in state of white hot fusion. There are about 64 national. flags In the world, besides the flags of various oolouies and parts of empires, suoh as thA flBM n Panada and of Ireland, the flags of Prussia and of the free cities of the German empire. Coal Tar In Maaonry. The announcement is made in Tho National Builder that what was at first considered a doubtful experiment viz, tho uso of coal tar as a means of render ing masonry impervious to water, espe cially in positions exposed to direct con tact with the latter has proved a prao tically valuablo resort. Used as a coat ing for masonry built up of very porous stone, tar renders it quite impervious, even at a depth of some 60 feet of wa ter, nnd, according to the experience of those who have had much to do with it tho article should bo utilized in nil publio buildings, particularly those de signed for tho preservation of works of art the dissolving action of water, even upon mortar of superior quality, being well known; also the unfavorable effect of the exudation of water charged with limo salts from tho mortar. Two meth ods of using the tar aro named viz, in a boiling state in ono or several layers, this being suitable for surfaces exposed to tho air, or it may bo made to flame up beforo using, this being appropriate to snrfuces which havo to be coverod up. Cilnrifttono Started the Tnne. Tho following story of Mr. Gladstone is told in the reminiscences of tho late Rev. James Dodds: "Dr. Gnthrio once paid a visit to tho Duke of Argyll at Invernry castlo by special invitation. A largo and brilliant assemblage of guests, including Mr. Gladstone, wero staying nt tho castlo, and before they retired for tho night Dr. Gnthrio was asked by the dnketorondnet 'family worship. ' 'With great pleasure I will conduct it, said tho doctor, 'bnt in tho castlo of Argyll wo mnst observe tho good old Preslry terian form nnd begin by singing a psalm. ' It was agreed that a Scotch song should be snug to a Scotch tune, but tho difficulty was to find a 'pre centor' to 'start tho tnno' nnd lead the singing. After a nnmlier of ladies and gentlemen had been appealed to and had declared themselves unfit for the duty Mr. Gladstone stepped forward, saying, 'I'll raiso tho tune. Dr. Gnthrio,' and well did ho perform his task." Peas In a Pod. S. M. Audree, a Swedish scientist, has collected tabular information show ing tho nverago weight of peas in their pods. Tho lightest peas were always fonnd near tho ends of the pod. The averago weight of a pea was greater the larger the number of peas in the pod, so thnt tho largest pods contained the heaviest peas. Tho weight of tho peas next tho point of tho pod increased with tho increased number of peas in the pod. With tho exception of the first and last peas thero was bnt a very small differ ence in the weight of tho peas in the same pod. Gounod received his first instruction in musio from his mother, who was a distinguished pianist. Ho won tho grand prize at tho Paris conservatory when he was 21. The averago weight of 20,000 men and women weighed in Boston was: Men, 141 ) pounds; womon, 124 pounds. The first fttrricnltnral instrument the ancestor of both spado and pick, was pointed, stick. T 52 f I mm MM I PRAISE, ONLY, FEOM ALL WHO USE AYER'S Hair Vigor "Aver's preparations are too o well known to need any cointiien- oi dation from me j but I feel coin- S! polled to state, for the benefit of others, that six years ago, 1 lost o nearly half of my hair, -mid w bat was left turned gray. Aiter jj using Ayer's Hair Vigor sevcml o iiwiiiIIim. inv luiir beeun to ltidw O again, and with the initurul color J restored. 1 recommend it to nil o my friends." Mrs. K. Fkank- o HAi sKit, box 805, Station C, J.os Angeles, t. ill. Ayer's Hair Vigor i'RKPARKD BT DR. J. C. AVER t CO., LOWELL, MASS. pooooooooooooooooooooocoj oook flGademu, HKVKNSi N. Y. II. W. SWKTUNI), PrlllHiml. College prup&ruUii-y bimrdtiitf school for Ixitli uuxuv. Column CIumkIcuI, I.lmnuy, Helen! IHc. Also sihh'IhI ooiire In Theory and I'ructteeof TeacliliiK, Hlbla Htudy, Music, Art. Htunotirupliy and Typewriting. Head tor cutulougu. 5ubcrlb fof The ft Star, If you wnt th N w. ' itf.'fr,hU: mm Grocery Boomers W BUY WHERE YOU CAN GET ANYTHING YOU WANT. FLOUR, Salt Meats, Smoked Meats, CANNED GOODS, TEAS, COFFEES Ann AM. kinds or Country Produce FRUITS. CONFECTIONERY, TOBACCO. AND CIGARS, Everything' in the line of Fresh Groceries, Feed, lECta. ilixxl ilrtiverctl free nun ptore in toicii. full on iih and uvt price. W. C. Sclmltz Son H U T & O N 2 mi 3 fl . r-l 7 Is Ol B 3 . afsifl?E8 ;. tr-o "Si. O IiXm Sao i.2i g 53 U "Sis 8 8 32 g I wish to call the ATTENTION of the public to the fact that I have received my Spring - and - Summer Suitings, and that the cloth ia the lat est and best. My pricey are made to suit the times and my workmanship is guaran teed to be perfect. Yours (or lionct dealing to all, J. G. Froetillcn. the Tailor, Reynoldavllle, Pa. STNoxt door to Hotol McConnoll. First National Bank OF JtEVXOLDS VILLE. CKP1TRL, $60,000.00. C. Mllrhell, Preldcnt 8eotl OTcClelland, Vice Frea. John II. Kaurber, Canhler. Directors: 0. Mltohcll, Bc;ott MoClolliind, J. O. King, Jout'iih HtrnuHH, Jowiili HonileriioD, U. W. Fuller, J. If. Kttuckor. Does a Keneral hanking bUMlneiw and nollolts the acoountH of inerrhHiitH, proft'fwtoniil men. (iirmera, mechanic, nilnnin, lunitwrmva ana ollu'rti, promlMliiK the moat curuful UltoiiUuii to the uuhIuoiw of all pontons. Bafe PepoKlt Boxes for rent. ' Fit-it Mutlonal liuuk bulUllnff, Nolan block " Fir Proof Vault. OAKLAND Private - Hospital, , KirTH AVKNUK AMD BOgUKT STUKET PITTSBURG, PR. , Private treatment, given, by export, for all dlHpauoii, medlcul or eurtfloal. A layiiiic-iu ward where ladle niuy nave the benetlt of attendance by a skilled obNtutrlcan, and thoroughly trained nil thou, and at the same time tmcuiT) strict privacy. HihicIuI attention f lven In all foniale troubles, aklu dlaeuHeaund ung alToctloim. NorvouH UlMiaca perMOiiully treated by l)r. I). E. Wllea, phyalutan lu charge, a graduate of JotTmnon lledical Col lege uf l'ulla. A eorpa of nklllf ul aud compel en I phyalclunn In conmant attendance, aided by trained nurse. Kale moderate, placing treatment within the reach of the aflllcteU. Patleuu admitted at all hour. For full par ticular addre,. Da. O. E. Wilm, H10 mm Arums, PITTKMURO, PA. 2 5 e!l si-si - 5 2 llB fi -o 3 8 ( ,H -'is I O j EsfiS'SS 3 O i S asurfcu f " at a i w E h o Z. to fa K o T r- . i. cc 2 u - i 1 2 8 5