COAL MINE RUN BY WOMEN. sVthletto ((later Who Can Farm and Da Honaeerork aa Well aa Dig Coal. A cnai mine run by women L na In noratkm In America. In sections of tiernianjr, KnglatK ami Wales It Is a common thing for wotunn to work In and about con I lulura, aMJinugb of lata ears this rustom ha been almost abolished In Valra. In the Mnlmiiejr Valley, several tulles Southwest of Bbaniokin, Pa., lires Jo oph Maui, a natira of Germany, whn In owner ami operator of a coot mine. Hla four grown daughters and three rounder girn lielp him In operating ttia colliery. Their father consider them MARIS MAPS. the beat slate pickers and workers In the anthracite region. Ho flilds them dutiful, cheerful worker, and he never baa any foam of their going- on strikes for higher wages or from any Imag inary grievances. Mr. Mnu superintends the mine and works at cutting out the coal. The old eat daughter, Katie, 22 years of age, performs the duties usually assigned to an outside foreman. Sue supervises the running of the breaker In a very satisfactory manner, and attends to selling the cool to the hundreds of farmers who live In the valley. Mary, 21 years old, lias charge of the mules which hoist the coal from the Interior of the mine by an old-fashioned gin. Anne, who Is a pretty good mechanic, runs the pump that keeps the mine from filling up wMh water and feeds the boiler and engine that operates the machinery. Little la the slate picker boss and Is assisted by her three young er slaters ami little brothers In clearing the coal of slate as It passes down the chutes Into the storage pockets. These energetic young women are line specimens of womanhood and arc stronger than tho avwnjjo man. They are almost six feet In height, and well proportioned, erect and weigh on an average of 200 pounds. They do not confine their muscles and lungs In cor sol and lace thorn Into elghtcen-lneh waists, with tho aasl&tanoe of the bed post, previous to going to work, and they are satisfied with the fine physi cal perfections with which nature has endowed them and are content to let feature have her away which keeps them In perfect health and strength They have, never known a day's illness In their lives and a vhnt from a doctor Is an unknown experience. Their clothes are not of tho approved new woman order, but are of servicea ble material, tho skirt Just reaching the anklos. They wear stout brogans on their feet and take turn about helping their mother with the work on the farm and In the house. They are export fanners and housekeepers. Mrs. Mam runs the farm and ber husband claims It Is a better paying Investment than the coal mine. The girls work hard six days In the week and aeoui happy and contented with their lot So much attention Is called to the measurement of the strawberry around the waist that the fat man Is escaping comment. Shah Into Tour Shoes Allan's Foot-Ease, a powder for tba feet. It cures painful. swollen, smarting feet, and In. etantly takes Uiestlnic out of corn ant! bun lone. It' the Rrvntett ronifort discovery of the ae. Allen s rooubaau nuui usnt-ni-tina or naw shoes frel easr. It lea certain cure for sweating, callous and hot, tired, ftrh Ins feet. Try It IcmUt. Hold by all drugitisW aua shoe store, tiy lueu ror sue. in suiinps. Trial peruana tKi.b, Auareae, Alien o. wiin. tied, L Hoy, K. V. TROUBLESOME PIMPLES Vooi Perfectly Purified by food's.' '"I have been troubled with small red ptaplts breaking out on W tsoe. They sased me a great deal oll pain. I have taken several bottles of Hood's Sansparilla and it his given me rellof. I have not been troubled with the pimples alnoa I began taking it." Lucx Fiacaxs, 230 West lMth Street, Hew York City. Remember Hood's Sarsaparilla tt the best In fact the One True Hlood Purifier. Hood's Pills cur constipation, iooenta. Pill Clothes. The) good pill haa a good coat. The pill ooat serves two purposes; it protects the pill, en abling it to retain all its remedial value, and it disguises the taste for the palate. Borne pill coats are too heavy; they will not dissolve in the stomach, and the pills they cover pass through the system as harmless as a bread pellet. Other coats are too light, and permit the speedy deterioration of the pilL After 80 years exposure, Ayer's Sugar Coatftd Pills have been found as effeotive as if Just fresh from the labor atory. It's a good pill with a good ooat. Ask your druggist for Ayer's Cathartic Pills. Mere pill particulars is Ayer'e Curebook, too pages. Meat free. J. C Aver Co., Lowell, Mass. C 3QC00 p A Mghthonee Girl. Outnv Kobbe writes a paper on "Heroism In the Lighthouse Service" fo.'tho Ccrrtury. Mr. Kobbe says: Ber prill of the violent storms that have whirled over Mntlnlcits Hock have fried the fortlrudo of the lltflo band of faithful watchers upon It One of those watchers, Abhy II urge, lias become famous In our lighthouse annals, not only for long service, but also for brav ery displayed on various occasions. Her father was keeper of the rock from 1M3 to 1HH1. Ia January, ISM, when she was 17 years old, he loft her In charge of the lights while he crossed to Matlclnus Island. Ills wlfo was na Invalid, bis son was away on a cruise, and his other four children were little girls. The following day It began to breeze tip;" the wind Increased to a gnle, and soon developed Into n storm almost as furious as flint which carried away tho tower on Mlnot's I.cdge In 1851. Itefnrc long the sens were sweep Ing over the rock. Down among the boulders was a chicken-coop which Abliy feared might be carried away. On a lonely ocean outpost like Mntlnl tus Hock a chicken Is regarded with affectionate Interest, and Abby, solici tous for the safety of the Inmates of the little coop, waited her chance, and when the seas fell off a little girl rush ed knee-deep through the swirling water, and rescued nil but one of the chickens. She hnd bnrdly closed tho door of the dwelling behind her when a sen, breaking over the rock, brought down tho old cobble-stone house with a crash. While the storm was at its height the wares threatened the gran ite dwelling, so that the furally bad to take refuge In the lowers for safety; and here they remained, with no sound to greet them from without but the I roaring of the wind aroundthe lanterns, and no sight but the sen sheeting over the rock. Yet through It all tho lamps were trimmed and lighted. Even after the storm abated, tho reach between the rock and Matlnlcus Island was so rough that Captain Burgess could not return until four weeks later. Bicycle I' rices rail. After several years of exorbitantly large profits the manufacturers of bicycles have been compelled to very largely reduce their prices, 'iho puu lio actually refused to longer pay $100 for a machine which can be built for onn-qtinrter that amount. A few makers saw this some time bro and pat on the market cheaper machines at very greatly reduced prices which so out into the buniness of the higher priced manufacturers thnt in pure self-defense they were compelled to bid good-bye to their old high prices. Why should not the same thing oc cur with typo-writing machines? They no doubt eont considerably less to pro duce than bicycles, nnd yet some of them are felling at tho ridiculously high price of $100. It is fair to infer that a machine which sells at $00 costs close to $15 to manufacture. If a few largo department stores in New York, Boston, Philadelphia, Chi cago, etc, would arrange for large quantities to be manufactured for them by some one outside of a Trust the prices would come down to reasonable figures as have those of bicycles. The Oyster. The oyster haa no greater enemy than the atarflsh. It appears difficult how ever, for a Usb to open the shell of an oyster, which requires a certain amount of skill even with an oyatei knife; but the starfish baa a pec;illnr method of leverage upon tho opening of the two shells which the oyster can not resist. Ulologists used to think that the atarflsh simply tarred tho oyster until it opened of Ita own ac cord; but observation haa shown that by the pressure It applies the bivalve speedily becomes a victim to its In genious enemy. A GooI Kxcnea, ' "nave I done anything to offend you, darling?" he asked, brokenly. "To-day f ou passed me without bowing and now you sit there with such an air of hau teur and pride thnt " "George." Interrupted the girl, with an unbending air, but In her voice a cadence aweotcr than music at ntjrht "I have a stiff neck." Boston Globe. After a man haa been sick as long at three weeks, bia wife, who nurses him, looks as If she bad been stck six rears, Try GralK.OI TryGraln.Ol Ask your grocer to-day to show yoo a pack ace of Graln-O, the new food drink that takei the place of ooffoe. The oulldren may drink It without Injury ns well aa the adult All wbo try It like It. (Irutu.O bns that rich seal browu of Mocha or Jsvtt, but It Is made from pura Krutns, and the mosttlulicnte stomach re ceives tt without. dlhtreH. One-quarter the Biire of coffee. 16 eta. and 35 eta. pur package, old by all grocers. I KEYSTONE STATE NEWS CONDENSED UNUSUAL SUICIDE. Probably Insane Woman AAopti an Original Method to End Her Life. Mr. Charles Blmmermnn of Knston rcintnlttpt) suicide In an uniisunl man ner a few days bro. Hhe told her 12-year-old rhlld she was going to take a Imth. A few mlmitPS Inter the t hllil henrd her mother groaning nnd ran for hrlp. When a neighbor climbed Into the bath room be found tho woman dead on the bottom of the tub. There wns not an Inch of water In the tub and Mrs. Hlmmerman had evidently laid down with her mouth to the spla-ot and turned on the water. Hhe was 32 years old, nnd was released from the Norrls. town Insane asylum a few weeks nun. Ramuel V. I.anirdon, of Philadelphia, entered suit In the lilalr county courts HKulnst John Imdon and seven othpr prominent capitalist of Altoona to re cover K'oo.mm dnmaires. Mr. Langdon allege that the defendants bargained with him on January B, 1 '.:. to sell hltn the controlling Interest In the Altoona, 1'lcarfleld ami Northern Hnllroad com pany, anil that they have committed a breach of this agreement. Tho com pany has gone out of existence and the railroad was recently sold nt receiver's sale. While a well was being drilled for the Forest Oil Company near West KliKahxth the crown pulley gave way, leaving the tools and more than fi.Oiii) feet of rope In the well. If the tools and rope can lie recovered the well will he cut down to the depth of fl.Oon feet. If they should not lie successful Its record, at its present depth, will stand ns the deepest well drilled In tho world. The well wns drilled B,t30 feet. A block of P.000 ncres of coal land be tween the Monoiigahela river and Jef ferson, llreene county, has been sold In a party of eastern capitalists and will bo paid for within twenty days. The coal Is all along the line of the proposal rittsliurg, Coiinellsvllle & Wheeling railroad, nnd the options were taken by the projectors of the new road. About BO of the Tlaker heirs met at the Alcorn schoidhouse a few days since to arrange for taking steps to secure the $.l,Wio,miO they claim Is com ing to them from an estate near Phila delphia. Heveral attorneys met with them, among whom were 1. T. Wat son, of this place, nnd W. It. 8. Thomp son, of I'lttaburg. The police of Franklin captured a man at lllg Hock llriilge. just below the rlty limits, who was totally divested of clothing and running wild, lie gave his name as Thomas York, of Pitts burg, and says he has a wife and four brothers In Pittsluiig. When found he wns almost famished. Five bridges In Jackson township were washed away during a storm the other day, as was also Hhafer's brldgo over the l'ocono. In Htroud township. The handsome summer resort owned by Thmnns Htltea was damaged to tho amount or :iuti. t'onHiiiernuie damage, was done to standing crops. Miss tsabelle White and Mrs Harriet Cooper, of the Lnilles' Auxiliary Com mittee of the Mutler Hospital Associa tion, received a letter the other day from Andrew Carnegie stating that he would contribute H.fiOO to the fund for tho erection of a general hospital In this city. George MrKlbben, who knocked down and killed James Kearns while driving on the street recently, at New Castle, was arrested for murder. Tho coroner's Jnrv declared the killing ac cidental. MoKlbbon Is the son of Wil liam McKlbben, proprietor of the Knox hotel. The body of a female Infant, about 3 days old, neatly packed m a lard can. was found floating nt the Muni y dam a few days ago by some fishermen. Every Indication points to the fact that the child was murdered before being placed In the can. While seated at the supper table at his home In Franklin recently, Bylves ter Haggerty, aged 23 years, was struck by a bolt of lightning and rendered un conscious. Frank Feully, 16 years of age, of Crabtree, Westmoreland county, pour ed oil Into a stove to start a fire and was probably fatally burned by the ex plosion that followed. A fire In Hawley, a town 12 miles from Honesdale, destroyed 12 buildings entailing a loss of 135.000. Thirty-one towns are trying to se cure the Mammoth Htar shoe factory at New Ringgold, which must remove from that place on account of the scarcity or adult laoor. Lightning struck the barn of Philip Kllngensmlth, near Ureensburg. Tues day, and completely destroyed It. with all Its contents. Loan, $2,UO0, with !,- 000 Insurance. Keferee Charles L. Hawley told the Lackawanna County Court that James H. Dainty tried to bribe him In an as- sumptt action in which Dainty was the plaintiff. Bharon capitalists are negotiating with foreign manufacturers for tho erection of a tin plate mill there, for which a oonus oi iju.uuu is asKeu, Mrs. Samuel Blftnn, of Dunbar, a few days ago leaped from a moving train having forgotten her pocketbook, and sustained fatal Injuries. Twenty-five firemen and thirty-six brakemen were suspended on the Penn sylvania and New York division of the Lehigh va ley Kaliroau. Caught between a load of nay ana a barn door at Ooodvllle, Lancaster county, Michael Bnader, a farm hand, was fatally injured. It 1b estimated that the wheat crop Just harvested in Greene county, the heaviest crop ever raised there, will yield 600,000 bushels. A 10-year-old son of Joseph Ringer, a contractor of Pittsburg, fell from a cherry tree near Sallna Saturday and died Sunday. The First Hammers, Hammers are represented on the mo numents of Egypt. 20 centuries before our era. They greatly resembled the hammers now In use, save that there wtre no claws on the back for the ex traction of nails. The first hammer was undoubtedly a stone held In the hand, Claw hammers vrere Invented some time during the middle ages. Illuminated manuscripts of the elevorth century re present carpenters with claw htmmers. Hammers are of all slzs from the dain ty Instruments used by the Jeweler, which welph less than half an ounce, to the gigantic M t?n hammer of ship building establlahmrnta, some of which weigh aa much as 50 tons ami have a falling force of from 90 to 10ft. Every trade has Its own hammer and Us own way of using it, Killed to Save Ilia Father. Polk Burrts, a candidate for sheriff at the last eleotlon, was killed on one of the main streets of Paris, Texas, by Luther Guthrie, who snot him while be was engaged in aa assault upon uuyines isiuer. CONGRESSIONAL July 1. The House was crowded early with members who discussed the new tnrirr schedule which had been ap proved at the tariff conference. Boon after assembling Mr. Iilngley submit ted the conference report on the tariff III and made an effort to get the Democrats to agree to Vote, but they nslsted on two days for debate, and. without reaching any agreement as to when the vote should be taken, Mr. Dlngley took the floor nnd opened the debnte In favor of the adoption of the conference report. July 20. At 12.15 this morning the bouse of representatives passed the report of the conference committee on the tariff bill by a vote of 15 to 118. The bill now goes to the senate for con currence and will become a law ns soon as It is signed by the President. Kvery republican present Voted for the re port. The democrats, with five excep tions, voted against the report. The exceptions were Blayden, of Texas; liroussard. of Louisiana: Meyer, or Louisiana: Imvey, of Louisiana; Kle berg, of Texas. The populists and sll verltes did not vote solidly. Mr. Hhn forth, of Colorado, and Newlands, of Nevada, sllverltes, abstained from vnt- ng. Mr. Ilnrtmnn .sllverlte, Montana, did not vote. The populists who voted nganlst the report were ns follows: lin ker, Harlow, HotRln, Fowler, Jen, Lewis, Marshall. Martin, Peters, Kimp- son, Btrowd nnd Vincent. Four did not vote Howard, Kelly, Htark and Bouth that ISO republicans and five democrats erlnnd. The other populists were an sent. An analysis of the vote shows Voted for the report, nnd 108 democrats and 12 populists against It, After some routine business tne sen ate resumed consideration of the tar iff conference report. Five paragraphs, from amendment M2 to amendment iSS, were disposed of without question, but at that point Mr. Jones, of Arkansas, said he had not been able to keep track of the matter, and tho rendli g was begun over again, so that explanations might be given. July 22. Benntor Jones of Nevada, chairman of the committee on conting ent expenses, submitted the report of that committee qn the resolution Intro duced by Bennror Tillman ror an in vestigation of the charges of speculat ing In Bugar stocks, etc. The report takes a strong position against order ing the Investigation and Is a very ex haustive review of the procedure of the senate In the past In such matters. The report takes the position that, aside from the names of the newspaper men themselves, only the name of Benntor Bmlth of New Jersey Is men tioned In the newspapers making the charges on which the resolution was based. The position Is taken that the newspaper men do not count, "inas niuchiis these gentlemen do not profess to write from knowledge nnd usually. If not alwnys, decline to disclose tho sources of their Information." Representative W. C. Btone of Penn sylvania, who was chalrmnn of the committee on coinage, weights and measures of the last house, Introduced in the house a bill to authorise the appointment of a monetary commis sion and to provide for Itr expenses. Bclontiflo Burglary. Among a lot of burglars' tools recent ly captured by the Scotland Yard police was a drill of the finest steel, worked by nn eleotrlc battery contained In a leather case, slung like an opera glass over the shoulder of the scientific cracksman, the amo battery also fur nishing a miniature electric bull's-eye which furnished light to guide the drill without attracting outside attention. Reports on the Indian wheat crop are beginning to come In. From the Cen tral Provinces we learn that the area of wheat s only l,R!iK,0-2 acres, ns com pared with 2.714.4M acres for 1896, and a ten years' average area exceeding 4 Oon.000 acres. The estimated out-turn Is 24.7.r5 tons, against S';8.H38 for 18i0, and IS4.S02 as the ten years' average. . MARKKT8. PITTSBURO. Grain, Flour and Feed. WilEAT No. 1 red I No a red 75 83 8J 119 U u COllN No. 2 yellow, ear No. 3 yellow, shelled Mixed ear OATH No. 1 white 25 25 43 4 70 4 40 2 75 12 00 8 00 12 00 12 25 8 76 9 25 6 26 6 60 No. 2 white BYE No. 1 nnn vii nuii a 41 M) 80 fit 75 60 00 00 60 00 00 Fancy straight winter i live flour 2 IIAV-No. 1 timothy. nixeu oiover, no. i Hay, from wagons FEEL) No, 1 White lid., ton.. Brown middlings BTUA W Wheat 7.7.'.'. '. ! '. ll.nn .,,ll Oat 8EEIJH Clover. 60 lot.. 25 t 00 45 1 (16 75 2 00 Timothy, prime 1 Blue Ores 1 Dairy Products. BUTTER Elgin Creamery.... 16$ 17 fancy creamery 16 17 Fancy country roll 8 9 CHEEHE Ohio, new 7 8 New Vork, new 8 0 Frulta and Vegetablea. BEANS Hand-ploked, V bu.,.9 90 95 POTATOES In car, tm 26 80 CAHBAOE Homegrown, bbl. 140 160 ONIONH per sank. 1 25 1 60 Poultry, Eta CHICKENS. V pair t 60 60 Tt'UKEYM. V lb 12 14 EOOH Pa. and Ohio, fresh.... 0 10 CINCINNATI. FLOUR $ 8 R0 3 90 WilEAT No. 2 red 72 78 BYE No. 2 85 COHN Mixed 27 28 OATH 20 21 EOOH 7 8 BUTTER Ohio creamery '12 13 PHILADELPHIA. FLOUR 4 23 4 45 WHEAT No. Jred 75 CORN No. 3 mixed 21) 80 OATH No. 2 white 1.4 25 BUTTER Creamery, extra 15 EG OH l'a. firsts U NEW" YORK. FLOUR Patents t.. 4 36 4 66 WHEAT No. 2 red 84 CORN Na 3 81 OATH While Western .. BUTTER Creamery IS EOOH Htate of Peua. 12 LIVE STOCK. CXXTBii STOCK TABDS, III! L1DSBTT, , CATTLS. Prime, l.SOOto 1,400 lbs $ 4 909 8 00 Good, 1,200 to 1.800 lbs 4 65 4 75 Tidy, 1,000 to 1,160 Itis 4 60 4 60 Fair lislit steers, AGO to 1000 Itis. 4 00 4 20 Common, 700 to 900 lus 60 I 75 sous. Medium , 8 65 3 60 Heavy 3 60 Roughs sad stags f.... 2 00 2 75 aucsr. Prime, 95 to 103 the, w.lbers...! 4 00 4 10 Good, 85 to 110 Itis. 8 T6 8 90 Fair. 70 to 80 lbs 8 26 8 60 Commoa 8 60 8 00 Culls 1 00 8 00 Chelce iambs. IM 4 86 Fair to good lambs 4 00 4 80 Veal calves 8 09 nil Using Long Words. Doctor who are in the habit of natng long wards when visit Wig people may take a butt from the - following Uttle story: An old woman whose hubnnd waa not very wU aont for the doctor, Who came and saw the okl wife; "I will send htm some medicine which must be token In a recumbent posi tion." After be had gone the okl woman ant down greatly puisled. "A recumbent poaltlon a reciunbeot position!" she kept repeating. "I haven't got one." Af loat she thought. "I will go ami sea If Nurse Lown hits got one to lend me." Accordingly she wont and sold to the nurse: "Have yon a recumbent position to lend ma to take some medicine hi 7' The nurse, wbo was equally aa Ig norant as the old woman, replied: "I had one, but to tell you the truth, t have lost It." We have tint been wlthnnt Plsn's Cure for Consumption for an riwrn.- l,irzir. Kammu Camp Hi., llarrhdiurg, l'a., Mar 4, 1WH. tr- .897C0LUMBIAS'75M BTAXDAllD OF TUG WOULD. HAVE MADE themselves tho leading bicycles on account of their quality not on account of their price ......... 1896 COLUMBIAS S60 1897 HARTFORDS, HARTFORDS Pattern 2 HARTFORDS Pattern 1 HARTFORDS Patterns 5 POPE MFG. CO., -Catalogue free from any Columbia dealer, or by mall from us for a 4-ceni stamp. If t'alamblaa are net properly represented la year vtelalty, let as knew. EVERY MAN HIS OWN BOCTOR JHAiw s4 4flr Taking.' (The low pries only bain mads possible by Mis Immense edition printed), Rot only doai this Book oontoln so much Information Kelattvs to Diseases, but very properly irives a Complete Analysts of every thins pertaining to Uourudiio, af arriajre sad the Production and Reeriar of Healthy Kamllits; together with Valuable Rseipet an I Pre snriptiona. Explanations of Botanical Practice, Correct use of Onllnarr Herb. Maw KdltlOD, Revised and Enlarged with Complete Index. With this Book in the house there is no excuse (or not knowing wbtt to do in aa emergency. Don't wait until you have illness in vour family hefor von or.l-r, hut sent at onea for this valuable volume. ONLY CO CfCNTS rUST-PAID. Bend postal notes opoatsffe stamps of any denomination not larger than esots. BOOK PUBLISHING HOUSE 134 Leonard Strost. N. Y. City. BAD BLOOD they wUI five you GOOD HEALTH and a PURE, CLEAN SKIN, ire from pimples and blotches. To TRY CA8CARET8 i to like them. For never before has there been produced in the history of the world to perfect and so harmless a BLOOD PURIFIER, LIVER and STOMACH REGULATOR. To use them regularly for a little while means SM ALL DRUaai3T5. loc, ssc, goe. INVENTORS! "'"','".";,' Btlvertl-inff o tiutim nn phv," lriw. in mntiM yrtmt rU-hf a, etc w tt ilo rwynlHr ptttMiit (niMliifatM. sw Je4, Ailvfrt I rr, H1kIim' rrlYreiicft. Write un. WATHO K. OI.KWAN, MiliH. tun ot patuuu l btrH, WBuliuitftuu, L.C. HOW TO BUILD sea VIUMMI strn. CO.. KAtAMAZOQ, MISM. DRUNK AUDI nn b mtM with out their fcnowiBdirB by Antl.Jt ttit marvelous cur fur th tiruist habit , Wrtta ftmuv. C'iienutal ut., w UruaJwmy, Ji. v. Full lnformBtiott (In plait wrapper) uiailfxl frt Wanted-An Idea I Whn eaa think BurjM stiunie thlus lopal.nif Protect your Messt they may brine you wraltu. Wrila JOHN WSUDEHBITHN a 1(1 P.I.nl Altor- Bars. Wsslilneton, 1. C. for their l.J prlss ufler aad saw uu ut eae thousauq Inventions' wan bed. P N V SO 91 Is Ike best lias I PIIBX CITIDDU a a SS V llailUMllStM L'.llMl IriMll Culler's Pc?ket Inbsl.r, SI.IMIi all dniuiiU. H. II. M.1I1T1I sV CO., MaSale, N. V.. freitk. P ENSIONS, PATENTS. CLAIMS. JOMNW. MORRIS. IVASHINGTQN, 0.0. LaU Frlaclpal IxaaUar If. I. Vtaus nurem $ jrn ia Uat war, 14 atsjiiMwaiiaU aiavuiatv LUy. mUJ a slos CUMMER " Well Dona Outlives Ccath." Even Your Kernory Will Shint if You Use APOLIG Fighting Flrea la winter Weatboe. To stand upon the peak of a ladder at perhaps the third or fourth atory eat a bitlldliig, directing the stream ol water nt the blazing Interior, while thai thermometer la at about Ita lowest point, Is not a comfortable task. Pel haps another stream Is playing ove your head, and you stand In an Icy spray. Icicles bang from erery point of your Are-lint, and the rubber coat la frozen to your back; awl the water that Is -falling about you freer.cg as fast a It falls. Kvery movement upon the lad der Is fraught with (laager; for It Is se oncnistnl with Ice that U is almost Im possible to get a solid foothold, and misstep would hurl you to the ground, forty feet lwlow. St. Nicholas. Fltspermanentlrcred. Jfofltsnrnervona nemaitorllrstdny'siiiwof Or. Kline' (Jreat Nerve Restorer. Jtrial bottle anil treatise frsa On, H, 11. Ki.isa. l,M..mi Arch m..PliHa.,l'a. W. Tf. Orlffia, Jackson, Michigan, wrltesi "Suffered with Catarrh for llfu-en years. Hall's atarrh Cure cured me." Hold itl lirug- litis ;&c Mrs. Wlnslow's Hootliiiig Syrup forrMlilren teet hlng. softens the gn ins. ruliH'f n ic llilliunliia lloii.Hllfiys inin, cures winil colle, SV'b IkiIIIu : : 50 45 40 and 6, .... 30 Hartford, Conn. y J. Hamilton Aytrs, A. if. 0. This ia a most Valuable Book for the Household, teaching as it done the easily-illslinKaishail Symptoms of different Diseases, the (Jausa, and Means of Preventing such Dis eases, and the Simplest Remedies which will alleviate or cure. 590 PACES, PrtOFUSBLY ILLUSTRATED. The Book is written m plain every day Snglisb, ami is free from tlis teonnloal terras which render most Doctor Books so valueless to the generality of readers This Book Is In ten led to bs of Hervice in the Family, nod fa so worded aa to bs roadlly understood by all. Only CO CTS. POST-PAID. PIMPLES, ERUPTIONS, BLOTCHES, SCALES, ULCERS, SORES, ECZEMA, and CHRONIC SWELLINGS. ARE WONDER WORKERS in the cure of any diaeuc caused by bad or im pure blood. Tly eliminate all poisons, build up and enrich the blood, enabling it to make new, bcaltby tisane PURE BLOOD MEANS PERFECT HEALTH, and if vou will use CASCaRf TS Pure Blocs! and Perfect Health. A GREAT CHANGE ! W want an afrcut n trnry town In th TT. 8. and Canada. No expert-mie V qntrml. Ladle niaktt uttmt MUi'ceHkful aifwiita. Wa pay Mtlury or liberal c(iintTtLitliii. You can work u II tlm tiin or iViniira limtri. ami can nam (mm KI4WIT TO TW K1.V14 HOLLA KM I'KK 1IAV. thall H1V 6 COTTAGE LOTS FREE Tomir A most fiu'ceearul airentn. Tluta lti art w-rtU ml.OUOeaWL. uow, will be worth J3,040 wiirn timer itQprove. rucy art iwriu k I'KTIT .HAN AN. tut 'iiieiri ! the .tlnln mutt. If ymi dir fn obtain it and will wvrh FORYOU tliera la out of them 1 Writ a on for full particular to th I. .H. la. 4. I. C O.UPA.N V. Belfn-t, M. UNIVERSITY S NOTRE DAME Notre Dame, Indian. Classics, Letters. Hrlenee, Law, C'UII, afe vlianlra! anil Kieetrlval Kuslneerlna. Thorough freparalory unit Uoui loerclal Course cclesiusticai students at special rnts. Idioms Free, Junior or Senior Year. Colle. flute Courses. t .! ward's Hall for uuye umler 11. The loTth Term will open September Tlh, I BUI. Catalogue sent r'rvo on applK'ntlon la lie. A. Morrlssey, C. a. C.freeitUut 4Bartluutfh8yrupL Tiiat Quuii. Vm I I In time,, rWiij by drmilta. I I