The Largctt Oil Well Shot. 1 A large shot was recently exploded In an oil well In the Allegheny oil field. It consisted of 400 quarts ot nitro glycerin loaded in 20 shells, each shell being 7 Inches In diameter by 20 Inches long. The well was 1,400 feet deep, nd the nitroglycerin was tamped with 80 barrels of water and 75 feet of oil. The "fro-devll" was dropped, but for fully a minute there was no sound, then a column of water rose from the hole to a height of 75 fret, where It sprond out. This was followed by a mlphty roar and the dlsnhnren of oil, rooks and water to a height of 150 feet. This Is believed to be the largest oil well shot on record. "1 had a very severe sickness that took olT ail my hair. I pur chased a bottle of Aycr'a Hair Vigor and it brought all my hair back again." W. D. Cjuinn, Marseilles, III. One thing is certain, Aycr's Hair Vigor makes the hair grow. This is because it is a hair food. It feeds the hair and the hair grows, that's all there is to it. It stops falling of the hair, too, and al ways restores color to gray hair. 11.00 ibtltlt. All fntrW. If your dmrelst ennuot supply yon, Mnd uj one ol'r and we will .ipres. you.nbttl. rl.auroand a We the nam. at your nwrfil express office. Address, J. C, AYKR CO., Lowell, Mill. ' l R 1 VtuiS!" TO WOMEN A Large Trial Package ol ANEW SPECIALTY f OR WOMEN. Internal eleanltneM ft th key to woman's beftlth and Tiiror, Inflammation, AorenMi, Pel no Catarrh ennnot exlrt with It. rerelittloa In rotnMnrd rlentialUB nnd bcullng power. It kill! all d I tonne germ In local treatment of fetnolo Hit It ti liiTalUAble, II ealt Inflammation and cure, all dltcharuea, Nerer falli to cure Xnwl Catarrh Caret ofTeniive perspiration or arm plti and feet. Cam Sore Throat, Hon Month and Hon Kyea. Aa ft tooth pnwtler nothing rnitla It Remorea Tartar, Hardens the (lumt and whitens the teeth, make a bad breath tweet and aareeahle. ThnMnHtti of lfttM from womm prove flint It lathe grvatett citr Hr Lvueorrhocn ever tllaeoveivd. We hnve yet Co bvw of the flrat eiiae It Tailed to cures To prore all this we will mall a large trial pucka pe with book of Instructions nhaolutely free. This Is not a tiny sample, but enough toeonrlnee anyone. At dritif slate or aent poetpialU hy lie, AO ete. liars hot. ftntlefhetlon cm n run teed. The R. Iitoi ., UpL - .ItoBlnn, IMnaa. RIpansTnbulesnre the bent d.vKpepsIa imdleliie ever made. I A. hundred millions of them have been sold in the United States in n single year. Every Illness arising from a disordered stomach Is relieved or cured by their use. So common is it that diseases originate from the stomach it inny be anfuly as serted there Ik no condition of ill health that will not be benefited or cured by the occiiHional use of Klpnns Tubules. Physlc'luiis know them nnd speak highly of them. All druggists sell them. Tho live-cent package is enough for nu ordinary occasion, nnd the Family Uottle, sixty centB. contains a household supply for a year. One generally giveg relief within twenty minutes. ifr.t f . ta S.-i'.TS-Piii'-il t.l 1 Jt&.sin The University of Notre Dame NOTRE DAME, INDIANA. FVIX rorit'FM IN !n lo, I rtinra, r.rnnumlcN niMl ItUturv, .IniirmilUm, An, Mclriir, , t'ltiirniiirv, Law, Civil. M r intuit . Tliaruiili I'rriiaiulury end t onuut'ixluj tournfe. UoimM Free to !) students who have, completed tlietttiifliew required lor tidniliiriu tutu the Kopliu luoro, Juulur ur tttmlor Year ot any uf the CoUturtat COUIIK'O. Utiuuta In Itcnt, moderate clianre to Htudeuts A limited uumlrtTof itfHlldat iW th Juclusiss tlci.) ktafi' wiil lit rtcMi4 il at an mi-im ri. l itnarii'M JlitM.fur liyn uiilr IS yean, is ThllOih 'rsr will .m.n Koiitewber . 11K13 Ima uiiMHe r rev. Addreaa BV. A. WOItitlBHF Y, U. H. C.. President. DoiW, The Cooling Effervescent Tor Prickly Hrat, 6tomocll IJitorueri, tleauacnes, Constipation. "ll't good Jur children loo" The larraat Co., Nmr Yort Veed by American ruysicuu aiiice uti. OHIO FARMS FOR SALE. Ie.rrlptlT. catalog (bowing photo., fr.., lor tH.UklU. , M. HUHVtl, JaffMt-.oii. Ohio, I AV SPOT CASH FOR KrTlAND WARRANTS tMiietl to lolrtlrr of any war. Writ. m. at one.. Ill AN K U. UJCUKll. Jlarlli lilouk. U.uvar, Uilo. MnnOVNEW DISCOVERT: a I M n O I quick tllaf aail aaraa want Bt. B. .at!" I.OIII.Su S. Attaata. (la., ;'S'.7.VW-. Thomjon' Eya W?r I My Hair DEMAND FOR ICE COOLER8. The Little Otd-Fashioned Tanks Go to Country Shops. "There Is still a demand for the lit tie old-fashioned tin Ice coolers, paint ed In gay colors on the outside," said a manufacturer of the Ice tanks In West Rrondway, "but we don't sell ninny of tlicm In New York any more. They go to country stores and little Ice cream shops In the suburbs. Time was when nlmo3t every store and every office In a downtown building had one cf those tin Ice coolers on a shelf in a corner. Then men began to order wooden Ice coolers lined with sine. It was too much trouble to fill tho little ones two or three times a day. But the little ones were the more snnltnry. H was so easy to lift them down and rinse them out. An Ice water tank should be cleaned every day If per sons compelled to drink out of It want to keep healthy. 1 am afraid that employes who have to fill up the big fellows before the boss gets down In tho morning take long chances. Hut the whole business has changed. Butch ers, grocers ana fruiterers in modern uptown stores have their Ice chest built by contract, with the rest of their fittings, and have a little tank built n It that Is surrounded by Ice In which to keep cool water for their customers. n downtown office buildings tenants ave Iced water constantly on tap from faucets. It Is not always very cold, but It Is better than ordinary Croton water, nnd It saves the tenant an Ice bill. In many of the swell suites of offices they have means of cooling huge ars of hygienic water for a large staff of clerks and a zinc safe that will hold a siphon or two of carbonic (and per haps a drop of something to put in It) for the president or mnnager of the company. Men deliver this water and take away empties every morning Just as they do In residences In the uptown district." GEM THEFT MYSTERY SOLVED. Dlamondo That Were Lost for Three Years Found. The mystery of the Clogan diamonds, alued at over a thousand dollars, and niissiug for the rast three years, was cleared up at Lafayette, Ind., in the ar rest of Walter Clogan, or Kussell, as he often styles himself. He Is the step son of Newton Clogan, owner of the diamonds. Three years ago the Clo gan home, four miles west of here, was entered and robbed. A trunk belong' ing to the old man, and known to coiv tain valuables, was rifled and its con tents strewn about tho floor. The mystery was never solved. Walter Clogan stole the gems from his moth er, and he was arrested. The police have not Investigated the manner in which the gems came into the possess ion of Mrs. Clogan. A ring, which waa the most valuable of the lot, proved the downfall of Its unlawful possessor. When young Clogan went to a second hand store with his diamonds, the keeper, grew suspicious and called the police. After a chase of several blocks Clogan was captured. Not to Blame. Chief Justice John Marshall knew that water would tighten a tire on a wheel, and, when he once found a wheel Iooko, he drove into a littlo reek. This wet one part ot the wheel. Then he drove out and backed the horse. The same part of the wheel went into the water again. Again he tried It, all the time, getting the same part of tho wheel wet. A colored man came along, and, seeing tho situation told the Judge to drive into the water again. Then he took hold of a spoke, turned it around, and soon had all the wheel wet. Judge Marshall said: Why, I never thought of dolnG that." The colored man smilingly replied: "Well, some people nat ly havo more scr.se that some others, anyhow. India's Wheat Crop. The final estimate on the wheat crop of India for the present season places. the same at 300.000,000 bushels. Tho exports from that country wire at their lowest in 1900 and lflul, the year of the last famine, when 93,000 bushels were sold. The exports for the cur rent season are about 20.000,000 bush els. The yield to tho acre during the past year runs from three bushels in Berar to 1G bushels In the united Provinces. The price of wheat Is lower everywhere in India at the pres ent time than In any season since 1899, A turbine engine for transatlantic business will be fully tested by Sir Christopher Furness. FITSoermonently ourod.So fits ornnrvons r.cm after first tluy'a uso o( Dr. Klluu' Greitt NervaRoHtorer.ii'Utrlal bottle nod trnntlnefreo iir. r.. H. Klikk, Ltd., U81 Arch Bt., rhuu.,rn Eighty-five per cent, of tW) children ol Japan ari now in school. Aak Tonr Denlnr For All.n'a Jaot-Ba, A powder to shake Into yourthoes; restatlte feet. Cures Corn., Bunions, Kwoollon. Sore, Hot. Cullou, Aflhln?, rlweutlngFent and In growing Null. Allen's Koot-Eu.se makes new or tlglit shoe easy. At all drugtttptH and line storca, 25 oents. Bmiiple mailed Fues. Address Allen B. Olnwtetl, Lelloy, N. V. Automobile building give, employment to 0,C00 persona in France. llow'a Tlila? We offer One Hundred Dolbira Itetrnrd 'or any cuae of Catarrh that cannot no uur.J tif hull'. Catarrh Cure. F. J. Ciknky & Co., Toledo, O. Vie, theundurmgued.huve known T J. Che wy lor tkxlimt lSyeorx, uml believe him tier leetly honorable In nil bunlaesa truumtutioni and Uuunolitlly able to oarry out any oblijj tionH ninde by their llrai. We.t A Xuuax, Wholesale DragttUts.Toledo, Uiiio. WALiiixo.KisxiNAMiBViK.WbolesiileDruj giHts, Toledo, Ohio. Uall'.Cutarrb Curol. taken Internally, Hat ing directly ttpoa the blood and inuoousaur l.ceaof the iystom. U'entiinouial. .eut (roe. Trice, 7Sc. per bottle, bold by all Druggist. Hall's family 1'llla are tb. beat. An air brake for automobile, has been perfected. Mrs. Whulow's 8oothlngdymp for ohlldret l.etuing,.o(tea the ruiuh, reduce, lullnnma. Uon,oUuypaiu,eure wind cullo.'iSo. abottl. An eleplinnt's jnw ha. been unearthed in Halleck Canyon, Wyoming. TUo' Cur. ennuot be too blxhly spoken of rs a ooujtb cure. J. W. O bui.w, ah Third Aveau., H MluneupoUg, Mmn.,Jnu. , lttOD. Thirteen new theatre", to coat 18,000 WW, ate huikloijl iu isvw York City, LAMENT OF A BRITISHER HOW AMERICAN INVENTIONS ARE CAPTURINQ FOREIGN MARKETS. Striking Lament of a Crltleh Writer Over the Crowdinj Out of English by American Manufacturer! In All the Leading Lines cf Goods. To nnderctand the prevailing be lief among the Britishers that they must do something to prevent Ameri can manufacturers from crowding their own out of their homo markets ono has only to read a little book that has of late had a great popular sale over there. It Is entitled "Tho Ameri can Invodcrs." A reprint of It 13 now circulating In this country. 'Men sometimes speuk," says this EnglUh anther, "as though tho dra matic trup cf n Morgan when he ac-iu!.-ed control of one of our great ship pi!!? lines, or of oi Schwab who out bids our stc?l-ir.nl(Prs, or of Philadel phia bridgo builders who capture tho orders for our biggest viaducts com prise this Invasion. They do not. Such items are merely the sensational In cidents in a vast campaign. The real Invnrlon goes on unceasingly and with out nolso or show In five hundred In dustries nt once. From shnvlng soap to electric motors, and from shirt waists to telephones, tho American is clearing the field. "Walk down the main thoroughfares In any of our great cities London or Glasgow or Liverpool. Take, for in stance, Holhorn viaduct, and see there the great blocks of office buildings mainly given over to the Indon repre sentatives of American manufacturers. Notice the candy stores, the Ice-cream-soda fountains, the American shoe stores. In our street. "Bryant & May, the once great Eng lish match firm, which has no competi tors and paid dividends of 20 percent per annum, were driven out of the field by tho American Match Trout. Hav ing shown Bryant & May that they could tako their market away from them by selling hotter matches at cheaper prices, the trust offered to take over their factories and guarantee them Interest at 14 percent on thelr agreed value. The entire English match industry and trade passed on this basis Into American hands. "The most serious aspect of the American Invasion," says the author, "Is that nearly every new Industry created In England' for 15 years past Is tinder American control. What are the chief new features In London life? They are, I take It, the telephone, the portable camera, the phonograph, the electric street car, the automobile the typewriter, passenger elevators in house.! and the multiplication of ma chine tools. In every one of theso save the petroleum automobile, the American maker is supreme: in sever al he is the monopolist. These new Industries, bo It noted, are enormously profitable; tho men they employ are. highly paid mechanics and prices rule high. "Take the typewriter. Machines are brought to England from New York and Boston to the averaga value of considerably over 4.000 a week. Tho cost of the raw material Uied in the typewriter Is comparatively trivial, and the greater part of this outlay goes to high wages for skilloi labor. Time af ter time English firms have endeav ored to acquire this trade, but In vain. At the present moment the only seri ous competitor with the American ma chine for office use is a Canadian typo writer, the Empire." When the English government es tablished a national telephone service as part of the general postofllco de partment. It tried to get its telephone instruments from English makers. But no English firm was ready to supply them, and the big order went to tbo Western Electric company of Chicago. Many million pounds sterling aro to be Fpent within the next few years by England on telephonic instruments, and English makers seem to bo entire ly out of It. In Parliament at the last session bills were presented covering the con struction of electric railroads that will cost $120,000,000, and here again the American constructors are taking the built of the business. The author says that about one-half of the motors on the street cars In Great Britain are Amerlcan-mnde. All the new London underground roads are equipped from American shops. In things domestic America has also carried England by storm. From sew ing machines to carpet uweepers the English home is filled with, 'things mado in Amorlcs. Turning to printing the writer says: "Here the American makers are ab solutely masters of the Hold. No first-class dally or weekly paper now when laying down an entirely new plant would think ot anything but American presses." Tho Hoe machines are used by every leading London newspaper with' one exception. The provincial newspapers are rapidly equipping themselves in the same way. The American machine tool Is seen everywhere in English workshops. At the great Woolwich Arsenal 50 an nealing furnaces are in use. ' In Shef field itself, the home of English tools, tho makers are now using American apparatus and. patterns and paying American inventors heavy royalties. Moreover, the writer of this book de clares that what is true of England Is aUo true of lier colonies, where Ameri can goods, particularly manufactures of steel and iron, are crowding out the English. Seeking to account for this state of things the writer says that the Ameri can business man is more enterprising and works harder than bis English competitor, and that the American workman does more work for the samt money than his English cousin, PREFER LONELINE83. Ctlebrltles Who Hatp Evtn ths Sight of Man. Of all the famous people with as undying hatred ot being lokej at or having strangers round them Rudyard Kipling Is one of the chief. He takes extraordinary pains to avoid the usual consequences of fame so much so that he has recently given up the hou.e he had lived in so long, and was so attached-to, nnd fled from the face of man. He settled years ago In a secluded house in the little vll lnce of liottingdean, near the Brigh ton, hoping to escapo the world at lnrgo. But he was soon found and beielged by admirers. Finally, chnr-a-banc owners took to running special Kipling excursions from Lelghton, bringing wagonloads of people to see tho house and plot to get a view of Its rwner. This was so exactly opposite to the tastes nnd wishes of tho famous author that lie recently stole away Inland much as he loves the sea to a rpot among the Sussex hills, near Burwnsh, far from any roml or railway station, where ho bought a fine old farmstead, buried In the depths of the country. Every year he goes to South Africa for a spell and avoids society as much as posplble. He has the name for being rude nnd curt, which bllef arises sole ly from his horror of being pestered. Another strong objector to fame and inspection nnd fuss of any kind is Mas conl, the electrical genius of the dny. Ills pet method Is to take a remote country cottage for a holiday or for study, nnd hide himself completely, so that no Interviewer or photographer can rout him out and torture him. If one abode becomes known he shifts to another, and does nearly all Ms work either alone or with a single col- 'league. He Is so "followed up" espe cially when in America thnt he sometimes finds tho papers publish his Intentions of going away to some re treat for a dny or two, upon which he quietly goes in a practically opposite direction: and baffled reporters have even declared that he drops hints ot his intentions of going to a certain plaeo, and then quietly chuckles to himself and goes elsewhore, leaving the pursuers lamenting. The greatest lover of solitude In Britain, however. Is Lord Salisbury, who Inherits tho peculiarity, in add tlon to acquiring It. When he was not forced to be In the centre of the wheels even then he was far lonelier than most politicians during his premiership, he used to steal away in a little brougham often a four wheeled cab to King's Cross, and bury liliuKelf in the recesses of Hat field as long as possible. The place Itself Is aternly secluded; and even when political garden parties had to be given there the ex-premier often contrived to escapo and get away by himself. His father was an even stronger lover of solitude, and had all the windows and outlets by which It was possible to see any part of the house from outside the gropnd bricked up or covered in, and no ono but mem' hers of tho household staff was al lowed ln?i(Ze the gates. Lord Salisbury gets a carrlago re served for him when traveling by rail on nny arranged journey, and when traveling a short distance In a public carrlacc busies himself In a book, and If often noticed at all by the other travelers. But of all famous people who detest being surrounded Is Rockefeller, the oil' kin?, nnd the richest man In the world. He posses from one house to another, often seeking eolitudo In the little cotages built for htm In the Adirondacks and other semi-wild diS' tricts, seeking always to keep away from tho world nt large. His chief exercise Is digging, nt which he never misses nt lenst ono hour's work day, and he goes Into large cities as little as possible. Having a good many enemies on paper, at leapt he has often been warned against tho danger of isolating himself, for it is said ho gets or usod to get an average of two letters week whose writers threatened to shoot him. To these and the warnings he pays not the slightest attention, but, if he finds himself worried by curious people in one spot, simply moves to another. London Answers. The Intelligent 8naks. The naturalist John Burroughs Is opposed to nature books that treat of animals too imaginatively that Im pute to animals sentiments ot love. pity, tenderness and refinement. "Sometimes In reading one cf these nature stories I am reminded," Mr, Burroughs tnid one day, "of the story of tho Intelligent copperhead. This story is quite as true as many that are implicitly credited. "According to It, there was a man who had the habit of teasing copper heads. He would find a copperhead's hole, and then ho would wait beside it till the snake returned till it had got so far Into tho hole that only the end of its tail protruded. This he would seize, and with a quick movement be would throw the snake 20 or 30 feet away. "One day the man did this to a cop perhead of unusual intelligence. The snake on alighting did not make for Its hole again immediately, as tho others bad always done; but it lay still and regarded Its tormentor, think' Ing. For a long while It thought Then, very slowly, it approached the hole, turned around and entered back wardentered tall first sneering slightly at the man whom it bad thus duped." New York Tribune, Any photographer will tell you thnt there are women who will sit for a photograph and then won't stand font. INCLOSURE OP 8TONEHENGE. ' Speculation as to the Meaning of ths Megaliths. ,W"e may not know exactly what Stonehengo orlslnally was; but we nr ell convinced that It was either a place of worship, a place where rites thought to be pleasing to some higher power were performed, or a p'-ace of burial for the lllurtrlotta dead, ot' a place ot tribal meeting, perhaps for the crown ing of kings, or, as Is very prol.ublo, a place used for more than cue of theso purposes. It. Is al!o quite cer tain that cf Its kind It was a place rf tho highest Importance. It may bo regarded as the Westminster Ab bey of come tribe or race which In the neolithic age spread over tho enuth of England. Obviously, it must have been a place of resort for a whole nation of people the ono plnce of all othera to which public highways votild lend. No ono would suggest that a street leading to the doors ot Westminster Abbey wns not a public highway because It flopped there. H seems to be equally absurd to say t"int n rond Is not a public road because It etops at Stonehengo. No doubt changes of race, changes of faith, changes in the distribution "f popula tion, might havo relesitd St'inehengo to obscurity, and might have led to such a disuse of the ways leading to It as to have amounted to practical nestntctlon. But It happens not to have been so. So remarkable was tilt "liengo thnt when It ceased to be used for worship, meeting or sepul ture, it became a wonder In Itself, nnd rontlnued to be n place of resort, from one motive or another, throughout the centuries. Indeed, It Is not quite clear that there has not been something in tho nature of a continuing rite per formed at Stonehenge from age to nge, Popular traditions cling strangely about these megaliths. In Brittany, to the present day, weird customs, obviously unconnected with Christian worship, though some times adopted and blessed by the priests, are observc-J before many a prehistoric stone. At Stonehenze there Is, and has been beyond living memory, an assembly of persons on tho long?sl dny cf the year to so the sun rise over tho top of the Friar's Heel and strlko the altar stone. The modem view of Stonehenge Is that it was a temple ot the sun; If bo, this gathering on June 21 Is obviously a remnant of sun worship. Can there bo any better reason for the existence ot roads than that they lead to a place so remarkable that year by year It brings people many miles to take part In a gathering the origin and slgnlfl cance of which have passed Into ch llvlon? Is It not Idle. In tho face o: such facts, to suggest that there can not be a public right rf way to Stone henge because Its stones were placed there by man nnd may be removed by man? As a matter of fact, they are older than anything elso In the nature of a building which the British Isles enn show. Removable they may be, but centuries have seen them standing In the same place, and centuries have seen them an object of interest and nn object of report. Tho megaliths of Stcnehenge saw old Snrum grow Into a rcrent city; they saw It deserted they saw its buildings fall to pieces; they havo seen It for centuries a mcro series of concentric earthworks: they hnvo seen the new city of Salisbury (miw old, as British cities go) rise jnushroomllko In Its stend. If cny structure of man can claim perma' nence. It Is Stonehengs. If tho public character of a road depended in nny ilegroo upon the permanence of tho oh Joct to which It lends (as a matter ot law, It does not), assuredly no plnee could lay as god a claim to be a worthy terminus of a public rond as Stone hengo. Nineteenth Century. Military Geese. Even tho geese In Germany march with military precision, which may be tho renson why the famous drill style ot tho Gorman Infantry is called the "goose stop." A writer in Travel thus describes the great goose armlnes which are so interesting to the health-seekers at Bad-Ncuheim: ' "It Is worth while to go to Ober- Moerlen nt 6 o'clock in tho afternoon to Beo these geese returning home from the fields. Tho village Is white with them; hundreds and thousands, regiments and brigades of geese, marching alone with military pre. clslon. "As they near home they reparate of their own accord; 10 to the right, 12 to tho left, a detachment up a lone, and so on all quacking loudly, but bearing themselves with that keon senso of order and discipline which distinguishes the Vaterland." A Child's 8elf-Possesslon. Thero was a remarkable exhibition of coolness and self-possession by a child In Park row the other flight. It as In the rush hour when thousands wero thronging to the Bridge entrnnce, Tho only one In the throng who didn't sacm to be In a hurry wai a little girl, bareheaded and with two pigtails braided down hor back. She couldn't have been more than 9 years old. As she moved along, with the jam she calmly read hor school primer. She hold the book In her left hand just as hor teacher had taught her, nt the proper angle and dlutancc. and aho turned the page twice between Ben Franklin's stutuo and Frankfort street -New York Sun, The Passing of th Gee-Gee. Nino hundred horsos were sold re cently at su auction sale in London. The animals werp tho property of the London City Council and had been thrown out ot work by the introduction of electricity, 1 U. S. SENATOR FROM SOOTH CAROLINA Recommends For Dyspepsia and Ex-Senator A. C. liatlcr. t If yon do not derive prompt snd .ati.fnc- at once to Dr. Hartmnn, giving a full state ment of your caxe nnd he will lie pleased to give you hi. valuable advice gratia. Address Dr. Hartmnn, President of The Ilartinan Ninitarium, Columbus, Uhio. CLIMBED MT. RANIER. Apparently Impossible Feat Accom plished by Mountaineers. A sensational ascent of Mount Bo nier, Washington, has been made by Dr. W. It. Betts, of New Orleans, and II. M. Sarvant, of Tacoma, Betts coming from New Orleans with the object ot disproving the general be lief that the mountain has been tin surmountable for years, since ava lanches broke off the great ledges of rock above Gibraltar, which climbers formerly depended on. Leaving Para dise valley they eatnpvd for the night at Muir, but terrlfio winds prevented sleeping, Starting at three as they reached Gibraltar Back only to find glaciers above all but impassable, using ropes and cutting more than 500 steps In ice they made long de tours around crevasses, finally gaining a sure footing. They reached the sum mit at 11 a. m., and visited all three craters. They found no evidence of recent volcanic activity, though sul phur fumes and steam are still rising. In one of the streets of Vienna workmen have dug up part ot the stone flooring of a Roman house dat ing from the third century. COMPELLED TO USE A CRUTCH FOR CtltCD MHS. r. CUMIN, CAR DON DALE, PA. slra. P. Conlln, PS Creen. fleitl Aveiiih'. i!iirlif!iil.tlo, l'a..sa.va: " I suffered w ith backache, nixl, tlcijilto the use i.f medicines, 1 cutil ti'it gut rkt of It. iru. cii,ij-.', fo im fl crn(ci fur t i hi mnnthn, nhil a part of tint .ime wua triable to n-lk nt nil. 1 fairly Kcmtmetl If I attempted to lift lay fret from tin flMr. nnd, llnnliv, I lnt control of my limbs tlirnu;rh uealme, ns 1 c.ntld neither licmi nor Ntrulirhten tip to my full height, fuel if .vera woman watt iu u sei ioua condition, 1 woh. My hus band went to Kelly's tlrujr store and hrouvht home a box of Donna Pills. 1 felt easier tn a few days, and, continuing the treatment, 1 r'' vntcc m NAMC t. O. TAT C ... , For frra trial Fortor-Milhiirn Co., Hp-un li UuutlUienta rmtt llp. WITH NERVES UNSTRUNG AND HEADS THAT ACHE WISE. WOMEN. BROMO - SELTZER TARE TRIAL BOTTLE: lO CENTS OUAKANltED CUKE for .11 bowel troubles, appendicitis, biliousness, bad breath, bad blood, wind on th. stomach, bloated bowels, foul mouth, headache, irdigeation, pimplaa. pains. rtar.atina;, liver trouble, sallow skin and dissiness. Whan your bowels don't niov. regularly you are sick. Conatlpation kills mora people than .11 other dlse.sca together. It rJK?iorS?',Jnn?,nd'onf,r'"r"ofu!,r,n No matter what ails you, start takin S"c!"' today, for you will never c wall and stay well until you Jet your bow.il right, T.k. our dvlu, .tart with Caserns today under abaoluta guur'atee to cur er rnoney refunded. Th.r.nuln. tablet stamped C C C. N.v.r ,id IrT bulk, tempi. 3 booklet fr. Addra Sterling Remedy Company, Chlc.no or New York. 50. Your Liver Is it acting well? Bowels regular? Digestion good? If not, remember Ayer's Pills. The kind you have known all yourjire. t. O. Ajar Co., Iaw.1I, If aaa. Want your moustache or beard a beautiful brown or rich black? Use BUCKINGHAM'S DYE Pe-ru-na Stomach Trouble Catarrh of tha Stomach Is Generally Called Dy3p9psia-S3rmthlng to ProJuc? Artificial tion is Gonerallv Takei. Hence, Fcpi'n, Pancrsvtin ail a Host of Other Difjrtstive Rensd'es Have Baen Invented. Thess Remedies Do Not Reich tha Seat ol the Diffic ilty, Which Is Really Catarrh. Tr X. U. S. Senator M. C. Tintlcr, from j (South Carolina, wns Henntor from that , Ptntc for two terms. In . recent letter to The Peruna Medicine Co., from Washing ton, u. C, says: "t can rteominem! Pemnt fot ilpnpepHla and ttnmaeh trouble. I have been untna your tnedtctne for a Hhort'pertdd an I le.-t vera much relieved. It Is Indeed a wonderful medicine bemtdee a good loftlo."--SI. C. Duller. The only rational wny to core dvncpis i to remove the catarrh, l'ertinn eures ca tarrh , l'erun. does not produce artilieinl digestion. It cuivs catarrh nnd leaves the atuiuacli to perform digestion in a natural wny. Thin is vnatly bettor and safer than resorting to artificial methods. l'eruna ha. cured mors case, of dyspep sia than all other remedies combined, .im ply because it cure, catarrh wherever lo cated. If catarrh is located in the head, Peruna cures it. If catarrh has fastened, itself in the thrrmt or bronchia) tubes, Pe runa cure. it. When catnrrh become. et tled in the stomach, Peruna cure, it, a well in this location as in any other. Peruna i. not simply a remedy for dr pepsia. Teruna is a cntnrrh remedy. Pe runa cure, dyspepsia bocimso it i. gener ally dependent upon catarrh. An Awkward Moment. There Is a story which Sir Ed war Malet recalls of a situation hardly equaled in fiction. A certain Cardi nal at an evening party, vhen pressed by an admiring circle of ladles to say, whether he had ever received anjri startling confessions, replied that ths first person who had come to hlra after he had taken orders desired absolution, for a murder which he confessed t having committed. A gentle shudder ran through the frames of the audi ence. This was turned to consterna tion when, ten minutes later, aa el derly Marquis entered the apartment and eagerly claimed acquaintance withu the Cardinal. "But I see Your Emi nence does not remember me," he said. "You will do so when I remind yo that I was the first person who con fessed to you after you entered tha service of the Church!" ' Thirty Years Undor the Sea. A section of cablo in the Caribbean Sea was recently raised from 1,359 fathoms of water, where It has lain fo 30 years. Tests showed Its core to he In perfect electrical condition and the rubber Insulator uninjured. At fear that sulphur from the rubber might Injure the copper wire had no foundatton. EIGHT MONTHS. DOAVS 41D.NZY 11LLS. vm non able to wnlk. . At th eml of two neks lb rainn In my 1 -inn left. When hud completed the trtwtW ment, I had not An ache nor a pnin, nnd I hnve iHeu in that comliuoQ ever gtuca. cita. Aching Lacks nre tat nip, buck, nnd loin tixin overcome. Kwrllinfr of the limbn and dropuy signs vanUli. They correct urine with brick, dust Httliment, fclffbj colored, pain in pKstuic dribliling, froipK-ncy, ba wetting. Doan's Kidney Pill removo calculi and ir ravel, lioilrre heart paliiitallo. Bleep Ifftftnefs, headaoJ,) nervouiuitws, dimluttai. , ,, , box, mall thin coupon to HutT'ilij, N. Y. If alxiv write ddrM on ( A Money Making Opportunity! 'An Old established CUIrt.ua firm m.tul youiuf uieu of Koud habits, soliar, Indus-1 trloiis and able to furnish rofer.ii. es. to I ii i oiutra. (iikhi pay vul I ruicsvo Ptiitr.tiT ix)., Dntt, ctkwn. P. N. U. 88. '03. Ms5rMraai I f U In tliufc H..ld bedniK.uta. I I il rrr or., or dbdgqist. nn i. niu s Co.. WAsur.. . u.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers