A Mystery to Hlmef. A tnan called at a San Francisco hospital and aald he bad forgotten hit Identity. He In detained under ths name of John Meyers, a small Dlble in hlg pocket bearing that name. The mnn thinks he Is a native of New York and that he lives somewhere up the HuJson river, also that he Is a graduate of Yale, and that lie may at one time have beicn engaged In liter a,ry work either as an illustrator or a writer. Railroad Gauge Changed. The work of changing the Range of the Mexican National railroad has been completed at a cost of $13,000, 000 gold, and the entire road, which was until a year ago the longest narrow-gang railroad In the world, la now standard gauge from Laredo to the Cltjr of Mexico. Fatirr's Karllrst Can. A-otW ntw thing. Can be eat til timet dining a inion ami sprouts (gain with lightning rapidity. Sext to Salxer'1 Tosime it will make mora greta fodder than anything !ae, cheap a dirt and grows everywhere. Of r-niwr'i F.cnovator Grass Miiture. ju.t the thing for dying out istiircs ana meadow.. Mr. U. Rapnold, Fast Park, (la., write. 'I lowed fcalzer'i Gran Mixturi on aoil 'in poor two men could not raisa a fuM on it, and in forty-one dny after otring I had the grandest stand of graa in the. county. IHnlierr'a Grnn Mixtures niMiifc quickly and pr.idtKr rnormously." 100,000 bnrrel choice Seed Potatoes. SAi.r.En's hew katiosal oats. TTere is a winner, a prodigy, a marvel, enormously prolific, strong, healthv, vigor ous, producing in thirty states from 100 to 300 hu. per acre. You had best sow lot of it, Mr. Farmer, in 1004, and in the fall sell it to vonr neighbors at $1 a bit for iced. A.C.L. Every heart hai its secret sorrow which the world knows not; and oftentimci we call a man cold when be is only tad. I do not believe Piso'i Cnre for Oonanmp tlon has aneqtml for coughs and colds. Jonj) I'.Eotia, Trinity Springs, Iiid., Feb, IS, IDOw Belfast is the rreat tea drinking city of the United Kingdom. You ran do yonr dyeing in halt aa hour with Put a at V a dei.khs Dtes. Cardiff exports 12,000,000 tona of coal year, Newcastle about 4.000.000. Russia has sent four dukes to the front The sporting editor cays It Is a sure sign of fighting when one of the combatants puts up his dukes. Washington Post Americans write about forty letters a year, and that average equals forty per cent, of all the letters written In the world. loo Iteward. WIOO. The readers of this paper will l pleaaad to learn that there la at least one dreaded din ease that science ha beeu able to cure lu all ita stages, and thatlaCr.tarrh. Hall's Catarrh Cure is the only positive cure now known to the mei'.ical fratrultr. Caturrh being a con stitutional dUeaso, require a constitutional treatment. Hall's CaturrhCure is taken Inter rally, atiug directly upon tb blood and mu cous surfaces of the system, thereby destroy, log the foundation of the disease, and giving the patient strength by building up the con stitution aud assisting nature iu doing its work. The proprietor have so much faith la Its curative powora that they offer One Hun tired Dollars forany oaae that it falls to cure, ttend for ll.it of testimonial. Address T. J. Cbxet A Co., Toledo, O. ' fold by Urngglxts, 75n. Take Hall's Family Pill for constipation. Steam launches with class bottoms are now at the service of those who wish to view the marine growth about Cutnlina Island. Cnl. Iorenzo Crossby, a Mormon elder, killed himself a day or so ago. The coroner shrewdly reported that the sul' clde was prompted by domestic troub les. Harvest operations In both the Eng lish and Scottish border districts were only brought to a close a day or twe before Christmas. The harvest was by far the latost within memorv. Swiss watches, according to a re port just published, are becoming pop ular In QUna. These with fantastic designs on the face find the most ready sale. The sacred fires of India are never allowed to go out The most ancient of these fltes has been burning for 12 centuries. It Is fed Ave times every two hours with sandat rood and other fragrant material combined with very dry fuel. RESTORED TO HEALTH. Many weak, suffering women do not know that their kidneys are sick. Backache tells of sick kidneys, and so do urinary dlsordors. Sick kidneys make bad blood, and bad blood makes bad digestion, .heart palpitation, dl sy headaches, nervous ness, sleeplessness, sci atica, rheumatic pains and constant depres sion. Can't be restored to health until the kid neys are cured. Bead how one woman was restored by using Doan's Kidney Pills: Mrs. H. A. Van Sickle. 811 Gth Ave., S. W., Eoanoke, Va says: "Kidney trouble was heredi tary in oar family, and I bad been so continually afflicted with the disease that I began to despair of even tempor ory relief. Sometimes I suffered so se verely that 1 was confined to my bed. The aching in my back was intense, and the kidney disorder caused an ex cess of uric acid in my blood which lm paired my digestion. I was compelled to deny myself of many of the little delicacies of diet The doctors diag nosed my case as congestion of the kid neys. I bad about given up hope when I began using Doan's Kidney Pills, but I took only a few doses when their curative powers were proven to my satisfaction. I have never been with out them in the bouse since." Doan's Kidney Pills are sold by all dealers; price, BO cents, or mailed oa receipt of price by Foster-Mllburn Co, Buffala, W. X. .Write for free trial How to Carry Your Umbrella. Too smart girl has a new little way, and not an altogether commendable one, of carrying her umbrella these dayj. She used to hold It by the nan-dli- In nn ordinnry common sense way; now she grasps It at the middle, and swings It nt nn nnglo of about 43 degrees, with tho handle pointing downward In front of her, and ' the ehnrn forrnlo-ond sticking out behind, a menace, to tho eyes of all pedestrians unlucky enough to follow her. Sho buys her umbrella to nintch In color her rain coat, and It fcenerally has more handles than ono. The Umbrel la with throe different handles is no uncommon thing this year. Tho han dled screw on, and nre very easily adjusted. Woman's Homo Compan ion. Invitations to Dine. It would be very discourteous to In vite your husband's old friend to din ner nnd not include his young wife. The fact that you have never met her does not relieve you rf obliga tion. Make it a point to cnll with your husband when his friend and wifo will be nt their hctol and then extend the Invitation ,to dinner to both, or, yon may send a cordial note the next day asking tliem to dine Informally to rr.f.ct a few friends. State the date clearly r.nd the hour, hlnr very par ticular ns to full house number and ctrO'jt, giving any other directions you may deem desirable for their guidance as Ftrangers In the cliy. A hostess shakes hands with her guests upon their arrival and upon their departure as well. Mirror-Fanner. Care cf the Complexion. Rouge In evidence Is not beauty, nor tho nnmlstakablo presence of powder nor a complexion cream with a blue tinge therein. Either the doctor or the skin specialist has been Ignored whore the whole countenance is uni formly florid or sallow; the chin, fore head and checks all of one hue. Ill health, Indigestion, undtto exposuro to the winds of heaven, have something to do with all tills. Genius is said to be a capacity for taking infinite trouble, and porsonnl appearance is Important enough now to need constant attention and contai ned exertion. If nine women out of 10 would devote time to a quiet scrutiny of themselves beforo a long cheval glass, realizing every' point In their appearance we should not see what we do nee, something almost grotesque sometimes, and often pathe tic In its failure. It is not always the spending nf a vast deal of money that Is required. The girls of today, however, have a higher mission in life than to look ornamental. It in not MUfficlent that they make the best of their charms; they must likewise develop their tal ents. It will not suffice that they bo graceful. They must also bo useful. Their aim in llfo is not merely to bo good; they must be good for some thing. Piltsbiuar Dispatch. Do Women Work Too Much? The set phrase Just now among phy sicians when It's a woman patient is: "Oh, you're working too hard." The words have become a rihibboleth In the medical profession when treating a woman. Grip, typhoid, pnoumonla It really doesn't mutter what tho mal ady is nor how little dependent it is upon previous working conditions all the doctor does is to take account of tho patient's px and promptly charge her with overwork. There have boon coses of women down with smallpox to whom the medical man has simply said: "Ah, you're working too hard that's the trouble with you. You need to tnko a good rest A good rest will bring you all right again." The women doctors are just as bnd about this as the men. It is apparently the 'professional" attitude, first, to deny women the right to work, and, second, that all the Ills of her flesh is heir to are due to work. The working woman, pure and simple, does not en Joy a monopoly of tho set- phrase, though to her, of course, it is appllod with extra vigor. ' Every variety of woman, from the society woman and tho housewife down to the maid of all work, gets but the one diagnosis from her doctor "You've been overdoing it and must take a rest" The phrase is profes sionally fashionable, and every doctor of them falls into line with It Just as a short time ago when another craze was on you couldn't have a cold In your brad without some physician wanting to perform an operation for appendicitis. Treating Stubborn Hair. Brushing, shampooing, etc., which are such important elornents in good grooming will improve evpn seeming ly hopeless locks, while systematic training, will, after a time, make the most obBtlnate tialr lay in the desired direction. Because the hair has been somewhat neglected la this respect In the past do not work on the principle thai if a certain amount of car la boneflclal a good deal will do wonders; heroic measures almost always prove disastrous. Coax, but do not force matters) as too frequent brushing and other manipulations of tho hair irritate the scalp and cause the hair to fall out. Hair which Is scrupulously clean but very stubborn in Its habits of growth needs training Instead of sham pooing, a common error in this day of good grooming. Close observation will soon teach ono tho difference between fluffy hair and that which is extremely dry. Never under any circumstances allow the hair to remain at night in tho coll or plnlts worn during tho day or Injury la done the scalp, nnd the hair soon assumes awkward lines, from the hours of pressure In the wrong direction. Beforo retiring brush the hair throughly and confine It In ono or two very loose plaits. This will Insure a frco circulation of air through the hair and relax the deli cate muscles of the scalp which are nioro or less Irritated by the pressure of numerous pins and tho weight of tho hair confined largely at one point To nsslst in the training moisten the hair with a little good tonic such as a preparation of quinine and bay rum containing a email percent of oil, and brush In tho desired direction each time brushing Is done. Experiences of a Woman Lecturer. No public speaker should ever apol ogize for anything but a cold, and that Is so apparent that It cannot be helped by an apology. To apologize for the subject or tho wny It Is treated (as I havo heard done) Is not only foolish but directly harmful to the effect of the lecture. And should it be necessary to apologize for being late, tho briefest explanation only should b? offered. Naturally a lecturer must endeavor not to be late, but accidents to cars, etc., cannot always be es caped. Once In Brooklyn a blizzard had stopped tOio cars bo that connec tions necessary for me to make were Impossible. Nor could a cab be found; there was nothing to do but wait and on a cold corner; the audience In the hall waited three-quarters of an hour. Not long ago, when Btuglng through tho Redwoods of California, from the coast to an Inland town, where I was duo on the platform at 8 o'clock, a do- lay occurred far up the mountain. It seemed Impossible to roach tho town In season, but furious driving on tho down grade, with (rasping passengers holding on for safety, finally landed me at my destination, dust-covered and breathless, at a quarter to eight That audience had to wait 15 minutes for mo to removo somo of tho dust and bo able to speak, and so great had been tho effect on the eyes of tho jolting drive that when the platform was reached I could see nothing straight; it would have been lmpoS' Ible to speak from notes. These acci dents prove that one must be pre pared for any emergency. Wet or dry though the weather be, an engage ment must be kept, and only once bavo I known a storm to be too severe to prevent tho assembling of an audi once. Florenco Jackson, in Harper's Weekly. Fashion Notes. Greens always revive with the com' lng of spring. Box-pleated sklrfs are to be a lead lng mode for walking wear. Summer dresses, promise to be elab- through be-rufiled and lace-adornod. You can't have too many buttons on your swn, but choose them with dis cretion. Walking suits of black zlbellne are made dashing by bands and bands of gold braid. Japanese' flowers and butterflies play a largo part In tho trimming scheme at present. A' noticeable fact about the spring suits is that so many of them are made of heavy fabrics. Narrow flowered ribbons to run through lingerie are newer and pret tier than the plain sort Black shoes laced up with white strings are among the queer things af- focted by faddish women. Deep- close-fitting cuffs, some reach ing almost to the elbow, are in evl dence on the new blouses. ' Shirt waist suits of plalded, striped and figured mohairs, in lovely colors, are to add gayety to the spring land scape. Pollia-dot designs are prominent on foulards and liberty satins some In big spots and some in little whirls of white dots. To be correct tho wldo bodice girdle should be seven Inches deep and straight across the bach, cut on the straight of the material and shaped to the figure by three or four seams. Orange and "old green" are favorite colors at present, and they are almost universally becoming. Orango lights up equally well under artificial or sun light, and all the green tones carry so much of nature's "life" in them that they are refreshing. Food for Poultry. Thera Is always more or less refuse from the kitchen that can go to the poultry. This should bo properly pre pared so as to give the greatest amount of benefit. At all country homes thero Is more cr leas milk that can be used In mixing up a very enjoyable feed for the fowls. If the llttlo fragments of meats be cut fine, the refuse from veg etables, fruits, etc., and bread crusts be thrown In an old pan or pot where some milk can be poured over the mess and a little meal and bran or shorts stirred in to thicken It up, to tnke off all sloppy condition, It will be found a fine feed for the fowls. They will show their appreciation of it by eat ing It greedily, and keeping a lookout for this feed. It should be fed In a trough so It will not get wasted by dirt or eaten by other animals. Try sav ing the basis of a good mess for the fowls by keeping the kitchen refuse, and you will be greatly rewarded by more eggs and healthier fowls. Lime and Sulphur Wash. Fruit growers are quite Interested in the formula composing the new In secticide, lime and sulphur, but have found tho labor of making It consider able because of the necessity for boil ing the mixture. Recent experiments have shown that If potash or caustic soda Is used, there will be no neces sity Tor boiling. The formula for making in this way Is this: Take 20 pounds of sulphur, 40 pounds of lime, five pounds of caustic soda and CO gallons of water. Make a thin paste of the sulphur and dissolve the caustic soda In water. In slaking the lime, use only enough water to make it boll rapidly. During the process of slaking, pour Into the lime the sulphur paste, nnd then the caustic soda solution, adding water If necessary and stirring rapidly until all bubbling stops, when dilute with water to the consistency and strength need ed for tho spraying. The use of this material In spraying Is not only a de cided check on scale, but very effec tive against various Insects. Applica tions may be made in the late fall, in midwinter nnd in the early spring. Indlnnopolls News. Saving the Pear Tree. The tree that had borne bushels of fine pears was stricken with blight. Six ends of limbs were brown. The women folks of the family were de pendent on that 16-year-old standard tree for pears to eat and to preserve. They diagnosed the case, and by the application of domestic remedies saved the tree. Two years have passed since, and no signs of blight and no diminution of fruit. First the affected limbs were sawed off about two feet from the tips, and burned. The ground was raked and chopped of every blade of grass and weed. A trench about a foot deep, In a circle, all around, and as far out fcs the shado of the limbs extended, was spaded out and filled In with wood bbIi es and old dried dairy compoBt. The trunk of the treo was scrubbed with the waste kitchen water, strong suds of gold dust washing powder, every few days. During July and August the trench was watered -J.wleo or three times a week, and wood ashes scat tered over the ground under the tree once each month. This routine, whether sustained by science, had tho effoct of bringing tho family favorite pear tree back to its normal condition, and for two years past has so con tinued. Blankets for Horses. Touching upon the use of blankets for horses, a good horseman says they aro an essential feature for Btable use, when horses are standing there in the winter season.' He says: "A blanket should always be thrown over the horse in cold weather of spring and autumn, when standing after boing driven. While the horse is working there Is no danger that he will suffer from tho cold. If a blanket Is used the average horso will sweat and the molBlure will be retained, and in this way the danger from taking cold is much greater. A horse should always be blanketed, when standing In a draft or in the rain, using a cloth or rubber blanket, as the case may be. After a hard drlvo and tho horso has become heated, do not cover him for about Ove minutes, letting him steam. Then put on a light blanket; allow this to remain half on hour, then remove this and put on your heavy one. This gives the animal a warm, dry covering, after you have removed the light blanket, which Is wet from the steam of the horse. A thorough rubbing first, if convenient, is excellent. In blanketing your horse see that the blanket is sufficiently large to cover tho animal from neck to tall; see also that the breast flaps are sufficient to protect this sensitive part, and' that the sides and flank ore fully protected. If not do not buy it at any price. In diana Farmer. The Vines and Tubers. Potash is the principal plant food preferred by the potato crop, and phoB phorlo acid la likewise an indispensa ble nocesBlty; that is, so far as tubers are concerned. But the tons are also to be made, for without good growth of vine the difficulty of producing a large yield of tubers will be increased, pot ash existing largely In the vines. The manure, as stated, should be well rot ted, as In that condition it becomes more available as plant food. Fresh manure, as all should know. Interferes with the keeping Qualities of the tub era, engendering disease and decay. Dot only while they are In the ground and growing, but also after being har vested and stored arvay. Chemical fertilizers aro better for potatoes than for any other crop, as such fer tilizers ore surer and cheaper in the end, and furnish better quality of tub ers. For an acre of potatoes a fair proportion would be about 75 pounds nitrate of soda, 201) pounds muriate; but these proportions must be varied' to suit the soli. If the soil Is fertile less quantities will suffice, and In oth er cases tho nltrato might bo Increased, If preferred. This fertilizer may be broadcasted on the surface, after the land has been mado ready, and after tho potatoes have been covered tip. Then go over all with a light harrow, and before the young plants are very high a healthy appearance will denote the telling effects of the fertilizer; but the use of fertilizer In the hills or rows Is preferred by many. Before plant ing the tubers cut and roll them in plaster. Cut a week .before planting, a.nd they will sprout the sooner for it. In using Paris green for the bugs let It be mixed with plaster. Wood ashes may also be used liberally on potatoes, broadcasted over the surface. Keep down the grass and weeds, as they rob the potatoes of moisture In tho dry times. Give plenty of room to each plant In which to grow, nnd keep the cultivator busy. Roosts for Poultry. There Is nn Idea current which has come from a scientist who has discov ered why a hen sits on the roost with out falling off while asleep. The phys iological larw is that when the leg and shank of a fowl Is extended the toes are free to act without hindrance. When the leg Is drawn up next to the body the tendons are so constructed as to close up the toes, and this charac teristic is not to be controlled at will. According to this Idea a hen gets on the roost, sits down and by doing so bends the shanks, which closes the toes about the roost and It Is Impos sible for her to fall off until she rises. Now this Is a nice theory and would be fine it It were so, but we have grave doubts of its being so. For Instance, we have had our fowls sitting on a perch that Is flat and fowls cannot put their toes around It When they sit down on that perch or on the floor of coop their feet are not drawn up as If closed around a perch. Watch a hen covering her' brood and see how her toes are spread out while she is crouched In a sitting position. Nature has not been blind to the fowl's wants. Being a bird that roosts while It sleeps It has been endowed with that Instinct which makes It safe on a polo one foot from the ground or on a bough 50 feet up In a tree. We have discarded all round roosts and likewise flat ones. Pole roosts should havo the bark removed from them, since Is makes a hiding place for lice and mites. We like a piece of sawed stuff two Inches square with the corners rounded off for perches. These are dressed bo as to be smooth and we like them better than any other. Roosts should not be fixtures, neither should one be placed above another like the rungs of a ladder. By having all roosts movable they can be taken from their place and treated In any way that will free them from vermin. They can be scalded with boiling water or they can be scorched with fire or treated in any manner that Is suggestive of good results. Place tho roosts so they will be convenient for the breed of fowls kept. They should not be too high from the floor.- Iowa Homestead. Pouftry Notes, Season soft food with salt. It sharp ens appctlto and aids digestion. Hens will pay well for table scrapa, It is wasteful to feed them to mon grel dogs and cats. Why are fowls the most profitable creatures a farmer keeps? Because for every grain they give a peck. Before you give a sick fowl liquid medicine, be sure that its nostrils are clear, or it may be strangled to death. Litter in which there is tough, wiry hay is not safe to put on the scratching floor. If eaten it causes cross-pound conditions. Keep a record of both your sales and expenses, and don't forget to give the hens credit for what you consume in your own family. Much time Is wasted on farms by the men folks that might be made prof itable by caring for the poultry and pro ducing winter eggs. Poultry raising has many advan tages In that there Is always a small income from the beginning, from the eggs and chickens, old and young. To renew the vitality of a flock it is net necessary to cross-breed and make them mongrels. Better get males of a different strain or family of the same variety. There Is a certain time when poul try that are being fattened are jUBt ripe and fit to kill. If left even for a few days beyond this period, they lose rather than gain In flesh, and the ex tra food given them may be regarded as a useless expense. This condition In the birds, whether fowls, turkeys or ducks, can readily be told by an ex port, and any one, of course, guess it by practice and observation. It Is quite worth while for' all poultry keep ers to try to gain this knowledge. Japanese Scientists. It was a Jap named Kltasato who discovered the bacillus of tetanus, or lockjaw, thereby leading to the pro duction of the antitoxlo serum, and it was another, named Shiga, who dis covered the bacillus of dysentery, one of the moet deadly of dlseasea In time of war. London Chronicle. iiiiiitnninHiinHiiinniinnHiimninntnnmiiiinnlniniK THE JEFFERSON 1 SUPPLY COMPANY Bring the largest distributor of Central Merchandise In this vicinity, is always u Fosition to gira the best quality of goods, ts aim is not to sell wou cheap goods but when quality is considered ths pries will al ways, be found right. Its departments are all well filled, and among the specialties handled may be men tioned L. Adler Bros., Rochester, N. Y.( Clothing, than which there is none better made; w. L. Douglass Shoe Co., Brockton, Mass,, Shoes: Curtice Bros. Co., Rochester, N. Y., Canned Goods; and Pillsbury's Flour. This is a fair representation of the of goods it is selling to its customers. iiiiiiiiiiiiaiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiauiiiiuiiiijiiuiutuiuiuiummuS PROMINENT PEOPLE. M. Henri' Cordler '.:na been fleeted President of tho Paris Geographical Boclety. Edward VII. Is going to visit Rome. Vienna, Paris, Lisbon aud Berlin this summer. Canon Alnger lins resigned the can- onry in Bristol Cnthedrnl, -which he has held for the Inst six'.een years. Tho Right Rev. Thomas Fielding Scott, the first Bishop of the Episcopal Church In Oregon, was elected to that olllce iu 1S53. Genernl Tznntoheff, the Macedonian lender, lias. left Vienna for Tnrls. Ho will later go to London nnd may after ward visit the United States. The Congressional Library has re ceived from Mrs. U. W. Fall, of Nash vllle, Tctin., n large box containing the papers nnd letters of I'rcsldcut James K. Polk. SInnrlce Rolllnat, tho French poet, who died recently In n private asylum, was nt ono lime the rnge In Paris, and his weird and gloomy lyrics were often set to music. Representative D. N. Bperry, of the Pecond Connecticut District, Is the father of tho House In point of years. Ho was seventy-six years old at bis lost birthday. Cojjnt Albert Ton Meran, a young scion of tho Russian imperial house, has entered the r.ovitlnto of the Bene dictine monks. Ho is the grandson of Archduke John. Former Governor norace Boles, who was one time tho popular lender of tho Democrats of bis fitnte, is nt present living a secluded life on bis farm of 1500 acres, near Eldora, Iowa. The Grand Duke Alexis Is In his fifty-fourth year. As his brother, the Grand Duke Vladimir, eldest son of the Czar liberator, is practically the bend of the army, so Alexis i the grand admiral of the navy. LABOR WORLU, The Retail Clerks' Association now bus locals In G15 towns and cities. South Wales coal owners claim nn other reduction of the colliers' wages, dating from February 14. The Rrltlfh Bonrd of Trade has found that the life of the average sea man is twenty-eight years. A New York concern has come for ward with a plan for tho orgniilntlon of a union trading stamp company. Fur workers' unions nre considering forming nn international union. Tho convention will be called In Detroit. Forty-three per cent, of all employes In the Austrian bookbinding trade aro women and thlrtccu per cent, chil dren. The California Stato Federation con vention decided that It is against union principles for labor unions to go into politics. Amalgamated Meat Cutters' and Butchers' Workmen, of North Ameri ca have declared against women cm ployed in butcher shops. New York painters are seeking leg islation, to bo framed on lines of a German law, prohibiting the use of white lead in paint for public build ings. Chicago (111.) union picture framo workers aro keeping up a steady tight against tho wugo reductions aud in creased working days lu the several factories. A compromise has been effected in tho question of wuges in the ship building trudo on the northeast coast of England on a basis of a tire per cent, reduction. Massachusetts State Branch of the American Federation of Labor plans to have tho laws governing the- Ktiito Board of Arbitration and Conciliation broadened to make the Board more of a peruiaucut working body. Testa of Steel. The reports of tests of structural steel at the Boston insurance experi ment station show that if struotural steel is Incased In a sound covering of good concrete, It Is proof against cor rosion for a period of years, which Is so long as to make the subject of more Interest to our great-grandchildren's children than to us. Steel, properly covered with concrete, may bo expect ed to last until tho substitution of a yet more modorn construction neces sitates the removal of the building. India's Vast Tea Crop. The half million acres cultivated In tea In India produce 190,000,000 pounds the Investment being about $100 an acre. The labor required is 13 per sona to aa acre. One pound of India tea will produce seven and a half galtoni of tea of a Riven strength, while the tea of China will produce out ore gallons. fcf i 4 BusirrinrrcARDs. yyv. Q( M. atcDONALn. ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, Notary Public, real mtata aisnt, FstorMa "cured, collection, jnaia tromllf. OBkae In Urn. Moots bulldini, lloynolilarlUa, Pa. 'jJR. B. B. nuoVh.it, JtETNOLDSVILLB, PA. , nnsMsni dentist. It tlie nnr bolldlaa 4ain strpat. (.entlenews In oeratlni. J)R. L. L, MEANS, DENTIST, . OfflQ oa soconri floor of First National Wah aulldlns, Main street. J)R. R. DaVEHE KINO, DENTIST, Efflos n.Hcotl floor Reynoldivllla BasJ stats Bldt. Mais strait ReynoUsTllIi, Pa. J)R. W. A. HENRY, " DENTIST Offlna oa Moond floor at Rfar Sim, lilrt olldlns. Main strait. NEW. JUSTICE OF THE PEAC7I Aa Rail liwi kgm BoyaoMivtlla, Pa. SMITH M. McCRKIGHT, ATTOrtNE Y-AT-LAW. Nntnry Ptihllc ami Ileal Estate Agents. Co! leotlrma will receive .n.ni.t attention. Office In tne HeynoMMvillH llnnlware Co. Building1. Main treot, h rnoUsvillo, t'a. rctnrsi BEEXl YOUNG'S PLANING MILL You will find Sash, Doors. Frames and Finish of all kinds, Rough and Dressed Lumber, High Grade Var nishes, Lead and Oil Colors in all shades. And also an overstock of Nails which I will sell cheap. ' J. V. YOUNO, Prop. j 'n a:iii-iiiaajiiCTi3iiJUijaaaCI WHEN IN D0UIIT. TRY iv saw . Sad hav tuns Ikaasaals at of Nervous Blssana. sask as DsbUlrr. Dlulasss, "i-slrsi bam aot Varfceeila,Awsaf.lis Thar dear tea krsla.smagraaa las Hreulatloa, Haas aijitriaa, perfect. ae4 iaul a Saalraf ver la the sola kalaa. All 4ralai aaa tassel ire laeaaaa fnmmmtnllf. Ualaas aaaea Jsaeale. aio araaerlvean aa l ana wantet then (atolaiaaltr, ', CaasaBaa tipneear, lata aars s Death, M.ll.a ...l.o. fHt i eaaa,wl eaAaWik aaa. srUa. Irea cl4 legal fusrastee ta esse aa wf. naa aaa ear aas aaaa. fat sale by k. li Stole. EVERY WOMAN SosDstlmas sjsedi a raGakaj -aoatbl ragulatlag aaarMala, 1 DR. PEAL'S .PENNYROYAL PILLS, are rrorar. aafe asd certain la reaoll. Tkasaa aM!r,K'al,e)MWlleappoln,. LM(Wai So sal. ep.eTL Ala. S-vaka. Carnegie's Offer Refused. The rejection by the American So elety for Civil Engineers of the otter of Andrew Carnegie to build for the society a $1,500,00 home, following closely on the heels of the declination of the city of Detroit of an offer of $150,000 for a Carnegie library has caused no small amount of talk among those who have followed: Mr. Carneg ie's eflorts to escape the disgrace of dying a rich man. Within a comparatively short time these odors of Mr. Carnegie, In ndt'. tlon to the two Just cited, nave been declined: Elwond, Inrl., $25,000; the Literary Society of Qirebec, $20,000; Cumberland, Md., $25,000; Easton. Pa.. $50,000; Wheeling, W. Va., no amount nanod; Grand Rapids, MJch., $150,000; Clinton, Mass., $25,000; Ty rone, Pa., $50,000; Macon, Ga., $25. 000. Ancient Writing Materials. Ancient inks were palnts, thick and heavy, far different from the thin fluid now used; writing was In broad strokes and pools mado with a brush, tick or pen, of reeda or brushes, and ' the page when filled was laid aside to dry. A brush and India Ink ( still tmd ta Cains. aTTl