Stomach and LiverTroubles Cured | RS : by Hood's Sarsaparilia. “1 suffered from stomach and Hyver trow- | bles and was confined to my house for a tag time. 1 was entirely deaf in one ear. ap hope of evar being well, eares by Hood's Barsapariila I decided to give it atrial. Soon after I began taking {#1 could see it had a good effect. and my stomach and liver troubles re. Hoven.” W. T. Nomrow, Canisteo, N. Y, , Sarsa- parilia six for $5. AOR SRR NG Japan is atmos as large as Catitor- 2, A A i SI Bs ANAS a the American State has 158, 00, The average Weight of Woman ix 4 fat | inch The American Women are nearly I mehes taller, and | the right to lay and use a donble track | street railway on it for transporting | freight and passengers, for a period of n: > | from this source is to become part of ¢ the road-building fund. New Guinea are still in the mest pri. | They are wholly unac- | the women of Great Britain 1-2 inch Sndier than thude American sisters, To Cure - Codd d in One | Pray. Take Laxative frome Quinine Tablets, ragcists refund money if it falls toenre. ES nt The Papuan of the Malay coast of D pitive state. gusinted with metals, and make their weapons of stome, bones and wood, ? in cooking. bebsg grated, AA St———y oar An Unique Game, _ graph blanks ay there are guests, They will give them for the asking at any telegraph office. Select the Initial letter | of ten words; for instance, T, H, B, A, CBE LW. 8 G. Hand each guest a telegraph blank, and have Wim or her . witite thereon & message 10 you. using _ dbese letters for the heginning of each of the ten words. Collect the telegrams aod réad aloud, If letters not common- ty seed In making words, like 7, X. Y, te, be selected, the greater ingenuity 8 required to write the telegram. For ~ Inptance, using the letters above for an A netration, one could write: * Starting Point, March 1, 1808 10 p. m. Mm J. G. Blank: This kas been sw§D enjeradie evening, } will ny good: 6 Cp MARY THOMAS. 3 DE eourse. earth person has the same © jpiters, and the iden Is to note the di versity of tha sentences.~Woman's Home Companion. HE want A Oumparieon of Sea and Land. ; by John Holt Scheoling. A bucket 743 miles deep and 743 miles : to side would hold every | oe mine Tos Tied Hew Own Obimar. ; a ary. mirlenice of reading her own obitoary murtioes, the Australian papers Loving i made the mistake of supposing that Sif $ui1 ot eee BAIA, died vecently. Sanstive Nas and Liver Pils have done {or nd painful menstruation. I could LD Buta few minutes at a time. up othomd py have taken oi bottles of Lydia Pinkhany s Vegetable Compound and of Sanative Wash, ny amour of all my troubles. I feel 8 Dew woman. I can do all kinds + and feel stronger than I did in my life. Inowweighlity Before using your medicine I | bed only 108 pounds. Surely it is the grandest medicine for weak woman that ever was, and my advice to all who are suffering from r female trouble is to try it at ance be well. Your medicine has proven & blessing to me, and i cannot praise i enough. —Mrs. Lucy Goobwix, | Fo Va. Icon. | tinued its use antil my deafness was cored | : road il the road -bhuildérs to get ‘a great natural ridge of sand, in rR t Lem be a fair prospect that the money i be intelligently and scientifically A System of Military Highways of Sharpsburg, Penn, “there shall be no State debt ecreatid except for military purposes,” he pro- ha constructed in the bent ing may be required, and tw be from The whole charge of bnilling and! | x these militar haghwa pi meine Sunes i wie | Detiting these miliary bigbears ‘of Internal Affairs, who is to hava | three competent civil engineers as his { pounseliors, tions of engineers In charge of the | eonstroction of these roads are to be i rigidly examined before they can he | appointed, | point a court to hear all claims and | award damages for property taken for | | the construction of the roads | each section of road is completed, the | All applicants for pow. The Secretary is to ap- Becretary is to seil at public sanction twenty years, and money receivid Before the end of November in esach year, the Secretary is to notify the | State Treamnrer how mireh will be ro . quired for the following year, which | som shall not excead $12,000, (WHY, i the first Toesday of each month, the {in The tadian or fe. sar cheese must | Treasurer shall sell at pablic sanction | be cut with a saw and is used mains . bonds, to : 81,0006 00%) per month, anti] thesam i required bry thre Secretary ix obtained. For 8 simple amusement try the tele | graph game. Provide as many tele | three per cent amount not excesding twenty year, an Sach highways are expected to) benefit the people so greatly that they |” bgt t wiil demand thet they be built twenty miles apart, and then ten, and then five. Mr, Kirk has given the road question much attention hath | here snd abroad. His proposed | Military Road Law has been printed | with fal! explanations. Statistics Regarding Good Roads. This is the time of the year when the average cyclist begins to look aroand to find out the condition of ths roads. It {s only the enthusiast who has done more or less regular riding daring the winter, but this elass 1s iraasing every year. Fred. | erick J. H. Merril has issned a good- road bulletin for the New York State Masset of the University of the State of Kew York, which » Lie has made a close study ot the good roads probjem. The bulletin treats of road-bailding and good road ma iu and it also includes a andl ills sigpe 7 The triviality of the sea compared | no. - WHA the land Ix the theme of a recent | of stretches of good writer shows that this country iu in the same condition ia regard to roads that Great Britain was | at the beginning of the present cen. | fury, or, in other words, that we are a | Jean behind England in| mth of {8 soaks directly into the sar- | hundred ing. Mr. Merrill says that the Romans showed a better kaow. ledge of ed nailEing three handred B. C., than the officials of this State do to-day. He gives the mileage of the important soads of this State at 123,000 miles. Much money, he says, is spent ini repairing roads improperly, leaving the highways in worse con. - | dition than they ware in befors the im. i provements were mada Tha maps show the quarries in the State and the kind of stone to be seoured in each, The ideal stone for road-buildisg can i be had around the Palisades on the Hodson. Mr. Merrill argues that it is not necessary to destroy the Palisades ! or biases for this stome, for, he says, there is enough loose material at the foot of the Palisades to last for road. | building io this distrist for some time to come. The writer argnes that all | that would Le necessary would be for barges, piok it up and bring it over. This partion. lar stone is known as “trap-rook, and it can be found in quantities iz Bo other part of the State, New load Law Already Popular, Belore tiovernor Black had attache his signature to the Higbee Armstrong | State roads bill, the property owners along two important highways ig Monroe County bad taken steps tu secure the benefits of that bill when it shall beromae a law. The movement waa fret started on the road between Rochester and Brighton, and the property owners on the Ridge road, between Hoosic Hill sad Lake Avenue, are a good second Both of the thoroughfares men. tioned are important ones leading inte this eity. The Ridge road, for exam ple, is a splendid natural highway leading westward from the Genesee River to the Niagara. Nas greatest breadth makes it sppear likes superd boulevard, and along its entire leagth, country crossroads from the north and south run inte it, many of them from important villages. Bat as it is the wagon tracks along this road arg during most of the year, very heavy, An improvement which would give teams and wazons a good, solid drive. way wonld immensely expedite and relieve the large traffic over the road. The evidence thus promptly far- nisiaed of the prospective popularity of the proposed law is specially grat- ifying to its friends. Something was needed to stimulate property owners on country hizhways to adopt meas. ures for ‘securing good roads. This something is furnished in the State and county aid secured under the bill, Under the new System there i new An elaborate system of good high. "8% Are. ‘ways for Pennsylvania is proposed Ly | : Arthur Kirk, I endured it distress fa my stomach | As the constitntion of that State says aed could not sit hearty food. I had given | Reading of | : | pores that the State create un complete | i rystem of military rowds, which shodl | | traverse the State from east to west | in parallel linea forty miles apart, and | | in like manser from north to south. ' These military highways are not to utilize old rounds, bat are to be lsad | . ont new nuder the most expert supar- | vision; manner; have no grade greater than | { three per cent, no matter what grad. 4 Fills hs =| forty to sitty feet wide, Before La Niate | | Springfield, Maes, | quarry wagons are driven, ows that! {applied insted of being practically % | wasted, us the money and Inbor in the of working the BR ont TRY P existing system © After two or threes nong ohwol lessons, zach Brighton asd Bidge road ‘monte will be, have been farntehed, tharg will 8 rush of aps from rural properly owners for road improvements ander the new law Rochester Dernocras and Chr x gs the improve ge sy Pa ik sicle, Marviand and Good Boads, There is siBple econymon senses for | the good roads tions, says the Bal | timers American, i men, and i make the money reach As { things are at present OY Cdimorganized. cin Maryland, doliar in fonr or iva appropriated for roads reaches the work on the roads, This fact 1s known It i» admitiad, It is one of the chief scandals of the Bate, Now the money to be honestly nsed shonld ha sow laws, new rogniations, now men and new metiuwis, The lsck of good romsds 1s keeping down the price of every farm in the State, sosting avery farmer more in got his | products to market, keeping back that progress which would conse if we had better highwavs It i= a simple matter, but wa hope he Legislatars will study it and he. gin by wise laws that progress toward better things, whieh will lead Mary. land to the destiny that kelongs to it by right of position and by the ex- bhaustiess value of its resources, rot Fons : ; $m moat organized Tait Nps timo haw come for the Warking of Permissive Laws. Permissive road laws will not bring the millenniam of good roads upon joe with a rush. Thera is still much | opposition to road improvement, and iit will take a good while, and much hard work, to overcome it. If county t | supervisors are simply given permis- sion to indicate what roads they want Limproved, and their sonstitgents don't | want any done, they will not call for any read building in their districts, | Under such laws, the only induce ment for a conte to build roads that it does not want, is the Riste's prom. i ise to hear hall the sxpanss. As same | one remarked, “this is a good desl Chika asking & man, into whose intel lset wo ray of spiritual Rght pisread, if be wouldn't Like taxed fos his salvation” —Gisod Roads Bulletin, bad i ab to he Preserving Goad Rosils, Tho effect of wide tires on roads has ‘boen shown clearly on a street in over which heavy The road was formeriy badly cas up, bat a nuniber of years ago it wus given a heavy surface coat of gravel with the anderstanding that wide tizes should be put on the wagons carrying the quarry stones. This was done, the tires being four to five inches wide, snd since that time the’ strest has been in good condition, although little Las Leen done on it, Ia the Wrong Flace, Id is said that 27,000 tonu of water fall every year on each mils of romd. This water does its beat to ritn off and join some watercourse, but is general. iy so hetopered in its efforts that face, so that dirt roads become mind, and stone roada are rained, drainage aloge would go far toward improving all our highways, Tadian Falls as Shoplitter; A Navajo Indian can bide mors balk within the folds of his blanket thau a two-bushel basket could bold, and can successfully hide many stolen articles before our eyes. The settlers along the San Jaan and Anise rivers, during the early days, had to pusall their stealable possessions in one cor- ner of their places of abode nad stand guard whew the Navajoas wer visitors, which was a 00 frequent occourrence “Chinvy ah-go!* (meaning something to eat) was the first islimation, gener. ally, that an Indian was near (perhaps a half dozen). They rarely sxcssded y hall & dozen 1o number, as thay, Like the American bobo, bad leammed that saalier numbers stood a better show to get something to eat One dayin A. R. Lincoln's cabln, on the south bank of the San Juau River, three bachelors were partaking fof their evening meal, when a Navajo with a : las eye walked in AN tried to wateh the Indian's movements, bm he had managed to got several articles 'aader his blanket, and wonid not have bean detected had not an accidant be. fallen Lam. A hatchet which slippad from one of the folds in bis blanket fell, and the sharp blade ent a long gash inthe calf of his log. The Indian lsoked to the roof of the cabin as if wondering where the hatohes had fal len from, but the blood spurting from the open gush betrayed hin His blanket was shaken and a butcher knife, mimer's candleatiok, several can- longing iu the cabin, fell on the earthy Roar.—Duzeage {0a} J Vasu Earner, Tuetion of Pursued Deer, An Oxford County sportsraan who is much interested in the habits of wild game reposts sesing three deer chased by dogs in the deep snow. I was impossible for them to rium fast, snd they adopted tactios that were at once novel sud practical. They were ranning single file, The flirt thine that attracted attention as anual was the action of the leader, wihioh stopped sudlenly, jnmped to one side, and let the other two deer ran by in the path he had made. Vary sven the new leader jumped out and lot his followers run ahead as long as the leader could stand it to make the path in the deep snow. This was kept up until they went out of sight, and the sportsman hed learned someting .—Kennebee tMe.} Journal Chern of the would-be purchases Proper | ' dies and a package of tebaceo, all be- | A Woman's Burden. Prom the Booming News. Detroit, Nick, The women of to-day are not as strong as heir grandmothers. They are bearing & pardon in diencs that grows heavier day by day; thut is sappisg thelr vitality and shouding thelr haopiness, Mrs. Alaxunder B. Clark, of 417 Misbisae | EF Loe wmiy 3 of beep of dis Avenues Detrodt, is & (ypl ai woman dxv. A wife with susk ambition as toring wile san have Bat the joys jife were marred by the existence waLen Hy Tring as thousands of her sisters haw raferad she almoet despalred of lle snd re she was onreil ‘Por Sve years |} salfernd with ovariag trouble,” In Mrs {imrk’s own version of the story. “1 was nig free ome siogie Any from headicho and intesse twitch. ing pains in 0 y nook and shoulders For mouths at 8 Sime | woaid be sonlaed to my ed, At times bisek spots wud appear Lelore wy ove and I would be I harame Hid, > Werle andy 3 1 A [of 19.000 feet an a mile | # | eetie. fuil of life. merve and vigor, take eame Bnd. My nerves were in imelra stale : that a step on the Soor ansettied be. “Ralneat dootogs, skiliful nurses the best Sood and medicins all failed sonsestnd to an operstios, Thet, too, failed and thay sshd another was oacewary. After the seoond | was worse than ever and tha worid wax darier than twfore. “It was than 1 beard of Dr William Pink Pills for Pals Pacple. 1 bean! thet they Bad cured asses [ike mins and I tried tiiman. “They cured ms They shine tom Bitte and ied me cop with Jinee. neadnnnhe ls gone: the Twite ng is gone. the twenty six pounds, Heath and strength 4s mine and I am thaskfsl to Dr. Williams’ | Pink Plils for Pale People for the hiessing.™ These Acting dlreetly on the Mood and nerves they restore the requisite vitality to i | parts. of the body, sresting tunetionsl regs- rity and perinct hafmony throaghout the nervous systom. The shanks is changed to the health: the oye grow siastis, smiition is created and good | beaith returus, fininfertant smells giwed factanit, bins of If a a Lowi Simin Edneate Your Sowels WHA Casearetn Candy Catbhariie, owe constipation [orerer. Be ie DO eC Sid, STVERMSE TSI AE THES. it has been aes riatned that laws wl make a more duralve Goniu- ment than the harlot granile. ST. YIU Dani IE SP ASNE kd ld ol permanently va reid Ds Kitze's Oimaal Nopyvw Hestoper FRUE $00 grind bettie and treatise to [ir Hn Kiioe 1 ul. ns | | | teething. sf to tie nervousness a gone; the any cae trembling has coasad, and I have goined taking Hani Popensiisle, fis are a Soon to womankisd, | | Avram De Sr af the | brighton: the museies it isn't plate nid all nore. the ame of | mend for | nt Arch Street, Phils, Pa | Modern needle are aid 10 have ane | SLs nee In 1b, No-Te Nas for Fifty Cents. CHunranined When Lalit cure makes weak Wel M2ORg, Mod pure. -_.a R All drags Theres are 1 0 hawkers of news. Papers in Lan £14. wo EE a ca To he Point, A certain Eastern ootipany that SNe Une Wgo Wis anxious (0 purchase 3 ailverdead mice, found itself in @ state of agcertainty. What seemed he a really attractive mine was found to be ln the murkel and segotiations for its purchase ware entered upon, The resudl of these negotiations is ro periad by the Spokane Miner and Elo trician. As the ore assayed well, and every | thing looked propitious, a wining ex port was sent W exadiine the mine. His report was favorable, [a fact, it was toc favorable. He certified that the ore was there Ib large quasUties, and that it was extreipely valusble. His un qualified praise aroused the suspicion If the mine was Indeed so valuable, why was the price so low? The company deter mined to luvestigate more closely. At this polut a well ksown mining When one man proowmes go good | thing, another man usually procoses one 0 wuch better that ucthing is done, i Ea Es ai Shake Tuto Your snivee Allen's Poot. Fame a powder Top the feet. It cures nalnini swollen gervous soaring foes sud instantiv takes the sting ast of soraw add anions. [Us the pretest som fort Sle. | pavery ol the age, Alien sn Foot lass maken } r new shies 8 foresd raey. ft ix ow cortuln for sweating, sellogs and nog teed, Try i by all drag. | T hind DET ERE hd Rien 8.00 Amated. ie Roy, N41. amok ber The dariaeter ves wien 8 i. RL. wed mate She steed wipes ua pw aebing fot Kits wrod FREE. a4 if fen % She wn 4 EWR Be ja Rei itmeriamd that way labopees coghd | ired Su loog AL A height SWOT it hae wen Tognd Wing a ri SP tT g in bags Pont Tobores Spit and Semele Tour Life Away, To quit whmess easily and forweer, be mags Yo To SU AR | Bae, the wocder wurierr, tht makes weaslk men Cstromg All drapes, #00 or B85. Cure gustan seed Bookier and saosiiie fret Adiiresy | Bering Hemady Ca. Chicago or Rew York : Ir Paves ty boom Wieite fur Make mors snd tetiee IWWE PAY FREIGHT. § QO “Manafuct iree, M. VTLAND. PA I a — irrnliar and Prices - Agitation is active In the 'Pransvaal fur The stablishment of a departraent of agri. with a minister at {ta begat diture, UI : KEARNS. Fitn re rT ty pH Nu Aor nerross. ; news after fret day's wee of Dr. Kline's Great | | Nery’ ¢ Restorer $orin’ twttle snd treatise fro iit HH Koiwe Lod 8) Arch vt Phils. Pa. lian MRACHERS WANTED, 300 oaetl ae fe cotton for next ters (Bows (6 Ta an a AGEWCLEN OF Awunaca. Ansa. Pittsburg. Fos PND wn Mes Winslow's Bacthing Sern foro hldmn | : the ams, reduc wl ithe mmation, allays palin, Cures wind colic. Te. a Bottle $ Sw honey & Toledo, ih, Pm iii & ata a Es Tofu SUB yews for of Catarrh thet taunot be cured by | a Catarrhs Cure. send for testi few. Rodd by Arigeists, He i i i believe Pac's Cure for Consumption (saved ray Nev's fe ae sumiemer oc MRE HL, Ae, LeRoy, Mich, ie 3 WII IG DIM I6 IIS Bevel-Gear are the strongest, most improved and best form of cycle construction. DON'T BE CONFUSED BY THE WORD “CHAIN- LESS.” There are many uatried chain- less devices on the market. are The Original, The Standard. - Their superiority over chain wheels has been demonstrated on the road. Clolumbin Chain Wheels, Harttord Bicycles, Vedeotte Bicycles, $75} sol $40 and 35 man of Spokane recommended that 8 certain rougb-and-rosily genius a man who bad graduated frem mo college should be sent to look at the uae. “You can depend ou bis Judginent”™ “and be will web said the miuiugman, you nothing but the Guth. Yeu had hed ter trust to Lis report, which 4n al © probability, will be sbort and vwery much to the polit” The advice was followed and the : avant showed the wisdom of the ad vier, As Be Nad predicted, the report | vas short sod full of pith. It read sub stantially as fuliows: “Dear Sizs—[ have made an e3amine durable than amy other nianos manufac. ton of the CUE Dweller mise snd re port that the are ls there sa ripresinted tured. that it sesays high, that !t » there plenty, but Ww gel your supplies in end your ore out you will reed a pack-wrain largest College of Music in the world, and over goo Ivers & Pood Planos used in two hundred of the leading colleges of bald aglen The mine was rejected on the ground » paceensihility, Every sale mde by the mioon-Kecper is a b bargals vs AA EA TAN “Nn have ge pr ed wilh soRetingd un for some tame. Bul siter ak: had plmpios on er face, inkdig CA ASC ARETS aud they ing ths fru Cascares | have had no trouble | with nls aliment. We ensnot sapesi too Righ- | FRED Waktomax iy of Cancureis 5708 Germantown Ave. Philadelphia, Pa Pleasant. Palatabin, Potent. Taste Good. Good, Never Siexen, Weaken. or Gripe «« CURE CONSTIPATION. ... Storting Remedy Company, Chisoge, Wontreal, Sow Veok. ik No-10-84¢ Sold and va ay 1 x atewd by al drag x Tobaetn Bann TIGHT. BEST scaLrs, LEAST MONEY. JONESOF BINGHAMTON. NV TIE DMN cv Wow Mie ine fot hel 5 i$ $+ ~ ment, Great Cindting Offer” orm maaa's Depart Fol pan TET LO BT Vda Da | He. Re. Me. a exchange. t bat I had been froubied : § i { i § as | POPE MFC. CO., Hartford, Conn. Catmieguns res from aay Columbin denies, or by mall for sone Te. stamp. | 'IVERS & POND PIANO: Strictly First Class. | Easy Payments. Require less tuning and prove mare! HH no desler sells our pianos near you i we supply them on time payments to parses living in any city or vi in the 237 purchased by the New. United States. A small Te a England Conservatory of Music, the and monthly payments extending owes three years secure one of our pianos We send pianos for trial in your home, even though you live three thousand wiles away, and guarantee satisfaction and institutions of learning in the United Of plano is returned to us at our States. Catalogue and valuable infor for pailway heigl both a. A pet } containing special prices mation mailed free. Old pianos taken 1 description of our easy payment | plans, free upon application. Ivers & Pond Piano Capany, i4 Boylston Street, Baston, Mass. : i i i : vn ation of RSI - 1“ Cood Wives Crow Fair in the Light of Their Works,” Especially if They Use