TIIE growth of most of tho Germanl cities, according to the census lately! complete, is nothing short of marvel-; ous. It rivals, and in several cases ex-! ceeds, the increase of population of the chief cities of the United States, and it j leaves all recent European precedents j far behind. SENATOR GORMAN is a most method!-) cal man. He rises at just 6 o'clock! every morning, sits just sixty minutes, at dinner, and never on any pretext j permits an interruption of his meals.) He takes a walk of a fixed length! every day, bathes at the same hour, and never uses tobacco or liquors. J SOME smokers have an idea that "tc baooo heartburn" can bo oured by swallowing the white ashes from the end of a cigar, Chemists say that it is merely faith cure. IN Paris, out of 2,700,000 residents, it is calculated that one in eighteen, or 150,000, live on charity with a ten dency toward crime. In London the proportion is one in thirty. Water at Aeala. ' Opinions differ as to the effect of the free ingestion of water at meal times, but the view most generally received is probably that it dilutes the gastric juice and so retards digestion. Apart from the fact that a moderate delay in the process is by no means a disadvantage, as Sir William Roberts has shown in his explanation of the popularity of tea and coffee, it is more than doubtful whether any such effect is in reality produced. When ingested during meals, water may do good by washing out the digested food and by exposing the undigested part more thoroughly to the action of the digestive ferments. Pepsm is a catalytic body, and a given quantity will work almost indefinetly, provided the peptones aro removed as they are formed. The good effect of water drank freely before meals has, however, another beneficial result—it washes away the musus which is se creted by the mucous membrane during the intervals of repose, and favors peristalsis of the whole alimentary , tract. The membrane thus cleansed is iu a much better condition to receivo food and convert it into soluble com pounds. _____ Certainly. If you remember how much easier it is to remember what you would rather forget than remember, than remember what you would rather remember than forget, than you can't forget how much easier it is to forget what you would rather remember than forget, than for-' get what you would rather forget than remember.— Elmira Gazette. FITS stoppei free by Do. Kniica's OasAT SERVE RBSTOIIKH. NO ftta after flrat day's use. arvelouti cures. Treatise and |2 trial bottle free. Dr. iUiue, 931 Arch St. t Phihu. Pa. A new lace manufacturing establishment is to be started on Long Island. Too large —the old-fashioned pill. Too reckless in its way of doing business, too. It cleans you out, but it uses you up, and your outraged system rises up against it. Dr. Pierce's Pleas ant Pellets have a better way. They do just what is needed • —no more. Nothing can be more thorough—nothing is as mild and gentle. They're the smallest, cheapest, the easiest to take. One tiny, sugar coated granule's a gentle lax ative—three to four are ca thartic. Sick Headache, Constipation, Indigestion, Bil ious Attacks, and all derange ments of the Liver, Stomach and Bowels are promptly re lieved and permanently cured. Without Medicine. The bvrfculc treatment of A. Wtlford Hall, Kditoi of The Microcosm. quickly relieves and permanent)! cures Dyspepsia, Constipation, Diarrhoea, Headache, Malaria, NeurAlgla, Catarrh and Incipient Consume tlon. DeaerlpUve pamphlet free. Address, Health Process Co., 3(1 Nassau St., New York. BEST BROOM HOLDER. I fcuntpiu 13c., postpaid IJ-I . 9 other artlelcs/rcl EN(ib K GL'N CO., Iliir-leton. Pa. Ktnmps taken, CANVASSERS WANTED, jam*. BAKER AND ROASTER. Latest Improved and moat perfect Tny'O ,f all. Many UOOD COOKH do not hhKaD nnf|\'AKE ill of •*2.00. Circulars free. Address HI. Hoculg il Co., Ilaxlctou, Pa. Agents wuuted. BI.Y'S CRKAVI BALM Applied Into Nostril* Is Quickly Absorbed, Cleanses tbo flood, Heals the Bores and Cures CATARRH.MI Restores Taste and Smell, quick ly Relieves Cold In Head and Headache. 50c. at Druggists. ELY BROS.. 56 Warren St.. N. Y. PROF. LOISETTE'S NEW MEMORY BOOKS. Criticisms on two reeent Memory Systems. Ready about April Ist. Full Tables of Contents forwarded only to those who send stumped directed envelope. Also Prospectus POST FREE or the Lolacttlau Alt Of Never Forgetting. Address Prof. I.OIRETTE, 237 Fifth Ave., New \ork. •MMFTMH.V* ■teUCI AN' 0 "' 1 w.noßKis, llbllblUN WmlUngton, D.C. llmlnlMtm liwUnilcttosclii™, wtrtinc. DISEASE GERMS. The Appearance and Prodigious Growth of Bacteria. Our systematic knowledge of the bac teria is still so meagre, so many speaics and doubtless so many families of them have never yet come into tho range of human vision, and our glimpses of their life powers have been so fragmentary, that as yet we can only try to bring a little temporary order out of the chaos by grouping them according to their shapes. We find, when we muster all the forms which have as yet been seen, that they all fall into one of three classes: spheroidal, rod-like, or spiral. Further subdivisions of these classes have been made, and generic and speci fic names attached to many hundreds of forms; but over these details we need not linger now. llow they look and what they do is here of more importance than what we call them. Although with the ordinary micro scopic powers the bacteria look like little balls or straight or spiral rods, we find, when wc use the most powerful or per fect lenses, that they consist of a minute mass of granular protoplasm surrounded by a thin structureless membrane. When we put them under favorable conditions for growth, and give them food enough, they may be seen to divide across the middle, each portion soon be coming larger and again dividing, so that it has been calculated that a single germ, if kept under favorable condi tions, might at the end of two days have added to the number of the world's liv ing beings 281,500,000,000 new individ ual bacteria. In fact, if this sort of thin" went on for a few weeks unhindered there would be very little room left on the earth's surface for any other forms of life, and pretty much all the carbon, hydrogen, oxygen, and nitrogen which is available for life purposes in the world would be used up. There would be a corner in life stuff, and even the master, man, would be forced to the wall, and become the victim of his insatiable fel low-worldcr, the bacterium. But, as it happens, this sort of thing does not go on; the food grows scanty; or the tem perature becomes unfavorable; or the sun shines hot—and the sun is a sore enemy of your growiug bacterium; or, as it grows and feeds, the germ gives off various chemical substances which often soon poison itself, or its fellows, or both together. So the proportion is preserved by such a line balance of the natural forces that, prolific as they are, the bac teria in the long run are held closely within bounds the world over.— rHar per's Magazine. Marriage in Frigid Climes. In Iceland a bride is known by lier dress, which is finer and more costly than that of her sisters, and she wears around the head dress, close toiler face, a silver gilt crown ; chains are suspended from her neck, and to one is attached a tiny heart, a present from the groom, in which some kind of perfumes are put. This last is a very pretty sentiment, and one worthy of our civilization. In Lapland the lover, wheu going to propose to the girl of his choice, arms nimSclf with two bottles of brandy. One he presents to her father; the other he drinks himsclt. No business is discussed till the bottles arc finished, when, both being in a happy, social state of mind, it is presumed the consent is gained without much difficulty. After the betrothal the groom must bring a bottle of brandy to bis prospective father in-law every time lie calls upon the daughter, which accounts, perhaps, for the long time which a Lapland father often keeps the lover waiting. After perhaps years of this he is obliged to serve the father for a whole year after his mar riage, while the mother-in-law, if she be the object of terror, the fact is carefully concealed, and she is waited upon most! assiduously by lier son-in law. She holds the reins in her own hands, I usually lives with lier daughter, and has the power to divorce her by simply pack ing his things and throwing them out of the house. The husband then follows them, and both arc free to look for other companions. Sometimes, too, the would be brides are very shv, and have to be brought into the room by two women, where tlicy crouch in a corner with their faces covered.—[New York Press. Long Distance Signaling at Sea. At a meeting of the pilot commis sioners the other day in New York city, J. W. I lay ward exhibited a new device for communication between ships at sea. It is called the lucigraph and is intend ed to enable ships to communicate long messages to each other at night. With j this machine, somewhat like a magic lantern, letters six to twelve feet long | can be thrown on a screen or piece of j canvas visible to the naked eye at live j miles. By pressing the keys as on a typewriter, the stenciled plates bearing the letters arc thrown within the rays of the lens, and which will cast enlarged characters. It is available for any light. It signals in any desired language or letter code, such as the international 1 code 011 every ship, lighthouse and j coastguard. Ordinary domestic kcro- | sene 11 akes the signals readable to tho j naked eye nt a mile. Its principal value i is in giving a simple and ready means of! speaking to a stranded or sinking ship j and to the coast guard or lightship. ' The signals can also be thrown 011 the ! clouds.—[New Orleans Picayune. Web of tho House Spidor. The web of tho house spider differs from that of the garden variety in two points—its mesh is much finer, and it is composed of one kind of silk only, says the Cornliill Magazine. The fiics'which • find their way into it arc detained by j the entanglement of their claws in the j fine meshes. The house spider, as a rule, makes its 1 snare in the corner of the room. Its first operation is to press its spinners against' the wall, thus securing threads in a par j ticular spot; then it goes to the opposite • side and fastens the other end of the j thread. The primary line is strengthened I by two or three others being run along i beside it, threads are drawn from it in i various directions, and the interstices are filled by the spider's running back- j ward and forward, always leaving a line j behind it. In one corner of the completed web a j tube is made, in which the spider con - ceals itself and waits for the appearance i of unwary flies. The Doctor's Secret. A San Francisco lady applied to her physician in that city for advice and a prescription. He had attended her and j her family, and on this occnsion he rcc- ! ommended that she go to a popular j watering place in that part of the j country, giving her a letter of introduc- j tiou to" a physician who resided at the I springs. On the way there the lady rc- j I marked to her daughter that as long aa her doctor had been treating her he had never stated just what was her ailment. "I've a good mind to open this letter and see what lie says of my ease to the other doctor." Acting 011 the impulse she tore open the envelope and, taking out the letter, read: "Dear Doctor— Keep the old lady four weeks and theu send her back to me."—[Detroit Free Press. A Queer Medical Case. There is a qiteer case at Gouvcrneur Hospital. It is that of a man who at noon yesterday weighed about 120 pounds and for a person his size was much emaciated. At 0 o'clock last night he was so puffed up that he looked as if he weighed twice as much. It took the hospital surgeons over an hour to con vince his daughters that the man was really their father. Air is the cause of this transformation. The victim of this inflation in size is Paul Shonebein, a German laborer forty years old, of No 157 West Sixty-secoud-st. While at woik yesterday afternoon on a pile of timber, it was said at the hospital, some of the boards fell upon him, breaking his ribs, One of the broken ribs pene trated his lungs letting the air out and into the tissues under the skin. This caused a general putting out of the skin all over his body irom head to heels,un til he was totally unrecognizable. At Gouvcrneur Hospital, where he was taken directly after tlie accident hap pened, the doctors say they have only had one case like it before. The man after a few days resumed normal shape aud size and got well. But Shonebein nas swe lied out of nil proportions. His daughters were informed of the accident to their father, and went to the hospital to see him. But when the attendants pointed out the man as their parent they were in search of, they refused to bcleive what was told them. "That thing our father? Do the doc tors think we don't know our papa? Our father was a tall thin man," they said. As to Shoncbcin's chances for recovery, the doctors say if lie does uot have con gestion of the lungs he will recover and gradually grow smaller until lie gets down to his natural size. They consider the case a most interesting one.—[New York Tribune. The Resurrection Bono. It is said in the bncf details of Emma Abbott's cremation litcs, that the sweet singer was reduced to two or three pounds of ashes, which were preserved m a silver vase. Now, it is well known that a two, or even four, hours' incineration docs not totally consume the bones, aud there is always a muss of these left, which are thrown away as refuse. Among these human bones is one which is believed to be impervious to death or decay. It is a small bone, part of the backbone, and is called "Luz." It is said that a learned rabbi demonstrated to the Emperor Adrian that water would not steep it, lire would not burn it, a mill could uot grind it, nor could auy hammer break it. This resurrection bone is supposed by many to be the nucleus of the immortal body, lludibras wrote: "All ih' other members shall, they say, Spring out of this as from a seed." The question arises, would not it be more in keeping with the importance of mortuary rights to have the bones buried in the cemetery lot, while the ashes find their repose in the silver urn, and may be retained in the household? Even a superstition has weight in favor of au idea.—[Detroit Free Press. Gas Fuel. London engineers discuss the plan of turning the coal of the north countries into gas and conducting it by pipes to the chief centres of population. The scheme is advocated on the ground that it would greatly moderate the smoke nuisance and reduce the expenses of many industrial operations. Gas has been profitably employed in all sorts of factories, but its substitution for coal in the homes of the poor would not fail to rivet the chain of their bondage to mon opoly, and they would probably prefer to evade the smoke by-laws by the use of coal-oil stoves. It has been repeatedly predicted that the invention of a home apparatus for the generation of electric light currents would ruin nine out of ten gas companies. -[New York Voice. The American Mother Abroad. 011 their return to America, a lady who was calling on Mrs. X. began to ask about the different ports which the ship had visited, but soon found that she could elicit little information. "I can't say that I noticed much," Mrs. X. would reply. "1 don't seem to remember much about all those places." "But at least you must remember St. Petersburg," the caller said. "You were there a week, your husband told me." "Oh, yes, I remember St. Petersburg," was the reply. "It was there that Sadie and I finished our satin quilt. We just worked liko beavers all the time we were in port, so that, we could begin a new one when we started for home."— [Boston Courier. An Exhumed Bible. A family Bible, which was buried un der the bead of Su-anna Bandall, who died in 1800, has been dug up and ic moved, the Eastern town authorities granting a liccuse. It was not seriously decayed. The family records in it es tablished the right of Lewis Bundall to the property of Isaac Phillips, who died in 1834, leaving a large fortune, most of which is still 011 deposit in the Manhat . tan Bank, New York city. Phillips has j no immediate family, and Bandall and t other relatives now lay claim to his prop erty in the Manhattan Bank ana St. Stephcus, Ala. Tho latter property is lioid by a man whose title to it is very imperfect, it is said. —[ Boston Transcript. The Agile Kangaroo. 111 some parts of Victoria they for merly outnumbered the sheep as two to one, and old shepherds have told me that it was not an uncommon thing to see the sheep and the kangaroos feeding together upon the plains as many as 2,000 or 3,000 kangaroos frequently ac companying iiliock of 1,000 sheep. Thus it will be seen that a "station" which, in 1850 could barely graze 5,000 slieep, can now be made to carry 40,000 with out any danger of overstocking. I Scrib ncr's Magazine. A Baby on Wheels. "Baby" Sherman is the youngest bicycle rider in the city, She docs not ride alone, however, but on the 'cycle of her uncle, William Ilonig. Mr. Ilonig recently purchased a chair which he allixcs to the handle of his 'cycle. As lie rolls through the street with his young passenger miuh com ment is called forth.---[Albany Journal. OLDER THAN SYRIAN CEDARS. the Oldest Tree on Earth Will See Earth's loimgeft City. Among the remarkable natural pro ducts of tho United States which will be sent to the World's Fair, the section of one of the giant trees of California which is promised from that State should excel in interest all the other ex hibits combined. What does this exhibit mean ? Let us think of it What are the<e trees ? They have been named by scientists sequoia gigantea. They were more seeds—atoms—when in by-gono ages some friendly breeze wafted them to the fertile and sheltered slopes of the Sierras. Life and growth and unboudfced vigor came to them in the shadow of the forest, amid the un tamed grandeur of the everlasting hills. But when camo they? What gave them their pre-eminent stature, their mnusual lease of life. Looking at them, one cau almost believe the fable which credits them as having been planted by im mortal hands, by some proud race which fled this planet when it was first giveu over to the dominion of man. Five thousand years have passed since their planting. The barbaric red man, whose bones have long since mingled with the dust of departed, played, no doubt, a child beneath their fresh green leaves. But a century had gone by ere they gave promise of outstripping their companions of the forest, and the elk and moose darted fearlessly beneath their lowest branches. Soon, as the peak of Chimborazo dwarfs the mighty range from which he springs, did they eclipse their fellows. Majestic wood kings! Roll back the curtain of forgotton time, and 6peak. Say, from the bosom of the hoary years, what have ye beheld. The snows of 5,000 winters have drifted around you, and the suns of as many summers have browned your leaves. Imagine their history. They have witnessed the rise and fall of the mightiest nations of the world. Tho Pyramids were an incep tion only in tho mind of a Pharoah when they had already climbed far into the western sky. The silent Bphinx looking with impassive gaze out over tho sauds of the desert has not kept more constant watch upon the world than they. How have they knitted their strong and hardy limbs around the very cycles of time. Since they wore planted music and the drama were born. They had seen already 2,000 years of sturdy growth, when Greece, emerging from darkness, gathered within her fostering arms the various arts of war and peace. Whilst they were, perhaps, the objects of adoration to a primitive Western population, tho chisel of a Praxiteles and a Phidias seized upon the ideal of beauty and im mortalized it in imperishable marble. The years of their prime represented a corresponding period of emancipation in the East. Those years were con temporaneous with the advent of iEscliylus, Bophocles and Euripides. It was an heroic age and a pleasure-loving. The bristling cohorts of Greece sang the song of Homer. The Plivrric pha lanx had its counterpart in the Phyrric dance. The great trees looked calmly on and witnessed the gradual decay of Greece. Then rose tho mighty Roman Empire, within whoso limits not less than 100,- 000,000 of human beings drew the breath of life, and half of whom were slaves. They will live to see, if they are spared from the Vandal, an empire as vast, within whose mighty boun daries no slave can live. Their gaze fell upon tho Eternal City in the zenith of her glory. Their green fronds waved Spring Medicine Is so important that great care should ho used to get THE BEST. Hood's Sarsaparilla lias proven its superior merit by its many remarkable cures, and the fact that Hood's Sarsaparilla lias a larger sale than any other sarsaparilla or blood purifier shows the great confidence the people have in it. In fact The Standard Spring Medicine Is now generally admitted to be Hood's Sarsa parilla. It speedily cures all blood diseases and imparts such strength to the whole system that, as one lady puts it, "I seem to be made anew." Be sure to get Hood's Sarsaparilla fold by all druggists $1; six for S.Y Prepared only | Fold by all druggist*. 61: si* for Jl. only by C. I. HOOD & CO., Apothecaries, I<owull, Mass. by C. I. HOOD & CO., Apothccarle.l, Lowell, Mats. „ 100 Doses One Dollar i 100 Doses Ona Dollar and is there to dis- cover some vulner able point in the fortification of the constitution which is guarding your well-being. That point discovered the spy reports it to the enemy on the outside. The enemy is the changeable winter climate. If the cold gets in, look out for an attack at the weak point. To avoid this, shoot the spy, kill the cold, using SCOTT'S EIV! U LSIO N of'pure Norwegian Cod Liver Oil and Hypophosphites of Lime and Soda as the weapon. It is an expert cold slayer, and fortifies the system against Consumption, Scrofula, General Debility, and all Atlantic and Wasting Diseases '(specially in Children ). Especially helpful for children to prevent their taking cold. Palatable as Milk. SPECIAL.— Scott's Emulsion is non-secret, and is prescribed by l!ie Medical Pro fession nil over the world, because Its ingredients arc scientifically combined in such a manner as to greatly increase their remedial value. CAUTlON.— Scott's Emulsion is put up in salmon-colored wrappers. Ite sure and get tho genuine. Prepared only by Scott & liownc. Manufacturing Chemists, New VorU. Bold by all Druggists. in voiceless Homage wlien in an liumblo manger at Bethlehem, ill tho reign oi Augustus, a child was bora, seeming); conscious of the occurrence of the most momentous event in the spiritual his tory of the world. Yet I'agau Rome still flourished to foster and bequeath to the generations the priceless dower of such intellects as Virgil, Ovid, Horace, Lucretius and Catullus. And 10, as the trees looked on she fell and passed away. The Goths were thundering at her gates. The great trees beheld the barbarism of Northern Europe melt awav before the sun of advancing civilization. They saw the followers of Christ, emerging from their hiding-places in the swamps of the Pontine marshes and the Roman catacombs, sproad like an irresistible tide the doctrine of the new life. As at the touch of a wand the darkness of cen turies was liftod and the sublime creed spread until the enthusiasm of its ad herents culminated iu the fanaticism of the crusades. All this happened to the peoplo of the earth, and still the great trees looked calmly on. They beheld the extension of civilization from oast to west. They flouri-hed and grew when Michael Angelio, Raphael, Titian, Durer and Holbein were bora; they wit nessed the Renaissance; while they stood, the silent sentinels of the West orn world, Spenser, Shakspeare, Cer vantes, Rabelais, Moutaign, and Camo ens passed away and wore enrolled among the immortals. Copernicus, who called in question the Ptlolemaic theory, and Galileo, who disoovered the fact of the earth's rotation, shared with them the same sunlight; Raoon, Descaries, Hobbes, Kepler, Spinoza snd Sir Isaac Newton came and went, and still in un shaken majesty they towered into the skv. 'The fifteenth century dawned and found invading hosts prossing upon the shores of a new world. Calmly the big trees looked on and saw a new conti nent subjugated to the uses of civilized man. The forest rang with tho blows of the woodman's ax. At last, with awe stricken gaze, a white man first beheld them, at once the offspring and the his tory of tho ages. To the American, separated by an ocean from the wondors of the Eastern Hemisphere, has been given in these grand trees the greatest of natural mar vels, and the magnificence of the gift transcends the most elaborate and costly monument ever raised by the hand of man. Save the big trees. — Austyn Granville, in Chicago Journal, laigtil llenri nnil Plenty Money. I have completed my first week with my Plater, and have &M.2> clear money. I am charmed with tho business. I bought mv Plater from tho Lake Electric Co.,Enulowood, ill., for SB, and fool confident If people knew how cheap thoy coui l net a Plater, and how much money they could make, wo would seo many more happy homes, it is surprising tho amount of tableware nud jewelry there is to plate; and If persons now idle woul I get a Plater, they would soon have light hearts and plenty monpv. Micliignn has a Farmers' Telegraph Com pany. Tlie Isndie* DdiKhtcil. Tlio pleasant efftct and the perfect safety with which Indies may me the liquid fruit lax ative, Syrup of Figs, under all conditions make it their favorite remedy. It is pleasing to the eye and to the taste, gentle, yet effectual in acting on the kidneys, livor and bowels. German schoolhouses have gymnasiums. For a disorder!d liver mo HEECUAM'S PILLS. About $15,000,000 is invested in electric lighting enterprises in London. There are people using Dobbins's Electric Boap to-day who commenced its uso in lHfis. Would this be tho case were it not the purest and most coiwmical soap made? Ask your gro cer for it. Look out for imitations. DobblnS*. More than 200.000 people are confirmed in the English Church every yenr. IJ 10 Drafufftg Can't be Cured I By local applications, us they cannot reach the I diseased portion of the ear. There is oulv one I way to cure deafness, and that i* by constitu tional remedies. Deafness is caused by an in flamed condition of the mucous lining of the Eustachian Tube. When this tube gets in flamed you have, a rumbling sound or imper fect hearing, and when it is entirely closed, deafness is the result, and unless the inflam mation can bo taken out and this tube re stored to its normal condition, hearing will be destroyed forever; nine cases out of ten are caused by catarrh, which is nothing but an iu liamed condition of the mucous surfaces. VN e will give One Hundred Dollars for any case or deafness (caused by catarrh) that we u T e H y Hall's Catarrh Cure, bond for circulars, free. i. • , F -J. C'IIENKY & Co., Toledo, 0. bold by druggist 76 cents. Every year raoro fanners believe that moderate weights in pork pay best. The Mother's Delight. A remedy that will cure croup in a few mo ment?, prevent pneumonia and dlfriilhoiia like. l)r. Hnxsie's Certain Croup Cure. No oplntu. Sold by druggists or mailed for W cts. Address A. P. lioxie, Buffalo, N. Y. In 1836 only 109 patents were issued in the United States. BEWARE OF THEM. Cheap j S. S. S. WILL CURE. ) There is imitations <! My daughter had a case of chronic ) Only OHO s Eczema, which for over five year. > o O Q ShOUlu Oe had baffled the skill of the best phy- ) avoided. <* sicians - As Bhe waß dail y mowing > Take no l worse, I quit all other treatment and ; They never;, commenced using 8. S. S. Before \ other. ) finishing the second bottle the scaly - ----- CUre t incrustations had nearly disappeared. I continued and are < usin f> s - ®- s - mta she was entirely cured. I waited S before reporting the case to see if the cure was perma- OTTen S nent. Being satisfied that she is freed from the an j_s noying disease for all time to come, X send you this. Udliyeruub. v VAUGHN, Sandy Bottom, Va. BOOKS ON BLOOD AND SKIN DISEASES FREE. THE SWIFT SPECIFIC CO.. Atlanta. Ca. "August Flower" I had been troubled five months with Dyspepsia. The doctors told me it was chronic. I had a fullness after eating and a heavy load in the pit of my stomach. I suffered fre quently from a Water Brash of clear matter. Sometimes a deathly Sick ness at the Stomach would overtake me. Then again I would have the terrible pains of Wind Colic. At such times I would try to belch and could not. I was working then for Thomas McHenry, Druggist, Cor. Irwin and Western Ave., Allegheny City, Pa., in whose employ I had been for seven years. Finally I used August Flower, and after using just one bottle for two weeks, was en tirely relieved of all the trouble. I can now eat things I dared not touch before. I would like to refer you to Mr. McHenry, for whom I workel, who knows all about my condition, and from whom I bought the medi cine. I live with my wife and family at 39 James St., Allegheny City, Pa. Signed, JOHN D. COX. 0 G. G. GREEN' Sole Manufacturer, Woodbury, New Jersey, U. S. A. <STH* ' PAINT. I REQUIRE 9 ADDITION OF AN DIIDP EQUAL PART OFOILAJ tot- RUNT MAKING CQ3TPr.Ciall.fr 1 4Q ADVERTISED IN 7348 PAPERS! W hero we linve no Agent will arrange with any active Merrhnnt.- 1.. & IW.-N. Y. PATENTS wi.H-v.'.Tß'ft * a * m W 4Q-pag*book free. FRSZERAfkI BKBT IN TUB WOBLDIIUCHVE HT Oat do Oanalaa. Said Evrrywhor* hippy 1/iICCC FOMTIVKI.T UKMRDIKD. UnUUI IxliLkU Oreely I'ant Stretcher. Adopted by students at llurvard, Amlicrat. and othei Colleges, alto, bv professional and business man every where. If not for sale In your town send a.le. to B. J. UUEKI.Y. 71ft Washington Street. Boston. IJ Sjag§j| PI AN P lo§SlSi 10 5-PAGE 9 FREEi nSSSGBESS3KSBBBB9HSHRHB rnako It easy to deal with us IWHEREVER YOU LIVE. Our prices W '•■ '■"''-mSSB are MOST REASONABLE for strictly FIRST-CLASS PIANOS. WE SELL ON EASY PAYMENTS. 11l J ! i Il} H<Wc take OLD PIANOS in Exchange, jU * i = a ===iJ 1.. ' IS IB'EVEN THOUCH YOU LIVE TWO tEgf-——jJIL §Rfi THOUSAND MILES AWAY. Woguar- — 5 -fcSilSa antco satisfaction, or Piano to bo SjjSEs) re! urncd to L AT OUR EXPENSE for SWW-" RAILWAY FREICHTS BOTH WAYS. IVERS & POND PIANO CO ■ MASS! "Better out of the wqrld,tha.n out of the — —• It is _ J&X e. cOwke of scouring soap Try ih "sifcjl Cleanliness is always fashionaole and the use of or the neglect to use SAPGLIO marks a wide difference in the social scale. The best classes are always the most scrupulous in matters of cleanliness—and the best classes use SAPOLIO. ■■ piso-s REMEDY FOR CATARRH. Bent Easiest to use. -L cheapest. Relief is immediate. A euro is certain. For ffijggj Cold in Hie Head it has no equal. r ,. jS£ It is an Ointment, of which a small particle is applied to the m nostrils. ITice, oOc. hy or sent by mull. HI fK CHICHESTER'S ENGLISH, RED CROSS DIAMOND BRAND JK k rvm*wiMx*T\\x\i& 4$ fa b£x c!telted*lt™Hhe'ribbon * '^Tako nooihcr kind.' Rtfltt SultMft.fUr.r'nnd jwTafi'Stw. V Jf All pill* In paateboord hoxcx, pink wrapper!. are dnnirmux omintcrfYtta. At nrußgiit*. or nd o Kv 4<*. in iumn< for particular*, i.wttmoulaU, an-1 "Keller for l.ntlle*," in leller, hy relurn Mall /Jr 10,000 TenllmonloH. A.imrAij.r, CHICHESTER CHCM ICAI CO , Square, r Sold bj' all l.oeal Drtieffliia. I'UILAUKLI'IUA, PA. THE POINT. 66 A Prom a Catholic Arch? bishop down to the Poorest of tho Poor 1a B all testify, not only to tho WW virtues of ST. JACOBS Oil, The Great Remedy For Pain, but to its superiority over all other remedies, < xpress. d thus: It Cures Promptly, Permanently; which means strictly, that the pain-stricken seek a prompt relief with no return of tbo pain, and this, thev say, St. Jacobs Oil will give. Tiiis is its ed-llcnc-. jmaSiniS For Internal and External I r. Stops Pain, Cramps. Inflammation In body or limb, like tiiairic. Cures Croup. Asthma, Colds. Cut nrrh. Chol era Morbus, Diarrhoea. Rheumatism. Neuralgia. tame back. Stiff ir.tsand Strains. Full particulars frwi. Price tacts, post-paid. I. 8. JOHNSON <K CO.. He ton. Mam. wm^mm ED.L. HUNTLEY'S f.'S, fire universal satisfaction. Why nhould you py mid lemen's profits when yon can buy direct from ÜB, the Jianufacturerßt Send us 110 and tho following measure® ind wo will guarantee to lit and pleaso you or refund roar money, Rules for measurement breast measure, jver vest, close up under arms, waist measure over panto at waist. and insido leg measure from crotch to heel. Bend Six Cents for 1J samples of our $lO Men's tuita, fashion plato and tape measure. Boys' Suits. 55.50; Children's Suits, 13. # EI>. 1.. HUNTLEY ASCO. I Whole.*!e Tailor*, 18i Emat SUdltop Street, Chicago, lit -VASELINE-- FOR A ON K-IM) LL A It lllLLaentua by man wo will deliver, free oi nil charges, to any person In the Unit- d States, ail of the following articles, care fully packet: One two-ounoe liottle of Pure Vaseline, • - lOotak One two-ounce bottle of Vaseline I'omade, - 15 " One Jar of Vaseline Cold Creom, 15 M One Ci he of Vnsollne Camphor Ice, .... 10'' One Cake of Vaseline Soup, unscent-l, - - 10 - O&e Cake of Vaseline Soap, exquisitely One two-ounce bott.e of White Vaseline, - - IS" •1.10 Or for poataQC stamp i an ?/ single article at the price named. On no account he persuaded to accept from ya.tr (frup(/isf any Vaseline or preparation therefrom unless labelled with our na me, been use you wilt cer tainly receive an imitation which ha* little or no caJue Clreeebrough .>lfg. Co., 'I I Sfute St., N. Y. E $3 SHOE OENTLIILIKN. Bc.no (lenuluc llnntUaewetl, an elegant and O stylish dross Shoe which commends itself. M.OO llnnil-sowed Welt. A lino ealf Shoe nn equalle.l for stvjo and durability. IfO.-'iO lloodypnr Well Is the staudard dress a Shoe at a popular price. 84.50 Policeman's Shore 1 especially odapted for railroad men, fanners, etc. All made In Coogreas, Button and I.aco. 99.00 for Ladles la tho ouly liand-acwrd Shoe v sold at this popular prlro. 84.50 huugolii Shoe for Ltidies Is a now de -4 nurture and promises to becomo very popular. 84.00 Shoe for I.atllrs, and c.l .73 for a. still retain their excellence for ntylo, etc. All goods war ran led and stamped with name ou bottom. If adveittsed local agent cannot supply you, Heud direct to factory, enclosing advertised price or a postal fur order blanks. W. L. DO I (11, AS. ItrocLton, Maw. \VANTKD—Shoe duulrr in every city and town 1101 occupied to take exclusive agency. All ngeuts ndvrrtlsrd In lonil paper. Send I'or lllimtrated catalogue.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers