jf Jpf ' glJeflJs c^W^ 1 TPW'? ®® aPaSB |V®/|li SfpsP (M# i? &|<diej, Iw^o|L . MeiVK^S 8 <V ■■ - n ■*>:><.: ■ -.-e - \)U HUI;I>A'S EASTER WAT. BY Wild. VISS< IIEIt. 'l^)^fflJ >UL . I)A DEAN J ~ jpT: some girl and a <*""M f <J&.- r!JL coul,tr 3' at that. Sensible ')n and dutiful, she /Q/> was nut a saint | V nor >' et ,l si -' V'i C i' nor, except in I 1'! *? siep i *■■■> ■ ,vl, -jf n way that we ) all confess in lOs,! — i; ( , the Litany. f 1 f ~~,"v !;!' j'J She had been % , ■ trained by the ' Hook of Com mon I'rayer so far as religion went, and had the Catechism and the Apos tles' Creed by heart, as well as the morning and evening services,and was well up in the Collects. In short, she had been confirmed, but I solemnly believi l that she often smiled, in a sly sort of way, when in the response she said: "We are miserable sinners." She wasn't miserable a little bit. but was, for the most part, the happiest sort of a girl. Being neither a blonde nor a bru nette, but just a pleasant medium as | to complexion, 1 think she averaged pretty fairly in all thingsat about that standard, and she probably had some thing like that estimate of herself, for the very reason that she was so well balanced. People, generally, who were ac- | quainted with her, liked llulda, and I was very fond of her. I could afford j that because I was old enough to be i her grandfather, at the time of which I 1 write and am yet, as to that. Her | father and I had been schoolmates, j comrade.-.-in-arins and life-time friends, j Indeed, our fathers and grandfathers i had been, before us. For three generations, and well i along in the fourth, our people—mine , and ilulda's—-had lived in the same re- ; wpeetable town in Kentucky, or at j least on adjoining farms so close to the town that we were considered as town people, ami we had been christened ii the same little church and at the sam< ifry* •- ~"A "sr-M --</ ~>>i\ IfULDA IN THE QUICKSAND, baptismal font for the hist three gen erations, including liulda's. George l)can. liulda's father, got "the California fever," however, about the same time that ho began to got ! some twinges of rheumatism and a i touch of the asthma, so he emigrated | to the Golden state when llulda was fifteen anil bought an orange ranch in the valley of San Bernardino. Of course lie knew nothing about raising and marketing oranges, and as a con sequence he was well on the road to grief by the time he had learned; and it was about this time that I, Jack Gillette, an old bachelor with more money than anything else except love for George and his youngsters, hap pened out his way and furnished him with sufficient funds to keep the wolf and the sheriff away from his door. But he felt poorer than ever after he ' had given me his notes for the money ! lent him. It was his way to consider himself that much worse off than noth- j lug until thc notes were paid, and as j lie seemed to get some eomfort out of that sort of misery I just indulged him in it. However, about that same time Easter was getting close at hand, and I bought llulda an Easter bonnet, or hat, whatever they call it. The bit of stuff was cute, too. As little as it might have been expected of me, I had taste in that way. I knew what would suit liulda's style of beauty, and I knew a great deal about the other "fixin's" she was getting for spring wear, so I astonished everybody inter ested by my selection, made one day at Los Angeles. It must be confessed, however, that I told the young sales woman from whom 1 purchased the af fair all about llulda, except her Chris tian name. Some women are blooming fools about names, and 1 suspected that this one didn't have enough every day common sense to know that llulda was a wholesome, sensible name that fitted my donee much hotter than any garment or bit of millinery she had in stock, not excepting kid gloves. I even showed the young woman a photograph of llulda, and so— Well, the Easter hat was a success. Easter Sunday came, and as promis ing a day as ever dawned in the citrous belt. 1 rode horseback with llulda over to Riverside that morning to church, and I was as proud of her as if I had been a cavalier of the olden time and she the ladylove I had won in the tourney. Oh! how she could ride. She was a Kentucky girl and sat her he loved filly us if she belonged there and didn't depend upon the cinch of her saddle for her life, as do so many would-be horsewomen I see now and then that make me shudder. They ride for a fad, and don't know enough about a horse and his trappings to even be careful. My fifty-five years had not affected my horsemanship. But we won't speak of that further than to say I was raised on a horse; yet 1 was never raised on a bucking broncho. They are not horcs. They are only poor imitations, and 1 ! never mounted one—never shall while the walking is good. We went to church at Riverside, ad mitted ourselves publicly to be "miser able sinners" several times, heard the sermon and—liulda's hat simply eclipsed the aggregation. Then we started home. How liulda's filly got into that quicksand in crossing the creek is something I have never entirely set tled in my mind, but she went clear out of sight for a minute, it seemed, and llulda with her, but I made a grab at her—llulda, I mean—and got the Easter hat first. was not what I mostly wanted, however. I wanted llulda; so I threw away the hat. and somehow we landed on the bank, all there, except the Easter hat. That floated off down the stream like any other wreck. The filly came out, too, and stood dripping and trembling on the shore. Hulda first looked decidedly fright ened, and puckered up her mouth to cry, but thought better of it when 1 she saw I had mud in my whiskers and j was ridiculously disheveled one way or : another, and more or less disposed to say things that would have emphasized : the "miserable sinners" confc sion! But did you ever notice how quickly a woman can shake herself out and look presentable? Well, that was what llulda did. She had been with that filly in the quicksand and water and was as wet as a drowned rat. But blest if she didn't give herself a few touches some way, and in five minutes looked as pretty as before, only a little j older and somewhat more graceful and dignified. Femininity seems to partake of this characteristic all thc way through, j The filly had given herself a few shuddering shakes and fixed her toilet nearly right. I gathered bunches of eucalyptus leaves and wiped thc side-saddle some, spread a big ban- j dnnna handkerchief over the scat, and in twenty minutes from the time the accident began llulda and I were can tering over the mesa, within twenty i minutes' ride of George Dean's house, I liulda's blue eyes sparkling with fun beneath the white scarf that was tied over her nut brown hair, some tresses of which were flying in thc spring breeze with the ends of the silken tur ban that had taken the place of the Easter hat. * John Pendleton was a young Metho dist preacher who had graduated at a Virginia college where they turn out any quantity of his professional "cloth," and he had come to California in search of such of the lost sheep of Israel us might be wandering on the ranges of sin in and about the San Bernardino valley. That is to say. the California conference of the Methoiftst Episcopal church south had set him on a circuit in that region, and he had been "riding" it something more than a year when this end of this chronicle begins, which was just one year, to a day, as measured by Easter, after the quicksand baptizing that llulda and her filly got as narrated in the para graphs preceding the constellation of stars that glitter in the white firma ment just at the head of this long par graph. Pendleton was a very good young inan, but he was enough of a "misera ble sinner" to retain a strong love for some patrimonial acres and the ancient pljf THE MINISTER SHOW INO THE HAT. mansion with white pillared porti coes appertaining thereto, out in thc Old Dominion, that would one day he come his as thc only heir of Judge Pendleton, of Fauquier county. The reverend John preached with much eloquence and earnestness, but he also wrote poetry and played the piano— the two last predilections being more and stronger evidence of the "misera ble sinner" in him. It was, perhaps, the poetry side of him that made him expose on his pul pit at the Pomona Methodist church, where he was preaching on this Sun day. a pretty Ea*ter hat of the preced ing year's style, and solicit a claimant for it. after telling how he had caught it the year before while fording Rin con creek on that Easter Sunday aft ernoon as he rode toward Riverside to preach that evening in the Methodist church of the new city. And Judith Dean, George Dean's maiden sister, who lives with him and who is as old as I am, if she's a day, and admits it to me, while she says both of us arc quite young yet, was iu church at Pomona on the occasion men tinned, for Aunt Judith is a perverse old lady, a dissenter from the estab lished religion of her family, hav ing apostatized when a girl while spending some years in "the Eelinoy" with a maternal aunt of her own, a Methodist and far away from the pro tecting wing of Protestant Episco pacy. Moreover, Aunt Judith j.ist dotes on Methodist preachers and has offered many a yellow-legged chLken in her time upon the altar of her devo tion to those good and reverend shep herds and gentlemen. Did any woman ever forgec an Easter bonnet? Not to my recollection, and 1 am older now- much older than when I bought llulda the hat and j afterward pulled it from her head. Aunt Judith recognized that hat in- stantly, Unci she didn't wait until "class meeting" was over to say so] either. She claimed it for her niece, then and there, and invited Mr. Pen dleton home with her to see the young lady to whom it belonged. lie went, and Hulda's blue eyes made him more of a "miserable sin ner" than he was before. Hut Hulda wouldn't marry a man who had to ride any circuit that conference told him to ride. She admitted that it was good and lovely and Christlike, and all that, for them to do it, but she was so constituted that she must live at home. So she does. John preaches yet, but only in the little chapel on his own farm in Fauquier county. I just came from there a few days ago, where I attended the christening of llulda's second baby' and first son. He was baptized "John Gillette Pen dleton." "Christ is risen from the dead, and become the first fruits of them that slept." Over the whole world to-day rings the anthem of the resurrection, lie ginning in the far orient, it runs with the dawn to the limits of the Occident, is sounded from every church bell, is voiced in every hymn of praise, rising up to heaven like a piean of hope and promise. The winter is past, and Na ture has set man again the lesson, which since time began she has spread out before him in the earth, that book which may be read by the unlearned as well as the wise, by the savage as well as civilized man. There is no death, there is 110 effort that sinks into the dim void and becomes naught, there is no cessation of soul influence. The summer comes and its glorypasses, the harvest time of our lives wanes, the fields are brown and barren, ami look ing over them sadly we grieve that all of our hopes were not brought to frui tion. When the frosts of age cover our heads we sometimes say with the great soul that voiced his agony in a dark hour: "Youth is a blunder, manhood a struggle and old age a regret." Yet we have lived and loved, and that is within itself a boon. From the grave whore were laid our crucified joy, our blameless offerings to untoward destiny, our loved and noble ideals, shall arise a glorified spirit to guide others down the rough way to the place where the "great light" shines. No path of sorrow in the vale of life is virgin to the naked feet of our shrink ing souls. Wherever the water is deep est, and the shadows fall darkest, there trod the martyrs of the ages, and, though they found a sepulcher at the end of the journey, being dead, they yet live and speak with undying ut terance. Did you ever stop to think of the wonderful symbolism of the divine em blem of this f ast and feast of Christen dom? Like other symbols, it is the plaything of the thoughtless, the im plement of the utilitarian, and per forms its humble office as a material factor. It is a food for the body, and thus the bulwark of the soul. The egg is the sacred emblem of the cre ation ami the resurrection. The lily which sends up its fragrance from a million altars upon Faster day is fair, but its odor is lost in the encircling air,* and the hours bear away upon their bosom its beauty, and it is gone. When men, in their days of innocence, worshiped the egg, and saw in it the cradle of the universe, they had re ceived Into their souls the heart-throbs of truth. Within the egg, formless but perfect, is the element of new life. Its shell—the earth and sky; its white— the sun; its yolk—the moon; ami all the emblems of created forms subserv ient to the needs of the organized crea ture. The Finns, the Persians and the Teutons of old, in this symbolism, clasp hands with the Christian upon Easter day, and the past finds another tie of brotherhood with the present. Christ is risen from the dead! Long ages passed when it seemed to the waiting nations that lie was yet in the tomb, and in the sleep of death had forgotten the world. Toil, stripes and anguish were the portion of His peo ple, for the poor are His. Wickedness wore the robe and crown and filled the earth with sighing. Even then there were leave hearts that looked up through the clouds and listened for the anthem of the resurrection. It was heard at last, and liberty of thought, faith and conscience was proclaimed. The cerements of error are cast off and lie in the open sepulcher, and with them are the broken shackles and Tended fetters. Lou V. CNAPLN. A SUGGESTION FOR THE OAY. The receipted milliner's bill might be made a prominent feature in Easter bonnet decoration. —Judge. Easter Item. Sunday School Teacher—Now, can any little hoy tell me what Easter is celebrated for? Good Little Hoy (eagerly)-Eggs.— Texas Sittings. I 7 LEHIGH VALLEY RAILROAD. j * - Anthriu lie coal used excUi -1 j si vely, insuring cleanliness i> ud j / comfort. ARRANGEMENT OF PAISENGKK THAINS. EEII. 11, I.HIT I. LEAVE FREKLAND. ! (i 05, 8 25, 9 33. 10 41 a in, 1 35, 2 27, 3 4.5. 1 55, ! 5 AO, 0 58, 7 12, s 47 10 40 p in. for I Milton. •Jcddo. Lumber Yard, Stockton and lluzleton. 00.,, 8 25. 9:>3 a 111, 125, :i 45, 4 .5.5 p m for ■ Maiuli chunk. Alhntown, Bethlehem, l'liila., : P,nßton and New York. j 0 05, 9.3, 10 41 a 111. 22 ,4 55, 0"8 m. for > Malianoy City, Shenandoah and Pottsville. I 7 20, 1050 am, 1150,4:14 |> in, (via Highland Ilranelntor White Haven,(lien Summit, Wilkes | Burre, Pittston and L. and 11. Junction. SUNDAY TRAINS. 11 40 a tn and 3 45pm for Drifton, Jeddo, Lum ber Yard and Hn/.leton. 5145 pin fur Delano. Mahiinuy < "it Shenan doah, New York hud Philadelphia. ARRIVE AT FR EE LAND. 5 50, 7 18, 7 20, 0 10, 10 50, 11 50 a 111, 12 58, 2 I , 131,0 ss, N37, 10 32 pin. from llazlebai, Moek ton. I umber Yard, .b*ddo and hrillon 7 20, 0 iO, 10 50 a in, 2 13, I 34, 0 ss, 10 32 p ni. from Delano, Maliuimy City and Shenandoah (via New Boston liraneln. 12 58, 5 40, 8 37, 10 32 j from New York, Hus ton, Philadelphia, Bethlehem, Alientown and Munch chunk. 0 10, 10 50 a in, 12 58, .5 to, 0 58. 8 37, 10 32 p in, from Hasten, l'liila , Bethlehem and Munch < 'hunk. 0 :t3, 10 41 a in, 2 27,0 58 p m Irom White Haven, (Hen Summit, Wilkes-Barre, Pittston and L. am! It. Junction (via Highland Branch). SUNDAY TRAINS. 11 31 a in and 331 p in. from lluzleton. Lum ber Yard, Jcddo and Drifton. II 31 a m from Delano, lluzleton, Philadelphia and Huston. 331 p in from Delano and Mahanoy region, ror Dirt her information inquire of Ticket Agents. ( HAS. S. LF.H, Gen 1 ! Pass. Airent, If. 11. WILBUR, Gen. Supt East. Div.," 1,1 " ' A. W. NONNKMACHEH, Ass't G. P. A.. Staith Bethlehem, I'a. THE DELAWARE, SUSQUEHANNA AND SCHUYLKILL RAILROAD. Time table In effect September 3, 1893. Trains leave Drifton for Jeddo, Kckley, Hazle Brook, Stockton, Denver Meadow Bond, Bonn and lluzleton Junction at GOU, 0 Hi a in, 12 10, 4 09 p in, daily except Sunday, and 7 U3 u m, 2 38 p in, Sunday. Trains leave Drifton for Garwood, Cranberry, Tomhioken and Deri tiger at G 00 a in, 12 10 p m, daily except Sunday; and 7 03 a in, 2 38 p m, Sunday. Tenuis leave Drifton for Oneida Junction, Garwood Bond, Humboldt Bond, Oneida and Sheppton nr c. 10 a in, 1210, 4 09 p in, dally except SIM dtiv; anil 7 03 u m, 2 ;> p in, Suiuiuv. I Trains leave Ila/Jctoii Junction for Garwood, Cm ill n - ! y, To.iihieheii and Jenifer at . ;i7 a in, i 49 p ni, dai.y except Sunday; and 8 47 a ui, 4 P' p in, Sunday. Trains leave Huzleton Junction for Oneida Junes ion, Garwood ltoad, Humboldt Bond, Oneida and Sheppton at 0 47, 9 lo a in, 12 40, 4 3ti p in. daily except Sunday; and 7 40 a in, 3 08 p in. Sunday. Tr ins leave Der'.ngt r for Toinliiekon, Cran berry, Garwood, Huzleton Junction, Bonn, 1 iea \ er Meadow Boad. Stockton, liazle Brook, Kckley, Jeddo and Drifton at 2 40, 007 p in, daily except Sunday; and 937 u in, 507 p 111, Sunday. Trulue leave Sheppton for Oneida, Humboldt Bond, Garwood Bead, Oneida Junction, Hazle ton Junction a d Itoati at 7 52, 10 hi a in, 115, ■i 2.5 p in, daily except Sunday; and 8 14 u m, 3 4o p in, Sunday. Trains lea\o Slieppt. n for Heaver Meadow ltoad, Stockton, Hazl" Brook, Kckley, Jeddo and Drifton at 10 111 in. 5 25 p in, daily, except Siuioa> ; and 8 14 a in, 3 45 p in, Sunday. Trnius leave Huzleton Junction lor Beaver Meadow Bond, Stockton. Hazle Brook, Kckley, Jeddo and Drifton at lo 3b a in, 3 11, 5 47, '> ;w p IU, daily, except Sundu;.; and 10 08 a in, 5 Jib pm, Sunday. All trains connect at lluzleton Junction with electric ears tor Huzleton, Jeunem illo, Auden ried and other points on Lehigh Traction C'o'O. It. B. Trains leaving Drifton at G 10 am, Huzleton Junction at it 10 a m, and Sheppton at 7 52 a m, 1 15 p m, connect ut Oneida Junction with L. V, It. K. trains cast and west. Train leaving Drilton at 0 00 a in. makes con nection at Doringer with P. It. n. train for Wll keti-Burre, Sunbury, llurrisburg, etc. B.B.COXE, DANIEL COXB, President. Superintendent* rnSTATE OF C. A. JOHNSON, lute of Foster I J township, deceased. Letters of adininis tration upon the above named estate having been granted to the undersigned, all persons | indebted to said estate are requested to make payment und those having claims or demands to present the same, without delay to . . L'lnis. Orion Stroll, Attorney. Bose M. Johnson, FreeJuud, I'a. A meeting of the Stockholm rt 11 iii ,* t ! Zt *" 1 s I ~a. n K ol Freelaiid will be held at tiie banking house of said bank on \ ednesday. April 4, 1894, trom 10 to II o'clock a. m., to elect directors to serve the ensuing year. H. B. Dav is, Cuahier. !• Iceland, Pa., March 2, 1894. IJ'OB KENT.—A large hail on tlrst floor, suit 1 able lor society meetings, storage room oi tor any purpose that a large building is needed. Apply to George Malinky, Fern street. BUSINESS BRIEFS. McDonald sells 5c towels. Go to McDonald's for 25c aprons. Use Pillsbury's Best XX XX Flour. Boy 's fancy shirt waists at McDonald's. Indigo blue calico, 5c a yd. McDonald. Parties supplied with ice cream, cakes, etc., by Laubach at reasonable rates. Wall paper, 0 cents per double roll, at A. A. Bachtnan's. Paper hanging done at short notice. "Orange Blossom" is safe and harm less as tlax seed poultice. Any lady can use it herself. Sold by W. W. Grover. Nothing is more destructive of beauty than a bad complexion, and nothing is more certain to secure a good one than the use of Wright's Indian Vegetable Pills. The Stuudurd Keiiicdy. From the Burlington, Yt , Free Press. That old established coneh remedy, Downs' Elixir, still more than holds its own in the public estimation, despite sharp and active competition. It is a "home remedy," and in this locality needs no words of praise from us, so well and favorably known is it. it is the standard remedy for couphs, colds and all tbroat troubles, with pteat num bers of our people, and their continued use and unsolicited recommendation of it speaks volumes in its favor. Sold by Dr. Schileber. DcufiiesH Cannot Jie Cured by local applications, as they cannot reach the diseased portion oi the car. | There is only one way to cure deafness, and that is by constitutional remedies. Deafness is caused by an inflamed con dition of the mucous lining of the eustachian tube. When this tube gets inflamed you have a rumbling sound or imperfect hearing, and when it isontire ly closed deafness is the result, and un less the inllamation can be taken out and this tube restored to its normal con dition. hearing will be destroyed for ever; nine cases out of ten are caused by catarrah, which is nothing but an in flamed condition of the mucous surfaces. We will give One Hundred Dollars for any case of deafness (caused by catarrh) that cannot he cured by Mall's Catarrh Cure. Send for circulars, free. F. J. CHENEY & CO.. Toledo, O. Sold by druggists, 75q. CASTORIA f&f infants and Children. 4 'Cae tori a is so well adapted to children that I recommend it as superior to any prescription known to me." 11. A. ARCHER, M. D., 11l So. Oxford St., Brooklyn, N. Y. "The tig© of 'Cftstoria* is so universal and its merits so well known that it seems a work . are the intelligent families who do uot keep Costoria within easy reach." CARLOS MARTYN, D. IX, New York City. Late Pastor Bloomiugdale Reformed Church. TOE CENTAUR COMPANY, 77 MURRAY STREET, NEW YORE. | ELKHMI o*B£SftSE M RAINESS RFO. GO. Have M!<I to conximer* for *1 years, y— ! SH C O9 <*lile-.t ant manufacturers in Arner- tffl j ) w 1 lea selling Vehicles and Harness this way sldp *J> w f I j I \sW L r L.-.-=rrs with privilege to examine before any money Is w f paid. We p:iy freight I f not satisuo • l is " <vln * froe * We* taite all risk of damage in L IAI ;/\ j WHOLESALE PRICES. I'lL- Ji Spring Wac:on9, S3< to SSO. ciuarnnteed No. 781, Burro v. <-* £ ;■ ■ iu© as sell forSoOtofs."). Surreys, SOS to SIOO " i N0.37. Surrey :! 'llOOtofiaO. Top Buggies, S2O - $.17.50, 11 no lis BO:<J for 065. Phcetons,so6 -1. to SIOO. Frin Wagons, Waponettee, / JJfN' / \ v \ : ,1 N < Wagons, Del very Wagons '"i RoU / /* \ 37 \ I j arts. I" lis tOil 31 EN, WOREN A (111 Ml KEN. V Our .♦' N0.727, Boed WUJIOU. No.TiS'-ti, Top Buggy. Manni'ue-10" A-a AtS=:^. A* ' • No. 1, Farm Harness. " ll" s.VlIf,E."* anl FLY NETS. Elkhart IHeyrle. 28hi.wheels, ! yOi I percent. i/I' I'if oaxli with rler. Head 4c. In pneumatic tires, welrlleßS j niuuipM to pay (Mtttiigu on I 1 Si-pngc catalogue. Steel tuhing, drop forgii:gs. No. 3, Farm Wagon. Address W. B. PRATT, Sec'y, ELKHART, SND. | Caveats, and Trade-Marks obtained, and all Pat-1 *ent business conducted for moderate Fees. # * Our Office ic Opposite US. patent Office * Z ami we can secure \ atent in less time than those J 1 remote from Washington. S j| Send model, drawing or photo., with dcscrip-? Jtion. V\e advise, if patentable or not, free of i charge. Our fee not due till patent is secured. 4 * A Pamphlet, "How to Obtain Patents,with ? JJcost of same in the U. S. and foreign countries J t sent free. Address, ? :CA.SNOW&COJ t Opp. Patent Office, Washington, D. C. # ; ..u - ' ; h: :wmv. Br.ST IX TBIB WORLD. j '^woaringqutilitioßiirounsurpassed, uctunll / c>:'.lasting two \:i xes .f ony other brand. Noli Cfi'.'wted by Lout. i dTUK'r Til il iiZ.S lINII. 10K SAM I ■KAT.KUS C.T.N I'UALI.Y. I\j ■ AN IDEAL FAMI LY "F* t DTC "we" J For In<llgc*iion, lilllonhui *■*. g llcaduelie, t ...mtlpiitlon, Itiul I Complexion, Oir. .~lve Itreutli, jffii M -Livernnil Dowels, . ! , RIPANS TABULEfi / W (rtVhiM,.;..-. I\!.'lu. : I Ifor ri-eo I Clit -tIKWr. CO., Vow York. Complexion PreserveJ .. m.-, DR. HEBRA'S titiLA fsPsEMS 4H®lf Removes rreoklos, Pimptos. Liver • Moloa. Gackbeade, V' Sunburn and Tan, and r> \ stores the akin to its origi- ~. \ . • ' - " nal freshness, producing a < 'JiK-'S '- clear and healthy com-WMrr vf-V ' plexion. Superior to till f.u o preparations and p'" ' Iwtk.lofs. At nil druggists, or mail. 1 lor 50 h. bend for Circular k VIOI.A SK-: -V' ; • rated. At clriu-i 1 f , ioe .11* Cents. G. C. BITTNLA & CO., TOLEDO, O. CAN I OBTAIN A PATENT? For a prompt answer and an honest, opinion, write to nil > n iv i <>., who havo bad nearly tlftv vearH* experience in the patent, business. Communica tions stru tlv confidentinl. All :i nilbool, of in formation concerning PuteniM and how to ob tain Miem sent. free. Also a catalogue of mechan ical and soientltic 1 noit* sent mr. Patents taken through Muun A Co. receive special notice in the Sclent ille A morion n. and thus are brought widely b • 1.• th.- public with out cost to the Inventor. This splendid paper, issued weekh . He. .\uu\ illtwr itetl. has hv fart ho largest e.rcuinti u 01 m.v .. -.itiiic work in the world. s:{ a v, 11. i t .- scut iree. lit* i 1.1 ,r. MiiglO copies. 'J."i ci nt s. 1 \ er> : 1 1 r cont iins beau tiful plates, in e . a".I 1 -ruphs Of new houses, with i.-iblin bill biers to show the iate-f dosirie an-i uri" contracts. Address MUNN & CO., NIAV YOUK, 361 BitOAbWAY. j fCURE THAT 1 1 AND STOP THAT II N. H. Downs' Elixir j ii WILL DO ST. j i Price, 2.V., aml -1.00 per bottle.)) ! j j Warranted. Sold every where. ■ , HE'-'Z?, JCUI z::' 4 LC?.D, Prcpa., Burlingtcn, vt. m Sold at Scliilcher's Drug Stor<. Cast or I a curefl Colic, Constipation, Sour Stomach, Diarrhoea, Eructation, Kills Worms, gives sleep, aud promotes di gestion, j Without injurious medication. "For several years I have recommended | your 4 Castoria, 4 and shall always continue to do so as it haa invariably produced beneficial results." EDWIN F. PARDEE, M. D., "The Winthrop," 125 th Street and 7ih Ave., New York City. "'" (X T cj ' .-'x •> l •. '.o : \ \ foP' Saa k abates act gently | 5 ; but promptly upon the liver, | ' j .stomach and intestines; cure. | habitual constipation and dis- ! pel colds, headaches and fevers. I ! One tabule taken at the first ; ! symptom of a return of indi j gestion, or depression of spir ; its, wiil remove the whole dif- i ; i fculty within an hour. Ripans Tabutes ate cc.m --i pound d from a prescription . ! used for years by well-known ' j physicians and endorsed by 1 j the hi; I lest medical authori -1 j i ties, in the Tabules the stand ! j nr.: ingredients are presented I j in a form that is becoming the j t fashion with physicians and ! I patients everywhere. 1 1 One 1 *<-•; v N) c vntv-fiw Cents. t >xes) I wo Dollars. ) RipansTabnles may be ob j tained <•!" nearest druggist} or | 1" mail on receipt of price. free santjilc address i RiPANS CHEMICAL CO. MEW YORK. Wheeler & Wilson HIGH ARM No. 9. 1) TT PI^EX SEWING MACHINE. ! Sews Eitiikr Chain on Look Stitou. | The liijhtext runninff, most thimble and moat fli/wlttr nut chine in the world. j Send for catalogue. Aironfs wanted. Dest ifoods. Beat terms. Address Wheeler & Wilson Mfg. Co., Pbili.delpl.in, l'n.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers