Etectilo Wires, / Bom. Writer very aptly likens the nerv.B to. ilotrlo wires, and the general working ol their system to lhat o( electric cars. A man Who "slips his trolley" like Mr. Jeremiah Bnoy, 1812 W. Lombard St., Baltimore, Md., Will need something better than even a gal ranio battery to set him all right. Mr. Eney round that something in the following way. "I suffered," he says, "a long time with neuralgia in the head. I gave St. Jacobs Oil n fair trial and am entirely cured." In this wny the great remedy acts as a motorman to restore broken wires, and set the system to perfect action. "Din you know that Mlsa Djones was prolng to marry young Smith?" "I knew it: but 1 cannot understand how a girl as intelligent as she Is can eonsent to marry a maa stupid enough t<j want to marry her." Brooklyn "Life. An Important Difference. I To make it apparent to thousands,who think themselves ill, that they are not affected with wny disease, but that the system .imply need, •cleansing, is lo bring comfort home to their hearts, as a costive condition is easily cured by using Syrup of Figs. Manufactured by th. California Fig Syrup Co. The peanut a? an article of food is rich in llbumen. • 100 Itrvvii rd. oioo The-eader of tills paper will bnpiensert to earn that I here is nl feusi mm dreaded disease that science has been able to cure in all its •tages, unit that is Catarrh. Hall's Catarrh Cure Is the only positive euro known to the medical fratornity. Catarrh being a constitu tional disease. requires a const i t utionat treat ment. Halls t atarrh Cnro is taken internally, acting directly on tho blood an I mucous sur- Sr,mi n c ,h Vi', M "T' thereby destroying the roundntion or tlio uis -asf,unl giving the pa tient BtrontftU by building up tin* const button una ftss'HUng nuturu inu-iin-r its work. The proprietors have so much faith in its curative rowers, that they offer Oum Hundred I) i lara 'or unv case t hut it fails to cure. Send for list of testimonials. Address -—• .. - ,F. .T. < IIKVEV & Co., Toledo, 0F^ ; old by Druggist*, 75c. Gamblers Mi rive like weeds all over Paris. r Grass and Clover Seed. The Urtfesi grower of Grass and Clover Seed In the world is Sal/.er, La Crosse, Wis. Over 50 hardy varieties, w.tli 1 ovest pricesl Special low freight Lo New York, Pa. and the East. If YOU WILL CUT THIS OUT AND SEND IT with Uc postage to the John A. Salzer Seed Co.. La Crosse, Wis., you will receive eleven packages grass and clover sorts and his ni imtn > h farm need catalogue; fu.l of good things for the far mer, the gardener and the citizen. A Beechara'a Pills with a drink of water morn ings. Beecharn's—no others. 25 cents a box. The first English theatre was built in 1575. As A PIMPI.K YET EFEKr-riVE REMEDY fot Throat Affections, "/Jroirn'# Hvntwhtal 7Yor/ic*" •tand first in public favor. They arc absolutely anrivalled for the alleviation of ail Throat ir ritations caused by Colds or use of the voice. If afflicted with soreeyesuso Dr. Isaac Thomp ion's Eye-water. Druggists sell ut2"c per bottle. Alligators are being slowly exterminated, Hatch's Universal Cough Syrup will cure lhat cough surprisingly quick. 2. cents. Birds wi-h long legs hive short la I < HDD'S SAISAFARILLA MISH Blanche Clark SALT RHEUM Broke out on our little girl's face. Her hands swelled and blisters formed and later broke open. The itching and burning sensation was terrible. Hood's Sarsaparilla cured her. It Hood's ! s> Cures ia like a miracle. Ilcr blood Ims become puri fied and her flesh soft and smooth." Mna, Anna L. Claiik, 4fl K. 4th St., Duluth, Minn. Hood' a Pills cure liver ui. blllouaneu, const!- eati n. Jaundice, sick ht-udAche. 2j cents. P N U (3 *O4 "Almost as Palatable as Milk" This is a fact with regard to Scott's Emulsion of Cod Liver Oil. The difference between thw oil, in its plain state, is very apparent. In Scott's Emulsion you detect no fish-oil taste. As it is a help to diges tion there is r.o after effect except good effect. Keep in mind that Scott's Emulsion is the best promoter of flesh and strength known to science. Prepared by Sett .<• Tt"'"in N V Ml dinge-M. GET THE BEST. MTT T TTD'Q $ NEW Dksionbfoh lUlbbMtO ! '94 at tic lowest Tlf 1 1 prices. Postage 5 Wot > cents. Perfect imita 'ti)n Gained glass. JE^lAAgents Wanted. J HERE IN Mil l.F't V t''j.. {J4:i •initibk qiNirrrt. I'iit-Uiii'tfl>. * - TO ESTIMATE HEIOHT. To estimate the height a colt will ?row to : Take a colt at any time be ween six weeks ami one year, put him >n a level surface so that ho will staml naturally, then measure the distance rem the hair of the hoof to his knee joint, and for every inch or fraction thereof he measures he will bo hands 'iigh when matured. If ho measures ifteen inches, he will be fifteen hands nigh; if lot inches, he will be 15$ 'lands high, and so on.—New York : World. HOW TO PEED MEAL TO A COW. The best way to feed meal to a cow is to cut hay and wet it only as much •is to make the meal adhere to it, and ; mix this with it, adding a small hand- j fill of salt with each feed. The meal is then more completely digested than if it were given by itself, in which ease it is apt to paHs on to the third | doiiiach and miss the rumination, which is necessary to the perfect di gestion of a cow's food. Five pounds f cut hay and three quarts of corn- \ meal will make a full single feed for a cow giving ten or twelve quarts of, milk a day. It is not desirable to try t feed a row for milk and fat both, as the food is then apt to be diverted to ! 't only, and the milk may decrease n any but a specially-gifted butter I or milk animal. Some cows will shrink j .n milk as soon as they are fed dry | jcal or shorts, and turn the food to • rsli and fat. Such a cow is not profit- | dle in a dairy. The best milk and butter row is one that is not easily fattened, but turns the food to these ' lined-desired products, and keeps thin as long as slio is milking.—New York HOTBED MAKINO. The work of selecting the place for the hotbed and cold-frames for start- j ing early seeds should not he post- j poned any longer. It takes some time | to make the beds and till them with • ihe right soil. The farmer who does I not make use of frames for starting j his garden vegetables ought not be ! classed among progressive farmers. 1 ! he seasons are too short for us to wait ! until spring before sowing our seeds. Isv the time the ground is ready for mowing our garden plants are several i inches high, and by transplanting them from the frames to the open ground j we save a month or more. In this j way raising two good crops in one sea- i sou on one piece of ground is made | easy. The early plants are also the ones that bring the most money, and I thoHo laised hi the frames always bring in more returns to the farmer than the 1 ones sown iu the open ground during j April and May. Many prefer the ! plants grown in frames first to those | planted later in the field, as they have j stronger roots and stalks, making it possible for them to resist dry weather. The hotbeds should bo constructed j right away, for there are some slow- I germinating seeds that ought to be put in the ground very early. It takes J time to gather and mix the right soil ! for tin' beds, and there will be many i days when the ground will be frozen too liard to dig any soil for the beds, i —New York Independent. WATER-DRESS CULTIVATION. In answer to inquiries, the Farmers' j Voice gives the following directions ! fir growing water-cress: Water-cress requires a clear running stream and a gravelly soil. The roots should ho planted in the spring of the year in slow-running streams, where the water ih from three to eight inches deep. When the roots are well established the plants will rapidly increase, and, hy their natural process of seed-sow ing and spreading of the roots, they 1 will soon cover the surface of the j stream. When planted the rows should be planted with the course of j the stream and about eighteen inches apart. The plants should always he j cut, not broken oft', as breaking them off is injurious to the plants. After they have been cut off two or three j times they will begin to stock out or thicken out, and then the oftener they are cut the better. When raised from 1 seeds they should be sown on the mar- I gin of the stream, and when of suitable sizo transplanted into it, where it is j an inch and a half or two deep. The most suitable time for sowing is in the ; months of April, May and June. There tire said to be three varieties of water cress— namely: the green-leaved, which is considered to be the easiest to cultivate; the small brown-leaved, j which is thought to be the hardiest, aud the large brown-leaved, which is said to be the best for deep water. SMALL FRUITS. Now it is time to apply manure to blackberries, currants, raspberries and other small fruits. It should be scat tered broadcast at the roots of these plants, which should run over consid erable territory. Autumn and winter are the most favorable seasons for spreading the manure, since the rains aud snows of winter can distribute the fertility through every portion of the soil much more cheaply and effectively than man can with the best of tools for the purpose. With the so-called hardy varieties of fruits winter pro tection, oven in quite northern lati tudes, does not appear very general, and yet, without, doubt, this is the true plan. It" cultivators could but see how their crons are oftentimes diminished by severe winters, even when plants are not killed outright by the changes of temperature, protection would more regularly be given. It is quite a simple thing to cover the roots of plants several inches deep with leaves or hay just after the ground has begun to freeze, and thus preven the alter nate freezing and thawing which provo so injurious. In addition, raspberry vines should he bent down nud cov ered partially at least. Winter winds harm the canes to a considerable ex tent. Opportunity is offered to establish new plantations until t' e ground freezes and puts an end to such opera tions. 111 transplanting remove fully cue-half the canes and set out well in mellowed soil; cover with deep mulch and protect the entire plants as well as possible. If spring work will not bo too pressing the piaut may be secured now and "heeled in" to he in readi ness for setting early next spring. Really spring is a better season for transplanting than fall.—Prairie Farmer. GREEN FEED AND PURE AIR FOR POULTRY. It should never bo forgotten that poultry need some kind of green food at all seasons of the year. In winter there can be given them cabbages, chopped onions, or turnips, occasion ally varying this diet with short lato dried hay. Poultry also relish corn stalk leaves, if chopped lino. Iu the early spring time, wheu the ground first softens from the frost, grain aud other seeds should be thrown into the pons, and unless they are kept in the open, they should have a plentiful supply of it daily. For young chick ens, nothing is so beneficial and so gateful as a run upon newly-grown grass. (Irass torn up by the roots is eaten hv hens, it is true, but not with that advantage or relish as when they can pluck it standing. Some, poultry keepers sprout oats in boxes of earth and allow their birds to eat off the soft shoots. Rutabagas aud carrots are excellent winter feeds, and about the cheapest to he obtained. It may he that the fowls will not take to them in a raw state; if so, the roots maybe cooked, mashed, and mixed with bian and meal. Next to a plentiful supply of green food, ventilation is the most important item to he considered in keeping fowls healthy. More fowls have perished for the want of perfect ventilation than from any other cause. One of the best and simplest plans to I let pure air into the poultry house is j to have a hole in the floor about six inches wide and several feet long, and 1 covered over with wire netting, which 1 is left open in summer and kept cov- I ered up in winter. With a eorre- j I spending opening at the top, this will j ! admit the fresh air from the bottom, ! and also allow all heavy gases to es- 1 | cape. It is the most perfect system | i that can be devised for admitting pure j air to poultry houses, and it is, at the I | same time, the cheapest and most ! i easily arranged. Sunlight, pure air, . aud green food make poultry profit able, but a lack of them bringH disease j 1 and consequent loss. American Agri- j culturist. FARM AND GARDEN NOTES. Trotters have too much energy for farm work. Horses differ in intelligence almost j as much as men do. Drive the colt the first time with n fast-walking horse. After choosing a place for the bee stands do not change it. A little drive every day aids the ! development of young horses. Italians-produce a larger number of ; bees than blacks, and so, indirectly, j more liouey. ! To leave the bees a reasonable supply 1 : of honey for the winter is better than 1 attempting to feed them. I Mat ng for the best results in vigor and fertility requires careful study ' and practical observation. ' The goose-raising English and Irish | counties are those with very thick pastures with short grass. | Ducks should never be yarded with other poultry, as they will pollute the , water ami cause sickness. I The color of the shell is no indica tion of the quality of the egg, but I simply shows the breed of fowl. Experience counts for a good deal in managing poultry. It is on the little details that success depends. Sell from the young stock, and do not sacrifice lowis and turkeys which have proved satisfactory, unless very j old. j Give the fowls all the skim milk and buttermilk you can spare. They will return it to you in the form of eggs j Rolling or hilly land is the best situ ation for the poultry-house. Sandy and gravelly soils are also to be pre ferred. Cocks should not be kept in the pen with the layers, as an egg-producing diet will fatten them and ruin them at breeders. The Dorking is the most populai fowl in England. There are three varieties the colored, the silver gru\ aud the white. The moth miller is a much to b i dreaded enemy of the bees, but if thf stock is kept strong they will not allow it to deposit its eggs on the 1 comb, Uncle Sam has 110 women lawyers. Queen Victoria speaks ten languages fluently. The Czar of Russia's typewriter is his wife. Sixty-eight Mary Smiths are students this year in Smith College, New York. ■ The Duchess of York has set up a swing for the amusement of her guests in wet weather. The Queen of lialy is bringing out a volume of folk lore, the result of her summer holiday. It is said that fencing is to be the fashionable exercise for ladies this j season in Loudon. Within a year Eleanor E. Gre.itorex j has become one of the best-known of I American illustrators. The English Queen's favorite wall I paper lias a bright blue ground | sprinkled with white stars. Miss Clav, of Lexington, Kv.. will be a candidate for the office of City , School Superintendent of that city. It is a point of honor that Moorish women never know their own ages. ( They have 110 birthday celebrations. Miss Green, a young lady from Cardiganshire, is the present English governess to the Emperor of Ger many's children. Ornithologists arc quoted as esti mating the number of birds "annually sacrificed to the vanity of the women of America" at 8,000,000. Miss Herbert, the daughter of the Secretary of the Navy, has a character istic mode of dressing, and is said to design most of her own gowns. Katherino Lee Bates, Professor of English literature at Wellesley Col lege, has lately brought out a volume on "The Early English Drama." Mrs. John Clay, the widow of h Kentucky stock breeder, left direc tions in her will that each superauu ated animal on lier stock farm should | be cared for at a yearly expense ol SSO to the estate. Lady Marjorie Gordon, daugnter ol the Earl of Aberdeen, is three years old, and greatly resembles her charm ing mother in appearance. She is the editor of "Wee Willie Winkle," a paper for children. The youngest, Queen Consort ol Europe, the Queen of Portugal, was born at Twickenham in England. She was the favorite child of the Comte de Paris, and is a brave aud graceful horsewoman. She has two little sons. Women organizations are becoming po numerous and popular in New York City that "1 saw you at the club the other day" is a remark frequently to be heard among women as they meet in the shops and on the streets. One of the greatest authorities on 1 pomology in the West is Mrs. F. C. Johnson, of Hastings, Neb. She is de scribed as "very charming in man ners and stylish in figure." Sin; is h fascinating talker, and has made h fortune raising apples. The widow of Frederick L. Ames has presented to the Boston Museum of Fine Arts, in memory of her hus band, two life-size portraits by Rem brandt valued at $10,01)3 each. One is a portrait of Dr. Tulpp, dated I'i'll, and the other of his wife bears the sauie date. Mrs. John Sherwood, of New York City, lias undertaken a crusade in be half of servant girls. Within ten days, she says, she succeeded iu per suading eighteen shop girls to take positions as domestics in the country, i She then adds, "What could one liun I dred women accomplish iu twenty | days?" j Next to Mrs. Cleveland's fondness for quaint, old things comes her fond ! uess for clocks, which is fully grati fied, as more than twenty hands rae ones and many small ones camo as i wedding gifts. The clocks are in every room, nil 1 are placed so that they liar* ; monize with the other furnishings. I Boston boasts of two young women who are composers—Miss Helen Hood ! and Miss Margaret Lang. The Apollc ; I Club, one of Boston's musical societies, has set the seal of its high approval upon the compositions of these young women, and musicians praise thcii work. So far they have both contiued themselves to song writing. I The first woman to he appointed up on the Illinois State Board of Chari ties is Miss Lathrop. Iu the course of her visits to charitable institutions, fully or partially supported by the State, she has found many abuses, and I has appealed to the Women's Clubs of Chicago and other cities to aid her, j through theii individual members, in I the work of discovering and correet ' ' ing defects of managements. | Miss Catherine Hogan recently passed the second highest examination J in a class of fifty law students in i Brooklyn, and will open a law office in I I New York, where she hopes to work up a practice among women who need as sistance in managing their property. She is the second woman to be admit ' ted to the bar in Brooklyn, and is a graduate of the New York public schools. The first, honor in the law ■ | class was taken by a blind man. - j Miss Sara M. Pollard has been farm ' | ing with much hii.vcsh for nine years : near Dugdale, Folk County, Minn. ' She conducts her farm without the aid of hired help except during harvest, v doing her own plowing, seeding and ! harrowing. When working on the , j farm Miss Pollard wears a bloomer , suit, short skirt falling just below the t j knees, with trousers to match. At all t I other times she wears the ordinary dress of womeu HOUSEHOLD AFFAIRS. BROILING MEAT. To broil prope*iy there mast be a bed of clear coals. The meat must be placed in a double broiler and held near the clear coals for about one minute, then be turned and cooked on the other side. Continue this until the meat is well seatea on both sides. Lift the broiler a few inches away from the great heat. Keep turning until the meat is cooked.—New York World. RAW MEAT JUICE. Raw mer.t juice is prepared by mincing the best rump steak very tine I and then idtling col. vater in the proportion of one pnrt of water t> four of meat. Stir the mixture thor oughly and let it stand in a cool place half an hour. Press through muslin or a course napkin. This process is recommended by a physician, who gives it as a result of many experi ments fo.: obtaining meat juice that has the greatest nutritive value. It is one of the foods often found excel lent for children four or live years of age, who have not yet learned the art of chewing well enough to get the nutriment from meat. New York Post. BITS OF LAMP LORE. Lamp wicks should have the charred part rubbed oft" with a rag kept for that purpose. They should very seldom be cut. They should not be used so long that the webbing becomes tight and non-porous. Lamps should be kept filled with oil. It is bad for the wick ami burner when the oil is left over from one even ing's reading and is made to do duty a second time. The. tank should lie tilled again. About once a month the wick should be removed, the burners unscrewed and boiled in a little water in which common washing soda lias been dis solved. This will remove the almost imperceptible coating of dust and grease that forms on the brass. The lamp chimney should be washed in warm, soapy water each day, a mop made especially for such work being used. When dried it should be pol ished with soft newspaper or chamois. THE ART OF PATCHING*. How many patch clothes, par ticularly children's clothes, with little i regard to the stripe and check, and I sometimes to the shade of the gar- j mcut patched. Then some seem to j think the larger the patch the better, i Of course the thinness of the cloth j near the hole will have something to i do with the size of the patch, but j when a three-cornered tear is mended ! take a piece exactly matching the ( check or stripe of the garment, and just large enough to leave a space equal to the fell taken on the other j side between the hem and the run ; , then on the right side make a cut in ' each corner equal to the depth of the fell, and a much squarer, neater patch 1 jis made. If n woolen garment, it ! should bo dampened and the fell j thoroughly pressed with a moderately I hot iron. A patch should never bo put on the right side of a garment. If the rent or wear is near a seam insert a sido of the patch into this, and some times two seams are so near that the patch can scarcely bo noticed. Gener ally people fasten the patch on the wrong side by running a thread along near the edge. A hotter way is to cat stitch the patch onto the garment. POTATO COOKERY. It seems n pity to the New York World that when there are so many delicious ways of serving potatoes, they are ever sent to the table in the unappetizing lump form which is most prevalent. Here are a few substitutes for the everlasting "boiled" potato. Potatoes in Jackets - Bake as many potatoes as arc needed. Cut a small piece from one end and a larger one from the other. Bemovo the inside and rub through a sieve. Put on the lire with half an ounce of butter and j one ounce of grated cheese for every | four potatoes. Add boiling milk, salt i and pepper as for mashed potatoes. Fill the skins with this paste, sprinkle j tops with grated bread crumbs and j choose and put ill the oven to brown, j Potato Souflie Boil six good-sized j mealy potatoes. I\ul> through a sieve. Scald a teacup of sweet milk and three teaspoons of butter. Add a little salt and pepper and mix with the potatoes. Beat to a cream. Add one at a time the well-beaten yolks of six eggs. Beat the whites to a froth and stir lightly into the mixture. Pour into a well buttered baking dish and bake for about half an hour in a quick oven. Potato Balls Mash Rome potatoes with salt, pepper, butter aud a little chopped parsley. 801 l into balls, dip in beaten egg, roll in bread crumbs and fry for a few minutes in hot but ter. Texas Baked Potatoes —Mash and season with pepper and salt some good Irish potatoes. Mince a large onion tine, mix thoroughly with the potatoes and bake in a brisk oven. Transparent Leather. According to the Magasin Pittor esque, transparent leather can now be made. Before the hide is absolutely dry it is placed in a room which the rays of the sun do not penetrate, and is saturated a solid ion of bichro mate of potash. When the hide is very dry there is applied to its surface an alco>'iie "iiiiioti of tortoise shell, and a • r iiisparcnl aspect is thus ob tained. This leather is exceedingly ; flexible. It is used for the manu facture of toilet articles, but there is not hi ii : to prevent it from being used for footgear, and pcrhapH, with fancy stockings, shoes made of it would not prove unpleasant to the sight. Tluy would, at least, have the advantage ■! original it y. Highest of all in Leavening Power Latest U, S. Gov't Report i RoYal Powder -AfiSOUJTELY PURE A l.ucky Prrsentfment. An incident of the recent race be tween the train robbers and their pursuers, which resulted so disas- ( trously to the former, was told dur- , Ing the past week. One of the party who went out from K*alispell to join I the chase was a young man who had J been in bad health. He was suffering j from long trouble and had had sev- J eral hemorrhages. Thinking the j open air would do him good, and that [ if ire happened to get shot by the out- j laws it would only hasten the in evitable end, he started. On the day before the fight he I thought he would take a walk uu the railroad alone. The air was cool and j bracing and the outdoor life had 1 already accomplished more for him than physic had ever done. So he started. A couple of miles from 1 where he left the party tie saw a pile of railroad ties alongside the track. | The idea struck him that that j would be a good hiding-place for a To purify, enrich and vitalize the blood, i and thereby invigorate the liver and dig'-; I live organs, braro up the nerves, and put the system in order geuertilly, "Golden I Medical Discovery " has no equal. DYSPEPSIA IH ITS WuRST TORN. j ERVIN PIETEItJ.Y, y ' ti\. Himunri-'g Miration, ! E. DIETEHLY, KSQ. t) , <|Uirt MU(I , I„ i I heartily rocoramond ilirau medicines to every one whoso milTeiinjr i* of the nature that mine was." Sold cA-ry where. WALTER BAKER & CO. Ch COCOA and CHOCOLATE Highest Awards (Mt'.inls an<l Diplomas) World's Columbian tS U \ Exposition. ! °n Uio following archies, if I'MlansiaKFAST coeoj, : l ' i > Ai'iii tin ,ii \. i Hiormrp, ■ jft 5, i Uw.ltM SWI.I T (UOUUTK, •Ml id-I'M WIUI CHOCOLATE, j ItVTTT.It, For" purity of material," " eicollfiit. flavor," nun " uni form oven cumpostliou." BOLD BY GROCERS EVERYWHERE. WALTER BAKt'fl & CO., OOnCHESUR, MASS. Your lANOl ANO " UWB YOUR Siren srt h'" liNnowN svsmi n ** |mm i iip AND Kenevved -.am/ed. tioiililod with n j• r .->! oil, 'anguid feeling, ar.d .n* l< of energy, your hlood is not right, at r. need |*ui ifvi p \N ! KVK] purlin-sand impart new \>g..r ami ■" life to the whole system. "I have used your ni'duim> often for the paet eight years, and feel eafe in i-aying that It i- the i bent general health restorer in tho world." o V. 11. <;n;sN, M.tes\ilie, Ark. SWIFT SPECIFIC COMPANY, Atlanta, Ga. WWORLD'S ) AWARDS two MEDAI s \"j. I ' .SircnHlhiiiuK - j t• • urn r, ii I d 11 n-1 ■M I I in- |ID ~, ALLIANCE CARRIAGE CO., CINCINNATI. O. TnF, \V\T,T, HATER MEROH AST \Hi ST3I SELLS THE BEST, W Its 3S Hi THE CHEAPEST WALL PAPER liiiiai I'nner.:|r. „„,l . i;ol<t I'ntier-V-., 5,.. mill Hfr rtcud .1 ■ -11111111. Mr a.iiui.lt',. j 141 Wooil Si I'll. IIM-IMMVIi, i'.t. S One bottle for fifteen cents, ) < > Twelve bottles for one dollar, ( mai ' | < g———a—ißOTP—— < 1 Ripans Tabules are the most effective rec- 5 ? jpe ever prescribed by a physician for any < ! j disorder of the stomach, liver or bowels. J | T! [l ; RII-ANS CHEMICAL COMI'ANV, 10 SmxE SI., Nw Venn. J " Say A,yo 'i;j' nnd Ye'N Ks'er lis Carried." 0&.V1 r.o* fuse Ail Our Advice la Uco SAPOLIO I bandit. As tie drew nearer to It the desire to look behind that pile of ties i became stronger as the distance lessened, and when he. reached it the Impulse was nearly Irresistible. Still, ; some Indefinable instinct told him ' not to. Love of life is strong, even in a man who thinks consumption Is l about to take him off. j The young man ob.eycd the Instinct | Instead of the impulse. | When Jones surrendered he callpd j the young man out of the crowd and j said: "See here, young man, you I were nearer death when you were walking up the railroad track than 1 you would have ever known if I | hadn't been caught. 1 was behind | (hat pile of ties. If you had as much as made a move toward iook | Ing behind that pile you would never | have known what killed you." The | subject of this incident now thinks | life sweeter thau ever because of the j Hose call he had.—Helena (Mont.) I I ndependent, "COLCHESTER" /dlli Spading lojftf 8001. / BEST in iVlorket ; liKsi'/ NMV KAJUNa A < 1 mm t ~p nutor or ,ft P BO '° Aw,?*. oxtcuds tin* whole length ■' * $ <l"w n m <bt- Levi, pi t'tcct ' Inferior'good a, Colchester Rubber Co. PNUfI 'O4 PHr T V T TT T/ r J Greatest of Family Games Progressive a Ainersca. A The most entertaining and instnwtive t game of the century. It delightfully A r | teaches American geographv, while ft A is to youug and old as fascinating as whist, (.an he played by any num- T J her >f pi v. y* A ps. The ,-RTV. T,. DOtTOLAS .L SHOE r " ~),n v ~,k . csting from TlHWiHtt I .WELT, A. Every L W i-DoUctAsTo — fwira/Ki < Vj bryr- r| ; VaV<^ rON ' MAS 7r~T3S is drrhymail. Postage free. You ran get the best bar::.tins of dealers who push our shoes. t nnn mm acres ° f I S UYI?,UU for sale by IheSaiNT PAUL VI ■ W-T-r .. \ DUI.DTH KAILKOAD I'OITI'ANY iu Minnesota. Rend for Maps and Circu' iaiß. They will btrrent to you Addro s HOPEWELL CLARKE, ijiodCornmisiiioner.gt. Paul. MlD®* I'rnycr to < levclnml The ri. hr t thing out. Denierntn and Hepublleiin? BUT IT. "I'll*• I:• .MIS \., 'I WANTIMI. stiigleeoples I".; I >RG| |Misl|ialil 111 ■ T NII\ KT TV I'•,Dexter,Me. I iTI'VTs; I b VIT: MARKS Kvamlnatl >n I \ I I, . > In, mi.l .n|vice i. i■ i | itentublltty '■l liivuiitlon senil f"i I•! V,>II t< u'4 * til. |.> >r howt t >. patent. I \ rRK i< I •>■ \ RRELI. w * IHM . ,D.O, Patentß^w 9 d . p - B iin il I nt. 11 . • •• : \ ■ 1. f..i Invent..i- k Oiilile JAPANESE TOOTin^^&VSSJ iiiuil' ll' : '. e I 'pi' 1 • . l'lilhi !e | Ida, Pt PATENTS '.V";","" . he"g'~r. I - Ii i. the be i cough Fyrup. Sol I everywhere. Ji6c. Hi
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers