There Is Nothing •* Just as Good " as Ripans Tabules for head aches, biliousness and all disorders of the stom ach and liver. One tubule gives relief. A Louisville tobacco warehouse holds 7.000 hogsheads. Dr. Kilmer's FWAMP-ROOT ouras all Kidney and Bladder troubles. Pamphlet and Consultation free. Labrato ry lii nghampton, N. Y. Warsaw, N. Y., has a 1,520 foot deep salt well. Karl's Clover Root, the great Mood purifier, eves freshness ami clearness to the romplex n and cures constipution. 25 cts.. 50 eta., $L South Carolina's rice crop is 70,000,000 pounds. THE BAKER'S BILL Tells of Creatly In creased Appetite "It affords me great pleasure to tell not only the condition of my present health hut also a great change in my do not, have that tired member of my family Mrs Mary Kcke parilla aiid with ben- Ilrooklyn, N. Y. eflcial results, if I may judgo by ray baker's bill each week. Hood's Hood's Sarsa parilla Rarsaparilla is wonder- / v 4. a ful for purifying the A S-A fl. blood and aiding diges lion." MIIS. M A it Y KCKB, 145 Alubaina Ave., Brooklyn, New York. Hood's Pills cure biliousness. 2' cents | Don't | | Cheat Your 2 | Stomach. j You must have pure, ? A wholesome food, no j S matter how much of 5 the sham you'll take 0 # in other things. # I Buckwheats % Is pure a A and wholesome. 4 TO SINGERS. The girls who put up my Medical Discovery all go to our Warren Street Methodist Church and two of them sing with great pleasure to themselves and others. One of them came to me one day, saying, 44 Dr. Kennedy, I must tell you what good the Discovery is doing in our church." 44 Glad to hear that," said I. 44 Well," she went on, 44 When I was so hoarse last Spring, you said it seemed like INWARD HUMOR and ad vised me to begin at once with the Discovery. 1 did so and in one month the hoarseness was all gone and my voice had improved so much several of our church mentioned it. Of course I told them you had advised the Dis covery and I was taking it. In fun, one of the girls said, 1 want to try it too, and the fact is that the whole church, I might say, found out that KENNEDY'S MEDICAL DISCOVERY would cure their throats and pimples and many other troubles." 44 All due to Inward Humor," said I, and that's what I explain in my little book which I send to any one who asks for it, and my Medical Dis covery is sold in your town. Yours truly, DONALD KENNEDY, Roxbury, Mass. D ATCTMTQ I R A UE MARKS Examination I C ■ o anit advice to patentability of nvcntlon. Send for Inventors Guide, or how to get a patent. PATRICK O'FARREL, WASIIISOTON. D. C. P N U 52 'O4 PHYTOLACCA BERRY TREATMENT fur Fat ami Attendant Ills. Our Leaflet on this ■ubjeo la Kent Free and Is well worth reudlng; treat ment Inexpensive and only safe one know u. Address ROKKICKR A TAKEI., Pharmacists, 1011 Arch St.. Phil adelplila. Pa. llilMiuess Established in 1835. fi Are You Fortified? When you are in a low stato of health, and on the verge of illness, there is no nourishment in the world like Scott's Emulsion to restore strength. Scott's Kmulsion nourishes, strcngth ■ eus, promotes the making of solid th enriches blood and tones up Tor Coughs, Golds, Sore Throat, Bronchitis, Weak Lungs, Consumption, Scrofula, Aniemia, Loss of Flesh, Thin Babies, Weak Children, and all conditions of Wasting. Buy only the genuine! It has our trade mark on salmon-colored wrapper. TRADE MARK. Sendfor pamphlet on ScotCs Emulsion. FREE. Scott SL Bowne, N. Y. All Druggists. SO cents and s|. Things for the Scrap-Book. A cement that will stand the wear and tear of use Is somethlni; hard to obtain, but a good authority says: The bcstcerueut for joining glass and metal together is pure alum melted in an iron spoon held over hot coals. As kerosene will not penetrate it, It Is better than plaster of paris for uniting the bulbof&lamp to its base, where these are only loose. Old paint should he cleaned before repainting, with a solution of soda— two ounces dissolved in one quart of water—applied warm; rinse thor oughly with clear water. Keep tea in glass or porcelain jars. An expert says it is ruined if kept in metal boxes; therefore the tin can ister must go. Muriatic acid will remove ink stains from vine. A remedy for hiccough that is well nigh infallible is to eat a lump of sugar saturated with vinegar. A rubber clothes-wringer should he kept in as even a temperature as pos sible, and especially not exposed to severe freezing. In cold weather it , should be warmed before using, by placing over a pan of warm water or near the range This is an idea to be remembered in the coming months. (pinint But Full nl IXoaninir. i( A crick"—"a stitch"—'"a twist' — 4 'a jam"—'"a halt"—"a raw spot"—"a blue spot '-— 4 'deal aches," etc., arc queer names well known among tho Ills of flesh, bone, muscle, nerves and joints, an 1 are belter un derstood as being so easily and surely '-urod by St. Jacobs Oil. The names lire pointers to what it has done and always will do read ily. None too rea lily, either, tor many of the infirmities indicated by these queer nomenclatures, if neglected, often lead to very serious results, which tho great remedy for pain stands ready to resist an t prevent. None the less useful is It to have on haul al ' ways rea Jy, lor the sudclou pain is very often the fatal one. Neither One Nor the Other. An elderly Irish woman who was in a Madison avenue car yesterday wished to get out at Forty-second street. The conductor was on tho front platform, so the woman, ad dressing a gentlemanly looking young man opposite her, said: 4 \Shtop the car." The young man looked over her head. "Shtop the car, I say," she re peated, glaring an him savagely. Still no response. "Didn't 1 tell ye to shtop this car," she shouted, gripping ler umbrella. 44 1 am not the conductor,"remarked the ycung man with sarcasm, while the young women iu the car tit tered. <4 Faix, an' you're not," replied the Irish woman scornfully; "an* you're no gentleman, nayther. Moreover, you're no blessin' to your mother, you're not. If you were you wouldn't let a respectable woman get carried two blocks out of her wav without any askin' from her either."—New York Herald. Finished at I.ast, After many years' delay the spire of the cathedral at Ulm has been finished recently. It is said to be the highest in Europe. Fou a list of a man's friends, look in his ledger forthose whose accounts have remained unpaid the longest. SIOO Rewnrd. 8100. The render of this paper will be nloased to learn that there is at least one ilreaaed discaeo that science has been able to euro in all its stages, and that Is Catarrh. Hall's Catarrh euro is tho only positive euro known to tho medical fraternity. Catarrh being a constitu tional disease. icquircs n constitutional treat ment. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, acting directly on tho blood ant mucous sur faces of the system, thereby destroying the foundation of the disease,and giving the pa tient strength by building up the constitut.-, and assisting nature in doing its work. The proprietors have HO much faith in its curative powers, that they offer One i laud red Do larj for any case that it fails to cure. Send for list of testimonials. Address F. J. CIIKNKY Se Co., Toledo, Sold by Druggists, 75c. Petroleum is tho latost suggestion for pre venting congelation of navigable waters. A Child Enjoys The pleasant flavor, gentle action and soothing effects of Syrup of Figs, when in need of a lax ative, and if the father or mother be costive or u bilious, tho most gratifying results follow its a use; so that it is the best family remedy know# 'I and every family should havo a bottle. Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup for children p teething. softens the gums, reduces inflamnia- H tion, allays pain, cures wind colic. 25c.a bottle ? fins was first employed as fuel in 1868. Plso's Cure for Consumption has no oqual ns a Cough medicine.- F. M. ABBOTT, tJHJi Seneca j Street, Buffalo, N. Y., May 9,1894. Aluminum paper is announced. I If afflicted with sore eyes use Dr. Isaac Thomp 1 J on's Eye-water. Druggists sell at 25c per bottle BRANDING TEXAS STEERS. HARDEST PIECE OF WORK IN THE COW BUSINESS. Duties of the Ropers, Uulldopcgers and Punchers—A Queer Thiug About Hrands. T HAT is the hardest piece \/\ / of work that a man in \ the cow business ever has to do?" "Well," romarked Joseph Keith, of Bolcherville, Texas, who certainly has been at the business long enough to know what he is talking about, "there are a good many things he has to do that haven't much fun in them. Stand ing guard in the rain or riding around 'em on a dark night would neither one bo considered a picnic by most people, but when it comes right down to sweating and tugging and good old hard words, I believe branding beats any job I ever tackled." Perhaps the reader may bo, as I I was, a little inclined to wonder how the mere making of marks 011 a cow's hide can involve any really hard man ual labor; but if ho once learns the details of the process all wonder on this point will cease. He will learn, furthermore, that it requires not only muscular strength, but experience and courage and brains. The average hard-working Missouri farmer would find it about as hard to make a suc cess of branding cattle in Texas as at building ships in Maine. Of course, ill order to brand cattle one must huvo liavo the proper tools. Branding irons are of two kinds stamping irons and dotting irons. I'lie former consists of a ivrouglii-irou stamp containing all the characters in the brand. For instance, if the brand were X I T, there would be an iron stamp composed 'of these three letters, with an iron handle running back from some convenient point, as the middle of the I. These stamps were formerly much in use, but have now become almost completely abandoned, except among the very largest outfits. Their place has been taken by the dot ting irons, which consist merely of a straight iron rod and a half circle with a long handle attached. With these two implements any letter in the alphabet can be made, and an as tonishingly large variety of other characters as well. For instance, the reader can easily understand how the X I T outfit makes its brand by fivo applications of tho straight rod. "B" requires one application of tho straight rod and two of the half cir cle. This may not make a very beau tiful B, but it makes one which any child that knows its letters would be apt to recognize. If more elaborate designs are wanted, the simple dot ting irons are found sufficient to pro duce them. Tho straight rod is gen erally about a yard long, and has a ring in i the end. The handle to the half circle is about the same length. They are generally heated in a brisk tire on the open prairie, though on the large ranches lhero is sometimes a furnace built es pecially for the purpose. For branding any cIaRS of cattle properly at least four men are re quired. Of these four, ono is tho roper, two are bulldoggers, and the fourth is the puncher. As I am writ ing in the English lunguagc, I take it for granted that my English-speaking readers all have a perfectly accurate idea of what these words mean. Of course, we all know that n roper is ono who ropes. If necessary, one man can do all the roping required, but two men do better. The roper throws his lariat around the neck of some animal to bo branded, and then, by tho main strength of his horse, hauls it up with in a reasonable distance of tho tire. The horse he rides is called the cut ting horse. He is called the cutting horse, not because ho can cut, but be cause he is used in cutting out Jeuttle from the herd. Some idea of the hard ness of the work may bo derived from tho fact that during the branding sea son each roper is allowed from ten to twelve horses for his own individual use. When the roper has driven and dragged the steer to he branded to the usual place, ho turns him over to the liulldoggers. These mon eatoh hold of the animal and hold him while the punoher applies tho hot iron. Does the reader imagine that ho and some other man like him could tackle a big full-grown Texas steer , and hold him down? Possibly they could if they knew how, but knowing how is tho trouble. Even one good able-bodied man can do so if he can manage to get the right kind of grip. Usually, when there is only ono bnlldogger, he plants his knees squarely in the flanks of his prostrate victim, passes tho animal's tail back between its legs, and grips it firmly with both hands. It might be well for the roador to remember this the next time he wants to hold a vicious cow down. The attitude may not be a very graceful one, but it gives the man a death-like grip on the brute. The horns may toss viciously and the forefeet pound away at a vindictive rate, but as loug as the grip on tho tail holds the hinder quarters stay close to the ground. It is hard on the cow, but it is also hard on the muscular strength of tho man who does the hold ing. For this reusou tho lmlldoggers generally work in pairs. One of them takes the grip just described, while the other ono grasps a fore hoof of the animal in each hand, as if in the fervor of a double handshake. When it is a colt that is being branded tho atti tudes are varied. One man holds the head down, or [sits ou it, while the other sits down flat on the ground and grasps the upper one of its hind logs firmly in both hands. Ono might think thut for two mon to hold a oaft down is not vory hard work, but when it comes to doing so for hour after hour tho work becomes exhuustino. Even at best tlie bulldogger's position lacks a great deal of being a sinecure. The time of year when most cattle aro branded is in the spring or fall- Most of the calves are of suitable age in the fall, but for grown cattlo the spring is preferred, because they shed most of their superiiuous hair then. Calves are branded any time after they aro two weeks old, but from three to six months is the usual age. Stock mon say that a full yearling is the hardest animal they have to brand. If any man thinks one at that ago isn't tough and muscular just let liim try to hold one down. There is one pecu liar feature about branding calves, and opinions in regard to its cause vary widely. Sometimes when a young calf is branded the brand will grow ay the calf grows and when the animal is full grown will be fully twice as large as it was originally. Then, again, some times it will remain just as it is, not growing a particle. This seems to me really a remarkable phenomenon, but it is undoubtedly a fact. Some stock men account for it by saying that it depends upon whether the calf is branded in the durk or the light of the moon, while others aro inclined to think it depends more upon the depth to which the branding iron burns the hide. It is a fact that branding is sometimes done much more deeply than at o there. If tho iron is hotter than it ought to be—red hot, for inst ance--the hair may catch fire and a needlessly sore place be made on the animal. If it is just hot enough, an application for two seconds is long enough. If the iron is getting cold, it may be kept on the animal lor half a minute. Sometimes the bulldoggers have to hold tho animal down for ten or fifteen minutes, while tho puncher goes and heats his irons a second time. Perhaps the reader understands by this time that branding a big herd in volves a large element of real, hard work. Ho should also understand that in selecting a new brand, a cattle man has to exercise a good deal of dis criminating judgment. To originate a really good brand is about as bard us to deviso a catching title for n modern book or story. In fact a new brand is selected very much as is the title of a modern novel. It is not nec essary that either one should mean anything in particular, provided only it is something nobody uses. To got an altogethrr new brand in Texas is now a very difficult feat. Every letter in the alphabet has been used long ago, many combinations of letters, and all reasonable combinations of figuress. A man must be very hard up when he would devise one like this : (7777). A student, by the way, would read that "seven thousuud seven hund red and seventy-seven in parentheses," but tho cowman calls it "four sovens in brackets." Sinciiar ones are as fol lows: (9999), (GGG). Theso three uro well-known brands in actual use in Western Texas —St. Louis Globe-Do i mocrat. SELECT SIETING3. Liverpool, [England, ships 10,000 tons of salt yearly to Africa. Naval salutes to the flag uro as old as the time of Alfred the Great. Percussion caps wero first used in the United States army in IS3O. Every gem known to jewelers bus been found in the United States. "Foggy Place" is tho amusing, but literal translation of Chautauqua. One firm in New York City prints 7000 Bibles a day, all the year round. Breast-plates inlaid with gold were found in an armorer's shop in Hercu laneum. An onyx seal ring belonging to an ancient Athenian was latioy dug up near Athens. There recently died in Maine a man who had spent forty-seven years in an insane usylum. Six hundred and ten pairs of twins were born in Boston in 1393, and nine sots of triplets. Several flutes, still capable of mak ing music, have been taken from tho Egyptian catacombs. The Emperor of China has had two astronomers put to death for getting drunk on the night of an eclipse. ' At the Bombay (India) Zoological Gardens tho skin of a sea serpent sixty four feet in length is on exhibition. The skin of a rattlesnake exhibited at Jofferson, Ga., is soventy-nine inches in length and has twenty-one rattles attached. New Yorkers are said to prefer oys ters that have laid for some little time in fresh water, as it makes them plump and white. A pair of shears with blades ten inches long is among the spoils of Pompeii. The instrument belonged to a tunic maker. A black basalt statue covered with fine inscriptions has been found on tho sito of the great palaco of the kings of Bullion, whore Belshazzar held his feast. Mrs. Joseph Donunlly, of Evergreen, Ohio, died from tho efi'octs of rain water which she drunk. Tho water was caught from a roof that had re cently been' painted with whito lead. A baby born to Mrs. Hales, ol'Kuox ville, Teun., weighed only one pound and six ounces when three weeks old. At tho ago of seven months and two weeks the child weighed five and one half pounds. During a recent thunderstorm near Vienna, Austria, hailstones fell so thickly that the railroad tracks near by were covered to a depth of three feet, thereby impeding travel for many hours. In the house ofaPompeiian sculptor were found Jthirty-lwo mallets, fifteen compasses, three levers, several chisels, together with jacks for raising blocks, and nearly thirty statues and busts, in overv atatre of manufacture. JAPANESE WRESTLERS. A. TOURNAMENT IN A TEMPLE COURT TARD. Shinto Priests Referced the Contests With a Fan-Grotesque Prelimi naries—What Constitutes a Throw ONE day when I was painting the willows, writes Alfred Parsons, from Japan, my boy Matsuba, who had plenty of spare time lor investigating the neigh borhood while waiting to carry home oiy umbrella and things, came and told me that thcro was a wrestling match at a small temple about a mile tway. I packed up at once and we walked over there, for I was very nnx ous to see what kind of a sport it was. This was a tournament, and all the professional, wrestlers of the neigh oorhood, and many youths anxious to listinguish themselves, had collected to take part in it. They were divided into three classes. The masters of the art were all past their first youth ; act enormously stout, as they are of :en represented in drawings and carv ;ug, but line athletic men, taller than :he average of Japanese. They wore chier hair in the ancient stylo, 6haved iway from the center of tho head, and chat from the back and side made into i queue, turned up and knotted with string on tho top of tho poll; they had no clothes except a loin cloth and an embroidered apron. In the sec ond class were men who had won but few prizes; they were not all in tho professional get-up, ami some of them wero evidently laboring men with a taste for sport. The third class was composed of youths, none of them more than nineteen or twenty years old. The contests took place in the temple courtyard ou a circular bed of sand, under a roof supported by wooden pillars, but not enclosed at the sides; round the edge of this raised circle thero was laid a straw rope, and the man won who could either fairly throw his opponent or force him across the rope without be ing dragged over himself. The pro ceedings were conducted by a Shinto priest in full dress, wide trousers and a coat sticking out from the shoulders like that of a modern young lady, who with a peculiar shaped fan gave the signal to begin and to stop. For the highest class this umpire was a vener able old gentleman; for the others the place was taken by young priests who needed to learn this pnrt of the busi ness. The u restlers came 011 in pair 3 as their names were called, and after a great deal of morching round, stump ing, rubbing their limbs, making ges tures of defiance, and so on, they squatted opposite each other. When tho signal was given to begin they rested their fingers on the ground between their knees, and ieaued toward each other till their foreheads touched, sometimes waiting several minutes before attempting to make any grip. If tho grip seemed unfair or unsatisfactory to one of tho opponents, ho immediately put down his hands,the priest stopped the bout, and all the preliminary business had to bo gone through again, but if it seemed all right the stiugglo began, and sometimes lasted for five min utes, each man straining every mus cle in a splendid way, and usiug all tho science and cunning he knew. If it lasted too long without either man gaining any advantage, the priest sig nalled to them to stop, and they had to wait till their turn came round again. Everything was conducted in tho most ceremonious and orderly luanner, and there was no drunken ness or rowdyism, although the multi tude who had assembled wero of tho poorest class. The most fashions bio wrestling-matches are held in Tokyo in spring and autumn, and tho cham pion is as much a popular favorite as a famous torero in Spain, or a well known prize fighter in England and America.—Harper's Magazine. Thinking Out a Novel. Hall Caine, author of "The Maux rnan," ft book which has had such a tremendous success in England, des cribes tho way in which ho wrote tho book in this way: "Hardly one pas sage of it was written with pen in hand. I used to wake early in the morning, usually about five o'clock, prop mysolf up in bed, and, with closed eyes, think out my work for the day, until not only the thing took shape, but every passage found ex pression. About eight o'clock I would get up and hurriedly write down tho words. This would occupy about an hour, and then 1 would do nothing but road until evening, when I spent another hour in revising or rewriting what I had written in tho morning, and the rest of the night in planning the work for tho following day."— Washington Star. Ciirl Cashier lor a Uootblack's Stand. Tho bootblacking stand in tho Equitablo Building cost SI2OO, and its Ttalian proprietor employs a pretty girl as its enshier. He was once a bootblack himself, but now owus sev eral of the most valuable stands in the city. The Italian who has tho boot blacking privileges on the Pennsyl vania Bailroad and several other fer ries employs about seventy boys, and their wages are from $5 to Si) a week. —New York Mail and Express. A Peculiar Hobby. A man living in Folkestone, Kent, England, has a peculiar hobby. Ho buys first-class houses, furnishes them in good stylo and then refuses to rent them, although some would bring from SSOO to a year. As part of tho town rates are paid by tenants the authorities are much annoyed by this strange conduct. There being no law to compel him to rent, tho eccentric house owner simply snaps his lingers at tho tax collectors. —Chicago Herald. No Substitutes For Royal Baking Powder. The "Royal" is shown by all tests, official, scientific, and prac tical, stronger, purer, and better in every way than all other Baking Powders. Its superiority is privately acknowledged by other manufac turers, and well known by all dealers. If some grocers try to sell another baking powder in place of the "Royal," it is because of the greater profit. This of itself is good evidence of the superiority of the " Royal." To give greater profit the other must be a lower cost powder, and to cost less it must be made with cheaper and inferior materials, and thus, though selling for the same, give less value to the consumer. LOOK with suspicion upon every attempt to palm off upon you any baking powder in place of the "Royal." There is no substitute for the "Royal." Cynical. An Arabian proverb, put in the form of a dialogue, reflects the cynic ism of Arab wit. It runs thus: ••Yea, he's indicted, but he'll ncvei be convicted." "Why not?" •'Nobody to testify against him." ••Why not?" ••Because he hasn't any friends!" A Poxy Scheme. A "New York syndicate has been formed for the purpose of buying an island otf the coa-t of Maine, stock ing it with black foxes and engaging in the fur trade. In Our Great Grandfather's Time, ' Assist Natur< a little now and then, with a gentle, cleansing laxative, thereby removing of- ' fending matter from the stomach and bowels, toning up and invigorating the liver and quickening its tardy action, and you thereby remove the cause of a multitude of distressing diseases, such as headaches, indigestion, or dyspepsia, biliousness, pimples, blotches, eruption.:, boils, constipation, piles, fistulas and maladies too numerous to mention. If people would pay more attention to properly regulating the action of their bowels, they would have less fre- 1 quent occasion to call for their doctor's I services to subdue attacks of dangerous diseases. That, of all known agents to accom- I plisli this purpose. I)r. Pierce's Pleasant ; Pellets arc utiequaled, is proven by the fact that once used, tlicv are always in favor. Their secondary effect is to keep | the bowels open and regular, not to fur- j tlicr constipate, as is the case with other pills. Ilence, their great popularity, with sufferers from habitual constipation, i piles and indigestion. A free sample of the " Pellets," (4 to 7 ' doses) on trial , is mailed to any address, 1 post-paid, 011 receipt of name and address I 011 postal card. Address, WORLD'S DISPENSARY MEDI CAL ASSOCIATION, Buffalo, N. Y. BEECHAM'S PILLS (Vegetable) What They Are For Biliousness indigestion sallow skin dyspepsia bad taste in the mouth pimples sick headache foul breath torpid liver bilious headache loss of appetite depression of spirits when these conditions are caused by constipation ; and con stipation is the most frequent cause of all of them. One of the most important things for everybody to learn is that constipation causes more titan half the sick ness in the world; and it can all be prevented. Go by the book. Write to R. 1\ Allen Company, 365 Canal street, New York, for the little book 011 CONSTIPATION (its causes con sequences and correction); sent free. If you are not within reach of a druggist, the pills will be sent by mail, 25 cents. GOING TO SCHOOL J j EASTM AN BUSINESS COLLEGE offers eourses of instruction hi Bonkk, spiny. Hmtk-iny'' on < >;• <'<■' enre. Com'l l.atr, Co 1 I Aril metie. rennian*hip, St- noyraphy and Typewriting, the A ><drmie loan- h. . Modern I.unpin iyrg, tfe. Mtisluess men supplied with HftsiKtuntH. Mtuntion* furnished < oinpe epi Hiti (leirft. Terms reduce Ito a hard times basis. Instruct Inn individual. Applicant* aoiniu.d any day in the mnr with equal advantage. No vacation*. Tor catalogue, with Hue Specimen* of JVII Wurit, addreon ( LEUKNT 4 . RAINES, Prmideut, .'lO \VnHtiiu K lu Siren. I'o.ithkn pM. , N. Y| "IF AT FIRST YOU DON T SUC CEED," TRY SAPOLIO How He Frit. W. S. Gilbert was lunching, not long ago, at a country hotel, when he found himself in company with three cycling clergymen, by whom he was drawn into conversation. When they discovered who he was. one of the party asked Mr. Gilbert "how he felt in such a grave and reverend com pany." "I feel," said Mr. Gilbert, "like a lion in a den of Daniels." Fond of the Theater. The greatest theater-goers in the world are Italians There are more theaters in Italy in proportion to the population than in any other coun try ' TO * * ECONOMIZE I * LIFE f r We must keep up the supply of f \ force needed by tne system. This a f can only be clone by Nutrition, f a Nutrition and good digestion area r synonymous. W 'RIPANS; : TARULES \ V .Should he taken immediately v Swheu there in any digestive de- A rangement manifest. V They are the sovereign remedy A for DYSPEPSIA. CONSTIPA- f TION. MIL OUTNESS, and all A disorders of Stomach, Liver and " Bowels. (t ONE TABULE 6 )CIVE3 RELIEF, f WALTER BAKER & CO. -j The Largest Manufacturers of LM PURE, HIGH CRADE COCOAS AND CHOCOLATES fbb Continent, hnva received JPp 3 ' HIGHEST AWARDS Mm ffld Food I . ; EXPOSITIONS iuElii Europe and America. I Their delicious HIVI IA KF AST COCO A ft"•KJKitely pure end ecluble, end COM lesf than one cent a cop. 60LD EY GROCERS EVERYWHERE. WALTEr BAKER & GO. DORCHESTER, MASS.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers