UNDERGROUND NEW YORK. LONG AVENUES OF COMMUNICA TION AND HOMES UNDER FOOT. Honeycombed Ground Beneath the Street Level, Where Thousands Live and Work. ~TC SECTIONAL view of almost / \ any part of tho city of New York, says tho Herald, would (£ proscnt a sight quite aston ishing to the uninformed, as to tho actual condition of tho apparently solid ground below tho street level. The firm foundations on which rest * the city and its teeming lifo lie far below tho pavomonts, and tho streets themselves aro only long and narrow elevated ridges, supported by tho walls of tho groat buildings, and rest ing on subways, channels and numer ous underground structures. Beneath tho skin of paving lies tho circulating, nervous and muscular system of tho city; in other words, the sewers, water aud gas pipos, the wires, distributing electrical energy, and the powerful engines, whoso work is made manifest through whirling ma chinery, lifting elevators and milos of cables moving underground and con veying hundreds of cars, loaded with thousands of passengers. For all of this thero must be great rooms, miles of pipe, long, arched passages, nu merous subways—all having their ap proaches, basins, manholes aud vur- ions entrances. These constitute an intricato system of avenues, over which we walk and ride, and tho en trances to which .pro marked by tho numerous iron plates aud grated open ings that are seen by tho thousands along tho streets. Add to this the dark, ill-ventilate<l dwelling below the sidewalks, into which poverty forces thousands in a great city, and wo have underground New York. Tho multiform uso of electricity, and tho vast increase of tho business in New York, brought tho decreo that wires must go under ground. It was a hard fight, but tho poles aud wires had to go, and subways were built. Thero aro now 125 of these ways reaching out to every portion of tho city, aud carrying tho various wi.Ajs used as electrical conductors, includ ing telegraph, telephone, electric light and fire alarm wires. These aro under nearly every street, and in many 4 streets are two sets of subways—one for electric lighting, or high tension, and the other for telegraph and tele phone, or low tension. Besides tho main trunk lines of subways, there aro lateral ducts which reach out liko great arms to the centres of tho blocks on cither side. Above and below and on cither side of these electric subways is a vast cir culating system that works an import ant part in tho city's economy. This system fairly honeycombs tho ground ; in every direction. There aro largo pipes with smaller branches, aud theso last have yet smaller arms that enter every building in greater or less num bers. This system is mado up of tho gas and water pipes. Tho gas, start ing from tho groat tanks placed ou the lowest ground in tho city, floats through more than two thousand miles of pipes that ond iu millions of burn ers whero tho gas is used to contribute to tbo convenience und comfort of u w vast population. And tho water, starting from tho huge reservoirs on tho highest ground, flows through more tban eight hun dred miles of mains, which have their lateral branches terminating with yet smaller pipes at tho hundreds of thousands of places whero water is noeded. There aro other comparatively small underground pipes that havo roacuod no considerable length, but promise soon to do so, particularly tho pneu • mutio tubes, of which there ure now about fivo miles. That several milos of theso tubes will havo to bo con structed by tho Postottioo Dopurtment is quite likoly. Thero is also now iu use iu tho city four miles of salt water pipes. Tho greatest ways of underground <Now York aro those through which tho sowago of tho city is disposed of. This is a wonderful system in its ex tent and importance. Its ramifica tions reach every point, aud its hun dred thousand mouths aro to rc ceivo tho waste that existence of hu lnail lifo demands must bo removed and discharge it into tho waters about tho city. Thero aro about live hun dred miles of sewers, varying iu size from twelve inches to twelve foet in diameter, with tho smaller connec tions that lead to every building. Be sides the roceiviug openings and tho numerous manholes that load to these sowers thero aro about six thousand receiving basins to catch tho surface drainage. Tho figures hardly give a correct idea of tho extent of tho sewer system, with its pipos, ranging from tho sizo of a rat hole to gre it urebod avenues, through which a team of horses can bo driven; such as tho sowers under Canal street, 110 th street and Fifty -4 ninth street. Theso aro hugo arches of brick and stone, twelyo feet wide at tho base and eight feot high. In the sewers work is always being done by men who earn support amid tho dampness, foul odors aud gas laden air of those streets of tho underground Now York. A struugo lifo it is in such a pluce, but tho work must bo done, and many persons aro anxious to do it. Gas sometimes accumulates be neath tho iron mahholo coverings, whon a spark from horseshoo fires it and an explosion occurs, raising tho covering, tearing out tho brickwork aud endangering human life. Thou tho workmen must descend into the opening to mako repairs. * % Every day to tho city sewer depart ment cOmo reports of leaks that call for men to enter tho labyrinth to ro move obstructions and make repairs. Such is tho underground work that gives employment to hundreds of mon. And these men somotimes make strange "finds" in the hidden places where they work. Not only are lost articles found, but booty, hidden by thieves to avoid detection, and even the bodies of the unfortunates mur dered and of hapless infants arWfcrought to light by these workers in under ground New York. The demands on street railways have necessitated an incrcaso in tho oxtent and population of tho under ground city. There must be an under ground chunnol to carry the moving cable, and there is now in the city sovonty miles of such ways, enclosed in metal, with a slot above through which to communicate to tho cars, and drainage openings bolow connect ing with tho sewers. Every thirty five feet along these lines aro open ings where mon can ontor into tho lower regions to oil tho machinery bearings and mako repairs. Then thero are tho great arched chambers whero tho chango is mado from one cable to another —that arc marked on the surface by signs that say "throw cable" and "tako cable." Here aro men at work, and all along the lines, particularly at night, aro these under ground workers seen going in and coming out of the openings—covered, whon not used, by iron plates. Then tho cable roads uecessitato tho immense underground power plants, like tho onos at bread way and Houston street and Third avenue and Sixty-fifth street. Hero, far below the surface of tho street, are men working amid powerful machinery that moves milos of stool cable to which, are grippod dozens of cars with thoir loads of humanity. Besides tho iron doorwnys that leal into tho underground avenues aro smaller ones along the cables roads cover signal boxes, from whero elec trical communication can bo had with tho power houses. Tho extended basements and sub cellars under tho telegraph buildings and power houses, from whero com munication is had with tho ways be neath tho streets, and where men work by gas and electric light; aro mere suggestions to the underground rooms, whero thousands of mon work, do pendpnt on artificial light, and at times ou machinery for air that is cir culated for their breathing. Under all of tho great office buildings, whole sale blocks and tho large rotail stores of tho city aro floors under floors, whore machinery is busy, where pack ing is done and manufacturing carried on. Not only under tho buildings, but below tho sidewalks, theso rooms extend, and tho feet of hundreds of thousands of pedestrians are daily passing over the heads of tho workers in underground Now York. Ground is expensive, and humanity must bur row in tho earth for tho privildgo of living. Theso cxtonded areas covorod by buildings, whero men toil day and night, constitute a largo part of tho underground city—tho city of labor, where men stay for a time and thou leave for homes abovo tho ground. But iu underground New York thero aro homes below tho pavomonts-- homes whero men and women sleep and where eliildrou aro born and roared; limitations called homo by those too poor to havo tho free air and light from heaven whilo thoy ihsist. upon liviug in a great city. To see theso places go along Hos tcr, Division, Madison, ilidgo or other of tho streets on the crowded East sido and descond into any of tho open col lar doors and forco your way through tho throngs of children. Little, dark, unvcntilatcd rooms. Sunlight never roaches them, aud tho air has a strug - glo to enter. Op Esssx, below Riv ington street, iu ono block were found soven euch basements, which averaged fivo rooms to a cellar and six inhabi tants to a room. Squalor, tilth, dis ease aud orimo must of necessity al most displace all clso iu such homos. Hero is fouud the darkest view of thq picture of underground New York. WISE WORDS, "The second thief is tho best keep er" of tho first. Pleusuro becomes monotonous, but happinosi never. Somo men havo more elbow room than they want. Man may circumvent Nature, but ho cannot crash her. "Who "fights aud runs away" may never havo another chauco. Thero is no nicbo in life - for a cross old man or an actor out of a job. It is a pity that so of ton tho success of ono means tho failure of many. 3b who analyzes too closely wears tho tissuo of his thoughts to rugs. A weak man "swears off;" a stroug onoseysto himself, "Thou shalt rot." A most uncomfortable man to live with is ouo who never makes a mis take. Cupid is a bravo littlo footpad who never attempts to "hold up" only ono victim. Cupid makes no resolutions atitlm now year. Tho old on-; 3 answer his purpose admirably. Two women who would exactly ploaso each other wouldn't, probably, please anybody olse. Tho worhl would uo a most disa greoablo place to live iu if it were absolutely void of deooit. True happiness lies less in having things as you waut thorn than in wanting things as they arc. If wo thought of oursolvcs as oth j ors think of us, wo would sit upuightu wondering what wo were born for. A Japanoso jinrikisha man would make—t. good A. D. T. boy. One of them has been known to pull a passen ger seventy-livo miles in a day. Forty or fifty is not at all uncommon SELECT SIFTINGS. Tho Japanese aro fond of bathing. Tho Black Sea has a dopth of 600 fathoms. Tho cost of tho Mexican war was $6G,000,000. Tho wren ofton makos a dozen nests, leaving all but ono unfinished and uu usod. Brooklyn (N. Y.) olevatod and sur faco roads carried nearly 200,000,000 passengers tho past year. Italy was so callod from tho namo of Italim, au early King, who gov ernod most of tho pouinsula. * The smallest church iu tho world is at St. Lawrence, Isle of Wight. A congregation of forty would crowd it. Tho ground has only been lightly covorod with BUOW at Mobile, Ala., fivo times during tho last seventy-five years. Motormou in Baltimqro aro arrested if they do not stop thoir cars beforo passing tlio engino houses of tho city liro department. In China, which has long beeu known as "tho laud of oppositcs," tho dials of clocks aro mado to turn around, whilo the hands stand still. Rev. C. M. Jones, of Ouooutn, N. Y., owns ono of the first horseshoes over made by machinery. It weighs two aud a half pounds, and was made at Troy in 1858. Miss Ellen Tickle, of Heno, Butler County, Ohio, is said to bo the smallest full-tlevelopod woman now liviug. Sho is thirty ono years old, and weighs but twenty-eight pounds. D. N. Talleut, mail carrier between Rutherfordtou and Columbus, N. C., walks twenty-seven miles each day, carrying tho mail box on bis shoulders, liis compensation is S6OO a year. The lot in Washington in which tho Bluino mansion stauds was once owned by Henry Clay. He traded it to Com modore Rodgers for an Audalusian jackass, which later ho lost over a gambling table. Gorniauy's army observos the most elaborate etiquette. The whole of this vast orgauizatiou, possibly tho most perfect of its kind that tho world has over scon, is governed by a codo of etiquette u rtgid as it is complicated. A Wyoming cowboy was attacked by a largo lynx tho other day while riding across the Bad Lands, near tho Mon tana line. Tho animal jumped on tho horse's back, clawing and biting botii man aud horso iu u terriblo muuuor. A companion, who was riding at his side, mauagod to kill tho boasf, after firing throe shots into bis body. Rats ofton desert a house boforo it falls down, because it is probablo that tho settling of tho boams an I stoues causes noises that, inaudible to human beings, may bo perfectly so, and very alarming bosides, to the rodents. Rats havo been known to dosert mines shortly beforo earthquakes or eaviugs occurred, probably for the same reason. A Salvation Army baud is responsi ble for a recent London suicide. Tho victim was a bachelor alliicted with in somouia. 110 asked the band to stop playing uoar his house. Tho Salva tionists ignored his request, and, say ing that ho would rid himself of tho auuoyanco in ono way or another, tho man wont indoors und cut his throat with a penknife. Trapping Salmon In Norway. There is a very singular way of trapping salmon ou the Norweigan fjords. Hero and there, as you pass along those groat, magnificent fjords, cut deop into the heart of Nor way, you may seo a solitary figure perched upou a sort of spidery, fragile looking timber lookout, overhanging tho ijord. A week later, or a month, as you pass again, you may seo that lonely figure, his eyes always bent upon tho fjord beneath him, still keop ing his watch. Tho man is a salmon catcher; in his hands are a couple of long ropos, con nected with a not in tho water below him, aud day after day ho sits up thero iuteutly watching until ho sees a salmon pass into liis net. Tho in stant this great event happens ho hauls sharply upon his ropes, closes tho mouth of tho net, ami thou, getting into his boat, proceeds to pick up tho salmon at his leisure. The salmon caught is sold to some hotel upon the fjord, or scut with others in ice to Bergen by tho next steamer. Tho fisherman gets from 3.1. to Oil. per pound for his catch—4d. is un average price—ami evou tho hard earned capture of three or four Hl] 1110 u a week, procured at tho expeuso of long, weary days of watching, menus a good deal to those poor pcasaut farmers, with whom Tfeady money is a scarce commodity.— Tail Mull Gazette. Fresh Air in Winter. An interesting test, which proved thnt fresh uitvfu winter was beneficial to even young and delicate children, is reported in the Journal of llouse holdEcouomics. It was tried recently in a babies' hospital in Boston. All the sickly babies that were suf feriug from chronic indigestion nut lack of nntritiou, auil wiio would not improve in spite of good food, p r fcotly ventilated rooms, ami careful bathing, were wrapped as for tho street, put in their perambulators, and taken to the lop ward of tho hospital, whero all the windows were wide open. Thoy wero kept in this room from two to four hours daily, anil soon showed a marked improvement. ' Their cheeks became rosy, they gained in weight and appetite, and would often fall asleep and remain so during tho en tire time they wero in tho air. Very delicate children had bags of hot water placed at their feet. It is recorded in the account of this experiment thul not one ohild took cold as a result of it. 9 a SURGEON'S KNIFE gives you a feeling of horror and dread. There is no longer necessity for its use in many diseases formerly regarded as incurable without cutting. The Triumph of Conservative Surgery is well illustrated by the fact that RIIPTIIRF or Breach is now radi -1 call'y cured without the knife and without pain. Clumsy, chaf ing trusses can be thrown away ! They never cure but often induce inflamma tion, strangulation and death. TII Ovarian, Fibroid (Uterine) J ■ UiMV/S\o niK i tunny others, ore now removed without the perils of cutting operations. '' PILE TUMORS, '/.TTtTit, ,a n T<i : other diseases of the lower bowel, are [ permanently cared without pain or re- I sort to the knife. CTONF l ' ,c n ' a( klcr, no matter 101 vJliL* iiow lurge, is crushed, pul verized, washed out and perfectly re moved without cutting. STRICTURE SLoremov^wTlE cutting ill hundreds of cases. For pain iv.; phlet, references and all particulars, I' Ij send 10 cents (in stamps) to World's I)is -1 If J pensary Medical Association, 663 Main Street, liuGalo, N. Y. MOTHERS should know that Dr. childbirth of its tor lures, terrors and {&£*£s mother and child, by /yyg aiding nature u pre - confiuenretit greatly shortened. It promotes the secretion of an abundance of nourishment for the child. Mrs. DOHA A. GUTHRIK. of Oak fry, Ovnton Co., writes: "When I began taking Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription, I was not able to stand 011 my feet without suffering almost death. Now I do all my housework, washing, cooking, sewing and everything for my family of eight. I am stouter now than I have been in six years. Your ' Favorite Prescription ' is the best to take ahcforc confinement, or at least it proved so witti me. I never suffered so little with nuy of my childreu as I did witti my last." . A Church ol' Ice. The olllcura of the Neptune line steamship l'atapsco, which arrived in port recently from Rotterdam, via Sun derland, witnessed an early morning scene in mid-Atlantic which FlTst Offi cer l'opham says was beyond descrip tion and any human power of repro duction. The beautiful sight was caused by the sun shining upon a huge iceberg about 7 o'clock 011 the morning of August 2, and continued for fully fifteen minutes. The iceberg was 270 feet high and 550 feel long, and was on tiie edgo of a dense fog. it was shaped exactly like a church, having at ono end a towering spire that was pierced near the top of tho spire in im maculate white. About fifty feet from the top the sun's rays blended into a soft pink that was most beautiful to behold. Back i f the spire was a slanting roof that tho action of the fog and sun caused to appear in a deep blue. Near the spire was a perfectly simited Gothic arch, in which had been melted a fissure so like a window us to almost make one be lieve it was built there by a mechanic. The sun shone througli this in all its brilliancy and dazzled the eyes of those aboard ship. The fog formed a deep background near tho water and made a marine picture that could never be painted. Besides all this, the sun, shining 011 the many small projections of the berg, made the whole look as though millions of sparkling diamonds had been piled together. The officers say that many statues and fantastic figures were discernible about the mountains of ice. The seamen and officers were awed by the beauty and grandeur of the "scene.—Baltimore American < Established n Value. Maurice Thompson tells of a certain buyer of sheep who went Into tile mountains of 'Eastern Kentucky, where (lie following dramatic Incident took place between him and a grim mountaineer who had ouo ewo for sale: Buyer—That ewe Is worth about 75 cents. Mountaineer—llit air wo'th Jest a dollar 'll' or half. Buyer—You are joking; tho old thing is lean niul Mountaineer (drawing a largo pistol and cocking It)— Stronger, w'at did ye say 'at that air owe was wo'th? Buyer (briskly)— Nigh on to seven dollars is what I said. x mm |j Accept None of the f| p Pretended Substitutes for || tj iWT CB 1 ® a killg | I T\}O y ell Powder fe a Esjwjifc-CAUSF, inferior and cheaper made baking jj|| HI Kapji preparations are bought at wholesale at a price so much lower than ROYAL, some grocers are ||| <£nt urging consumers to use them in place of the ROYAL at |fi imj the same retail price. j§S S-tj KB If you desire to try any 01 the pretended substitutes K& J|J for ROYAI. BAKING POWDER bear in mind that they are SI all made from cheaper and inferior ingredients, and arc not so great in leavening strength nor of equal money |g value. Pay the price of the ROYAL BAKING POWDER IS for the ROYAL only. It is still more important, however, that ROYAI. BAKING T&BT POWDER is purer and more wholesome, and makes better, JJ£ finer, and more healthful food than any other baking * ,jg[ powder or preparation. cs SfcfiS ROYAL BAKING POWOER CO., 10S WALL ST., NEW-YORK. S&i® BRAVE COLONEL LARKE. With His Arm Badly Broken He Writes and Works Every I)uy. Col. Julian K. Larke, the Crimean war veteran, met with an accident re cently. in which he demonstrated that the soldier is born and not evo iuted by a system of drill. Ho is one of the bright writers on an afTlV noon paper aucLiias charge of the real estate department. On one of the cold est days of last week, when the breath seemed to freeze qnd icicles gathered on the mustache and beard, the Col onel, chipper as a chipmunk, although ho is over GO years old and is all scarred up with wounds received in battle, called at the Real Estate Exchange, Bays the New York Commercial Adver tiser. In descending the steps from the streets that lead to the exchange lie slipped on the frozen ice and fell heavily 011 his left shoulder. Like a nimble athlete of thirty years he picked himself up, and, after finish ing his business at the exchange, lie went to ids otllce, and wrote a column, coolly smoking a long Havana, known as the "Smuggler's Delight." His brother members of the quill noticed that while he was writing his left arm hung limp and motionless at his side. Finishing liis copy and calmly knock ing the ashes from his cigar he said: "Now 1 will look at my arm." He tried to lift up his left arm, but he discovered that it was not only broken, but consid erably fractured. Ills shirt and coat sleeves were soaked with blood. Sev eral wished to ruii for a doctor, but ho simply said: "Oh, it is nothing; I'll go out and have it set." lie lighted a fresh cigar and went out and found a surgeon, who tried to lecture the brave old vet eran, who lias fought through wars, because he neglected bis arm so loug. "Oo home early and stay there a week," said the surgeon, after he had splin tered the broken arm. The surgeon lit tle knew the vitality of the Colonel and his devotion to journalism. The next day lie turned lip in the office and wrote five columns of statistics, the data of .which he had been gathering for some time. His coolness and heroic nonchalance in suffering "great pain have won the admiration of all the editors and re porters 011 the papers and they propose to honor liini in some way, either by tendering liim a banquet or giving him a silver loving cup. Durable Driest*. Excavations in Babylon have brought to light a number of bricks, the stumps 011 which prove uieui to be at least 4,000 years old. They appear to be as good now as when they were first baked. _____ The i'opuliut. Why shouldn't thoro bo a third party? It Is truo they dialuib tho smooth running of tho regular organizations nnd sometimes overturn election?, but what is popular is founded on merit: As for instance, among all the remedies useu for sprains and bruis> s, Bt. Jacobs Oil is the most popular because It is known to bo the best ; houce it is the Pop ulist in medicine. The more because it cures so promptly anil surely. Thoro is no crippling trom sprain whero this old romqdy is used. It imparts now life and strength and lho pain vanishes. Truly it is a Popu list. Straw plaiting gives employment to 5,000 women in Europe. now'* This I We offer Ono Hundred Dollars Reward fOl nnyrosoof ('at arrh that cannot bo cured by iiall'u (-a*arrh Care. F. J. CHUNKY & Co., Props., Toledo, O. We, tho undersigned, have known F. J. Che ney for the last 15 years, and believe him per fectl*' honorable in all business transactions and limine, ally abl 1 to carry out any obliga tion made by their firm. WKST .V Tuua x, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, Ohio. WALOJNO, KINVAN & MARVIN, Wholesale Imigglsts, Toledo, Ohio. Ha'l's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, act ing directly upon tho blood and mucous sur faces of the system. Price, 75c. per bottle. Bold by all Druggists. Testimonials free. Not IIU Experiment. Tne use of Itipans Tubules for headaches, dyspepsia nnd other stomach disorders is not 1111 experiment but nu assured success. They will do ull that we say they will. California has 2 .030,000 fruit troos, ncco rd lug to recent estimates. i use riso'B Curo for Consumption both in my family ami practice.—Dr. <. W. PATTERSON, Ink stor, Mich., Novombor 5, 1801. March Ape* i 3 111 ay Arc the Best Mouths iu Which to Purify Your BSood! And the Best Blood Purifier is Hood's Sarsaparilla Which Purifies, Vitalizes and Enriches the Blood At this season everyone should take a good | spring inodicine. Your blood must bo puri- Bed cr you will bo neglecting your health. There is a cry from Nuturo for help, and un- : leasthoro is prompt and satisfactory resybnso . you will bo liablo to sorious illness. This demand can only bo met by tho puri- ' fying, enriching and Blocti-Vitalizing elements to bo found in Ilood's Sarsaparllla. " My mother-in-law, Mrs. Elizabeth Wolfe, at the ago of 72 years, was attacked with a violent form of salt rheum; it spread all over , her body, and her hands and limbs were 1 dreadful to look at. At the same timo, my little daughter Clara, who was just one year , old, was attacked by a simllur disease, like scrofula. It appeared in HOOD'S ON An Old Deed. A few (lays ago a singular deed was presented at the register's oil ice in Newark, N. J. It was made in 17bd and had never been recorded. Dr. Kilmer's Kwami'-Koot cures all Kidney and bladder troubles. Pamphlet and c onsultation free. Laboratory Dinglinunptou, N. Y. Bismark never uses any pens savo thoso inudo of goose quills. Scotland's Itomun Catholic churches have 352,000 members. Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup for c hildren teething, softens the gums, reduces infiama tion, allays pain, cures wind colie. e. a bottle A London omnibus carries on an averag 2,500 passengers each week. Karl's Clover Root, the great blood purifier, gives freshness and clearness to tin- complex ion and cures constipation. 2">cts. 50cts. §1 Lawyers wero known in Babylon 230J B.C. I^NTJOY® Both the method and results when Syrup of Figs is taken; it is pleasant and refreshing to the ta?tc, and act 3 gently yet promptly on the Kidneys, Liver and Bowels, cleanses the sys tem effectually, dispels colds, head aches and fevors and cures habitual constipation. Syrup of Figs is the only remedy of its kiud ever pro duced, pleasing to the taste and ac ceptable to the stomach, prompt in its action and truly beneficial in it 3 effects, prepared only from the most J healthy and agrccablo substances, its many excellent qualities commend it to all and have mado it the most popular remedy known. Syrup of Figs is for sale in 50 cent bottles by all leading drug gists. Any reliable druggist who may not have it on hand will pro cure it promptly for any one who wishes to try it. l>o not accept any substitute. CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO. SAN FRANCISCO, CAL, LOUISVILLE, l<r. NEW YORK, N V. FN U 9 'OS W* Successfully Prosecutes Claims. ■ I.titu Principal Examine: U.S. Penalon Bureau. ■ Uyrslulast war, 15u<Uudicutluyclaims, aMy aiuce. PATENTS !;l, o-nu"!'ii!y'.';i invctiton. Send for inventors Cubic, or how to t n latent PATRICK O'FAIUIKL. WASHINGTON. I>. C WAIT CP NISWBLKTTKIt of vtiluo Html WilLLl Dl. FKKK to nuui. iH of this pancr ( liuh A. Baldwin At Co., 40 Wall Street, N. V WANTED BUYERS VQHIv ■ LAJ up, Inolu.ling buildings. Call on or address W. R. Bruuddua. Ago, Wo t Polut.Vu. || | A Pleasant Reflection . -? | —the fact that easy washing n / / ) '" ias ' ,et!n made safe. Until g, J ( </%((// Pearline came, it was danger \ i oi'.s. Pearline takes away lac; \ danger it takes away the \ \, work. There is no scout n/ A ing and scrubbing, to /I \ \ wear things out; there fw 1 is no trouble in keeping things clean ' ' soa[>, you need hard work ; for easy work, you need Pearline. Peddlers and some unscrupulous crccers will tell you, "this is as good n's " or "the same a. I'earlinc." 1 T'S JLJKs YV CLI I V/ FALSE—Pearline is never peddled, if w:r .jrocsr S-T.-:-; you an imitation, be honest— send it back. JAM:,S PVl.li, X. V. v ou Will Realize that "They Live Well Who Live Gleaniy," if You Use SAPO'LIO Largs Sores I under each side of her neck; had the attend ance of tho family physician and other doe tors for a long time, but seemed to grow j worso. I read of many people cured of serof ! ula by Hood's Barsaparilla. As soon as wo ignvo ilood's Sarsaparllla to Clara, she began to got bettor, and before tho first bottle was gone, tho sores entirely healed up and there has never been any sign of tho disease since. ! Who is a Healthy Robust Child. Ilor grandmother took Hood's Sarsaparilla at the same time, ami tho salt rheum decreas ed iu its violence and a perfect euro was soon effected. It took about three months for her cure, and she ascribes her good health and strength at her advanced ago to Hood's Sar saparilla. It has certainly boon a Godsond to my family." Mas. Soruu WOLTIS, Zalcskl, Ohio IIY HG O OJ 9 S I B*= S Wc 'unt lo 1 RFE I \bSL Vr r .m a U CbM* a this locality . | p SSij on our second unnual TKN DAY '; !$ SOnjroer Vacatioo Trip to Atlaotic(ity. Ed livery expense paid by us. No coupons. }>-j Write at once f.>r particulars to jg THE JOURNAL PUBLISHING CO. {£ 62 Second Ave , Pittsburgh, Pa. 3 ' o v Is It liot surprising That a remedy That has Leon The Physician's Trump Card For a century--Hi* h<n of n mil-1 Should now. ——— For the first time, Be so prepared as To uiHko it, possihlo To of erft tu the puhlfj In a form Available for immediate tire Atid capable of being preserved Without loss of virtues For a decade ? X)r until the occasion arises ? Elicit a surprise exist*!u Ripp.ns Tabules. Rlpans Chemical Co., 10 Spruce St., New York. Price, fO cents a box, of drueclsts or by mall. W.L.DOUGLAS 13 SRT©E.SKF*BI, C-OnDOVAN", jgjZ'. FRENCH AENAMELLED CALF. tgt.: .£t4f®K>FiaECttfWCiuß $3.1? POLICE,3 soles. I BQYS'SCKOOLSHQES, '.LADIES" FLOCIITOMMASa, Ovsr Oca Mlllioo Fecpla wear tlto ; W. L. D"JGL£S $3 &$4 SHOES ' All our shoes ere eqaaiiy eaticfsctory They pive tho beet vrtltso the money. 'i h. jy equal custom shoes In style end fit, Ih:fr qualities are unsurpassed. The prices ore ur "form,—stamped on sols, i From $i to .*"• sovei over makes. If your dealer cannot supply you we caa. * I Rapbs'!, Angr|i>. Kulx im, T:.> ~) The " LIN F.N F." arc tho Best and Most Economl ) eal Collars ami CulTa worn; they are made of fins cloth, both h dm tin Shed alike, and be ijt reverse f blc, ono collar is equal to two ol any other uhul. The / ft well, V'-ir w l anf link well. A box of T n Collars or Fivo Pairs ol' Culls for Twenty-Fivu A Sample Collar and Pairof Cuffs by mail for Bin \ Cents. N UIIU style Hud s.ze. Address REVERSIBLE COLLAR COMPANY, 17 Franklin St. Now York. 27 Kilby St., Boston. J^FSF^LMBREOUREI! fcW P„CJ Q tW POSITI V i I,Y j nn Adju '..iMcl'a i I. It'll r \ p f-mnllor t<> nilt clmi'trlrir ! rATKNTK.n. lil'l " i'm.'s 111 M . nr.'iV i Rcalrilby u.V. llouseMfg.Co.TMßroadwny.N.V.t utv II GFEI : . V.'HtKE All USE (Alts. t^T >■4 Biwt t'.ii. t; Syrup, 'i'a.-ltji, >ml. L:,, 1
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers