N a Winner' | I M Our 'Ninety-Seven ^ M Complete Line of | ' 3f*C ' -| M are t'-e " ~j w § Supreme I Result | I 0 """ (l "V (S "' ft -ft I Years Qf 8 Experience ' - --- ;; k MONARCH CYCLE MFG. CO. W M CHICAGO HEW YOKE I.OHDOH W Wfil Retail Salesrooms: T^L w ® N fj 'gjL LITTLE LCST BIRD. Story f n Sioux Papoonc Found on Wounded Knee Battlefield. Tin? adopted daugihter of Mrs. Clara Hew lok Colby, the eminent suffragist, who recently addressed the New Citi zens' el lib of Pittsburgh, is a full-blood ed Sioux Indian. The story of the little maiden formed the theme of a supple mentary chat by Mrs. Colby, as inter esting to those who heard the tale as 1 he eloquent address of t he speaker had been on the selected topic, "Kqunlity lie fore the Law." The babe was res rued from its dead mother's arms four days after the noted battle at Wounded Knee creek, in South Dakota, six yea is ago. Col. Colby was in the charge made by the United States troops against the 1 ndians at that time. The uprising had its inception from Ihe ghost dance. Orders had been is sued for the disbanding of Dig Loot's bond. The order aroused hostility among the Sioux, and without hesita tion the "medicine" man threw a hand ful of earth into the air. This was a signal for the Indians to fire. The United States troops, Custer's old reg iment, under command of Col. Foray the, charged bach, and after the battle was over "nothing that wore n blanket was alive." The slaughter of the Indians was terrific. The next day a terrible blizzard set in, and for four days the dead were left alone in the ravine where the battle had waged. On the fourth (lay the babe was dis covered. A bullet had hilled the squaw, but as she fell rihe had gathered her blanket closely about the child. This, with the heavy covering of snow, had kept the baby warm. It was almost perished from hunger, but soon rnll'cd when placed in the care of some Indian women. As t lie women crooned over it nr.d slowly nursed it back to life, they con stantly wailed: "Zintka Laununi." meaning "poor lost bird." Col. Colby and wife, who have no family, were touctlied by the incident, and as the par ents of the babe, both full-blooded ( -4 s In W I ,i LITTLE LOST BIRD. Sioux, bad both perished in the battle negotiat ions were made for t he purchase cf the little one. This was accom plished, and for six years little Zintka lias been eared for with devotion bytiei foster parents. The blanket and little bonnet worn by tflie baby are treasured possessions ol 'Mrs. Colby. The little bonnet had been wrought with great skill by tlie squaw mother. It is of soft leather, exquisite ly worked with colored bends in geo metrical patterns, and with a npecinl design on either side of aVnited State* Hag. Mrs. Colby states that she nevei looks at the two little flags, wrought by the poor Indian mother, without a feeling of intense sadness that a United States bullet should have ended one loyal life. The little flags, if nothing else, Mrs. Colby says, would make little Zintka dear to her foster parents. The training of the little one, Mrs Colby says, will be watched with inter est. Full-blooded, beyond a doubt, and of- a tribe that has proved itself almost unconquerable, tihe development of the child-with civilized surroundings will in the future have weight. Zintka attends kindergarten now. and the differences bet m en In r and 'othc little ones have not yet been lir.rl.ei. enough for comment. In dispositioi at home and in the kindergarten she i extremely affectionate, willful. Un amenable to reason. She is a mode: Sunday-school baby, and asks question, i on her spiritual being u-fter the sinrl itude of other bright children. She i : fond of music, and in her baby fashion | makes harmony 011 the piano. One pe culiarity, however, is iier ability to read . the thoughts of those about her. She ! has 011 several occasions interpreted ! looks from Grangers and impel UOllß'\ J answered their unspoken inquiry in her | own baby fashion. She is as obedient. , Mrs. Colby says, as any little lassie in i a favored home. Her skin is brunette ! and her hair, Jong and silky, readily | yields to the civilizing cm I papers. | Mrs. Colby is one of the prominent of fieiols of tiie National Woman's Suf frage association and editor of the Woman's Tribune, the organ of tin body. Her home is in Beatrice, Neb though her duties call her frequently to Washington, I). C. MISS BAUDET'S EYES. From Hazel the French Actre.is Hail 1 hem Changed to tilack. Miss Louis Handel's eyes on her last visit to this country were a light hazel. Now they are a dark, rich brown, which at times deepens intoa jetty black. The change in the tint of Mjss Baudet's eyes was brought about by Prof. Henri FLacide Dumont, the famous Parisian oculist, demonstrator-in-chief at the Paris eye hospital, chief operator at the Ophthalmic institute, and member of many scientific societies. Miss Bau det's hair Lsa rich,reddish brown. The actress suggested one night to Prof. Dumont that lie ought to remedy na ture's unkindliuess and make her eyes the same color as her hair. So lie con sented. The operation was simple. 'Miss Baudot, was prepared for it by a. three days' bathing of her eves with liniments which softened the ex terior of tlie "ball." Then followed some days' confinement in a darkened room. Next slie subjected her eyes to vapor arising from chemicals, the com ponents of which arc only known to the professor. She says she "smoked" her eyes for an hour or more daily for ore week. They soon began to change color. Little patches of brown ap peared on the -clear hazel. These patches spread until the color appeared mottled. Dumont suspended opera tions for a week, and then resumed them. The "smoking" was continued for three days longer, at the. end of which time Miss Baudet's eyes were of the rich line they are now. She de clares that her eyesight is better than ever. Dr. E. S. Peek, of No. 53 West Fiftieth street, New York, has turned the eyes of animals different colors. Jle caused a rabbit to have one rod and one green eye. lie said: "The eyeball is rotated inward by means of forceps, a hypoder mic syringe is passed through the back part of the white of the eye containing n weak solution of permanganate of potash, or of yellow or red prussiate of potash, or of nitrate of silver, or of so-1 üble Prussian blue. In a few hours these fluids will have entirely traversed the vitreous humor of the eye and will have passed through the canal outside of the lens and into the anterior cham ber in front, and will finally be forced under the colorless external eoat of the ! eyeball. The length of time for such j transmission varies in different animals and with different fluids. The usual time spent in these transmissions is from three to six hours in the human eye."—Chicago Inter Ocean. Sanco tor Roast i*At>ic. Put half pint milk on the fire to boil, put in it a small onion, in which you have stuck one clove. While it is bod ing rub some stale white bread on a wire sieve or grater. You will want two ! tablespoon!uls of crumbs. Whun the ! milk boils, put in the crumbs and ljulf nn ounce of Sutler. Let ients simmer-gently for about ten min utes. Take out the onion and clove ami add half a teaspoon fill 6Tsa.lt and a few grains of pepper. Mix well and serve hot. WHEN TIIE WORLD WAKES. 66 ' fer' IIAT will come to pass when the worlil shall take seriously the les- Not .satisfied with flowers and the sound of music. TwjSßrjL tions that Christ ' s r ' se| W w hat will front its own sleep and rises itself? it throws off its graveclotlies, it roils away the stone from the mouth of its tomb. It rises from death. It begins really to live in the eternal life. "What then? "A thousand million people, sons of Cod and llis daughters, will begin on that Master morning, whenever it shall come, to engage tbemeslvcs in (lod's af fairs first and their own afterward, and then only JUS their affairs relate to His; as in the rush of a gTeat battle a brave soldier for a few moments for gets his own danger, even his own life, in tlie determination that the colors shall go forward and a certain ridge be won. On that Master morning the souls of nil men and women, ail youths and maidens, all boys and girls, shall start up and control their bodies and their minds. To-day. on the contrary, the body of a man and his mental ma chinery generally control his soul and keep it under. When of a sudden he acts from faith, or hope, or love, the three attributes of his soul, he sets it down himself as something exceptional, lie is a little surprised that it all turns out so well. I-ife controls the tools, and t he treadle and the flywheel 110 longer keep the life down to their place of dead and mechanical movement. "This life is eternal and abundant. .•Tills is the secret of life with which Master has to do, the secret of faitli and hope and love."—Edward Everett Hale. A DAY TO REJOICE IN. The observance of Faster Sunday throughout Christendom is not only a memorial of the central fact in the Christian religion, but gives occasion lor a variety of beautiful customs. With the earth bursting forth in its glories of budding plant life, and the heavens glowing with a warmer sun, and all nature smiling through tlie fresh fragrance and subtle warmth, it is a fitting season for the chief festival of the Christian year. "The Bright Day in the Cast" is the bright day in the west, and wherever the sun shines tlie ancient rites of the Saxon goddess, Fast re, born in paganism, have been as similated and given a new meaning in the Christian civilization of this later day. The gaudy decorations of the heathen races, which were the tangible expres sion of their festival delights, have an ample suggestion in the personal dis play that is now one of the attributes of the Paschal feast. No pagan god dess could address herself more direct ly to the preparation of her Fastre •uiinent than the woman of to-day to Ihe selection of her Buster costume. But. 110 idle variety mars the delights of the present custom. By a most de sirable consensus this day is reserved for the lirst appearance in the gar ments of spring, and as if swayed by a magic Christian wand tlie dark and heavy attire of winter falls away and there stand revealed the bewildering beauties of a new life. From the rising of the sun, the first symbolic event of the day, there is a series of events that complement each other in testifying to the more serious imjsort. No memory is more lively in after years than that furnished by the various egg customs of Faster handed down from ages gone by, and no cus tom is more directly suggestive of the new life it typifies. But through them all, says the Chicago Tribune, runs the central idea of joy and reverent happi ness, a day to rejoice in, a day for light hearts, a day for the renewal of all the forces that contribute to the better life of the world, in fact, Faster day. THE EASTER SERMON. W W ( if* Be—How did you enjoy the service to-day ? She—Oh, it war, simply charming. I never saw so many lovely bonnets in my life.—Detroit Free Press. Swedish Easter Customs. r l lie peasantry of Sweden believe that Faster eve is an occasion upon which supernatural influences prevail to a very great extent, that all devils and witches are then abroad, and that the fairies hold high carnival. All this changes with the dawn of Faster morn ing. for tin-11 110 evil spirit dares stir abroad. All things evil know that Christ, who has triumphed over death and tin' grave, has risen in glory to curtail their power and ultimately de stroy them. It is also a Swedish super stition that all horses and mules fall on their knees on Faster morning. Went Eg-jQtuliiNt Him. Tic made a Lot that he could eat A score of Faster epg-s, But t lie epssortioii proved a foat That knocked liini off his pegs. Egpsasperatcd, he eggsclalmod. With an >■: gspresplye smirk, "Tliis' Easter lay, which me has lamed. Is most eggs-hol*ttnu work'" —Detroit Free Press. [ DOUA'o EASTEK SEEVICE. \JIII- church wna a I//S&fj [~d blaze of beauty. Th ° an (1 s of | \] ' )e autiful flowers 1 fillet! the chancel white loveJi cH! ness aJlc i scented Irsi A A® p^ 3 t,,t5 a ' rand tho (| (JI Jjp body of the church 1 ' seemed a radiant garden, for everybody was out to cele brate the Easter in an array of rich costumes and beautiful head-dresses. Among the latest comers was a styl ishly dressed lady with her little girl, who marched up the aislet beside her in that contented consciousness of be ing well clad, which seems the birth ! right of the gentle sex. They took their places in a vacant pew, which had evidently been reserved for them, and the little girl was no sooner seated than she began to tug at her mother's sleeve. "Mamma," she said, in a very audible voice, "v. here's the eggs?" "Ie still, dear," said her mother. | "Hut I don't see the eggs," com j plained the little girl. "Is they up there by the flowers?" "Now, Dora, be quiet or mamma will have to take you home." "Hut I want to see the eggs, mamma." By this time half the congregation r -iffi ' 7- v - mii\it illj fv\ i a-X \m • \\(\\ TS'feP? W fi|, Ull j i GIIE WAS CONSCIOUS OF BEING WELT GOWNED. was interested in the child and the mother's face showed her vexation. "Dora," she said, rather crossly, "you must be quiet. There are no eggs here. -Mamma will let you have some pretty eggs when she goes home." "Blue eggs?" asked the child. "Yes, dear." "An' red eggs?" "Yes." | ; I "Mamma!" J There was no response, and the little I girl pulled at the mother's sleeve. I "Mamma!" "Well, Dora, what do you want?" "Let's go home, mamma." "Dora, do be quiet." "Mamma! Let's go home an' get the ] red an' blue eggs." "No, not now, Dora. Be quiet, like a | good little girl." "But 1 want to go home an' get the c^ s * The lady made no response. | "Mamma!" said the child. | No reply. "Mamma!" she said again. "Sec that | man up there." ! "Yes, dear, that is the minister." | "Well, look at his head. lie ain't got ! any hair on it." | "He still, dear." ; "It looks just like an egg, don't it, ! mamma?" "Dora," said the mother, very crossly, "if you do not be still I shall punish you when we get home." "But, mamma," said the child, "his head ain't blue like my eggs is goiu' to j be, is it?" ■ Without a word the mother lifted the little girl down from the pew, and tak ing her by the hand, led her from the church. Her face was rather red, but not entirely vexed, for she knew every one was looking al her, and she was conscious of having the most expensive hat in the congregation. And the last thing 1 heard the little girl say was: "1 guess they hain't got any chickens in this church, has they, mamma ?" EI-LIS PARK EH BUTLER, A Gentle Jieniiudcr. lie had been reading an Eustcr bon net pleasantry aloud to her, but she did not join in his "ha-ha." lie read it over, but she was silent and unnppreciutive as before. Then bo grew a little indignant and j exclaimed: "Great Scott! Maria; haven't you 1 any sense of humor nt. all?" "Keally," she replied, "you can't ex I pect anybody to laugh at what he doesn't understand. It has been so long i since I've seen an Easter bonnet that I honestly don't feel like assuming that I know what one is." Washington j Star. A Festival f Festival**. To the church, Easter is the festival of festivals. Christ's work for man was then completed. .This the church celebrates, It is, indeed, a day of tri umph, for death is conquered, man is redeemed, his salvation secured and ! eternal life is his. Christ's resurrection assures man's resurrection, hence there ' is good reason for songs of jubilee, and the heart of every Christian should send forth joyful notes of praise to the risen Lord. S!xc> Isn't Everything. "Thirty-five dollars for that blamed I'tlle. bat! Why. confound it, a dollar bill would cover it." "Yes, Ilcnry. love, and so would ii cdvcif a thousand dollar bill."—N. Y. Journal. Not .loyotiM to Illni. 1> i list.M iner -I never could abide 1 Ihfe East"rseason. Hoiibrotte Why, I think it's lovely— i m s \v bonnets, new gowns— Barnstormer (sndlv) • Yes, but so ■ many old egg-. Brooklyn Life. THE LESSON OF EASTER. \ n y DW passing strange ma s h° u M be tiia'. I / *' ie ' ,O P° °I a<l vaneed civilization /p' / / should cluster about a tomb and that the faith ol rr Christianity f/ should rest upon \|\ the voice of one who came back from the land of ever lasting shades. Mighty was the nd j vanee from the tristful wail of the Hebrew poet, when he sang t he despair ing threnody: "Man is like the beast which goeth downward," and the sub j I* l me, triumphant prose-hymn of Paul: "Now is Christ risen from the dead and become tlie first fruits of them that The church in all its ages of existence has logically maintained that Easter is the brightest and best of all the lioh days of the year, properly interpreting those words of the great apostle to the Gentiles: "For it Christ be not risen from the dead, then our preaching is vain and our hope is vain." Moses met death on Nolio's cloud-girt peak, while angels only made his burial sure; Elijah was borne heavenward in a char iot of flame. Jacob, his head on it stony pillow, saw the pure spirits of Heaver as-ending and descending, from tilt j celestial to the terrestrial spheire; Enoch walked with God and was not. Adam, Noah, Isaiah and other worthies heard the voice of God and felt the benison of llis blessing in their souls, liiit. no responsive call had ever come up out. of the illimitable depths to the anxious inquiry: "If a man die shall be | Ine again?" The Hebrew theology and literature were saturated with mate j l'ialism and one of the most influential of the Jewish sects denied the doctrine of the resurrection. Tt is true that Job saw through the gloom the glints of 1 the promise when lie said: "I know that my Redeemer liveth and that. lie shall stand at the latter day upon the ' rarth: and though after this life worms j ; destroy this body, yet in my flesh shall | I see God." Yet the U/.zite cursed the hour in which He was born and the j womb which gave Ilim birth. Christ bad overridden death in the calling back to life the daughter of Jniru, the son of the widow of Nain. and the brother of Mary and Martha. But those miracles were regarded more as evidences of His personal power than as precedent, for the calling back of others to life. The grave was the pit of everlasting silence. Man went (low n to it. mourned by bis fellows, who thought the farewell eternal. Bethlehem is forever sacred as the j pot of His divine nativity; Golgotha is precious as the scene of the sublime and awful tragedy, but- the tomb of the Arimatliean is the climax of Christian hope, the diapason of His faith. What boots the life that is, with its load of cures, its floods of tears, its sighs and groans, its sins and disappointments, if the dead rise not and they that sleep in Him shall not be raised? Better the stroke of the death-angel in childhood's first hours of unconscious suffering, sooner the fatal breath of the pesti- I*. nee or the sure blow of the electric bolt in the flush of young manhood, than that one should toil on and suffer on to senile age, only that he may fall finally into a pit that may not be readied by the ringing blasts of Ga briel's horn. 13lees God for that dear old word, Im mortality! Praises for the witness of . I lie tomi) and the final triumph of the Xnzarcne. Hail the resurrection morn with it.4 glorious assurances that they who sleep in Christ shall finally rise with Him. WILLIAM ROSSER COBBE. TIIE SANCTITY OF THE MOMENT. I //. "A rU 1 1 ; i* '/a .] If /V •• , v s\ \ W-. [Copyright, lEC7, by MIU-holl & Miller.. "Bill, 1 can't account for the strange religious feeli n' w hat take persession ol me whenever Easter arrives!" "It's de me wid me, Tom; the same wid i :e. All wot is good in my nntui ' seems to come lode surface when Haste! gets here." (After a pntise—with u sigh); ".Vli, Tom, if we could only hook a chicken an' some eggs how we could celebrate de occasion!"— Life. An F.nmfor Ills*. On Easter morn, when Christians meet In Russia far away. They r.reet each other with a kiss, In honor of the day. And when I see sweet Annabel, And think of what might be— I would not mind Siberia If she were there with me! —Truth. The Halt Took. In tlie beautiful eyes the love light shone Of the young and attractive wife, And she said to her husband: "I love you. ! John: You are dearer to me than life." He said: "You're tho same sly darlii.pr still 1 And r know what you're driving at," ! So he gave her a twenty-dollar bill To purchase an Easter hat. —Boston Courier IJitril to Decide. ('dbwigger—You seem rather reflect ive, my dear. Mrs. Colmigger 1 was thinking I where I would sit in church on Easter \ If I take a front seat everybody wil ; see. my n-nv lipnnet, \\liile if I sit lii' tfu" I i ar I will'bc able tjic others j —Truth. ' BLOOD POISONING. GIVEN UP TO Remarkable Recovery of Mrs. Thomas Stockton, of LAFAYETTE, PA. Mrs. Thomas Stockton, of I.afavette. ML* Kuan Co., Pa., relates tho following remarkable recovery: •When Hrst taken ill. I)r. Ward, of Mt. Alton, said that 1 had of the bowel*: I kept grow ing worse and he advised tne to go to the lhadford Hospital, where lie operated upon me. I had been out of the hospi tal but a short while, when blood poisou iugsetin. A physician from Mt. .lewett attended me for three weeks and then said he could do no more for me and gave me up to die. My husband then took me to Dr. Freeman, at Smethport who wanted to operate upon me. hut as I had already gone through one awful experience of that kind. 1 refused to again. After arriving back home, I made up my mind to trv DM KENNEDY'S is 1 had heard oT it doing oth< i s so much good, so my husband went to Thompson & Wood's Drug Store. In Bradford, and purchased a bottle and it certainly win a Uod-send to me. From the very lir>i it seemed to help me, the pain I had en tered constaptly began to leave me. mv appetite improved, and before long *1 was around the house doing considerable work, in short, had it not been for Dr. David Kennedy's Favorite Keinedy I believe I should have been in my grave today. I hope every one suffering' from lisease. especially women, will try tin valuable medicine. I know of many here who are using Favorite Remedy since it helped me so much, and in every case it has proved its great value." I "Wheels, [f j Quality £22* TOO! | | '■ ' '' K STYLES: K | Ladies', Gentlemen's & Tandem. fe Tho Lightest Running Wheels on Earth, r J IE ELDREDGE j 3 THE BELVIDERE. | VVo always Made Good Sowing Machines! P \ Why Shouldn't wc MakoGood Wheels! R g National Sewing Machine Co., J 339 Broadway, Factory: fe New York. Celviderc, Ills. R : Peirce 1 : * : School I i | 3 Did Year. ! 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All the ncw< •.t < edito rials-—a children's depart mini, w ltich n ?ie vuting and educational. Pri • old-red monthly t-> the little ones, (inly "i'Mtd prr ,\onr. Tbe( irnndest Preiniuin t:\er i sued by any paper given to subscribers for Js: 7. s-nd for sample copies •uul premium circular. Tlie Catiiolic St 6 :''ard and Times Pub'g Co 503-505 Chestnut st. Pliila. | Caveats, and Trade-Marks obtained, and all Pat-1 # cnt business conducted for MODERATE FEES. * JCUN OFFICE IS OPPOSITE U S. PATENT OFFICE J and we can secure patent in less lime than those J t> remote from Washington. 4 t Send model, drawing or photo., with descrlp- ' J tion. We advise, if patentable or not, free of J | 4 charge. Our fee not due till patent is secured. 4 t A PAMPHLET, "How to Obtain Patents,"' with 1* 1 Jcost of same in the U.S. and foreign countries i 4 sent free. Address, 4 JC.A.SNGW&COJ | OPP. PATENT OFFICE, WASHINGTON, DC. FOII 1897 Q Leading Newspapers A 0 for the Price cf I Tile "Philadelphia Press" hy spi 1 ial arrangements, at gn at cost, is entitled to all the news received hy the New York "Times," j "World, "Journal, Chicago ; "Tribune," "St. Louis Globe Democrat," "Cincinnati Commer cial Tribune ' and the "Boston Journal." All this news is tele graphed to *• 1 he Press * over spe cial v. lies evr ry night and present ed to its readers fresh and attrac tive every morning. This is all in addition to the service of "The Press'" own staff, great corps of correspondents and the Associat ed Press. f| Great Papers in j Greatest Feat Ever Effected in Journalism MW\b Press Pennsylvania's Greatest Family Paper Devotes more attention to the household and family than any other paper. Has a page every day especially for women, edited by the brightest woman in journalism. Gives daily it column of well tested COOHINI; RK< 11-KS which are of the greatest value to every house keeper. 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