Foods. The foods of the various classes of a nation were often regulated by law In the past*, two lto.man laws, passed about 100 B. C., regulated the costs of feasts at private houses, stating how much was to be eaten, and forbidding the fattening of fowls. Julius Caesai was very strict with regard to foods, aud used to send his soldiers to confis cate forbidden luxuries offered for sale In the market-places, and to private houses to see that the legal dietary was properly observed. These diet laws were probably necessary in ancient Home remembering the gluttony of the Romans. Coming down to the Middle Ages, laws of Charles VI. of France mid of Edward 111. of England decreed the diet of the French and English ac cording to their rank, both as to quality and quantity. The Parliament of Scot land in 1433 passed a similar law. In addition to those the laws regarding dress were particularly severe, a nil it Is curious to notice that some of tho EngLisli sumptuary laws remained in force, nominally, until about thirty-live yea v ago. _ New Mineral S Distance. Manjak is a new mineral substance found in the Island of Barbadoes, which is used as an iutensilier of the il luminating power of coal gns. Its Im portance to the electrician, however, Mos in the fact tliat it possesses many of the properties of an ideal insulator for electric wires. It is of n black color, and Ims a high luster a fid a bright, con ehoidal fracture, resembliug in appear anco newly broken pitch. It is found very near and sometimes upon the sur face of the ground in seams varying from one foot to two feet in thickness, running usually at an angle of about forty-five degrees, and in close prox imity to rocks. It is supposed to have beeu formed by the drying up and con solidation of petroleum oil, which is found in abundance in the same locali ties and is often seem oozing out of the ground or floating down tho streams. In composition it is not unlike Trinidad pitch, tho Utah "giloonite" and tho Mexican "albertlt." The analysis of the best quality manjak is stated to le moisture, 2.GG; volatile organic matter, r0.85; non-volatilo organic matter, 20.97; mineral matter. 0.18. Safety Elevators. An improved system ILUS been adopt ed In r aspect to the now elevate is for the Library of Congress. They ure built wLth a special view to safety, and lu addition to a safety catch are pro vided wl/tli what is termed the air cush ion -the latter not a real cushion, inas much as it is not soft, nor is it made aiwl put in position, being farmed only when the elevator is dropped to the bottom of the shaft, and thus all wear and tear on tlie cushion is avoided. The principle Is very simple: At the bot tom of the shaft is a well about thirteen feet in depth, the sides of which are so arranged as to come at the top with in the sixteenth of an inch of the side of the elevator, this space gradually growing larger until there is a distance of an inch and a half between the ele vator and the shaft When the elevator Ls dropped from the roof it pushes be fore it a quantity of air, and, dropping Into the well, the air Is compressed, ami, eaoapiug very slowly, allows tho ele vator to settle easily. Artificial Rubies. Although minute diamonds can be made with the aid of the electric fur nace, noue large enough to be employed In Jewelry have yet been produced. But rubies of large csize, and aa tine in color and appearance as the best natural gems, have been made. A certain method of detecting artificial rubles Is by examination with a microscope. The natural gem is always filled with min ute cracks, invisible to the naked eye, but perfectly discernible with a high magnifying power. The artificial ruby has no cracks, but, 011 tho other hand, Is tilled with minute bubbles, or gus holes. Lions Affected by Weather. A peculiarity noticed by the keepers out at tho Zoo is that bad weather af fects lions Just as it does human be ings. A rainy day will make them limp and listless, and a glimpse ol' sunshine makes them happy as crickets. Bad weather, however, docs not prevent them remembering when meal time is at hand, and they ure as restless as young kittens till their food is forth coming. Fits permanently cnrcfi. No fits or nervous ness uft.er first day's use of l)r. Klino's (Jroat Nerve Restorer. trial bottle and treatise free Da. K. ii. Klink, Ltd., Uil Arch St.,l'iiila.,Pa. Piso's Cure is the medicine to hre.ak up children's Coughs and Colds. Mrs. M. u. BLUNT, Sprague, Wash., March i\ iSUI. Shake Into Your Shoes Allen's Foot-Ease, a powder for tho feet. It cures painful, swldlen. smarting feet, and in stantly takes the sting out of corns and bun ions. It's the greatest comfoit discovory of tho age. Alien's Foot-Ease makes tight-fit ting or new shoes feel easy. It is a certain cure for sweating, callous and hot, tired, ach ing feet. Try it to-day. Sold by all druggists and shoe stores. By mail for I&c. in stamps. Trial package FREE. Address, Alien S. Olm sted, Lu Hoy, N. Y. Conductor E. D. Loomis, Detroit, Mich., says: "The effect of Hall's Catarrh Cure is wonderful." Write him about it. Sold by Druggists, 76c. SCROFULA CURED Hood's Sarsaiparilla Just Was Needed. "I have taken Hood"* Sarsaparilla fox •erofula troubles and it has given ine relief. T find It drivos away that tired feeling and it is Just what is needed when tho Bysrtam is run down. I gladiv rocommend Hood'a." CAATTFCEFI A. BAEKII, Little Ullea, New York. HOOdVparma • f tlieliest—ln faot the OncTvueßlooflPurifter. Hood's Fills cure all liver ills, fffi cents. ON A QUAKING RAILWAY. AT FULL SPEED WITH THE TRACK CURLING UNDER THE TRAIN. Ai Rnglneer'g Experience on the Night of the Charleston Earthquake—Running ut. Fifty Miles an-Hour to Sidetrack His Train When the Shocks Regan. There are few locomotive engineers alive to-day who have had a moie thrilling adventure in a cub than the man who pulled a traiuload of passen gers out of Charleston, S. C., on the night of the memorable earthquake, nearly eleven years ago. The throttle was wide open and the train was dash ing down a long, steep grade at the rate of lifty miles an hour. The en gineer had to reach a small station a short distance ahead and sidetrack to allow an excursion train for Charles ton to pass. The local was behind time and the engineer knew that 500 lives depended on his getting safely into the siding before the headlight of tho other train hove in sight. Sud denly the earth shook, but the rum bling noise accompanying the shock was drowned in the roar of the speed ing train. Without the least notice tho track under the train began to quiver and move, while the locomo tive trembled like a deer at bay. The engineer thought that the eugiue had jumped the track and was running along over the erossties. The train rolled on for half a mile before being ditched. Engineer Charles H. Burn was the only person injured, and he would have escaped unhurt had he jumped. He remained at his post, however, as if glued to the seat. His mind was so intent upon reaching tho side track that he could giye little thought to tho earthquake. Mr. Burn recently gave a New York Sun corres pondent his story. "It was 9:25 011 the night of August 31, 188G," he said, "when I mounted the train in the railroad yards here and got orders to pull out to Summer ville, thirty miles distant. Tho weather waa hot, with not a breath of air stirring. My train started on time, hut soon afterward we -were delayed a few minutes. My orders read to side track at Ten Mile for a down passen ger excursion train to pass. When I got to a point a mile and a half from the station I found that I hud only two minutes to make the run and have the switch clear for the other train. The chances were, too, that it would be 011 time, and I realized that I had a race against death. The track ahead of me, however, was clear. Every nerve in me was strained, for I knew what would be the consequences if I ran in half a minute late. I was in this condition and Hying over the final stretch, with the throttle wide open, when the first tremor of the earth was felt. My first impression was that the engine had jumped the rail and was shooting over the cross ties. I looked back once and saw that the coaches were following all right, but the next instant I knew it was an earthquake. The track under me was jerked to one side and then to the other. I looked ahead and the bright glistening 011 the top of the shiny rail could not be seen. A second glance showed that the rails were moved out of their original position aftid were in the exact shape of a horseshoe. The engine would twitch and squirm, but it held to the rail, aud tho movement of tho whole train was very much like that of a snake crawling over the sand. 4 'When I sff\v how the rails had con tracted I tried to stop the train. I ap plied the brakes, and immediately tho engine jumped the track. It was like a whirlwind to me. The cab on the engine was broken off, and the top of the cab was thrown thirty feet, bottom upward. Arnold, the colored firemau, went with it aud hud a close shuve,but escaped unhurt. 44 J.t is almost impossible for me to describe my feelings while on that rocking engine, speeding over rough track at the rate of fifty miles an hour. The speed was not slackened by the winding of tho track, but the engine was flying to the right 0110 second and to the left the next, and getting over tho ground so swiftly that it took all my strength to keep myself in by hold ing on to the lever. The engine seemed to groan. "When we woro ditched I was thrown into tho soft mud and pinned down by part of the engine. Another shock came about this time, and it buried the engine lower in the loose sand. This made it harder for me,lmt fortunately I was not burned 1101; scalded. Tue third shock came, and down went the engine again in the sand. I could not move a limb, and the heat from the furnace near me fairly made my skin fall away. A lot of frightened colored jieople came rush* by the train, running they knew not where, and I begged them to get me out. " * 'Tain't 110 use, white man,' cried one old fellow; 'your time done up now, and we is all gwiue down toged der. Goodby.' 4 'The earth continued to tremble dur ing the night, or at least until 3 o'clock in the morning, when I was taken out of the wreck. I have been on the road for thirty years, but I never expect to go through another such experience as on that night of the earthquake. Noth ing but the mercy of God saved me aud tho train." A Cat T.ORCH Iler Kittens ami Adopts a Rat. On Saturday A. B. Ste vens, of Cairo, N. Y., drowned a litter of kittens that were only a few hours old belonging to a pet cat. On Sunday a nest of young rats were found and one of them was given to the cat to eat. The cat has adopted the rat and is now caring for it with as much diligence as if it was her own.—New York Sun. To start an ostrich farm in Cali fornia one needs a capital of at least 815,000. SCIENTIFIC AND INDUSTRIAL. A new speaking tube for steamers has the pipe insulated by a waterpropf I textile covering which makes it easy to hear speech in the engine room from a i distance of 300 feet. One of tho most curious results of the investigations mado by doctors in tho Russian jails is the statement that each group of criminals has its own peculiar color of the eye. Anthropologists have ascertained that the Andaman Islanders, the small est race of people in the world, average less than four feet in hoight, while few of them weigh more than seventy-five pounds. Evidenco of the complexity of i cathode rays is found by M. H. Des< landres in the fact that when a ray is turned aside by a neighboring body it is divided into several unequally dev | iated rays. "Growing pains" aro a myth, says j Dr. Irving H. Haines. The pain meana Potts' disease of the spine, and the ignorant or lazy doctor does not find it out until the limp or the hump on the back appears. Paris and Marseilles aro now con nected by telegraph lines entirely un der ground. They are placed in iron pipes, and buried four feet beneath tho surface with manholes 3000 feet | apart. It cost $7,000,000 to bury the I wires. Chelsea district in London utilizes its street refuse by separating the rags and paper, which are converted into brown wrapping paper, while the rest of the refuse is burned in the furnaces of the reducing works and the residuum is used in briokmaking. ! The Illinois Central Railroad is j about to experiment with electricity as : a motive power, with a view to its •J adoption on all the suburban lines of 1 Chicago. It is said that both the third rail and overhead trolley systems will be tried exhaustively before a decision is come to on equipment. From records extending hack to lf>B9, 'M. Camilla Flamraarion finds that the rainfall of Paris has gradually increased about three inches, being I now a little more than twenty-two ! inches a year. The amount of differ once seems to indicate that the incrense is real aud not due to greater accuracy ■ of observation. | The director of the gas works at Aix-les-Bnins, France, has perfected u simple system of automatically light- I ing and extinguishing gas jets from any distance. The burner is closed , by a steel plate, which is magnetized | and drawn aside while an electric cur rent is 2>assing through it, the escap ing gas being ignited either by a spark ' from the plate or the incandescence of | a suitable material. The plate fulls | back over the burner on being demag- I netized. Motive Power of the Future. Electricity as a motive power on long distance roads is likely to be in- I troduced, according to the reports, much sooner than lias been antieipat ! ed. The successful experiments of the New York, New Haven and Hart ford road, recently referred to, have I demonstrated the practicability of the third rail system. The adoption of that system by tbo Manhattan Elevated system in New York City gave a fresh impetus to the movement, and now it | is reported that the managers of sev eral other important railroads running into New York City, among them the j Erie, the Pennsylvania and the Long j Island railroads, are all preparing to introduce the new system ui>on their roads. The Long Island directors, it is said, are enthusiastic over the sub ject, believing that in a very Bhort time the public would see the intro : duction of the third rail system, or something equally as good, over the entire western lmtf of the island. The Pennsylvania, it is well known, has been experimenting with electricity on | one or more of its branch roads for Bome time jiast, and the Erie proposes to equip some of its branch roads with electricity as soon as possible. There seems to be no end to the possibilities J of electricity, and the prediction that it would be the great motive power of the future seems to be near its realiza tion.—Trenton (N. J.) American. Key to tho Mediterranean. The fortress Gibraltar is in many ways the most remarkable place of its kind in the world. The height of the rock is over 1100 feet and this stu pendous precipice is pierced by miles of galleries in the solid stone port holes for cannon placed at frequent in tervals. Tho rock is absolutely im pregnable to the shot of the enemy, and, by means of the great elevation, a plunging fire can bo directed from nn enormous height on a hostile fleet. A garrison of from 5000 to 10,000 men is constantly maintained, with provis ions and ammunition for a six-mouths' siege. In 1779 the celebrated siege lasted three years, the fortress being successfully defended by 7000 Eng lish, while being attacked by an army of over 40,000 men; 1000 pieces of ar tillery, forty-seven sail, ten great float ing batteries aud a largo number of small boats composed the attacking force. For mouths over 0000 shells were thrown into every day. A Long Probationary Term. A civil engineer, mechanical engineer or architect, in the employ of the Ger man railways, must, on an average, wait till he is thirty-eight orj forty years old before his position is per manent. The average time they are employed on temporary work before they are permanently appointed is twelve years. 'A New Military Bicycle". A military bicycle recently patented is fitted, with an extension arm pro jecting in the rear, with a piece of canvas rolled over the handlebar, whioh can be unrolled nnd strung from the handles to the end of tho arm for uao.us a stretcher. ] THE MERRY SIDE 0t LIEE. CTORIES THAT ARE TOLD BY THE FUNNY MEN OF THE PRESS. ! Not Original Packages—How Extremes Met Where Honesty Gets T.clU Science in tho Home—'Trying Conclu sions—Sure to Work—Thr Reason, Etc. "I always like vour jokes," s'ao said, "they are so full of life." Then added, with ineisivencss that cut him like a knife, "And still your wit and humor, sir, I really don't begrudge. Your jokes uro always full of Life and Tunehand Puck and Judge." —Chicago Times-Herald How Extremes Met. "Did her husband come up to her ideal?" "No; —her ideal came down to him."—Puck. He Whs Genuine. She—"Did the Count turn out to ho an impostor?" He—"Not much! Why, her father had to borrow money to pay his debts!" Tlie lteason. "I'm writing to Belle." "Because you have something spe cial to say?" "No; because I have nothing special j to do."—Puck. Where Honesty Gets Eeft. James—"The rain falls alike on the j just and unjust." Jones—"True, but the unjust man is generally provided with the just I man's umbrella."—Fun. Meeting the Ilemaiid. "Gracious, Jack, what immense shirt studs you wear!" j "Well, you know how buttonholes j act. I'm going to keep up with them i if it takes a dinner plate."—Chicago j Record. Trying Conclusions. | Wife—"How people gaze at my new dress. I presume they wonder if I've been shopping in Paris." Husband—"More likely they won der if I've been robbing a bank."— Tit-Bits. Itcasonuhle. "Bridget, there's a napkin missing." "Yes, mum, I've taken it to boil tho pudding in." "To boil the pudding in,!" "Well, mum, it was only the dirty oue." —Pick-Me-Up. Sure to Work. "Papa," said Sammy Snaggs, as he ' paused, pencil iu hand, "how do yon make a Greek cross?" ' 'Mention the concert of Europe to him," replied Mr. Snaggs.—Pittsburg Chronicle-Telegraph. Science Iu the Home. Mrs'. Newmarket—"Have you any nice cocoanuts?" j Huckster—"Yes, mum; here's one full of milk." I Mrs. Newmarket-—"ls it ster ilized?"— St. Louis Star. The Things They Say. Edith—"He told me I was so inter' ! eating and so beautiful." ! Julia—"And yet you will trust your self for life with a man who begins de ceiving you even at the commence ment of his courtship."—Tit-Bits. A Game Law in IfimHclf. Gobang—"l think I'll do quite a little shooting this summer. I wonder what the close season is?" Buckshot—"Well, in your case, old man, I fancy if you apply to the Legis ; lature they'd throw the whole year , open to you."—Truth. Hopeful. "I'm going to invest in thermome \ ters," declared Chuinpley with a know ing look. "What in the world do you want to put your money in thermometers for?" "They're bound to rise soon. This depression can't last." War Ahead. Mamma—"l don't want you to play with that Jones boy. He isn't fit com pany for you." Johnnie-—"All right. When he asks ine to play with him I'll tell him you said he ain't tit company for me, and he'll tell his mother."—Puck. quite Likely. Mrs. Grimm—"My goodnoss! I have just been reading au item about a man who traded his wife for a shotgun. What in the world do you suppose made him do that?" Old Grimm—"Probably the gun was warranted not to kick."—Puok. Caught. "O, say, Proudly, I was very sorry j to hear that you had lost all your money." "Lostall my money," snorted Proud ly, and he produced a roll that filled his fist. "Let me take twenty till to-morrow, old man."—Detroit Free Press. In the Liar.' Club. First Dentist—"The fact is, I've got gentleness down to such a fine poiut that all my patients go to sleep while I'm pulling their teeth." Second Dentist—-"That's nothing! Mine are beginning to have their pho tographs taken while I operate, be cause they always have such pleasant expressions on their faces."—Puck. In Hard Luck. Gilhooly— "What's the matter, Johnnie? You have a lovely black eye." Johnnie—"Sister Jennie almost pounded the life out of me." Gilhooly—"What did ysu do to her to provoke her?" Johnnie—"Nothing at all. She got j a note from her feller telling her that j he couldn't take her to the theatre this [ evening, and I happened to oome in the room just after she had read the letter, so she tookitout on me."—New York World. AGRICULTURAL TOPICS. Cutting Potato Seed. It is slow, tedious work to out the potato seed for planting large iields. Yet with most kinds of potatoes the cut seed is a necessity, for if the seed j is planted whole there will be too ; many small potatoes from crowding of so many stalks in a hill. It is true not all the eyes on a whole or even of a cut potato will grow, but if the seed is planted whole there will be far too j many for profit. It is dirty work cut ting potatoes, not so much from the soil adhering to them as from the po tato juice, which discolors and rusts the knife and stains the hands. This discoloring is easily removed by wot ting the hands in pure water witnout soap, and then holding them over one or two burning sulphur matches. The fumes of sulphur are excellent to bleach anything. When to Cut Hay. | There lias been much discussion relative to the proper time to cut bay, and there are many mistakes made on ! both sides of the line, more, no doubt, on the side to too late rather than too early cutting. The stage at which the | plant contains the most nutritive mut ter is when it is Hearing maturity, and before any considerable portion of its substance has entered into the seeds. We have found it a good plan to begin rather early, for we are sometimes thrown back by wet weather, or other causes, over which we have 110 control, and if we wait until the grass or clover is just right, before beginning, the last cutting may be a little more than a mass of woody fiber. It is claimed liy some that in cutting before maturity, we endanger the stand, as they have noticed that where grass was well ripened before being cut, the stand was more enduring. Probably this is simply the result of the matured seeds shattering off, taking root growing—a rather expensive method of seeding.— Agricultural Epitomist. I.lvi' Stock I'olntd. Ailsilte clover appears to bo a good pasture plant, but not profitable for hay. A Missouri stockman believes he lias succeeded in breeding a family of Herefords without horns. For eight years lie lias been follow ing up experi ments along this line, mid at length announces that he lias attained tlie de sired result. He calls his now breed of cattle Polled Herefords. lie lias at present a herd of twenty-seven heifers and two bulls that were born hornless. They present the markings of tlio famous and beautiful white faces, but they are larger and are sparer about tlie hips. The stockman contends that his new bred of Polled Herefords make better beef than the horned species. Horses? Yes, there are too many of the kind. There are too many ugly, lightweight trotters that cannot trot, and ought to be made into fertilizing material; too many others that are neither big enough for draft, nor spry and handsome enough for driv ing; far too many bony-faced, loose jointed, flat-footed, flop-eared, sway backed, stupid brutes that are more like an old-fashioned Texas cow after a hard winter than like a graceful, in telligent, neatly built horse—all, that is different! A prominent firm of dealers writes: "We never saw a time when a sixteen hand high, full made, stylish, well-broken coach liorso with good action would sell for more money than he will now." You can raise without trouble 100 bushels of carrots or parsnips to the aore. You can sell these to town horse keepers at good prices, or you can feed them to your own stock. They constitute for all animals, with the exception of ensilage for milk cows, the best possible change from dry grain feed.—Connecticut Farmer. Scratching llcnt*. It is tbe nature of a hen to scratch, and when a breed is bred to a size where the hens will not scratch, they begin to quit laying eggs. Every healthy and productive lion scratches, and he who expects to keep hens and prevent them from scratch ing must devise some means to gel them to scratch where 110 damage will he done. It is much easier to do this than it is to keep a dog to drive the liens out of the garden and away from the flower beds, or the wasted energy of throwing clubs at them. Besides, a flock of liens that are chased by a dog or frightened by throwing clubs at them will uot lay so well as those kind ly treated. If poultry keepers would remember that tame heus are the most profitable ones, there would not be so many flocks in the country that make a bee-line for the nearest hiding place when a dog or man comes iu sight. One plan is to let hens have free ac cess to the garden at all times at this time of the year, though they will not lie allowed there when peas and to matoes begin to bear. They do not scratch in the garden because we keep some small grain scattered in the grass around the run, and they do their scratching there. When they are let out of the house in the morning they are fed, and as soon as they havj fin ished their breakfast they take a tour of the garden and dooryard, and stray cut-worms, cabbage butterflies anil other insect enemies of the garden are picked up. Then they take a walk around the open fields adjacent, and finally come hack to scratch some of the small grain out of the grass. Idle hens are not worth keeping, and when they scratch in the garden and flower beds they are a nuisance, and if tliey are given something they like to scratch for, where they can get it easily, they arc not going to dig up the garden for what they may possibly find. Hens do not scratch for amuse ment, anil will scratch where they find food witfi tho least Work,—The Silver Knight. Will Buy Their Machines of Us. Three representatives of the Russian government who have been gent to this country to study farming, forestry and cattle raising problems in America are now in Chicago. "It is our inten tion to abandon the machinery now used by us," said one, "and buy our iin. piements exclusively from America." J When a man first appears without his mustache, he has a sort of inimod- I est look, as if he had left some of his I clothes off. f) How Old are Ycu ? - > (/>") . n You need not answer the question, madam, tjiS'iy for in your case age is not counted by years. It (Mf) (f '\ , will always be true that "a woman is as old lip/ as she looks." Nothing sets the seal of age tffP t|\ so deeply upon woman's beauty as gray hair. | gg>. ,J It is natural, therefore, that every woman is €|| anxious to preserve her hair in nil its original abundance and beauty; or, that being denied V V few the crowning gift of beautiful hair, she longs to possess it. Nothing is easier than to attain f?l|p to this gift or to preserve it, if already tm||) poslessed. Ayer's Hair Vigor restores gray or faded hair to its original color. It does this (lj|| #by simply aiding nature, by supplying the nutrition necessary to health and growth. \©J) €Ss There i 3 no better preparation for the hair '!) than (sQjl © AYER'S HAIR VIGOR, g I'ij IN BICYCLE PRICES. 11 I LOVELL I - --"mama/Mr |p LEADS the world. 1 $ '8" Love" Diamond, BBBBBBBBBGffIBB s ©S.oo k % 1836 Lcvaii Diamond, nVmTTnTm 40.00 § |j Simmon's Spacial, "WDUUIJIJ S4. so §§ gj Boys' and Sirls' ESkkSSMSSka 19. 70 jg &W Our reputatioo of 60 years is a guaranteo that oui* 1897 model is the best wheel mnde. Insist on seeing the Lovell Diamond. Agencies everywhere. <•[£ t*~BE NLJUi AND SEND FOll CATALOGUE. SPECIAL AND SECOND HAND LIST .HAILED FREE. pQ $ JOHN P. LOVELL ARSVSS CO., i? H7 Washington St., 131 Broad St., Boston, Mass. ytf | SICK HEADACHE! ""TO um. i | Poisonous matter, instead o£ being; thrown out,is reabsorbed into j s the blood. When this poison reaches the delicate brain tissue, it i | causes congestion and that awful, dull, throbbing, sickening pain. | | STIMULATING THE LIVER, j i Making the poison move on and out, and purifying the blood. 1 | The effect is ALMOST INSTANTANEOUS. I c B whose sensitive organism is especially prone to sick headaches, DO 1 i a=M&Sa NOT SUFFER, for you can, by the use of CASCARETS, be S 1 jKejteved Like Mafic. - j fat the Sun \JNRESL&^ \noot bootytooi'Dnnm y-^^^^^ootbeerj yuMs)^ Jyyourthirst \ PENSIONS, PATENTS, CLAIMS. JOHN W. MORRIS, WASHINGTON. O.O. Lata Principal Examinar 0. 8. Pension Bureau. 3 >r. ia lut war, 10 adjudicating claiuii, atfcy. tiuj. DRUNKII Full information (In pliiiu Wrapper) uliilid im. 'Thrift is a Goer] Revenue." Great Saving Results Frons Cleanliness and SAPOLIO Say nothing; it is the only way to avoid being misquoted. Try Craln-Ol TryOraln-Ot Ark your grocer to-day to show you a pack age of Orain-O, the new food drink that takea the place of coffee. The children.may drink it without injury as well as the adult All I who try It like it (irr.iii-O has that rich seal brow u of Mocha or Java, hut it is made from pu re era inc. and the niost delicate stomach re ceive, It ry i*, 11.11> I, 'i i-t, rv-s. (>uc-i(Uiu*t<*r Ufa price of col.t i'. 1 , <tb. a oil 25 cts. per package. I buld by alt grocers. Mrr. Window's Soothing Syrup for children I teething, sol teas the gums, reducing inllarnma* Uou. allays pain, cures wiad colic. 25c-a buttla. | { The Bicycle I Sensation \ I \ \ 1597 SOLMASatS7S I | • BIANDAKD OF TEC WOBLD, Z • J j; 5836 Salumhias . . at S6O * 1897 Hartfords. . .at 50 £ ; Hartford Pattern 2 . at 45 ; • Hartford Pattern t . .at 40 ' : Hartford Patterns SSS at 30 : • .. .. .. z ; Thoso are tlio now prices. I • They have set the whole I 5 bicycle world talking— : ; and buying |: j I j POPE MFd. CO., HartfordrConn. I • J i • Catalog firce from any Golnnibia dealer) • j by mail for a 2-cent otamp. • INVENTORS TZfiSSHESZ H advertising " No patent no pay," Itritte*, medals, j great ritfitB, etc. We do a regular patent business. Low feoa. Advice free. Bigke* reference*. Write us. WATSON 1!. f OLBMAN it CO., 1 Noliri tors of put culv, UM F. St., Washington, I>. O. I! S/LOS j KBPL HOW TO BUILD ASK WILLIAMS MFC. CO.. KALAMA7OO, MICn.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers