Rheumatism Is permanently cured Bv Hood's Sarsaparilla Which neutralizes the ' Lactic acid in the bleed. Thousands who were Sufferers write that they Have feit uo symptoms Ol Rheumatism since Taking Hood's Sarsaparilla DiMirncßK Cniiunt Re Cured by lot .tl applications..is they cannot reach the diseased portion f the ear. There in only one way to cure deafness, and that is by constitu tional remedies. Deafness is caused by au • it fiauied condition of the mucous lining of the Eustachian Tube. When this tube gets in tl imed you have a rumbling sound or imper fect hearing, and when it is entirely closed Deafness i- the result, and unless the inflam mation can be taken out and this tube re stored to its normal condition, hearing will bo destroy" d for ver. Nine cases out of ten arc caused by catarrh, which is nothing butan in liamed ondition of the mucous surfaces. We will give One Hundred Dollars for any ease of Deafneai (caused by catarrh) that can not be cured by Hall's Catarrh cure. Send for circulars, free. F. .i. CHENKY & Co.. Toledo, O. Sold by Druggists, 75c. Hall's Family Pills are the best. It Keeps the Feot Dry and Warm. And is the only cure for Chilblains, Frostbit.-*. Damp, Sweating Feet. Corns and Bunions. Ask for Allen's Foot-Ease, u IWdcr to he shaken iis to the shoes. At all Druggists and Shoe Stores, 85c. Sample sent FRK.F. Address Allen S. Olmsted, Be Hoy. N. V. Fits permanently cured. No fits or nervous ness after first day's use of Dr. Kline's Great Nerve Restorer. $2 trial bottle and treatise free Da. R. H. KLINE, Ltd.. 981 Arch St..Phila..Pa. Ihave found Piso's Cure for Consumption an unfailing medicine. F. H. LOT/. lIJUS Scott St., Covington, Ky., Oct. 1, IS'JL Postage Stamps. The design of the stamp is engraved on steel, and, in printing, plates are used on which 200 stamps have been engraved. Two men are kept busy at work covering these with colored inks, and passing them to a man and a girl who are equally busy printing them with large rolling hand presses. Three of those little squads are employed all the time. After the small sheets of paper containing 200 printed stamps have dried enough they are sent inro another room and gummed. The gum made for this purpose is a peculiar composition, made of the powder of dried potatoes and other vegetables, mixed with water. After having been again dried—this time on little racks fanned by steam power for about an hour, they are very carefully put be tween sheets of pasteboard and press ed In hydraulic presses capable of ap plying a weight of 2,000 tons. The uext thing Is to cut the sheets In two. each sheet, of course, when cut, con taining 100 stamps. This Is done by a girl with a large pair of shears, cut ttng by hand being preferred to that t>y machinery, which would destroy too many stamps. They are then pass wl to another squad of workers, who perforate the paper between tho stamps. Next they are pressed one* more and then packed and labeled and stowed away, to be sent out to tlie various offices when ordered. If a sin gle stamp Is torn or in any way muti lated, the whole sheet of 100 stamps ii burn (HI. Not less than 50,000 are said to be burucil every week from this cause. The greatest care is taken in counting the sheets of stamps, to guard against pilfering by the employes.— Ashton Recorder. Mines Abandoned 8,000 Years Ago. The most ancient copper mines in the world are those of the Sluui peninsula, near the gulf of Suez. They were abandoned 3,000 years ago, after hav ing been worked for some hundreds of years. The process used In tho reduc tion of the ore Is said to be similar in principle to tliut used at the present time. A JOYFUL MOTHER OF CHILDREN. * y* Mr 3' PJnkiiam that in the Light of Mod- Br!:i Science no Woman Nood Doapair. Lydia K. Pinkham's Vegetable Com jH w jf pound lias effected so many cures; f. (j&oft * ts tonic properties are directed es- J /A. 4K* PccfoHy *° the nerves which supply \ •4/V z' /fYvSHI the uterine system. Amortg otlier \)ftf/ / / caUKt ' B * or sterility or barrenness xAIII 1 JV / V > are displacem nts of the womb. ' M \ lack of strength in the ligaments y \ U V supporting the womb and the ovaries; re- IV \\\ ) store these, and the difficulty ceases. Here, 1 y \ again, tlie Vegetable Compound works won ders. See Mrts. Lytle's letter, which follows v^— * in this column, do to the root of the matter restore the strength of the nerves and the tone of the parts, and nature will do the rest. Nature has no better ally than this Compound, made of her own healing and restoriug herbs. Write freely and fully to Mrs. Pinkliara. Her address is Lynn, Mass. She will tell you, free of charge, the cause of your trouble and what course to take. Believe me, under right conditions, you have a fair chance, to become the joy ful mother of childreu. The woman whose letter is here published certainly thinks so: 1 am more than proud of Lydia K. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, and cannot find words to express the g<od it has done me. f was troubled very badly with the lcucorrhoea and severe womb pains. Prom the time I was married, in 1882, until last year, I was under the doctor's care. VVe had no children. I have had nearly every doctor in Jersey City, and have, been to Kelvin Hospital, but all to no avail. I saw Mrs. Pinkham's advertisement in the paper, and have used five bottles of her medicine. It has done more for me than all the doctors I ever had. It has stopped my pains and has brought ihe a fine little girl. * I have been well ever since mv baby was born. I heartily recommend Mrs. Pinkham's medicine to all women suffering from sterility."— MRS. LUCY LYTLK, 255 Henderson St., Jersey City, N. J. "~"lFair Face Cannot Atone for an Untidy Howse." Use SAPOUQ, liAoemaking Machine. The problem of ma kins: by machln ery lace which cannot possibly be dls Mnguished from that made by hand seems to be solved by a machine in vented by n Spun laid ami now in use j in a great Nottingham lace factory. Ii claims lo reproduce any pattern that I can l>e made by hand on the cushion, | and one-third finer than the nveragf j quantity of lace. The mechanism lias | u speed of 33b motions per minute J which can be raised to 200. so that a | machine SO inches wide, making 2-ineli I breadths, would perform the work <f i forty women. The design is pricked j our on cushion ruled in saunre*. and ] laeo pins stuck at the corners of Hit i squares, where they remain until the j lure Is finished. The real lace is then i decomposed by the woman who mails 1 It. She Ims at her side an assistant j who takes down the figures as they arc : called out*to her. The rows of pins or motions are worked down the left side ! of the cushion draught; the number of , threads is marked from left to right along thi* top. and the maker reads tin number to her assistant while decom posing, the exact motion of each thread 1 being recorded. The paper on which ' the morions are marked is then taken j to the puncher, who prepares the cards ' accordingly, and the cards being placed on tlie machine reproduce exactly the j same design. The machine is small. ' entirely automatic and is only stopped | to till the bobbins. The bands of lace are not attached to each other, each being woveli separate. The threads Jo nor become dirty or discolored and j the lace comes from the machine rend* | for the wearer. A Hugo Freight liili. j Ido not know that many are aware that the annual freight bill of this country amounts to more than SBOO,- j 000,000 a year. It is a tax. and the most burdensome tax which this conn try knows, upon our industries and upon production. Its meaning, brought I home. Is that each family in the United States pays on the average SOO a year i for freight alone. If Commissioner j Wright's statistics are correct—that the average income of each laborer In ■ this country is not more than SSOO a year—then each head of a family must | set aside on the average the results of a month and a half of toil to pay his | share of the freight. The people of the West have learned vhis economic lesson well. They have seen their wheat carried over the great lakes at an average charge of less than 1 mill per ton per mile, when the rail road rate from their farms to lake 1 transportation or to market was from i I cent to V/j cents per ton per mile. They know that If all the freight in the Unl- I ted States could be carried as cheaply as is wheat from Duluth to Buffalo this ; burden would l>o cut down to one-tenth of what It now is. Such considerations as these ought | to make it plain, even to a wayfarer ior a Congressman, that the freight question Is worth a little attention.— | Review of Reviews. Origin or t'opulur (ruinra. j It is quite astonishing how many games were originally invented and ire to-day practiced by people we are accustomed to think of as savages. The Canadian game of lacrosse originated among the North American Indians. Wallace tells us how in Borneo one wet day he thought to amuse his Dyak I t>oya by showing them cat's cradle, but he found that they not only knew It. but knew more Intricate figures than j he. The Maoris of New Zealand ac tually have a sort of pictorial history \n cat's cradle figures of twisted fiber, i The Sandwich Islanders play a kind jf draughts. The South Sen peoples nearly all are adepts at kite flying. Polo comes from Persia and Is played magnificently by wild hill tribes from Northern India. To Kill Sheep Gadfly. Persian insect powder blown forci bly into the nostrils of sheep or used as an extract in alcohol is recommended for sheep gadfly. The usual method of removing these flies with a feather moistened in oil or carbolic acid is also quite successful.—American Agri culturist. Mistakes With Old Orchards. There is scarcely a farmer in this country who uses any fertilizer for his orchard, simply because he has al ways been taught that the old orchard would take care of itself. And what a mistake! It needs the same care and attention as tho hind devoted to other crops. Why not renovate tho old orchard? Cut down the worthless trees. Plow the whole area, sow to white clover and timothy, put on about 200 pounds of muriate of pot ash,and 200 pounds of dissolved bone per acre. Keep the orchard trimmed and each year apply chemical fertil izers in about this proportion per acre: Nitrate of soda, 100 pounds; ground bone, 200 pounds; muriate of potash, 300 pounds. By a little systematic work and study every farmer could materially increase his profit with a little extra work, and perhaps a little outlay of money. If tho old orchard is hard and unproductive, first put it in fit condition for the growing of crops and the trees. Cover the hardest spots with ma nure. Get humus in the soils, and with an application of potash and phosphoric acid, one.can feel sure that a good harvest will result.—C. W. Burkett, in Hoard's Dairyman, ' Blighted Celery. G. A Woolson, of Vermont, writes: It is a mistake to suppose that blighted celery is not worth putting in for win ter use. For four years the blight has besieged my garden; rotating tho crop makes but little difference; not a decent head matures. Plants set early in June grow well for a month or six weeks perhaps, and then the blight appears; active growth ceases, then it stands in spite of fertilizers or irrigation. But about the first of October I trim up the plants, leaving only the the heart leaves. A shallow trench in tho cellar is well watered and the roots, with as much soil as can be con veniently left on, are placed in the trench; more water is given and sand or other light and dry soil is worked carefully in and about the plants, leaving only the tips exposed. Finer celery I have never had than such roots furnished in January and Feb ruary. If the long white brittle stalks are cut oft' squarely—not too close—a second crop has been ready by April. This is lighter, of course, than the other, but a dainty luxury for the season. At tho present writ ing—November 3—a marked growth is already noticeable in plants not three weeks in the cellar. Why Timothy Run* Out. As contrasted with clover, which is only biennial, and dies as soon as it perfects its seed, timothy may be called a perennial. But it is the least per sistent of all the grasses grown, except on land that is inundated by an annual overflow. The timothy root always rur>n near the surface, and is, there fore, much injured by winter freezing. Not even letting the fall growth re main as winter protection will keep it from being thus injured. Usually, on upland, the timothy roots exhaust the surface soil after two or three years' growth. Even if they did not the sod is likely to be destroyad by white grubs, the progeny of the slick beetle, which lays her eggs in timothy sod, and the first feed of its young is usually the bulb at the surface of the ground from which timothy roots proceed. In many fields we have seen the sod so entirely eaten out by these grubs that the plants for a yard square or more could easily be pulled up by the hand. The thinning off' of birds by sports men or for ladies'hats has greatly in creased the white grub nuisance. For this reason we should not try to keep a timothy sod more than two or three years, though if it is a meadow that cannot be easily put to other use, it can be done by putting on a coat of manure everyjother winter. If the grubs eat out the sod, sow some more timothy seed this fall, or else prepare to plow it to be planted with some hoed crop next May and reseed the follow ing spring. • f Hemlock for Farm lluiUlingft. The farmer of the United States has gotten beyond the point.where he wants the cheapest thing, simply be cause it is cheap, but he, like every sensible man, wants the most possible for his money, with due consideration to a reasonable profit to everyone legitimately engaged in manufacture or trade. Economy in buying de pends not so much on tho actual price as upon tho peculiar adaptability of the thinglpurchased to the purpose for whiqh it is intended. The wider acquaintance the lumber buyer or consumer has with varieties of woods—with their peculiarities of strength, durability, workable quali ties, etc,—the more economically he will buy. Having such knowledge, he will find that the more costly article is really the cheaper, or he may find that the cheap articles mas. for certain uses, be as satisfao- Tory as the lucre expensive one with which he is acquainted. To the farmer, hemlock, which is a comparatively new material in the West, should appeal with special force because of its peculiar adaptability for certain classes of construction com bined with cheapness. It is actually better for some things than white pine, and yet can be bad at a much lower price. It is better for some things than yellow pine—better, in fact, for corn cribs than any other material. Hemlock has the advantnge of being both strong and stiff; that is, it is capable of bearing a heavy strain and of not yielding to it until the breaking point is closely approached; thorefove, for framing material it is unexcelled. For mud sills aud in situations where it is subject to alternations of moisture aud dryness, hemlock is found ex tremely desirable. Therefore, to a large part of farm building construc tion it is peculiarly well adapted. In sections of lowa where it has been thoroughly tried hemlock is given the preference for barn contrac tion. It is a little late in the season to talk about coru crib material, and yet tlio attention of farmers should be called to the fact, supported by much irrefutable evidence, that rats and mice will not attack hemlock, and so cribs built of it are rat and mouse proof, except as the rodents may find their way through openings into cribs. They will not make an openings, how ever, and this fact should commend it for this purpose to the farmers. Hemlock is still a cheap timber in the West, and lumber consumers should be given the advantage of this fact, that they may use it wherever it is possible aud economical to do so.— The Timberman. The Training of Children. "John," said Mrs. Wisely to her liege lord the other evening, "I want to have a very frank talk with yon. Do you realize that the boys are old enough now to observe aud are begin ning to form their characters?" "Of course I do. Grent boys." "Yes, and we want them to be great men. They naturally look up to you, John, more than to anybody else. For their sakes you must be careful .in what you do and say. You fell over a chair the other day and used some very improper language. I heard Willie repeat it when he stubbed his toe iu the back yard." "The little rascal! He didn't!" chuckled the father. "Yes, John, and they pretend to smoke cigars and pour drinks from an imaginary decanter. Can't you set them a better example?" "Sfy, little one, I heard Amy play ing'keep house one afternoon . lately. When callers were announced she sent out word that she was not at home. When she did consent to re ceive any one she combed them down to beat the tiaud before they were ad mitted. One wns an old crump, an other was an intolerable bore, and a third better a good deal be at home cleaning house or looking after her children. Yon couldn't have done it better yourself." "I see what you mean, sir. No use ol' rubbing it iu. But wait, dear," in a softer voice. "Let's both do better. It's for their sake's you know." "I'll go yon." Aud they shook hands. As John left that evening he slipped up on the front steps and made the air blue. Around the cor ner ho lit his cigar. Mrs. Wisely had some animated gossip with a neighbor. And yet the children seem to thrive. —Detroit Fret- Press. Tattooed From Hc:Vl to Foot. A human picture gallery came to light at an nutopsy just held on a fish erman of Toulon, France, named Feu onil, who was tatooed from head to loot, there being absolutely no free space, on his body. On the chest wns a picture of General Briore de l'lsle; on the abdomen the bust of a woman and an inscription in Gothic letters, "Compagnie Barbot";ontheleft breast a cross of the Legion of Honor; on the right the bust of a woman aud a crim inal condemned to hard labor; on the right a bunch of fruit; on the left a bunch of flowers—the two forming a species of epauletes; on the right arm the heud of a priest aud pigeon hold ing a letter in its beak; on the left arm a squirrel, a crocodile, a Chinese and the bust of a woman; on the forearms, roses, pansies, sword, woman's head, clasped hands, etc. —Savannah News. A Qtiffr ItHU'. A relic just acquired by the Paris Military Museum is the wood aud iron leg of General Dumesuil, who lost one of his own legs at Wagram, and re placed it with a contrivance of timber and iron springs. When the General, at a later day, was summoned to sur render a fort near Paris, his reply was: "Give me ,back my leg, and you can have Vincennes." The old Napol eonic veteran survived until 1833. Hale on Boston's Streets. Edward Everett Hale said in a lec ture on the old streets of Boston the other day; "An old Bostouian regards the straight, checker-board streets of other cities with a contempt which v is not to be described, while the people of other cities claim that Boston was, 1 laid out by cows.". INDIANS IN NEW YORK. A Handful of Mohawks and Iroquois Llr In the Big City. Mr. Jacob A. Eiis writes an articls for the Century on "Merry Christina:! in the Tenements." Mr. Eiis says: Within hail of the Sullivan Street school camps a scattered little band, the Christmas customs of which I have been trying for years to surprise. They are Indians, u handful of Mo hawks aud Iroquois, whom somo ill wind has blown down from their Ca nadian reservation and left in these West Side tenements, to eke out such a living as they can weaving mats and baskets, and threading glass pearls on slippers and pin cushions, until, one after another, they have died off aud gone to happier hunting grounds than Thompson street. There were as many families as one could count on the lingers of both hands when I first came upon them, at the death of old Tameuund, the basket maker. Last Christmas there were seven. I had about made up my mind that the only real Americans in New York did not keep the holiday at all, when, one Christmas Eve, they showed me how. Just as dark was setting in, old Mrs. Benoit came from her Hudson street attic—where she was known among the neighbors, as old and poor as she, as Mrs. Ben Wah, and believed to bo the relict of a warrior of the name of Benjamin Wah —to the office of the Charity Organization Society, with a bundle for a friend who had helps.! her over a rough spot—the rent, I suppose. The bundle was done up elaborately in blue cheeso-clotli, and contained a lot of little garments which she had made out of the remnants of blankets and cloth of her own from a younger and better day. "For those," she said, in her French patois, "who are poorer than myself," and hobbled away. I found out, a few days later, when I took her picture weaving mats in her attio room, that she had scarcely food in the house that Christmas Day, and not the car fare to take her to church! Walking was bad, and her old limbs were stiff'. She sat by the window through the winter evening and watchod the sun go down behind the western hills, comforted by her pipe. Mrs. Ben Wah, to give her her local name, is not really an Indian; but her husband was one, aud she lived all her life with the tribe till she came here. She is a philosopher in her own quaint way. "It is no disgrace to be poor," said she to me, regarding her empty Sobacco pouoh; "but it is sometimes a ?reat inconvenience." Not even the recollection of the vote of censure that was passed upon me once by the ladies of the Charitable Ten for sur reptitiously supplying an aged couple, the special object of their charity, with army plug, could have deterred me from taking the hint. WISE WORDS. Culture never made a saint.' Under the direction of reason in stinct is always in the right. Character is a diamond that is pol ished on the stone of suffering. What furniture can give such finish ;o a room as a tender woman's face? A fool's heart is in his tongue; but s wise man's tongue is in his heart. Be something that will warm aching aenrts—something will cheer hopeless lives. A man who comes to the front as a nan, is always a little to the front as i boy. The men think of pumpkin pie when there is a frost, and the women think f poetry. A poor man with a snnny spirit will jet more out of life than a wealthy grumbler. The passionate are like men stand ing on their heads; they see all things ihe wrong way. Don't put too much confidence in a log because it wags its tail; that is not the end it bites with. The most serious mistake a man can make is to blunder and then try to ex rase himself by explaining it. What a uniformity of opinion exists among men that good husbands are made by letting men have their own way. Something 1 , happens every day to ronvince a'man that he lets people see too much of him to add to his popu larity. One of the most pitiful sights in the world is, that of a woman moved to tears when she has left jher handker chief at home. It is the man who knows how to create J opportunities who is never known to fail because be didn't have a chance to succeed.—The Southwest. Mourning Colors of Various Nations. Black is the accepted color for mourning throughout Europe; it ex presses the total deprivation of joy on account of the loss sustained, li> Shakespeare's time the stage was draped in black during the porform i ance of a tragedy. White is the em blem of hope, the Chinese color for mourning. The ladies of Bome and Sparta also dressed in white during a period of monrning. Mary Queen of Scots was called the "White Queen," becanse she mourned in white over the death of her husband, Lord Darnley. Black and white striped, expressive of hope and sorrow, is the mourning color of the South Sea islanders. The ancient Egyptians mourned in yellow. Pale brown, the color of withered leaves, is the Persian mourning. In Syria and Armenia skyklue is the mourning color, in dicating that the deceased has gone to heaven. More than 6000 species of plants are cultivated, and most of these hove been broken up into varied forms by the hand of mas, ■■l Hi i , >v V No. 203. Thlsquar s pl'ato glass • 'S* k ' in top and a v d PPdrawer [r^W' bo 1 ° ,v * Ar " II French lcsr"; II PSIm fflwi] also flubbed ■JLJ#|I N|| lu mahogany. J*' ii $3.95 J (u* II ,s our s p° c " I I l\ MP> iCO for | -, u> this flOdcbk. n I ( Mail orders filled promptly.) ■ Wo will mail anyone, tree of all charges, our new 112 page Special Cata logue, containing Furniture, Draperies, Lamps, Stove 4, Crockery, Mirrors, Pictures, Bedding, Refrigerators, Baby Carriages, etc. This is the /moat com plete book ever published, and we pay all f>ostage. Our lithographed Carpet Catalogue, showing carpets in colors, ia also yours for the asking. If carpet Samples Are wanted, mail us Bc. in •tamps. There is no reason why you Should pay your local dealer 00 per ceut. profit when you can buy from the mill. Drop a liua now io the money-savers. JULIUS HINES & SON, Baltimore, Md. Please mention this paper. Increase In Train Hauls The Baltimore and Ohio Railroad is now reaping the benefits <>f the im provements that have been made to the property since John K. Cower, and Oscar G. Murray were appointed Re ceivers. It was stated* by a noted critic of railway operations a few months ago that if the Receivers suc ( eeded in increasing the train haul p j r ton per mile to 300 that they could be commended for having spent so much money in buying new locomotives, straightening curves, lowering grades and laying new rail. Since June 30th a careful record has been kept and the results have been more than gratifying t" tie management. Before new loco motives were purchased, before track improvements were made and before the tonnage system of loading trains was adopted, the average train haul per ton per mile on the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad was less than 225 tons and some old employees think it did not exceed 200 tons. There are no fig ures for comparison but in July the average was 334.76, in August 356,41 and in September 361.4, a very large and satisfactory increase. The average would have been still larger but for the fact that on several divisions, de pending on coal for tonnage, but little or none was moved owing to the strike. The Main stem figures are considered very satisfactory as that part of the road crosses the Alleghenies, some grades being 125 feet to the mile. The averages on the several divisions range from 32.21 on the Wooster branch to 534.19 on the Pittsburg division. The figures in detail are as follows: Main Stem and July Aug. Sept. Branches 374.22 398.31 380.2 Philadelphia divis'n 270.35 289.03 330.1 j Parkers burg Branch 212.75 201.31 218.0 Pittsburg division.. 465.13 553.93 5*4.5 Wheeling and Pitts burg division 161.55 173.28 185.1 Central Ohio division 283.74 332.71 262.6 Rake Erie division.. 232.27 220.82 319.4 Straitsville division 133.36 65.50 186.0 Chicago division 331.71 305.44 355.6 Midland division 390.41 410.80 214.1 Akron division 305.05 321.90 382.1 Wooster division.... 18.35 33.29 44.0 Averages 384,76 856.41 361.4 Do You Dance To-Night 1 Shake into your Shoes Allen's Foot-Ease, n powder for the feet. It makes tight or new Shoes feel Easy. ('ures Corns, Bunions, < 'liil hlain end Sweating feet. At all Druggists and Shoe Stores. 25c. Sample sent FHF.K. Address Allen S. Oliuslead, Leßoj, N.N'. I Mining tor Heat. A man in Pennsylvania Is trying to muko the deepest hole in the world I lie has now bored to u depth of 6,001- j feet, and the machlue continues tx ] delve deeper every flay. Before fal) ' the bottom of the drill will have reach ed a depth of over 10,000 feet, or near ly two mile*. The work is under tin j supervision of Prof William Ilallock of Columbia College, and it i being j done for a very strange purpose. Deei holes are usually bored for water ot for gas or oil, and sometimes to pros poet for mineral* of various kinds, but Prof. Hallock 1* mining for heat. As i every one knows, the interior of the- j earth Is a burning, fiery furnace, and It | Is Prof. Hallock'* theory that if he can j ' make a hole deep enough he can ob j tain a constant flow of steam, which i can be utilized for operating machin ' ery. Already Prof. HaJlook'a hole which is being bored near the city of Pltteburg, is the deepest In tin* world The next deepest 1* a salt: well neai i Leipslc, In Germany, which measure* f,740 feet In depth. It will be Inter j asting to watch this wonderful expert- j incut. If it l successful the time may \ come when manufacturers will get all their power from the bouiidleee fur j naces at the center of the earth, when j our cities will be lighted from th* ! same sou ire. our houses heated, anO our railroad*, street ear* and steam- j ships operated from the same *otir<v j Fill Teeth with Glass. The latest use for glass is instead of yold as a material for stopping decay- I ng teeth. It answers splendidly. aiid s far less conspicuous than the yellow netal. Of course, it is not ordinary ! glass, bur is prepared by some new pat ?nt.cd process which renders it soft aud malleable. Trying to He Perieor. '•No man." said Uncle Eben, "kin he pulfect. But it's only by try In' t.er be so dat most ob us kin manage ter keep mlddlln' respectable."— Washington \ Star. J7/ VEGETABLE SICILIAN : ffiAlß RENEWERs llt has made miles and miles I KjV of hair grow on millions jV j\ and millions of heads. //[ I.n Not a single gray hair. C,(fl No dandruff. j(£ Will Locate a Capital. Government proposes to found a ueif city In Alaska known as "Weare" on the Yukon River between the boundary; line of British Columbia and St. Mi chaels. It is intended to make it the capital of the contemplated new terri tory and locate the land office there. The Caretaker. Caretaker is a word adopted into modern use and means one who takes • arc of, and is very generally applied to those employed to take care of things committed to'their keeping. The way some people have of taking care of themselves is very suggestive of the need of a caretaker. The human body to such is a mansion filled with pre cious things uncared for, where thieves may break in and rust doth corrupt. Pains and aches are thieves, and the body left tin cared for to th >ir spoilage will be robbed of all its comforts and despoiled of its peace of mind and hap piness. It is a happy thought to look upon St. Jacobs oil as a caretaker, to employ it as a watchman against such intruders. There is hardly an ache, from a toothache to a toeaehe, that It can't take care of and effect a cure, and pains the most violent are conquered by Its use its office as a caretaker is to prevent the spread of aches and pains into a chronic stage. Keep a bot tle of it in the handiest place and be assured of good care and comfort. Mrs. Winalow's Soothing Syrup for children teething, softens the gums,reuutuug inflamma tion. allays pain, cures wind colic. 25c.a bottle. The city of Cofon, Honduras, is the oldest Ami rican city. Chow Star Tobacco- The Best. Smoke Sledge Cigarettes. The Department of Labor of the United States Government is about to undertake an investigation Into the financial status of the gas works, water works and electric light and power plants throughout the country. To Cure A Cold In One Day. Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. All Druggists refund money if it fails to cure. 86c. Washington's commission as Com mander-in-chief of the United States Army was approved by Congress June 17, 1775, and on June 21 of that year he set out on horseback to take command of the forces encamped about Boston. m ONB ENJOYS Both the method and results when Syrup of Figs is taken; it is pleasant and refreshing to the taste, and acts ; gently yet promptly on the Kidneys, Liver and Bowels, eleanses the sys tem effectually, dispels eolds, head aches and fevers and cures hnbitual constipation. Syrup of Figs is the only remedy of its kind ever pro duced, pleasing to the taste and ac ceptable to the stomach, prompt in i its action and truly beneficial in its effects, prepared only from the most j healthy and agreeable substances, its ; many excellent qualities commend it ;to all and have made it the most popular remedy known. Syrup of Figs is for sale in 50 cent bottles by all loading 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. Do not accept any substitute. CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO. SAN FRANCISCO. CAL. LOUISVILLE. KY. NEW YORK t ff.Y. \"A Perfect Type of the Highest Order of • \ Excellence in Manufacture. " \ ' Walterßafter&Cois t ]• V.Costs less Tiian QUE CENT a Cup.. \ y , fie sure that you get the Genuine Article, 1 \ made at DORCHESTER, MASS. by r > WALTER BAKER & CO. Ltd./ < I KSTABUSIHD 1780. HANGER U without knife, plaster or pain. All forms of BLOOD DINKANRH I thoroughly eradicated from the system. Six ! weeks Home 'I rent meat for $lO. Book of ! Information free. NATURAL REMEDY CO., Westfield, Man. CONSUMPTION AND CATARRH I "Are result of Contracted Nostrils. />. uy* r,tnoi Gtu-f.Htnri Mv. for NASAL INSPIRATOR uratatim for pamphlet to (i. B. FAKICKQ. Perth. Ont.. Canada. j : Thompson's Eye Water psr 1 •#. |Mi Bent Lough Syrupy Tames Good. Use jJJ
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers