' The man who goes to church because ho has nothing else to do Is an Idle worshiper. America's Greatest IViecficine GBEATEST, Because it does what all other j medicines fail to do. As an instance of its peculiar and unusual curative power, consider the most insidious disease, and ' the disease which taints the blood of most I people, producing incalculable suffering I to many, while in others it is a latent Are I liable to burst iuto activity and produce untold misery on the least provocation. Scrofulcl is the only ailment to which J the human family is subjeot, of which the ! above sweeping stutoment can honestly ' bo made. Now, a medicine that can meet this common enemy of mankind j and repeatedly effect the wonderful cure*; Hood'sSarsap.'irllla has, —clearly has the j l ight to the title of America's Groatest ! Medicine. lie uro to get only HoOd'S S pa,ma Hood's Pills BEEOS^k Saber's Seeds ars Warranted to Produce. I|| 1 0 DOLL ARS WORTH FOR 10c. jjl KLONDIKE GOLD FIELDS OF ALASKA. Now is the proper time for all people con templating making a trip to Klondike to get information. Write the undersigned or CALL ON BIG FOUR AGENTS j for circulars and advertising matter per taining to Rates, Routes, Sailing of Steam- ! ers, Equipment, Baggage, Supplies, and all detailed information. E. 0. McCormicli, Warr?n Lynch, PUSH. Traflh- Mgr. Assist. O. P. &T. Agt ! CINCINNATI, O. flMllfirm AND TUMOR ■ ■lliUl.r'R PERMANENTLY ■ .HllULai cured without knife, plaster or pain. AH forms of ISI.OOD DINEASEH thoroughly eradicated from tho pystern. Six } weeks Home Treatment for §lO. Book of Information free. NATURAL REMEDY CO., Westfield, Macs. LOOK. LADIES, LOOK! THE LORD'S PRAYER written in ink (English or Latin,) in the ('ircumfer- i once of 11 gold dollar, with your name in Kalian I her!pt inside the border. Enclose one dollar with 1 order; write plainly and send to l{. S|KI.IJK, (Pouuian.) 11l Dulllrld St.. Brooklyn. N. V. Garden Si Flower Bfl la -i w ßh a world wide Krat Bra reputation. Catalog ; Tree to all. JAMES J. H. GREGORY ASOX.lUrblekead.K**s. MMfeuMEN WANTED. TO TRAVEL for old established house Permanent posit ion. S4O per month and all expenses ILW.ZIEGLEU & CO.. 240 Locust St., Philadelphia. TALKING MACHINES I illustrntodcirculars address Talking Machine Co., Syracuse, N. Y. Vb 1 S E3 Hk and Liquor Habit cured In Wl fiwHWH Dept. A, Lebanon. Ohio, i VoZlTn* I Thompson's Eye Water P N U 9 '9B. PASNTSWMLS*ILINfiS HURALO WATER 30L0R PAINTS FPU DECBR6TIHG WALLS MO CEILINGS urcUaso a paokaga of 9 your grocer or paint dealer and do your own ' ** H ve ,j aco . rating. This material is a HARD I'TNISH to be oppliad with a bruah and becomes as hard as Comout. Milled in twenty-four tints and works , equally as well with cold or hot water. IwkTSIC.VD t'OSt SAMHJLE ] CARDS and if you cannot purchaso this material from your local deal- ■ era let us know and we will put yon in the way of obtaining it. "S THE lllllßAbD CO., XEW HKIGHTOX, S. 1., NEW YORK. I Surrey naraea*. Prior, f 16.00. Send for large, free No. 606 Surrey. Price, wlh curtalni.lampa, tun- At good aa mIU for $45. Catalogue of all our etjics. thade, aprou and fendtrt, fW. Aa good aaiella for |9O - CARRIAGE AND lIARHEStt MFG. CO. W. 11. TILATT, Sec'y, ELKHART, UfD. THE CLEANER 'TIS, THE COSIER 'TIS. WHAT IS HOME WITHOUT SAPOLIO Dog with a hiitury. A dog with un Interesting history hat just died in France. He was a Now foundland named Sultan, and he count ed among his exploits the arrest of i thief, the capture of an assassin, the rescue of a child from drowning in th< ! Maine, and of a man who attempted tc commit suicide by Jumping from tin Pont-Neuf into the Seine. For thlf gallantry the Society for the Protectior of Animals presented him with a eollai of honor three years ago. Latterly Sultan was owned by the Cointessi Foucher de Careil, who relied on bin to protect her castle at Ferdy, neai Corbeil. Quite recently he preventive the castle from being robbed. The no | ble dog has paid his devotion to dutj I with his life, for he was found dead in i the park, poisoned by his enemies.— Lloyd's London Weekly. Life of Work Horses. In London the omnibus horse is worn out in five years, the tram horse in | four, the postoffice horse in six, and the brewers' in from six to seveu, j while the vestry horses last eight years. Some men can naraiy wait tni tney i get through telling the Lord how good ; lie is to give them such a dinner before they begin to scold the cook. Piso's Cure cured me of a Throat and Lung trouble of three years' standing.— E. CAOY, Huntington, lud.. Nov. 12, ISW. COULD NOT SLEEP. Mrs. Finkham Relieved Her of All Her Troubles. Mrs. MADGE BABCOCK, 17G Second St., Grand Rapids, Mich., had ovarian trouble with its attendant aches and pains, now she is well. Ilcrc and since taking |it all troubleshave gone. My monthly I i sickness used to be so painful, but have j not had the slightest pain since taking I your medicine. I cannot praise .your Vegetable Compound too much. My husband and friends sec such a change in me. I look so much better and have j some color in ray face." ■ Mrs. Pinkhain invites women who are , ill to write to her at Lynn, Mass., for 1 advice, which is freely offered. ! 1"A Perfect Type of the Highest Order of • Excellence in Manufacture." < [walterlMer&Cols iv) Breakfast J ijlll Ifrilu s °iut e 'y ..Costs Less TQanOHE CENT a Cup..; Be sure thai you get the Genuine Article, I , made at DORCHESTER, MASS. by I ' WALTER BAKER & CO. Ltd. < J ESTABLISHED 1780. • ! | Ko, 088. B fij ~ is hod solid on k 6- 8 • | I® | ■_ sJi furnished with , .1 .Mi_±-=) the best looka, ) ._ .I.J.—uw't/ bujs this exact S||jßpg— ~ - -—n * piece of furni tailsfor 18.00. (Order now and avoid disappointment.) Drop a postal for our lithographed r Carpet Catalogue which shows ail colors with exact distinctness. It carpet sum pies are wanted, mail us he. in stamps, r >V hy pay your local dealer 60 per cent, more than our prices when you can buy of the mill? Ihe great, household educa tor-ournew 112 page special catalogue of Furniture, Draperies, Lamps, Stoves, Crockery, Mirrors, Pictures, Bedding, Refrigerators, Baby Carriages is also yours for the asking. Again we ask, H why enrich your local dealer when you H can buy of the maker? Both cata- B Jogues cost you nothiug, aud wo pay all postage. " J JuliusHines&Son BALTIMORE, MD. Please Mention Tv.ia Paper, BnHmasiannßßßaßaaM BATTLE WITH A SNAKE. A Florida Story Related by the Chica go Chronicle. Mrs. Byrou Brown, who lives over In the West End settlement, five miles from Ocola, Fla., had an exciting set-to with a huge snake the other day that has mado her a great reputation as a bravo woman. She has a Une lot ot poultry. She never gives a chicken away, kills one or sells one, much to the dlsguet of her husband, who Is a practical man, and wants to see some money come In for the big outlay In get ting the fowls. The other day while Mrs. Brown was In the house cooking some eggs for her husband's dinner she heard a terrible commotion 1# *-ke hen yard. limnning outshosaw a huge snake devouring one of her pet chlckons. She stood struck dumb with horror aud pain—she was from Boston—and then her Yankee blood was roused and she determined that the "sarpint" should pay for his meal. Catching up a big stick, she struck at the snake, but missed, and the next moment the snake flew at her. She nimbly jumped aside and It missed her dress by an Inch. Turning tall the reptile sought safety in flight. Gliding flown by the fence. It sought a big knot hole and started to got out. As Its folds disappeared through the hole Mrs. Brown was seized by a brilliant Idea. Jumping forward she seized Its'tall and began pulling lack. The snake thrash ed vigorously, but couldn't strike back on account of the boards. Mrs. Brown was struck by another brilliant Idea. With an adroitness pe culiar to women she tied the snake's tall In a double bow knot. Then slip ping a big wedge of wood right behind It she drove a stake through the loops so the snake couldn't get back. Then going up to the other side she sought to kill the reptile. But his angry hiss and threatening look were too much for her. She ran Into the house and came out with the eggs that had been boiling nil this time, and were sizzling with heat. Getting the reptile excited she threw an egg. The snake struck at It in auger and madly swallowed It. Two or three more followed In rapid succes sion, the Infuriated reptile swallowing every one as It came along. At the fourth one the snake seemed to think It bad had enough of this roil-hot kind of food and wildly thrashed about trying to get free. Soon one of the eggs came through Its under side, having burned Its nay through the snake's body. Then another and another followed until all were on the ground and a dying snake lay there. Mrs. Brown then waxed brave, and, getting a pine wood knot, pounded the reptile's head Into bits. It mesumred 9 foot 514 Inches long and vas 10 Inches around the middle. She saved the eggs and her husband .•omarked that day at dinner that she aad "allowed the eggs to get pretty hard." whereat Mrs. Brown smiled. WISCONSIN'S YOUNG JURIST. Judizo John E. Pannior, of Chippewa Fall, but 23 Tcurs Old. The youngest Judgo in Wisconsin, anil probably the youngest In the coun try, Is John E. Pannier, elected County Judge at Chippewa Falls, Wis., last spring. He Is 23 years old aud suc ceeded Judge Belden, of Itacine, who ten years ago, at the time of his elec tion, was tliu youngest judge on the bench. Judge Pannier was born In Chippewa Falls and is a product of the public schools, which he attended until he was graduated from the high school In 1892. JOHN E. PANNIER. He then spent a year or more making the best of Ills time and opportunities In studying in the law ofllce of Colonel L. J. Busk, after which he went to Madison, whero he entered the law course anil was graduated with honors in 1895. Shortly after he began the practice of Jils profession. At the time of the spring election ho secured the nomination nncl was elected to the of fice of County Judge. HOUSEHOLD CJIATTERS. Grease Stains in Velvet. Pour turpentine over tliG grease 1 stains in velvet and rub with eleau flannel until it is dry. Should the spots be not removed by the first ap plication, repeat the process, and when this is done, brush the park rapidly, but gently, Lastly, hang the velvet in the ai r >0 evaporate the smell. Should the pile seem at all crushed, raise it by means of tbe usual expedient; that of holding a hot iron near the back of the material. To Clean Papier Muchc. With a sponge apply to the surface lukewarm water and plain white soap. Wash off the suds and wipe the tray dry, then sprinkle with flour. Allow this to stay on for a short while, then rub oft* with a dry rag, and finally polish the tray with a silk handker- ; chief. Heat marks on papier mache trays should be treated with an appli cation of sweet oil and spirits of wine, though even this remSwy is not in fallible when the marks are very bad ones. Black and Burnt Spiders. To clean black and burnt spiders or kettles, boil in them a little salt and vinegar, then scour vigorously with an iron dishcloth. Copper and brass may be brightened by a vigorous rub bing with a slice of lemon dipped in salt. Frozen vegetables arß less im paired if placed at once in a cold salt- j water bath and left in a warm place to ' thaw. It a teaspoonful of salt is added to a quart of milk it will keep sweet and pure a much longer time. If the cook at any time gets a dish too sweet to suit the taste a pinch of salt is a corrective, and vice versa. Cooking Meats. A ham weighing ten pounds re quires to boil three hours and a quarter. A small chickeu should boil j twenty minutes; a large fowl forty-five | minutes to one hour; a neck of mut ton demands one hour and a half, and a pickled tongue two and a half to three hours. The loss in weight occasioned by the action of boiling varies with dif ferent meats. Pork, hams, beef and mutton experience about twelve per cent, of loss, while poultry diminishes about fourteen and three-fourths per cent. A turkey loses sixteen per cent, upon its original weight. Folding Linen.' If sbeots and tablecloths aro so fold ed that tbe selvage edges will pass through tbe wringer first, they will be less likely to curl and will be smoother. Never bang articles singly on a windj day; if doubled or quadrupled even, they will dry, and frayed and other ; wiso dilapidated corners will be less frequent. Use a small wlxisk brooni to dampen clothes preparatory to ironing. Fold napkins and band kerchiefs once, place one upon anothei and roll. To prevent tbe fringe ol towels from breaking and wearing off, snap tho towels when tbo fringe is damp. Recipes. Peas in Turnip Cups—Peel ten me dium-sized turnips; out a slice from tbe bottom, that tbey may stand up right, and boil in salted water until tender. With a spoon scrape out tbe inside, leaving a quarter-inch wall ol turnip, and filled with creamed peas, using canned instead of fresh peas, and adding a teaspoonful of powdered mint, Jungent Jelly—Place one pint oi currant jelly, either black or red, in n double boiler and set where it will slowly melt. As it is melting stir in two tablespooufuls of dry English mustard. As soon as tbe jelly and mustard aro perfectly blended into a paste, pour it into dainty little indi vidual molds, to bo turned out when perfectly molded. Best prepared tbe day before. Duck-Liver Balls—Chop fine and ' rnb through a strainer tho livers ol 1 the ducks to be served for dinner. Add two beaten eggs, oue-balf teaspoon of salt, a few grains of paprika and two teaspoonfnls of fine chopped par sley. Add soft bread crumbs sufficient to bind tbe mixture, that it may be formed into tiny balls; drop into hoi water or stock and cook five minutes. Serve with clear soup. Onion Souffle—Two cups of white Bauoe, one cup of rolled craekei crumbs soaked in a cup and a half of milk, two cups of chopped, cold, : cooked onions and the beaten yolks ol five eggs; mix all well together, sea son with a half-teaspoouful of salt and quarter teaspoonful of whito pepper; lastly fold in very lightly the five egg whites beaten to a stiff froth. Turn into a buttered pudding dish and bake one hour. French Marmalade—This recipe is very good for seasons when fruit is scarce. Peel six large cooking applos and put them over a slow fire, together with a half-pound of sugar and a wine glassful of orange juioe. When well stewed add two and a half poniuls ol seeded raisins and just water enough to prevent their burning. Cook slowly until tho fruits appear well dis solved, then beat through a strainer and next through a sieve. Mold if desired or put away in small fruit jars and serve cut in thin slices with cream. Nesselrodo Padding—Press through a colander a pint of blanched and boiled chestnuts. Pound a pint of blanched sweet almonds. Cut a half pound of candied fruit into small pieces. Boil a pint of water with a pound of sugar for fifteen minutes, then add ,the beaten yolks of six eggs to the boiling sirup and stir over tbe fire until' thick, then take off and beat with a spoon until cold. Add the fruit and nuts, a tablespoonful of va nilla and a pint of cream. Mix well, put in freezer and freeze. When hard stand away four or five fr*urs be fore serving. \Vlint H JJlun Can't Do. [ A man cannot do two things at a lime. A woman will broil a steak and see that the coffee does not boil over, ; and watch that the cat does not steal the remnant of the meat on the kitchen [ table, and dress the youngest boy, and set the table, and see to the toast, and stir the oatmeal, and give the orders to the butcher, and she can do It all at once, and not half try. Man has done 1 wonders since he came before the pub 11c. He has navigated the ocean, be has penetrated the mysteries of th< I starry heavens, he has harnessed the lightning, and made it light the great cities of the world. But he can't llnd a reel of thread In bis wife's work basket; he can't discover her pocket in a dress hanging in the closet; he cannot bang out clothes and get them on the line the right end up. He cannot hold clothes' pins in his mouth while he is doing it either. He cannot be polite to somebody he hates. He cannot sew on a button. In short, he cannot do a bun dred things that women do almost in stinctively. Smart Advertising. The proprietor of Beeeham's pills, 01 his agent, did a smart thing at Liver pool. Nelson's old flagship, the Foil droyant, broke loose, it will be remein bered, from its bearing In a storm, and drifted on to the shore. The Bluckpoo! agent for Beeeham's pills saw a splen did chance, and proceeded to paint on the side of the stranded vessel the in serlption, "England expects every man to do his duty and take Beeeham's | pills." Mr. Cobb, the owner of the j Foudroyant, has sued the proprietoi I of the pills for a trespass and dam agos, with the result that he has been awarded by a jury 40s ngainst the agent, and foO against the principal, I The advertisement will probably not ! be regarded as very dear.—Lloyd's I London Weekly. Deafness Cannot be Cured iy local applications, as they cannot reach the liseased portions of the ear. There is only one yay to cure deafness, and that is by constitu tional remedies. Deafness is caused bv an in- > lamed condition of the mucous lining of th© 1 Eustachian Tube. When this tube gets in- I lamed you have a rumbling sound or imper fect hearing, and when it is entirely closed deafness is the result, and unless thointlam- : nat ion con bo taken out and this tube restored 0 its normul condition, hearing will be de itroyod for ever. Nine cases out of ten are ■aused by catarrh, which is nothing but an in lamed condition of the mucous surfaces. We will give One Hundred Dollars for any saae of Deafness (caused by catarrh) that can lot be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure, tieud for ' tirculurs, free, r. ~, v F - ,T - Cheney & Co., Toledo, O. bold by Druggists, 75c. Hall's Family Pills aro the best. Land and a Living \ro best and cheapest in the New South. Land >8 to sr> an acre. Easy terms. Good schools 1 md churches. No blizzards. No cold waves. Sew illustrated paper, "Land and a Living," 8 I noiitbs for ID cents in stamps. W. C. HINKAU- I ION, vJ. P. A., Queen & Crescent ltouto, . Jincinnatl. Projectiles used for the United States irmy for its great modern suns cost is follows: Solid shot, 8-inch, $69 80 ?ach; 10-inch, $14150 each, 12-inch, $212 ?ach; 12-inch mortar shells weighing ,000 pounds, $195 each. To Care A Cold In One Day. Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablet©. All Druggists refund money if it fails to cure. 86c. The first woman on record who held 1 medical diploma was Anna Moranda Vlazzoni, who, in the middle of the last century, filled the chair of anatomy in the University of Bologna. Chew Star Tobacco—The Boat. Smoke Sledgo Cigarettes. Addington Park, for a century and until lately, the official country place :>f the Archbishops of Canterybury, has been sold for $.'175,000, to a new million aire from Johannesburg. To check a cold in one hour use Hoxsie'g C. C. a homoeopathic, remedy of great power; certain cure, 50 rts. Sample mailed free. Write lioxsie, Buffalo, N. Y. A Total Disability Claim of $1,650 Paid to a ian who was Afterward Cured, The Monitor, a nowspaper published at Meaford, Ont., Canada, first discovered this case two years ago, and published it at length, which now seems, owing totheoure of It, to be a miracle. Tho facts were so remarkable that many people doubted tho truth of them. They said: "It is too re markable; It cannot possibly be true; the paper is mistaken, and the man, although ho mar think himself cured, will soon re- : lapso into his former condition," etc., etc. The accuracy of its report called in ques tion, tho Monitor determined to find out definitely whether the facts were as stated and whether the man would really stay cured. They accordingly kept a close watch on the case for two years after the first ar ticle appeared, and have just now published aiother article about it iu which the original rV A/Z^L^V^^CX ft /fztpfj/Q .Pr***** s£2_JlX reports are completely verified, the cure is per manent, and they publish a fac simile of the check given by the Canadian Mutual Life As sociation for $1G50.00 amount of total disa bility claim paid by them to Mr. Fetch. The first account stated that the patient (see address below) had been a paralytic for live years, that there was such a total lack of feeling in his limbs and body, that a pin run full length couid not be felt; that he could not walk or help himself at all; for two years he was not dressed; furthermore that ho was bloated, was for that reason 1 almost unrecognizably, und could not get j his clothes on - . The paralysis was so com-| plcte as to affect the. face and prevented r liim from opening his mouth sufficiently ! GARRETS AND COOKS. Delights of Which the Modern Child Knows Nothing. I do not believe that the modern child j knows anything about an attic. The I flu-de-siecle attic is a respectable place ; I where boxes are solemnly piled and : where inoth camphor sheds Its fra | grance abroad, says a writer in Lippin j 1 cott's. There are hardly any old book:- to be found, for most people send therr, j ; to the Hebrew merchants on the side ; i streets. Our attic was a long, low 1 room, with mysterious dark corners, i into whose depths we did not pene trate. There was an old hair trunk in one corner that held some of grand mother's muslin dresses. It was open ed only on rare occasions and I was al lowed but a glimpse of the faded beau ty within. There was an old spinning wheel where spiders hung fantastic wreaths and there was a guitar with broken, moldered strings. But the corner where the books were piled was the spot I liked the best. An old-fashioned, tiny-paned window let an occasional sunbeam stray across the "Ladies' Repositories" and "Saints' Rest." There was a fine old elm tree that tapped against the window and sometimes a robin sent a thrill of song into the dusty corners. Just beneath the window seat I used to sit, a small crouched form, bending over a musty volume. But when I wished to read under the most blissful conditions I fortified my | self with half a dozen russet apples, | whose juice would have given flavor to I a treatise on Hebrew grammar. Now, I I never see a russet apple without sec j ing also the dim old attic and an utterly j contented child, and I am sure the mar ! Uet women misunderstand my wistful | glance, for they draw closer to their j baskets and look at me In suspicious fashion. An apple, so some tell us, de prived lis of our Eden; but apples were :iu important feature of my childish paradise. So let us leave them in Po I mona's care and look at the intellectual , | part ©f the feast. Bargains, "Did you hear what Whimpton's lit | tie boy said when they showed him the | i twins?" "No; what was it?" "He said: 'There! Mamma's been i gettin' bargains again.' Collier's j ! Weekly. Never Content. Rome people nro never content with any- i I thing. They will not find exactly what j they want even in heaven, if they know j some one is thero ahead of them. For in- I stance, some are great sufferers from neu ralgia. Friends have told them what is ; best and certain to cure them. Not con- ! tent with what is said, they su/Ter on. Pain ravages and devastates the system, and i leaves it a barren waste. St. Jacobs Oil ; has cured thousands. Just try it. No Klondiko for Mo ! Thus says E. Walters. Le Raysville, j Pa., who grew (sworn to) 252 bushel:. I Salzer's corn per acre. That means 2\- 200 bushels on 100 acres at 30c a bushel equals $7,560. That is better than a i prospective gold mine. Salzer pays S4OO j In gold for best name for his 17-lnch i corn and oats prodigy. You can win. i Seed potatoes $1.50 a Bbl. SEND THIS NOTICE AND 10 CENTS IN STAMPS to John A. Salzer Seed Co., La Crosse, Wis., and get free their seed catalogue, and 11 farm seed samples, including above corn and oats, surely I worth $lO, to get a start. A. C. 5. Fits permanently cured. No fits or norvoua- NOKFL after first day's use OL' I)r. Kline's Great Nerve Restorer. s2trial bottle and treatise froo L)IU R. 11. KLINE. Ltd.. 101 Arch St..PhUa..Pa. ( Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrnp for children i teething, softens theKums.reducing inflamma tion, allays pain, cures wind colic. 26c.a botfr.'\ ( wide to tftke solid food. The doctors called I the disease spinal solorosis, aud all said ho ; could not live. I For three years, he lingered in this con dition. Then by some friends he was ad ' vised to take Dr. Williams' l*iuk Pills for Pale Pooplo. lie took them aud there was ,'i slight change. The first thing noted was a teudency to sweat freely. This showed there was some life left In his helpless body. Next came a little feeling in his limbs. This extended, followed by prickling sensa tions, until atiastthebloodbegautocour.se freely, naturally and vigorously through ills body, and the helplessness gave way to returning strength, the ability to walk re turned, and he was restored, to his old time I health. t The above is tho substance of the first nrtlclo published by tho Monitor. Now fol ! low some clippings, taken from the same paper two years afterward and there iB not tho slightest shadow of a doubt, in view of this testimony, that Mr. Fetch's cure is per manent. Hero follows the account: On being again questioned, Mr. Patch said: "You see those hands—the skin Is now natural and elastic. Onoo (hey were hard and without sensation. You could pierce thera with a pin and I would not feel it, and what is true of my hands is true of ] tho rest of my body. Perhaps you have : observed that I have now even ceased to I use a cane, and ean get about ray business | perfectly wJI. You may say there is abso- I lutely no doubt as to my cure being perma- A Curious Bequest. I The conditions attached to bequests j of money are often curious. An inter i csting illustration of this Is afforded iby an annual custom which takes | place in one of the cemeteries of New castle-on-Tyue. Some years ago a gen tleman left a sum of money for the re j lief of the rates on condition that cer | tain members of the corporation should I every year place a wreath of flowers ! on his tomb. So, annually, as the an j niversary of his death comes round, the mayor and other members of tint corporation attend and hang a wreath on the granite obelisk which marks His resting place. Thus his memory is kept green among his fellow-citizens —Golden Penny. unique Ceieuration. A highly-esteemed midwife at Stolfe. in Germany,celebrated lately a singular feast. Sho had just assisted at the birth of her o,oooth child to whom she had given services, and, in honor of that event, she invited all the children whom she had helped to come into the world to her country house to partake of a banquet. Very many big and lit tle children accepted the invitation, passing a pleasant afternoon. When they left in the evening they made a torchlight procession past their bene factor's house, and then took the train to Berlin.—Lloyd's London Weekly. Marriage sometimes uncovers the truthfulness of the proverb, "Troubles never come single." ©rm enjoys Both the method and results when ; Syrup of Figs is taken; it is pleasant j and refreshing to the taste, ar.d acts ' gently yet promptly on the Kidneys, ! Liver and Ilowels, cleanses the sys tem effectually, dispels colds, head aches and fevers and cures hahitual constipation. Syrnp of Figs is the only remedy of its kind ever pro duced, pleasing to the taste and ac ceptable to the stomach, prompt in its action and truly beneficial in its effects, prepared only from the most 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 leading drug- I gist 3. 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. AY. NEW YORK, N.Y. For Poultry, half cost of W 8 f FiJ D Netting. Also best Farm I can save you moiit v. r paid.Catalogue free K. L. SHffLLABAfcGLR, AH F. St., Atlanta. Ga. nenl. Indeed Tam in even heller health than iohe.ii I gave yon the first interview "Do you Btill attribute your cure to tlio use of Dr. Williams' Pink Pills?" asked the Monitor. "Unquestionably I do," w.vu the roply. "Doctors had failed, as had also tho numer ous remedies recommended by my friends. Nothing I took had the slightest effect upon me until I began the use of Dr. Williams' Piuk Pills. To this wonderful medicine 1 owe. my release from the living death. I havo since recommended these pills to many ol my friends, and tho verdict is always in their favor. I shall always bloss the day 1 was induced to take them." Such is the history of one of the most re markable oases of modern timos. Can any one say, in the face of such testimony, thai Dr. Williams' Pink Pills are not ontitlo l ti tho careful consideration of nuy suffering man, woman or child? Is not the case iu truth a miracle of modern medicine? To make the ovidence complete wo pub lish above a fac simile cut of the chock re ceived by Mr. Petoh from the Canadian Mutual Life Association, being the amount due 11 im for total disability, it is unneces sary to add that tills life insurance asso ciation did not pay this large amount ol money to Mr. Patch, except altar tho mo.sl careful examination of his condition b v their medical experts. They must have ro. garded him as forever incurable. Mr. Fetch's address is as follows, Rca oji retch, Grieriviile. Out.. Canada.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers