DEMOCRATS CONTROL They Hold the Key to the Sena torial Situation at Harrisburg. GEO. A, JENKS FOR U. S. SENATOR. Theltcpublloan Machine Is Unplug In Vain For Help From the Democracy. Anti-Quay Itcpubl leans Have an Or tranlzatlon to Fight Quay—The Down hill of tk£ Itcpubl loan Boss Only a Matter of a Few Days or Weeks. (Special Correspondence.) Harrisburg, Pa., Jan. 16.—The sena torial situation is in the hands of the Democrats. They are masters of all they survey. Opportunities never dream ed of have been coming their way In the past ten days and it is creditable to the party and its leadership that the senators and members here are of a character fully able to take care of themselves. The nomination on Thurs day last of the Hon. George A. Jenks for the United States senatorshiptosuc ceed Senator Quay was a stroke of good policy. The reputation of Mr. Jenks for statesmanship, integrity and unswerv- | ing Democracy is as wide as the country. No better selection could have i been made. He is a man around whom the Democrats can rally and feel that they are safe In following him as a standard bearer. In the past the Democracy has known what it is to light against hopeless odds. Heretofore It stood for an unfaltering minority. Today It stands triumphant for the best that is in politics in the state of Pennsylvania. Some base slan ders have gone forth from the Quay Re publican press in the past two weeks. They have hinted that when the senior j senator wanted votes to make out the 1 quota of his majority, which he could 1 not get from the Republicans, he would I turn to the Democrats. It was an im- . plication that Democrats could be ! bought. Refore the present fight is over no ! man in Pennsylvania will dare to say I that even the weakest or humblest i Democratic member in house or sen ate could be swayed from the course of rectitude and honor to his party by scheming Republicans. There is more than the mere fact of holding the balance j of power in all this. Since Jackson's time the name Democracy has been synonymous with reform. If the party ' In Pennsylvania has not been able to j father of all the reforms that have been placed on the statute books, it has ai least forced the adoption of these re forms by the dominant Republican party. The old arrogant Republican machine is practically on its knees to the Democracy. It is beseeching Col onel Guffey. Hon. George A. Jenks. ex- | Lieutenant Governor Black and all the | other leaders, great and small, to save j It from its fate. From present outlook i Quayism is doomed and on its wreck must rise the tribute of sterling D •- I mocracy. ONE OF QUAY'S SCHEMES. One of the smoothest schemes of Sen ator Quay's followers was to try and in duce Democrats to remain away from the approaching joint ballot for United ] States senator, which begins on Wed nesday of this week. It was an appeal j to the careless and thoughtless mem- ' hers of the party. For any Democrat to ! remain away from his place in house | or senate at the present time is equiv alent to giving a vote for Quay. The independent Republicans, who are ! lighting Quay, recognize this fact and i they have pledged all of their followers 1 In a written document to be present at j every roll call and vote against Senator ! Quay. I The action of Colonel Guffey and other Democratic leaders in passing a ; resolution requiring two-thirds of all i the Democrats in house and senate to consent before another candidate is i named in place of Mr. Jenks gives the lie to Republican machine statements that the Democrats will help Quay. Tf there had been any men weak enough and corrupt enough among the Demo cratic legislators at Harrisburg to yield to the blandishments of Republicans this action of the Democratic caucus would have settled them. But there have been enough gratuitous insults thrown at the Democrats. They stand today a? they will stand to the bitter end, asolid, unyielding, uncompromising barrier to the re-election of Matthew Stanley Quay. TO HELP OTTT REEDER. One other thing in which the Demo crats were alleged to be interested is the reinstatement of General Reederand of John P. Elkln to places in Governoi Stone's cabinet. There are enough Re publicans of the anti-Quay kind In the senate to defeat the confirmation of Reeder if the Democrats join in. It is known positively that Quay wants Reeder put back in his old place of secretary of the commonwealth as .1 vindication for being turned out by Governor Hastings. The Republican state chairman. John P. Elkin, Is also seeking vindication in the same way. It nan be stated with the utmost as surance that no Democrat will vote for , the confirmation of General Frank | Reeder. The reason is clear. The Demo- j crats have named their late candidate | for governor, Hon. George A. Jenks, as (heir candidate for United States sena tor. During his campaign Tor the gov- ! ernorship Mr. Jenks went up and down the state proclaiming the outrage of the Indemnity bond, to which General Frank Reeder and Mr. Elkin were signers, and proclaiming that the men who signed j that notorious document were law j breakers in the sight of the law. Under such circumstances no Democrat daro 1 vote for a reinstatement of these men, and so the charge that General Reeder will get back into the cabinet with the assistance of Democratic votes is as i false as false can be. The balloting for United States sena tor will begin on Tuesday of this week with separate ballots in house and sen ate. On Wednesday a Joint meeting of both bodies will he held and a joint [ ballot taken. Up to last Saturday night j It is understood that 48 members of the i anti-Quay organization had signed the iron bound anti-Quay pledge. More are ! expected to sign before the balloting I begins. j There Is no longer any doubt that a protracted deadlock Is inevitable. Even Senator Quay's friends admit this. They j are making some very boastful claims, ' but they are not giving out any figures. The Democrats and anti-Quay Republi cans make no boasts, but they do give figures. They tell just how many men they have and how many votes they Will be able to cast against Mr. Quay on the joint ballot. The Quay lieuten ants have nothing to offset this with, except to reiterate that the "old man" j will be re-elected. That is the way the j fight stands today. Senator Quay will be j defeated because Colonel Guffey and Hon. George A. Jenks and the men who are the brain, the bone and the sinew of the Democratic party have said i\ j And the Democratic party can claim , ; the victory. SAVAGE AND FEROCIOUS. The Devil Duncci-i at Ceylon HIMI Their Myhterioud Way*. The real Singhalese devil dancers in Ceylon are ferocious and savage fellows. Their dances are revolting and horrible. But their profession N j popular and afl'ords a royal living for ( ! the men who go into it. There is :i | superstition among the Singhalese that ; when a man falls sick lie is supposed j to be afliieted ly the devil. In order j to rid him of the disease the devil j dancers are called in to propitiate th * j demon. Two or more of them go bv j night to the sick mail's house, in front | of which n sniau. square inclosuiv, j about six feet high, lias been mad • ; of grasses and palm leaves. This an- j swers the purpose of the green room j at a theatre. The men appear at firs, without masks .and with long yellow grass streamers hanging from tlu i" I heads and waists. The only light cast I on the scene is by torches made of stieks, round which pieces of cloth a:*" ! wrapped, dipped in oil. To the music of a tam-tam, kept up on one note, the dancers sing a pccu.iar, wild funeral dirge, In which the spectators often join. The dancers begin by slowly moving j about, stretching the right foot ami bringing rue left up to it. and appear ! as if they were searching for some- ! tiling, during which the singing sounds like crying. They are then asking the devil to appear. There are twenty-four 1 different sorts of devils, and, after the tirsi part, the dancers are constantly changing their clothes 10 represent the entire species: some wear masks, son; • don jaws ind terrible teeth reaching to the ears. The jaws open and clo.s<* ; in a very realistic manner. A dance .asts over two nights, as the j whole twenty-four devils have all to be personated before the particular de mon who is a filleting tue sick man is pitched on. When ho gives signs of his presence the dancers go into a sort <f frenzy, which increases as he tak s j possession of them; tiie tam-tam heats I faster ano faster, the chanting grows into yells, the men whirl and stamp and the hells on their ankles Jingle and , clash. At this stage the dancers appear to ; lie looking for some object to give th" i devil in sacrifice, and into which he may pass. A chicken is usually offered I by the friend of the sick man, and this unfortunate bird is seized upon, twist ed and tormented and bitten between i the false teeth, until the dancers, worn ! out, move slower and slower, and the j chicken sinks into a sort of trance, which is the sign that tlie devil lias accepted the sacrifice, and is willing | to pass from the man into the bird. Manila Hemp. Every engineer knows what Manila hemp is. but few arc? aware that it is the product of a species of banana which Is cultivated In certain localities ; in the Philippine Islands. The plant, 1 called by the natives "abaca," throws i up a cluster of sheating leaf stalks to ! a height of twenty or thirty feet, which I spread out at the top iuto a crown of j huge, undivided leaves. When it is three years old it is cut down, and the | stalks are torn into strips. These I i strips, while still fresh ,ure drawn b- ! i tween a knife and a wooden block, and the soft cciluioiis matter is removed. The fibre is then hung up to dry in the I open air until it is fit for use. Each stalk gives about a pound of fibre, and two natives will turn out about twenty five pounds a day. The inside fibre, which is thin and weak, is used by the j natives for making articles of dress. The familiar Manila rope is made from : the fibre of the outer layer, which is j hard and strong. The whole supply of Manila hemp practically comes from the Philippines, and the United States | consume 41 per cent of it. Last year this country took 417,473 hales out of the 825,020 bales exported. Great Brit ain coming next with 385,182 bales. The continent of Europe took 22,373 bales. Corean Oeoinancera. The influence of the geoniaucers cx- I tends from the King to bis humblest subjects, and illustrates the cunning and simplicity which are combined in the Corenn character. These profes sional oracles arc consulted on all oc casions by all sorts of people. The King never thinks of doing anything 1 without first asking their opinion. They are more important to liiin than legal advisers to railways and other i corporations that employ them, and they are notoriously corrupt, and their ; id vice is always Influenced by the pny i inont of money. If any one desires to obtain a favor from the King, lie usually endeavors to secure the good offices of the gcom •nicer who is likely to be consulted, and the amount of the bribe corresponds to the Importance of the matter. While the geomancer pretends to consult the spirits and observe the movements of i tne stars, his client knows that it is the money that governs his action. Nevertheless, when the client is re i quired to perform some official act, he consults the same old humbug, WHO has been bribed by some one else to influence his decision, and he is per- I fectly aware of the fact. Fifty pounds of honey are annu ally produced by a hive of 5.000 bees, j In five years the bees will have in creased to oUjUtIU. KM Mill One of the Cleverest Yricks Known to the Professional Swindler. IT REQUIRES" PATIENCE. The Victim May Have Been Watched for Months Before He Is Fleeced. The Cane of Doctor Darlington, Who Wa Itoltbed of n Sutehel Containing •AO,- 000 In Caiih —Some Other Instances Where Sums Dave Deen Secured by This I'roees*. "The art of 'substituting* is perhaps one of the cleverest tricks of the pro fession." saitl a veteran tliief-taker, when approached concerning the loss of Samuel Greenwood, president of the Coatsville iPu.i National Bank, who was robbed of a satchel containing bonds to the value of SIO,OOO, while another grip was substituted in its place. "Speaking of similar eases that have come to my notice." I lie detective con tinued. as lie leaned back in his chair and took on a reminiscent air. "it is re markable what clever devices the pro fessional swindler will resort to in order to fasten on his intended prey. And yet, while the obstructing of one's grip and the substituting of another may seem a difficult matter at first glance, nevertheless when you remem ber that the thief may have watched Mr. Greenwood for months, the tiling becomes quite clear. He may have followed him from place to place, week out and week in. He became acquaint ed with the habits of Ilis intended victim, am. when the opportune mo ment arrived in the restaurant all he had to do was to place his empty grip where the satchel containing the valua bles had been before. "So much for that case. Let me tell you about another, much cleverer with the exception that the swindlers were apprehended afterward. About thirty years ago a great sensation was creat ed when Doctor Darlington, president of the West Chester (Pa.) bank, was robbed of a satchel containing $50,000 in cash. He was on his way home from Philadelphia. Seated in the rail road coach, with ids feet 011 an old grip on the floor, the old geutleman thought himself and his treasure abso lutely safe. But lie did not know what was in store for him. In the seat in front of him sat a woman in black. By the way. It is nearly always a wom an in black who is concerned in these swindling affairs. But to continue. "The lady, for she had all the ap pearances of a gentlewoman, was evi dently distressed from a cough and vainly attempted to raise the window next to her. She kept lifting away, and still the window would not budge. This was too much for Doctor Darling ton. Gallantly he got up from his seat, or rather released his foothold 011 his grip, while placing ids knees 011 his seat. The scheme was not mature as yet however. The woman bore down on the window while apparently assisting in its raising, and thus matters stood for a minute or two. The moment for the work of the confederates had now arriv ed. Seated across the aisle one of the thieves swiftly pushed his owu satchel under Doctor Darlington's seat, abstracted the full one. and the trick was done. The man was attired in a long cloak, whieli facilitated the oper ation. and when the old man sat down he felt secure in the fact that ids feet once more touched a satchel. At the next station the thief got off. and the woman was not suspected until long afterward, for Doctor Darlington never discovered ids loss until he reached home. The men implicated were To bacco Jack' and "Slappy Williams,since convicted to long terms in the peniten tiary. The woman, whose name 1 have forgotten, was also sent up.. "You can easily see how the trick was done." and here the superintend ent showed, by the aid of some chairs ami other paraphermialla. how Doctor Darlington was made the loser of a satchel with $50,000. "<)uo of tin- foremost detectives In tlie service, who for obvious reasons desires his name wit held, told of an other satchel robbery that differed in some respects from the one above. The spotted victim was despoiled of his grip as the train nearcd a station a distance away from the point of de parture. A confederate was in wait ing outside, and cunningly the stolen valise was passed to him, while the unsuspecting traveler did not discover liis loss until some time afterward. Condition of Working Poople. A stricking illustration of the differ ence ill the condition of the working people of Kurope and those of Ameri ca is furnished by contrasting the steerage passengers who go West with those that go Hast on the big Atlantic steamers. Steamship doctors say that oil the westward voyage they are al ways compelled to use many gallons of disinfectants in the steerage. On the eastward voyage tlie.v use none. Em igrants from Europe to the United States are headed together like so many cattle, and live in away that would disgrace noble animals. After two or three years in America, when they go back to their homes, they de mand clean quarters and comfortable hunks and the use of a bathroom. When they go West they carry thelrbo longings lied up in a handkerchief or Jammed into a bag. When they go East they have a good trunk, and some times several 01 them. ■Smallest Locomotive. The smallest locomotive ever made was seen at the Omaha exposition. Its height from the top of the stack to llio rail is 25 inches, and the gauge is 12'/j inches. The cylinders are 2xl Inches; the boiler is 1% horse power, made of steel, and tested to 500 pounds pressure and will hold 24 gallons of water. The diameter of the driving wheel is 10 Inches. The weight of the little engine is about (100 pounds and it will run on a rail three quarters of an Inch square. It will draw 10 cars, each coutaluiug two persons. AN OLD CIRCUS MAN'S STORY He Telle How They Found a Place In Which to Bury the Great Giant, "I never told yon the exact height of the great giant—what's the use?" said the old circus man. "You wouldn't believe it if 1 did; as I've said before it would only make you dis believe what 1 do tell you about hiin, and what's the use? But you can form some sort of an idea übout it if from these things that I've told you and from what I'm going to tell you now about his death and burial, because in the course of time he died. "We were under canvas then, show ing three times a day. and moving ourselves, and we were tolerable busy, and we really hadn't time to give at tention as we ought to the burying of what had been, after the great giraffe, our very greatest attraction. The dig ging of a grave for him would have been like digging the foundations for several houses in u row and would have taken lots of time, and the mere cost of the land would be considerable. "Well, as usual, the old man's horse sense came to the rescue. In looking around for forage when he struck the town he had discovered the bed of on abandoned canal, that they'd stopped using when the railroad was built. This old canal ran through the edge of a man's farm there, and the land was uo use to anybody. It didu t pay to plough it because it wasn't worth the time and trouble it would take to get horses ami plougns up and down the bank, and it wasn't any good for any thing; and the old man bought a strip of that land along there, a few acres of it, enough for a cemetery lot for the giant, for next to nothing. So you see there we were, with the land bought uud the grave dug at very small ex pense and practically in a minute. "We laid the giant down iu the sec tion of the canal we had bought, and hauled earth from the rest of the piece to cover him up—the old man was wise enough of course to buy laud enough to provide for that. When the mound was rounded up in proper shape and due proportions it made quite a ridge: it was a flat country round there, and you could see tills ridge for quite a piece. "Of course the old man put up a headstone, and it was much the biggest I ever saw. and quite different from any I ever saw—it was built of brick. The old man hired all the men that could work on it, and they put In a foundation nno built the headstone in half a day. It was something like tlie side of a brick house for general di mensions. only it was very much thick er and tombstone-like In shape, and at a little distance in the level country the ridge with the great stone at one end of it looked like what it was, the grave of a mighty giant. "And so we left him secure in mem ory, as we thought with the inscrip tion we liuil put on the headstone, but a groat storm came up before the mor tar had set and blew the headstone down, and there it lay simply a scat tering pile of brick. But the mound remained, as it still does; I saw it there only a year ago when I passed through that country. But with nothing to mark it. exact knowledge of it gradual ly faded, and even tradition had grown Indistinct, and the great mound had come finally to be known simply as the giant's hill." The Climate of Cape Colony. The climute of the Cape Colony, and indeed of South Africa, may ho com pared to that of the south of Europe and the north of Africa, with frost and snow on the highest lands and subtropical belts on the lowest lying parts, as in Natal. Zululand and Mas hoiialund. It may be roughly said that any part of South Africa is better for those suffering from chest compluiut than is the climate of our home coun try. at the most trying time of the year. But those who come to South Africa hoping to escape from this disease' should not as a general rule delay ou the const. The Cape peninsula is delightful for most people, but it is not by any means best for those who are constitutionally inclined to consumption. They must leave the coast, no matter how mauy Inducements there may be for them to stay, and climb the tableland which faces them at whatever port they may land. At irregular distances from the sea we have probably nowhere more than a hundred miles of low-lying coast lands before we ascend.Ouce on the tableland, so far as climate goes, it matters not in what direction health seekers proceed, the climute is equally good. l.ived In CBK*. Capt. Dreyfus is not the only man so unfortunate as to be shut up in a cage. At the Castle of Plessis lex Tours one is sliowu a dark and gloomy place un der a stairway, where they tell us Cardinal La Bhtue spent twelve years in au iron cage so constructed that he could neither stand nor lie in It. He had the singular good fortune—ne probably would question the adjective —of undergoing a punishment unique in history. In Copenhagen about 1740 there was living au Englishman who had spent eleven years in a cage. He was a gen tleman of Lancashire ,in the service of Charles XII. of Sweden, and was ar rested for some alleged act of treason. He escaped from prison, took refuge in Hamburg, where he was safe, but im prudently ventured hack, was again arrested and this time, for greater safe ty. was put in an iron cage and stayed there eleven years, when he was re moved to a prison room. He had not been ill any' of the time, was quite cheerful, wrote a volume of anecdotes, lamed a mouse for amusement and never lost his hope of ultimate release. A Paper HOUN*. A large paper house with sixteen rooms has been erected by a Russian gentleman upon his country estate at Savinowka. in I*odolfa. The house was constructed in New York by an Am erican engineer, and cost SBO,OOO rou bles. Its architect declares that it will last longer titan a stone building. To make the triumph of paper still more emphatic, the proprietor has re solved that the whole of the furniture shall be made of trie same material. An Unhfnltlir Cfty. St. Petersburg is built on what was formerly a swantp. To the present day a strong west wind, combined with high water in the river, forces water into the cedars. fflEanii They Are Useful in Many Ways, But Make Unpleas ant Companions. THE HIDEOUS BUZZARD. In Some Communities It Is Unlaw ful to Kill This Malodor ous Bird. Tli Scorpion >ot Half So Had H> Ilia Reputation—Tim Turnutula Salcl to Be HarmlosM If Not l>Uturbd—Land Crabs Am C'oimldereri a Delicacy—The Curious Little Spider Crab. Our soldiers In Cuba have no ad miration for the big land crabs, and certainly those creeping creatures arc not attractive. They are, however, useful allies of the buzzards, repul sive scavengers that consume decaying bodies which would otherwise produce dire pestilence. There is considerable difference between these two scaven gers. The buzzard is au absolute crav en, fearful even of its own ugly shad ow, and touches nothing that is not already decaying; while the crab, when ravenous, seeks prey, devouring live kittens and other helpless small things. At Belize, British Houdurous, there is an annual swarm of small land crabs: the negroes then catch us many as pos sible and keep them in barrels, salted, foi future consumption. The hermit crab, common in those lands .is ob jectionable for other reasons-its pala table flesh often proves poisonous to the msiguided ones who enjoy it. The hermit monopolizes auy empty shell of convenient shape and useH it as u movable cell, until his growth compels him to seek a larger one. It is odd to see a periwinkle shell, several indies in diameter, steered over the ground by one projecting crab claw which, kept busy out of doors, grows nmch bigger than the other, sheltered and inactive. In hot countries, where thorough sanitary measures are not taken, land crabs and buzzards serve a grout pur pose, and this is so well recognized that in some communities it is unlaw ful to ki'l a carrion bird—a flue being imposed for the offense. Ugly, malod orous and timid, this creature can arouse only disgust and pity. Dec id eclly "distance lends enchant ment" i) the buzzard's appearance, for when soaring on high its ch'ding flight is admirably graceful. But a company of these scavengers catches sight of some still form upon the earth below. Swiftly the birds swoop downward, always circling, from the height where they had appeared like mere specks. They settle upon the leafless brunches of some dead tree. Eagerly the black eyes scan the body they perceived from afar. and. having made sure that noth ing is at hand to disturb their right, they partly unfold their rusty-black wings and stealthily light upon their banquet. When these black-robed undertakers retire millions of ants soon swarm up on the skeleton and clean the bones, which, in a few da's, become whitened by the strong sunlight. The scorpion is not half as had as his reputation, especially the mother scorpion, the unfortunate being, doomed by nature to he devoured by her own progeny. It is rare, indeed, for any one to die of a scorpion sting, though the venom induces temporary paralysis of the tongue and some fever. Natives of Honduras assert that indigo is a good antidote, htil ammonia is the best remedy for poisonous virus, generally. As long as the scorpion is treated with due respect it will reciprocate; other wise there is a fair probability that the neat little dart at the end of its in teresting but woeful tail will bethrust into the aggressor's skin, injecting a thousandth part of a drop—no more— of the virulent white liquid stored ill a gland at the base of the sting. The great hairy tarantula is com monly dreaded, though not aggressive; in fact, some persons declare that it does not bite, but it should be particul arly avoided on account of its hair, fine bristles, which, if they enter the pores of the skin, make exceedingly bad sores. In places these black-hair ed spiders, whose bodies measure two inches in diameter, are so numerous that oeeasionly whole uriuiKs of then) can be seen changing their quarters. In such districts it is always advisable to shake each garment before donning it; also to give boots and shoes a good rupplng ou their upturned soles, in order that scorpions and others of the spider family may have a fair chance to vacate the premises. This polite attention may prevent an unpleasant encounter. As the crab was first considered, the crab spider may close the subject un der consideration. This curious little being is too interesting to be left out. and sufficiently dangerous to guard against; tjiuce one is enough to close the career of the finest race horse. When full-growu the am is about the size of a dime; in shape it is like a ('lawless crab, and its color is bright yellow, with brown spots. This pretty little body is exceedingly venomous, not that it bites, but because it poisons the man or beast that lias the misfor tune to swallow it in water, or in fod der. among which insects are apt to tumble. One am suffices to cause the death of horse or mule. It is assorted that a human being poisoned by the snfle means continues to exclaim "Ain! ant! am!" up to the hour of death; for which reason tlie Maya Indians name the spider thus. No big spider lias such an appetite as this small one; it consumes an astonishing number of flies. The am lives on trees, and noth ing can be more Interesting than to watch it rapidly spinning its great web. Upon the approach of a storm it quickly draws nil ttber hack into its body, and until fair weather again pro vails remains motionless beneath * leaf or in any convenient nook. Music In St. Peter's. Th music sung In St. Peter's at Home, is entirely In manuscript. No vosallst or musician Is permitted to have his part in his hand, except while he is actually performing it. A Big Sewtug Machine. A monster sewing machine weigh ing three and one-quarter tons is in us, lu Leeds. II sews leather beltlug. feICftSTORIA - & For Infants and Children. CASTQmi Fhe Kind You Have Always Bought , similatingtheroodantlßegula- ■ m ting ihe Stomachs and Bowels cf Pgpi-pg tllG W Promotes Digestion, Cheerfu- Signature ness and Rest.Cor,tains neither r> M U . |P^ Opium, Morphine norMineraL j 01 /[I /\ rf HotNabcotic. f H If Xcajx of Old OrSAItl ZZ PITCHER 4 \ A jv Pampfan See/' 1 V ■ pcdJZ7.fi, - j Jwrt i [ (\ , The 1 11 1/1 1 IIU Cltirtfod Sugmr - I I ftA T V A perfect Remedy for Constipa- if M fM* lV 111 (J lion, Sour Stomach.Diarrhoea, || I;*!' Worms .Convulsions, Feverish- fl I V.. II ness and Loss OF SLEEP, iyj* | Q II HOVQ TacSimile Signature of &3 1 Always Bought. iWKfrr II J JiIVILWirTTHIgBIi i * ° EXACT COPY OF WRAPPER. ■ Hiß|l ■fA W TMI MNTAUH COMMNY NEW YORK OITY M W£oi r, i§ of Wfas^nßetg Tlie trouble with thousands of women is not "female weakness," although many physicians suppose it is. The real trouble lies in the Kidneys, Liver and Bladder. Doctors often fail to effect a n cure, simply because they don't give the right remedy. Women as well (T) as men can ascertain for them selves if their Kidneys are diseased. ) S Simply fill a bottle or glass tum -1 / , •>. ./- / / bier with urine and let it stand a \h v ~~~/ / day ancl a n 'S htl there is a Jk!>sPtES<s Jk!>sPtES <s -~assy / sctJiment at the bottom, something is \\ V \\ x / / wrong with the Kidneys. If there is a ' f2=- , vj _ Jgr _/ /* desire to urinate often—if there is a /2> 1 L pain in the small of the back—if the urine fi taius linen—look out! The Kidneys are SJ 1 H . FgfiWlw ' O Ladies can take Dr. David Ken ' i \if surance of relief. It will cure them of Kidney, 1 '/ fa Liver and Bladder disorders just as certainly •£/■/' I S\\ ~ ))/ as it cures men. Wfl JIrS ' G " W ' DAVIXrORT . Of West Troy, \Sf9l N ' Y " " ajS: " * was troubled with my Kid ' \ nev nd suffered intense pain in my back and • .A loins. The wife of Dr. Robinson, pastor of the I'xrlmk rst Avcnuo Methodist Church, recommended Dr ' Dav ' d Kennedy's Favorite Remedy, ffif &1 Wlr vi 1 1 R ot some, and have used it ever since, with l"'S ffiwW the result that I ant greatly benefited. Allpains have left me, and I am like another person." Dr. David Kennedy's Favorite Remedy is a perfect blood and nerve medicine. It restores the liver to a healthy condition and cures the worst cases of constipation. It is a certain cure for all diseases peculiar to females. SssrnpSo BotM® Free Favorite Remedy is such a certain cure that the DA. David Kr.NN7.nY Corporation, Rondout, N. Y., will forward, prepaid, a free sample bottle to every sufferer who sends his or her full postofilce address and mentions this paper. The fact that our liberal offer appears in this paper is a guarantee of its genuineness. All druggists sell Favorite Remedy at si.oo a bottle. T. CAMPBELL, dealer in €?rocerie% Boot# unci • Hfonfijs* Also PURE WINES I LIQUORS FOR FAMILY AND MEDICINAL PURPOSES. Centre anil Mflin streets. Freelaftd. P. FTMCNULTYT FUNERAL DIRECTOR AND EM BALM ER. Prepared to Attend Calls Day or Night. Suiith Centre atreot, Freclitnd. BePIERRO - BROS. -CAFE.- Corner of Centre end Front Htreete, Freeland, Pa. Finest Whiskies in Stock. Gibson, Dougherty, Kaufer Club, rtosoubl ut h s Velvet, of which we b ve EXCLUSIVE SALE IN TOWN. Munim'e Extra Dry Champagne, Henue-ey Brandy, Blackberry, Gins, Wines, Clarets, Cordials, Eto. Imported und Domestic Ciyars. OYSTERS IN EVERY STYLE, | Ham and Schweitzer Cheese Sandwiches, Sardines, Etc. MEALS AT - ALL - HOURS. Bullentlne and Huzletou beer on tup. , Baths, Hot ov Cold, 25 Cents. Anyone sending r. i etch and descrlntlon may quickly uscortnln our opinion free whether an Invent ion la probably patentable. Communica tions fitricHy coufldmitial. Handbook ou Patenta sent froo. Oldest nsoncy for securing patents. I AtOMta taken through Munn & to. receive tpeeinl notice, without charge, lu the Scientific American. A handsomely Illustrated weekly. Largest clr dilation of any scientific Journal. Terms. 8 n SaVa'afaa t nnjniths, sl. Sold by all newsdealers. MUNN &Co. 3G,Broadira New York Branch Offlco, 625 F Bt., Washington. D. O. ipirihsttiist <3- of every description executed at short notivo by jthe Tribune Coinpnug.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers