"He That is Warm Thinks All So." Thousands are "cold" in that they do not understand the glow of health. This im plies disordered kidneys, liver, bowels, blood or brain. Hood's Sarsaparilla makes "warm" because it gives all who take it perfect health. Hoed'* Pills cure liver 11U; tho non-irritation and only cathartic to tsik* with Hood's Saraaparllia. Mme. Lou bet greatly resembles her friend, Mme. Carnot. in her charitable tendencies. She disposes of large sums among the poor, and is a regular vis itor at the hospitals. SdnrateTonr Bowels With Casrnreta. Candy Cathartic, euro constipation forever. 100, 25c. If C. C. C. fail. druKfhsis refund money Collis P. Huntington is a fine yachtsman, and has a more thorough knowledge of navigation than most amateur seamen. OUT OF TUNE AND HARSH. Stove's Uiisvenucss AlTecta Pluuo's Sweet- The girl had a new piano. She was j a musical girl, and It was as nice a i piano as could be found. When she • had it properly set up and ready for I use there was probably not a happier girl. But as she sat down to play a look of discontent and wonder spread over her face. It was strange, but this new piano was certainly out of tune; certain notes sounded like the hammering of a piece of iron. That would never do; she couldn't play on a piano like that; she couldn't under stand it, either, for certainly that piano had a very sweet tone in the shop. So the piano man was sent foi in great haste, and came to see what the trouble was, very much aston ished himself. He ran his Angers over the piano, and then, turning, gazed curiously around the room. That i 3 a most curious and impertinent man," thought the girl, as she watched him, his Angers moving over the keys, but his eyes wandering searchlngly from one piece of furniture to another. Fi nally he left the piano, went to a stove in the room, tucked a piece of paper under one leg, and went back to the piano, when, strango to say, every note was as sweet and clear and full as could have been desired, and there was not a suspicion of discord. Dur ing the cold weather a stove had been , placed in the room. and. not Standing j evenly, with certain vibrations of the piano It was made to move, and there ( followed a little clattering of iron, | which, coming simultaneously with I tho striking of the keys 011 the piano, 1 sounded as if that instrument had pro duced the disagreeable sound. "That Is all right now," said the man, as he left the piano, "only it was a stove man you needed instead of a piano man." Thick Foe*. They were talking about the recent fogs, and some one stated that his morning train had stopped every half mile on its way to the city, the fog being so thick that it was impossible to see either of the railway banks. "Oh, that's nothing!" said another man who was of the company. "Down In Lincolnshire the fog is sometimes so thick that the driver has to get out and lead the engine."—London Tlt- Blts. A Sensible Conclusion. Fair American—How do you like our tountry? Literary Foreigner—l am delighted with it. Fair American— j Then you are not going to write a book about us? SALESWOMEN understand what torture is. Constantly on their feet whether well or ill. Compelled to smile and be agreeable to customers while dragged down with some feminine weakness. Backaches and head aches count for little. They must keep going or lose their place. ■ ■ WOMEN "V h " * d * i " ""WHO EARN Miss NANCIE SHOBE, Florence, T|#WJ5 H Col., writes a letter to Mrs. Pink- * ***•*? SL.B WBBVSW ham from which we quote : "I had been in poor health for some time, my troubles hav ing been brought on by standing, so my physician said, caus ing serious womb trouble. I had to give up my work. I was just a bundle of nerves and would have fainting spells at monthly periods. I doctored and took various medicines, but **l 11 y-tojgnp & r->jji- got no relief, and when I wrote to you -r * could not walk more than four blocks -L-j at a l ' m e. I followed your advice, tak ~J Lydia E. Pinkham's Blood Purifier J ' n connection with the Vegetable Com ~3 potmd and began to gain in strength ~J wl jjh V. i f rom the first. lam getting to be a to pain and I-owe it all to your 1, \y%C / Jjk what your medicine has done for \ enough. Since my P girlhood I had been troubled with ir periods and for nearly Aye years had suffered )jf\ T lIM VPF 3 womb, and whites. Also y ' * had ovarian"txouble, tha left ovary being so swollen and sore that I could not move without pain. Now, thanks to your wonderful medicine, that tired feeling is all gone, and I am healthy and strong." Ancient. Warning Again.t Winn. The oldest Egyptian papyrus, which contains a series of moral aphorisms of the fifth Egyptian dynasty (3666- 3333 B. C.), is said to afford the earli est instance of the moral treatment of intoxication and the first warning in writing against drinking in wine shops. "My son," runs the injunction "do not linger in the wine shop or drink too much wine. Thou fallest upon the ground; thy limbs become week as those of a child. One cometh to do trade with thee and flndeth thee so. Then say they, 'Take away the fellow, for he is drunk.' " TTo-To- Bac for Fifty Cents. Guaranteed tobacco habit cure, makes weak men strong, blood pure. 60c. sl. All druggist*. One of the out-of-the-way wars of the world has been in progress between Persia and the Arabs of the Lingah, on the northeast coast of the Persian gulf. In the last battle reported the Arabs lost 210 men and the Persians four. THE EXCELLENCE Or SYRUP OF FIGS is due not only to the originality and simplicity of the combination, but also to the care and skill with which it is manufactured by scientific processes known to the CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP Co. only, and we wish to impress upon all the importance of purchasing the true and original remedy. As the genuine Syrup of Figs is manufactured by the CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP Co. only, a knowledge of that fact will assist one iu avoiding the worthless imitations manufactured by other par ties. The high standing of the CALI FORNIA FIG SYRUP Co. with the medi cal profession, and the satisfaction which the genuine Syrup of Figs has given to millions of families, makes the name of the Company a guaranty of the excellence of its remedy. It is far in advance of all other laxatives, as it acts on the kidneys, liver and bowels without irritating or weaken ing them, and it does not gripe nor nauseate. In order to get its beneficial effects, please remember the name of the Com puny CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO. SAN FRANCISCO. CL ' LOUISVILLE:. K T . NEW YORE,N.T. F its permanently enred. Noflt® or nervorum rerfi after first day's u?e of Dr. Kline's Great Nerve Restorer. $2 trial bottle and treatise tree. Dr.U.H.k'LiNK. Ltd. 931 ArchSt.Phlla.Pa "The Little Minister's" Church. The Auld Licht church at Kirriemuir (Thrums), Scotland, made famous by J. M. Barrle, seems to have fallen upon evil days. William C. Conn, the "lit tle minister," has resigned because the older members of his congregation said he was "too broad," having preached in the pulpits of other denominations. Although the presbytery acquitted him of all blame, Mr. Conn could not be persuaded to remain. There are, by the way, only twenty-seven churches in Scotland and two ln-Ireland which are now included in the "Synod of United Original Deeeders," a fact which reminds the Philadelphia Press of the reply made by an old Scot when asked after the welfare of his church: "Weel," he said, "ye ken 't this way; first, there were a hunnerd o' us. Then there was a schism an' tha' left hut fifty. An' then there was a heresy trial which took awa' twenty-five. Then a deesruption left only my broth er Donald an' myself—an' I have sair dou'ts o' Donald's orthodoxy." | ' ZUNI INDIAN TRAILERS. Their Ability to Track a Man or ISeast Is Simply Marvelous. "The ability of the Znni Indians to trail a man or beast is simply marvel -1 ous. An Indian knows the track of hie prey, and will notice it when a whito man cannot see n truce of it. j He can pick it out from among a score ! of others, or follow it along a traveled | road with the greatest ease. An | Eastern traveler, while stopping at the village, went out for a bear hunt with the Indian trader and an Indian | guide. After some hours they sighted a bear, but did not get a shot at it, as it fled. An Indian was put on the ; bear's trail and followed it at a slow j trot until evening. There was no snow on the ground and no mud. As far as the whites could see there was absolutely nothing to indicate which direction the bear had taken. The traveler was incredulous and said he did not believe the Indian knew what he was doing, but some hours later he was wholly convinced when they came up with Bruin. I "It is this keen sense of sight which j makes them so valuable as scouts in ' the army. Where my eye can distin i guish only a blur in the distance, a j scout will see the tiniest moving ob | ject, and will be able to tell what it is. j Show them a trail and ask thenj when it was made, and they will tell you with reasonable aocuracy. This fine senso does not seem so remarkable when we remember that it is a savage j characteristic, a birthright, and one which they train from childhood. I have seen a number of small boys scare up a rabbit and run it for hours, in fact until the rabbit was onught, following it by the sense of eight as accurately as a dogwould by the sense of smell." The Change in Shopping. "Shopping is very different to-day from what it was a generation ago, or I might say, even half that time," said a shopkeeper iu Ludgate Hill re ' eently. j "What is the most noticeable dif ference?" "In the independence of the shop per. Time was when peeple came in here and asked for some article, and I served them with something iu that line which I had in stock. If they wanted the best then they had tho very best I carried, and, if a similar article of less cost, I conld always suit their needs. Nine times out of ten the same people came again'and again for an article of the same kind, or to j supply some other need, and so I found myself with a very extensive custom, many of wlrom I knew, iu a business sense, quite well. "But it is very different nowadays. A man or woman will enter, and one ] in every five, at least, will ask for some particular article that I have not got, and, instead of permitting me to servo them with the best I have of j such • goods us' they may wish, out they go to some other shop where they , ?an get what they want. To bo sure, sometimes there is something about the shop which they may fancy, and they buy, but this is not making cns ■ toiners of thein as one would if he could supply their special needs." Pearson's Weekly. Stamp Fad Profitable. I The Government has turned tho mania for collecting stamps to good acoount. The confirmed stamp collec tor is one of the most enthusiastic and persistent of all men who pursue fads. For a long time persons of this class have been beseeching the Government to place on sale complete sets of its . newspaper and periodical stamps, and ' finally the postoflico department con seuted to do so. Fifty thousand com plete sets of these stamps were offered to tho public at $5 a set. A set con j sists of twelve stamps, the one-cent, two-cent, five-cent, ten-cent, twonty | five-cent, fifty and one hnudred dollar stamp. Of course the stamps thus sold cannot be redeemed or used for postage, as their aggregate face value is far greater thau the price charged for them. It is said that there are several hundred thousand stamps eol j lectors in the United States and more I than a million in the world. The de mand for the supply of stamp sets put ( on sale by the Government has there tore far exceeded the supply. The Government has made nearly a quarter of a million dollars by this little spec ulation, the cost of printing the stamps from plates already on hand being very small. Animal Pncularitioa. A herd of wild Asian buffaloes will charge nuy foe, even a tiger, to save the life of one of their number who has been wounded. Elephnnts, baboons and other animals will do the same thing in a wild state. On the other hand, monkeys have been known to fall upon one of their number who is ill and drown him, possibly as an net of merey. Simi larly wolves destroy one of tho pack which becomes helpless. If an otter is trapped, his brother otter will run around him all night, showing the utmost concern. A writer in tho Spectator states that he has seen sparrows in groups dis cussing and lamenting when one of their number had fallen into a trap. Next day, when a robin was caught, tho sparrows paid no attention. He adds that ho had seen a. big pig try to help a sinnller one through a hole in tho fence paling by pulling at its head. 1 Wlieu Smoking Wag a Crime. Smoking was condomued in the early part of the seventeenth .century by the Bussian Government aud-nuple a crime. In some cases the noses of smokers were out off'. In Turkey, under Amwath IV., about 1630, the punishment for smoking was death. Beginners were sometimes let off' with the indignity of having their pipes thrust through their noses. | Paying Double Prices | ? Licycle forsiß.7s? Cat- ♦ 5 Price , $18.75. aloguc No. 59 tells all y | about Bicycles, Sewing y f Machines, Organ-; and Pianos. *:£ 't* What do you,think of a fine r suit of Clothing, made-to-your- # t # I* measure, guaranteed to fit and llFi X Y expres* i>aid to your station A ? for $5.50? Catalogue No. 57 I 'j shows 32 samples of clothing /AA w / X y and shows many bargains in V^TT^/ A 's* Shoes, Hats and < Furnishings. >r<\ • V* Lithographed Catalogue No. rC Y '* 47 shows Carpets, Rugs, For- X \ Y '♦ tieres and Lace Curtains, in j\ \ Y hand-painted colors, li e pnu **' y Freight, sew carpets free, and IJ\ I Y y furnish lining without charge. | ¥ y ,|, | ,i| ■, .I, What do you If I I A I) 01 "? jtygr I I C;ii J iS 5° n taincd in cur Gen- tjj| 't* We save you from 40 to 60 X 9 per cent, on everything Why X .*• oily at retail when you know A t of us ? Which catalogue do A A Price , $3.95. you want? Address this way, A *JUUUS HINES U SON, Baltimore, Md. Dept. 305 £ •X.WWWW'X'MWW'K-Mi- BAD "CISJIAKETfI do u!l claimed for thena and aro a truly wonderful medicine. I have often wished for n thidcino plea rata to take mid at last, havn found it Iti Cnsntrets. Pince taking tbcui. my blood has been iiiuiOed and try coniplfxlon has Im proved wonderfully and 1 feci much better in every way. ' Mtis. fcAL.i-.iE L. fcLi.LARti. Lull tell. To tin. CANDY i 4 Pleasant. Palatable. Potent. Taste Good. Do Good, Never Sicken. Weaken, or Gripe. 10c:. 25c. 5Uc. ... CURE CONSTIPATION. ... Blnrllns Ronvdy fompauy. t'hlrairo. Ifontrral. New York. 310 Ufl.Tf)-RAP Sold nr.d Rim re n'ec.l hv all drug nil I U GNU gists to cfITJKJtI Tobacco Habit. WANTED- aseof t.art healih that IM-P-A-N-8 * * will not lienefit. Send ft els. to Kipans ( hemica] Co., New York, for lOtiamplea luuu testimonial.-. RHEUMATISM 1 *Alci.\md Rkmkdx Co.. -M6UrMUwicli St..2LY. Old Irish War Dries. I.ike the modern cowboy yell of the western troops in the Cuban campaign, the war cries and slogans of the an cient Irish clans often had much effect In inspiring fear in the enemy and courage and enthusiasm in the com mand. The simplest and most fre quent of old Erin's war cries was "Kaire. faire," signifying "watch," or "look out." It was precautionary sig nal and was commonly written "Far rah." From it the modern "hurrah" is supposed to have been derived. An other cry was "A buaidh," which meant "to the victory." It was pro nounced "aboo," and followed the name of the clan, or leader, according to circumstances, like "O'Neill aboo," or "Clann Conail aboo." Frequently "a buaidh" is construed incorrectly in modern English to mean "forever." That translation applies to "go brath," but not "a buaidh." The famous Irish cry of "Fag an bealach," meaning "clear the way," scared the spunk out of the French soldiery in the Penin sular war. Magnetism In Ilrlckn. From time to time experts have no tiecd certain unexplainable peculiari ties in magnetic instruments in vari ous buildings. It is now declared, as the result of experiments and investi gations, that the vagaries are due tc the presence of magnetism in bricks. They arq made of earthy matter con taining a greater or less proportion of magnetite, or magnetic iron ore. Auk Your Dealer for Allen'M Foot-Fuse, A pow<i<'r to shake into your shoes; rests the feel. Cures Corns, Bunions. Swollen. Horo, Hot, Callous, Aching. Sweating Feet ami Ingrowing Nails. Allen's Foot Ease makes now or tight shoes easy. At all shoe stores nn<l druggists, 25cts. Sample mailed FREE. Adr'a Alien S. Olmsted, Leltoy, N. Y. A Boston reporter has made a trip from Boston to New York by trolly cars, with only a break of 57 miles', which had to be covered by means of regular railroad facilities. The time occupied was 49 hours. Beanty Is Blood Deep, Clean blood means a clean skin. No beauty without it. Cascarets, Candy Cathar tic clean your blood and keep it clean, by stirring up the lazy liver and driving all im purities from the body. Begin today to banish pimples, boils, blotches, blackheads, and that sickly bilious complexion by taking Cascarets,—beauty for ten cents. All drug gists, satisfaction guaranteed, 10c, 25c, 50c. American millionaires are adopting the habit in use among European roy alists of traveling under a pseudonym. It saves them much annoyance and ir ritating attentions. Recently, when he went to Florida. W. K. Vanderbllt was known as Mr. Edward Green. To Cure Constipation Forever. Take CuHcurcts Cumly Cathartic. 10c or 25c. If C. C. C. fall to cure, druggists refund money The greatest age which any species of insect has ever been known to at tain is 15 years. This feat was ac complished by an ant which had been tenderly cared for by a certain natur alist for that length of time. To Cure A Cold In One Day. Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. All Druggists refund money it it fails to cure. 200 Professor George E. Vincent, who holds the chair of sociology In the University of Chicago, has been of fered the place of President of the University of Cincinnati. M rs. W i nal ow's Soothing Syru n for child re n teething, softens the gums, reduces inflamma tion, allays pain, cures wind colic.£sc a buttle. Piso's Cure for Consumption has no equal as a Cough medicine..- F. M. ABBOTT, 383 feen eea St., Buffalo, N. Y., May 9, 1894. M. L. Thompson A Co., Druggists, Couders port, Pa„ say Hall's Catarrh Cure is the best ami only sure cure for catarrh they ever sold. Druggists sell it, 75c. VIRTUE IN IVY LEAVES. | Used for Making Old Gowns New Again. A woman in England has recently | discovered the peculiar virtues of toe ivy leaf as a means of bringing up i pristine freshness to a soiled, faded or j spotted g*wn. This is her recipe: Pick about twenty ivy leaves, young, green ones by choice, wash them care- j fully and place them in a jug or basin. Add about one pint of boiling water, i cover up the basin or jug, and leave all to soak for two or three hours, when the cleanser will be ready for use. Meanwhile the garment must be thoroughly brushed inside and out, and all untidy braid or lining removed from the bottom. When ready, spread it on the table and carefully sponge it with the ivy water. It must then be wrung out dry, when it will be found to have recovered its former color and to look quite like new. Black silk may be cleaned in the same manner, but it needs more care. If the silk is in the breadths it must be lightly sponged and then tightly rolled over a cloth wound round a roller and left to dry. | Black lace may also be renovated when j soiled or brown with age by sponging It with ivy water, and then rolling it j over a cloth wound round a collar. It should not be ironed. Not Meant for Illui. The public is invited to sympathize with a quiet and retiring citizen oi New York who, says the Sun, occu- i pied a seat near the door of a crowded ' cable car when a masterful stout wom an entered. Having no newspaper ' behind which to hide, he was fixed and 1 subjugated by the glittering eye. He rose and offered his place to her. Seat ing herself —without thanking him— she exclaimed in strident tones that reached to the farthest end of the car: "Say, what do you want to stand up there for? Come here and sit on my lap." "Madam." gasped the man, as his face became scarlet. "I—l fear I'm not deserving of such an honor." ! What do you mean,you dude?" shrieked the woman, "You know very well I was speaking to my little niece behind you." One Spot Avoided l>y Sparrowa. In the fourth edition of Yarrell's I "British Birds" Prof. Newton, F. R. S„ j gives in a footnote the curious tact I that in the village of Shepstor, a moor land village of Devon, England, the I sparrow is never seen. This is the j sole exception known to the professor to the sparrow's universal distribution ' in England. I wonder it has fifty happy years'back^^ I Get a bottle today of lj Sarsaparilla j [which made Sarsaparilla famous] 8 —>l 1111 l M>' If ■ linn l i I I I BSSSIXnttHiaHHUHHHCSRHMNNHiHHMMMBK •; ALL DRUGGISTS SELL AYER'S SARSAPARILLA. SI.OO A BOTTLE. MBnrmißnrfirTTn^ -rr^w ' nmxmmzimz : * Txzsmv ßtaanasHßHH "Use the Means and Heaven will Give You the Blessing,' Never Neglect a Useful Article Like SAPOLIO | When sand's as good as sugar, and chalk's as good as milk ; When thirty inches make a yard, and cotton equals silk ; When fourteen ounces make a pound (ard that you'll not allow) — Then common soaps may be as good as Ivory Soap is now. IT FLOATS. In Russia 65.000 students are engag <1 \ in a sympathy strike. They have I ceased to attend lectures because the I students in the University of St. 1 Petersburg: were prohibited from en- I joying holiday revels. Don't Tobacco Spit and Smoke Your I.lfo Away. To quit tobacco easily anil forever, be map ! netlc. full of life, nerve anil vigor, take No-To Bac, tho wonder-worker, that makes weak men strong. All druggists, 50c or Ifl. Cureguaraa teed. Booklet and. sample free. Address Snarling Remedy Co., Chicago or New York. J According to the Revue Sclentifiquc, ; Berlin shows a greater increase in the j number of visitors than any other European city. In ISB4 there were 288,- <>oo visitors; in 1897 there were 517,000 — a gain of 93 per cent. In Paris the in- I crease was smaller, but the total num- I ber larger—B9o,ooo in 1597. In the same I year Vienna had 361,000 visitors. —" ■ "■■■'■■ nun I i 'KB J, Spalding ! ! OFFICIAL Ur.su. : ! Bait I I i [':*%) ft'Po.ilyofficialball . / j of t 'm- :•.. • it u .i ; 1- acli ball warraated I ACt'UI'T NO HUBS! I l l Tfc'S. Jfa dwdiT dons not carry Spalding's athletic gt Oils 111 Stock, send your name and address to us i ami his, too) for a copy of our handsomely illustrated catalogue. A. C. SPALDING & BROS.. New York. Denver. Cliicnuo 11899 CONSTRUCTION, j ABOUT SPnKCS ABOUT SPOiIES. There arc 61 s pokes in the two wheels of a Columbia bicycle. They represent 64 poiuts of superiority over uuy other wheel. WT j Since we adopted the Columbia Stud 8 ! Hub ami direct tangent spoke over I J 7,500,000 of these spokes have been in R use. Wo have yet to hear of one break ing from any cause except collision or other violent accident. The stud hubs obviate all uending and twisting oT the spokes. When you compare Columbia, Hart ford and Vedette bicycles part for part with other wheels you llnd good reason for their recognised superiority. PRBCES, $75 to $25. POPE !IF€. CO., Hartford, Conn. piAGNo&TI cIAN J & '-J® fj fffsssj (jjk"*v M aii'u j " t'l K Cinuini,, '* niW'l V.-'J lj ~ i &J&UU ii£it THYSELF or Know Thyself Manual. j A 91-page pamphlet by a Humanitarian and emi nent medical author. f f .rt?v^V (^ uo Y n,, r Medical Science for MhN ONLY, whether man:, i, unmarried or about to marry; young. middle a.. .1 ..r old. Price SO cents by mail, seali l; s. at free t'ur f> > duv Ad. dress The Pcnbody ncdleuf Institute. No. 4 IhYlflnch St., Hoston, Mass. t'hi.-r Consulting Plivdcian graduate of Harvard Medical College ela'-s IS64* Late Surgeon r.th Mass. lb g. Vol . the inimt eml-' al wa vs < i it fs ... farm! tilt. I'm lii I v .1. ~„ | lii.t Itnto tins nt. " BIG ROUR" "THESEA LEVEL ROUTE" TO NEW YORK. DOUBLE DAILY SERVICE. WAGNER SLEEPING GARS. DINING CARS. M. E. IKBAtLS, E. 0. McCOKMICK, President, Pus.. Traffic M :r. W/iKHEN J. LYNCH. Asst. Grii'l Purs. & Ticket Ad. GOLDEN CROWN™" Are the best. Ask for them. Cost no more than eouuiion chimneys. .til ,ii-a'or . r iTTSIiI Ki; <;E.\ss Allegheny. I'a. D R C PSY SEKB ri75S? xs cuses. Book of tsßtinioni&ls and H) |n m' in him- nt Free. Dr. H. H OREEH'B EONS Bo* D. Atlanta Q 1 v."! uic': Thompson's Eye Water P. N. D. 19 '99
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers