The Prudent Man Setteth His House in Order." Your human tenement should be given even more careful attention than the house you live in. Set it in order by thoroughly purifying your blood by taking Hood's Sarsaparilla. Erysipelas-" My little girl is now fat and liealthy on account of Hood's Sarsapa rilla curing her of erysipelas and eczema." MRS. 11. O. WHEATLEY. Port Chester, N. Y. (flood 6 SaUafMiiit/n Hood'. Pill, enrp liver ill, ; the n.n-trrltatlnz and only cwthartic to take with Mood*. Sar.aparllla. l>ocfteat Spot la tb. um, The deepest ocean sounding on rec ord was recently made by the British ship Penguin during a crulso In tho Pacific. A depth of 4,762 fathoms, or about live miles, was found between Auckland end the Tongan archipelago. No-To-Bao for Fifty Cents. Guaranteed tobacco habit ouro, makes weak men stroug, mood pure. 600,t1. All druggista Gernny has now oil the active list In her navy two Admirals, throe vice Admirals and 14 Hear Admirals. The total number of officers above the rank of cadet Is 784. Twelve royal personages hold honorary rank. H. H. GREEN'S SONS, of Atlanta. Ga., are the only successful Dropsy Specialists in tho world. Sec their liberal offer in advertise ment in another column of this paper. The appointment of W. C. Hayes as Locomotive Superintendent of the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad will be followed by a distinct change in the plan of over-seeing locomotives in ser vice. The positions of "Supervisors of engines and trains" have been abolish ed and traveling engineers substitut ed, who will report to the new ntHeial at Mt. Clare, Baltimore. The road has been divided into the following sub divisions and a traveling engineer ap pointed for each: Philadelphia to Washington; Baltimore to Brunswick; Brunswick to Cumberland; Cumber land to Grafton; Grafton to Benwoud and Parkersburg; Pittsburg to Cum berland and Wheeling; Wheeling to Sandusky and branches; Chicago to Akron. The plan is expected to pro duce economical results with an im proved service. J. O. Simpson. Marquess, TV. Vs., says: "Hall's Catarrh Cure cured me of a very bad case ot catarrh." Xlrvggists sell it, 75c. Muminoth Meat. On Feb. 8 a Swede and his partner, while marking their claim on Domin ion Creek, discovered, according to a Dawson newspaper, a body of a mam moth forty feet below the surface. The story was that the body was in a perfect state of preservation. Unfor tunately there were no scientists in Dawson to examine the body, but, ac cording to press statements, it meas ured 44>/$ feet long. Its right tusk was broken, but its left tusk was perfect, so tbat it was probable that the right tusk may have been snapped off in the fall that caused its death. The tusk which remains measures 14 feet 3 inches in length and 18 inches in cir cumference. The flesh was covered with woolly hair 15 inches long, of a grayish-black color. The neck was short and the limbs long and stout, the feet short and broad, and had live toes. The flesh was cut and tasted sweet. Mammoth flesh has been tasted on other occasions. It is very unfortunate that an expert geologist was not upon tho ground at the time of the find, as it is of considerable im portance. WOMEN are assailed at every turn by troubles peculiar to their sex. Every mysterious ache or pain is a symptom. These distressing, sensations will keep On coming unless properly treated. The history of neglect is written in the worn faces and Wasted figures of nine- _____ tenths of our women, _lflffffifft every one of whom may WW vUPBVMfcBu WWVfLP receive the invaluable ad- an MJSTJ vice of Mrs. Pinkham, IWiL&ftJ iVftrfvfou SrttSJK™"' PtMKHAM'S Miss LULA EVANS, of ' Parkersburg, lowa, writes of her lecovery as follows: " DEAR MRS. PINKHAM —I had been a constant sufferer for nearly three years. Had inflammation of the womb, leucorrhoea, heart trouble, bearing-down pains, backache, - headache, ached all over, and a t times could hardly stand on my feet. My heart trouble was /VS"£ i-- _ _ so bad that some nights compelled to I ( H < " )ne ay * thought I V(?,Y\I // wou ' d write and see 'ft ' J y° u could do any- Y a \\\ thing for me. I followed y° ur advi ce and now I feel * J 'ike a new woman. All those dreadful troubles I have no —■ more, and I have found Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound and Sanative Wash a sure cure for leucorrhoea. lam very thankful for your good advice and medicine." Do You Know That There is Science in Neatness? Be Wise and !!se SAPOLIO Do Your Feet Ache and Kuril 7 Shake into your shoes Allen's Foot-Ease, a powder for the feet It makes Tight or New Shoes feel Easy. Cures Corns, Bun ions, Swollen, Hot, Callous. Aching and Sweating Feet. Sold by all Druggists, Grocers and Shoe Stores, 23c Sample sent FIIEE. Address Allen S. Olmsted, Leßoy, N. Y. In his younger days Lyinan J. Gage, Secretary of the Treasury, was an athlete and could lift a thousand pounds. Don't Tobacco Spit and Smolio lour I.lfc Away. To quit tobacco easily and forever, bo mag netic, full of life, nerve and vigor, take No-To* 13ac, the wonder-worker, that makes wealc men strong. All druggists, tOc or 61. Cure guaran teed. Booklet and sample free. Address Sterling Remedy Ca, Chicago or New York. Hear Admiral Kautz is almost as great a smoker as was General Grant, and is rarely seen without a pipe in his mouth. Educate Your Bowclo With Ciiacarots. Candy Cathartic, cure constipation forever. 10c, 25c. If C. C. C. fail* druggists refund money. Mrs. Booker T. Washington is her husband's most efficient helper in the management of the Tuskegee Insti tute. She is a graduate of Flake Uni versity. To Cure A Cold In One Day. Take Laxative Hrorao Quinine Tablets. All Druggists refund money if it fails to cure. 260 BONBONS OF ANCIENT ORIGIN. Bu&ar Plums, Pastilles, uud II unit Al uiomls Date Back to 177 B. C. The most popular and most ancient of bonbons are sugar plums, pastilles and burnt almonds, but how many persons know their history? Sugar plums date from Roman times, for the Romans were the first to think of covering almonds with layers of sugar. The inventor was a certain Julius Dragatus, a noted confectioner, who belonged to the illustrious patrician family of Fabius. He made this great discovery, which has wrought so much damage to our teeth for twenty cen turies, in the year 177 B. C. These bonboni, called dragati, after their inventor (dragees in French), re mained the exclusive privilege of the family of Fabius. But at the birth or the marriage of one of that family a great distribution of dragati took place as a sign of rejoicing. This cus tom is still observed by many of the nobility of Europe. The pastille is of far later origin, having been invented and introduced into France by an Italian confectioner, the Florentine John Pastilla, a pro tege of the Medicis. When Marie de Medici married Henry IV. of France Pastilla accompanied his sovereign to the French court, where his bonbons had a tremendous vogue. Everybody wanted the Florentine's pastilles, and, strange to say, they were perfection from the beginning. He made them with all kinds of flavors—chocolate, coffee, rose, violet, mint, wine, straw berry, raspberry, vanilla, heliotrope, carnation! Burnt almonds are purely of French origin, owing their inception to the gluttony of a certain French merchant. One day Marshal Duplessis-Pralin, an old gourmet, sent for Lassagne, his chief confectioner, and promised him a great price for some new sweet that would please his palate, dulled as it was by all the pleasures of the table. Lassagne, who had already invented many a toothsome dainty, was a man of resource. He searched, he reflected, he combined, until finally he conceiv ed a delicious bonbon, which he bap tized gloriously with the name of his master. Praline, the French for burnt almond. This is the history of the invention of bonbons, for all others are mere combinations or developments of these three—the sugar plum, the pastille and the burnt almond.—New York Herald CHILE GERMANIZED. Nearly Every Manufactured Article Used Is of Tcutonle Extraction. I The women of Chile go clad iji Ger man serges and German nun's veilings, and gowns of other Continental goods, j cut out with German scissors, pinned j with German pins, stitched with Get man needles, threaded with German cotton, made with German sewing ma chines, fastened -with German hooks and eyes, and set off with Swiss and German laces. And when they betake themselves to embroidery, it is Ger man wool with which they exercise their skill. In Gorman blankets the Chileans sleep; they wash in German basins with water poured out of Ger man ewers; and barbers cut their hair with German barbers' scissors. They glaze their windows with Bel gian and German window panes, look at themselves in French and German mirrors, and hang their walls with French and German papers. They cook their food in pots, moulds, stew pans and frying pans from tho United States and Germany, eat it off plates —china, earthenwaro and enamelled —from the same countries; whilst the Argentines cut it as well with French and German knives and forks, and ladle it with Gorman ladles. They also carry German pocket knives in their German trousers pockets. They boil their water in German kettles over ( spirit lamps which are all of Conti nental make. And they drink their tea out of German cups and saucers. They write on German paper with Ger man pens, and despatch their letters in German envelopes. They print on American paper, and Italy as well a9 Germany supplies them with wrapping papers. Their treasures are secured in German iron chests, and they fasten their doors and cupboards with Ger man locks [and padlocks.—Nineteetli Century. WISE WORDS. It is -the black life that makes death look dark. Talebearers famish the fuel for the fire of strife. The fervent and diligent man is pre. pared for all things Light thoughts are often heavy enough to drag men down. A heart without love in it is colder than a hearth without a fire. Set your ideals high. First think them out, then live them* out. Thou wilt always rejoice in the even ing, if thou spend the day profitably. It is harder work to resist vices and passions than to toil in bodily labors. He that avoideth not small faults, by little and little falleth into gi eater. Every true achievement has within it the seed of something better than itself. Every man is the father of his own works; and a fine family of failures some men are raising. It is sometimes a sign of cowardice to keep silent, and sometimes a sign of foolishness to Bpeak. No man has ever begun to be per fect till he has learned that life is for duty, and not for pleasure. Laziness is the deadliest of all dis eases, for the disease itself prevents one from taking the remedy. TVIr. Schmidt's Musical Heart. One of the most peculiar eases ol heart disease ever observed in medi cal eircles is that of Andre Schmidt, aged thirty-six, a musician, residing in Cincinnati. His is a case of sncb rare and interesting phases as to make him a muoh-sought-for lecture-room subject, and he has, according to his own calculation, furnished material for clinical lectures in tho local medi cal colleges and hospitals at least twenty-five times. Schmidt is a violinist of ability, he haviug enjoyed considerable ability as an artißt before having been disabled by his present trouble, which is j known as "musical heart," a most peculiar condition, in which the heart, j instead of boating with the regularity of a normal organ, pulsates four or five times in rnpid rhythmic succes sion, emitting a harmonious sound j not unlike that produced by the dia- ' taut movement of a hall iu a bowling } alley, tbo rumbling of the moving hall j and the quick succeeding beats of tho falling pins all becoming vividly por trayed. A most interesting feature in con nection with his ease is tbo aceelerat- I ed action and seemingly sympathetic I movement of tho heart, while its power I is deeply absorbed iu rendering his I favorite selections, the harmony and j rhythm of the heart not being rnoro I pronounced. Whatever may be the 1 outcome of his condition, it is one of exceedingly great interest.—Clevo- \ laud Plain Dealer. An Electric Hair Cut, Paris has now a hairdresser's ostah- j lishment in which a pair of scissors is never used. The cutting—if so it | may he called—is done with a comb which has a wiro stretched along the | upper portion of the teeth. This wiro 1 is connected electrically with a stor age battery. When tho battery is turned on the wire becomes red hot. Therefore, on the comb passing throngb the hair the latter is bnrued off by the red-hot wire. Of course J the wire can be regulated to stand at any distance above the comb, so that the hair can bo cut, or rather burned off, at any length. Other operations, such as removing facial imperfections and curling and drying the hair, are also performed by moans of electric ity. A Zulu Who Wants to Learn. Probably the most interesting pur chaser of the reprint of the Eucyalo pradia Britaunica is Chief Dinizulu,. son and successor of: Cetewayo, the formidable King of Zululand. The chief has lately been released from- St. Helena, and is disposed to accept •ivilization and mako tho best of it j THE MERRY SIDE OP LIFE. STORIES THAT ARE TOLD BY THE FUNNY MEN OF THE PRESS. In tho Good Old Times* .Want# to Be Petted—A Sapo, lloticciion—A# Fate V/oulil Have It —No More Credit— Avoiding Trouble—Easy For Him, Etc. : Old times are gone forever, and they can not come again; , But if you have a level head this will not give you pain. As in the elevator you go whizzing through tho air, Remember, in the days gono by, you plodded up the stair. , Old times are gone forever—don't bewail the fact with gloom- Just touch electric buttons and illuminate tho room; j And when tho girl at tho telephone your lordly mandate mocks, Remember, in tho days gone by, you'd walk a dozen blocks. —Chicago liocord. A Sage Ki'llection. She—"John, tho Joblots' new house is much larger than ours." | Ho—"Yes, my dear; so is their mortgage."—Tit-Bits. A# Fato Would Have It. I "Where is that girl who was out i lecturing on 'There Is No Death?'" 1 "An undertaker proposed to her and she married hini." Chicago Record. Avoiding 'Trouble. | "Don't you ever take a nap in tho | daytime?" I "No; it's too much trouble to get 1 awake more than once a day."—Chi | cago Record. Easy For Him. i Quizzer—"So ho shuts his eyes to I his wifctfs temper fits, does he?" ! Guyer—"Yes, she's deaf nuddumb, i and talks on her hands, you know."— Pearson's Weekly. Want# to Be Petted. "They say she leads him a dog's : life." "A dog's life; well, I wish some body would pamper mo like that."— Detroit Free Press. No More Credit. Mrs. Spendall—"You look worried. | Is it because you are so deeply iu debt?" | Mr. Spondall (gloomily)—" No. It's I because I can't get any deeper." Malilne 111. Murk. I "Hello, Swardie! I haven't met you sinoa you camo to tho cily aud set up for a doctor. How are you getting along? Are you making your mark?" I "Er—yes. I'm doing considerable vaccinating."—Chicago Tribune. Culled tJitck. j The Sweet Young Thing—"l love to read of those dear, daring explorers in the Arctic, but I should think scaling ' icebergs all tho time would become monotonous." The*Savago Bachelor—"Part <f tho time they wero scaling fish."—lndian apolis Journal. The Boy'# I den. i "Tommy," said tho teacher, "is ; there any difference between tho words 'sufficient' and 'enough?'" "Ye9'm," replied tho youngster, j ; "'Sufficient' is when mother thinks I j have eaten enough pie, and 'enough' I is when I think J have eaten suffi cient."—Troy Times. A Labored Explanation. "Why is that woman scowling at; you?" "That's my sister." "But why should she scowl at you?" "Well, you see, she's very near sighted, and as there's something fa miliar about my face she fancies it must bo her husband's." —Cleveland Plain Dealer. Hi# Heroism* Kate—"What a humbug you are, Fred! The idea of your posing as a hero of the war, when you never had anything to do with it." Fred—"That's just it, Kate. I wanted to go to tho seat of war aw- ; fully, but I conquered my desire and j stayed at home. Wasn't that heroic, ' I'd like to know?"— Boston Tran script. Inferiority oi Nature. Visitor (at art store) —"Here is a family group, now, that illustrates j what I was talking about a moment i ago. Tho figures are correctly enough ilrawu, hut so utterly stiff aud uu-j natural that I can't imagine where the artist got his idea." Dealer—"My dear young lady, that j is not a painting. It is a colored photograph from life." Chicago I Tribune. It Hail. "Mamma, if I had a hatbefore Iliad ! this one, it's all right tp say that's the hat I had had, isn't it?" "Certainly, Johunie." "And if that hat once had a hole in j it and I had it mended I could say it had had a hole iu it, couldn't I?" "Yes, there would be nothing in correct in that." "Then it'd bo good English to say that tho hat I had had had a hole iu it, wouldn't it?" —Boston Journal. Naturally HUturhcri. "There they go! There they go!" ho cried, throwing down his news paper. "What's tho matter now?" some one asked. "Why, here's a Chicago doctor who has an invention which shows when a child is overworked." "But you're not a child." "Of course not, but can't you see that it's only a question of time when civil service commissions will succeed in workiyg some such scheme as thai into the public service, and then u man might just as well bo tied up with a private corporation. I might just as well resign ray job with th county."—Chicago Post. I RABBIT-PROOF FENCES. " - * j Ovdr Seveut.cn Tliuusunil Mile. Have | Been Erected In Austral..!., | A few notes are given in the last Annual Report of the Department of Lands, New South Wales, regarding the progress of the measures adopted by the Queensland and New South | Wales Government to cope with the I rabbit pest. The erection of a rabbit proof fence from Mnngindi, on the Queensland border, to the Namoi j River, at Bngilbone, a distance of j about 115 milos, was completed in March, 1597. Suggestions have been made for the continuation of this fence, from its present termination at Bugilbone, either in an esterly direc tion to Narrabri, or southerly to the rabbit-proof fence on the boundary of Wiugadee pastoral holding. The erection of the latter line of fencing and the bridging of a gap which sep arates the netting fences on the boun daries of Goorianawa and Goolthi pas toral holdings, would bring into exis tence an additional barrier, some hun dreds of miles in len th, which would protect nearly the whole of the coun ties tof White and Baradiue, includ ing the well-known Pilliga scrub, and i practicnlly render the greater part of j the northeastern portion of the colony ! free from the inroads of the pest. | The aggregate number of miles of j rabbit-proof fencing erected in the colony has increased to 17,280. A map illustrating this subject is given at the end of the report, which shows that ! along the whole western boundary no 1 rabbit can cross the frontier, while ; two-thirds of the northern boundary is similavly protected. The work is | thus not one of merely local interest, for it may be said to add a new type of boundary—the artificial biological 1 barrier —to those hitherto recog nized in political geography.—Geo graphical Journal. Lonßlnc For the linpoftHlble. A woman on tho North Side ob served the deep melancholy of her housemaid and wondered what was the matter. She feared that the poor girl had been crossed in love. One day, when tho maid was particu larly sad, tho mistress lost patience i and wanted to known what was the matter. "Oh, ma'am!" exclaimed tho girl, bursting into tears, "I'm that un happy; I've been to see a fortune tell er and she says that I wasn't intended for this station in life at all. She says that I hadn't ought to be work in' for someone else, when I was born to have a grand house, with servants and jewels and fine carriages all of my own. I can't help thinking of it, \ ma'am. I somehow think it's so." "Annie, this is a matter in which I cannot help you," said her mistress, j "I advise you to keep away from for- ' tune tellers. Of course you're entitled ] to a beautiful house and servants and j | all the other luxuries, including a ; husband who belongs to eight clubs. 1 The only difficulty is to get them. I don't know what in the world I can do to help you. Now, if I were you I 1 wouldn't worry at all. You're going j to have my bicycle in the spring, re- i member, and when you get out in a shirtwaist costume peoplewon'tjknow but what you are the mistress of the finest house on Lake Shore drive." "Thank you, ma'am," said Annie, I and she fell back into her humble lot, j moderately content.—Chicago Record. , Reflection* of a Bachelor. A really sweet laugh is one thatyou listen to after it has stopped. In the matter of usefulness women rank men somewhere along with door mats. If men would admit who did tho ; proposing most of tho time the novels would be different. Most women never get too old to expect to hear that some great man's wife is madly jealous of her. A woman's hair that was the won der of everybody always existed in the period before yon knew her. When a man is sure that ho has mastered a woman it is a sign that at last she has him where she wants him. Because two persons get married without loving each other is no proof I that they will be any more happy than the others. If women wero independent in money matters men would he a lot less con ceited about how highly their devotion is valued. When a woman wants to find ouf how much she likes a man she thinks of him as married to her best friend, and if that makes her hate her friend | she knows she loves him. When a young man tenderly puts away a lock of hair to treasure forever, tho hardest thinking he does in mid- i die age is trying to remember whose 1 it is and how to get. there. If a man who is proposing bad sense enough to know anything, he would know he was doing it in a senseless way, and he would be so ashamed of | himself that he wouldn't do it.—New j York Press. A Mutiny In a Storm. Captain Torreuce, commanding the British tanker Tancarville, had au ex perience on his last outward passage to Belfast, which he will never for get. It was on January 10 last, while weathering a terrific hurricane. His vessel was diving into a tremendous sea, and a spare propeller that was lashed below got adrift, and would soou have knocked the sides out of the ship. Captain Torreuce ordered the crew below to secure the propel ler and they mutinied. Heroic action was necessary to quell the disturb ance, and Captain Torrence was com pelled to shoot three of the sailors. One, it is understood, has since died, and a second has gone insane. Cap tain Torrence's actions were investi gated by the Board of Trade, and he was upheld by that body.—Philadel phia Press. Examine the new oil cloth on the kitchen floor; its color and I gloss are being destroyed and you may see where a cake of common soap fresh from the hot water in the scrubbing bucket has been laid ! on it for a moment, the free alkali having eaten an impression of [ the cake into the bright colors. A more careful examination will show small "pin holes" here j and there where the alkali has cut through the surface to soak into j and gradually weaken the whole floor covering. This is what cheap soaps do. Use Ivory Soap, it will not injure. ' I Don't Spoil It. Any one who lights one cigarette . | from another and then lights one of • j the same brand with a match will per ! ceive that the latter emokes much j fresher and sweeter. When you light | your cigarette by applying it to that | of your friend you draw some of the i stale smoke and accumulated nicotine jof his into yours. This spoils the j best cigarette made. In fact, no one ! who appreciates the fresh flavor of newly kindled tobacco would think of j doing it. Should you be short of ' matches, or particularly economical, however, there is a method of lighting one cigarette from another by which j you can escape the evil consequences ! j described. This consists of applying i j the whole surface of the end of the j end of the unlighted cigarette, to the I red end of the other, and blowing, not | drawing, gently through it. The kin i dling occurs more rapidly and com i pletely than in the old-fashioned way, ■ and, in addition, preserves all the flavor. Germany I,enda In College Men. | In Germany one man in 213 goes to college; in Scotand, one in 520; in ' the United States, one in 2,000, and in England, one in 5,000. j General Nelson A. Miles is very fond ; of rowing and is a skillful hand at an | oar. Deanty Is Blood Deep. I Clean blood means a clean skin. No , beauty without it. Cascarets, Candy Cathar | tic clean your blood and keep it clean, by , Htirring up the lazy liver and driving all im purities from tiie body, begin to-day to banish pimples, boils, blotches, blackheads, i and that sickly bilious complexion by taking Cascarets,—beauty for ten rents. All drug gists, satisfaction guaranteed, 10c, 25c, 50c. Scotland was visted on May Day by ; : a heavy snowstorm, which caused the , death of many sheep and lambs. To Curo Constipation Forever* Take Cascarets Candy Cathartic. 10c or Csc. *1 C. C. C. fail to cure, druggists refund money. General John B. Gordon has made considerable money as a lecturer in the i past year or so. He intends to invest a Rood share of it in a sheep-raising ! venture on his Georgia plantation. Fits rrnnnnentlv cured. No fife or nervou*- refP offer first day's me of Dr. Kline's Great Nerve Restorer. $: trial bottle and tretti* o iree. Di-.R.H.Ki.tne. Ltd. 031 Arch St.Phila.Pa Pifio's Curo for Consumption Is an A No. 1 I Asthma medicine. -\V. It. \S illiams\ Autiocii. Ills., April 11, lm. ' ' Mrs.Wirsbov'sSouthingSvrup forrhildren teething, softens the gums, reduces infiaino.a- ! ( tion, allays puin, cures wind colic.a bottle. FARQUHAR durable, perfect In operation ami cheapest. Farqubai* Separator Farquhar Celebrated Ajax Engine n-rn iv?tV'e"ifety! Vheruid I no record of a Farquhar boiler ever exploding. j Farquhar Variable Friction Feed I Saw Mill. Most accurate set ITv • /I works made. Quick re- | ceding head blocks and / j lightning gig buck. x ' Engines lloilors flaw Mills and Agricultural Implements Generally. Send for illu*trut<Ml catalog:. A.B.FarouharCo.,Ltd. i .YORK. F= a. FIE MS I©N Vv ,V.n " i "E. r:! syra lu civil war, 15 adjudicutiug claims, attjr aiueu | Lazy Liver i W I have been troubled a great deal f with a torpid liver, which produces constipa tion. I found CASCARETS to be all you claim L fortheia.and secured such relief the first trial, that I purchased another supply and was com pletely cured. I shall only be too glad to rec ommend Cascarets whenever tho opportunity j is presented." J. A. Smith. Ave., Philadelphia, Pa. CATHARTIC MARK PEOiaT|[RCP^_^^^' Pleasant. Palntable. Potent. Taste Good. Do Good. Never Sicken. Weaken, or Gripe. 10c. 25c.50a ... CURE CONSTIPATION. ... Sterling IWr.ifdy CumpunT, ( hlrueo, Montreal, Keir York. 'l2O NO.Tn.R&P. nm LC ,mrn nfped by nlldrug lIJ 10 DRu gists to CUKE Tobacco Habit. I BOYS ? Spalding's Athletic TJbmry should be read by I every boy who wmits to become an nthie.o. j v 0 .4. Boxing. Ilete.'No. 88. Official Foot Ball F No.fb How to bean Atli-. Guide. [Hull Guide, ft No. 2H. Hi wto play Foot No. 86. Offi lal basket Hall, by \\ alter Camp. No. 87. Atretic Primer. No. 27. College Athletics No. OS. Official A. A. U. N0.82. How to play Base ltules. I**ll. {letit s. N0.03. Athletic Records No. 87. All Around Ath- N0.96. Official Base Ball N0.42. How to Punch Guide. the Bag. No. 100. How to be a Bi- No. 82. llow to Train. eye e Champion. PRICE, 10 CENTS PER COPY. tend for catalogue of alt sports. A. C. SPALDING 6c BROS., New York. Ilenver. t'Uiciign. Hartford and Vedette BICYCLES. Public appreciation of the un i equaled combination of quality and ; price embodied in these machines Sis shown in the present demand for them which is entirely without pre |i cedent. NEW MODELS. iGhainless, . . . %1\ Golumbia Chain . . 5U Hartfords, ... 35 Vedettes, . . 525,2G A limited number of Columbia, Models 45, 46 Hand 49 (improved) and llartford3, Patterns 7 S and 8, at greatly reduced prices. II SEE OUK CATALOGUE. POPE MFG. CO., Hartford, Conn j- I "' A BMMHMi U— MHI—MM G9SBSES^>SSSSS9G9fcSSSSSS9 j S What would the world do without ink? fi y) Just think of it! jX & CARTER'S INK I jg IS THE BEST INK. g |jr Forty years experience In the making. Costs GOLDEN CROWN LAMP CHIMNEYS ( Aro tho bent. Ask for tlirm. Cnatnoniore than common chimney.. All dealers. [ I'l IT>I'.I ltd 111. Asa CO.. Allegheny, l'a. ' r. N. U. 20 'OO DROPSY SMBHT SfM tSirS I case*. Book of testimonial-, and 1(1 diivn' traMtio-nt Free. Dr. H. H OI'.EEK'B 80K8. Box D. Atlanta, Ua. RHEUMATISM? U'AXTED-. aseof ba.t Uenlib that li-I-l'-A-N-B r. Acta.t.lupanschemical Co.. Now iork. for losuiuplea and loou testimonial.-. t csuKh W sffp* i 'i'Mw u' lL e' u I
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers