"You Never Miss the Water Till the Well Runs Dry." We never realize ihe value of health until it is gone• When old time strength and vigor are wanting, purify the blood by taking Hood's SarsapariUa; soon re stored appetite, perfect digestion, steady nerves and even temper will prove it is bringing back the glow of perfect health. Anthony Hudson, the first white set tler In Pierce county. Wis., is still liv ing. having just passed his 100 th mile stone in life. He is actively engaged in farming, cultivates 30 acres without employing help, his wife lending him assistance in harvest time. Arc You l T ßlng Allen's Foot-Ease ? It in the only cure for Swollen. Smarting, Tired, Aching, Burning, Sweating Fie-, Corns and Bunions. Ask for Allen's Foot- Eose, a powder to be shaken into the shoos. Sold by all Druggists. Grocers and Shoe Stores, 250. Sample Pent FIIEE. Address Allen S. Olmstead, Loßoy, N. Y. Notwithstanding the fact that there is nothing new under the sun, the United States Patent Office grunted nearly 25,000 patents last year to peo ple who had hit upon a new Idea. Ifo-To-Dae for Fifty Gents. Guaranteed tobacco habit cure, makes weah men strong, blood pure. 60c. 11. All druggist* The Government Is paying from S2)O to SOOO a day for each vessel carrying horses, supplies and army baggage to the Philippines, and SI,OOO a day for each vessel that carries troops. Beware of Olntmeuta for Catarrh That Contain Mercury, as mercury will surely destroy the sense of smell and completely derange* the whole sys tem when entering It through the mucous Surfaces. Such articles should never be used except on prescriptions from reputable physi cians. as tbe dumage they will do is ten fold to the good you can possibly derive from Hall's Catarrh Cure manufactured by r. J. Cheney & Co.. Toledo. 0., contains no mercury, and is taken internally, acting di rectly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. In buying Hall's Catarrh Cure be sure to get the genuine. It is taken Internally and is made in Toledo. Ohio, PjL*• ;!• Cheney & Co. Testimonials free. druggists: price 75c. per bottle. Hall's Family Pills are the best. The United States turns out annually 185,000 pounds of plug tobacco, 12,000,000 pounds of fine cut, 14,000,000 pounds of snuff, i,000,000 cigars and 5,000,000,000 cigarettes. Milkweed, commonly believed to be poisonous, is used as food in some parts of the Tyrol. The First Silk Hat. In an English newspaper of the date of Jan. 16, 1797, appears the following: "John Hetherington, haberdasher, of the Strand, was arraigned before the lord mayor yesterday on the charge of breach of the peace and inciting a riot, and was required to give bond in the sum of £SOO. It was in evi dence that Mr. Hetherington, who is well connected, appeared upon the pub lic highway, wearing upon his head what he called a silk hat (which was ofTered in evidence), a tall structure having a shining luster and calculated to frighten timid people. As a matter of fact, the officers of the crown stated that several women fainted at the un usual sight, while children screamed, dogs yelped, and a young son of Cord wainer Thomas, who was returning from a chandler's shop, was thrown down by the crowd which had collected and had his right arm broken. For these reasons the defendant was seized by the guards and taken before the lord mayor. In extenuation of his crime defendant claimed he had not violated any law of the kingdom, but was merely exercising a right to ap pear in a headdress of his own design —a right not denied to any English man." Mrs. Ncrimp's Gardenias'. Old Friend —"Did you have much ol a garden this year?" Mrs. Scrimp (of Scrimpvllle)—"No, It didn't amount to much. In the spring I gave a grand garden digging tourna ment, the young men who dug the most to have the pick of the girls for the evening, and It worked very well, but It cost me 'most two dollars for re freshments. Then I had a planting bee, and that wasn't so expensive, only the planting wasn't half done. Later on I tried to get up a weeding festival, but somehow the young folks sort o' lost Interest, and I gave up gardening In disgust." A Letter to Mrs. Pinkham Brought Health to Mrs. Archambo. [LETTER TO MRS. PINKHAM NO. 42.395] "DEAR MRS. PINKHAM —For two years I felt tired and so weak and dizzy that some days I could hardly go around the house. Backache and head ache all the time and my food would not digest and had such pains in the womb and troubled with leucorrhcea and kidneys were affected. "After birth of each child I grew weaker, and hearing so much of the good you had done, I wrote to you and have taken six bottles of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, one box of Lozenges, one box of Liver Pills, one package of Sanative Wash, and to day I am feeling as well as I ever did. When I get up in the morning I feel as fresh as I did when a girl and eat and sleep well and do all of my work. If ever I feel weak again shall know where to get my strength. I know yourmedicine cured me."— MRS. SALINA ARCHAMBO, CHARLEMONT, MASS. The present Mrs. Pinkham's experi ; e in treating female ills is unparal leled; for years she worked side by side with Mrs. Lydia E. Pinkham, and for sometime past lias had sole charge of the correspondence department of her great business, treating by letter as many as a hundred thousand ailing women a year. All women who suffer are invited to write to Mrs. Pinkham at Lynn, Mass., for advice, which will be promptly given without charge. THE IMMIGRANT'S LOT. FEW FOLLOW THEIR OLD-WORLD CALLINCS IN THIS COUNTRY. Take Up Whatever Industry la In Voitue Among the Colonies ofThotr Country men—US una Select the Mlna--Soin* Dangerous Diseases Are Imported. Officials of the Immigration Bureau at New York Harbor believe them selves able to forecast the further em ployment of an immigrant with almost unerring accuraoy. "The rough-and ready way of making this forecast," Baid a prominent official to a Post re porter, "has been by learning the oc cupation of the immigrant in his own country, and then assuming that he would follow the same in this country. Prolonged and careful observation, however, has shown that this method is fallacious. The immigrant does not pursue the calling he followed in the old land, but whatever calling he finds in vogue among the colonies ol his countrymen, and it is often quite different from hi old employment. That immigrants of the same race should drift together in the large cities and should then fall into a few lines of work is easily explnined. When an immigrant arrives, knowing only his own language and the ways only of his own people, he has really nowhere to go except to that quarter of the city or section of the country in which for similar reasons, those of his own blood and religion have grad ually congregated. Living thus close together, they naturally learn the trade or two which already flourish in the quarter. "The great majority of the Italians who come in the steerage become mere laborers, for which they are fitted by physical strength and endurance, and are not unfitted by skill, knowledge, or dexterity in any of the brauohes of skilled labor. The heavy work of construction in this country—in the North, at least—is done mainly by them. Jewish immigrants have be come the elothing operatives of the country; many of them are also fur riers and feather-curlers, and some of them soon set up as small mer chants. There are 70,000 Jewish op eratives of these classes in Now York City. The German immigrants almost invariably recruit the skilled vocations. The Poles share with the Italians the heavy labor of the country, doing a large part of the mining, and also muoh of the work in manufactories where heavy unskilled labor is re quired. "Nine-tenths of the Greek immi grants go into the flower business, and they have now almost monopolized it. The Scandinavians have for a long time gone regularly to swell the farm ing population of the Northwest, but during late years there has been quite a diversion of them to the shoe indus try in Now England. To the same region go most of the Portuguese, largo numbers becoming mill-workers at New Bedford and Fall Kiver. The Armenians also have a deoided drift towards the shoe factories of New England, and into the wire mills where the machines do most of the work, but the operatives must exercise some skill. The Hungarian additions to the population are doomed in large bodies to the mines. "The most undesirable immigrants are the Greeks, Armenians, Arabs, Hindus, Itnliaus and Poles. Con spicuously good immigrants are the Swiss and Swedes. An interesting fact in connection with the Irish im migration is that for several years a very large proportion has been com posed of girls, the male immigration having dwindled to almost nothing. "'There are two diseases which it is not generally known have entered through our 'open door.' One is favus, a pnrnsitio scalp disease, which was entirely unknown in this country until a few years ago, and is now oc casionally epidemio in certain quar ters. It is brought over by ltnssians and Italians. The other disease is trachoma, otherwise known a9 the Egyptian eye-disease, an inflammation of the inner surface of the eye-lids, which frequently spreads and involves the whole organ. The Ophthalmolo gical Society studied the disease and announced that but for the fresh ac cretions of affected immigrants, it would die out in this country. Both diseases were for many years freely admitted, but both are now barred. This action in the case of trachoma was largely due to the efforts of ooulists, who found the :aew disease increasing. There is an exception to the rule of exolusion, inasmuch as the diseased children of naturalized fathers are allowed to come in." New Caledonia'* Convict Band. The finest band in the southern hemisphere is said to be the oonvict band of Noumea, New Caledonia, Aus tralasia. The kiosk in whioh the con viols play is in the Place des Cooo tiers, and is surrounded by oocoanut trees and flame trees with their scar lot flowers, which give the place a gay appearance. The baud, whioh is gen erally about thirty strong, is made up of first-class convicts. The perform ances take place on Tuesdays and Thursdays at 8 p.m., under the super vision of armed warders, who march round and round the musicians. The music is classical. The performers are all clean shaven (except those who are to be shortly liberated), and are dressed in white trousers and jump ers, and wide brimmed grass hats. The audience is generally quite small. When the programme is completed the convicts are marshaled up iu line by the warders and marched off. A Good Trade* There are some 60,000 costermong ers who carry on business in the streets of Loudon. Their capital is supposed to be $250,000, while they are said to do t) trade during the year of three Bullions. FACTS ABOUT LIGHTNING HOLES. | How the Diameter of a Lightning; Flash is Measured. | "Did you ever see the diameter of a lightning flash measured?" naked a geologist, according to Pearson's Weekly. "Well, here is the ease which ouce inclosed a flash of light ning, fitting it exactly, so that you can see just how big it was. This is called a 'fulgurite,' or 'lightning hole,' and the material it ia made of is glass. I will tell you how it was manufactured, though it only took a fraotion of a second to turn it out. | "When a bolt of lightning strikes a bed of sand it plunges downward into the sand for a distance less or great er, transforming simultaneously into glass the Bilica in the material through which it passes. Thus, by its great heat, it forms a glass tube of preoisely its own size. Now aud then suoh s tube, knowu as 'fulgurite,' is found and dug up. Fulgurites have been followed into the Baud by excavation for nearly thirty feet. They vary in interior diameter from the size of a quill to three inches or more, accord-! ing to the 'bore' of the flash. "But fnlgurites are not alone pro- j duced in sand; they are found also in ■ solid rock, though very naturally of slight depth, and frequently existing as a mere thin, glassy coating on the ! snrface. Such fulgurites ocour iu astonishing abundance on the summit of Little Ararat in Armenia. The j rock is soft and so poroUß that blocks a foot long can be obtained and per- | forated in all directions by little tubes filled with bottle-green glass formed j from the fused rock. There is a small •peeimen in the National Museum whioh has the appearance of having been bored by the torpedo and the' holes made by the worm subsequently filled with gla9s. "Some wonderful fulgurites were found by Humboldt on the high Ne-. vada de Toluca, Mexioo. Masses of | the rook were oovered with a ,thin layer of green glass. It peculiar ' shimmer in the sun led Humboldt to ascend the preoipitous peak at the, risk of his life." WISE WORDS. The contented man is never poor; the discontented never rich.—Leigh-1 ton. Wltere two discourse, if the anger ! of one rises, he is the wiße man who | lets the contest fall.—Plutarch. The matt who has not learned to I say "no" will be a weak if not a, wretched man as long as he lives.—A. j Maolaren. The men who succeed best in pub- \ lie life are those wno take the risk ol standing by their own convietions.— [ J. A. Garfield. Deoeit is the false road to happi- I ness; and all joys we travel through to vice, like fairy banquets, vanish when we touch them.—A. Hill. We should do by our cunning as we do by our courage—always have it! ready to defend ourselvoß, never to offend others.—Greville. Consolation, indiscreetly pressed upon us when we are suffering under affliction, only serves to increase our pain and to render our grief more poignant. —Bousseau. It is not every calamity that is a curse, aud early adversity is often a blessing. Surmounted difficulties not only teach, but hearten us in our fu- 1 ture struggles.—Sharp. Small kindnesses, small courtesies,' small considerations, habitually prao- j tioed in onr social intercourse, give a | greater charm to the character than ! { the display of great talents aud ao oomplishments.—M. A. Kelly. pewey's Twenty-one Drawer* One trait that always attracted the attention of the acquaintance of Ad- 1 miral Dewey was his extremely neat appearance. He dressed iu the morn ing with a strict regard for the de mands of a professional man and wheD he left his apartments for the club in | 1 the evening his outfit could be used as 1 a model for a society man. His figure : is rather below medium height, but 1 trim aud well knit. From the conser vatively shaped hat to tUe round toed shoes he wore, everything bore the ear-marks of gentility aud refinement. He was fastidious about every featurb of his dress and always had his shoes made on the same shaped last. The care he observed in his dress waß fal lowed in the arrangement of his ward robe. Everything had its place and he knew exaotly where to find a hand kerohief, a shirt orcollsr. In fact, he might be Galled a crank on this sub ject, having invented an odd oustom for keeping his shirts, so that one conld not be worn oftiner than an other. They are all numbered, rang ing from one to twenty-one. He had a chiffonier containing an eqnal num ber of drawers, just wide enough to receive a shirt. He begius at the top aud wears the shirt iu Drawer No. 1, then the garment in Drawer No. '2 and so ou down the line. He is jnst aS particular about other parts of his wardrobe also.—Brooklyn Eagle. Corps* Carried Seven Miles by lee. About a year ago, near the foot ol Mont Blanc, iu Switzerland, the corpse of the English captain, Arkwright, lost thirty-two years ago, was dis covered. A foot and a part of the Bkull were missing. The bodies ol the captain's guides were found two days after the accident, but every at tempt to find the body of the captain had failed. May 25 last a guide who attempted to olimb the Bosson glacier discovered a human foot with a shod upon it. A little distanoe farther on he found a rusty axe, a knife, a skull bone and a battered gold watch. The artioles were recognized as those of Captain Arkwright. The distanoe whioh they had been earried by tha ioe in thirty-two years was found to be about seven miles.—Chicago Reo- Md. IPiiiS 1 Lookatyourtongue! Ifit'scoated, I I yourstomachisbad.yourliveroutof I I order. Ayer's Pills will clean your I I tongue, cure your dyspepsia, make | I your liver right. Easy to take, easy I Ito operate. 25c. All druggists. I Want your "moustache or beard a beauttiul | hrown nr rich black ? Then use BUCKINGHAM'S DYE Whiskers | A Bellville (111.) man recently added $63,000 to his tax returns because his "conscious commanded it." i)on't Tobacco Spit and Smoke Toar Lire A nay. To quit tobacco easily and forever, be mae aetic, full of life, nerve and vigor, take No-To- Bac, the wonder worker, that makes weak men strong. All druggists, 50c or Hi. Cure guaran teed. Booklet and sample free. Address Sterling Remedy Co., Chicago or New York. HOW TO OVERCOME INSOMNIA Sleep May Be Induced br Holding One*! Breath for a Time. From the New York Press: In these days, when the mercury is trying to leap the hundred hurdle, the hardest problem of New Yorkers is how to get to sleep at night. Turn and strive as one may to place himself, sleep won't come. A prominent New York physi cian, himself a sufTerer from insomnia for many years, has discovered a brand new way of putting one's self to sleep almost instantaneously. It has worked well in hia own case and never has failed in the many trials he has made upon his patients. After taking a deep inspiration the breath is held until pos itive discomfort is felt. It is then let gently out. The process is repeated a l second and a third time, and this is as a rule sufficient to obtain sleep. The | mind must be fixed upon the experi ment and one's thoughts must not be allowed to wander. Insomnia is pro l fluced by two kinds of cerebral activity ' directly opposite in nature, a too active [cerebral circulation and an Insufficient [ cerebral circulation. The former can j easily be recognized from the throb bing and pulsating arteries. The self asphyxiation of the patient causes a flow of nervous blood to the brain and an Increase of the carbonic acid and waste products of decomposition. These products, carried to the brain by the blood, overwhelm its centers and so produce sleep. Dr. Johann Meull- Hiltz, a German physician, writes en thusiastically about the effect of sleep ing with the head low as a means of obtaining the most refreshing slumber. He raises the foot of the bed so that it forms an inclined plane. He says that the sleep thus obtained is more benefi cial; that one awakens with a clearer bead, a wider mental horizon. He as serts that the neck increases In size, that the cerebral circulation is im proved and the influence upon the (ungs is so great that it can lessen the tendency to consumption. He recom mends that the lowering of the head be done gradually, and says that in somnia often is caused by sleeping with the head too high. Queen Who Studied Medicine. Few people know why the queen of Portugal studied medicine, although many are aware that she has taken the legree of M. D. She married the crown prince of Portugal without knowing much about him, but his sterling good jualltles quickly made her fall In love with him. When the tendency to stout aess first showed Itself in her husband, :o his great discomfort, she determined x> watch over him, believing she could lo him more good than the doctors, as ihe was constantly with him. Hence ihe devoted herself to medicine under :he tuition of the doctors of the coun try. THE EXCELLENCE OF 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 FIB 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 FIQ SYRUP Co. only, a knowledge of that fact will assist one in 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 Company CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO. •AN FK4NOUOO, C.L XOUISVILLE, Kr. NEW TOR?. If.T. HOUSEHOLD AFFAIRS. A Graceful Lamp Shade. The cumbrous lamp Bhade is being rapidly superseded by the graceful tamp veil, which adapts itself readily to auy kind of lamp or light. These I veils are on sale at all the stores, in , prioes suited to the varying depth of individual purses. They may, how ever, be readily manufactured athome of materials to march the decorations of the room for which they are in tended. They are usually made of silk, gauze or fine grenadines, plain or in patterns, and of about the size of a large silk handkerchief. They may be round or square, having a hole iu the center for the lamp chimney and top of the globe. The edges of the veil may be left plain or trimmed with lace ruffles or shirred ribbon. Cleaning the Carpet*. Carpets should be taken up at least once a year, and where they are in constant use two or three times, as the dirt underneath wears them out very fast. If there is auy sign of moths when a carpet is taken up, sprinkle the floor with black pepper or tobacco and let it remain when you put the carpet down. When the dust is well shaken out of carpets, if there are any grease spots on them, grate over them potter's clay very thick, cover over with a piece of brown paper, and press with a warm iron. Repeat this pro cess till grease is removed. If the carpets are so soiled as to require cleaning all over, after the dirt has been shaken out lay on a clean floor and rub on them with a new broom pared and grated raw potatoes. Let remain till perfectly dry before walk ing on them, and then sweep.—New York Journal. To Banish Flies. In view of what has been said in re cent years about the mission of flies in carrying diseases it becomes more urgent than over to discover some means to banish them from our living and cooking-rooms. It is said that a little oil of lavender and water sprinkled through a common atomizer about the rooms will drive tho flies away. However efficacious this remedy may be, it can not be surpassed by several of tho mosquito-killing pastils. Besides destroying mosquitoes these pastils kill the flies as well and drive from their hidden deus nearly all ver min in the rooms. There are several varieties of these pastils, which can be made at home. One good compound is made by mixing one part of ben zoin, one part balsam tolu, five parts charcoal, one and a half parts common insect-powder, and half a part salt peter. Add sufficient water to this mixture to knead into a stiff paste. Then roll tho mixture into suitable pastils and dry them. One of these pastils will burn for some time in a room, and the fumes emitted will de stroy the flies and mosquitoes without iujuriug furniture or fine curtains. Filling the Hone-Jar. Now is the seasou to fill the rose jar with the leaves of roses aud other flowers to preserve the sweet odor of summer for winter eujoymeut. A rose potpourri is a delightful remem brance of the warm, balmy weather and its fragrauce fills the house all through the wintry days. At auy Oriental shop faucv, wide-mouthed jars just adapted to this purpose can be obtained for a nominal sum. The rose-leaves should be collected in the middle of the day when there is no moisture on them. Spread them on a newspaper to dry. Cover the bottom of the jar lightly with salt, add a layer of the rose-leaves, cover the top with a little cotton batting, and then put on a layer of tho following mixture: Half a pound of powdered orris-root, half au ounce of anise-seed, two ounces of sandalwood, one Tonka beau, a grain of musk, and three ounces of some good sachet-powder. A few drops of camphor and vinegar on top of this layer stiould be sprinkled. Then add another layer of cotton hat ting aud more rose-leaves, repeating tho operation until the jar is full. It is not necessary always to purchase anything for the rose. Instead of putting in orris-root aud sandalwood, and so on, make a mixture of other sweet-scented flowers. Violets, honey suckle, clover, pinks and other flow ers are good for this purpose. They should be gathered the same as the ros. -leaves in the middle of tho day. After the jar is full it should be kept tightly covered.—The New Voice. lleclpen. Frozen Bananas—Boil one pint 01 water and one pound of sugar to gether until n syrup is formed. Strain through a cloth, and when cool add the juice of two oranges and one dozen bananas peeled and cut into dioe with a silver knife, then mashed to a pulp. Put all into the freezer. When frozen remove the dasher and stir in one pint of cream, whipped; oover and pack in ice and salt until needed. Pineapplo Sponge—One fresh pine apple, or a can holding a pint and a half. Ouo small cupful of sugar, and one and oue-half cupfuls of water. Cook together ten minutes. Have ready a half box of gelatine soaked in a half cupful of cold water; add to fruit and strain. When partly cooled and set, stir into the mixture the whipped whites of four eggs. Heat till very smooth and mold. Serve with cither whipped cream or custard. Boiled Batter Pudding With Jam- Butter a pudding basin, put two table spoonfuls of jam at the bottom. Beat together four eggs and a pint of milk, strain them. Put half a pound oi flour iu a basin, pour in the milk and eggs gradually, stirring well to pre vent lumps. Pour the batter into the pudding basin, cover with but tered paper, aud boil quickly for an hour aud a quarter. Turn out and serve at once or the Duddiug will be come heavy. We cannot believe all we read in all advertise ments, but when we see an article advertised month after month and year after year, we know that it must be a good thing. If you do not use Ivory Soap, try it, and you will find that the claims for it are moderate. Ivory Soap is good because it is made by men who have been soap manufacturers ail of their lives, they know how to select their materials and how to make pure soap. A Rainy Day. Farm For Sale. It Is not until we take the rainfall ° ne of tho vel "y best hill farms in In the bulk that we can realize what a Waitsfleld, Vermont, seven (7) miles stupendous quantity of water showers from 'a"road, one-half (%) mile from dowh In Great Britain and Ireland In ateam sawmills, comprising 200 acres, one year, and even when we have the hal£ of whlch is under the highest figures before us It is difficult to realize state of cultivation. Plenty of good their magnitude. To say, for instance I tlmber an<l excellent pastures. Sugar that 9.262,370,000,000 cubic feet of rain | on an average fell annually in the the balance wooden tubs newly painted united kingdom conveys little or noth- ' anJ in first-class condition. Latest Ing, though it Implies something moist ! '^™| V „t d „ e J apor t tor: lron a,ch - lar se DnH _ . .. , ® l| sugaring-off arch, sugar-house con and when we further learn that the taining 60 cords four-foot dry wood; weight of the same amounts to 258,- three years' supply stovewood on hand. 126,500,000 tons, except for a feeling of Uarns ln first-class condition, one thankfnlnes t HAT < AIA nearly new. 175 ton silo; abundance of tnankruiness that it did not fall on small fruit; splendid orchard of grafted our toes all at once, we are only con- trees. The place kept through last scious that It makes a very pretty row winter forty (40) head of cattle, seven tlonTmak "T" bTrn's' tion of making these latter figures look Complete set of tools of the best make. small we will merely say that the total The whole place is well fenced and weight of the rain that falls in one thorou ffhly well kept up. Dwelling is r, p ,r nn RHHoh t first-class; two stories, twelve rooms, year on the British Isles Is only equal recently painted inside and out. The to 1-liDth part of the weight of one whole would be sold at a great bar paltry square mile of the earth's sur- sain. on acount of death in family, face, from the surface to the center of U r , ftmherinformation app!y 10 F ' A " tKo t Joslyn, Waitsfiekl, Vermont, the earth. When we consider that there are 121,000 square miles of such Fits permanently cured. No fits or nervous* surface In the united kingdom alone ' one can understand what an infinites!- ! free. Di-.K.H.KIike.LUI. DSlArcli St.Phila.P* mal fraction of the total weight of the British isles the annual rainfall would After six years 1 suffering I was cured by Pi q rvrnn f tn wh,- A Qon AAA n BO S CUT6.—M ART THOMSON, Ohio Ave., amount to. Why, 4,300,000 Forth Alleghany, Pa., March 19,1804. bridges would almost equal it.—Lud gate. i Hear Admiral Bartlett J. Cromwell I had the honor of being the first naval I cadet appointed from Nebraska. H& Realistic Playing. 1 was graduated as a midshipman on Petted Daughter—"They asked me to June k 1561. , play at Mrs. Highup's this evening, To Coro Constipation Forever* and I did; but " ' TakeCascarets Candy Cathartic. 10c or 25c. , ... 44TTr uC.C. C. fall to cure, druggists refund money. Fond Mother (proudly)—" Were they not entranced?" Lord Kelvin has resigned the pro- Petted Daughter—"Hum! When I of natural philosophy In the , ~r t , ... University of Glasgow, which he had played Life on the Ocean Wave,' with he | d for 53 years . H e is now 75 years variations, half of them left the room." of age. Fond Mother (ecstatically)—" That's n , . ~ ... EUueato Tour Rowels With Van carets. wonderful. They must have been sea- Candy Cathartic, cure constipation forever. sick." oc, 25c. If C.C.C. fail, druggists refund money. 4—— | npa ttiv i. i)i nn A n . ' Uaviar is made from sturgeon eggs, pi ~ , , XT salted in brine. It is the most costly K 0 S?„,? 00 Vfr ns a , cle £ n S kl £^ No P roduct ot the fisheries of this coun beauty without it. Cascarets, Candy Cathar- t ry. and while largely relished bv epi tic clean your blood and keep it clean, by cures, a taste for it must usually be itirnng up the lazy liver and driving all im- acquired. Until recently its manufae punties from the body Begin to-day to ture was monopolized by the Russians banish pimples, boils, blotches, blackheads, most of it being prepared on the Volga r\* B^c kly bilious complexion by taking river and Caspian sea. and at the pre- Lasca rets,--beauty for ten cents. All drug- ent time about S.O'W.OOO pounds of it gists, satisfaction guaranteed, 10c, 525 c, 50c. are exported annually from the domin ions of the Czar. An apparatus has been devised for * T ..„ 7~Z Z - a "'° mat ' ca "i; Photographing pvople us tin y cntu shops and other places. tion, nlla>> pain, win,i culic.iiV abottle. "DON'T BORROW TROUBLE." BUY A Rainy Day. It is not until we take the rainfall In the bulk that we can realize what a stupendous quantity of water showers dowh in Great Britain and Ireland in one year, and even when we have the figures before us it is difficult to realize their magnitude. To say, for instance, that 9,262,370,000,000 cubic feet of rain on an average fell annually in the united kingdom conveys little or noth ing, though it implies something moist, and when we further learn that the weight of the same amounts to 258,- 126,500,000 tons, except for a feeling of thankfulness that it did not fall on our toes all at once, we are only con scious that it makes a very pretty row of figures. With the laudable inten tion of making these latter figures look small we will merely say that the total weight of the rain that falls in one year on the British isles is only equal to l-119th part of the weight of one paltry square mile of the earth's sur face, from the surface to the center of the earth. When we consider that there are 121,000 square miles of such surface in the united kingdom alone one can understand what an infinitesi mal fraction of the total weight of the British isles the annual rainfall would amount to. Why, 4,300,000 Forth bridges would almost equal it.—Lud gate. Realistic Playing. Petted Daughter—"They asked me to play at Mrs. Hlghup's this evening, and I did; but " ' Fond Mother (proudly)—" Were they not entranced?" Petted Daughter—"Hum! When I played 'Life on the Ocean Wave,' with variations, half of them left the room." Fond Mother (ecstatically)—" That's wonderful! They must have been sea sick." V Beauty 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 to-day 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. An apparatus has been devised for automatically photographing people as they enter shops and other places. "DON'T BORROW SAPOLIO 'TIS CHEAPER IN THE END. DYSPEPSIA! " Pop yearn I wnw a victim ofdya- ; pepsla in its worst form i could eat nothing but milk toast, and at times my stomach would not retain and digest even that Last March I I began taking CASCARETS and since then 1 j have steadily improved, until 1 am as well us I ever was in my life." David H. Murphv. Newark. O. CATHARTIC MASH I Pleasant. Palatable. Potent. Taste Good. Do I Good, Never Sicken. Weaken, or Gripe. 10c. 25c. 500. ' ... CURE CONSTIPATION. ... Sterling Remedy Company, < hlr.ro, Montreal. Ken York. Sll NfI.Tn.RAO Rml gnnrnnteed by all drug- I U"DHU gists to CXIBE Tobacco ilablt CARTERS INK —None BO good, but it costs no mere than the poorest. I ASTHMA POSITIVELY CUBED II I. ROSjl V'M sn KOI.SH ASTII.IIA cum I RHEUMATISM • • lull,DU Bkmidi Co., Mfirwiwlcli St.. M. 1 |w. L. DOUGLAS Is 3 & $3.50 SHOES ELI'S! 1 j 1 IVi A D L. I t Worth $4 to $6 compared with other makes. Indorsed ly over 1,000,000 wearers. ALL LEATHERS. ALL STYLES Take no substitute claimed to be as good. Largest maker* of *3 and *3.50 shoes in cho world. Your dealer should keep . , a pair on receipt of price!* Statw kind of leather, size and width, plain or cap toe. fat aloe ne C Free. I W. L. DOUGLAS SHOE CO., Brockton. Mass. I GOLDEN CROWN LAMP CHIMNEYS Are the best. Ask for them. Coat no more than common chimneys. All dealers. I ITTSHI Kti GLASS CO., Allegheny, Pn, Or. Ricord's Essence of Life ard, never-falling remedy for all cases of nervous mental, physical debility, los. vitality and pre matura decay in both sexes; positive, permanent cure: full treatment *6...r *1 a bottle; stamp for circular. J. JAcQUES. Agent, 176 Broadway. N. Y. "^"oyelui.e' 1 ; Thompson's Eye Water ; P. N. U. 35 '99
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers