44 A Gentle Wind of Western Birth" Tells no srveeter story io humanity than | the announcement that the health-giver and health-bringer, Hood's Sarsaparilla, tells of the birth of an era of good health. It is the one reliable specific for the cure of all blood, stomach and liver troubles. In Surrey. England, there is a great poultry fattening establishment, which annually sends about 36,000 fowls to Dondon. Don't Tobacco Spit and Smoke Your Life Away. To quit tobacco easily and forever, be mag netic, full of life, nerve and vigor, take No-To- Bac, the wonder-worker, that makes weak men strong. All druggists, 50c or 81. Cure guaran teed. Booklet and sample free. Address Sterling Remedy Ca. Chicago orj-lew York. There are 2,360 central station plants for generating electricity in the United States. No-To-Bao for Fifty Cents. Guaranteed tobacco habit cure, makes weak men strong, blood pure. 60c, 91. Ail druggists. There is an epidemic of fleas in one of the New York markets. The Baltimore and Ohio South West ern Railroad placed in service several months ago five large ten wheel com pound passenger engines for use on fast trains between Cincinnati and St. Rouis. The performance of these engines has been eminently satisfactory and up to the highest expectation. The same line has also in service 50 Consolidation compound freight engines which provide ample power for the entire line in addition to what was al ready in use. The compound engines were an experiment but hard service has proved that they are entirely suc cessful and show a saving of 10 per cent, in fuel as compared with simple engines of the same type. Exhaustive tests were made with both the simple and compound locomotives before the order for the entire lot was placed with the result vastly in favor of the com pound locomotives. How'a This T We offer One Hundred Dollars Reward for iny ease of Catarrh that cannot be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. F. .1. Cheney & Co., Toledo, O. We, the undersigned, have known F. J. Che ley for the last 15 years, aud believe him per- . fectlv honorable in all business transActlonn | ind financially able to carry out any obliga tion mode by their Arm. Wkht SO TIiUAX, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, Ohio. Walpino, Kinnan & Marvin, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, Ohio. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, act lug directly upon the blood and mucous sur faces of the system. Testimonials sent free. Price, 75c. per bottle. Sold by all Druggisto. Hall's Family Pills are t.he best. I have fo nd Piso's Cure for Consumption an unfailing medicine. F. It. Lot*, 1306 Scott Covington, Ky., Oct. 1,1834. Richest Gold Mine In the World. The Band Barton and Albion gold j mine, under the town of Ballarat, In j Australia, has yielded more than fifty j millions as the value of ita output of ! gold since it was discovered about thir- | ty years ago. It is the most productive ! gold mine yet known. Its supply of i paying quartz seems practically inex haustible, and as the vein is extensive, being spread over much territory, the mine bids fair to last for centuries. The work in the Ballarat gold mine is said to be much safer as well as more com fortable than that of the workers In a coal mine. At Ballarat there are no noxious gases and no danger from ex- j plosions. Air is forced Into the work- j ings through various shafts. In the | Transvaal rich and regular deposits! were discovered in 1886 in the Witwa- j tersrand. The reefs are estimated to ! contain nearly 100,000,000 tons of ore, I the gold of which is said to be worth ! £45,000,000. From eighty to a hun- I dred years must elapse before the field Is worked out. DonbtleMH Remembered. The Advocate of India tells of a curi ous way of rejoicing. The Nawab ol Rampore being blessed with a daugh ter, rejoicings were taking place In his 6tate, and a week's pay was deducted from every state official in commem oration of the event. THE very word "operation" strikes terror to a woman's soul. Nearly always these operations become necessary through neglect. If the menses are very painful, or too frequent and excessive, get the right advice at once and —— - stop taking chances. It will cost you nothing for advice if you write WW ÜBvaK.kW to Mrs. Pinkham at Lynn. Mass.. I/#!##) for it. and if you let the trouble 6+ Br run along it will surely cost you a fkOfTO A great deal of pain and may mean WirtrßiM M an operation. ~ ~ Miss SARAH J. GRAHAM. Sheridanville, Pa., writes: "DEAR MRS. PINKHAM :—I had suffered for sev riSviilf doCt ° re<i " ntil IWBS cMsco " raßed ° 1 \ fonned • in nll ,ny organs her and she begged of me to try Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable pieces and I got better all the ; ime - 1 " eiie^ e now that am that my case was a hopeless one, and no human power could do mo ? n is not safe to wait until the "Wfey | **■ last moment. Head off trouble by prompt attention to it. Don't be satisfied without Mrs. advice. ... Ao Cure, ho Pay, Is the wny Flndley'a Eye Halve is sold. Chronic aud granulated lids cured in 30 days; common sore eyes in 3 dnys, or money back for tho n&klug. Sold by all Druggists, or by mail, 26a box. J. P.* Hayteii, Deca tur, Texas. In a Methodist Church in a remote Georgia community the old rule of sep aration of the sexes during worship is j observed. To Care Constipation Forever* Take Cascarets Candy Cathartic. 10c or 25a u C. C. C. fnil to cure, druggists rotund money. The largest pumping engine in the world is in the Calumet and Hecla mines. Tattooing is just now the popular pastime of the leisured world. BUY OF THE MAKER —v Fifty-one years a*o, we began our n&V present plan or doing business or sell tm\ ing direct to the consumer, as we j£j2 found thousands of people living in lAfriffv all parts of thiscount ry who pay cash A9MIW for their merchandise, were tired of \rWfv paying the big profits their local dealers were charging. WrJjN We then begun selling everyone our own goods made in our own factories, Corsets, consisting of everything you Eat, 300 to S3, everything you Wear, everything you , Use, everything found In a home, In an office, in an lio- H |UMnf ll tel, on a farm, or in a barn, nnd we ftre saving money t.o-dny for nearly two mll- Bso\ ffilml llon People, who live in all parts of the world. Our 304 *p Catalogue costs us 69c everything to /Cat, Wear and X) Use, has lO.Ouu illustrations r. u .. and quotes wholesale puces on vPt/} 'flT ' IW.OOO different articles. s/.yo t,527. Our Lithographed Car- SV't a^°' un aliowa Carpet*, |pj|[ anil Laco Curtain* in their real Uj£&| color*. Carpet* sowed free, lin- P®ing furnished free and freight prepaid. Our Made-to-Order Clothing I t M Catalogue with namplcH of cloth | I lit fuelled, oilers suit nnd over- Chair ROr •'"Ufa from $5.05 to $20.00. Kx owe. p PeMaffe ]m | ( i 01l o i„thlng every where. We also issue a Special Catalogue of Pianos, Organs, Sewing Machines and Bicycles. Which Catalogue do you want 7 Address this way: JULIUS HINES& SON, BALTIMORE, MD. Dept. 13 CARTER'S INK You deny yourself pleasure and S- comfort If you don't use It. Exports of coal from the TTnlterl States have Increased from 227,918 tons in 1870, to over 4,000,000 tons during the I past year. Educate Tour Bowels Wltb CMnreta. ,onll y Cathartic, cure constipation forever. iOc, 2So. If C. O. C. fall. drusKlsts refund monej- Home for Fatuities of ilandlta. Not actuated by remorse, but by pure philanthropy, Jim Jenkins, hunter ol outlaws, has concluded to devote all his money to the maintenance of a home for the orphans and widows of men he has run to earth, in particular, and of criminals of the great South j west In general. Jim Jenkins, now of Kansas, is now 65 years old and has j spent forty years as a scout and hunt ! er of bandits and train robbers. In this ] way he has made about $50,000. Among | the distinguished outlaws he has i chased were Jesse James and his broth er, Bob Ford, Bill Dalton and Bill Cook, while he wns the leader of the band that caught Cherokee Bill in 1595. In the Dalton raid in Coffeyville, Kas., Jenkins was shot eight times. He esti mates his bag of bad men at about 150, The home, which is being built on a j 5,000-acre farm owned by Jenkins, | near Pryor Creek, I. T., is to cost $20,- | 000.—Buffalo Express j Ernest Whitehead captured a young j seal near Anacapa island, California, I recently, and took him on hoard his | ship, says Our Dumb Animals. As the I vessel started the mother seal was no | ticed swimming about, howling pite i ousiy. The little captive barked re | sponsively. After reaching tho wharf J at Santa Barbara the captive was tied | up in a jute sack and left loose on the - deck. Soon after coming to anchor I j the seal responded to its mother's call - J by casting itself overboard, all tied up s jas it was in the sack. The mother I seized the sack, and with her sharp i teeth tore it open. She had followed 1 the sloop eighty miles. •'GANCWAVI" A New War Cry liaised bj Oar Men In the Philippines. The Manila correspondent of Col lier's Weekly, writes as follows: The enemy were invisible and shooting. That made it necessary for Uncle Sam's troopers to go on until they got near enough to get a good close view of the little brown enemy. And they did it with splendid spirit, rushing, shooting, cheering and laughing. Two companies of Cook's battalion of the Third were ordered to the left of the railroad, while the other two com panies, under Captain Cook, kept to the right of the track. AlHfour of the companies were made up* mainly of "rookies," ns recuits are called, but they made up in spirit what they lacked in effective drill. As the two companies to the left of the track, under Captain Day and Lieutenant Hannay, got their first glimpse of the shooting enemy their officers shouted out to steady their commauds. It was unnecessary. One tall rooky, who was the first to catch sight of the heads of the mass of Fili pinos ahead, yolled'gloefully: "Gang way!" With one accord the two com panies took up the ory of "Gangway 1" and on they rushed. It was their slogan. They kept it up until they reached the thrown-np dirt of the trench and saw the Filipinos, now an irregular mass, fleeing a hundred yards ahead of them. The Filipinos gained another trench, but "Gang way!" was the battle cry that drove them out of it. It was the same with the third line of trenches. Parenthet ically, it is understood, of course, that our boys shot off something be sides "Gangway!" Dead and wound ed Filipinos strowed the ground and filled the trenches. Our losses all along the line that day were tri fling by comparison. Day's and Han ney's oompauies, for instance, which suffered rather more than the average losses, had five men killed and eleven wounded. But that cry of "Gangway!" is fam ous over in the Filipinos lines. In surgents who have been brought in either wounded or prisoners have in quired eagerly the meaning and po tenoy of that mysterious Yankee word which invariably preceded a Filipino retreat. Aud so the Third has con tributed auothar famous word to the technical slang of the American sol dier. Indian Village Lout. Historians aro at a loss to account for the apparent rnins of an Indian village in Silver Creek Township, Miohigan, about half a mile west of Indiau Lake. In 1843, when William Gilbert, one of the wealthiest farmers iu this section, built his house in this locality, he built upon the ruins of what had evidently been a church. In fact, settlers iu the twenties claim to have attended churoh there, the ser vice being conduoted by a priost from Bertraud or Notre Dame. Other old settlers state that in the early thirties one Slater taught school there, later going to the vicinity of Yankee Springs and continuing thut occupation there. The fact of its be ing a schoolhouse would not preclude its being used occasionally as a church, aud there are in oxisteuce in this city records of baptism of Indian children at the "Church of the Indian Village." On this same farm were ruins of nine sugar camps, each about twelve by sixteen in size, with holes bored in a log at the back, iu which sticks had been driven on which to make their beds. Copper kettles were used, and copper kuives, nails and hatchets, of poor temper, have been plowed up there. There is not an Indian in this vicinity who knows anything about this church or school, yet the evi dence that one did exist ,is indisputa ble. Indian Lako was named from the fact that thiH locality was tho favorite resort of the Indians iu the maple sugar seasou.—Detroit News. Dentlßt Tells l>y Sign*. A peculiar actual or imagined cor respondence bus been developed be tween physical acts and mental atti tudes. The elocutionist declares that the sledgehammer gesture indicates emphasis and the bauds opened with an outward spread of the arms candor. The student of haudwritiug assures you that the up curl at tho end of n word indicates a hopeful mood and the droop a despondent one; that it the handwritiug begins boldly and ends iu smaller characters a weak will is indicated, and vice verna. Curly hair is supposed to imply a quick temper, and the dentists will tell you that the teeth of the curly haired man pull hard. "I can tell as far as I see a man," one of them remarked, "wlietkoi his teeth will bo difficult to pull. If he has a bull neck and curly hair, you will need your strongest forceps. Somehow the roots curl themselves up in the bony tissue of the jaw iu as much of a tangle as tho hair itself."— New York Mail and Express. lUtR an<l Trap Swallowed by h Snake. A remarkable snako story that is vouched for by the family of Charlos Braddock, Sr., of Shamong Township, N. J., is told by John Dellett, the hired man. Dellett went to the barn tho other day to milk the cows. Upon entering one of the stalls he saw a large white throated blacksnake. It was curled up iuan apparently comfortable posi tion, aud it was noticed that a rat's tail was hanging from its mouth. Dellett summoned Mr. Braddock anil other members of his family. At iirst tho men arranged to give battle to tho reptile, when it was found to be dead. Au examination showed that in its hunger aud greed to get the rats, three in number, the snake had swallowed the trap aud all. This caused ita death. INEWS AND NOTESI I FOR WOMEN. I M3K^oie!@iofof<?feKNeN3<G4eieiefe(eieioie<eieie<el( The Ideal Motlier. She never describes her aches and pains. She never dwells on unpleasant reminiscences. She is never a martyr. Sho never corrects tho children in the presence of any one. She lets everyone have affairs of his or her own. She is always polite and cordial to the children's friends.—Philadelphia Record. Keep Up the Diary. A thoughtful woman says that the "journal habit" should be discouraged iu young girls, as writing down the thoughts, feelings and impressions of immaturity and inexperience tends to tho development of self-consciousness and introspection at a time when they cau do more harm than good. A diary, however, is u different matter, and should be encouraged, as it may bo of value iu after years, in its record of dates aud happenings. Female Nimrotls. Lady Hopetoun, wifo of the Lord Chamberlain, is one of the cleverest of a galaxy of female Nimrods, whioh includes Lady Sandhurst, Lady Beaumont and the Duchess of Bed ford, and she can bring down any thing from a partridge to a stag as skillfully as cau most men. Iu Aus tralia she used to practice regularly at the rifle range, and her score of "bulls" was the envy of mauy men shooters. Deer stalking is her favor ite relaxation, and many a line buck has fallen to her gun. The Revival of Coral. Coral beads used to be considered tho correct and necessary thing to wear, with muslin gowns and other pretty, old-fashioned toilets appro priated by the present fashion. Perhaps, also, if there be one color in jewelry ns to the beauty of whioh all tastes, from tho least cultivated to that of the conuoisseur, accord, it is for red in its various tones. Its re vival began in the favorite old form of beads. It has found its best field again in the fashionable long chains, aud it is in this line that jewelers make their priuoipal display. Next to chains in extent of display come brooches aud .pins. A dainty now fancy noted is the combination of pearls and coral in one or two fine brooohes, the design being a cresoent inclosing a star. An establishment catering to the finest trade reports coral unequivocally as "coming in," and displays a variety of chains and some new designs in pins and brooches. Commonplace Girls. The brilliant and unusual girl gets more than her meed of praise, but we just go on loving the commonplaoe girl for the nice little part she plays in life and seldom think of telling her what we do. And the commonplace girl is so apt to underestimate her worth. You know that time and again she has come to you for comfort be cause sho declared she was such a social failure, such a commonplace mortal. My dear littlo commonplace girl, it is the commonplace men and women who make up tho greater part of the world, aud it- is tho commonplace men end women who attend to the small hut necossary matters that go to make hp the great sum total of our lives and )he world's affaii-3 generally. The geniuses are too busy to look nfter imall matters, and, besides, the goni nses are so few! Maybe out of a thousand folk there will be but one auusual one. The balanco aro just sommonplace. Tho commonplace woman is not tho Inferior woman. The oommonplaco woman comes just up to the accepted standard of what a woman should be, when all is said aud done. Each of us may have an ideal, but we are all quite conscious that in some way, as time has passed on into eternity and Mother Eve's daughters have lived and loved aud worked and smiled, a standard has been fixed. To sink below it is sadly disappointing to those who look for all that is best in womanhood; to rise above it puts one in the ranks of the unusual. Our greatness or our inferiority, as men and women, only stands out prominently because there is a standard.—Philadelphia Inquirer. Mow to Take Care or Pearls. Pearls nre undoubtedly one of the most beautiful of precious stones, aud thoso persons who are fortunate pos sessors of them have, doubtless, been puzzled many a time as to tho beat way of keeping them nice, A good way of brightening up the oppearanoe of pearls is to wash them in soap and water, that is, if they are what is known as "whole" pearls. But should thoy bo only half pearls, tho greatest care must be exercised iu keeping them out of water, as this fluid nffects their color and lustre, and in time causes them to becomo quite black. People who possess a ring or brooch that consist of half pearls find it a most difficult matter to clean them. When they look dirty, just take a dry, clean leather and polish thorn, and then that being done take a ■ jft brush nnd go gently over the settings, and yon will be surprised at the incrensed lustre and clean look which this sim plo process has given to the pearls. Pearls are valued accordiug to their color and lustro, and so, if the color fades, so does tho value, and pearls that are kept lockod up for any longth of time lose their color entirely. The wenariug of pearls do them far more good, nnd tho great pity is that some poople who have in their possession penrl necklaces and rings never allow them to see daylight, but keep them looked away in a jewel case, and thus the color aud the value of tho pearls are ruined. Pearls should never be kept looked up for more than a week at a stretch, aud if possible they should be worn evory day, and in the end you will be rewarded by seeing how much handsomer they havo be come through oontact with the fresh air.—Woman's Life. Tlie Woman of the Angeltis. Barbizon, a little village in the midst of the forest of Foutainebleau, a short distance from Paris, has become a goal of pilgrimage for many admirers of Millet's work, and particularly for those who know that the woman who suggested to the great painter his fa mous picture of "The Angelus" still lives there iu a little cottage a stoue's throw from where she was born. Mere Adele's homo is a small vineclad cot tage, in which she lives a frugal but comfortable life, troubled only by the orerinquisitivo tourists aud by her rheumatism. She must have been an attraotivo woman once, for even now, although she has witnessed tho pass ing of more than threescore years aud teu, thero are traces of former beauty iu hor wrinkled face. Mere Adele is a lady, though she has worn her fingers blunt by toil, aud her form is bent uuder the burdens she has had to bear. When sho looks at you her smile is like abauedition, and the beantiful things of earth are not lost upon her. Her manner is cheer ful, as one who feels she has not lived in vain. If questioned closely she will tell you of tho day when the great artist came through the dense forest with his wife and children, leaving be hind him the gay city of Paris with its schools of painting and its models. She knows u great deal of the very hard days whioh followed for Jeau Franoois Millet—the toil, the anxiety, the disappointments. She nursed his five children, aud did the little field work iu the garden adjoining the cot tage. When he saw his nurse-girl, Adele, and her father reverently bow ing their heads in prayer at the ring ing of the Augolus lie conoeived the pioturo whioh, if not his best work, is yet the best known, and the one most appreciated by the people. Mere Adele calls herself i child of God. She looks it in the painting, and she lives it every day in her humble cottage.— Woman's Home Companion. The obiguon is to be revived. Kosa Bonheurwas of Jowish extrac tion. Women have been enfranchised in Western Australia. In one month Helen Gould receivod over six hundred begging letters. Baroness James de Rothschild owns the finest collection of fans in Europe. Sarah Bernhardt is writing her rem iniscences. They will fill two large volumes. News from Londou states that Lady 1 Warwick is doing good work for the labor movement in England. Archduchess Stephanie, daughter of the Kiug of Belgians, is known to hor friends by the nickuame of "Step." Mrs, J. Piei'pont Morgan owns a dinner service that cost 3-50,000. It is made of silver gilt, and there are 300 pieces in the set. While it is coucedod that the study of astronomy calls for abstract and I exact thought, yet many women have gained ominence in this science. Women sailors are employed in Denmark, Norway and Sweden, and they nre often found to be most ex cellent and delightful mariners. Tho Kansas State Federation now consists of ninety-two clubs, with about four thousand members, an in crease the last year of one thousand members. Mrs. Phmbe R. Sturtevant, of Ja maica Plain, Mass., has agreed to fur nish the greater part of the money to build a SIO,OOO dormitory for girls at the Hebron (Me.) Aoademy. A noted costuiner of London says ho has designated 3200,000 worth ol costumes for one woman, while a pair of stockings he provided for a noted belle cost 3500 and a tea gown 3-3500. Mrs. Caroline B. Nichols, of Bos ton, is making a name for herself as one of the most competent musical di rectors in the country. She is leader and musical director of the Boston Woman's Fadette Orchestra. Miss Daisy Leiter, who will be re membered by her American friends as a superb horsebaok rider, has taken up elephant riding ns an amusement while in India. She has a pet ele phant, which she is training herself. Toilet Hints. Nover mistake fads for fashions. Gloves aud shoes too small are de cidedly bad form. Ripped garmeuts and frayed edges are fata! to smartness. A sense of appropriateness in attire is more desirable than riches. Good grooming is the necessary preliminary to smart dressing. The little spade-fronted jacket again is coming in for a good deal of es teem. Well-brushed skirts, well-cleaned shoes, aud a trim waist-line costs nothing. Learn how to carry the body cor rectly if you expect to carry your clothes well. Fresh linen is ns essential to the smartly dressed girl as to the correct ly dressed man. Dry hair and scaly scalp require nourishing. Rub a little olivo oil into the roots of tho hair with tho Un gor tips twice a weolt, making part ings over the head for that purpose. Sweet spirits of nitre is one of the j best aud simplest of toilet waters. It is an excellent doodorizer, and while possessing no actual fragrance itßolf, imparts a most acceptable aroma of cleanliness. IVORY SOAP I _ HO FREE ALKALI Mgy nn @ ffiWA THE REAL ISSUE. Some say "Free silver is a curse," Some think it is the nation's hope; But no one wants "Free Alkali," And there is none in Ivory Soap. IVORY SOAP The gimlet-pointed screw has been | responsible for more wealth than m st silver mines. Beauty la Blood Deep. Clean blood means a clean skin. No beauty without it. Caacarets, 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 • Rxam." Economy Is so Important a subject that the mathematical housekeeper will doubtless find It greatly to her edifi cation and profit to consider the fol lowing from Puck: If a housewife twists in one hour and fifteen minutes ninety-three "lamp-lighters" when 1,250 matches can be bought for five cents, at what rate per hour does she value her time, assuming the worth ol the paper to be zero? If the aforesaid woman will take six steps across a room and six returning, each step being of twenty-two inches, to save one match, how far should she consistently walk to save five cents carfare? If a man can draw from boards in fifty minutes seventy-eight nails of a cer tain size, what wages would he be earning per hour, nails being worth' four cents per pound, and there being one hundred of this size in a pound' In a certain climate underwear at a 1 price of $4 per winter will assure ; against colds. Assuming that under wear costing $1 per season will lead to two visits from the doctor at $1.50 ( each, what is the saving by the pur chase of the cheaper material? Oil Is worth nine cents per gallon. Lamp A burns forty-five gallons in reading or j sewing period of one year; lamp B,! twenty-five gallons. Spectacles A cost $4.50; spectacles 25 cents. If lamp B and spectacles B are used, the eyesight I is made useless in eight years for a ! person whose expectation of sound eye- ! sight with the use of lamp A and spec- 1 tacles A is twenty-five years. Making | no allowance for deterioration of l lamps or spectacles, estimate the value j of eyes per pair Force Exerted by the Heart. By accurate measurements of the heart's force it has been calculated that in twenty-four hours the amoun! of work done by it is equal to 124 fool ; tons; or, in other words, if the whole force expended by the heart in twenty- ( four hours were gathered into one ; huge stroke, such a power would lifl 124 tons one foot from the ground The heart really performs this work in sixteen out of the twenty-four hours for eight hours during the day are tak en up by rests, every beat being follow ed by a pause, during which the heari stops. Another calculation shows that the distance traveled by the blood ■ thrown out of the heart Is seven miles 1 an hour, 168 miles a day. or 4.292.00 C miles in a lifetime of seventy years. Is your best friends turn their heads aside. A bad breath means a bad liver. Ayer's Pills are liver pills. They cure i constipation, biliousness, dyspepsia, sick headache. 25c. All druggists. Want your moustache or beard a beuuttful f ' BUCKimfepVE Whiskers | | GO ldeKT OR OWN LAMP CHIMNEYS Are flic host. Ask for them. Cdstnomore tliun common chimney. All n-ern. I'ITTSHUKC; (iI.ASS Allegheny, Pa. Onv flMtifnclnn's Arnenal- New York Sun: The tearing down of the old buildings, 93, 95 and 97 Cher ry street, to make way for a modern structure, removes a landmark vaguely associated in the annals of the neigh brohood with the days of the American revolution. When Washington made his headquarters at Roosevelt and Cherry streets, the local historians declare, he stored in these old build ! Ings munitions of war supplies for his ' army. The historians of Cherry Hill then skip the intervening years until a period beginning fifteen or twenty years ago is reached. The buildings were then occupied as resorts for sail ors. The Loopey gang, which once threw a man into the river for 6 cents, made its headquarters in the neignpor bood. Near by was Sneepy's alley, leading from Roosevelt to Cherry street, in which a Roosevelt street resi dent declares there were three mur ders within as many months. Dr. Bulls i The best remedy for Consumption. Cures gi 531 Coughs, Colds, Grippe, &yrup Bronchitis, Hoarse * ■ nets, Asthma, Whooping cough. Croup. Small closes ; quick, sure results. JJr. Bull's Jills cute Constipation, Trial, io/or^c. INSOMNIA hnve been lining; €.-IS('AKET.S for insomnia, with which 1 have been afflicted for • over twenty years, and I can say that Cascarets i have given me more relief than any other reme -1 tly I have ever tried. 1 shall certainly recom | mend them to my frionds as being all they are represented-'' Tnos. GILLAHD, Elgin, 111. m CATHARTIC | THADI MARK PKOI6TIRCO Pleasant. Palatable. Potent. Taste Good. Do Good, Never Sicken. Weaken, or Gripe, ltie. 26c. Soc. ... CURE CONSTIPATION. ... lt.-m. dv Company, ( l.lraao, Montreal, New York, tlfl NO-TO.RAC and guaranteed hy all drug n W I U'DMU K ists to CUBE Tobacco Ilabli W. L. DOUGLAS 53&53.50 SHOES M Worth $4 to $6 compared with other makes. Indorsed l>y over 1,000.000 wearers. ALL LEATHERS. ALL STYLES Take no substitute claimed of #:> and 13.R0 shoos In the world. Your dealer should keep kind of leather, size arid width, plain or cap toe! Catalogue C Free. W. L. DOUGLAS SHOE CO.. Brockton. Mass. ■ EES STOPPED FREE ' m SB V Pe-"-Tanently Cured flj ffl Insanity Prevented by $3 MM DR- KLINE'S GREAT , H BJ W NERVE RESTORER ®PltlTeear for all genww Vhtatu.Fita, RpUj>y, free to Kit!|lumU nl* ARNOLD'S COUGH All Druggists. 25c. ■■ ■ !■ ■■ E H QENSIONw."uKf.nV."r: Prospcutes Claims. Or. Ricord's Essence of Life R"™, ard, tie - ei -failing remedy for all caws „f nervous, ineutal, physical debility, los vitnlPy and ]-re mat mo decay in both sexes; positive, permanent cure: full treatment #5, or $1 a bottle: stump for cin ular. J. JAt.QUES. Agent, 176 lSroadway, N. V, RI!E!IMATISW?;SRJ? , %W "Ai.kv VNI'FR RKMK.I'Y 1'.).. -AMirt-enwi'-h St.. N. V i'. x U. 4u 'yy In time. Sold by druggists Ban BazmnaaMz^gi
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers