44 It is an HI Wind That Blows Nobody Good.'' That small ache or pain or weakness is the 44 i1l wind" that directs your attention to the necessity of purifying your blood by taking Hood's Sarsaparilla. Then your whole body receives good, for the purified blood goes tingling to every organ. It is the remedy for all ages and both sexes. No Damage That He Could See. Magistrate—"You aro charged with running over an olu ladv while scorch ing. What have you to say in regard to this awful accident?" Defendant —"Awful accident? Why, a little thing like that doesn't hurt a good bicycle like mine is?"— Stray Stories. Save tlic Nickels. From saving, comes having. Ask yonr grocer how you can save 150 by investing sc. He can tell you just how you can get one large 10c package of "Red Cross" starch, one large 10c packago of "Hubinger'a Best" starch, with the premiums, two beautiful Shakespeare panels, printed in twelve beautiful colors, or one Twentieth Century Girl Calendar, all for 50. Ask your grocer for this starch and obtain these beautiful Christinas presents free. DRIFTING BOTTLES. Give Valuable Information us to the Ocean Currents. Washington Spec. Baltimore Sun: Some valuable information respecting oceah currents has been obtained by the Naval Hydrographic office through floating bottles thrown overboard by steamers and recovered by passing ships, which report the exact points at which they were found. Frequently the bottles are picked up and again tossed overboard after the latitude and longitude and the number of the bottle have been noted, so that the office in Washington may know tho direction taken by the bottle since put into the sea or last sighted by some vessel. In this way the direction it has drafted and the strength of the current can be accurately estimated. There are some recent returns which show that bottles have floated thousands of miles, and one has a record of covering 2,400 miles in 92 days. This bottle was tossed overboard from the steamship Furst Bismarck on May 1, 1898, about 350 miles southeast of Cape Race, and re covered on August 1 In the vicinity of Gluck stadt, on the Elbe. The dis tance between the two points, follow ing the route through the English Channel, is about 2,400 miles, giving 26 miles as the lowest possible estimate of the dally average velocity with which the bottle traveled eastward. The longest distance made by any bot tle was one thrown from the steam ship Electrician, which covered 6,300 miles in a little over three years, or an average of nearly six mile 3 a day. An other bottle traveled 6,000 miles in 671 days, or an average of eight knots, while another made 5,000 miles in 327 days, or an average of 15.3 knots a day. Another good record for a bottle is 300 miles in 16 days, or an average of 18.S knots a day. In conducting its experi ments the navy department has had the co-operation of the Russian gov ernment, which on the cruises of two of its vessels had thrown in the sea 703 bottles, of which 30 have been re covered and reported. Taken collec tively, the paths followed by these floating bottles give a good idea of the drift currents of the North Atlantic. The motion of the waters seems to be westerly, as is evident by the destina tion of the numerous bottles cast adrift between Madeira and Cape San Roque, all of which ultimately found their way to the Windward Islands, the Ba hamas or to the western shores of the Gulf of Mexico. MRS. PINKHAM says that irritability indicates disease. Women who are nervous and snappish are to be pitied. Their homes are uncomfortable; their dis positions grow constantly worse. Such women need the coun sel and treatment of a woman who understands the peculiar ___ troubles of her sex. yyttl/y nm mw M R S- ANNA E. HALL, of Mill- KLif W dale, Conn., was all run down in _ _ „,„ gl health and had completely lost mO%BL&€.S> WwMMH control of her nerves. She wrote UMtrm t0 rs ' P'nkham'at Lynn, Mass., for advice. Now she writes: "I wish to thank you for what your Vegetable Compound has done fpr me. It has helped me more than anything else. I suffered for a long time with ner vousness, pains in back and limbs and falling of the womb; also had neuralgia in my head and could not sleep. I told husband " s ° me " 'to try it. I have taken it and am happy to say I am cured. I recommend it ggg to all my friends and never bottles of Lydia E. Pink- -Zs g ham's Vegetable Compound was entirely cured. I take great pleasure in writing this to you and would be pleased to be interviewed by any one who is afflicted with that distressing complaint. lam very grateful to you." Don't Need Auottaer. Lady Traveler—Allow me to detain you one moment, sir. I have here a neat and pretty little letter-opener— very handy. Gent (interrupting)—So have I—at1 —at home. I'm a married man, you see! Keiko Finding HI one jr. The use of the Eudless Chain Starob Book in the purchase of "Red Cross" and "Hubiuger'B Best" starch, makes it just like finding money. Why, for only 5c you are enabled to get one large 10c package of "Red Cross" starch, one large 10c package of "Hubinger's Best" starch, with the premiums, two Shakespeare panels, printed in twelve beautiful colors, or one Twentieth Century Girl Calendar, embossed in gold. ABk your grocer for this starch and obtain the beauti ful Christmas presents free. Rat. Undermined It. An extraordinary occurrence happen ed the other day in Brussels. A milk woman with her cart, drawn by two dogs, was passing through a street in the center of the city, when of a sud den the roadway opened and the cart and dogs disappeared. Investigation showed that the roadway had been un dermined by rats, which swarm in the neighborhood. To Care Constipation Forever. Tke Cascarets CauUy Calhartio. 100 or 25c. a C. C. C. fail to cure, druggists refund money After the recent thunderstorms In England thousands of dead eels were found near Sandwich, floating in the Delf river. Bonf Tobacco Spit and Smoke Tour I.lft Array. To quit tobacco easily and forever, be mag netlo, full of life, nerve and vigor, take No-To- Bac, the wonder worker, that makes weak men strong. All druggists, 50c or !. Cure guaran teed. Booklet and sample free. Address Sterling Remedy Co., Chicago or New Yorlc. Cheap Water In Gltiftgow. In Glasgow a $75 householder ob tains for $1.42 per annum a continuous, never failing, unrestricted stream of the purest water in the world delivered right into his kitchen, wash-house and bath-room. It is calculated that 3SO gallons of pure water are delivered to the citizens of Glasgow for every penny paid. And it is water of such peculiar softness that the householders of Glasgow can pay their water rate out of what they save on soap. Loch Katrine water Is not only soft—lt is remarkably bright, clear and free frcm vegetable matter because of the bare and precipitous character of the hills which drain Into the loch. It is uni form In color, temperature and qual ity, is absolutely free from pollution, and must remain so because the corpo ration have now bought up the build ing rights of the whole drainage area; it needs no filtration and is practically unaffected by the change of seasons.— Engineer Magazine. A Prince*. Dilemma. The German emperor likes to study the characters of his group of small sons, and to that end has given them a room next to the one used for busi ness purposes for himself. A certain great scientific man, having on one occasion an interview with the em peror, left his hat in the adjoining vestibule. There the little brothers discovered it; and the crown prince, explaining to the younger ones that "papa" sometimes sat on his opera hat and It came all right again, preceded to give a practical Illustration of this statement, to the ruin of the beaver. The emperor's door suddenly opened and "papa" and the professor appeared. Like a manly little tellow the crown prince owned up. apologized to the laughing professor and went off to buy for the old gentleman a new hat with his small pocket change. A Terrible Revenge. Tom—"So that rich heiress refused you?" Jack —"Yes, but I got even. I married her mother." —New York Journal. Kidneys, Liver and Bowels ~e an ses the System EFFECTUALLY D i sP E i: nLD es^, OVERCOMES L 1 hABITUAUC^ST-PAT-ON PERMANENTLY BE "EF|cial Ef fECTS Buy THt GENUINE - MAN'F O BY (AIIIvRNIA ffC SjVRVP(S +' Xt! L H i-' "?.% roa SALf BY AU ORU66iSTi FRitl SOc PtR MTU I. Sour Stomach *' Aftei' ■ wsi Induced to try CASCA' BETH, I will never i>e without them iu the house, ily liver was in a very bad shape and my head ached and 1 had stomach trouble. Now. since tak ing Cascarets. I feel hue. My wife has also used them with beneficial results lor sour stomach." Jos- KUEULING. 11121 Congress St.. Bt. Louis, Mo. M CATHARTIC tajacauto THAOe MARK RIOTRCO Pleasant. Palatable. Potent. Taste Good. Do 9ood. Never Sicken, Weaken, or Gripe, 10c, 25c. 50c. ... CURE CONSTIPATION. ... Irrllng Remedy Company. < 'hlcago. Montreal, Nw York. SIS ftlft.Tfi.RAP Sold and guaranteed by all drug- NU IU DAU gists to CIJKL Tobacco Habit W. L. DOUGLAS $3 &$3.50 SHOES g A '° t Worth $4 to $6 compared with other makes. Indorsedjiy over ALL LEATHERS. ALL STYLES Take no substitute claimed to be as good. Largest makers of and $3.50 shoes In the world. Your dealer should keep klud of leather, size and width, j'laln or cup too. Catalogue C Free. W. L. DOUGLAS SHOE CO., Brockton, Mass. CARTER'S INK No household can afford to bo ►- without it-Every household can afford to have it. D R OPSraKisa esses- Bo >k of teatimonmla and lO diivs' tieatmni.t Free. Dr. U. H. GREEK'B BOMB, Box B. Atlanta, Qa. Catarrh Cannot be Cured With local applications,as they cannot reach the seat of the disease. Catarrh is a blood or constitutional disease, and in order to cure it von must take internal remedies. Hall's Ca tarrh Cure is taken internally, and acts di rectly on the blood and mucous surface. Hall's Catarrh Cure is not a quack medicine. It was prescribed by one of the best physicians in this country for years, and is a regular pre scription. It is composed of the best tonics known, combined with the best blood puri fiers, acting directly on the mucous surfaces. The perfect combination of the two ingredi ents Is what produces such wonderful results in curing Catarrh. Send for testimonials, free. F. J. CHENEY & Co., Props., Toledo, U. Sold by Druggists, prio e, 75c. Hall's Family P ills are the best. The constantly increasing business of the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad has necessitated very material additions to the telegraph service. During the past year nearly 2,000 rhiles of copper wire, 166 pounds to the mile, have been strung. New lines have been placed in service between Baltimore and Pitts burg, Baltimore and Parkersburg, Newark, 0.. to Chicago, Philadelphia to Newark, Philadelphia to Cumberland and Cumberlnd to Grafton. During the summer several of these wires were quadruplexed between Baltimore and Cumberland and duplexed west. Like all new Baltimore and Ohio work, the lines are constructed in the best possible manner. In Great Britain there are 7,310.096 houses of all kinds. As the popualtion is about 40.000,000, this gives five per sons and, say, a baby to each house. Beauty I* Blood Deep. Clean blood means a clean skin. No beauty without it. Cascarets, Candy Cathar tic clean your blood and keep i\t 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. There are two hospitals for lepers in this coutry. one in New Orleans and one in San Francisco. Each contains about | 35 patients. How Are Tour Kidneys t Dr. flobbs'Sparamiß Pills cure all kidney tils. Sum. pie froc. Add. Sterling ilcnjudy Co., Chicago or N. Y. As early as September orders were placed In Wisconsin for 50,000 Christ mas trees, to be shipped East. Fits permanently cured. No fit* or nervous, ness after first day's use of Dr. Kline's Great Nerve Restorer. 82 trial bottle and treatise free. Dr.R. H.KLINE, Ltd.O3I Arch St.Phila.Pf_ H.H. GKEEN'S SONS, of Atlanta. Ga., are the only successful l)rop<v Specialists in the world. See their liberal offer in advertisement in another column of thin paper. I could not get along without PIFO'S Cure for Consumption. It always cures.—Mrs. E. C. MOULTON, Needham, Mass.. October 22, laid. THE BALLAD CF THE POINTER MAN, Younc Jenkins was a printer man, a likely youth, but r.isb; Be thought lie to shine In life, Aud tried to cut a He loved his master's (laiiffhter; she Adored him, so ho thoucj.it. Butt, ofil the ways ot womaalcindl His iovo it cauio to 0 Ho wrote a noto, in which ne let His doting fancy frisk; Bh<* oried, "Oh, vuat a risk to run! And what uu * Now in tho note he cried, "If you Don't to my pleading hark, I'll die! I'll did"—but alio did not Hi* 1 Sboput tho noto straight In the fire. The flame but slowly stole on; She broke uuothor coal iu two, And put a ; And so tho note was burned, and she Itetired to bod, quite weary; Hennwhile poor Jenkins waited for The answer to his ? It never enmo. Ills mind gave way, Aud fairly went to rackets; o'e rope-mid r.o tied round his neck. The other round some [ ] For once, although teetotal, he Allowed himself a drop; And, quite cut up, he, when cut down, Had come to a • -Tit-Bits. PITH AND POINT. Showman—"Have you found me a leopard for tho show yet?" Agent— "No; but I've got one spotted."— Tuck. Passenger—"What time do these cars leave this corner?" Conductor —"Quarter after, half after, quarter to, and at."—Puck. Maude—"l firmly believe that we should love our enemies." Jack— "ln that case I declare war upon you at once. "—Brooklyn Life. It's curious that the average doctor only speaks one language, despite the fact that he is familiar with so many tongues.—Philadelphia Record. He asked her for a kiss, lie took A lot, despite all she aould say; And yet she brought hiin not to uoo!r. For well she liked his taking wav. —Pu-*. Philanthropist—"Why don't you go to work? Labor euuohles a man." Vagabond—"But I am opposed to the uobility."—Humoristische Blaet ter. "And you broke off tho engage ment?" said one young man. "Yes, not brutally, you kuow. But I man aged it." "How?" "Told her what my salary is." "Don't you dare kiss me!" she cried, warningly. "Why, I wasn't thinking of such a thing," he said. "Well, I was," she replied, firmly. —Philadelphia North American. "'lt is woman's lot to suffer in si lence !' I wonder what is tho origin of that sentiment?" "Perhaps it's a corruption of the truth that a silent woman suffers a lot."—Detroit Jour nal. Mrs. Gobbs—"l think it very strange that your friend Dobbs never married." Mr. Gobbs—"Oh, you don't kuow Dobbs. Ho isn't half such a fool as ho looks." —Now York Weekly. "A man," she paid, "never knows when he is well oil'." "True." ho re plied, "and it's a mighty fortuuate thing for women who don't care to be old maids that they don't."—Chicago Evening Post. Mrs. Beenwed—"l could never nn dcrstand how Mrs. Spadeface man aged to marry sneh a handsome man." Mr. Beenwed—"l should think you would be able to figure it out from your own experience."—Columbus (Ohio) Journal. Census Supervisor—"You must hive taken the enumeration of the people in that Indian settlement very carelessly. There are certainly many more of them than you have printed." Census Taker—"Sure. I counted two half-breeds as only one Injun." "Well, here's another case of acci dental shooting." "Too bad! I won der why it is that people will go on fooling with guns that they don't know are loaded." "Oh, they knew this one was loaded all right. It hap pened at a French duel."—Chicago Times-Herald. Britain's Koman Kernels. Dp to the year 1821 the modern roads of Groat Britain were inferior to those the Romans built prior to tho fifth century. The coinpleto system included six main roads from Loudon, with their branches, aud a perfect network of cross roads, measuring all te Id somo GOOl) miles, and connecting Edinburgh, Glasgow, Bath, Bristol, Newcastle, Dovei and othe: points still unoccupied by thriving towns. The Roman roads wero narro v, but built to last for all time. Tho usual width was about fifteen feet, the depth "three feet. The bottom was dug out and well rammed, a founda tion of larger stones was laid in ce ment and layers of smaller stoues tap ered oil toward the top, which was laid crowning in the middle to shed rain. Such cement as Romans used' made these roads practically solid blocks of stone. Two Service* it Year. A church in which only two ser vices are held during the course of any one year is a curiosity, yet such a one can be found in the middle of a large field near the village of Towtou, England. It was originally erected as a memorial to Lord de Clifford, who fell in tho battlo of Towton in 11G1. Services were instituted for the purpose of praying for tho repose of his soul and those of Uis followers who fell iu that historic battle. They might liavo bocu discontinued long ago did not the vicar of Rythcr, iu whoso parish tho church is situated, receive the tithes from no less than one thousand aud nine acres of land that arc delic.atod to the little sanc tuary. WINDMILL INSTEAD OF SAILS. Inventive Waterman llhh Devised a New Motive Power For Yachts. Windmills can be put to other uses than that of drawing water on stock raisers' farms throughout Illinois for the cattle to drink. This has been demonstrated by an ingenious boat man on the iako front, who has at tached a mill to his toy yacht. The fans of the mill revolve fastest when the wind is high, and the craft is one of the swiftest between Michigan City and Waukegau. The owner of boat accepted a wager that he could not constructed a boat which would be able to make progress in the teeth of the wind. The bet was made early in the spring. The boatman begau to think all day long. Last Sunday he announced that he had constructed a boat according to specifications and was ready to try it in order that his point might be proved aud his money won. The craft when in tho water proved to be a skiff-like boat, three feet long. Directly under the bow was a deep keel. From the stern rose along vaue, like those seen on country barns, to show the direction of the wind. Right above the bow there was a shaft with a windmill ten inches in diameter on the end. The shaft inclined aft and ran through what would have beeu the sternpost until it struck below the water line. A five-inch propeller was attached to this end of it. It was such an absurd-looking craft that everybody laughed when its builder put the un wieldly thing into the water. A strong west wihd was blowing The queer boat quavored for a second as it struck the water, then slowJ but steadily came to the wind. The ind mill caught the force of the gate and began to revolve. Little by little the boat' forged ahead The harder the wind blew the more rapidly it gained headway. The forward keel and the after weather vane kept it dead in tho wiud. The absurd little vessel stood out from the dock until its owner had to get in a rowboat to capture it. Everybody cheered and the wager was declared won. It is quite probable that the inventor will build a boat on the same principal big enough to carry him aud a friend or two. The littlo model has created no end of talk along the lake shore. Making Love in Pera. The social restrictions of ancient times are growing lax in Peru, as iu other Latin-American couutries, be ! cause of contact with foreigners at home and abroad, although the young women are not yet allowed so much freedom as their sisters in United States and England. It is still a , breach of decorum for a lady to re | ceive a gentleman alone until after I her marriage. A young man may call | upon a young lady, but he must ask j for her mother or her father. If they are at home it is proper for him to ! ask also for the daughter, aud ho is \ allowed also to tell her of his love, but their interview must be in tho presence of her mother, and when she has consented to accept his hand his father and her father make it up be tween them aud the match is ar ranged; but no coutract is required, as in France, and money marriages are infrequent, although of course prudent parents look out for the wel fare of their daughters with quite as much solicitude as in tho United States. An I n teres tins: Samoitn Ceremony. The drinking of kava forms one of the most interesting ceremonies amoug the natives of Samoa. They are gen erally distinguished by the utmost for mality, especially if a chief is present. "In such an event the kava is brewed in the presence of the gathering by a comely Samoan girl, picturesquely garbed in bright-colored lava-lava, i garlands of flowers and a headdress of brilliant feathers. Tho liquor is then emptied into a large bowl supported | by three legs, from which it is dished up iu cocoauut shells. The first to be | served is the chief, who, however, I haughtily rejects the beverage five times before deigning to partake of it. After the chief has been waited upon the liquor is passed around to the re mainder of the company, according to their rank or years, and as each one is about to rece.'vehis portion hec.aps his haud3, which act is equivalent to a toast." A Dun to iUoot Fifteen' i .leu. The Royal gun factor/.-a at Wool wich, England, have, it is stated, just | turned out a gun vDharnnge so much l in excess of any previous ordnance that the Government range at Shoe buryness has been fouud insufficient for ascertaining its maximum range. When tired for the first time, the shot; went cut to sea miles beyond tho tar gets. Though the rauge of the new weapon has not been actually measured or calculated, artillerists estimate it at fifteen miles, or about ten miles more than that of the latest rifie small arms. Gazette. llin lCoinedy. The other day a little stenographer iu a downtown office begged some workmen who were putting up a now telephone not to place it so high cu tho wall as they were doing. "You see," she said, "I have to use it as much as any one, and I am so short that I can hardly reach it." "Oh, well, miss," aaidthe humorist in charge of tho work, "you eau raise your voice, can't you?" Boston Trail script. Typewritten Klomlyke Paper. Mrs. Clara E. Wright, of Sau Fran cisco, started the Rampart City Whirl pool iu the Klondike last January, aud it has proved to be u great suc cehfc. It is issued ouco a mouth, and sells at SI a copy. It is not printed, but is typewritten, by Mrs. Wright and her daughter, and is well filled with good paying "ads." ~ 7 |■■ *J Ql I i \ I 1 j | •TjA . | , I j I BUBBLES. \ With their pipes, and with a pan Filled with soap-suds pure and strong, Little maid and little man Play with bubbles all day long. No chapped hands will worry mother— No stained clothes; they play secure; Ivory Soap, unlike all other, Cannot hurt, because 'tis pure. THE WORLD'S COLDEST PLACE. Russian liamlnt on Yana River Holds That Distinction. From the Philadelphia Press: Ver choiausk is considered to be the cold - ; est place in the world. It is a small collection of native log houses, plant ed near to, but not on, the Yana river. The street, if so it may be called, ex tends on either side of a narrow sheet j of water, a kind of creek formed by the j i autumn overflow of the Yana, and j j which in winter forms a frozen prcm- j ' enade or driving place for sleds. It is ' a dreary place enough. The summer lasts only four months, and during the I other eight of the year it Is bitterly cold, the thermometer sometimes indi cating 86 degrees below zero, and it sel dom goes above 50 degrees until April 30. Corn will not grow in this desolate region. Barley and oats have been sown, but have always succumbed to the early frosts. Of vegetables, there are only the radish and the turnip, with, perhape an occasional and very precarious crop of potatoes. Cabbage 3 all run to leaf. The ground rarely ! thaws, even during the hot season, be ! yond twelve or eighteen inches deep and in places much exposed to the heat never beyond a yard. Most of the : dwellings are Rakut huts, built of lir trees against a square framework and covered thickly with mud to keep out the cold. Marghorlta's Fondness for White. Queen Margherita is passionately I fond of white, and wears it more than I anything else. One day she asked the , king if he thought she was growing ! too old to wear white dresses. The ! king replied that he would like to ; think the matter over. In the course of a week the queen received a note from her royal husband, saying that his answer would be found in the ac companying box. The box contained three beautiful white dresses. flat Worth Having. Sir Jung Bahadur, the prime minis ter to the king of Nepaul, has a hat made of diamonds worth over $2,500,- 000, and perched on top is a single i ruby of incalculable value. = —" I—j 1 —j Dizzy? Then your liver isn't i acting well. You suffer from bilious ness, constipation. Ayer's Pills act l directly on the liver. 'For 60years i the Standard Family Pill. Small doses cure. 25c. All druggists. I "Want your tm.usiarhe c.r tHMrj a beautitut I BUCKINGHfIivi'S 'pyX.^f.'?R"r. s | I //OL'/DAY.G/fTS\ Y : A.--- • I roR A I I • [ r " ~ "*— *— J The first five persons procuring the Soilless Chain >turch Hook from their grocer, will each obtain one large 10c. package of *'Keil Cross" Starch, one large 10c. package of "Hubinger's Itest" starch, two Shakespeare panels, pr nted in twelve beautiful colors, as natural as life, or one Twentieth Century Girl Calendar, the fiuest of its kind ever printed, all absolutely free. Ail others procuring the Endless ( ham Starch Honk, will obtain from their grocer the above goods for sc. "lted Cross" I.aumlry Starch is something entirely new, and is without doubt the greatest invention of the Twentieth Century. It has no equal, and surpasses all others. It has won for itself praise from all parts of the United States. It has superceded everything heretofore used or known to science in the laundry art. It is made from wheat, rice and corn, and chemically prepared upon scientific principles by J. (1. Hubingor, Keokuk] lowa, an expert in the laundry profession, who lias had twenty-five ycartf"' practical experience in fancy laundering, and who was the first successful and original inventor of all fine grades of starch in the United States. Ask yeJ grocers for this Starch and obtain these beautiful Christmas presents free. In the housework, as in play,, Tenderest skin er frailest laca Washed with Ivory day by day Is not harmed the slightest trace. Half the housewife's care and troubles In the cleaning work befall; Common soap the mischief doubles— Ivory Soap prevents it all. Merchandise imports into France dur- I Ins July decreased 122,000.000 franca i j from I*9B. or $24,400,000. Exports in j creased 88,700,000 francs, or $17,740,000. Rdarnte Tonr Rowels Wttn Candy Cathartic, cure constipation forever. 10c, 36c. it C. C. C. fail* druggists refund money. French Studying German. It is said that the study of German is increasing in France, while the study of English is on the decline. In tho i Ecole des Sciences Politiques, in Parle, where diplomats are trained, many | more study German than English. Many young Frenchmen are now being sent to Germany and Austria instead I of England to get acquainted with the language of the victors of 1870. In a Paris lycee 143 students study German to 34 English. In another school the proportion of German to English is 500 to 188. In the Marseilles gymna sium two-thirds study German, one third English. It Is believed that this French interest In German will have a powerful Influence in the commerce and politics of the world in the next generation. Conquers Croup without fail. fflH Is the best lor Bronchitis, Grippe, ££9 kpp\ Hoarseness, Whooping-Cough. and L< for the cure ot Consumption. rJi Mothers praise it. Doctors prescribe it. Hul U4 Small doses; quick, sure results. Jfcfil Wellington A Visible | Typewriter Writing. I No. 2 Equal to any machine. Superior to all ]in important features. GUARANTEED. ! Made by Williams Mfg. Co., .Aaontreal, P. Q., Can. Second-hand tynewri ers and type wi t r supplies. Send for catalogue. F. A. ■ SAYKK, -4:7 Fourth Ave, I'lttsburg. Fa. ARNOLD'S p&ucss COUCH Prevents vOLDS KILLER MaU 1 ! WAN I El) Km :ie man as t ount • mi- V* perintendent to manage our business in your own atul adjoining counties; no can vassing; straight salary, SIB.UO per week and expenses. Yearly ontract, rapid promotion. Exceptional opportunity. Address Manufac turers, P. O. box 7!W. Philadelphia, Penu. I ASTHMA POSITIVELY CURED li CKO*lt \ - s\\ EDISH ASTII.IIA CUKE H (lees this. A trial i n kage mailed tree. 1 Collins linos. .Mimci.se Co., St. Louis, Mo. I Dr. fiicord's Essence of Life | ard, never-failing remedy for all cases of nervous, mental, physical debility, lus vitality and pre mature decay in both sexes; positive, permanent cure: tall treatment or $1 a bottle; stamp for cinular. J. JAcyUES. Agent, 176 Broadway, S. Y. ! RAILWAY MAIL. KJS 51 for Railway Mail, Postal, Custom House, etc. Send for particulars. CIVIL ttRViCE SCHOOL* I <■> * I'. Thompson's Eye Water "'Ai.K.X OiDXH IUMHH CO, !■ h St.. .N Y. ,
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers