, Rome Novel Sleeves. Some new sleeves introduced recent ly into dinner and tea gowns of the Empire period are novel, if not gen erally becoming. These fit the arm closely to the elbows, and are most ef fective in a boldly patterned lace or spangled passementerie. A full puff of tulle or chiffon falls over the lower arm. and is held in by a thin elastic, so planned that it clips the arm just above the elbow and forms the puff. First College for Women. J. Warrenne Sunderland, who Is now living at Collegeville, Pa., at the age of 87 years, claims the distinction of founding at Collegeville in 1851, the first institution in the world to offer college advantages to women. The in stitution was in existence 25 years, during which nearly 2000 young wom en were educated, and more than 100 gaduates took the degree of bachelor of arts. Mr. Sunderland believes that he is the only American now living who saw the destruction of the Turkish squadron in the harbor of Navarino, Oct. 20, 1827, by the allied fleets of England, France and Russia. Fends Money to Business Women. Chicago has a Business Women's Loan association which suggests the "Little Societies" that have long flour ished in Germany, although it is less - of a philanthropic enterprise and more of a business proposition. Tlio Gor man societies lend small amounts of money to women desiring to go into business for themselves, and records show that the losses of the organiza tions have amounted to very little. Th Chicago association lends money for the same uses, but requires good security and protects itself against any heavy loss. The need of such an organization and its success are an interesting commentary on tlio eager ness with which women arc invading the business world. First Newspaper Woman of California Mrs. Caroline M. Parker, the first newspaper woman of California, is now a bedridden old lady of 73. Her pio neer newspaper work was done on the San Francisco Post in 1872, and later she filled positions on several other papers. An ardent suffragist, Mrs. Parker has always been an advo cate of everything that pertained to woman's progress, and now California women are glad to show their appre ciation of the work she has done. In her pretty cottage at Los Ange,les Mrs. Parker is surrounded by every comfort, and despite the pain she suf fers, is bright and cheerful and takes great interest in the work of the young women who find newspaper work easi er because she first led the way.—San Francisco Call. Tho Vogue of Coral. How pretty the girl in her teens looks at dancing school with her White cambric frock, blue sash and coral necklace. Women of good taste never bedizen their little daughters with fanciful jewelry or over trimmed dresses. A plain white lawn or cambric frock, with a little real lace edging fine as that on a baby frock, or flno em broideries and insertions of needle work are prescribed for the children of the society leaders at their danc ing lessons. The blue sash and knot of hair ribbon is sometimes exchanged for pink or buff ribbon. Tho coral necklace is the preferred ornament for the throat. The double rope of twisted coral is liked rather better than the rounded coral beads. The rough ends of coral will hurt the soft white throat if the string is too short or too tightly drawn.—Philadelphia Record. Care of tho Hair. Bad circulation affects the hair. The scalp grows tight, and must be loos ened. Spread the hands either side of the head and gently move the scalp forward and backward 10 times each day. Tho hair and scalp should be as clean as the face. They should be ■a. shampooed once a fortnight. Falling hair means failing health. A tonic for the body will be better than one for the head. Both at one time is better still. Weak dry hair needs food. A mix- ture of vaseline and cocoanut oil is ex cellent. Almond oil is also recom mended, for blonde hair especially. Have the ends of the hair singed once in three montns. Cutting the ends causes it to "bleed," while sing ing closes the hair tubes perfectly. Never allow the hall to be wet long. Dry it quickly with warm towels, dry heat and friction. Every day give it a few minutes' brushing. Then rub the scalp until It glows. Girls Men Want to Marry. Men love beauty, but seldom marry for it. Neatness and good taste far •outweigh beauty and slovenliness. Men are born nunters. They value a girl most who most values herself. ' Men wish their wives to be good to L look at. Careful attention do they 1 give to all details—teeth, bands, hair I and breath, for example. A stylish girl delights all well-bred I men. Tailor-made upon the street; in the houM, a changing symphony la color. Odious mannerisms disgust fastidl- | ous men. Sniffling, giggling and "mak- | ing eyes" never won a husband for any I girl. A good physique men wish in wom- I en whom they marry, a higher reason I than vanity inspiring the desire. Wasp | waistcd women are looked at dubious ly. Show your fiancee (after your heart is won) that he is lord thereof, but never for one moment forget the beau ty of womanly reserve. —Philadelphia Record. Outdoor Life for Women. Golf has been an unspeakable boon to American women, not merely to the girls of the period, who take de light in every form of outdoor sport, but to their mothers, their maiden aunts and their grandmothers. Tha 20th century opened with a new lease of life for the middle-aged woman. Instead of coddling herself, shivering in the cold, and spending her time in fighting with illness, this bright and blooming personage sallies forth with her juniors and engages in active ex ercise, showing her skill upon the links and sometimes tiring out much young er peoplo by her enthusiasm and her staying power. If the health rate of the feminine world has gone higher than ever before, the fact certifies to the great advantages of much living in the open where the free winds blow, and of regular moderate exercise of every muscle in an interesting way. At the country clubs, the golf tea is a feature of the afternoon; and is a pretty and picturesque occasion. The girls in their sensible short skirts and loose blouses and jackets, the men in their hunting pink, the mingling of gay colors, in which leaf-brown tones down to red and vivid green, the sprinkling of brilliant maidens and matrons in elegant toilets, the com fortable papas, who, if they do not play wish they did, the fringe of car riage? on the outer edge, with their correct and impassive coachmen on the box, and tho beautifully groomed and caparisoned horses, wondering no doubt at the ways of men and womeu —all combined make up a scene of va riety and animation worthy of remem brance. Hiding always has its votaries, and in the parks many women are seen with a firm seat and a nice hand on the rein, women who have complete sympathy with their horses, and who look fit and charming in their habits and hats. For regular cross-country riding, ono ned not, however, seek out trim parks and broad avenues. In Maryland, in Virginia, in Kentucky, and indeed all over the South, there are hundreds of women who have been accuEtomed to the saddle from early childhood, who ride fine horses with a splendid ease and courage, and who take fences and streams as a bird flies from branch to branch. One may see the perfection of equestrianism in tho mountains, where girls were tossed to the pony's hack in their baby days, and where, ever since, riding has been their constant method of going from place to place. A woman never looks more charming than when her color is heightened by bracing exercise and pure air, and her eyes are bright with the feeling of perfect physical equipoise. She is not coarsened or roughened by her activi ty, far from it. To outdoor llfo wom an imparts a grace and refinement which it might lack hut for her en trance upon it. The gallantries of sport are seldom foolishly sentiment al, but a certain chivalry pervades tho relations of men and women who rival one another in games which require deftness of eye and hand and the ex exercise of judgment in their progress, and, however exciting the contest, po liteness is dominant through its phases. Women should not forget that walk ing is within the reach of everybody, and that a walk twice a day will keep most of us in excellent physical condi tion. Ily a walk is not meant a saun ter or a dawdle, hut a tramp of a mile or more over the country l'bad or the city street, a tramp with intention, even if 110 shopping or visiting object exist as the goal which attracts the lady out of doors.—Collier's Weekly. Flounces on some of the silk petti coats are now featherboned. The newest veils have a tiny gold dot by the side of the dot of chenille. Gold quills are used for hat trim ming, and so are rosettes of dotted chiffon. The new embroidered India mulls are wrought in designs as line and del icate a3 real lace. A novel and striking evening gown has a deep V in the back, filled in with white chiffon and strapped across with black velvet ribbon. Many new coats have revera faced with shirred chiffon in black, white or the same shade as the goods. The col lar, if It be a high one, is faced in the same way. Satin foulards In small, neat de signs and in soft yet gay colors are to be immensely popular this spring and summer. Rose, beige, tan and reseda will he the favored shades. Lace will he used in profusion for trimming. It is said that the large Leghorn hat with sentimental droop is to ho a feature of the summer millinery. The crown will be rather high and en circled by a rose wreath, and the brim will he adorned by a wide, soft ribbon drapery, caught on the edge in front and tied in a bow at the back. [c?3RDR£N3 COLUMN Lost Hours. "I say good-night and go up stairs, And thou undress and say my prayers Beside my bed, and then jump in it; And then—the very nextest minute— Tho morning sun comes in to peep At me. I s'pose I've been to sleep. But seems to me," said little Ted, "It's uot worth while to go to bed." —St. Nicholas. Affection of Soa Gulls. That sea gulls are possessed with strong affection for each other was clearly demonstrated near the Ogdens burg ferry dock the other day. Two of these birds, evidently mates, were flying over the water about 500 feet from the ferry dock, when a man shot one of them. As the dead bird was ly ing on the water her mate did every thing in his power to help her up. He would fly close to her, and several times tried with his bill to raise her out of the water. He hovered around the spot some time after the dead bird was taken away.—Boston Weekly Bou quet. Flowers us Advertisers. Flowers have away of advertising that is quite as effective as the dis play type and cuts used by merchants. The scientists tell us that there is a constant struggle in nature for the propagation of species, so that the fit test may survive, and out of this has grown the advertising that the flowers do. It is necessary that the pollen of one flower he carried to another to pro duce fertilizations, and nature's agents for this work are the honey loving insects. In taking the honey from a blossom they get their feet and legs coated with pollen and thus carry it from one blossom to another. With out this fertilization many species would soon die out and become extinct. To save themselves and to perpet uate their kind the flowers must have the services of the insects, and they have been advertising for them from the earliest ages. The first adver tisements were very plain and unpre tending, set, as we might say, in small type and solid, but this simplicity did not suit the bountiful and ambitious designs of nature and she gave colors and sweet odors to the flowers that they might offer more attractions to tne insects, and thus make their visits more frequent. Then there grew up a rivalry among the flowers to see which could attract the most insects, and blossoms became larger, colors brighter and odors sweeter. Thus it is that the flowers advertise, for, while it is true that their beauty and fragrance are intended in part to give lis pleasure, it is equally true that these characteristics were designed pri marily to help the flowers in their struggle for propagation and survival. The Horse Tlmt 15: Joyed tho View. It was Roderick Dhu, of course. Philip said he was the only horse there was that amounted to anything. To be sure, Philip was not what pompous old Dr. Dinwiddle called a "dis-in-tcr est-ed party"—dear me, no! Philip was altogether too fond of Roderick Dhu for that. Didn't he keep the mar ble and twine room in his pocket rent ed to sugar plums by the month? And didn't all the sugar plums, every one, belong to Roderick Dhu? And didn't that wise, gray maned old horse know it quite well? Didn't he? But that's another story. This story is about the view that Roderick Dhu enjoyed. "I believe that horse understands every word I say," remarked grandpa at the supper table. Philip let the last bite of his hermit wait a min nte, just long enough to cry: "Why, of course, grandpa Tho idea! Graud pa'd just found that out!" "Yes, and that isn't all," went on grandpa, smiling over at Philip. "He has an eye for the beautiful, too —I've discovered that. He enjoys a view." "Why!" murmured Philip in sur prise. Philip, who knew Roderick Dhu so well. "Yes, the view from the top of Breakneck hill—he seemed to enjoy it as well as I did this afternoon." "1 admire Roderick Dhu's taste," said grandma, quietly. "I took sick Mrs. Bennett to ride, you know —or rather, Roderick Dhu did. We went round Squirrel pond and down a little way on the turn pike. Then I said, 'Well, Roderick Dhu, we'll go out on the brow of the bill to see the view, I guess.' And, ac tually, that horse started off as if ho, were tickled enough to be going there. He forgot all about being tired and grieved with the flies. How ho did spin along. And —wnen—■he— got—to the brow of —the —hill"—grandpa paused between tho words impressive ly—"he stopped." Then Philip's round, astonished eyes "went back" 011 Roderick Dhu again, until he remembered the reins. Of course, the reins. "But you pulled 'em, grandpa—the reins, you ltnow," he began. "The reins were over the dashboard, Philip. I was helping Mrs. Bennett find her glasses. No, it must have been because Roderick Dhu heard me say we would go just to the brow of the hill." "And then he looked at the view, I suppose," said grandma. Grandpa laughed. "I should say so. It took us so long to find the glasses that if it had been any other view in the world, there wouldn't have been any of It left for us to see—Roderick Dhu would have looked It all up." "Grandma, will you please to ex cuse me?" cried Philip, suddenly. "I must go right out, and give Roderick Dhu a sugar plum."—Annie Hamilton Uonnell, in the Christian Register. Where Camphor Comes Froiti. A page of the St. Nicholas is filled irith a paper by Ralph Benton entitled "Talking of Camphor." "Where does this come from," asked ' Sandy McLauren, picking a block of | camphor out of a jar that stood on the counter. The druggist at the corner near San dy's home was a good friend to all the boys, and they liked to ask him questions. "Camphor? That is a long story." The speaker and questioner sat down behind the prescription counter. Have you ever noticed that row of lindens down on Fourth street, near the gram mar school? Well, the tree that pro duces camphor looks very much like any one of those. It grows in China, Japan and other parts of eastern Asia. Occasionally a camphor tree becomes so old and so large that it is a verita ble landmark. In 1691, for instance, a traveler in Japan described a tree which he found that was 36 feet about the trunk. Almost .a century and a half, later the same tree was said by another traveler to be 50 feet around. "Did your grandmother ever make you take a few drops of spirit of cam phor? You know what a fiery taste it has, then. You wouldn't think that camphor and the cinnamon sticks that you like so well are first cousins; but they belong to the same botanical fam ily. If you take one of the shiny green leaves from a camphor tree and rub ] it gently between two stones, you smell j the same odor as comes to you when you take the lid off a camphor jar. Every part of the tree contains its part of the gum, but the bulk of it comes from the root, trunk, and branches. The first step is to reduce the tree to chips, and these are put into iron vessels having a cone shaped cover lined with rice straw. Then the vessels are heated, and the camphor is driven out of the chips. Do you know what I mean when I use the word 'volatile'? No? Well, a thing is vola- I tile that seems to fly off in the air. Now, camphor is volatile; it is capable of being changed into vapor. When heat is applied to the iron vessels the ; camphor is volatilized, but it condens- j es almost at once; that is. it is changed I to a multitude of tiny little lumps of I solid camphor, which fasten them- i selves on the straw that lines the cov- I er. It is then scraped from the straw, j refined and pressed into blocks." "Is camphor used for anything but medicine and to keep off moths?" ; asked Sandy. "I was just coming to that. Strange a3 it may seem, we can get a sub- i stance from it that looks almost like i ivory—hard and beautifully white. Go j out to the first show case on the left and bring me a white comb and one of those hand mirrors with a white back." | Sandy looked puzzled as he obeyed. "This material," tapping the back of the mirror, "is called celluloid, and it is made from camphor and cotton. It is used for hair brushes, soap boxes, knife handles, and many other arti cles. In another field we find that it plays its part in changing the map of the world or shaping in ihe destiny of a nation. Camphor is used in making smokeless gunpowder. Our country certainly learned the value of it in the summer of '98." "Why," Sandy ventured, "I should think with all the big armies every where that most of the camphor would be used for powder." "A great deal of it is. That is why camphor has been so dear for a num ber of years past." "Couldn't tar camphor be used?" "Oh, no. Tar camphor is really not camphor at all, though somebody dis covered about 12 years ago that it would take the place cf camphor in preventing the ravages of moths. For many years it was thrown away; it was a puzzle to get rid of it. It comes in a roundabout way, from bitu minous coal. When this kind of coal is heated in a certain way it is split up into gas (used for lighting), a heavy black liquid (coal tar) and coke; and it is from the coal tar that tar camphor is made. I couldn't begin to tell you all about coal tar in one night, Sandy. Some other time we'll talk about it again.' Can I Make a Farm Pay? Writing an answer to the often put question, "Can I Make a Farm Pay?" Professor Bailey of Cornell, gives in The World's Work some good advice. There must be, first of all, he says, a love of independence, a lovo of the j country and an ambition to work for ! the work's sake. Speaking of the love [ of country life he says: "Half of country life is in the living. It is in the point of view. It is in the • way in which we look at things. Thor | cau rejoiced when it rained, because ho knew that bis beans were happy. One day my man was agitated be cause the woodcliucks were eating the ' beans. He would go to town at once and buy a gun. I asked him how i many beans the woodcliucks would j probably destroy, lie thought from ! one-eighth to one-quarter of an acre. ; Now, one-quarter of an acre of field beans should bring me a net cash re i turn of $3 to $4. I told him that he could not buy a gun for that money. ' If he had a gun. he would waste more time killing the woodehucks than the beans would be worth. But the worst ' part of it would be that he would kill J the woodehucks. and at daylight morning after morning I had watched | the animals as they stole from the bushes, sniffed the soft morning air, 1 and nibbled the crisp young leaves. ! Many a time I had spent twice |s4 for much less entertainment, j My neighbor thought that I ought to cut out the briers in the fence corner. I I tphl him that I liked to see the i briars there. He remarked that some i folks are fools. I replied that it is \ fun to be a fool." If Y&ur Stomaoh makos Ufa miserable, Its your own fault. Dr. Groane, the discoverer of Dr. Greene's Nervura, will tell you why this Is so, and just exactly how to oure the whole trouble. This information and advice will cost you nothing. Write to Dr. Greens, 35 West 14th St., Now York City. From tho librarian's report ab St. Louis, Mo., it i 9 learned that tho Public Library now contains 145,000 volumes, a pain of over 10,000 in tho year. Collections of books are loaned to many schools through out the city, while forty free-delivery sta tions ara maintained. Over 70,000 books were issued for home use during the year, while in the last month of the year there was a gain of over 12,000 volumes distrib uted to patrons. Thorp In a Clrm of People Who nro injured by tho usoo feoff oe. Recently there has boon placed in all tho grooety storei a now preparation called Qbaim-0, rnadp of pure grains, that takos tho place of coffee. The moot delicate stomaoh receive* it without distress, and but few can tell it from eoiTeo. It does not cost ovor X much. Children may drink it with great benefit. 16 eta. and 26 eta. per package. Try it. Ask for Qiain-O. Chicago is still pre-eminently the leading port of the great lakes. A total of 7099 vessels entered the harbor up to Decem ber 1. Buffalo, Cleveland ana Milwaukee were close rivals for second place. The record shows 3864 entrances at Buffalo, 3343 at Cleveland and 3057 at Milwaukee. German Farmers Rely on Chemistry. Recent reports to our department of j agriculture indicate that farming is ; conducted iu Germany on more im proved and scientific principles than anywhere else iu the world, says the Youth's Companion. The German far mers employ less machinery but more chemistry. They pay very close atten tion to the fertilization of the soil. Yet with all their efforts and all the ad vantages of their advanced science they are unable to fully supply the demand of the population of Germany for breadstuffs. They do supply scv eivtighths of that demand, but the re maining one-eighth, which lias to be Imported from abroad, amounted in 189b to more than 50,000,000 bushels of wheat alone. Mexico buys all of its shears and sharp-edged tools from the United States. DO YOU FEEL UKE TOT Pen Picture for Women. " I am so nervous, there is not n well Inch in my whole body. lam so weak at my stomach and have indi gestion horribly, and palpitation of the heart, and lam losing flesh. This heudaclie anil backache nearly kills me, mid yesterday I nearly hud hyster ics ; there is a weight in tiic lower part of my bowels bearing down all the time, and pains in my groins and thighs; I cannot sleep, wulk, or sit, and I believe I am diseased all over; no one ever suffered as I do." This is a description of thousands of cases which come to Mrs. Pinkham's attention daily. An inflamed and ul cerated condition of the neck of the womb can produce all of these symp- Slra. John Williams. Toms, and no woman should allow herself to reach such a perfection of misery when there is absolutely no need of it. The subject of our por trait in this sketch, Mrs. Williams of Englishtown, N.J., has been entirely cured of such illness and misery by , Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com pound, and the guiding advice of Mrs. Pinkliam of Lynn, Mass. No other medicine has such a record for absolute cures, and no other medi cine is "just as good." Women who want a cure should insist upon getting Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com pound when they ask for it at a store. Anyway, write a letter to Mrs. Pink ham at Lynn, Mass., and tell her all your troubles. Her advice is free. W EAT HER Wls E, j /OTHERWISE! I WMT serrr touweae j ! Ml A,/ Sf[ 4 u . M' //]; I, pi ji- :: ANDKK^KffI BEWARE Or IMITATIONS. ICCK PC* AC3VE TRADE MARK. CATALOGUES TREE Showing Pull Line, of Garments andHcvta. c, a., posts, A o | AGENTS Brsferd Sash Lock and Broward Boor bolder Active workers mr;wb?ro can earn bin money; always a steady demand for our woods. MatuplO aash look, with prices, term*.e:-\. fYr* forSoelau-p for poffu.s'f. Til f' UKOIUItIK'O., l/cpartinnt 12, Philadelphia, Pa. r. N. U. 10, I'. 01. O oY bTnCOVF.RY; r'Tm c nt 'I O d a?' Valuable Philippine Forests. The Philippine commission in its re port on the forestry of the archipelago says that the timber-producing trees have been classified in order of their! commercial value as follows: Super-! ior group, 12 species; first group, 17; species; second group, 49 species; third! group, 74 species; fourth group, 200 species; fifth group, 83 species; total! species, 385. It is certain that therel still remains more than 50 species not] yet classified. Included in this list are' very hard woods, capable of taking a, beautiful polish; woods that resist cli matic influences and are proof against the attacks of white ants; woods es pecially suited to use for set piling, on account of their imperviousness to the attacks of teredo naval!** or for rail road ties, because they hist extremely well when placed In the ground; in short, there are wood* for every imag inable use. V.anc'a Family Medicine Moves tho bowols each day. In order to b healthy thin is necessary. Acta gontly ou th liver and kidneys. Cures sicls headach Price 25 and 50 cents. A handsome bronze memorial tablet in honor of Pontine, the famous Indian, was recently unveiled with appropriate ceremo nies by the Daughters of the American Revolution in St. Louis, Mo. The tablet was placed in the Southern Hotel, imme diately over the spot where Pontine vul buried in 1769. try raln-0 ! Try Grain-Ot Ask yonr grocer to-dny to show yon a packs nge of Gbaih-O, the new food drink that tako the place of coffee. The children may drink rt without injury as well as the adult. All who tryit.likeit. Gbain-0 has that rich seal brown of Mooha or Java, hut it is made from pure grains, and the moat delicatestomooh receives it without distress. }£ the prico of coffoe. 15 and 25c. per package. Bold by allgrocors. How Coal is Made. An interesting case of rapid trans formation of pock wood, or "lignum ' vitae," into coal has been reported by Mr. (J. Arth. The pockwood bad been inserted into the bronze footstep c$ a 12-horse power Jonval turbine, which was making 132 revolutions. The re volving mass weighed about 900 pounds. The pock wood, op which th*? steel pivot of the shaft, rested, was not always under water, but It would always be wet. When the turbine had been running for six months some re pairs became necessary, and it was observed that the pock wood bad turned black in its upper portion; tlie wood was brittle, and the fracture strongly resembled that of coal; many fissures were noticed. The lower por tion of the wood was not altered. Tho black wood contained 2.75 per cent, of moisture. Dried In vacuo, it yielded on analysis, 3.9 per cent, of aslics, 1.86 of hydrogen, per cent, of carbon, and the heating value of the dry material was found to be 7,100 calories. The substance would thus occupy an intermediate position be tween lignite and coal. This formation had been effected within the short period of six months, and the temperature could uot have risen to any higli degree. The change would, therefore, appear to be duo es sentially to continued friction of the wet wood. The author concludes that we need hardly believe in the long periods which geologists demand for the format ion of our coal fields. —Moul- teur Industrial. Tn Georgia it is estimated that 30.000 negroes have been graduated, at. a cost of $100,000,000. which colleges are sup ported by Northern money. Each PACKAGE of Putnam Fadeless Dtb color 3 cither Bilk, Wool or Cotton perfectly at ono boiling. Bold by all drugglsta. According to recently published statis tics Merlin i*>ssessos now more than 50,300 telephones. Heredity is a comforting thing on which to blame our faults. Elo\v' Tin, 7 We offer Ono Ilundred Dollars Reward for any cose of Catarrh that cannot be cured by Hall's Catarrh Ouro. F. ,T. Ciif.ney ft, Co., Toledo, O. . We, tho undersigned, have known F. ,T. \ Cheney for the lust 15 years, and bellove hira j perfectly honorable in all business transac tions and financially nblo to carry out any obligation made by ill sir firm. West Tbuax Wholesale Druggist.i, Toledo, Ohio. Waliuno, Rinnan & Marvin, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, Ohio, nail's Catarrh (hire is taken internally, act ing directly upon tho blood and mucous sur faces of tho system. Testimonials sent free. Price, 75e. por bottle. Bold by all Druggists. Hall's Family Pills are the best. [ Tn South Australia there are only eighty five women for every 100 men. ti You Ba live 9>ysprp7i a Rend no raonoy, but writo Dr. Slioop, Rnoins, WD., Jinx 14S, for six bottles of Dr. Shoop's Restorative; express paid. If cured, pay $5.50; If not, it is free. The man who lives on the top of • ' mountain shouldn't object to climate. Frey'ft Yermiffnge Saves Lives. Children and mother know it cures them of j worms. 25c. Druggists and country storos. It is better to believe everything you hear than to believe nothing. Mrs. Window's Soothing Syrup Tor children teething, soften tho gums, reduces inflamma tion, allays pain, cures wind colic. 25c a bottle The Public Library of Chicago has 200,- 000 volumes. ; Piso's Cure is the best medicine wo over used for all affections of throat and lungs.—Wm. O. Enusley, Vanburen, Ind., Feb. 10,1900. Rhode Island is one of tho thirteen orig inal States and smallest in the Union. The ambidextrous chap can make his left hand his write hand. Dyspepsia is tho bane of tho human pys torn. Protect yourself against its ravages by tho uso of Docman's Popvun Gum. Many a fellow has goue broke on a 1 CrieudJy tip.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers