THE CARE OF GEMS. Diamonds Require Gentle Treatment to Continue Hound and Brilliant. The best of all jewel boxes are not the satin-lined, velvet-covered ones in Which the jewelers alluringly display their wares, but airtight eases simply lined with wool. Even in such a re ceptacle diamonds should be wrapped I in silversmith's tissue paper to keep then of exquisite brilliancy. Diamond" in spite of their hardness, must be treated with great care. Though they can hardly be scratched, they nevertheless chip, and when roughly used are easily loosened in their setting, and fall out at the most unexpected moment. When they are sent to be cleaned the expert first tests the settings, and then dips the ring or pin repeatedly into a little eau de cologne. A powerful magnifying glass is used to detect any "foreign" bodies in the setting, and an ornament that has an accumulation of dust, grease or soap on Its under side, a blemish that is often noticeable in rings, is dipped alternately in soap suds and eau de cologne, and a very fine soft eamelhalr brush pointed like a pencil is employed to reach delicate ly between tho claws of the setting. When the jewel is thoroughly clean it is buried in a jar pf line sawdust to dry. This is all done after the gold or silver mounting has been carefully rubbed with jewelers' rouge, dried and polished with a tiny chamois-covered pad. When diamonds and turquoises are set together the most exquisite care is taken that alcohol only Is utilized with whiting to clean both the setting and the diamonds, and as little moisture as possible is allowed to come near the bine stones. If a turquoise has been carelessly treated, and is turning green from the effects of water, the cleaner sets it to soak in stale beer, which treatment will frequently re store the pure azure color. But old turquoises that are nearly green liave a value of their own. Pearls require a great deal of human companionship, and that is why they aro so constantly worn by their own ers. When they are "sick" (to nse a technical term) they are given, sun bathß, and sometimes are sunk in the .sea in perforated caskets to be re stored to health and lustre. Pearls held in a warm, dry hand and drawn slowly backward and forward through the half-closed member are benefited. Some women have their pearls re t strung every season, and when the owner cannot arrange to wear a fine string of these gems at least once a fortnight the cleaner lays them in a cup of warm flour or lukewarm fresh milk to keep their skins In good order. Experts test real diamonds by touch lug them with the tip of their tongue. Diamonds are icy cold; paste Is not. Real pearls they can differentiate from false, it Is said, by the touch of their finger tips, for tho skin of the real pearl has a feeling peculiar to Itself. Tho Chicago Woman's Walk. Did you ever notice her? She ts a marvel. No trolley ear will ever run over her. She moves, and she moves with lightning rapidity. She darts in between the pedestrians, dives through a group that Is packed as closely as sardines in a box, swings and swishes as she scoots around the corner and disappears like a blue streak. She is a wonder. Now, the interesting thing about it all is the fact that Chicago methods aro responsible for the way Chicago women walk. Take the street cars. The average woman who strikes an average gait could not catch a Chi cago street car in a month's time with out obstructing the track. The car , stops. The bell rings and the car is of.. But it never gets away from the Chicago woman. She knows a few things. She touches the pavement once between the curbstone and the ear. She pounces upon the ear, crawls In between the seats, crawls over the callous bodies of ungallant men, grabs a strap and swings cn until she Is ready to get off. But with it all she lias lost nothing of that gracefulness of motion which adds so much to the cliarm of a woman's presence, and, after all, the way they walk Is a good thing and an Interesting phase of Chi cago life.—New Orleans Tlmes-Demo l crat. Chlneae Women Leanilnc to Walk. 'According to a San Francisco spe cial In the New York Herald, Mine. Wn Ting-fang, wife of the Chinese Minister, who returned a few days ago from a visit to her native land, gays small feet are no longer the fash ion there. "The very llrst penetrat ing Influence of exterior civilization on the customs of my country has touched the conditions of women," said Mme. Wu. "The emancipations of women In China means, first of all, the liberation of her feet, and this is coming. Indeed, it has already come In a measure, for the style in feet has changed. Wee bits of feet, those no longer than an infant's, are no longer the fashion. When I went back home I found thnt the rigid binding and forcing back of the growth of the feet was largely a thing of the past. China, with other nations, has come to re -1 gard that practice as barbarous, but 0 the small feet, those that enable a ' woman to walk a little and do not in convenience her in getting nbout the house, arc still favored by the Chinese 'J) ladles." Tallor-Mado Hats. Tailor-made lints hid fair to rival the felt, and are extremely smart for street wear with the tailored gown. They are of medium size and have but lit tle trimming outside of a wing, or quill, or breasts, says the Pittsburg Dispatch. A pretty hat of this kind worn with a brown suit was of the same material as the suit, and seemed to be nothing but folds of cloth artistically caught at the back by a handsome buckle. Under tho brim of this semi-flat shape, nestling against the hair of Its pretty owner, were two brown wings; one on each side. A mere millinery trifle; but such style and chlcness as was represented by thlo bauble of head dress. Pillow Ribbons. ruiow ribbons, called by some "skirting ribbons," are a novelty sure to come into a long popularity. They arc found in all the new colors, aro from six and a half to seven Inches wide, of soft taffeta, and have a wov en-in card on one edge, which gathers up a ruffle heading an inch and a half in width. As the name "pillow" Indi cates how prettily and quickly sofa pillows can be trimmed with them, the name skirt also suggests the ease with which one may make with their aid a ruffled silk petticoat. As a liouse-wrapper trimming they would go far toward a success. In price they are ninety-eight cents per yard. I)reHH Cllpjpinc; Fiend. Ladies who go out of Paris just now, says a special cable to the New York Herald, in dresses they value should keep a sharp lookout for a person going about with scissors collecting clippings of dress material. Instead of adopting the usual method of get ting these from a dressmaker tho per son in question prefers them from made-up material. Many smart ladies who have been victimized in this man ner are crying bitterly, and complaints have been lodged with the police by the indignant sufferers. Tue police thus far are nonplussed. Give the Girls R Chnnce. Give the girls the best of education. Let them have college education if possible. The way to get at the boys of the future Is by means of the girls who are to be their mothers. Too much attention has been given to tho boys and not enough to the girls. If the boys of a college woman are capa ble of receiving a college education they stand the best chance of getting It The best side of the house is th 6 mother side of it.—Sioux City Journal. gteel and Black. Steel and black are combined fre quently with good effect this year. In some of the smart frocks the dots of velvet which make a good trimming for so many things are set upon a lace or net foundation, and encircled with heads, black and steel alternating. Lines of black and steel beads are to be seen In other combinations on stocks. NEWEST Other flannel skirts have tho edge finished with deep flounces and inser tions of regular Hamburg. Pretty handkerchiefs with hem stitched liems have the inside, where they are hemstitched, undulating. All-Jet umbrella handles are stylish this winter, some with straight ends and others with a large hall for a han dle. There is a bit across the horseshoe which forms the head of a hat pin. Diamond horseshoes galore are to he seen for ordinary pins. Shaped flounces are on many of these underskirts, two two-inch shaped hands being all the cloth used, and these put together with wide insertions of lace. Corset covers of fine lawn are oc casionally trimmed with deep cream lace insertions and edges, and are pretty when worn with deep creum colored petticoats. Colored handkerchiefs have a broad hand of white inside the hem. There are floral designs in white on the cen tre of the handkerchief, with perhaps the flower embroidered. There Is a combination of printing and embroid ery in most of these. One Interesting style of colored handkerchiefs bus the centre and hem of white, and Inside this forming a narrow border around the edge, llght ning-like lines of color, free hand d shes, with a flower embroidered in white rearing Its head here and there. Fancy silks are exceedingly pretty in petticoats. Some of these are made of a dotted silk, and others in a bro cade of a delicate pattern. The silks are all In one tone. One petticoat of brocade is of a deep cream, and is trimmed with a pretty fine lace of a pale coffee shade. It is a beautiful skirt. A peculiar design Is after the stylo to be seen In tapestries and wall papers this year, tteld flowers and stems forming long, straight perpen dicular lines. In the handkerchiefs a cluster of the long-stemmed flowers aro set In one corner, extending up nearly to the centre of the handker chief at the side. Flannel underskirts, skirts of alba tross and various raaterlnls In which these skirts come, have many of them embroidered figures scattered over them, these lu colors. In some In stances a flounce Is made around the skirt of satin ribbon to match the color ot the embroidery, made with Inser tions of laeo ,the ribbon and lace put together horizontally, entre deux. HOW IT IMPRESSED COLDBERC. Lectures on Pergonal Hygiene Tliat TVere Almost Too Successful. Any one who comes in contact with the most ignorant of the immigrant class in this city soon realizes that the education that is derived from uooks is only a very small part of what they need. Teach them to read and write English, and they are little changed, except to become rather more self-im portant; but tench them to wash, and they are different beings. One teacher of immigrants had this so firmly im printed on her mind that she would look at her large English class and sigh hopelessly as she tried to plan how grammar and the art of bathing could be taught together. One day she had an inspiration. She made a little speech to her class on elo cution. She saitl that to speak good English a clear pronunciation was in dispensable, and a clear pronunciation necessitated a good deal of care of the teeth and so on. Then she wound up by saying that she would like to have the whole class come up to her house to listen to lectures on elocution. This done, she secured n lively young elocutionist and explained her purpose. "I don't care," she said, "whether you teach elocution or not. At least three out of the six lectures I want you to give must deal entirely with personal cleanliness. Drag it in by the hair of its head, but get it in somehow." The elocutionist Bleed tho idea. The audience of thirty or forty foreigners was most attentive. This was to them a new gate to success. It appeared that to speak good English and get on in life one must have a clear enuncia tion, which required good teeth, which required daily brushing and general good health, which in turn required washing and exercise and open win dows. By this simple but effective house-that-Jack-built system the con spirators could reach anything they wished to say, and hurt nobody's feel ings by doing it. The whole thing was, to the eyes of the class, a part of the teaching of English composition. Now, the most attentive listener was, to the tencher's great content, the dirt, lest member of the class. Not that he, poor fellow, was much to blame, or that teacher or elocutionist felt that they would hnve been much better had they his pnst life behind them. Still, Goldberg was facing Ills opportu nity now, and, so far as washing of body or teeth went, he hadn't seized it. The class returned to its lessons on grammar much Improved. Handswere cleaner, teeth brighter; so the teacher felt repaid. But Goldberg did not come back—patient, Industrious, cheer ful Goldberg—and she wondered what had happened. Some two or three weeks later he appeared, still patient, but with an nir of subdued triumph and somehow oddly changed. Tho teacher welcomed him, and asked why he had not appeared before. "I vas busy," he explained. "Too busy to learn English?" she queried, "Vas trying to be able to speak good English," he explained, and suddenly showed by an expansive smile what was the change that the teacher had noted. Ills teeth were simply ag gressive in their brilliancy. "Why, how fine your teeth look!" ex claimed the teacher. "Dentist, he fix 'em," explained Gold berg, complacently. "Dat vas why I stayed away." "He took a fortnight to polish them!" cried the teacher. "Pulled 'em all out," said Goldberg. "All but four in the back!" He had -been so impressed by the elo cutionist that he had really had every tooth in his head but four extracted, and a complete false set put in.—New York Tribune. The Jews' Services to Mankind. In religion, In philisophy, in com merce, in the arts, and—let it not be forgotten by the thoughtless who are accustomed to regard the Jews as un patriotic money getters merely —in every struggle that man has even made, in any land, under any sun, since Abram tended Ills (locks, the Jews liave contributed their full share to the advancement and the enfran chisement of mankind. A people with out a country .they have made all countries their own. Thay hnve thriven on persecution and survived the despotism of blind hatred. They have, with a tenacity unprecedented, preserved their racial Integrity while keeping pace intellectually, morally and In material prosperity, with man's utmost progress. In "The Jewish En cyclopedia," which is the Joint pro duet of more than 400 scholars, they have for the first time had full and fitting representation as a people.— Frank Putnam, in National Magazine. School Children as Gardeners. Scientific gardening is taught in tho national schools of Sweden and in the seminaries for the education of na tional school teachers. There is a school garden in nearly every rurul school district in the Kingdom. The garden Is placed near the schoolhouse, and the children receive practical in struction In the cultivation of pluuts, berries, flowers, herbs, and fruits, the management of hotbeds, greenhouses, and so forth. The parishes are re quired to furnish the necessary ground for the gardens, and trees and shrubs are annually given to the children to bo planted at their homes. A Peculiar Custom. In Venice when anyone dies It hi the custom to fix a placard before the dead person's house, as well as In adjacent streets, as a sort of public notice, stat ing his name, age, place of blrtli and the illness from which he died; af firming also that he received the Holy Sacraments, died a good Christian and requesting the prayers of the faith ful. WHEN CINDA SWEEPS; When Cinda sews, within the lamp's clear beam. Just mellowed by a shade of porcelain white, Around her chestnut head soft shadows dream. Spun bv the elfin fingers of the night. The moths, with silvery wings, come wa vering in The open door, through which some late red rose Pours fragrance rich; and all is calm and fair When Cinda sews. When Cinda bakes, what odors as from isles Of clove and citron float unon the air. And in the pantry—Oh, what witching piles Of crusty rolls and frosted tarts arc there! A dream of far-off eastern light and warmth In some strange wise, she mingles in her calces; Some subtle atmosphere th kitchen fills When Cinda bakes. When Cinda sweeps—Ah me! The dismal tale Is almost more than my poor pen can tell. The cloudy waves and billows that do sail About my ears, my spirits crush and quell. Poor Cupid drops his arrows right and left Distractedly; the muse turns blue and weeps, And sniffing, flies away to dry her eyes. When Cinda sweeps. —Hattie Whitney, in Good Housekeeping. ■Ji rimes omm I Hook—"I hear you were quite tnkeu with Molly." Nye—"Well, we were photographed together." .Were I the weather prophet When the storms began to brew, I'd keep predicting sunshine Till it finally came true. —Washington Star. He—"They say, dear, that people who live together get to look alike." She—"Then you must consider my re fusal as final."—Tit-Bils. The Bishop—"Wouldn't you like to be boru again, little girl?" The Child— "No, ther; I wath born in Botbton the very firth time!"— Puck. "Our friend Butely over there says Nature intended him for a poet." "Oh, pshaw! Nature never had such bad intentions as that."—Judge. Nell—"She carries her passion for remnants to an absurd extreme." Belle—"Yes, she has even married a widower."—Philadelphia Record. If at first you don't succeed, Try, try again; There are other friends to bleed For five or ten. —Philadelphia Record. "Blanche's papa paid a round million for her count," said Miss Flypp. "She always said she wouldn't marry a cheap man," udded Miss Kittish.—De troit Free Press. Tess—"l accepted Jaek Timmid last night!" Jess—"O! I'm so glad." Tess —"Are you, really?" Jess—"Yes, I bet him a box of gloves that you would."— Philadelphia Press. Wigg—"l hear your friend the under taker has been adjudged Insane." Wagg—"Yes, poor fellow; I'm afraid his case Is hopeless. He Is trying to discover an elixir of life." Consulting Physician—"Do you think the patient can stand an opera tion?" Fumily Doctor—"Can he stand it? Why, my dear sir, the man is a millionaire."—Town Topics. Mistress—"Now, remember, Bridget, the Joneses are coming for dinner to night." Cook—"Leave it to me, mum. I'll do me worst! They'll never trouble yea again!"— Harper's Bazar. Wigg—"Bjones would rather argue tliuu eat." Wagg—"Yes; and the most surprising part of it is that he can make the other fellow believe he un derstands his own arguments." Impecunious Lover—"Be mine, Amanda, and you will be treated like au angel." Wealthy Maiden—"Yes, I suppose so. Nothing to eat and less to wear. No, thank you."—Tit-Bits. Grntu From Semi-Arid Region. Eiuuier is the name of a species of wheat which tho Department of Agri culture is recommending for introduc tion in this country, particularly for cultivation in the semi-arid regions of the West. The seeds are being ob tained from Russia, where several provinces raise large quantities of this graiu. In Abyssinia several varieties ure grown at au altitude of OUOO to POOL) feet. Almost all varieties of ('tu rner are drough-resißtent, and equally winter hardy. The uses of etnmer are yet in an experimental stage in this country, but the Judications so far are that it will become a regular and val uable crop for stock feeding. Emrner is being used extensively ut the ag ricultural experiment stntious for im proving ordinary wheat. General vigor and hardiness are inbred by its use. These features ure exhibited iu resistance to fungus attacks, drought resistance, luereased fertility of tho head, nou-shutteriug, stiffness of the Gtraw and increase of gluten content of the graiu. To Itlako Usury a Cilitis. The Judielnry Committee of tho Georgia House of Delegates has decid ed to report favorably a bill providing that it sbull be a misedeunor to charge more thun twenty-five per cent, per an num on any loan whatever. A number of pawnbrokers uud money lenders appeared before the committee in op position to the bill, but it was decided unanimously to report it favorably. Two of the members of the commit tee made strong arguments in favor of the bill, showing how some of the money lenders are charging from 100 to 1000 per cent, on loans to the poor people.—Baltimore Sun. OLD HIDDEN TREASURE FOUND. Gold Worth 87000 In n Shanty Near Roy niton, N. ¥. Gold nuggets and fine gold dust Worth $"000 were found a few days ago by 77enry Freeshe, a farm hand, in the attic of an old shanty on the Barker Pond, north of Royalton, N. Y. The building was being remod eled to be used as a barn. The gold was stored in an old wooden box about two feet square. Mice had made a nest in the chest, the side of which had become rotten long ago. The finding of the treasure recalls the interesting history of the late ec centric eld hermit, George Hoffman, who left Niagara County back in the fifties to seek the precious yellow met al in California. According to old residents he went to the gold fields soon after he was married. His bride remained in the East. He was in Cal ifornia for three years, and during that time he did not write to his wife, who, believing he had perished, left Nia gara and went back to her home in Ohio. It is said that she is still liv ing near Cleveland, and an effort is being made to find her. Hoffman cam 3 back in 1850 with a fortune. No one knew at the time that he had found the gold he sought, but it is supposed that the new-found treasure was brought back from Cal ifornia by him. Its existence can bo accounted for in no other way. When Hoffman returned he sought out his wife in the Buckeye State, but she would not come back to West em New York with him, probably ow ing to his eccentricities. It is said that ho told her he had met with no luck in the West. Until his death he lived in the old sliauty on the Barker Road, a hermit and a miser, tilling a small farm for a living. He died in ISO", and since then the shanty has been deserted. The property belonged to the Freeshes, Hoffman having rented it for fifty bushels of potatoes a year. The old hermit was known for miles around as the "bogie man," and his name was used to strike terror to the hearts of disobedient children in the town. It is said that he gained a rep utation in the West as a bad man who was altogether too handy with a gun. Many of the stories concerning his past, however, consist merely of gos sip, and are the products of the imag ination of these who knew him. The Freeshes are well-to-do farmers. They declare they will not make an effort to keep the gold if Hoffman's legal representatives claim it. So, if Mrs. Hoffman can be found, she will not have to carry the matter into court.— Hew York Times. Little Elsie's Vlov. Little Elsie, aged three, is ever on the lookout fcr a chance to add to her vocabulary by listening- to the remarks of her elders. Not far from that place in the Cats kills where she and her mother spent the summer months was a point of rocks Jutting out from the mountain side, easy enough of access from the rear, but in front a sheer precipice of 200 or 3CO feet. Elsie had been to the spot several times, and while her pro tectors looked off in the distance and pointed here and there she always heard them say something about "the view." When her father came up for one of his over-Sunday visits, he, of course, had to be taken around to see the va rious attractions of the locality, and finally came to the point of rocks. He ventured out pretty close to the edge, when Elsie, a few feet behind him, piped up, in a tone of warning and with not a little pride in grasping the opportunity for her new word: "Look out, papa. Don't det too close or you'll fail off into the view."—New York Times. Earl I.! the Richest Mnl , Li Hung Chang was called the rich est man in the world. This assertion is easier made than proved, for nobody knows lirw rich he was. His fortune may certainly bo counted by millions cf dollars, but how many millions Is purely conjectural. It is enough to say that he was very wealthy, and he accumulated nearly the whole of his fortune by taking advantage of his opportunities and making opportuni ties during his long service as Viceroy of Nanking and Pe-Chl-Li. One way in which Li for many years made an enormous sum of money was to use thousands of soldiers in his own private enterprise without paying them a cent for their labor. In the course of time he purchased extensive estates in the rice growing regions, and raised more bushels of rice every year than the bonanza farmers of North Dakota used to raise of wheat. He got his labor for nothing, and Ills great crop of rice was almost clear profit. He simply turned his soldiers loose in :;he rice fields and they had to be content with the rations and the miserable pittance paid to them by the Government.—New York Tribune. Our Unit of Valne. The real, actual unit of value in the United States is the silver quarter. The dime is out of place. In the bar you get two drink for a quarter. One ciga.r for ten cents seems plebian, so you take two for a quarter. In tho res taurant you are ashamed to give the waiter a ten-cent tip and cannot afford to give hi- j a quarter, but moral cow ardice drives you to let him have the quarter. The quarter is the most beau tiful silver coin in the world. It is of the most convenient size. Mix up a lot of dimes, nickels and copper cents in your pocket and your sense of touch balks at distinguishing between them. You must haul out a handful of "chick en feed'" for visual identification. A quarter you can tell from anything \by the "feel." A half-dollar Is too much like the gold eagle.—New York Press. ARMY POST AN ISSUE. Des Moines Citizens Provide a Site, but Council Blocks It. It is probable that the question of a United Statets army post may be a considerable factor in the Des Moines city election campaign next spring. The business men of the city nearly a year ago contributed the funds nec essary to purchase a site for the post, but the city council dallies. One condi tion the government insists on before establishing the post is that the city shall annex the territory comprising the proposed site. It is generally de sired that the post bo inside the city, in order that the more stringent mu nicipal authorities may prevent the gathering of resorts about the govern ment property. The Glasgow Student. His life is plain and hard, and rath er poor in color. His class at Ba. m. calls him early from Ills bed —how early he who comes to It by train from the suburbs will tell you. And what, after all, comes he out for to see? The tardy moon lighting him up the college hill, the windy quad rangle all dark, the lighted class room windows, a brisk janitor selling the college nugazlne, the college bell, clat tering for five short minutes after the hour has struck, its suddon stop, the scramble of men to enter while yet there is time, the roll call, the lecture, the bent heads of the note takers, the scraping their anxious feet lest a word be missed, the rustling of a sporting paper, the smell of wet water proof in the hot air, the intoler:-i'>lo dreichness of (let us Bay) the con veyancing statutes, and then —happy release! —the college clock booming out the hour, and once more the rain and wind in the quadrangle. No hand some reward this for early rising! Classes meet all day long from 8 a. m. till 5:30 p. m.; and, if our friend has a spare hour, and is eager for work, he goes across to the gaunt, warm reading room, where a comnidq with a "call" may invite him to defend everlasting as against eternal punish ment, or another with a foible for jokes, may, in absent-mindedness tell him the same story thrice in 60 min utes. Porto Rico's Library Plans. According to recommended plans the Carnegie Library building for San Juan, P. R., which is to cost $60,000, will be two stories high, 75 feet wide, fronting on Piaza Colon ai/.l 50 feet deep. The second iloor will be de signeed as an assembly hall, the first floor will be provided with shelves for 100,000 books, and in the basement it is designed to arrange two reading rooms, one of which shall be for chil dren. ENCKE'S COMET A HERALD. Has Appeared Before the Assassina tion of Three Presidents. Encko's comet has heralded the death by assassination of three Presi dents of the United States. President Lincoln was assassinated on April 15, 1865; Eneke's comet appeared Janu -25, 1865, and was visible five months. President Garfield was the victim of the assassin's onslaught on July 2, 1881, and died September 19; Enr! e's comet appeared August 20, 1881, and was visible to the naked eye. Presi dent McKinley was attacked on Sep tember 6, and died September 14, 1901; Eneke's comet appeared on Au gust 15, 1901, and was visible for sev eral weeks. Wo refund 10c. for every package oT PUT NAM FADELESS DYE that fails to give satisfac tion. Monroe Drug Co.. Unionvllle, Mo. The Japanese earthquake of 1703 was the most destructive on record. It killed 190,000 people. There is more Catarrh in this section of the country than all other diseases put togethor, and until tho last few years was supposed to be incurable. For a great many years doctor# pronounced it a local disease and prescribed local remedies, and by constantly failing to cure with local treatment, pronounced it in curable. Science has proven catarrh to bo a constitutional disease and therefore requires constitutional treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cure, manufactured by F. J. Cheney ,V Co., Toledo, Ohio, is the only constitutional cure on tho market. It is taken internally in doses from 10 drops to u teaspoonful. It acts directly on tho blood and mncous surfaces of the system. They offer ono hundred dollars for any cas® It fails to euro. Send for circulars and testi monials. Address F.J.CHENEY A Co.,Toledo,o. Sold by Druggists, 75c. Hall's Family Pills are tho best. There are 165,000 Britons living in the United Kingdom at present who were born in the colonies. I Coughed " I had a most stubborn cough for many years. It deprived me of sleep and I grew very thin. I then tried Ayer's Cherry Pectoral, and was quickly cured." R. N. Mann, Fall Mills, Tenn. Sixty years of cures and such testimony as the above have taught us what Ayer's Cherry Pectoral will do. We know it's the great est cough remedy ever made. And you will say so, too, after you try it. i There's cure in every drop. ' Three tlm 25c., Mc.. 51. AH tfraKtet®. ( foneult yoar dontoT. If be says take it. I Liken do as he etys. If ho telle you not 1 to take It, then don't tako it. Ho kuowS. JJ Leave it with him. We are willing. J. C. ATKII CO., Lowell, Macs. I _ TWT-- l Wr -.n-o -cv CIoM Itlednl nt rtlcILH ENNY 'i"> TA H A SCO Buy Jones Scales Send a postal for Bargain CatalOfjaOe JONES HE PAYS run FUF.UUIT. Box N. Y., BifttHAiiTl N, N. ¥.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers