FEW ELOPEMENTS NOW. . OEATH OF ROMANCE LAID TO FEM ININE ATHLETICS. NowailnyH a Runaway Murtiagn Is Much Klr Tlian the More Orthodox Style of Ceremony Parents Are Much More Setmihle Than They TVero In the I'ust. "It seems odd at first glance that, considering all the facilities which now make runaway marriages such an ex tremely simple thing, elopements have to a great extent gone out of style," said a clergyman. "There are hardly one-fourth the number of runaway marriages now recorded that there were 20 years or more ago. "In the old days runaway couples had to go to all kinds of trouble to carry out their plans. In the first . half of the century, when elopements were quite common, the young people had to hire coaches or riding horses, ford rivers in leaky boats, for which J. thcry had to pay big sums to the own- ers, and go long distances to find Bome one who would consent to marry them. Nowadays a runaway marriage is * much easier than the more orthodox style of ceremony. With justices of the peace on every corner and a most obliging coterie of officials waiting on the docks over at St. Joseph, Mich., ready to perform the ceremony, kiss the bride, and present the groom with a half-tone marriage certificate, all inside of three minutes it does not seem that any young couple in Chi cago who had the slightest wish to elope would find the least bit of trouble, and similar conditions exist all over the country. "Stern fathers and relatives on stur dy steeds no longer follow fast be hind eloping couples or stand on the shore with arms outstretched and wail: 'Come back, come back.' he cried in grief, . 'Across the stormy water; And I'll forgive thy Highland chief, My daughter, O. my daughter.' "But in this fact may be found one of the principal reasons why elope ments are no longer popular. An elopement appealed to sentimental young people because it was so ro mantic. If there are no angry papas mounted on fiery chargers or a reti nue of relatives in pursuit a large ele ment of romance Is eliminated. The papas cf ye good old days had a much finer appreciation of true romance than the prosaic and commonplace dads of today. The old-time father, with sundry 'Ods bodkins,' 'gadzooks' and 'by my halidom' gave the true romantic finish to an elopement and made the sentimental maiden feel that indeed she had not lived and loved in vain. But the father of today spoils the romantic element by simply light ing a fresh cigar when told that his daughter has run away to get mar ried and remarks: 'Run away, eh? , Well, they'll run back quick enough when their money is gone." "A runaway marriage with nobody to run after the runaways is not at all a success. It is "Hamlet" with Hamlet left out "Yet the greatest and possibly the real reason why elopements have gone out of style is because of the better conditions of life which women of to day enjoy—compared with their moth ers and grandmothers. Until quits recently the women of the upper and great middle classes of the country passed their lives either in unhealthy pastimes or complete idleness. It used to be considered unladylike to be strong and healthy like modern girls, and even when they were children girls would often be reproved. If not forbidden, to romp with their broth ers. Such things as golfing, bicycling, rowing and tennis that make the mod ern girl big and strong and tans her face a good sailor brown wore un known to the girls of the old genera , tlons. They had to sit in the house —' and keep their hands soft and their of pearly whiteness, and any girl that dared to assert her in dependence was set down as a hoyden ish tomboy, whom ail good men look ing for a proper helpmate would shun. "The girls of the former days, too, were fed on a sickly sentimental lit erature. They read nothing but nov els, which invariably had for their themes the story of a maudlin sort of girl who left home and wealth and de fied her parents in order to marry for 'love alone' with some ninny who was from every standpoint entirely ununit ed to marry anybody. "Yet 'for love alone' was the phrase which sentimental young girls, cut off from knowing men and being unable to form a proper estimate of their character and ability, had continually ringing in their ears. Any number of the old-time girls no doubt arrived /y at young womanhood with the idea > firmly planted in their breasts that a iormal engagement and marriage was something entirely at variance with love, which invariably demanded of its votaries that they defy parental coun sel and advice and make all sorts of sacrifices in going to the altar, and that otherwise marriage was but a business arrangement in which the heart had no part. "The dull, listless lives that girls of former times led often drove them to elope, as much as a protest against boredom as anything else. It was about the only way they hau of show ing their utter disgust for the exist ing social conditions. "In the days of our grandparents and our great-grandparents the sexes never met on terms of equality and comradeship as young people do now. Young women hardly ever met their social equals of the male sex except at parties and receptions, where the A strictest formaility prevailed. And so unscrupulous music teachers, or hand some servants, or young men blessed with more good looks than manners of regard for conventionalities often played havoc with the hearts of young girls and drew them into elopement. "Parents are much more sensible than they used to be. The craze for securing rich sons-in-law is dying out, and few men of means object to a de cent and persevering young fellow pay ing his addresses to their daughters, providing the affection is reciprocal. They argue, with wisdom, that pover ty in the outset Is no great drawback to a girl's career provided he possesses integrity and intelligence. This in it self is a powerful reason for rendering elopements comparatively uncommon. "But more than all other reasons that operate against elopements by the girls of today is that the present conditions give them an opportunity to meet many men, to study them and understand them, and when they de cide to marry they usually select men who are in every way worthy of them and to whom the parents can make no valid objections. And, even if they were Inclined to object, they will not. for the idea has become generally pop ularthat marriage is a thing which con cerns most the young couple who wish to become husband and wife, and that if they are satisfied no one else should say anything to the contrary, and a wedding of the orthodox kind is per mitted to take place without the nec essity of secrecy and elopements."— Chicago Tribune. BONAPARTE MOTTETTE. Mow lie Live* With Ilia Goata and Ilia Rig I)ogH. Shunning human beings and culti vating the friendship of wild animals, Bonaparte Mottette, an aged French man, has obtained a section of land on the Los Pinos river, 50 miles from Durango. His nearest neigh bors are miles away, and they first learned of his eccentricities when ha undertook the task of taming Jules Barriller's wild goats which were de scribed at length some time ago. Al though the old man Is reticent, It is the common impression around there that Barriller, when he found himself about to die, wrote a letter to some friend asking him to carry on the work he had taken up. Meanwhile, however, the goats grew wild. Many of them were killed by hunters, and now they are quite as shy as mountain sheep, excepting the few the old man has succeeded in tam ing. It seems to be his intention to elaborate Barriller's idea and estab lish a park where all hunted wild ani mals may find refuge. Already he has made preparations to fence his posses sions, and has posted signs that no animal must be killed within the boundary lines of his land. Readers will remember that Barriller, a lone prospector, obtained two goats as pets, and before he died there were numbers of them about his place. At his death only one old goat was left that did not desert the place. He was killed while hurrying to greet a posse of hunters, who, he apparently be lieved, would treat him as Barriller had done. Barriller's successor has a number of wild animals domesticated already. To a prospector who ridiculed his idea, he said the work would go on long af ter he was dead. The Frenchman seems to have plenty of money, as twice a year he drives a team of goats to Durango and hauls out the few supplies necessary to last him until he can make another trip. At such times his cabin and premises are guarded by four Great Dane dogs, far more sav age than any bear or wolf in the mountains. The dogs have been trained not to molest deer or goats, and they confine their attentions to would-be trespassers. The wild goats seem to be Increas ing in numbers, notwithstanding the ravages of mountain lions, wolves, bears and eagles. The birds carry off the kids, but other animals destroy the old ones as well as their offspring. George Taylor, a Denver man. who | lives at 1932 Lawrence street, has been in the vicinity of the French- I man's preserves all summer, and a I few days ago he killed a Mexican blue goat. It was a great curiosity when brought to Durango, and Fish Com missioner T. J. Holland, who returned from that place today, said the goat j was one of the largest he had ever seen. Taylor also killed two white goats, and has incurred the enmity of the old Frenchman, who thinks they all belong to him because he inherited them from Barriller. George Smart, another Denver man, has killed one white goat this summer. He says they are very hard to get a shot at, and he would not believe Mottette had succeeded in taming any of them until he saw the domesticated goats. The flock of wild goats would Increase much more ranidly if it were not for the eagles. The birds are most re pacious in their destruction of the ltlds. —Denver Post. A Unique Subject. Difficult as it is to believe, says the Liverpool Post, King Edward has an aged subject in these islands, who cannot speak our language. She is Miss Mary Stewart (a descendant of the Stewarts of Appin). and was born at Ardnamurchan, Argyleshire, In 1791, so that she has seen five sovereigns on the throne. She has been 53 years in service at different places between Appin and Inverary district. She is still hale and hearty, and able to get up and about. The old lady does not know any English, but speaks Gaelic. A Whole y,-rt "Mamma, how can you ask me to marry him when he has no social po sition?" "But, my dear, he tells me has made a million." "But even with that it will take him a year to get into soctef."—Life. Late Seed Wheat. Wheat that is seeded late will seldom be attacked by the Hessian fly. One difficulty with wheat is the liability of being thrown out by frost in the spring, but when'such is the case the cause may be due to lack of proper drainage. When a field has been prop erly tilled there will be but little lia bility of wheat being injured by alter nate freezing and thawing. Soil for Forcing Crop*. Soil for crops under glass is the same as that in the field. It is merely a part of the field which has been covered with glass, and its superior mechani cal condition is owing to extremely high manuring, which with the decay of plant rcots renders the texture very loose and light. Fresh land, however, may be used at once for greenhouse crops, and such soil is usually free from blights and disease germs for a year or two. The soil is manured and forked over before every crop. OIIP Way to Keep Cabbage*. An excellent way to keep cabbages is to pull them up and put them close together, roots in the ground, and t'ovcr them, so as to protect them against rain, first placing salt hay or straw over the heads. By this plan the cabbages will keep until late in the spring, as the stalks will take root and throw out sprouts or greens, after the heads are gone. By burying the heads with the roots up the frost prevents their use, and when the fro&t leaves then the ground is damp and the heads rot. It will be found of advantage to use the stalks in the manner stated, if for no other purpose than to secure tne early greens. There is no one point in poultry rais ing which requires more consideration than the house —especially that por tion where the fowls stay during in clement weather. The roosting room need not be large, because the fowls will huddle together any way, and the small houses are not so hard to keep warm. The scratching shed should be both large and cheerful, so that the fowls will be contented to remain there and hustle all day. Clean straw or leaves should be kept 011 the floor and all grain should be rawed into it. It is a very good plan to scatter the grain in the evening and if the weath er will permit, leave open the small door, thus letting the fowls begin the work scratching as soon as it be comes sufficiently light. In selecting grain do not forget that whole oats will give the best results. An occasional change will be relished, but the principal food should be oats. Unthreshed oats thrown into the scratching shed will furnish exercise for the fowls. Look over the houses carefully and see if the walls and roof are tight and see that the floors are kept clean. —Home and Farm. Pick Out tlie Iteit, A saving of dollars in the purchase of breeding stock is often false econ omy, as this often means a lower grade of stock. The higher priced birds are often the cheaper in the long run and are much the better investment. There are, of course, exceptions, but it usu ally pays to buy the best, if you are going to raise poultry for market or for eggs, for good layers are usually the descendants of good layers. It will be noticed that even under very unfavorable circumstances a few hens in the flock will lay, while the others seem to live for no other pur pose, apparently, than to eat. The liens that lay the best should be placed by themselves during the breeding season, and made the founda tion of the future flock. By forethought and persistently following this plan, the laying habit may be so fixed in a flock in a few generations as to al most double the egg yield. One farmer built up his egg record from an average of 86 eggs per hen the first year to 173, then to 186, then 195, and his last year's record was 198. His method has been the simple one of picking out the earliest and best layers to breed l'rom. —Poultry Review. DentroyinK Inect Pt*. The recent developments in the tests as to the possibility of mosquitos con veying contagious diseases seem to have effectually proven that they do so, and though it has cost some hu man lives, it may teach us a lesson that may save more. Experiments at shore resorts in covering swamps and stagnant waters with kerosene or some cheaper form of the petroleum product have proven that the mosquito can be greatly reduced in numbers if not en tirely exterminated by this method, and though undertaken with a view to the comfort of their present and prospective guests than as a sanitary measure, the fact lhat it will also serve that purpose is an additional in centive to its general adoption. But we want to see the work go farther and reduce the number of flies as well as mosquitoes. We know their favor ite breeding places, the manure heaps, the droppings of the cattle, dead ani mals, r>r fish offal, places where kitch en waste is thrown out, swill barrels, and almost all the receptacles of fllth and decaying matter Bet it be a rule, or even enact a law that all such places shall be saturated every day with some form of petroleum, and let the oil companies learn what form will do the most effective work at the least cost, and send it out for public sale, and health, comfort aAd cleanliness, that we are robbed of by these flies that come loaded with fllth from such places, to invade our sleeping, sitting and dining rooms or pantries and dai ry rooms, to torment us and our do mestic animals, would soon become so rare that we should wonder how we ever endured them so long. The an nual loss by other insects has been computed at millions of dollars in some cases, but who every undertook to compute the loss from the plague oi' ilies. —The Cultivator. . The Farm llopair Shop. I often wonder how I got along with out a repair shop. The building need not he extensive, but tight and warm. One end should be rigged up for black smithing. Build a hearth of stone and ordinary clay mortar, with a good 'Sized flue, about nine bricks to the round. An opening should be left at the proper place for the admission of a five or six-inch stove pipe. Procure a blower or bellows, an anvil, a drill press, a vise, some dies and tops, one fourth to five-eighths inch, for cut ting thread, a hammer, tongs and two or three sizes of heading tools. Steel punches for hot iron are also neees-" sary, but these can be made. After some experience, many other tools can be made that come handy. Much of the equipment mentioned can often be gotten second-hand from ma chinists or blacksmiths. Collect all kinds of scrap iron, bolts, old horse shoes, etc., from about the farm. Much useful iron may often be gotten for a trifle at public sales. Old horse shoes welded together and worked out are very useful for making nails, riv ets, links for chains, etc. I have been using for several years a heavy farm cli n made entirely from old horse shoes. As to the actual work in this line, many valuable hints may be got ten from a good natured blacksmith. One may need instruction particularly on the working and tempering of steel. For a time the novice may be dis couraged by his seeming awkward ness, but after he gets the set of his hammer and the hang of his tongs, some experience in welding, etc., there will be little repairing that need be taken away from the farm. Put in the other end of the build ing a bench or table Provide a cross cut handsaw, nine teeth to the inch, a square, a smoothing, a jack and a tore plane, a brace with at least seven bits differing in size one-eighth inch, three or four sizes of chisels, a draw ing knife, miter square and a hand ax or bench hatchet. A supply of differ ent sized nails and wood screws. This will equip the wood working end of the shop for all ordinary repairing. Many new implements can be made and troned complete later. Now get or make a sewing or Sadler's horse, procure some needles, wax and thread, harness rivets, etc. Put up a stove, fix up the harness and gather the plows, harrows and other implements that nee'd repairs.—J. F. Thomas, in New England Homestead. Secret* of tho Dairy. There are some secrets which are no secrets, and the experience of years uas shown me that the art of butter making may be known and read of all faithful and persistent men. A few of the points that every one who as pires to good butter making must ob serve I believe to be as follows: The man or woman who sets out to be a dairyman must love his work. Unless he does failure lies just before him. There must be the essentials of a good cow in every individual of the dairy. No man can succeed with poor cows, any more than a carpenter can do his best with wornout, rusty and dull tools. Good water and plenty of it must be available. Impure water has more to do with our failures than most of us are inclined to admit. Roily, stag nant or bacterial water never should be tolerated in the dairy. This applies to the source of supply in the pasture just as much as that used In washing the butter. We niight better be to the expense of drilling a well and putting up a windmill than to attempt to get along in the dairy room without pure water. Every man, woman and child who has anything to do with the work of butter making, from cow to package, should be cleanly and neat. Unclean liness is tbe rock upon which thou sands go down. It is possiole to do something in a slovenly manner and yet succeed fairly well. Tills is not true of butter making. Every pail, can, churn, ladle, package, cloth and worker must be scrupulously tree from anything which will impart a taint to the finished product. The hands especially must be clean. It does not seem as it' it should be necessary to speak of this, and yet it is not a week ago that I saw a man who would resent it quickly if I told him he was not neat sit down to his cow, milk on his hands, and wet the teats of a fine Jersey before he began to take her mess into the pail. We look to the Danish people for our pattern of cleanliness, and well we may, for if there be any secret with them it is the secret of neatness. Cli mate, pasturage, water, care, all pass for nothing without cleanliness. Finally, the care given the cow large ly determines the quality of the butter made. Good food, cleanly quarters, kindness, freedom from all that might give the cow discomfort, these all en ter in to bring about success or fail ure in butter making. Many other things have a bearing on the art of butter making. They may be said to be adjuncts and not abso sute essentials. The principles in volved are not many, but they are in valuable. They must be taken into account by all who would win in the beautiful science of good butter mak ing.—E. L. Vincent, in American Cul ! tlvator. DIPLOMA IIC BEAVERS. They Ca*ed War on ItliiHkrats I!eraue of Valuable Al<l. Charles Nicholas, an Indian guide of Kineo, Moosehead lake, to whom the habits of bird and beast are an open book, tells the following little story which he declares is true, which is certainly good enough to be true. Near the head of Spencer bay is an extensive marsh, where in the summer time deer are wont to feed and frolic, where in the fall the lordly moose comes from off the mountain to mate and where at all seasons of the year muskrats innumerable have dwelt. Not so far away is a smaller marsh, where, for many years, a colony of beaver has lived in cosey houses built close by the water's edge. These two little communities never exchanged calls, but lived and prospered in happy ex clusion. The going out of the ice from the lake last spring was followed by an almost unprecedented rise of water, and the two marshes in Spencer bay, the large one and the little one, were completely covered. Now, the musk rats did not mind the flood a bit. Driv en from one hole, they sought another further back, and when there weren't any more holes these happy-go-lucky vagrants set up housekeeping in a huge pile of driftwood, never losing a meal or a wink of sleep. But with the beaver it was different. These industrious property owners suf fered severely, and when the waters of Moosehead lake at last receded the ruins of the beavers' lodges went with them. The beavers did not sit and sulk, neither did they for a moment think of building again on the same old site. They sought higher ground, where the floods of another spring could not reach them, and so it came about one fine morning when the muskrats came down onto the marsh to play they found the beaver there before them. It was a large marsh, as has been stated before, but It was not large enough for both inuskrat and beaver. War was at once declared, and the war ended in the breaking up of the musk rat colony and the scattering of the rats along the shores of Spencer bay. Two miles from the marsh anil on the farther side of the bay was a clump of poplar trees which the beaver selected as the best material available for their new homes. All day and all night they sawed, until finally they had floating in the lake and compactly rafted several hundred logs just the right length and thickness for up-to date beaver houses. And then the troubles of these busy but unscrupu lous little builders began. They could not even stir the raft of logs from shore, to say nothing of towing it two miles across Spencer bay to the marsh. Every beaver In the colony was sum moned to the task. Young and old, big and little, weak and strong, they pushed and pulled, but they could not budge that raft of timber. Then the head of the beaver colony called the other beavers together on the raft and laid beiore them this re markable proposition: If the musk rats would lend a helping hand and tow that raft up Spencer bay, they (the beaver) would permit them to re turn to the big marsh, where they might live without fear of molesta tion. The rest of the beavers agreed, and the muskrats, when appealed to, also agreed. And the following morn ing, before the waters of the bay roughed up, the deer and the squirrels anil the gulls beheld with amazement beavers and muskrats, shoulder to shoulder, pushing a raft of logs before them up Spencer bay. The houses are built and the beaver are in them. And all about are musk rats holes, and muskrats in them, too. And beaver and rat, who are at war everywhere else in northern Maine, are living together in peace on the big marsh at the head of Spencer bay.— Boston Herald. lloy Seasick, but Game. He was one of three diminutive mes senger uoys hired to remain aboard the big ocean going tugboat that fol lowed the yachts. There was quite a ground swell on when the tug got out about the lightship and the wind, coming up strong made a nasty sea. The dipping and rolling of the boat made this boy more sick than the oth ers. He lay on the after deck unable to move, and groaning at intervale. Once in a great while he raised his dull, heavy eyes to note the positions of the yachts. Ail day he lay there, refusing to go inside the spacious cabin. When the tug pulled it at the pier he was so weak he had to be helped ashore. His face was haggard and, support ed fcy his companions, he dragged him self up the pier, eliciting sympathy from all the yachting reporters. Half way up the pier he hobbled over to the reporter who had been in charge of the boat that day and placed two blue and trembling hands on the wrist of the newspaper man. His wan face was raised and he said in a hoarse, tense whisper: "Hey, mister! If yer want a boy agin* termorrer, ask fur me, will yer, mister?' He was game.—New York Mail and Express. The I.Hrjfest and Smallent County. San Bernardino county, Cal., with an area of nearly 20,000 square miles, Is the largest in the United States, and Bristol county, R. I„ with an area of only 27 square miles, is the small est. It Bristol county were in the form of a square man might walk aeross it in a little more than an hour; but San Bernardino, in the same form, could not be crossed by an express train In two hours. It is larger than Ver mont and New Hampshire combined. ARMY POST AN ISSUE. Dcs 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 be 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 8 a. m. calls him early from his 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 magazine, the college bell, clat tering for five short minutes after the hour has struck, its sudden 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 intolerable ■ dreichness of (let us say) 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 Voom, where a comradq 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 and 50 feet deep. The second lloor 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. Encke's comet has heralded the death by assassination of three Presi dents of the United States. President Lincoln was assassinated on April 15, 1865; Encke'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; Encke'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; Encke's comet appeared on Au gust 15, 1901, and was visible for sev eral weeks. We refund 10c. for every package of Put nam Fadeless Dte that fails to give satisfac tion. Monroe Drug Co.. Unionville, Mo. The Japanese earthquake of 1703 was the most destructive on record. It killed 190,000 people. There is more Catarrh in thie section of tho country than all other diseases put together, and until the last fevr years wa supposed to be incurable. For a great man; 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 be a constitutional disease and therefore requires constitutional treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cure, manufactured by P. J. Cheney .V Co.. Toledo, Ohio, is the only constitutional cure on tho market. It is taken internally in doses from 10 drops to a teaspoonful. It acts directly on the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. They offer one hundred dollars l'or any caso it fails to cure. Bend for circulars and testi monials. Address F.J.CHENEY & Co..Toledo, O. Sold by Druggists, 75c. Hall's Family Pills are the best; There are 165,000 Britons living in the United Kingdom at present who were born in the colonies. Tje, | | , , i i li 111 Mil— 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. There's cure in every drop. ' Tbrtt ■!*: 25c., 50c., SI. All ilrcrgtat.. Consult your doctor. If lie snys take It, then do as he says. If he tolls you not J to take It, then don't take it. He knows. J Loave it with him. We are willing. I J. 0. AYEU CO.. Lowell, Mass. ■ Cold IHednl at BnHW!" Imposition. McILHENNY'S TABASCO Buy Jones Scales Send a postal for Bargain Catalogue. J O.N El HE PAYS THE FUEinHT. Box H. Y„ BUIUJUUTOM. li. V.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers