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" ** * Dr. Kilmer's 8wamp-Root cure* all Kidney nnd Bladder troubles Pamphlet and Consultation free. Laboratory Binghamton. N. Y. The German Emperor has limited his chaplain to twenty-minute discourses. flOO Reward. 9109. ^ The reader of this paper will be pleased to le&ra that there is at least one dreaded disease that science has been able to cure in all its stages, and that is Catarrh. Hall's Catarrh Cure is the only positive cure known to the medical fraternity. Catarrh being a constitutional disease, requires a constitutional treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, acting directly on the blood and mucous sur' faces of the system, thereby destroying the foundation of the disease, and giving the patient strength by building up the constitution and assisting nature in doing its work. The proprietors have so much faith in its curative powers, that they offer One Hundred Da'lars xor an j- case that it fails to cure. Send fur list of testimonials. Address F. J. Che.vey & Co.,Toledo, 0. fWSnld by Druggists, 76c. When Nature Jfeeds assistance it may be best to render It prompt] y,bu tone should remember tonse even the most perfect remedies only when needed. The best and most simple and gentle remedy Is the Syrup of Figs manufactured by the California Fig Syrup Co. To Keep ronnft reeds no magic elixir. It only require* a little daily care of the health. Ripans Tabules reduce doctoring to its lowest cost. ^FITS jjtopped free_ by Dr. KLn?E^8 Great jhkkve ivkwtukb.k. .^uuu iuw> uiot uu|. > . Marvelous cures. Treatise and $2.00 trial bot- J tie free. Dr. Kline. 931 Arch St.. Phila., Pa. Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup for children teething, softens the (turns, reduces inflammation, allays pain, cures wind colic. 25c. a bottle After six years' suffering I was cured by Pico's Cure.?Mart Thomson. 29% Ohio Ave., 4 Allegheny. Pa.. March 19.1894. iTWiirPay v To make some provision for your physical health at this season, because a cold or cough, an attack of pneumonia or typhoid fever now may make you an invalid all winter. First of all be sure that your blood is pure, for healtn depends upon pure blood. A few bottles of Hood's Sarsnparilla will be a paving investment now. at wm give jwu pure, rich blood and invigorate your system. I Hood's Sarsaparilla Is the One True Blood Puilfier. < ' ' llaaii!* Dill* are tasteless, mild, effecH000 S rlllS tive. All druggists. 25c. I DAD WAY'S | n PILLS, Always Reliable, Purely Vegetable, Perfec.lytasteles*.ele?antly coated, regulate, purify, cleanup and strengthen. RADWAK'S WLLS for the cure of all disorders of the Stomach, Bowels, Kidneys, B1 tdder. Nervous Diseases, Dizziness, Vertigo, -v Coatlveness, Piles, SICK HEADACHE, FEMALE COMPLAINTS, BILIOUSNESS, INDIGESTION, DYSPEPSIA, CONSTIPATION, and All Disorders of the LIVER. Observe the followlnr symptoms, resulting from diseases ot the digestive organs: .Constipation, Inward piles, lullnusso( blood In the head, acidity of the stomach, nausea, heartburn. di?gust of food, , Soilness ot weight or tbe stomach, sour eructations. ainxing or fluttering of the h?art, choking o.- suffocating sensations when in a lying posture, dimness of visl in, dots or web* lief ore tne sight, lever and dnll patn la the head, deficiency of perspiration, yellowness of the skin and eyes, pain In the side, chest, Umbs,andsuidenflushesof heat,uurningin tbe flesh. A few d'iseg of RADWAY'S PILLS will free the ryatem of al! cf the aoove-named disorders. Price 25 cm. per box. Sold by druggists or sent by mall; Send to DR. RADWAY Sc CO., lock box 365, Kew York, for bno< of Advice. N Y N U?40 Waiter Baker & Go. Limited., Tba Larfact Mannfcetcrara of PURE, HICH GRADE Cocoas and Chocolates _ On thia Continent, have raceirad w>^ highest awards ~ from the (rait Industrial and Food * M EXPOSITIONS H ( MM IN EUROPE AND AMERICA. fil1lHKCautions ?wy"Tmiuu?! u'tt V f gjllof tha labaliand wrappara on oar UJ . Amlf'V f ?oort?, ecoBuTr.vri should maka iura BUL rlj Philil our placa of maoufartura, ^aSSBHQpSanamaly. I>orch?atcr, Haia. it prinud on aacb packaga. SOLD BY GROCERS EVERYWHERE: WAITER BAKER A CO. LTD. DORCHESTER, MASS. The Greatest Hedical Discovery of the Age. KENNEDY'S Medical Discovery, DONALD KENNEDY, OF ROXBORY, MASS., Ha? discovered In one of our common pasture weeds a remedy that cures every kind of Humor, from the worst Scrofula down to a common pimple. He baa tried it in over eleven hundred eases, and never failed except In two cases p* (both thunder humor). He has now in bis possession over two hundred certificates of its value, all within twenty miles of Boston. 8end postal card for book. A benefit is always experienced from ths first bottle, and a perfect cure Is warranted when the right quantity Is taken. When the lungs are affected It causes shooting pains, like needles passing through them; the same with the Liver or Bowels. This 1b caused by the ducts being stopped, and always disappears In a week after talcing It Bead the label. II the stomach Is foul or bilious It will ause squeamish feelings at first. No change of diet ever necessary. Eat the best you can get, and enough of It. Dose, one tablespoonful in water at bed* time. Sold by all Druggists. [^asthMAI IPB^ POPHAM'S ASTHMA SPECIFIC I SF?ij52?>?ltaGivejrtliff in FlVt minutes. Sen?| foi a FliKE trial patUufO. Scldiivl IIBT'WS?Bra bnireifts. One Bos uriit postpaid H H rn lrrrliif nf |1 Six b?x?? $5.00.1 WWHgliriflrK. thus. roriUE. ruiLA., fa. R Rockland Collegiate Institute, nyack-on-the-hudsox, n. y. The Cheapest and one or the Best HI(!E1? GKAUK SCHOOLS tor boys and youns meu tut Ktw York Full courses EuKlisb, Academic, Kkjatlflc, Commercial, College Preparatory. CertiQcate admits to BEST CO 1, IRENES. No reOMBBitBded student h?s ;ver ueeu refused. Compit4? BQUteTKJ AN I)El*A K.T1UENT o.' HoraM anu Ponies, s-euu for illustruted ca nlORue. VA PX. JjOKK ? I'.M>X. A..K.. Principal Best Oowh feyrup. Tastes Good. Cu M lil'Ume. Sold t>7 drogitittt. IH J"8 3 1?8. LIFE IN CUBA, nOMES AND HABITS OF PEOPLE. The Houses Have BIj? Barred tlovrs ? Picturesque Dress the Women?Hospitable Country Folk. ^ i | BE races in Cuba are so r I says May B. Stacey i f New York Recorder, one is ever in doubt wl he is talking to a Metizo, or a C or a Spaniard; but their manner customs are very pleasing. 0 arrival in Havana 1 was met by i charming and cultivated man, < TT t- 1 J J . * vwl havana a itauju^ iovtjwo, auu courteously entertained for som at his casa, prior to my visit : country, where I spent the y among the 6ugar plantations. The he mes in Cuba are very fortable, made of stone with p fronts and immense barred wii and solid wooden doors. The are paved; sometimes there is just where the chairs are put, am is in a square between two op] windows. ^ war% iMf Why the people are not all sumptives I cannot tell, for thi in this draught even in cold They do seem to suffer greatly catarrh and aBthma. One of the beauties of Cuban dences is the open court in the c of the building, which is prol decorate I with birds and flowerc even small trees are grown. I richer ones there are marble f with fountains and 6tatuary. and willow furniture is used < sively. In one room I saw eight willow rocking chairs, and all tb - u; ji zc cues were rocmug raping u iu time with their talking. There : one door to the outside world in homes, and everything goes in an of it. Marketing goes in, and bage goes oat. As the door is constantly barred, I was prepare anything; even dreams of brij flitted through my brain, but no but friends and the most inoffens marketmen ever entered the hoc my knowledge. The business men in Cuba take a cup of coffee in the morni home, and have their breakfast c i3 ' ** / J' " lj'-'LLOVE MAKI town, at noon time, just as our lunch at their club or restaurant j: u cl? uiiie U( uuuie uner UUOIUCOD uvux I presume it is on account o climate, but most of the people tired, and there is none of the I nes6 of American?. The men lac rigor our fine-looking American have; there are many handsome but round shouluers, which ever the handsome head. The women of Cuba are very turesque, when they wear the mantilla, but they are adoptin Americau and French hat, and not becoming. Their kindne strangers is proverbial, and quaint way of presenting their to you, when yon call to 6ee the very attractive. One lady, wlioe broidery I much admired, for il as beautiful ami fine as a spider's presented me her hands. "The yours," 6he said, meaning she 1 embroider something for me, if sired. While taking a walk in the co one day, we passed a house whej door was wide open?tbey gen are open?and the family was a ntr. The master cried out: " evening; are yon not hungry? 1 you come aud eat something?" The custom is to say: "Thank bnt 1 am not hungry." When yc upon a friend a cup of excellent coffee is made at once and serve* a husband and wife call the hui is served first, and he drinks onl, of the coffee, ami bands the rest J i* ^ nPkin if ?lfA A At* of Am O Ullc* 11119 JC AIOU tlic V/ uo Li-X ?* table after dinner with the desse well as the coffee. I must add, thankful it is not the custom t elude the guests. I presume it old loving cup, or, perhapp, a reminder to the weaker sex that was made first. One thing I noticed particular! that at night the people hold a hand kerchief over their mouths and nostrils to prevent breathing the night -3 ? TT?^? +V.Q larlips f?ftrrv THE ttir, umi lu ilmaun vuv ? ? -? perfumes with them, as the odors about the houses are sometimes dreadw. fuln" Few people walk in Cuba. Y02 ' take a cab for any distance, dismissing it when you enter a house and hail another one when you come out, but to call a cab you motion away from you nixed, instead of to you, as we do in the n the States. The reason one does not walk that is because the sidewalks are too narlether row, and the streets very filthy; many uban, sidewalks are only three feet wide, sevs and eral less than two. We felt sure after n my trying to hold on with our toes, that 1 very our feet would soon resemble the one of monkeys, and wo looked with care, most when removing our shoes, to see if e days such a catastrophy had occurred. I in the found myself frequently in the gutyinter ters, which are-very filthy, as the drainage is poor. com- The milkman, instead of driving a faster wagon drives his herd of cok-s around adows town and milks at the door of his cusfloors tomer. It has this advantage, the a rug milk is pure. There is no cream in i that Cuba; they boil the milk immediately aosite it is received. The want of confidence in the wo llllf A COUNTRY HOME IN CUBA. con- men hurt me very much. We are so sy sit repected and honored at home by our days, men that I got indignant when I saw with wives, sisters and Eweethearts watched like children. The monstrous barred resi- windows, seen in all houses, gives :entre them a prison like aspect, but Oupid fusely ?though barred out?finds many i, and ways of slipping through. n the - loors, The Lile ol a Turkish Farmer. Cane 3xclu- Inured as the Turkish farmer has large ^een to a struggling existence, it has ie ja. had the effect of making him gloomy keep aQd taciturn. In place of a neat farmin hnfc stead we find a hovel constructed of these aundried mud bricks. This oneid oat roomed hovel, without any windows gar. (the only light and air admitted comes kept down the chimney), serves him and d for his family as their residence. AdJanets joining: this we tind a cellar-like thing buildiuz which serves to house hie ive of ^ve stock. All the surroundings are ise to dirt an^ untidiues?. Frugality is a great characteristic ol j only 'he Turkish farmer, and it is owing tc ing at this that he has been able to eke out lown- a miserable existence. His tastes arc jjj I J <?* NG AMONG THE CUBANS. men simple and his requirements few. He and produces everything for his sustes. nance at little cost; his food consists f the for the greater part of bread, for look which he grows the wheat. This is >risk- sometimes varied by a soup made of k the sour milk and crushed wheat boiled; men this is a most nourishing and satisfyfaces, ing dish. He also cooks another di6h, mar equally good, of crushed wheat boiled and flavored with fresh butter. Some' pic- times he indulges in a dish of fried lace eggs. Coflee he drinks occasionally. a the This coinDletes his dietary, and, it ie simple aw it is, be is strong and healthy bs to and generally of fine physique. He their thinks nothing of a twenty or thirtyhouse mile walk, or of doing a day's work m, is of sixteen hours. He would fare badly ie em- with tho eight hours' system. His t was clothing costs him even less than his i web, food. He cultivates the cotton from y are which the women spiu tho yarn and spould weave the calico for bis clothes. He I de- also allows himself a jacket made of bright colored Manchester print. The untry sheep find him a material for a warmer re the covering; he knits his own stockings, erally Boots are uuknowu tu him ; he mauut din- factures out of a piece of untanned 'Good ' cowhide a pair of saudals. His cattle Won't liiul him luel; he collects all their manure and dries it in the sun. This you; warms his house, it makes a good m call bright fire, and also serves to light black his room. Lamps and candles are too 1. If great a luxury. Tobacco he somesbanil times indulge-) in, In 6pite of all yehalf this frugality he remains poor. The t<-? hid low nrmii noroolu in til A nast. find t the occasionally bail seasons have been rtf as agaii?6t him. ?Loudon Puulic Opinion. I am o jn. A London magistrate ha< decreed is the that a householder cauuot interfere dailv witb an organ-grinder unless he is Adam disturbed in his business has sickneEs ! in his house or ie attested in his health ly xva* by the sounds 0/ the organ. CHINESE FUNERAL HORSE : Paper Steed Which Celestials C< crate to Service of the Dead 1 The most marked trait of the nese is a profound veneration for t k CHINESE FUNERAL HORSE. ancestors, a characteristic which 1 expression not only in a filial affec for and obedience to the living erts, but also in a holy reverenc< StV/vV/*, * the dead, who are faithfully 6hiped in the most solemn relic: rites. The form of adoration off to the deceased is made up of burning of candles, incense and paper, accompanied by nume genuflections and prostrations, necessary factor in the services it spreading of elaborate feasts, th< visible essence of which, it is belie ascends for the delectation and m cation of the dear departed. The ' nese believe implicitly that the s of the dead continue in consciou istence and in such contact with scene of their former existence the location of their graves, the stancv of the worship they reci with tbe richness and variety of offerings made to them, are most portant in determining their ha nese or misery. 1 The vulgar belief is that the n 1 of the dead are substantially the ? as the needs of the living, and they can only receive those nec ties by the ministrations of the liv > Food, olothing and money are tt < fore offered to the spirits, being dered invisible and transmitted tc other world by means of fire, funeral of any one is the occasioi a solemn bonfire, wherein are sumed the olothing of the decet and enormous sums of imiti money. In addition the funeral often ^includes paper houses and nishings and servants that the def may enjoy distinguished immorta If the mourned were a sea capta paper ship would be given to flames. If he were an officer of: a horse would be provided, as wa pflKfi in the funeral whichBofleret opportunity for the accompanyin lustration. Ejrss Worth a Fortune. The egg of the great auk valued at 315,000. That was price recently paid by a wealthy lector of rare birds' eggs. Ther< only eixty-eight of this extinct b egg in existence. Two auks' eggi in this country ; one is owned bj Academy of Natural Science in P delphia, and the other is in the co tion of Va89ar College. The foi collection held for many years an its treasures the rarest of all eg an egg of the California condorit mysteriously disappeared a years ago, and it is supposed i scientific sneak thief thought it n< Tins EGG IS WORTH 815,000. to transfer the treasure to his collection, where he is holding it a rise in price. It is quite a fad nowadays to col rare and curious eggs and vast si are paid by wealthy collectors for delicate little ovals. One of the lari private collections in the world is \ of Mr. J. Parker Norris, a well-kn lawyer of Philadelphia. He has sj more than $20,000 for fine specin of egg shells. Clever Crows. In a garden in Japan a dog was ing apiece of raeutiu the presenc several covetous crowa. They dently said a great deal to one anol on the subject, aud now and t some of them tried to pull the u away from him, which he naturallj sented. At last a big, strong c succeeded in tearing off a piece, i which ho returned to the pine wl the others were congregated. A much earneet speech they all rounded the dog, and the leading 1 dexterously dropped the email p of meat within reach of his mo: The dog immediately snapped at unwieely letting go the big pi which was seized by two crows ! carried to the pine. With ec | fluttering ami hilarity they devoi |it.? St. Louie Fost-Dippatch. POPULAR SCIENCE. mse- A flash of lightning is olten a 1- long. Chi- Artificial ivory is now made ;heir condensed skim milk. Prussian bine paint is made tbe ashes of the burnt hoofs of hi When a snake has gorged itself a large meal, its skin is so stre that the scales are some distance a The New York Central Railroai a train from New York to Buflfal other day, 436J miles, in six ] < and forty-seven minutes. | Papier mache is now used in k structing bicjclas. It is said ?\ these machines stand the wear f] I tear of heavy road work very vre. The sting of a bee, when com / j,| with the point of a fine needle, \ fa powerful microscope, la hardh cernible. The point of the need) pears to be about an inch in diam The OiAaha Street Railway Con is being sued for $250,000 dar for injury done by the electric rents, which it turns loose in inds ground, to the pipes of the 1 tion works company. The pipes are r par- ly destroyed by electrolysis. 3 for There is no lower limit to lengths in the ether. An el< magnetic wave produced once a ond is 186,000 miles long; a wai affect the eye is one-flfty-thouss of an inch long, and soap-bubble aomena show waves much shorte A sound vibration is the to-au motions of the air molecules, il sound be in air, the motions beir ' - ii_- ? -c Aiw toe line 01 me muveiiieut ui wave ; that is, lodgitudinal vibrat The air particles act upon the panic membrane and cause it to to and fro at the same rate. It is reported officially that \ are 9133 science classes in Ensla: present and some 183,120 studen tending them. The r<port statef there are fully 10,000 fewer sc studonts in the country than were last year. This falling off ii to be due to the recent organiz of purely technical colleges. Oil is no longer to be poure troubled water. It is to be fired a shell from a gnn. As a wave wor. proaches a shell filled with oil is ions precipitated in its direction. ere(j shell will be perforated with ttje holes, so that the oil will rui slowly and continue its work irous floater l?gth of time than \ ^ otherwise be the case. i the J The reason why ships are not si e in- by lightning is attributed to the ved, eral use which is now made of asti- I rope for rigging purposes, as w< Chi- to the fact that the hulls of ship touls usually constructed of iron or i s ex- Thus the whole ship forms an t the lent and continuous conductoi that means of which electricity is led con- into the ocean before it has time sive, any serious damage. the * ; im- The Dangerous Sperm Whal PP1- The sperm whale is an extrt awkward fish to approach, for at eec*8 she uses her mouth (the lower ja ,ame which is armed with a formidable that Df teeth), flukes and tail with ter ?e81" effect. There is an instance of i in8- destroying three boats and inj ,ere" the ship itself; and the ship Esse: ren' actually sunk by a sperm deliber the charging her twice. Tk0 Sir W. H. Gore-Booth says: 1 for best way to approach this fish is 00?* on, under sail if possible, as, o l8ft0 the position of her eyes, she ca ition 8ee weii fthead. The other altern P7re recommended is to approach the i *ar" from behind on the starboard sic u:ict as to give a right handed dart. . y* boat, ranging alongside, proceeds ,in a allel to the fish one or two fatt or possibly three or four, from rank until far enough forward, when ? harpoon is thrown into the back. * But none of these precautions K I require! by a lucky settler oe west coast of New Zealand, who,*1 pigeon shooting, happened c school of twenty-seven lying dea< ' .J8 j the beach, and who had merely t< , | his mark on each to make the v * ' his property. The whales, v ? varied in size from a baby of t R feet to a monster of sixty, lay mi i in pairs for a space of about ... miles. On the whole they were L j. cellent condition, and there is nt planation as to what drove rmer ashore, though it is noted that th lon? had been exceptionally rough for i time previously. "J1 On a different part of the seab a whale of another species, eight; J0II? feet in length, had been found u 3 S1D , similar oircuinstances a little b< this great find. The discovery unnaturally .attracted a large am of attention, and everybody in th? trint went to view the stranded SB; athan. Luck follows luck, an another settler, bent on an erran W curiosity, came upon 800 ounc ambergris some two miles aw? J Black and White. An Antidote lor Poison Iry. A friend who i6 very susceptib poison oak and ivy, and who hae fered terribly from it, tells me the best thing *he has found i; own tincture of grindella. Dilute it ^or about three parts of water an 3 b the affected parts. It should be lect plied as soon as the irritation is un13 and before the characteristic pusi the appear. Applied at this time it gest prevent the formation of the pus' that an(j 600a check the irritation. 0WQ if not applied until the pustules )ent pear, it will only prevent the foi ien9 tion of new pustules, and thus cl the spreading of the affection to o parts; the pustules that are alr< . formed will simply take their co ? ! without spreading. The dili i_ j tincture should be applied to ths ther Pa,'ts as often as two or t hen ^mes every hour.?Rural New Yo. iieat An Vjiriglit Man. r re- There is certainly some slight feeling'c row miliatiou 111 beinir bent down and oblid creep aloni; for fear of a snap in the s] lel'e columii. It is snob a plain show of dec ^ er tude that we ?* ?! embarrassed. It is sur- every iJav wbeu lumbago takes a good bird on 11 stitch in the l>ack. There is very ippp sympathy for one in such a plight, for it well known that St. Jacobs Oil will < ? tllla. promptly and that neKieot i.- the cans* it, much disability. Why not keep tin- rei ece, always ou band <iud prevent suchdiseorr flD(l Sheffield, England, pays the Duke of lUCb folk rents at the rate of $500.00" a year. irco " " 11 IfmHicteu witusureey*s us* ui. iPHuc I'll eon's Eye-water. L)iujffcibth ttil ut-Sc &ur U > i The Railway Delirium. The most absurd project that ever mile emanated from a madman's brain would, during this memorable year from (1836), have found credulous English investors. It is difficult, in fact, to from believe that some of the promoters jrses. "were n?t insane. In Dnrham, for in- ; ... stance, three railways, all running in | ^ , parallel lines, not far apart, were proc e. jected. At Greenwich speculators lPar ^ere eager to tunnel the park, and, ; ^ r*n lest the vandalism should arouse in- , 0 dignation, proposed to erect marble hours Brches adorned with marble busts. One inventor, confident that wind con- was a better" motive power than steam, that endeavored to propel his engine by and means of sails; another was certain LI. that by the aid of rockets he could pared drive a locomotive at the rate of one inder nunarea miles an Hour, ja/ren more j die- delirious was the rush for fortune in ,e ap- 1845-46. The number of projects was leter. enormous. Lines were, on paper, duipany plicated everywhere, or carried into aages the r?motest localities. One was adcur. yocated because it passed through a country "celebrated for its genial water climateanother, beoause it ran apid- across ground that had been invaded by the Danes, and the London and ^ave Exeter was actually thrust upon the jctro- mar^e'i on the plea that it ran along sec- roa<^ use<* ^oman8' *t is re to e8timilted that $500,000 per week was aiu spent in railway advertisements alone. -Good Word.. *j_fro Polyglot Signs. E the ^he array of signs rendered neces1J? jn sary where people of various Nation5 air alities congregate often confnses one ions. n?t familiar with the foreign lanx?' ornoiTPR. pfineniftllv when the person is IJ III- n?o?f ? sr 1 move Dot aware that they all mean the same thing. On a door leading into one of there *e6neries are d at inscriptions: . . No Admittance. thai L>er Entrit ist Yerboden. n?a Verbodner Ginzang. lence i. j there Nie Wchodzic3 said There is still another collection on ation board the Bed Star Line steamships sailing to Antwerp. There is, of conrse, no smoking, except on deck, " ?n and each state room is provided with "k? the following sign: ' aP" No smoking. Th Niet ^00^eD* T?? Defense de Famage. small Nicht Rauchen.?Philadelphia Reoi ont ord. for a rould Highest of all in Leavening Poi track ^ ^ ^ I/AVAI is are ujl m tl ABSOLU1 Colleges One Hundred Tears Ago. p* Dartmonth College consisted of a imely wooden building 150 feet long, fifty times an<j thirty-six feet high. At w 0 Dartmonth Englieh grammar and 1 *?,w arithmetic were text bdoks in the nble ?M1. rt , OUJpUUUlUiO J i nab Princeton, the greatest Presbyterian annK college, was a huge stone edifice, its ? WftS faculty consisting of a president, viceatev president, one professor, two masters of languages and seventy students. I he Harvard University had four brick . buildings; the faculty consisted of a W1U^ president and six professor*, and in n^0k' its halls thronged 130 to 160 students, ative yaje boasted Qf one bri 3k building 1 and a chapel "with a steeple 125 feet mu? high!" The faculty was a president, a professor of divinity and three tu'Pftr* tors. tome, greftje8t Episcopal college in e*' the United States was William and ? Mary's. It was under royal and State patronage, and was, therefore, more substantially favored than most of our 1 A?? American schools. At this time, it is w 1 e said in a curious old State report, the L11 a college was a building of three stories, . ?n jjjjg a brick kiln," and had thirty gentlemen students. The Btudents ( r, ? ? lodged in dormitories, ate at *he < 7 10 "commons" and were satisfied with Ie.v?n what we would consider prison diet. 1 "n ^ Breakfast, a small can of coffee, a bis- ! ex_ cuit, about an ounce of butter. Din- J ) ner, one pound of meat, two potatoes them anc* Bome vegetables. Supper, bread i e gea and milk. The only unlimited sup- I some furnished was cider, which was i passed in a cup from mouth to month. 1 oar(j The days were spoken of as boil day, Toast day, stew day, etc.?Chicago < oder Newa' ! jfore ooooooooooooooooooooooooooo* ount 0 W ebster >s i'dis- 6 5^ Successor of the " Una levi* 9 {JEM " Spcc.men pages, etc., tent o ,1 9 W&SWM , ' Standard ofthff.s.st U SO o KBwB3W /mT\ , nearly all Scboolbouks. Cot (1 of, 6 its#! 62%) : the best fof 89 ? 9 i It is easy to fi l'* 5 fflK&ffm 1 It is easy to a o /y ** *3 easy t0 t] rt Ml imjm ** *3 eas^ t0 ^ 6 G. ft C. Mcrrlam Co., I*u le to c>oooooooooooooo<xxxx>oooo<x>oc I suf- ~ that Brevity is the Soul < witL You P athe # SAPC Kill AC I ???????????? 7- borrowing rina- ^ ^ ^ Twn The sign of this borrowing i: ,Vol,! waste. You need fat to keep tl litiif , ie i?s.? want to live with no reserve ion ofi! Scott's Emulsion of Cod-live It is a food. The Hypophosphi It comes as near perfection as g> world. Be sun you jrri Scott's Emuhitn je-. omr. _ . ? ottle- Scott & Bowne, New Ycr^. STOMACH AND BEAD PAINS. , M A REMZDT. Women Are Subject to Both, on Accoani of Tight Lacing:. From the Eoening News, Newark, N. One of the happiest women in this oity is . ;.t^S Mrs. George G. Beiss, ot 29 Montgomery " r^5l Street. "No one to look at me now." said Mm . Y,$SJ Betss to a reporter, "would think for a momeat that I was so 111 that the do store said 1 ' ;^?| could not possibly be saved. About three years ago I began to suffer from terrible pains in my stomach and it was almost Im- \ _V3 possible for me to do any work. Then I had severe headaches that almost distracted me and altogether I was in a very sad condition. Of course I wanted to be well again, and like most people in such cases, I consulted a do<v tor,-spent money for medicine and took It faithfully. To my Infinite regret I got no better, and another doctor was called in. More medicine was prescribed and this I took, but it did no good. Those terrible pains continued to make life miserable for . '?ii me. The doctors blandly told me that I y&gj could not be cured entirely, if at all. Pleae- /.. < ant news, wasn't it? Well, I continued to . work about the bouse here and suffered on- ' told agonies. I did not give up hope but did all I could to relieve my misery. Nothing gave me any relief, however, and I had be- ' 5aBB ; gun to think that all hope must be abandoned, when, in reading the Evening Newt, I ' 3EHH saw Dr. Williams' Pink Pills advertised. J .TffigMj The printed testimonial coming from a rest- ;>gMg dent of this city led me to believe that I, too. might be benefited by these pills and not ... i without some misgivings I bought a box of ;JM -1 "Aimost as soon as 1 began to takothem X ^ reit relieved and tnenrst maricea incucouoa A.jum of improvement was when that tired, weary, U don't-care feeling disappeared. This wan in r3s 5? itself something to be grateful for, but otheand more pleasing results followed after 1 <?Hff had taken more of the pills. My headache# 'A ceased entirely and the pain in my stomach troubled me no more. Now once In a ^reat "' while I have an occasional ache c a l-ut I know the cure. Out comes the Pink ' >; Pills, and after taking one or two of them, away the pain goes. It all seems so good to vpgjl me that at times I can scarcely believe that . it can be true and yet I know that if I had not used these Pink Pills I would still be 'fim suffering agouy such as few people do in this Dr. Williams'Pink Pills contain, in a condonsed form, all the elements necessary to give new life and richness to the blood and restore shattered nerves. They are an unfailing specific for such diseases as locomotor . ataxia, partial paralysis, St. Vitus1 dance, "".V sciatica, neuralgia, rheumatism, nervousheadache, the after effect of la grippe, palpitation of the hean, pale and sallow complexions. all forms of weakness either la. ; male or female. Pink Pills are sold by all . dealers, or will be sent post paid on receipt >V of price. (50 cents -a box, or six boxes for '! $2.60?they are never sold in bulk or by the100) by addressing Dr Williams' Medicine- ' Vi$g Company. Schenectady, Y. iver.?'Latest U. S. Gov't Report I Baking J ! Powder rELY PURE ???ARLY to bed, Eat cakes made ot _ X; buckwheat, To be healthy and lke/&0& ; M BUCKWHEAT MAKES <& The Best k Cakes. Always Light and Dainty. ^ X Y N P?40 * PROFITABLE DAIRY WORK Can only be accomplished with the very bMl if tools and - l4M appliance!. With a Davis Cream Sep* rator on the farm yon are sure of more J and. better autter, while TEfiLJ the skimmed ullt Is a val- Bwjpft uable feed* Farmers will \LjBja make no mistake to get a Davis. Neat mustraieu ?? nailed free iiiiJllw* Agents wanted DAVIS & EANKIN BLDG. & BEFC. 00. C#t. Rindolph A Dtarborn Sts..Chleajo. "Within the Golden Circle" aancUomeiy iljiwt Mail-id free wltli map uy thk .7U0DS INVESTMENT CO., Colorado Seringa, Colo. i International < I n application. Dictionary | iprfmc Oonrt.tlie T.'.S. Gov't Printing Offlc?,an(* O tmieudedbyalltftaM Superintendents ot Schools. o I PRACTICAL PURPOSES. | nd the word wanted. o scertain the pronunciation. q race the growth of a word. Y :arn wha* a word m^ans. O bllsliers, Springfield, Mass. $ ',3 M Df Wit." Good Wife, ieed DLIO 1 from health. f m If you have borrowed from health to satisfy the demands of business, if your blood is not getting that constant supply of fat from your food it should have, you must pay back from somewhere, and the somewhere will be from the fat stored up in the boay. 5 thinness ; the result, nervene blood in health unless you :e?live from hand to mouth. r Oil is mere than a medicine. tes make it a nerve food, too. ood things ever come in this o V 4 utnt it aK.i vtt i elerf st.ls'iivie. All Druggists. 50C? an(J $! N ,.;s: