»HOTH£* life SAVtO. Urt G. VT FMki. of ilelliborj. Mi. «f» of Q. W. Fo»k*. Sheriff ef Wieo-
tnlco County, mj»: "1 »uffreed with Urt-
H ney rouplRlot ? forelebt ye«r«. [ It cam* oo toe
I gradually.
felt I
and
weak. was | short of breath | and was trimbled with liloattnc after catiny. and my limbs were baiily kwollen. Oo>' doctor told me It wouid/iiislly turn to Kricbt's disease.^ 1 waa laid up at one time for three week*. 1 had not taken Doan's Kidney PUU more than ttiree»-dajs when the distressing aehin: aero's my back disappeared, and'I was soon enFor sale by all dealers. Price 50 cents. Foster-MllhnniCo. Buffalo. >f. V. NEW USE FOp PHONOGRAPH.With It a Physician Cures a Caae .Without Seeing Patient. ■*A novel use for the phonograph Impressed mo the other day.” says s clergyman In the Philadelphia Record. "I wa* calling on my doctor and ho told me of It then. He aald a patient of hla. while on a visit to California. . had developed a bad eongh and feared that Ibis cough was of a tubercular natnfe. His heart also was weak and v he was anxious dbout that, too- ' Well, for the doctor to go all the way to California would have been expensive and for the patient to have come to Philadelphia would have been Impossible. In the dilemma a phonograph waa called In. T£c tick man first talked into the phonograph til . his symptoms. Then he conghed before It. and then, with the help of an Instrument that highly magnifies sound, two or three minutes' beating of his disordered heart was registered on the sensitive cylinder. "The outcome was wonderful. The , Philadelphia doctor, receiving the phonograph record, ascertained that his patient's cough was not a consumptive one. and that his heart wav not seriously affected. The doctor let me listen to the record In bis office. It was Impressive. First I heard the patient. In a weak voice, detailing bis symptoms—a pain here, an ache there, and so on. Then I beard him coughing. Then I heard his heart pulsating In an odd. irregular way. " Thanks to the phonograph.' the doctor said. 1 diagnosed that case as well as though my patient has sat be-
side me.' ”
NEW JERSEY _STjlTE NEWS
The Dc; arlmctit of Factory am' Workshop Insp.ciinn, which is noa making a rkibi labor intcMigatior throughout the State, hat decided t<: proceed wherever possible against pa rents who swear faJscly concerning th< *gt» of their children in order to sccurr < u.plo) ment for the little ones. It hai been found thAf in many cases tht erred of parents for the paltry earnings oi the children it the principal cause ■ •f the violations. Just how this reform u to be accomplished it somewhat of 4 (.ucstir.n, as the department-* lacks rends to protecr.te to many law cases I'd speaking of the situation Secretary Swayac taiJ: It ha* not yet been settled jsi»t what is the proper course to pursue. The la-v seems mandatory in compelling the department to bring ••••t* against the parents who violate :hc measure's provisions. We have a number of such cates in the South Jersey glass iliitricti and in Paterson. Newark and Jersey City. The majority of the complaints are against
We
e de-
Asthma
“One of tnv daughters bad a terrible ease of asthma. Te tried almost everything, but without relief. U’e then tried Ayer's Cherry Pectoral, and three and one-half bottles cured her.”—Emma Jane Entsminger, Langsville. Q.
Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral certainlycuresmany cases of asthma. And it cures bronchitis, hoarseness, weak lungs, whooping-cough, croup, winter coughs, night coughs, and hard colds. n>m••<*•: Itt.'at.St. AEfcwitsW-
Small Potatoes result from a lack of Potash in the soil. Potash produces size and quality. W« have
lUpaosTabatMara the beat dyspepsia
J A hundred nfllllon* r of ibato have be*n aold In tha Dn'ted States In a tingle year. Every Ulnesa nrisfag from n disordered stomach is vtOsesd «r cored by thrlr sat. ■maos Is It .ibst discs Iksaa Che stomach It may bs safety _ ■acted lbars is no condition of UI health tbit will not bs besrittad or •srsd by the occasional use of Elpane ShhsUa. Physicians know them and Wgmk Wgh'ly of (bem. All druggUU “i«m. Tbs five-ceot packsgs is I for an ordinary Deration, and tbs Family Bottle, sixty orals, eon la las y ■ bossabold supply for a year. One \ gsnsrslly gives rsllsf within twenty
l< rminrd to^brAk up these violations if it is possible to do so, but the amount of more) is so limited that we V’uld not pay the cKpense of such litigation. It is likely that an increased amount will be asked of the next Legislature to permit of continued effort tc break up the -evils of ch.ld slavery. John Brown, the subforeman of the Winslow section, who disappeared or Friday afternoon and wa- supposed tc hive been tie uietim oi foul fifty, wa.Uu:ud tn CfnrJtn by Detective Curtis of the Fennsylvaiiia _ Railroad, ant* taken -to his home in Hamraonton Brown is in a mattered-up condition ar.J his version of the |Hair i- that aftei he struck Antonio Sacc.i with the hot tie he was set upon by two companion* «t Sacco, who were out ■g-inning anc had bought the Beer which had caused the tight. When he started for hihome Friday evening hr wa* in such J daisd condition. hr • tatted towarf WtrtMow Junction and kept on going until he walked to Camden. Bffon Justice of the Peace Horn Brown re fu-rd to give any testimony against thtwo men who he cl?tm> avauited him rasmg: "l struck the lir*t blow." "just before he died Thomas Smith a carpenter, of Salem, revealed to hiwife. Kie hiding place of his savings, Mr. Srnkh had always been a hard working man, but even his wife did no' know that Be had st:recede! in savini anything. ^Vhen she looked in an oh to.sl cbeeff a* directed, she found thro fat pocket-books that arc said to ba*« contained nearly %xao. The knife of a surgeon, treat mg a pa tient for appendicitis, i* the only hop. of Mrs., Theodore i'ootic. «i Trento: for the recovery of a valuable diamond which became dctacljcd from her rinj while she was frying byrtdbt at a sup j-er in the aid of the Evangelical Lnth crJn Church of the Saviour, of whicl •he i* r. leading member. She i* con vinced the diamond became embedde. in an oyster and wa< served to"one oih- patrons of the supper. Robert Reeves, a i »-ycar-o!<J lad o C.-Jib'town. arcidentar.y -hot himsd while gunning, frotfi fhr^effeet* * o which he die-1. Reeww placet! his gut partly threugh a wire fence and. as hreached the other side attempted to pul the weapon through when the trigge eaugt t. The load entered his stom ach. and he-died in great agOhvT - An -•vertumed oil stove caused i, jkicoo blrze in- Princeton. The firstarted in a resttnrant on Witlirrspoo' street, which was complete!» destroyer The Princetot\ Opera House als-.-aught fire and wa- damaged while th -club rboms of the Odd, Fellow* Ha! were ruined with smoke and watet Jnsuranrc ?iooa Congres-man Gardner intends iotre dneing a bill for deepening the ghah nels of the inlets to Cape May and At
Untie City.
Work on the new filter plant at th water works in Glouce*tcr City wri' soon be commenced. It #11 refpjir three months to complete the plant. A new theatre to be named the Al hnmbra, will be erected on the bead front at Pennsylvania Avenue. Atlanti City. Edward C. Boicc i* back of th enterprise. . . An effort will be made in the Legislature to secure an appropriation t> purchase pictures- of the five JerseSigners of the Declaration of Indepen ounce, Richard Stockton. John Wither -poor.- John Hart. Francis Honkimoi
and Abraham Clark.
The police hare destroyed the suspi cious caves found on the outskirts o Gloucester Citr last week, supposed ti be the deni of thieves, bet later loom to be the headquarters of boys playin» truant from the public schools. Mrs. Ellen Fitzpatrick. notec thronghont Camden for her kindnes. to the poor, died at her home in thai city after an illness oi five weeks. Mas. Minnie Ebele. of Pensai<k-en Who, it it said, threw a lighted Ump at hes daughter on Sunday, setting fire to the house, was adjudged insane by a
commission In lunacy.
Carbolic Add Waa ■ Nuisance. An exploring expedition in a remote part of China had a queer experience, which one of the party thus relates: “A large bottle of carbolic add bad been broken Inside Its wooden case. We exhausted oar Ingenuity In hopeless effort to unscrew the cover.. We feared to carry It farther, aa the burn tag tears distilled by tt destroyed everything they touched. We dared not throw It aside, lost'the unsophisticated heathen should qrtnk it Is a cheering >r medicinal beverage. We had no Uma tp watt and empty 11 as the fatal fluid would only Tickle drop by drop through a chink which had .been can ttnpsly and laboriously excavated with a blunt hunting knife. .What were we to do? Degraomg as the confession' oust appear, we had to deposit the torpedo in the middle of the yard and throw bricks at It until It was
of Potato. of White River Junea potato with a thumb and three ftagen, the latter
Freaks of Hair Dressing. In Abyssinia oat method of doing the. hair that Is adopted bjr' watriors is to stroll into the market place, buy a pound of butler and putting it wpfen the top of the hair,' stand still while the*nn arranges things.* When the hair is thns dressed with melted butter - the Abyssinian knows that fate cannot, or will not, touch him—he i* a picture of' well-drdised elegance done in oils. Another Myle is to tre»t the hair, and every tress means something. A young warrior with a head ol hair undressed is of no account; he has not yet killed a man. When, ho*ever, he ha* done so all his hair is shaved except enough to make one tress, which is of the same significance as a notch on a -pistol stock. After that every man he kids entitles him to add another tres*. until at a conquering hero of one hundred tresses he is a, formidable man to try conclusions with, says the Cbicag< Some of the New Hrbride* people do their hair up in a buntj) on the top of the head and slain it yellow, w' ~ the inhabitants of Ombvt island pai through a tube so as to make a kind of plume. The Marquesas chief'! vonte method is to shave all the head except I wo patches, one over each temple. where he cultivates two horns of hail? No doubt this is to render hiir more a thing ol terror to his encmiethan ol admiration to his friends. Hij reason for shaving the rest.of the lira I I is to allow more space for tattooing | as if til the available skin of the bod' were not. ehbngh. | No one has visited Fiji in the past without being astonished al the fearful and wonderful stjles of hairdressing I They arc geometrical, monumental, pyramidal, trepazoidal. An ^additional factor in this production of the grotesque is that the hair varies in color lime varies in bleaching power, or the juice of the mangrove in coloring matter. Between black and Pliite the colors run through the blue-black and all shades of red ami yellow. Often lialf the hair is red ami the other half white, giving a kind of piebald effect.
' Ap Uaprolitkbla (.
GRATEFUL, HAPPY WOMEN
ig ,. to pedestrians, unless the person peafadee ir decidedly tfnprepossetsing. and provided, ol coarse, the request i« ■made. in.proper form. A farmer, returning from town with an empty produce -wagon, overtook a young man plodding along with the j discouraged air of a city man unusued I
to dirt roads.
' Hullo. Jersey!" cned'the stranger, briskly. ' Can a man get a lift to Vine- 1
land? - ’
"I don't see why he can’t." respond- , ed the farmer, in a non-committal way | "Then I'll take a ride." said the j stranger, vaulting into the wagon, and ' * nuking himself comfortable. After two^pr three miles had been traversed, the stranger paused in hi* j inconsequential talk long enough to 1 'observe.— "It's quite a distance to Vineland?" "Yes, it is a distance," admitted the
farmer.
Another mile was passed, and then the stranger inquired.— "About how far is it to Vineland?" ' Well, replied the farmer, meditatively, 'keeping' -traight ahead, the way we're goin* now. it’s about twentyfive thousand n,il«*: but if you'll ffet out and hoof it back it ain't more'll six
; Thank Pe-ru-na far Their Recovery After Years of Suffering.
t
l and "hoofed"
Drinking Water. It is safe to say that pure w-atcr be drunk at any lime and with hardly any limitations «avr such as might appeal to any one. Water is universally man's greatest and safest drink and. lightly Used, would in itself largely help to extend his life well towards the ccn tury mark. Food tastes better and ii more agreeably rcli*hed by the wratrr drinker than by those who drink wi at table Strong liquors taken at time* confer no useful assistance t>a*Mng the dangers of life, and in se interest it would be nqavr to safety let. nature's . -provi-ion for drink have iufl credit, as being the best, and accept nd substitute. A good drink for man is pure water, and the ordinary drinking water of a country is or shoold be always appreciated by the dweller in that .country. - "»
How Trees Differ as to Their.4}oots. Trees whose roots arc of the same length and fibre do not thrive as well as those which arc unequal because tliey develop belter when their roots reach for nutriment in different strata or depths of the earth. The oal* could not lise in soil where the pine would thrivr luxuriaplly. This is owing to the na litre of the tree*. One requires the most »ol*'l nutriment. The pine requires light, sandy soil.and the atmos plierie conditions of sunshine and rain The oak. maple, elm. hemlock., birch and beech all require warm and clean .sod. Tree* arc noted for picking hut she attractive place*, and where thcr; arc flourishing forests may be found th!>r,t land and the ' soil always productive.
A Notable Owl. The Zoological Gardens have invariably, possessed -peomens of the owl family in superabundance, but s new arrival is of an unusual character. An owl from Australia, which has the technical name of llieraeoglaux conntvrtiand the pseudo-vernacular name of the "winking owk” is quite a novelty to thcollection Blinking owls arc well known; winking owl* open a new chap ter; But after all. if it has to connive as the Latin name scAn* lu urge, it must wink rather than blink. On the tame day there arrived a barn-owl fro:u foreign parts. This bird has the wide*: range over the globe of any bird. or. at any rate, it is not exceeded by any. There are burn-owls even in the remote Galapagos. They "snore" and "hiss." not merely from China to Peru, hqt throughout the habitable globe, save Sweden and New Zealand. The paper bills of the United States printing office amount to $750,000 a year. Frra—r-wwwwf -»«►'. No auornwrvo >*- "<* *’•••- flrsl dvv's «—o-O- KH»«> Orws Nerreqes-orse *5' nvlb-v .t !w *0-1 trasttsalrw* Pr.B.H.KLl»«.U<l..*tl Ae-‘«*l..Phlli..«»i.
Mrs WI a* !->«'> to iwwiWav.softw.:*tlwiAllays oalveow* •; o.l - ill'
I do not bellrv* riso s r-ur*-T«yCox»uirfp tl,in ban ■annual tor eon eh* androids*r.Doraa, Trialty Kpring*. laa.. Feb. It. DM
Female Weakness ta Pelvic £25 - Catarrh. . ;
A'wivS Half Sick Are !he W.m r Mho Have Pevic Caiirrti.
fireman. Away frvtn Heme. In Great Britain and the eolonle* lire 150.000 German*, a* against 120.000 In Anstria. 112090 l:i Switzerland, lOO.OOp in Rnaxla and 00.000 In France.
. Among flowers the i-UryMintbemuin I* aid to' lira the longest after being rat.
Mow', This? ytt offer OaFHaadfwt Dollar* Reward fot any o*ee of (Mura that cannot he coral by Ball'* (Mazrh Cura. t. i. Caesar A Co.. Tolado, O. We, th* nAenlgwed. bora kdowd f. J. Cbeuey for the Urt IS ymrt, sad belter, hla perfectly Honorable la all uwlasa* tnoaaeUoasaaJ ffoaaoiaUy able to curt out aay obligations made by their firm. Wcrr A Tacax, Wbotama Dragglst*. Toledo.
O.
Wtumro. Ktxxax h Msanx, Wholesale
Draggteta, Toledo. 0.
Ean-ejatanb fan I, Uhra latrnmllr aoV-
Fall's ( »t*i igdiraAly a
laces of tbe eyetea. 'J eetlmoalels sent tree. Frier. Tfic. per bottle. Bold by all DraggUU.
Kail-a Family FUh era the beet.
Damascus now contains about Ibe rame number, of Jews that it bad in tbe time of St. Paul. In the middle of tbe first centnry of onr era some JO.OOu Jews lived In Damascus and were governed by an Rtbnarcb: the present Jewish community Is computed fit
Jfwit 11.000. •
Catarrh cured at home Three prepamina* !a one rmekage. A*k your dealer for 9 Dr. Hartley a Graat Bemedy.” Bt aarm yon get it Agfa.. Stanley A Brawn Drug Co- Ualto..Mg. Five hundred and sixty thousand ner too* in the United Slates are depeadeot
toon the street car* for sappnri.
CtPSIQUa VASELINE tvorop x ■ oosj^eai aui mamM aHSSSTsaris 1 Mil 1 ■ rt li I* ■ r, wnwd ■

