A ! r I 1 l w , What II a Tonr Cicin1 Eaten ! Mc.ro pc-oplo know of the vlrtne of co i J liver oil than know in what that Tirtne coiifists. It is not that thore is any ppculinr hpallh-givinfr qualitipa about the vital tissues ol the couflfih any more than ftr those of any other fish or of land animals, i Tho virtue of cod liver oil, it is de clared, depends wholly on the food which the codfish baa eaton, and if the cod has not fed on tho rifrht food, hie liver will not yield oil of any more benefit to the victim of consumption or antenna thnn any other fish oil. ' The bent cod liver oil is obtained from cod that have fed on kelp, a sea weed that ia not fonnd on soft or mnddy bottoms. It is a rook weed and does not prow near the shore on the American coast. Every one knows how mnHi better milk is given by cows that have fed on rich pasturage than by those whose feed has been stale hay ; and the cod that has lived in deep water and feasted on the rich, jnicy and aromatio kelp is altogether different fich from tho one that has lived near shore and eaten clams and mussels, a diet that no self-respcoting fish will touch at all when it can have anything else. t hus the oil from ood caught near tho shore is practically worthless, while that made from deep sea cod is one of the most nourishing and health giving of foods. The best cod liver oil Homes from Norway, where all the cod are rockbottom fish and live ex clusively on kelp and similar seaweed. -New York Mail and Express. ' Pnssrldorf and Maintz, in Ger many, have in turn refused a statue of Heine. I Well rut. ! "It mnkvs ma mournful to think," said an Old vatorna of tbe O. A., "that this good, light arm of mine which carried a musket in a hundred fights, should now be all doubled up and out of shape with rheumatism." "Wfrtl look here, where havo jou been living all this time, that yon don't know St. Jacobs OH will cure you." And straightway he went for a lottle, and lo : he was mired also. The straight way Is ths sure way for the ac complishment ot any good In this life, and the seeking of the grunt remedy for the cure of pain is surely the best way. Ask those who have boeu benofltod and they will put yon sti-Right. J A bed, supper and breakfast in Paris in cost ahont fifty cents. Dr. Kilmer's BwAitr-RooT cures all Kidney nnd Bladder troubles. Pamphlet nnd Consultation free. ; Laboratory Blaghamton, N. T. Henry VIII. paid the equivalent ot 17 In our money for a dor. Row's This I TVs effer One HMndre f Dollars Reward for fenv cae of Catarrh that cannot be cured by Hall's Ca'arrh Cure. . F. J.Chsmkv ACdt, Prop,, Toledo, O. We, the undersigned, bare known F. J.C'he. tiey for t hu last 15 years, and believe him per fectly honorable In all business transactions 'and financially ahl to carry out sny obliga tion made hy the.r Arm. ' Worr & Tkuax, Wholesale Drucfftats, Toledo, 1 Ohio. Wai.di.no, Ki.fv.tn & Mahvis, Wholesale l l)ruireits, Toledo, Ohio. Ha'l's Caiarrh Cure is taken internally, act ing directly upon the blood and muoous sur face of the syteni. Price, 75c. per bottle, bold by all JJrugglau. Testimonial frea. Why rut Ofl taking medicine until yon are sickf Yon can keen a box of Hipans Taliulea in the house and at the first sifrns of a headache or bilious at tack a single Uibule will relieve yon. Foanrr Feeble Lnntrs Against Winter with dale Honey of Horehound and Tar. Pike's Toothache Drops Cure in one minute. Mrs. Wlnslow's Soothing Syrup for children teething, softens the (til mi, reduces Inflamma tion, allays pain, cures wind colic. Slip, a bottle Karl's Clover Hunt, the great blood purifier, elves freshness and clearuest to the complez lon and cures constipation. 85 cte.. 80 cts., SI. Good Words for Hood's "I have taken Hood's Sirssparllla for three years with good results. I can truly reoomsjend it for rhenmntlam, lndl Keatlon, catarrh and a host of other Ills My catarrh trouble has decreased in my head and throat, and my other troubles have been Sit'- vurea. MM.Jfft$ M husband has K''y vAV'; 3S 1o taken Hood's if :'y-&Ay&KM Sarsaparllla and it m;i 21 has helped him JHr. u. PhUbrtck. much. I saw no ITjfrfiyeht i'bJllSE" of what" Hood's Barsa- If thUY", r 0Ue Bn,4 d8c"0d ,0 . .u I found that it helped me at once. oefr i Hood'ss,8Cures I shall always have a goo 1 word for Hoo i's Sarsaparllla." Mas. Habbmoh Philbeiqi, Plymouth, N. H. Get only Hood's. ' H o o d" a P 1 1 1 S cure all liver Wj, biliousness. Jaundice, Indigestion, flick headache, gie. "What's thero? Things A' ( ,! Fnr 1h uiv, bit i Hethinks it is some Buckwheat For the morrow's breakfast. lJiiiifl, All.rlo, Jill brill. IkMO ' Vim "MNENK" are the Bst and Mont Bconoml- 7al lulUi aiui lnn wru. lixmy are made ol flue trltith, both nwlra tuimlird alike, and jatittf revtual kl. Qi collar istotiiiskl to Iwu uf anv oIIiht cmd. It a fit it-tit, umr wit an I -i uU, A box of YMi I'uliaxaur iJ'euaiuf CuQa tut Xweuly-i'iY A bawple OotUr anfl Pair of Cnfft hy mU for Bis vouia. puue hi j ia auu .. auurMi KK tUhlULK COL.L.AU COM PANT, VI Frank I in tot , Naw York. r Kill.y Bt., Boaloa. .ilfOlUH Ua.tilnu(uii. ik.wi! Successfully Prosecutes Clalma. 1 wai. i.u,;b fcrui. 'iiMwa Uu.nl. Vae I rwrv ( Gawp APPLES POH STOCK. Earopenn nnthoritios consider the monoy value of fodder constituents in ordinary varieties of apples and pours as somewhat higher than those con tained in an equal weight of turnips, and those of the apple pomace ai about one-third higher ia feeding value than the whole apple. New Tork World. EHORNnfl VOIINO CALVES. Prevention of horns is preferable to dehorning. If a stick of canstio potash ia applied to the spots on the skull of a young calf whore the horns are abont to break through, it will destroy the born and cause only a slight sore, that will give the animal no serious in convenience. Sometimes, however, this application does not reach the root of the horn, and a new growth will spring op. Watch should be kept for this, and the oaustio or knife be appliod as soon aa the growing horn Is aeon. Boston Cultivator. BEST TEMTERATTJHB OF WATER FOR STOCK. There is nothing better for all farm animals than pnre well water. The temperature of it is tho best possible. Warm water is nau6eons to an ani mal, as to a person ; tho refreshing effect of a cool draught of water we all know. Just the same we know bow ice-cold water makes the teeth ache and the whole body shiver, as it takes the heat fi om the blood to be come warm itself. A temperature of fifty-five to sixty degrees is the very best for the animals in the winter, and water from any good well will be somewhere near enough to this. The water should be pumped into the troughs for use, and the troughs drained and immediately covered as Boon aa the stock have drunk, so that snow or ice will not gather in them. Anierioan Agriculturist. BLIND STAOOEnS. The hog when plcthorio and well fed is liable to congestion of the brain, which may pass into actual effusion or apoplexy. In congestion only, which is properly termed "staggors," the animal ia dull and stupid, the eyes are red, the bowels are constipated, and the pulse hard and quick. These symptoms may pass off or may increase, leading to a period of excitement from increased pressure on the brain. The animal runs to and fro, often in a cir cle, hitting against objects aa if blind ; the breathing is laborious, and he may fall down in an unconscious condition. In other cases the effusion on the brain or the apopletio stroke takes place with these premonitory symptoms: The hog suddenly drops as if struck on the head with a hammer, the limbs stiffen, the breathing is hard and snor ing, and a froth exudes from the mouth. In either case the treatment is by promptly daishing cold water over tho animal and especially pouring it from a hight of eight or ten feet on the head. The bowels should bo stimulated by an active purgative injection as follows: Bulphate of magnesia, four ounoes; vii vi turpentine, two drams; soap suds, one-half pint ; mix for an injec tion. American Farmer. CULTIVATION OF ORCHARDS, Gu no other part of the farm is so little attention bestowed as on the or chard. This is the more singular as bo much is required of it. The far mer knows he must fertilize and cul tivate his fields if ha wants a crop to harvest, but with the orchard he ex pects to gather where hn bun nnt 1A or tilled. If he would only stop to coHsiuer ne woum realize that trees, like men, can die of starvation, and ii only imperfectly nourished only in ferior fruit can be produced. lo be profitable orchards must re ceive aa crood care as other ermiu. Tn call attention to their requirements tne Cornell btation, lthaoa, N. Y., has issued a bulletin on the cultivation of orchards. Borne of the points insisted on are th9 necessity for good drainage, natural or artificial, the value of good tUlasre in increasing the availahln f nml aupply and conserving moisture and ine general superiority of level cul ture. Sod is kometimes allowable in apple and standard pear orchards, but never in other fruit plantations, says the bulletin. Even thnn it. ulinuM l.o patitured closely with sheep or hogs. it tue stoca is led at the same time the land will fare better. Watch a sod or chard. It will begin to fail before ou know it. The remedy for these apple failures is to cut down many of the orchards. For the remoinder, the treatment is cultivation, fertilizing, praying tho trinity oi orthodox ap ple growing. rot&Hb. is tho chief fertilizer to be applied to fruit trees, particularly af ter they come into bearing. An an nual application of from 600 to 700 pounds of muriute of potash may be used to the acre in mature orohsrds. Cultivation should begin early and be continued often. It maybe stopped late in the season and a crop can then be sown upon the land to serve both as protection to the soil and as a green mauure. Crimson clover would seem to be tho best for th's purpose. CARE OF DEES. In order to have any reasonable proxpect of a good honey season, bees must lie carefully attendod to during tbe winter and so secured that they will not only bava plenty of warmth but au abundance of food to .carry them through in good condition. There are many theories on the win tering of bees, each bee-keeper prob ably fancying his own better than any ether ; but there are certain general rules that must be obeyed if one ex pects the bett results. An expert bee- keener. IIAfnrA urAnapinir ib liinau fk. Winter. CIltK-A IuiIh tbromrli Aartb frame to bo left in the hive. The discoverer oi this idea was a woman, and to it tho claims to owe the fact that she has never yet lost a colony through ex- Cessiva Cold. Or.linuril v il... to inn! around the outuide cf the frames to get to the outlying honey supply. Sometimes they eat holes through the combs, and this led to the praotica of making free passagoway entirely through the middle frames and a small aperture through which one bee at a time could got to the outer ones. Besides leaving In all of tho honey frames, there should be outside cush ions or board walls for warmth. It is a remarkable fact that bees keep their hives as warm as the temperature of a living apartment. If anyone chooses to ascertain this fact, let him place the hand over the chair cushion or board that ia usually laid over the frames. One of the most important items in preparing bees for winter is that they have a large surplus of honey and that it is disturbed as little as possible. Bee-keepera are fohd of putting thoir colonies on short commons and fend ing in tho spring. Sometimes this may work well, bnt aa a rule tho bees know quite as well what they want as the bee-keeper possibly can. It is by some thought wise to disturb the colonies very little after they have finished the gathering of the honey in the autumn. It the hive ia large, two frames may be taken out, one on each side, and the cushions be put in. Ii the hive is small it is much bettor to have an outside box with a padding of chaff and cover the hive entirely with this, except the space for the door way. There are double hives and patent hives of various sorts, but if an abun dance of honey is left and a little pro tection is afforded, the oolony ia quite likely to oome out in very good shape in spring, whatever the Btylo of the hive may be. It ia often asked whether bee-keop-ing in this climate is profitable. In answer to this it may be said that there are too many uncertainties about the weather to make it at all worth while to go into honey-making aa a business. As a supplemental occupa tion it is a very good thing, but it ia scarcely wise to invest money in it to the neglect of other things. Aa one among many, it is quite remunerative and a very pleasing and interesting pursuit ia addition. New York Led ger. FARM AND GARDEN MOTES. Be sure your hens have a tight roof over them. Injudicious feeding ia tho ruin of many horses. There is a saving of ten per cent, in I ittvor oi cni rations. Blankets are aa necessary for the horses as overcoats for the men. It ia neither economical nor neces sary to feed the horse all the hay he can got. As a general rnle it is the most prof itable to use mature aires and dam in breeding. Tests made at the Michigan Experi mental Station were against flat-bottom foundation. If from any cause surplus honey be comes unfit for table use it Bhould be fed back to the bees. Bees should be prepared for winter aa soon as the honey flow ceases, -whether late or early. The future value and usefulness of the horse depends largely npon the first winter of the colt. A bee-keeper, of Coloiado Springs, thinks alfalfa leaves are,a better pack ing for winter than either chaff or other leaves. . ' Horses that are used for driving on the road do best when fed chiefly on 'oats, with sufficient hay to make a proper ration. . Help the poor ragged hens to get on their winter suits by the addition of a little oil meal or fresh meat to their daily ration. Keep the eLeep out of the rain. A cool dry place ia not objectionable, but a wet tieeoe is a breeder of dis comfort and disease. A Viennese apicnlturist has dicov ered a hive in which there are two queen bees, who live most affection ately together and rule their subject! jointly. If covers, frames, etc, are moved after it is too lata for the bees to ob tain propolis outside or to work it in side, many crevices will be left open, through which cold and wini will en ter. A chaff quilt, or cushion, from three to four inches thick if the upper etory, half-story, or super is left on, and thinner if the cover only is used, should be placed over the frames to abscb the moisture from the cluster. If about to start in the poultry bus iness there are so many breeds to choose from, you better, if you have no choice in the matter, get a breed suitable to your plaoe, surroundings and facilities for keeping and selling. In plauting trees, whether it be cpring or fall, mulch them. In winter it keeps frost out of the ground, and in summer the roots are oool and moist underneath it, and both of theso things are great aids to the trees in re covering from a transplanting. Top-dressing pays the best on land well set with healthy, desirable gratis plants. An old, woruout mowing, in which wild or inferior grasses pre dominate, offers littlo inducement to the top-dressing method of enriching the soil ; suoh land should be plowed. The closest study and the most eareful thought cannot always insure success. But they will bring tho far mer a great deal nearer Jo this result than any method, or waut of luuthod, which neglects to make careful and. timely pluns for the work that ia to be done. Where from any cause it is not prac ticable to use wire netting a a pro tection against the ravages of mice the tress may be saved by ruisiug a small mouud of earth around each tree. Mice usually work close to the ground, so that a small iuouud pro tects front tueui. 1101 SEI10LI) AFFAIR?, WATTRrROOF CKI.tAM. A ccllnr can be so oonatrncte l as to bo waterproof, if the bottom of the floor is first covered with cement, ths walls built thereon laid in cement and the exterior of tha walls covered with cement. This makes practically a water-tight basin. The cement used must be the best Fortland cement, one part; clean sharp aand, one part. After a cellar is built it is not so easy to make it waterproof. Still it can be done. Cover tho exterior of tho wall with the above cement, ditto the bottom, and work the cement in under tbe bottom of tho wall, says the National Builder. If these directions are followed you will succeed. But if cheap materials are used and the work badly done you will be anro to fail. A drain put around tha outside of tho wall, or even inside, below tho cellar floor, may bo efficient in carrying off tha water if you can give it a good deliv ery. Tna ovav. For sponge cake and pound c.tko hnve beat that will in five minutes turn a piece of white paper yellow. For all other kinds of cut cake use nn oven that will in five minutes tnru a piece of white paper dark yel low. For bread and pastry have an oven that will in five minutes turn a piece of white paper dark brown. When the oven ia too hot at first a crust forms on tha bread or cake, which prevents it rising. It ia better when baking bread and cake to have tho oven a little bIow at first and in crease the heat gradually. When baking puff pAsto tho heat shonld be greatest first and decrease later. This ia to koep the pasto in shape. When the oven ia too hot the torn perature may be reduced by putting in it a pan of cold water. When baking in an oven that ia too hot at the top, fill with cold water a dripping pan whioh ia about an id oh deep and place it on tha top grata ot the oven.' Should the oven be too hot on the bottom, put a grate on the bot tom, put a grate nnder tho article that ia to bo baked. nOMB On OF A HOt?3T5HOI.D. Thrr living room is the one room in tho house which, above all others, should be bright and cheerful. If any room must 09 neglected let it not b tho living room. Havo here refined pictures, plenty of books and current literature. Thia ia tho plaoe for the piano, tho mo3t comfortable chaira and cosey corners. Within the pre cincts of such a room one may shut out the world and forget that thera are any troubles to bear. The character of a room depends upon its wall decorations, its carpets, its pictureB and its curtains. We should be careful to have these ot tho right kind, for all others are mere ac cessories. "We could not afford ex pensive things," said a newly married couple, "so we chose the comfortable ones ;" aud this idea, "oomfort," is the secret of all room furnishing. It is not elegant surroundings that make people happy and contented. "What can a queen have mora than we?" aeka an exobange. "If ahe ia cold she can absorb no more heat than we. If (he ha millions to satisfy her appetite ahe can eat no more than we. If she has millions of beautiful dresses she can wear but one at a time, the same as ourselves. Her jewels ar bo costly that they are locked up in a vault for safe keeping; when ahe wears them npon State occasions ahe is constantly shadowed by a guard. We admire ours through the window of the silver smith's and are not bur dened with the responsibility of their being stolen, nor annoyed by a detec tive. Air, water, and sunlight, tho essentials of life, are aa frea to ns aa to the queen ; and even her throne is not so comfortable aa the old rocker in your sitting room. We should, therefore, not despair if we cannot afford costly thing in our homes. We can make our living rooma bright and comfortable, and that goos a long way toward happiness. Boston Budget. I RECIPE8. German Bice Pudding Mix boiled rice ' with a well-beaten egg and a little milk. Tour the mixture into a pan until it is abont one inch thick, and bake till a delicate brown. Powder with sugar and serve with cream or vanilla sauce. Cheese Potatoes Boil potatoes in salt water, rub them till soft, add three tablespoonfuls of grated cheese, a little milk and a little butter. Put them into a pudding dish, aoattet bread crumbs over tho top, and bake half an hour or more. Scalloped Fish Flake the cold fish. Put a pint of milk in a double boiler, adl a tablespoonful of cornstarch mixed smooth in a very little cold milk, and a tablespoouful of minoe.l onion. Let it boil five minutes, thea a Id a heaping tablespoonful of butter, a little ininoed parsley, suit, pepper, Worcester sauce and the flaked fish. Let this boil a few minutes, then stir in tbe yolk of an egq. Pour this iuto a diah, cover with bread crumbs aa I bits of butter, and bake twenty miu ute3. Lamb Chops Santo Put a piece of butter into a frying pan, and when hot lay in the chops, rather highly seasoned with pepper and salt. Fry them until thoroughly doue, but not t jo brown. Should gravy be required, pour off the greater part of the fat, -no J then stir in half a tablespoouful ot flour ; stir nntil the flour browns, then add a gill of broth or water, au ouuoe of fresh butter and the juice of half a lemon. Stir until the sauce be comes rather thick, pour over th6 chops and serve. feouietrliat Eccentric. Nasturtium Solpie, an eccentric cit izen of North New York, who goes nbout with a horse and open buggy, b:it never gets inbide the vehicle, either ridiiig on the horse or loading it, hits secured from a dealer in curios a huge Chineso vase of light blue por ccluiu. This now oooupies the front scut of the buggy, and out of it comes a pole, on top of which is chained a large pink aud white cockatoo. Mr. dulpie, under tho circumstances, now attracts more notioe than ever on his daily shopping tours. Detroit Free I'm. TEMPERANCE. Tsr wianow. Dloijenes wns onoo prenorttrit with a (fob. let of wine at a tea;. Ho threw ths wine on ttm croiinii to the iliitniaj- of nil. "Why itlil you wkXo so mnnh preeloua wlneV" thev all aalil, angrily. And this was nls nnswrr: "Had I drunk It ther wonlt hnve heon double waste. I as wuil as tlio wlno would Bave been lost." no Lojtaitn r-EB sa. Mr. Oecrpii V. Buln. the temperance ora tor anys: "lou often hear ths remark that 1 here s no harm In a glass or wine perse.' I er ss rnonn by Itself . Certainly there is no harm In a glass ot wine by itself. rine agbws of wlno by Itself nnt It rotnnlns there and It Is per sa and It hnrms no one. Hut It you tak It from tha s'lell nnd turn It tusldo a man, then It Is do longer perse." KOW A DOO BFCAM1 A TOTAL ABSTAtXKH. A lady at Westgate-on-SAt had a dof Which soma erIMntemlonn I people taught to take bread whloh had been soaked In beor. The dog, like many a man, began to like ths beer. One day, when a largo party was re turning from a plenlc, Noptune, the dog, was put on the bo.vsnt beside tho driver of tha enrrlage, as he seemed too tired to run. Hs fell, and, although no bones were brokon, he was severely shaken nnd frightened. Never afterwards would lis touch any bread that had been soaked In boor, That fall tuaJe bj'n a teetotaller. TBXATIKO IS ILL-THIATIN9. On 01 the greatest causes of drunkenness Is the habit of treating. Four or rive friends goto a saloon to hava a drink, and they ar oot satisfied until everyone has treat ed, al though If only two had met, two drinks would have been all thy would havo takxn. lltit they tnks four or five, and maybe eight or tan, and then they are all In variout Stages of Intoxteatfon fighting drunk, talkative drank, affectionate drank or suites drunk, ns the ease may be. If everyone had bought his own poison, only one or two drinks would hnve been called for. 80, stop treating, stop being treated t Join the A. X A. that is, the Antl-Troatlug Association. IK HOT COUHTRirS, In answer to the qistlon whether It Is necessary to usi alcohol In tropical clim ates, as Is often claimed, Mrs, Mary Clement Lenvltt writes: "At lllty-tlve years df age, hnvin past most of my life In Mew England upTo that dale, an t having been a total alwtalner all my life, I first entera l tropical lands. Thence to the present time, seveii years, I have been tbe grrnter part of the time in troplsal climates. India, Ilurmoh, Madagascar. West co 'ist of Africa, from tbs Congo to Sierra Leone, rirna.l, are among the coun-trl-s I have visited, and in whloh I have re mained soras months each. It has always been safe not to touch nnvthlug acholic. I have never taken u drop even as medicine. A lcoholic drinks are 1 specially doadiy in hot ollmatos. Everywhere I havo found total abstainers lers llVilo to levers, bowel com plaints, rheumatism nnd other diseases, than thoee who use alcohol even In moderation. In one towu in In lis, I remember, an Eng lish couple wi re tbe ony white persons ex empt troin iiiHlnrutl levers during a three VMira r til,.n,.n -.1 1, , . - . - - - - , ..mm nere iiih only so. staluerslu the plaoe. Alcohol Is a poison elsewhere ?ul,:''or w,tma " tropics than A tkbribli ricrnsc. and sympathy towards every poor human being who has oontraoled the horrible dis ease of alcoholism. I have always pitied the poor, confirmed Inebriate more than ony other human being, for I have seen him In tbe asylums and In tha hospitals and prisons .vivnuwuiiw, 4 UntO StwjD V It 1 1 in of strong drink strapped to the bed whloh ba jiiuiu tun vk suorpiuua anil repines, I hum aUMin him iwnnAhln. . .. 1. 1 1 - " w.uMlllllll, IIDUIUIIU, shrieking, weeping, yelling, moaning and ill. llun.nli.ll. I 1 . . .mov uuiuvu.vniij KHUUIUKflSlI SUppilOailUg or holding piteous pleading, agonizing eon- iw viii'i inn uurnuiu, mmasilO UHmonS and monsters of his own diseased. Inflamed, viaiu. vu, iiiu uurror oi ueurium tremens. Ohlnh mr.it nnrl ...1 1 .v.- i ' able body of tbe victim ! Tha Bufferings In uu u.auB n.w mtuu,a luM TfivU B B U preme convulsion tbe soul flees, appalled, trembling, and stands oowering aud stained with guilt before the Almighty Judge. Ab bott. A M'SIXKttg VIEW OFlfoDRIUT DBIKKIKO. A U'rll , r tohn tm .1.. .1 t 1 I tl """ '.stv.uro.uX IUD IJUeullUU Ol f .' ..Mm nuniuvuua irora a practi cal business nnlnl if 1 1 . 1 i ' - I u. .1.. n, uud, iKUoriUrt-lUw moral and seutimemal aide, says : "Life in- ......uu luiuitiiura iiuu rue nioueraisnrmxer a more dangerous ris' and his mortality greater, benee refuse to Insure hira at or dinary rates or not at all. Mercantile agen cies nod that business conducted by moder ate driukers is more precarious and followed by a greater number of failures, hence rato such iirms low as to responsibillt v. Kallroad companies find that accidents and losses in crease under the oh re of moderate drinker ; that the Income ond stubllliy of tbe rood are tl I It 1 1 tl I . Il .i.l ..Anna... I 1.1. .1 . , u.ouuu, u!,uijuruu wim iQo same service 1)V total ahntnlnnn r.nli.l v. j,. - . w. uHrunt strn n uu uu covers by figures and statistics, whloh hav ... itiusi uinmnK, mat under tue care and control of moderate or exocssivo drinkers the lossea, peril and risks of business are increaaoiL' KPnnulr'll.il,l. ht 11..1 timoio. ' I PtrLLMlN'S OLD MAT A D10HR1BD. Before the war, and back In New Tork State, Charles Gardiner and George II. Pull man were fellow appreuttona at tha cabinet maker' bench. When Pullman came 13 Chicago aud engaged In the house raising business Gardiner came with blm, and when Pullman started to build his first sleeping oar Gardiner was his assistant and confidant. Subsequently Gardiner was tbe foreman of Pullman's first shop, aud many of tha early patent and Improvements, it Is said, were the result of his suggestion and creation. Drink wns Gardiner's only enemy. Through it he lost hi place with til old companion and fellow apprentice. Time and again he would be tuk.ia back to the shops ouly to be discharged for drunkenness. There ha ever been a kindly feeling for Gardiner la the Pullman works. He has lived at Ken sington and Pullman evor slnoe the town wore built, and dally went into the shop and looked at the men working, begged, a few dime and went to the m-anut suloon, where he spent the remainder of the day. He talked but little and preferred to sip hi glass by himself. Yesterday morning, when arraigned for drunkenness, he stood before Justice Kobbins, bis bunds trembled so from the effect of drink he could not support him self and an officer had to hold blm up. He pleaded guilty to habitual Inebriety and was sent to the Washiugtonian Home. .Inter Ocean. TIMFEBAKC MEWS AMP MOTES. Not to train up the boys properly is to help the barkeeper. It does uot take ths lost drink to mike a drunkard but the first. Ths man who drinks when he wants to will some day have to drink when be don't waut to. Mrs. M. E. Gloason, National W. C. T. V., lecturer ou narootiea. cellmates that there are 1,500,000 opium viotlms in this country. The New York Evening Post asserts that the persistent drinking of ohampagne soon firoduees disease of the kidneys in Its dead ieat form. Borne oue oommea ling Phillip of Maeedoa for drinking freely, "That," said Demos thenes, "Is a good quality in a sponge, but not in a king." Tbe murder of an employe of the National Soldiers' Home at (Milwaukee bos sturted a crusade against the saloous and gambling dens whiun surround the hornet Superintendent of Police Byrnes, of New Tork, says that 63,460 violations ot tbe law are known to have been committed by saloon keepers of that city in three months reoemly. The stock of wiues, spirits, eta., laid la for a trip to Euglaud uu l back on one ot tbe largest Alluutln liners is 2500 bottles ot wluua and spirits, 2000 bottles of ale and porter, aud 6000 bottles ot miuoral water. Out of every hundred patients that I have charge ol at tbe London Hospital, seveuiy of tlien owe their ill-health to aluunol 1 cio not suy these seventy per cent, were drunk ardsto the excessive use. Sir Audrevr Clark, M. D. Aacordiug to the official report of criuil nul statistics of Canada tor the your 18U3, tha total uii u'iurof convictions for all caui durlugthe year was 35,053, wlilob wasau In crease of 65J ovor the previou year. Of these, no leas than 11,651 were for drunken ness alone, or mure tha oue-thlrd ol tu eutuu number. Highest of all ia Leavealng Tower. Latest U. S. Gov't Report VJ U T7T W ry .x The Algerian Desert. We vera ioRRing along frontly through tha sand of tho Rahara, bound for the black tents ot El Ifadj Ahmed Abd el Kndor ben el lladj Mohammed. Thia is a long name ; but then we were a long timo potting there, and my memory needed exor cipe. Far away behind ns atrctdhed the ragged ridge of tho Atlas: ahead of us nothing but a gray blanket of sand waving away into an infinity of shiny mist. I bad seen tho same sort of thing in Colorado. Remington said it woa Arizona all over again. Teople prow silent and sensitive when they live on the great pluins, and no won der. To the desert-dweller every star gaina in significance, every ob ject that lifts ita head above tho horizon. Tbe cloud that souds;the bird; the traok of an animal I the ehapo of a tent ; the load of a camel ; the track of a man ; a bunch of grass ; a aign of water whatever arrests his eye on a day'a roaroh speaks to him of nature ministering to a rariety of Lis needs. He must have water and grass; he must have shelter from storms; ho must avoid dangerous gulliea ; must watob for signs of wild beasts; must anticipate tlfo ambush of an enemy and with it all use heaven as his guide, with ita tun by day and stars by night The traveler of the desert plains ia never without occupation ; his eyes are sweeping the uuriaon wimout interruption, ana ne pious ma way hy the help of a Jndg mont constantly exeroised for tha Arab knows no roada whioh are not unmade by one puff of sand. It waa little that we saw in tho shape of humanity a camel train now and flien bearing dates and wool from the interior, the camel swinging aiong wnn irritating regularity, feed ing aa thoy moved, and treading gontly, aa though on rotten cround. The drivera eyed na malevolently, and I telt comfort in reflecting that Franoe supported 50,000 soldieia in Algeria lor tne express purpose of making our journey aafo. The caravans wore escorted by Arab horsomen in white burnoosea, perched high npon tough and springy mustancrs. Each horse man had hia gun balancing aorosa his saadio-Dow, and looked at us aa though repeating imprecations from the Koran. Harper's Magazine. Whoa Clydesdales are used a depth ia reaonea in plowing that ia not pos sible to lighter stock ; and no doubt muoh of the srreat excellence nf Rnntnh and English nlowino- ia dn ta tha sirongin ana steadiness aa well aa in teuigeuoe oi tne Horses. KNOWLEDGE Brings comfort and improvement and! tends to personal enjoyment when rightly used. The many, who live bet ter than others and enjoy life more, with less expenditure, by more promptly adapting the world'a best products to the need of physical being, will attest the value to health of the pure liquid laxative principles embraced in tho remedy, Bvrup of Figs. Ita excellence is due to its presenting in ine lorm most acceptable ana pleas ant to the taste, the refreshing and truly beneficial properties of a perfect Lax ative effectually cleansing the system, dispelling colds, headaches and fevers and permanently curing constipation. It has given satisfaction to millions and met with the approval of the medical profession, because it acta on the Kid neva, Liver and Bowels without weak, ening them and it ia perfectly free from every objectionable eubstanoe. . Pyrup of Figs is for sale by all drnp gists in 60c and $1 bottles, but it is man ufactured by the California Fig Syrup Co. only, whose name is printed on every package, also the name, Syrup of Figa, and being well informed, you will Hot accept any substitute if offered. washed; it tells on the woman who washes. Pear line sn; , work, and works safelv. It leavp want done well ; what it leaves Beware? Pcddleti and good as" Something in place of Pearline, do the e honest j Webster's International Dilior'r? f yy Tho Hest Christmas I VElfalEirS 1 Dictionary ot English, Geoetaphy, biography, Jclion. t0- ; 1 l',J!im(,NAt I Standard of Ih. F S 8Upr.n7.Ton. U V IHo,rr.mmt Ft f " Twi01 5 surScudf Pa Yen RnawTha! There Es Visa "A Second Niagara.." Frank E. finydor callw the great dam over the Colorado Hiver at Ann tin, Texas, "a second Niagara." It ia 1300 feet lon and sirty-eight foet high, raising the stream aixty foot above low-water mark. Not cn'ly will it furnish the city with electric light and power for the pumps of tho water works, but thero will bo a largo sur plus of power for mills and factories. The lake formed by tho dam is twenty five miles long and covers nn area of 2000 acres. New York World. Light narrow gauge railroads are again being tried in England and Franoe. PROGRESS. Tcople who pet the greatest degree of comfort and real en. Joymcnt out nf life, are tlioee who make the most out .v"-. " ",elr opportmi tics. - v"" jn-Tvrpiinn ana "VrT3 (rood Judgment, lead surh nromotlT n oln,,t .ri flt:ikc tint nf tlio.n G il'V'i 'ml,r,vel products of Pt J 1 .' I moilirn Inventive genius li'J . f which best serve the fi. 'r Meeds of their physical X I . JAV !' Accordingly, and improved products of and profrcflive imoj1b pre found to vinpiov the most refined and , ,perlccl laxative to re? rulnte and tone uo tbn stomach, liver, ami , - bowels, when in nerd rsiteli an atrent hence tbe creat popularity of Dr. Pierce's rieasotit l'elk-t. These are made from the purest, most refined and concentrated vegetable extracts, and fi..-m forty-two to forty-four are contained in each vial, which is sold at the same price as the cheaper made and more ordinary ? tills found in the market In curative vir ues, there is no comparison to be made be tween them and the ordinary pills, as any one may easily learn by sendiiifr for a frve ample, (four to seven doscB) of the rel icts, which will be sent on icceipt of nania and address on a postal card. QNCEUgEO THEY ARB ALWAYS IN PAVOH. The Pellets cure biliousness, sick and bilious headache, dizzinesa, costiveness, or constipation, sour stomach, loss of appetite, coated tontiie, indigestion, or dyspepeia, windy belching, "heart burn," pain and distress after catinfr, and kindred derange, menu of the liver, stomach and bowels. Put op in (rlass vials, therefore always fresh and reliable. One little "Prllrt" I a laxative, two are mildly cathartic. A a "dinner pill," to promote riifreatinn, take one each day after titnurr. To relieve distress from ovtr eatini, they re en equaled. They are tiny, tug-ar-coated granules; any child will readily take them. Accent no substitute that may be recoro tnended to be "Inst as pood.'' It my M better for iht dealer, because of paying him a better profit, but he is not the one who. avrrft help. Address for fire sample, World's Dispensary Mkoical Asso. CIATIQN, 663 Main Strect,Huftalu, N. Y. TUB SALES LADY, Oftn la the morning Ot wfjiriueHK, tudtn;r limbic I Krtfrv.iiillyjll, is'or (it to 90 to the store, hit Uto near lo re miv in &way. One Ripfins Tabute Taken at rlflit, nolore rrtlrlnv, Or just after dinner, , Has been knowu To drive away tliat WearlueH fur months. EASTMAN OOlKOR, porwitniBirataV N. Y otrn both swxe ti brt tHlai-at ioua) cvlran'aiFfi aMMAlOirMlCOAt. HPHlinrui; DNl tUtlUftkCMB; tle'UJ Ptu4l. Superior luatruftlon. lepaj-iiut-iitaof Hoi A JsWiWrv? ami Buntn MuJiVj; hhorthunrt and Typ writing; JTiifc and JHvdem lAnwaai JVntfeait thipantt Tratn(j; the rlrtnenttu-v liraiirhm. a NO VACATION. fpliUni abii..M7 f.. AMra for (.tal'u CLKMKNT O. O AINKH. l'i irleuU 80 Waahinirton Ktreet, fougbaxeepaie, hw York. . GullEGE H V M l7-4 yl-urtt.. sua i'reveum iUitmmtttlamt, ludiKusiiuu, m Dytpeiwua, Harlburi, L'tuarru fttt t AslUmA. a f L' ful la Mtirif tui fr evar. (.'IwattHtM tho T m Teeth aal Promote ttis A (i.it1Ui. burUmi A F tQeUnjMth.CurlfTobAOtK) iU'jh. Et:il-irn-.vl f by Ui MAtkutl Kacittiy. btmtl fur 1", 1,. r- A rnl pacliu-i. Urf Stamitor itnt.il Av. f UvO. it, i.Ai.ai, Wt .hi a:., i-t-.v ; PI1 YTOI.A4 A HKURV T ! K 4 TM fc N T tut tuiau J AiUuiuuii, iiiR, Our ix-.u'u-: u ii Biihjfot U Bent Krtni ami h yvH wwriii readmit; trtial mem tuexiKiiivt aitftouty nfui:f tin'? it. Ai'ir4 iHiBKti'kK 4 Takkl, I'nariiiaMUrtl, UMI Arcli Hi., I'd it-Mfli-l.lm I', Hm ami rM Intn hlUhrd n 1 H 1 "V. UfAM T NKWN IV.TTKIi of valueii6 IffaHLI Oh fit f-'-K Ui luauiernor thin iti-r, ChwHea A. i ) l v ti A r,. 4oV. li Ht., N. V, It's a cold day .1 a for the housekeeper when Pear li tie wts left. Take Pear line from washing and cleaning and r.othing remains but hard wnrL- If shows in t'1' undone, it ought not to do tome unscrupulous grocers will tell you or " the same aj Icaillne." IT'S FA I ' I i J r 4 rearhnc is never Dedjled. aud if vnnr racrr y"it ihinp ttKiiithack JAMES FY T v- C. Merrlam Co., IutM., Bpln-el, MBB- ; eud fur fitat iMuupblet outiudum- iwcuusu pu-""11!611015!' - is Sanson tr.i Us3 " 1 - f .4 j.. i
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers