The Flrt Item on Banks. The first "run" upon banking insti tution! in London of which any record exist took place in 16G7, in which year several Lombard street bankers aud goldsmiths who had loaned money en trusted to them found themselves un able to meet demands for immediate payment. With all her agricultural wealth, South Dakota is also third iu the list of gold-producing States. The aggre gate of gold produced in the State last year was $3,829,575. Poet Tobacce Spit tad Satoke Toar lift aaj. To quit tobacco easily and forever, be mag netic lull ot life, nerve anil vigor, take No-To-Bao, llio wonder worker, that makes weak men strong. All druggists, toe or II. Cure guaran teed Booklet and sample free. Address Sterling Kernel Co.. chlearn nr New York. In nil countries more marriages take pluco In June tlina In any other niotitb. Five Cents. Everybody knows that Dobbins' Klcctrio Soap is the befit In the world, and for it) years it has sold at the highest price. Its price Is now 5 cents, same as common brown soap, liars full size and quail ty.Onler of grocer. Alio Junn Ponce de Leon discovered tho coast ot east Florida In 1512. E. B.Walthnll A Co., Prwrni.sts Horse Cave. Ky., my: "Hall's Catarrh t'iiro cures every one that bikes It." Sold bv Dniifirlsts, 75c. In tho Klondike region In midwinter the un rises from 9.30 to 10 a. tn. and sets from 2 to 3 p. m. To Car Constipation Forever Take Cascnreta Candy Cathartic lOe or So. If G C C. fall to cure, druggists refund money. Since 1892 thorn has been a decrease of 1000 students In the Scotch universities. Fits permanently cured. No fits or nervous ties after first day's use of Dr. Kline's Great Nerve Hestnrer. .trial bottle and treatise f reo Du. R. 11. K i.i hk. t.td)l Arch St-PhllaPa. A doctor In France Is not permitted to Inherit property left to him by a deceased patient. No-To-Bae for Fifty Cents. Guaranteed tobacco bablt cure, makes weak ' men strong, Dioou pure. 60c.l. All druggists. Meerschaum Is a silicate of magnesia, and Is to be found chiefly In Asia Miflor, Greece and Madrid. Eat in Haste And sutler at leisure. When your abused stomach can no longer cheerfully and properly perform Its duties, a few dosos ot Hood's Snrsaparlllu nre like frosh water to a withered pinnt. This medicine tones the stomach, restores digestive strength, cre ates an appetite uud with a little care In diet, the patient Is soon again in perfect health. Try it and you'll believe in It. HoodVSa Is America's Greatest Medicine. Hood's Pills cure constipation. SSceuts A Fortune From a Scare. An inventive genius who suffered from attacks by stray dogs when riding his wheel, set his wits to work to devise something which would be an effica cions, and yet comparatively harmless, means of defense. As a result he has bronght out and patented a pocket pistol which will shoot ammonia, water or other liquid. The most vic ious dog cannot withstand a few drops of ammonia in his month or eyes, and yet there is no danger of actually in juring a valuable animal which might playfully annoy a rider. The weapon has proved so much of a success as a - ,1 i v means oi aeiense as wen as iun-uia&-ing, that the lucky inventor is realizing much money from his device. Some of the wooden churches of Norway are fully 700 years old and are still in an excellent state of pres ervation. Their timbers have success fully resisted the frosty and almost arctio winters because they have been repeatedly coated with tar. TUMOIi EXPELLED. Unqualified Success of Lydia B. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. Mrs. Elizabeth Wheelock, Magno lia, Iowa, in the following letter de scribes her recovery from a very criti cal condition: " Dear Mm. Pinkiiam: I have been taking yonr Vegetable Compound, and am now ready to sound its praises. It has done won ders for me in relieving me of a tumor. "My health has been poor for three years. Change of life was working upon me. J was very much bloated and was a bur den to myself. Was troubled with mothering spells, also palpitation of the heart and that bearing-down feci. Ing, and could not be on my feet much. " I wts growing worse all the ime, until I took your medicine. "After taking three boxes of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound Lozenges, the tumor passed from jne. "My health has been better ever since, can now walk quite a distance and am troubled no more with palpita tion of the heart or bloating. I rec ommend your medicine to all sufferers from female troubles." It is hardly reasonable to suppose that any one can doubt the efficiency of Mrs. Pinkham's methods and medi cine in the face of the tremendous vol ume of testimony. MPWTTfl"rITIIIS PAI'EK WHEN KEI'LY. 11LJJ. X1U11 I Mi TO )ADVT.-. NYNU-28. CB1STIPATI0I1 ' "I bare gono 14 dare at a time without aveeat the bowels, not being able to more ibem except by using but water tujectluns. Cbroolc ooDstluatlon for seveu years placed me in Iblt terrible condition; during tbat time I did ev erything! beard of but nuvur f uuud any relief: tuck wu my case until I Im-ksu using CAgCAHKTH I now have from one to tbree passages a day, and If 1 was rlrb 1 would give IKWVU fur cacb movement! It !tsucna relief. ' avi.iieu L. 11 cut, V3t Uuwell bu lxtrott, Mich. Pleasant. Pnlatablc, Potent. Taste Good. Do Good, ftever Mlckeu, Weaken, or Gripe, 10c, 2Uc, Iiuc. ... CURE CONSTIPATION. ... wrtta( u, CmW, tstesr. iwimJ, iw. at 111' I ffp CANDY CATHARTIC TWADI MAKH BtOISTIfO 1 Vegetables For Hens. Do not neglect while planting your garden to arrauge your supply of cab bage, beets, etc, for the fowls next winter. There is no one thing more beneficial or more highly relished by a flock of fowls thau either cabbage or beets. Both are easily raised, and easily cared for during the wiuter. Oue head of cabbage every other day will be sufficient for tweuty hens and surely, when jndged by results, the littlo trouble and cost are well spent. Beets can be fed either raw or cooked, the latter way, perhaps, be ing preferable; but cabbage should be given uuoooked always, llaug a head so, that the hens will have to jump to reach it, and yon will be surprised at the exercise they thus get. i liens will often work in this way wlien will not scratch for groin. So do not neglect now to provide a win ter's supply. Sulphur lu the Garden, j To keep the tomato gist from ruin ing young plants, mix equal parts of sulphur, red pepper and snuff. Dust the mixture over the plants while they are wet with dew or damp from sprink ling. Use the bottle lamp at night to catch the first insect millers before they deposit their eggs. Place the lamp in a pau of water in which you have put two or three spoonfuls of coal oil. The lamp attracts the millers, they fall into the water and oil and your work is finished. Sprinkle your plauts and garden once a week with wood ashes. Do not use too great a quantity of ashes or you will kill the plant. If yon have a tree, rosebush or vine of any kiud that is decaying, find the decayed spot. If in the roots, scrape off all earth, clean off the root and cut away the decayed portion, apply sul phur to the spot, putting sulphur arouud tho roots; take away all the old earth and fill up with fresh, rich soil, and your tree or vine will take on new life. To make young plauts and flowers grow, spray with strong sulphur water every other day. Agri cultural Epitomist. Turning Horses Out to Grass. Horses are exceedingly fond of grass. Yet no horseman who has experienced the evil of changing horses from old hay to new, even when the latter was thoroughly cured, will think of giving fresh grass to horses thnt are hard at work. It is so succulent and innutri tions that it inevitably throws work ing horses into a diarrhoea, and inca pacitates them for hard labor of any kind. So soon as - a horse is set to work under such circumstances, all the strength goes out of him, no mat ter how well he may be fed. The only horses that cau be safely turned to grass in summer are those that have been hard driven on city pavements, or on the race tracks, and whose hoofs have been worn so that they are no longer good to hold a shoe. Such horses can be turned to pasture with great advantage. In the cool turf their hoofs grow sound again, and after a few weeks rest of this kind they will be ready to go to hard work again. But such horses should always have a grain feed, preferably of oats, every day, and they should not be driven on the road nt all while their new hoofs are growing. As for farm horses, they should be allowed no grass at all when they are working. If their feed is too coustipoting, give them a bran mash on Sunday, when they have nothing to do. Put some linseed meal into it. This is far more strengthening than grass, and it will keep their bowels open without provoking a strength exhausting diarrhoea, as grass will surely do. American Cultivator. Growing. Squashes. The squash is a heavy feeder and must have an abundance of fertilizer to do well. Applying good, fine, well rotted barnyard manure is the best method of furnishing plant food. At the outset do not think of saving ma nure. If you can possibly get it, ap ply not less than ten cords to the acre. Put the bulk of it on broadcast, plow ing it in, reserving only one good shovelful to place in each hill. Lot the hills be made ten feet apart each way. It is important to allow plenty of room, as crowding means an excess of vines and a loss of fruit, plant not fewer than ten seeds per hill, as it is necessary to allow for some losses from depredations of bugs. Of course not over three or four good strong plauts are to be left in each hill. The squash is badly troubled by at least three forms of insect life. The striped yellow beetles come first aud tho farmer must be on the lookout for them, since often during an hour or two of a bright sunny day these pests will ruin every plant in a hill. They seem to issue from the earth in legions and pounce npou the tender leaves as soon as they peep out of the ground. Land plaster, with tho ad dition of a little kerosene oil, is the 1 t - L . ... remeuy ior tuese insects. AUU a couple of tablespoonfuls of kerosene to a two-quart measure of the plaster. thoroughly mixing. Next comes the black or brown bug, which smells so offensively. Place somo bits of wood. as shingles, around each hill and these bugs will collect beneath them to pass the night and may therefore be caught and killed each morning. The third great enemy the squash has is tho cutworm. This is an insect difficult to find until tho mischief has been done. Tho best preventive measure is the use of wood ashes and lime in the squash hills and about the vines, It is well to change the land upon which squashes are grown abcut every year, to, in some measure, escape the many insect pests. American Agri. tmlturist. Huggestlona For Trnek Growers. The following suggestions from the Louisiana .hxperiment Station are to th point for the farmer, trucker, or f nc wno pmnts a iamur eardei "Truck farming means intensive high farming. Lrnds dedicated to truck must be heavily fertilized, not with commercial fertilizers only, but such home-made mauures as will in sure large supplies of organic matter. Tho frequent incorporation of vege table matter by the growing and turn ing nnder of some leguminous crop preferably cow peas (clover at tho North will auswer the same purpose) supplemented by mineral mauures, will iu a few years render these soils well adapted to truck growing. "If stable manures be used, they should first be thoroughly composted and several times piled and cut down, in order to bring them into a most available condition as plant food. A compost of stable manure, cotton soed, acid phosphate and kaiuit, mixed with such proportions as will suit the crop to be grown, will be found a very ef fective fertilizer, perhaps superior to any other mixture. "When the supply of home manures is inadequate for tho demands of yonr orop, these may be supplemented by cotton seed meal, acid phosphate and kaiuit, mixed to suit the kind of vege table growth. "Froper rotation must be observod in truck growing as iu general farm ing, if the fertility of the soil be maintained and maximum results de sired. A slight knowledge of botany. yea, even of the character of vegetables grown, will greatly assist the former in determining the rotation to be adopted. Melons, cucumbers and squashes belong to one family, and should not succeed each other. Egg plants, tomatoes and Irish pota toes form another, and beaus and peas another. "Always follow a crop by another of a different family. Expressed in a simpler manner, roots should not fol low roots. A tap-rooted plant will follow well a fibrous-rooted one. After a heavy manuring, cabbage, onions, Irish potatoes or egg-plonts should be planted, since these require excessive fertility for best results. Follow these crops with tomatoes, squash, etc., aud these in turn by beans, peas, eto. A farmer . will soon have a suitable rotation of both crops and fertilizers." Poultry Notes. Don't feed too much. Less grain and more grass and meat is best now. The chicks that are being raised now for pullets should receive the best of care. To overfeed them will be worse than useless. Neglect of the hen house often comes from inaccessibility. It should be made convenient for the hen and the owner. Let it be light, warm, comfortable aud roomy. Give the poultry plenty of good, cool and refreshing drink these warm days and see that tho supply is not exhausted. Grit is essential, too, and should be supplied in some form or other. If too far from market to make poultry pay, the farmer should find no excuse for not raising enough for his own table, and that right liberal ly. Compared with pork, poultry meat costs less and is more nourish ing and healthful. To learn how to govern fnturo operation in the hennery, mark down the number of eggs laid weekly, the cost of food, aud learn under what conditions and at what season your hens lay most. Instead of counting carcasses sold, weigh them; and then note the losses from death or acci dent. This will interest you. WISE WORDS. Neglect bolts the door of oppor tunity. Salvation is not a thing; it is a con dition. Some little men love to live in the clouds. Fear-Not, plus Fret-Not, equals Fail-Not. Self-denial is the thermometer of true charity. Love can outrun the feet in carry ing good news. Care is the stumbling-block in the pathway of happiuess. Character is the fruit of thought. and the seed of action. The heretics of yesterday may be come the heroes of to-day. Don't blow a steamship whistle testi mony for a cockle shell life. The mouse that nibbles the cheese is liable to be eaten by the cat. The more we weigh our conversa tion, the heavier the words will be come. The happiest people in this world are those who are at rest from them selves and at work for others. Ham's Horn. The Curfew Toot. The curfew has become a very popu lar institution in Indianapolis, the city that inaugurated the revival of this aucieut custom. It has now been in force there for three months, and from the inquiries that are every day coming to the Superintendent of Po lice it 'is probable that its spread over the State will be rapid. It is said to have wrought a marvellous change for the better in the peace and good order of the neighborhood of whose discipli nary machinery it is now so conspicu ous a part. The limit of grace was 9 o'clock iu the winter, but since tho present month came in an hour more is allowed. But it seems a little hard thnt, whilo the lads and lassies must submit to this restraiut, they are to be deprived of the poetry that formerly attended it. Tho curfew no longer "tolls the knell of parting duy," but announces the fact by tho "toot!" "toot!" of a factory whistle. There were at last accounts mnrn thau (J000 Frieuds in Philadelphia alone, and prjbubly not fewer than 50.000 iu the Stato of IVunsvlvania A TEMPERANCE COLUMN. THE DRINK EVIL MADE MANIFEST IN MANY WAYS. The Evil Tide Alcohol Not Wanted As sistant Surgeon Woodson Officially Fa vors Its Abolition From the Soldiers' lMetary and Medicine Chest. Obi who will help to stem tho tide ot misery ami woe. And help to bring about the time when it shall cense to flow? The tide of evil caused by drink, destroy ing rich nod poor, And multiplying miseries arouud ui more and more. We try to do the best we can In faith and love and hope. But with the evil all around wo cannot fully cope. For streams of misery every day with nover-censlng flow. Are rushing past on every band wherever we may go. Wo waut the help of all our friends, we sock their help to-dny, Thnt this great tide ot misery may soon be rolled awny. If all would but at once unite with eourage true und strong, We surely should Improvement see, and hotter days ore loog. The work Is yours s well as ours, so let's join bauds and strive To do our very best to make tho good cause ever thrive. And If wo do, It may be ours to stem drink's evil flow, And bolp to close our gates against this tide of human woe. Temperance Banner. The Army and Alcohol. Captain It. O. Woodson, the Government expert on tropical diseases, who for years has made a study of yellow fever and kin dred diseases at Atlanta, Tensacola, Loredo, New Orleans, Havannah and Tam pa, has just made a special official report for the guidance ot troops, especially thoso to be sent to Cuba. Dr. Woodson has re cently boon acting assistant quartermaster, sod will be lu charge of tho ambulance train of the Fifth Army Corps of the army ot Invasion. In his report, Dr. Woodson has this to sny about the use of alcohol In an army campaign In the tropics; "Yellow fever Is certainly the greatest danger that confronts us. It Is to be remem bered that the mortality of this affection among the troops from Northern climates, who possess absolutely no coutra-lmmun-lty, will be exceedingly greater should the disease gain access to our midst. Yellow fever, being a disease which attacks essen tially the liver and kidnoys, will prove particularly fatal to those whose habits of life have reduced the vital resistance of these organs. Especially Is this axiom applicable to soldiers with clrrhotto liv ers and kidneys from alcoholio excesses, and those with' lithemia from over-Indulgence in highly nitrogenous foods. The term lithemia Is Intended to define that condition of men ordinarily spoken of as 'full habit.' "So firmly convinced am I of the predis posing Influences ot alcoholio Indulgences toward this disease thnt I would strlko all such beverages from tho dietary of the sol dier and even from tbu medical supplies ot the department. "Iu this connection I wish It understood that I am not discussing this question from a moral standpoint; und to those who Insist that the hnbttuul drunkards require their accustomed stimulant, I would reply that such men should be left behind, or, if carried, should be sent up dally for a hypo dermic Injection of strychniue or dlgita line." A Victim of "Whiskey Biscuits." An eight-year-old schoolboy who was taken to liellevue Hospital last week to be examined as to bis sauity and who was suf. ferlng from neurasthenia, accordiug to the diagnosis, was a victim of what his mot lie t called "whiskey biscuits," which are sold on tho sly In some east side bale esliop?. Tlx boy's mother described a whiskey biscuit as a composition otenke, Jolly, and alcohol, and she said tbat the boy had bad dreamt during the night after eating tt. A man whose work for several years has compelled him to spend most ot his time on the lowei east side, said yesterday that he bad beard of whiskey biscuits, but that he had nevei been able to buy oue. "The people who sell these things to chil dren," lie said, "know well enough that tbey are rendering themselves liable to punishment, and an adult can rarely buy them. I don't believe that the practice ot selling alcoholic candies and cakes to chil dren Is very general, because a normal child does not care for such things. It Is an acquired, but very rarely an inherited, taste. The selling of brandy drops was discouraged a few mouths ago, whoa sev eral of the sellers were arrested. The "whiskey biscuit" is the successor of the brandy drop, and If alcohol Is used Instead of brandy, I don't wonder that its effects are deadly." New York Hun. Treachery of the Saloon, In the city ot Minneapolis some years ago a young man of high standing and excellent abilities was trapped and en snared by the saloon. Ills life was wrecked and dishonored. That accursed institu tion li d him Its slave for long and bitter years. The blackness of those years was due to the saloon, was caused by the sa loon, would not have been without the sa loon. The day came when, by the grace of God, that man broke the shackles of his slavery, caino out of the saloon's prison bouse, and for ten years has lived a free man, has won for himself honor and the respect of his fellow men, a clear head, clean heart, and a happy home. And these things have been ic spite of the saloon, and constantly opposed by that damnable Institution. And now, when the friends of that man propose to do blm honor for the service that he bos wrought for his fellow men In tueso ten years, saloon organs are busy repeating the story ot the dishonor of those years for which the saloon was responsible. It makes very littlo difference what the liquor papers say, for very fow people outside of the "trade" road thorn, but their utterance? are an exhibition of the spirit ot that In stitution that has iu tt not one redeeming feature or characteristic the American saloon. The Voice. What Temperance It rings. We love to see young men with a noble carriage, and with blooming health. We cannot bear to see young men, that have every reason for building up a noble man hood, walking with a discolored face and an unwholesome skin, which are signs ot intemperance. Perhaps there Is nothing more disreputable than for a young man to present himself a miserable wreck ot what he might have been, and a burden to the state mid to the age in which be lives; and perhaps there is nothing more uredlta blo to a young man than to present himself to the state and to the ago in which be lives a monument of health and vigor and true manliness. Tcmperauce brings you to this higher and nobler condition of man hood, and intemperance takes you from It Temperance News and Notes. Remorse Is linked with mm. The pledge In time saves many a man. The happiness caused by drluk is of very short duration. People who "brace up" on whiskey are llablo to break down on it. Avoid the occasions ot sin. Keep away from drinklug companions. Educate the children In tcmperauce mat tors and you begin at the right end. Two colonels, commaudlng regiment! encamped at Chickamauga, bnve absolutely prohibited agents of liquor houses from entering the camp aud trying to dispose of thoir wares. It is said tbat tho demaud for things regulates their supply. In the case of In toxicating drluk, however, It seems as it this ruin worked the other way. At a recent English Inquest It came out tbat of live persons who had received lega cies of t5000 each two yoars ago four bad Already drunk themselves to death. From an occasional glass the descent li easy to an occasional debauch, until event, unify the man is only sober occasionally, tvold the beginnings of evil things. It Is said that we owe the word "teetotal" as applied to temperance practices to tbf stammering speech of au orator who as sured his bearers that nothing less that "te-te-te-total" abstinence would satisfy Why We Are Right-handed. Anatomical explanations of right handedness are rejected by Dr. George M. Kellogg. He believes that the child in born equally expert in both hands and both legs, and that right handedness is due to careful training, left -handedness being probably started by some slight accident to the right hand in babyhood. He recommends tho cultivation of ambidoxterity, which has beeu of great advantage to such men as Alexander Mott, Joseph Pan const, S. F. B. Morse, Leonard da Vinci aud Michaol Angelo. The Snake Hunter of Snaggy Mountain From the far purlieus of Suaggj Mountain, above where the pellucid waters of Sung Bun pour their cur rents down the pine-clad crests of tht Alleghauies, "Si" Sniumers, the ven erable snake hunter of the Virginia mountains, has been heard from am' reports that he has not killed a snakt this season. That this will be bau news for tho frieuds of "Si" will bt better underatood when it is knows thnt tho killing of snakes is the crown ing labor of "Si's" existence. Ht would "sooner kill a snake than figh; Spaniards," not meaning any refleo tiou on his loyalty, either. Ho it making money out of tho rattlesnak business by extracting the oil from them aud selling it as an infallible remedy for the rheumatism. He alsc soils the skins for belts, and "nobl3 neckwear," aud, altogether, "Si'Msar institution that Snaggy Monntair. would do well to supply with snakes at all seasons for fear that he will go entirely out of the business. It is not stated that "Si" is the originator of the only bona fide American snake story, but he comes pretty near furn ishing the subject for tho champion ship sunko story himself. Baltimore Sun. Olndstone' I.ona; Service, The length of Mr, Gladstone's po litical service can be measured by the fact that he entered Parliament at a time when Andrew Jackson wns Presi dent of the United States, and retired from it when Mr. Cleveland began his second term. He held his first Cabinet office when Daniel Webster was also first serving iu a like capac ity in our National Government, Lived Century In One House. A Mrs. Morley, who has died at Cotham, in Euglaud, iu her one hun dred and first year, had lived in the same house all her life, had never slept out of her native village and had never ridden iu a train. Until eight years ago she managod a small dairy and personally attended market with her butter. A Naval Hero's Btory, From the Times-Herald, Chicago, III, Late tn 1SC1, when Prosldent Lincoln is sued a call for volunteers, L. J. Clark, ot Warren, Trumbull Co., Ohio, was among the first to respond. lie joined the mortar fleet ot Admiral Forter Just before the me morable operations on the Mississippi River began. It was at the terrtflo bombardment of the Vlcksburg torts, that the hero ot this story tell with a shattered arm from a charge of schrupnel. After painful months In the hospital, be recovered sufficiently to be sent to his home at Warren, Ohio. Another call tor troops fired hit patriotic seal and Clark soon en listed In Company II, of the 7th Ohio Vol unteers. In the army of the Potomac, ne was In many engagements. Being wounded In a skirmish near Richmond, ho was sent to the hospital and thence homo. Boon af terward be began the study and .then the practice of veterinary U'-Heeklnir a 11 T O A V ' Wider Hold t ban the Ohio vil lago afford ed, bu went t o Chicago where be A Wounded Urro. now has a wide practice, . Is a member ot Hatch Post, O. A. H., and lives at 1935 Ash land Ave. Several years ago Dr. Clark's old wounds began to trouble him. He grew weak and emaciated, and his friends despaired of bis life. He finally recovered sufficiently to bo out but was a mere shadow, weighing only U0 pounds. The best medical attendance failed to restore his lost strength and vigor. "A friend gave me a box of Dr. Williams' rink Tills for Pnle People," said Dr. Clark, "and they hoiped me so much that I bought a half dozon boxes and took them. I soon regal nad my strength, now weigh l'JO pounds and, except for Injuries that can never be remedied, am as well as ever. "I consider Dr. Williams' Pink Pills fot Pae People the host remedy to build up rut down system, and heartily recommend tbom to everyone in heed of such aid." Within the last ten years tho number ot Gorman firms has grown from fifty-six tc ninety-two in China, and from thirty-elghl to fifty-seven In Japan. Savannah, Fernanillna, Jacksonville, Tampa and Key West. The Southern Railway and tho F. C. & P R. R., Florida Short Line, offers the quickest time between New York and Savannah. Ker nandina, Jacksonvll)e,Tampa and Key West Double daily service with tlirouh Pullman Sleeping Cars New York to Tampa, leave New York 4.3U p. m. and 12.05a. m. Dlulng Cat on afternoon train from New York to Chap lotte. Connections made atTampaauii Miami for Key West. For full particulars call on or address Ai.px. 8. Thwbatt, Kasteru Pass enger As-cut, 271 Broadway, New York, Ins civil-service examination in 'Eng land thore were 1866 failures lu a class ot 197a. Beauty Is Blood Deep. Clean blood means a clean skin. No beauty without it. C'uscarets, Candy Cathar tic clean your blood and keep it clean, by stirring up the lazy liver and driving all im- Eurities from the body. Begin to-day to anish pimples, boils, blotches, blackheads, and that sickly bilious complexion by taking Cascarets, beauty for ten cents. All drug gists, satisfaction guaranteed, 100,250,600. Scarlet flowers are said to stand dr ough better than any others. Try Allen' Foot-En.sc, A powder to shake In the shoe.,. If you have smarting feet or tight shoes, try Al len's Foot-Ease. It cools the feet and makes walking easy. Cures swollen and sweating feet, blisters and callous spots. Relieved corns and bunions of pain and gives rest and comfort. Try it to-day. Hold by all druggiste und shoo stores for 25c. Trial package FREE. Address, Allen H. Olmsted, Le Roy, N. Y. Orango County, Col., expects to market 600 carloads of celery this year. Educate Toar Bowels With Cascarets. Candy Cathartic, cure constipation forever. 10c, 25c. It C. C. C. tall, druggists refund money. Manila is a city ot 250,000 Inhabitants; acoordlng to the consns of 1880. To Cure A Cold In One Day. Take Laxative Bromo Onlnlne Tablets. AU Druggists refund money if it falls to cure. 25c. Honduras has at present about 400,000 Inhabitants. Mrs. Wlnslow's Soothing Byrnp for children teething- softens the gums, reduces Inflamma tion, allays iala, cures wind colic, Uio.a bottle. ZU III Australia is twenty-six times as large as the United Kingdom, fifteen times as large as France, and almost equal to the United Htates. nrm a n a a a a t a reoTnrtro o a . There's nothing in Ivory Soap but soap, good, pure vegetable oil soap. There's nothing to make the linens streaky, no alkali to injure the finest textures. The lather forms quickly and copiously, and wash-day is a pleasure instead of a drudgery. Try it in the next wash. The price places it within reach of every one. Look out for imitations. eM. IM. If t KJLUJLASLSiSLSlSJLSLSLSLJLk For liriilai'lia (whether nick or nervotm), tor.tli arli. niurslxU, rlieiiiiistlmu. luinlisuo, wiiin ami wt-akmvta In the iwt-k, ptne or kldnvvM, twin around the ller. pl.Mirl-) , nwelllnx of the Joints and iwlnn of nil kind, the upvnVation of Hmlwuy'i KiMtilv hvllef will afford lninIUte vane, anil lt romtnunl use for a fuw day edvets a iwruwuvnt rnr. A CURE FOR ALL Summer Complaints, DYSENTERY, DIARRHEA, CHOLERA MORBUS. A half to a teaftpconful of Hvaily Relief In a half tnmhlor of witter, repeated an often aa the th cliariiea continue, and a flminel Maturated alrh Hesily Kellrf pUred over the stomach or bowel, will alTord litiiueiliate relit'f and noon effect a rnro, lNTriiSAi.l t A half to a teafttioonfiil lu half a tumbler of water will In a few minutes ure Cramp, HpaNiim, Hour Stomach. Nausea. Vomiting, Heartburn, NervouMietm. Sleepleietiiemi. Hick Head ache, Flatulency and all internal palux. IHnlnrla In lis Tarlaua Forma farad and Prevented. There Is not a remedial aitent In the world that wilt cure fever and aiiie and all other ma'arious, bilious and other fevers, sided by HAUWAVH I'll.LS, so quickly a ItADWAY'S HEAJY HKLIEF. lTW-e 60 cents per bottle. Sold by all druggist. ItADWAV A. t o., 05 F.lra Nt., New York. SuccssfiJMy Prosecutes Claims. Lte Principal Bitmtner U 8. Venston Bureau. 3yralultMt W(r, lJJJudictlugcl.iu, (ty aluc umw PAINT own IV ALLS GE1LBH GS CALCIMO FRESCO TINTS FOR DECORATING WALLS AND CEILINGS urorCalclmo paint dealer and do vour own kalsonilnlnff. Thfa material la lusd-i oa ac!utlno principles by machinery aud milled In twenty-four tints and Is superior to any concoction of Ulue aud Whit lug that can possibly be made by baud. To be mixed with I old Water. r-8F.M FOU NAMPI.K C OI OIt I'AKIIS and If you cannot purchase this malarial from your local dealer let us kuow aud wa will put you lu the way of obtalulnK It. THE ITIlItALO CO., XRW IIKIUIITOV, S. I., M:W YORK. XT SHOOTS, AMMONIA, WATER,COLOCIME, OR OTHER It in weapon which protect 1tlryrllnti ttrMnnt virion doR nd f-ot-prvlg; trurelpni ftgairoi. rob ben and touxlin; limne aaint tbif vta and tramp, and it atMpfti to many other situation. It doer not kill or thjiH-e; It Is perfectly mfe to haiuUe; timkrH no netie or sm ike; breaks no law an4 creates no .anting reuretn, an doe the bullet pistol. It luily and amply protec, bf ouuipelHutf tht foe to plve undivided attention to hlmnelf for awhile iiwtcnil of to the ln'enled victim. It la the only real weapon which protects and also mattes fun, laughter find Vita of It; tt shoo., not once, Imt many time without reloading; and will protect by ts appearance In tlrnt of danger, althoiltfb loaded only with liquid. It de not vet nut of order: t durable, handitoroe, and nickel plated. Kent "boxed and post paid by mall with full direction how to uste for olr. in fe.Poaiatfe Stamp foet-oftice Mnnev Order, or Express Money Order. Aa to our reliability, refer to It. i. Dun's or Bradstreet's mercantile agencies XEW VOIt Mi UMO SUIMLY CO., 13 I,?onurd St.. Xcw York, It Yas Before the Day of SAPQIJO They Used (a Sav " Wpmin's Work h Kevar Pom." JUST THE BOOK YOU WAN CONDENSED ENCYCLOPEDIA OF UNIVERSAL KNOWLEDGE, u It treats upon about every subject under the inn. It contain &M paea, profusely illustrated, and frill be sent, postpaid, for 50a tn tamps, postal Dote or silver. W'ben reading you doubt SSirS AN ENCYCLOPEDIA :ErS will clear op for you. It baa a com' plete Index, so that It may bt F" ft B Z. srt . referred to easily. Tills book U rich mine of TaluabU B"UI l W U C5 lnformlkt,on preacnte-d ta an Interesting manner, and Is m " w vl well worth to any on many times the small sum of FIFTY CENTS which we ask for It. A study of this book will prove of Incalculable benefit to tlioio whose education haa bees neglected, while the volume will also be fousd of groat value to thoee who cannot readily command the knowledge they bars acquired. BOOK PUBLISHING HOUSE. 134 Leonard St.. N. Y. City. Mso'a Cure for Consnmntlon haa lived mS many a d.Mt,,r's blll.r8 F. Ha hoy, Hopkins Place, Raltlmore, Mil.. Dec. 8, Ihm. r About 3000 books have been written on the anthropology of Peru alone. e a a mrrsrnm fl-a a a a b rinR rmta a Mt C, (Wat 6evel-Gear Chain less Elcyclos MAKE HILL CLIMBING EASY. ' Columbia Chain Wheels, $75 Hartfords, , . SO SMI Vedettes, $40 & POPE MFG. CO., Harllord, Conn. UQUII 5V LIQUID. to reier ta constantly. Is our band 35 w suijii nisi, mi.sa, ' Vf : 1 TS Wats WHtHt au ust una. rr Iks Bait Cvunh byrup. Tastes Uoui. Gae fi 3 In time. Hold by dmiml'ta, Ff lue temnaranoe teiarvawr
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers