Queer Facts Abomt Eels. Young eels, in passing up a river, (how the most extraordinary persever »nce in overcoming all obstructions. The larye' floodgates, sometimes fifteen feet in height, on the Thames might be tupposed sufficient to bar the progress of a fish the size of a darning needle, re marks the Rod and Gun. But young eels have a wholesome idea that nothing can stop them, and, in consequence, nothing does. Speaking of the way in which they ascend flood gates and other barriers, one writer says: "Those which die stick to the post; others, which get a little higher, meet with the same fate, until at last a layer of them is formed which enables the rest to overcome the difficulty of the passage. The mortality resulting from such 'forlorn hopes' greatly helps to account for the differ ence in the number of young eels on their upward migration and that of those which return down stream in the autumn. Iu some places these baby eels are much sought after and are formed iuto cakes, which are eaten fried. "Eels spawn like other fishes. For long, however, the most remarkable theories were held as to their birth. One of the old beliefs was that they sprang from mud; a rival theory held that young eels developed from frag ments separated from their parents' bodies by the rubbing against rocks. One old author not only declares that they came from May-dew, but gave the following recipe for producing them: •Cut up two turfs covered with May dew and lay one upon the other, the grassy sides inward, and then expose them to the heat of the sun. In a few hours there will spring from them an in finite quantity of eels.'" A Costume of Rattlesnake-Skin. Peter Gruber,the Rattlesnake King of Venango County, has made the most unique costume any man evor wore. It consists of coat, vest, trousers, hat, shoes and shirt, and is made entirely of the skins of rattlesnakes. Seven hundred snakes.all caught and skinned by Gruber during the past five years, provided the material for this novel costume. To pre serve the brilliancy and flexibility of the skins in the greatest possible degree, the snakes were skinned alive, first being made unconscious by chloroform. They were then tanned by a method peculiar to Gruber, and are as soft and elastic as woolen goods. The different articles for this outfit were made by Oil City tailors, shoemakers and hatters, and the costume is valued at slooo.—Pittsburg Chronicle. During the year 1892 suits against New Yerk City for damages aggregating $253,865 for personal injuries were de fended by the Corporation Counsel. The amount awarded in these suits was $7,- 198.04. THE CRIP Left me in a terribly weak condition; my health nearly wrecked. My appetite was all gone, I had no strength, felt tired all the time, had disagreeable If roaring noises in my head, like a waterfall. 1 filJ) also had severe headaches and severe sinking ' vftSSRIO pains in my stomach. ' All the disagreeable ef- <'eo. \V. Cook, fects of the Grip are gone, I am free from pains and aches, and believe Hood's Sarsaparilla is HOOD'S CORES burely curing my catarrh. I recommend it to all." GEO. \V. COOK, St. Johnsbury, Vt. HOOD'S PIIiIiB cure ConHtipation by restor tag the peristaltic action of the alimentary canal. ITHE KIND DANIEL C. EGGLESTON, Corinth, N. Y. HELPLESS MD SUFFERING, FAINT Am) WEAK FROM® RHEUMATIC TORMENT, i TIT CTJKKD BT DANA'S. I DAKA BARSAPARILLA CO.: H OlN'ilemxn.—l am oft veara old, by occupa- §s= tion a fanner. For the last 3 years I hare been afi| • P«atlofferer with Khenmatlam, 10S bad at time# I could not atir my arm. ASS constant pain in my shoulders. One arm wasH so bad that my Angers were drawn out of* ahape. Was also afflicted with n bHrnina— aenaation in my stomach with serere pains. ]■ would be faint and weak, so I could hardly S3 sit up. 1 have taken == DANA'S " SAKSAPAIULLA 1 •ndnyrtomjchii WELI, .... pain In mr| shoulders and arms. lam indeed grateful. = Yours truly, DANIEL C. EGGLESTON. jg The abore testimonial was sent us by W. R W Clayton, the well-known Druggiat, Maple St.,=£ Corinth, N. Y., which ia sufficient guarantee thatH it is trae. ™ Dana Sarsaparilla Co., Bellatt, Main*, §f TO YOUNG MEN, Splendid opportunity to learn a business that wfl give steady employment and a salary or sitnx) n yeai Send 2c. stamp for circular, containing full luformc tkm. Address Geo. H. Lawrence. MR. 10th, N.Y. Cltj QXhL Combine Conquered t lf|| Xhe Rochester (Stove Pipe) KadiatVsnve K! the fuel. Write for proofs andpfecea PjW First order from each neighborhood fillcOLa |wholesale rste.and secures an agency. ROCHESTER RADIATOR CO,, Rochester, N Y Young Mothers! W« Off** Ton a Memedy which In*uro* Safety to life of Mother and Child. "MOTHER'S FRIEND" Bob* Confinement of Its fain, Horror and Uitk. weakee* afterward usual In such cases —Mrs. Ann Qack, uunar, Ho., Jan. 15th, 1801. BBIBFIELD BEOVLiTOB CO.. ATLANTA, GA. BOLD BT ALL DBOUUISTB. CABBAGE FOB LATINO HENS. A head of fresh green cabbage fas tened by a string to a nail in the side of the coop just high enough to permit the hens to pick at it, is an excellent food for winter, and besides it stimulates and gives exercise that any healthy layer must have. This is worth trying. Cabbage should always be kept in a cool place, handy to the poultry house; a supply of it should be stored away early in November. The lime and soda phosphate contained in the cabbage plant are essentially valuable to laying hens when outdoor exercise is out of the question, and the fields where such sub stances are usually obtained are covered with snow or ico.—New York Indepen dent. TIIE DEMAND FOR MUTTON. Until recently there was no demand for mutton, in the form of lamb, outside the cities and more wealthy towns, but now wherever cultivated people of means are found lamb is wanted. Country people formerly ate hog meat, partly as a necessity and perhaps of choice; but more recent observations among the better-living farmers show that a change has cAne even here. The farmhouse menu compares favorably with tho most luxurious city livers. The number of lambs consumed on farms has not been re ported, but it would be quite consider able. Mutton has long been a favortte in country homes. Latterly the more fastidious country people have sent the well-fatted old sheep to market instead of consuming them, and kept the best young Bheep for home eating. Summer resorts, sanitariums, country hotels and boarding houses consume large quantities of the best mutton, and pay good prices to the home producers.—American Farmer. i FROZEN HOTTER KEEPS BEST. With the improvements of refrigera tion and the ability to produce a very low temperature at a minimum cost we are now able to freeze butter and hold it at a very low temperature at a cost as low or low er than formerly paid for ordinary cold storage. After experiments, covering a range of five yenrs, it has been thor oughly demonstrated that this is the only proper way to hold butter. Butter made in June, frozen solid and held until May, came out in elegant condi tion. Not a tub oily and all in very fine flavor. Ordinary goods hold their own and deteriorate very little. Re peated experiments have shown us tint butter frozen will stand up longer after being taken out of the freezer than that held in the cold- storage. A certain amount of fermentation takes place in the cold storage butter that is prevented by the freezing process, and when the butter is taken from the freezer it has better keeping qualities than butter held in ordinary cold storage.—Creamery Journal. ORNAMENTAL VINES. The Chinese honeysuckle are excellent viues to (rain on a plaza for screens in half shady positions, and when shaded it remains green all winter. The Japan honeysuckle, both the plain green-leaved and the golden, are rapid growers, aud will thrive with a full exposure to the sun. Their flowers are very fragrant, and continue to appear for several weeks. The Dutch monthly honoysuckle is also an excellent vine for such purposes, and it remains in bloom from eaily spring until autumn; in fact, you can scarcely choose amiss in selecting any species or variety of the climbing honeysuckles, although there arc some more desirable than others. But for a very rapid and slender growing vine we do not know any that excels the Akebia quinata from Japan. Its leaves are of a dark rich green color, and they appear eaily in spring and hang on until very cold weather in the autumn or early winter. Its flowers are of a dark purple color, and produced in pendulum clusters. The plants arc now plentiful iu nurseries, and may be obtained very cheap.—New York riuu. HOME-MADE BROAD TIRE*WAGONB. There are ten or twelve wagons in our town having old mowing-machine wheels on the running gear, writes W. H. Mat thews, of Vermont. These wheels and axles cost only the price of old iron. The hay rack is only thirty-six inches high, and when manure or other loads are drawn, the body is only three inches higher than the axles. I have drawn many loads of hay with my rig on ground so soft that an ordinary tire would not be supported. The mowing-machine axle is cut in two in the middle and holes punched in the ends, and bands or clasps placed around a wooden axlctree in order to make the axle long enough for a wagon body between the wheels. The cogs on the outside of the wheels are cut of! with the hammer or cold chisel, so that the rims are smooth. I have cut them from twenty wheels without breaking a rim. The bolsters are made the same size as those of my wagon, so any box or rack may set on. This wagon saves hard or heavy lifting and is used almost entirely on the farm. Owing to the broad tires one horse can draw a heavier load than two with the ordinary wagon. I also have a stone boat on four of the wheels which I use a great deal. It is hung under thj axles, about six inches from the ground, and saves all heavy liftir g.—Farm, Field and Fireside. FATTENING PIGS WITHOUT CORN. Corn, the great pork producing food of the middle Western States, cannot enter into the problem of pig feeding throughout a greater portion of the State of Oregon. Hence the attempt of the Oregon Station to demonstrate the success of feeding pigs without the aid of this highly carbonaceous food has an interest it would not otherwise possess. No very definite conclusion was fully realized, yet it is said that some points were eitablished which arc very eucour •ging to these who wish to make pig feeding in Oregon one of the important factors of the farm. Six Berkshire pigs, born M.«rch 19, were selected for the iments. Up to September 1 th»y wt:c given slops from the kitchen, with shortß added, in sufficient quantity to keep them in a ' vigorous growing condition. Grass and clover pasture would be excellent, but these were not available and not furn ished. Nothing seems better for keep ing young pigs growing to their fullest capacity than shorts and fine middlings. The feeding experiment began Sep tember 1 and en4ed December 29, mak ing 120 days. The hours for feeding were Ba. m.and sp. m. Charcoal was given two or three times a week. An effort was made to use such food as could be obtained on the farms of Ore gon. These were chopped oats, whole oats, whole wheat, barley and a mixture one-fourth each of ground wheat, barley, oats and shorts. The rations were mixed with enough water to wet them up thoroughly and allowed to stand until the next feeding hour. The mix ture of ground feed was the one best relished. The chief points of interest developed were that in the dry excrement of pigs fed on whole oats and wheat much of the grain was passed to all appearances wholly undigested. Very slight gains were made from chopped or whole oats alone. The above seems to indicate that the feeding of whole grain to pigs, wherever it may be practised, must be wasteful. Photographic representations of the meat of the mixed fed lot show a large per cent, of lean meat in the samples. The texture of the meat in this lot was all that could be desired. In similar sections of those fed on whole grain there was a little larger per cent, of fat. A photograph of similar cuts from a pig of similar weight, fed exclusively on earn at the Kansas Station, does not differ materially in appearance,except in the amount of fat in the loin cut, in which particular there is considerably more in the corn-fed pork than in those of the Oregon experiment.—Now York World. FARM AND GARDEN NOTES. An early bred pullet will lay when the hens are taking a vacation. Young hens sell the best in market, but old ones are the best for farmers to sell. Never fasten the nests to the wall; it increases the work of keeping then clean. Chickens are fond of sand and lime in the proportions commonly used for plas | tering. The only benefit of ccrn in egg pro- I duction is that it helps to maintain i warmth. The popularity of chemical fertilizers for fruit trees is on the increase among orchardists. Vick advises frequont syringing or ! spraying with water for plants infested I with the red spider. In your efforts to give house plants plenty of sun do not set them so that | they will touch the glass. Burn a lot of bones, pulverize them , thoroughly, and put them in a box where the poultry can help thomselves. Nearly al' classes of fowls thrive best in high, dry localities, with a sandy or gravelly soil that is easily kept dry. Hens when moved from one place to another do not begin to lay until some days after thechanpe of surroundings. One pound of butcher's scraps to twenty hens, given three times a week, will be a good ration for laying hens. At the Utah Station kerosene emulsion proved the most effective remedy for the cabbage plant louse and the flea beetlo. With a little care in the management a good proportion of the meat needed in the family can come from the poultry yard. If the hens are fed three times a day, one of the best feeds to give at noon is whole wheat, especially when eggs are wanted. The Columbian raspberry is a new, hardy variety that :s said to possess many merits. It is especially adapted for canning. Some one says that coal tar placed in the drinking water is a sure cure for running nostrils that so often affiict poultry at this season. A writer in the London Garden as cribes fine color in apples to the soil, as well as the direct action of the sun, with a portion to the wind. Without the aid of incubators the raising of early broilers on a large scale would be next to impossible, on account of the difficulty in hatching. With turkeys, ducks and chickens the males should be changed annually in order to prevent inbreeding. This is not so necessary with geese. To be certain of a good supply of eggs in winter the pullets should be at least nine or ten months old and then be well fed and comfortably sheltered. Dampness injures seeds by promoting the growth of fungi, which attack the vitality of the 6eed; hence one reason for keeping them in a dry place. The Seneca pear, a new candidate for favor, is larger than the Bartlett and not so highly colored. It is claimed that it ripens immediately after the Bartlett. Unless the brooders are kept reasonably warm, especially at night, the young chickens will crowd together so close that some of them will be smothered. It is always considered by good breed ers that the last eggs of a hen's clutch are" not nearly go fertile as the first, nor are the chickens so strong and healthy. One of the best ways of feeding mid dlings to the poultry is to mix it with bran and cornmeal and then scald thor oughly. Fed in this way it makes a splendid feed. The desire to save a single fowl in a fiock often leads to the spread of the diseaso and the consequent loss of a larger number. In very many cases ll would be economy to kill the first few sick fowls. At a meeting of the Massachusettt Horticultural Society it was stated that apples grown in grass ground will keep longer than the same fruit grown ou cultivated land. Late-keeping varieties, therefore, should always be grown ia grass lauds. HOUSEHOLD AFFAIRS. A PRACTICAL HIXT. A good cook says she always has a piece of bacon in the house, and to keep it sweet and fresh she takes a clean white cloth, wrings it out in cold water and wraps the bacon in it, then lays it on the swing shelf in her cellar. In sum mer she does the same thing, only she puts it in the refrigerator. Salt pork may be kept in the same way. CAUTION ABOUT CANNISD FRUIT. Now that the season of canned fruit is again upon us housekeepers will do well to repeat the caution which forgetful maids need periodically—to empty the provisions out of the can as soon as it is opened. Often a most dangerous acid is formed by the chemical aotion of the air upon the soldering of the cans. It is this acid, indeed, which is respon sible for much of the prejudice against canned food. Many of the reported ac cidents would,if they could be thoroughly investigated, be found to have resulted from kitchen carelessness. The thrifty cook who, wishing everything in ample time, opens her can of corn or pears an hour or more before it is put into the saucepan exposes the family to a danger which is none the less serious because usually avoided. Open the cans if neces sary, but empty their contents at once, and never set a remnant away in them for future use.—New York Times. KITCHEN NECESSITIES. When one expects good service, it is an important item that suitable utensils and equipments be provided. Many a housemaid wastes hours of her time every week in the almost hopeless search for dusters, scrubbing cloths and the thou sand and one bits of fabric that one must have about the kitchen. Many housekeepers do not seem to realize that there are many things that require a little piece of rag or, possibly, very soft paper. Odds and ends of cloth of all sorts are thrown away, torn up or, as one over-thrifty woman used to do, put into the heater. Indeed, in more than one family the appetite of the hot air furnace is insatiable, and has been for years fed with articles of great value, if properly utilized. There should be special cloths for lamps, windows, paint, floors and stoves. For these latter, worn and otherwise useless lamp and door cloths are desira ble. When these cloths are of little value for their legitimate purpose, they should be thrown into a dish of strong soda water and boiled for half an hour, when they may be rinsed and put up to dry. They are then useful for rubbing the stove, the hearth or the grates, after which they may still do service in kin dling the fire. The good housekeeper rarely finds it necessary to throw anything away. Her economy, however, consists largely in starting right and making one article do the work of half a dozen. Old muslm may be first used as window cloths, then go through the various stages of paint, lamp and stove cloths just as well as not. Instead of this, we often see the hearth and grates rubbed with bits of snowy white muslin or cambric caught up in a hurry, because there is neither system nor economy about the house. RECIPES. Apple Salad—One quart of steamed apples rubbed through a sieve, six table spoons of salad oil or melted butter, salt and pepper to taste, one toaspoon made mustard, and one teaspoon sugar. Serve cold. Potato Lomon Pudding—Three ounces of potatoes, the peels of two large lemons, two ounces of white sugar, two cunces of butter. Boil the lemon peel until tender, and beat it in a mortar with the sugar. Boil the potatoes and peel them; mix all together with a little milk and two eggs. Bike it slightly. Poached Eggs in a Ball—To poach eggs in a ball is a knack known to clever cooks. The water is heated to boiling and then rapidly stirred till a small whirlpool is producod, in the hollow heart of which maelstrom the egg is cleverly dropped. The motion of the water sets the white instantly into a cir cular covering for the unbroken yolk. Chocolate Cake—Take a quarter of a pound of butter, beat to a cream, add the yolks of six eggs, half a pound of sugar, and stir for half an hour. Then add a quarter of a pound of grated chocolate, two teaspoonfuU of cocoa powder, some vanilla flavoring, three and a half ounces of cornstarch, aud fin ally the snow of the whites of six eggs. Bake in a form like preceding cakes, but let the oven be hot. It will take about three-quarters of an hour to bake. Parker House Rolls—Dissolve in a quart of warm milk two tablespoonfuls of sugar, one teaspoonful of salt, one cup of lard or butter, three-quarters of a tea cup of yoast. The milk must be scalded, then the butter added to melt; let this mixture cool, then add flour enough to make a smooth batter. Set it to rise, and when light add the rest of four quarts of flour. Knead it into a loaf, and let rise again; then make out into biscuits, and when they are light, bake in a moder ately hot oven. Rissoles of Pish—Any cooked fish will do; rcmovo all bones from the meat, and then pick well to pieces; mix it well with an equal quantity of bread crumbs and n little butter, season it with an onion ohopped very fine, a little chopped pars ley, sage, pepper and salt; add to this enough beaten egg to hold it well, and make it up into small, flat cakes; fry in hot butter; when they are done, add a little water to the fat in the pan; add a little flour thickening, and a few chopped capers; pour the gravy around the rissoles, and serve them very hot. How to See tko Wind. Take a polished metal surface of two feet or more with a straight edge; a large handsaw will answer the purpose very well. Next, above all things else, choose a windy day for the experiment, but whether hot or cold does not mat ter; neither will it make any difference whether it be clear or cloudy, only let it not be tried in murky, rainy weather. Hold your metallic at right angles to the direction of the wind, i. c., if the wind is north, hold your surface east and west, but instead of holding it ver tically incline it about forty degrees to the horizon, so that the wiud upon strik ing It will glance over the edge as water flows over a dam. Now sight carefully along the edge for some moments at some sharply defined object and you will plain'y see the wind pouring over the edge in graceful curves.—Philadelphia Press. JUST A LITTLE pain negle<4£d, may become RHEUMATISM. NEURALGIA, SCIATICA, LUMBAGO. Just a little SPRAIN may make.a cripple. Just a little BRUISE may make serious inflammation. Just a little BURN may make an ugly scar. Just a little COST will get a bottle of ST. JACOBS OIL, A PROMPT AND PERMANENT CURE Years of Comfort against Years of Pain for JUST A LITTLE. A copy of the "Official Portfolio of the World's Columbian Exposition," descriptive of Buildings and grounds, beautifully illus trated in water color effects, will be sent to any address upon receipt of ioc. in postage stamps by THE CHARLES A. VOGELKR CO., BALTIMORE, Mo. A DR.KILMER'¥Z ran ftoo'T* THe asE A T kidney: livers Dissolves <»ravel, Gall stone, brick dust in urine, pains ill urethra, st raiutntf after urination, nain in back and hips, sudden stoppage of water with pressure. Blight's Disease, Tube casts in urine, scanty urine. Swamp-Root cures urinary troubles and kidney difficulties. Liver Complaint, Torpid or enlarged liver, foul breath, bilious ness, bilious headache, poor digestion, gout. Catarrh °f the Bladder, Inflammation, irritation, ulceration, dribbling, frequent calls, pass blood,mucus or pus. Guarantee—Use -ontents of One Pottle, If not be.- eflteil, lirtiKiciotn will refund you tire price paid. At DriiKKlntM, , r ,oc. Size, SI.OO Size. 'lnvalids' (>uide to Health" free—Consultation free. Uk. Kilmer & Co.. Bikohamtqn. N. Y. Aii Ostrich's "Broiiiminr." "Bromming'' is the terra applied to the unearthly sound that the ostrich imagines to be song. When I first heard it I actually mistook it for the trumpet ing of a distant fog horn! In the desert it might well be a lit answer to the roar ol the lion. So very peculiar is the sound, that I took pains to ascertain exactly how it was produced. The process, after nil, is simple. The bird inflates his long neck, till it looks like a great bag; he then lets the air out in three installments, lie blows thus thrice in succession, mak ing nine roars in all. The performance is then over for the time being. Brom ming is occasionally heard by day, but more usually breaks the silence of the night, and is probably meant as a chal lenge. Two of the herd always are on guard while their companions sleep. They take turns in this duty.—Scientific American. Bishop Doane is to have a carved wood throue in the cathedral at Albany, N. Y. It is the gift of Mrs. J. V. L. Pruyn, and is said to be the finest thing o the kind in America. The wood is blick oak, an.i the throne is twenty-two leet high. Royal Baking - Powder. THE GOVERNMENT TESTS ESTABLISH ITS ABSOLUTE SUPERIORITY. (Datafrom the latest Official U. S. Government Report on Baking Powders, Department of Agriculture, Bulletin /?, page 599-) Roval is placed first of the cream of tartar powders, actual strength, 160.6 cubic inches of leavening gas per ounce of powder. Every other powder tested exhibited a much lower strength than the Royal, the average being 33 per cent. less. Every other powder likewise showed the presence of alum or sulphuric acid. The claim that this report shows any other powder of su perior strength or purity has been denounced as a falsehood by the Government officers who made the tests. Avoid all baking powders sold with a gift or prize, or at a lower price than the Royal, as they invariably contain alum, lime or sul phuric acid, and render the food unwholesome. "German Syrup" I simply state that;l am Druggist and Postmaster here and am there fore in a position to judge. I have tried many Cough Syrups but for ten years past have found nothing equal to Bosehee's German Syrup. I have given it to my baby for Croup with the most satisfactory results. Every mother should have it. J. H. HOBBS, Druggist and Postmaster, MoQat, Texas. We present facts, living facts, of to-day Bosehee's German Syrup gives strength to the body. Take no substitute. 6 N Y N U—3 CnrfH Consumption, Cough*. Croup, Soro Throat. Sold by all Drugging cn a Guarantee. OPIUMSSMHM Enormous Coninmptioa of Fruit. Those who have predicted that the enormous increase id fruit growing in California would glut the markets of the East have their best answer in the returns made bj several Southern California dis tricii. 'ln Pomona, a Los Angeles County colony that planted many acres to olives about five years ago, the trees are just coming into good bearing. The pickled olives of Pomona have proved so tine that one New York wholesale grocer this week sent out an order for 20,000 gallons of these olives. The order could not be filled, but it has given a great stimulus to the olive industry, and sev eral thousand acres will be planted to the tree, which flourishes here as vigorously as in the Holy Land. The orange grow ers of Southern California are also reap ing a rich harvest. They have lost only eight per cent, of their crop by frost and wind, and the total yield promices to equal 7000 carloads, against 2800 last year. Buyers are paving $3.25 a box for the best fiuit, delivered at the rail road station. This means a return of from SSOO to SBOO an acre for groves that are over eight years old, and from SIOO to SSOO for trees that are from four to eight years old. Of course, a Cali fornia orange grove represents a great deal of care and a long wait for returns, but it is doubtful if similar returns for | the money invested can be gained in hor ticulture in any other State in the Union, —New York Tribune. A Good Jump for a Cat. There is a large Maltese cat making its headquarters at the Seventh Police Pre cinct Statiou that is bound togo on record as the smartest feline known. Like mil other eats it delights in captur ing spanows, but unlike other cats it has never been Known to let a bird get nwiiy that it made up its mind to catch. Lieulenant Thompson is authority for the statement that the cat, perched on the cornice of the building made a leap . of twenty-two feet into a tree and caught a sparrow. The Lieutenant has also watched the cat while bird-catch ing, and has counted nine sparrows cur ried to a and after the hunt wax over devoured one by one. A |eculiar trait of the cat is that there is but one man who reports at the station that she will make friends with, and he isPnirol man Rowland. When he is on night duty the cat will follow him from the time he goes on until relieved the next morning. All the dogs in the Ncwburg region have encountered the cat on sev eral occasions, and when she is in sight the canines take the other side of the street. —Cleveland Press. llenfnens Can't be Cured Br .oral applications, a« they cannot reach the diseased portion of the ear. There is only one way to cure deafness, and that is by constitu tional remedies. Deafness is caused by an In flamed condition of the mucous lining ol the Eustachian Tut*. When this tube gets n flamed vou have a mm biintt sound or imper fect hearing, and when it is entirely closed, deafness is the result, and unless the inflam mation can h- taken out and this tube re stored to its normal condition hearing wiL be destroyed forever nine cases out of ten are caused by catarrh, which is nothing but an in flamed condition of the mucous surfaces. We will give One Hundred Dollars for any case ol deafness (caused by catarrh; that we cannot cure by taking Hall's Catarrh Cure, bend for circulars, free. F. J. Chenft A Co.. Toledo, ft 6-old by Druggists, 75c. "That unrivalled complexion," said a promi nent New Yorker, alluding to a lady acquaint ance, "was tlie result of using Garfield Tea." Send for free sample to 819 Went 4Mh Street, New York City. Tiikoat Diseases commence with a Cough, Cold or Sore Throat. " Jlron'h't JironcnuU Troches"" give immediate relief. Sold only in boxen. Price 2S cents. w. L. DOUGLAS anil price .lumped on bottom. Look W Syid?»erywh U e«. 7- (O CUAKT FOR 4m 4m in wrlvEL GENTLEMEN. XafIBHBSHSnBF A sewed shoe that will not rip; Calf, IIHR seamless, smooth inside, more comfortable, \XH stylish and durable than any other shop ever fc«t sold at the price. Everystyle. Hquala custom* a Ws : made shoes costing from $4 to $5. © » V*JL The following are of the same high standard ot S K-i Vv £Lk ] tg »t ] J3 Mt& tj.oo Hand-Sewed. I FOR e* J|jp 1 and a.OO Dougola, ( LADIES. IV IB A DOTT yon owe yotirsaU to gat the beet value foe your money. Economise In your «! THIS L rdpiwm? WIJIgITO exelasWe eate to shoe dealers and general mcrdincM where I have>M Meati, Wrliefpr catalogue. Jf not for »«le In your place fend direr: to Factory, Mating Mad,slaaaad wMttW|»M. PooeegoFroe. W. L. Douglas, Brockton, Mas*. " Batter Wort Wisely Than Wart Hard." Great Efforts are Unnecessary in House Cleaning if you Uie SAPOLIO ON® ENJOYS Both the method and results when Syrup of Figa is taken; it is pleasant and refreshing to the taste, and acts gently yet promptly on the Kidneys, Liver and Bowels, cleanses the sys tem effectually, dispels colc?3, head aches and fevers and cures habitual constipation. Byrup of Figs is the only remedy of its kind ever pro duced, pleasing to the tasto and ac ceptable to the stomach, prompt in its action and truly beneficial m its effects, prepared only from the most healthy and agreeable substances, its many excellent qualities commend it to all and have made it the most popular remedy known. Syrup of Figs is for sale in 50c and $1 bottles by all leading drug gists. Any reliable druggist who may not have it on hand will pro cure it promptly for any one who wishes to try it. iJo not accept any substitute. CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO. SAH FRANCISCO. CAL. LOUISVILLE. Kr. AfIV YORK. H.V. IAOWAY'B N PILLS, Purely vegetable, mild ami reliable. Cause perfec Digestion, complete absorption and healthful regu larity. For the cure of all disorders of the StomscH Liver, Bowels, Kidneys, Illadder, Nervous Disease LOSS OF APPETITE, SICK HEADACHE, INDIGESTION, DIZZY FEELINGS, BILIOUSNESS, TORPID LIVER, DYSPEPSIA. PERFFCT DIGESTION will be accomplished by taking Radwav'n Pills. By their ANTI-BILIOUS prop ertles they stimulate the liver In the secretion of t.h« bile ami Its discharge through the biliary ducts, These pills In doses of from two to four will quickly regulate the action of the liver ami free the patient from these disorders. One or two of Had way s Pills taken daily by those subject to bilious pains and tor pidity of the liver, will keep the system regular and ■ecure healthy digestion. Price. 35c. per box. Sold by all druggist*. r~fa No Alkalies OH Other Chemicals are used in the preparation of W. liAKEH Si CO.'S I JFPREAKMCOCM Eli | U tr/lich i.i atmnhitel)/ Hi j|*| y, 1 pure and soluble. KIH , | * l»rj It hanmorethan three times gSS | Jr u I V thostrcnjth of Cocoa mixed I L wiili starch. Arrowroot or Sugar, :tu<l is l»r more eco nomical, costing lest than one cent a cup. It lj delicious, nourishing, anil EASILT DIUESTEH. Sold by Grocer* everywhere. W. BAKER & CO., Dorchester, Mao, Garfield Teas Cures Constipation, Restores Complexion, tfrrcs Doctor!' BUla Sample free. GauvisldTkaCo.,3l\) W.43thSi..N.Y. Cures Sickßeadacne FIENSIO "Successfully Prosecutes Claims. Lat» Principal KxAnilner IJ S..p«nelon BlJWau. Sj rsiulftßt war, 15atijuiikuliugcl»iin», atty atuw. PATENTS ■ 1 I W 4<l»payeiiifctrn> AAITDC or Til irk Neck (hit. By Mall, sl. Hill I tit J. N. K IiKIN. Belleville, N.J. ■ill iii ii m naazaaMi HI Consumptives and people ■ ■ vho have weak iungsor Astn ■ ua. should nee Piso B Cure for ■ Consumption. It bus enred H ■ thooitaudi. It has not injur- H ed one. It #s not bad to take. Hit Is the hest cough syrup.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers