1(1 nr for n llnrvr«i. • It'* the worst season for dam|>neHH I ever saw," Mili* lii traveler on n train. M Yes/' an swered ii man of bt# words, "It'* the sillier saturation of the atmosphere from fogs and vanors; these cause too much moisture ami sickness follow*.' 1 "Maybe 'tis, tiut. an I said, It is the worst season for wet anil for such complaints as rheumatism, neuralgia, face ache, headache, toothache and the like." ••Weil, you've struck a combination I can break," said a third party. "How?" "WithNt. Jacobs Oil. If it's the worst season, Ht. Jacolie Oil is the best thin# to use for the troubles which it brings. It will cure in no time anything in the shapeof pain or ache." Denver, Col., has decided to have an in eruatlon.il mining expo3itloi ii 1998. Dr. Kilmer's SWAMP- iCoor cures all Kidney an 1 Bladder troubles. Pamphlet and Consultation free. Laboratory Binifhamton, X. Y. A scheme is on foot to remove the capitol of Minnesota from St. Paul. Karl's Clover Hoot, tho vfro.it blood purifier, jfives freshness and clearness to the complex lon and cures constipation. T» cts.. ft) cts., 13. 1 112 afflicted with sore eyes use Dr. Isaac Thomp son's Eve-water. T)rtK?irfstssell at &">c ner bottle IN THE SPRING Every one should jiay attention lo tho condi tion of his health. Nearly every person needs h good spring medicine. Tha impurities which have accumulated in the blood during the cold months must he expelled, or when the mild days come and t lie effect of bracing air is lost, the body is liable to be overcome by disease and great suffering follows. Hood's Sarsaparilla will purify, vitalize and enrich the blood, create an appetite, and.enable the body easily and safely to meet the coming changes in temperature. It possesses precisely those elements of support and assistance which the body at this season craves. Hood's Sarsapa rilla is the "ideal spring medicine" and The Great Blood Purifier. Health Broken Down From any cause, finds a corrective and health-restorative in Hood's Sarsapa rilla, the great blood purifier: __ '• I had a severe attack of rl ooa 8 rheumatic fever which left mo in bad condition, weak Sarsaparilla and with kidney troubles and headache. 1 was much Makes alarmed and knew my condi tion must be improved or I Rich would never get well. I be gan to take Hood's Sarsapa- B.J Oi J villa and it did me a great n«H DIWU 0 f g ool | My general health is much improved, and the headaches, which formerly lasted three weeks at a time, never trouble me. Hood's Sarsaparilla is a good medicine and I highly recommend it." ELLA C. ELLIS, Boxbury, Vermont. Hood's Sarsaparilla Is the Only True Blood Purifier This i9 why it cures oven wh«n all other medicines fail, insist Hood's. Dill, not harmoniously with ilOOu S "HIS Hood's S.rnpirllla. g">c. DAD WAY'S" n PSLLS, .Vor thocure of all disorders of tiie Stomach, Liver, Bowels, Kidneys, Bla tder, Nervous L).season, L •&# of Appetite, Headache, Constipation, Costlvenesa, Indication, Biliousness, Fever, lufiainmati r> n of tlie Bowels, Plies, and all derangement* of tlie lutorn.il Viscera. Purely vegetable, containing no mercury minerals or deleterious drugs. OBSERVE the following symptoms result in; I rum Disease of the Digestive Organs: Constipation, luwar I Plies, Fullness of the Blood iu tha Ileal, Aci lity of the Stomach, Nausea, Heartburn, Disgust of Po >d, Full ness of Weight In the Stomach, Sour Eructations, Sinking or Fluttering of the Hear:, Choking or Suf focating Sensations when in a lyiug posture, Dim ness of Vision, Dizziness on rising suddenly, Dots or Webs before the Sight, Fever au i Dull Pain lu the Head, Defliclency of Perspiration, Yell »\vues< of the Skin and Eyes, Pain in th.> Side, Ciies , Limbs and Sudden Flushes of Heat, Burning in the Flesh. A few doses of RAD WAY'S 1»I 1,1,8 will free the system of all the above uatned disorders. Price £5 eta. per box. Sold by all druggists. RADWAY «to CO., NEW YOltK. W.L.DOUGLAS CUAlT'isthebut. 91) WrIVL FIT FOR AKIN©. CORDOVAN; FRENCH&ENAMCLLCD CALF. ' m* W3.M Fine CAU ikammoa *3.8? pouCE,3 soLts. m 71 '2. WORKING Vfc ]** -EXTRA FINE -1 boys'SchooiShoei PJJW* TP • LADIES • <£ „■ v-V. IM BROCK TON J-IASS. Over One Million People wear the W. L. Douglas $3 & $4 Shoes All our ahoes are equally satisfactory They give the beet value for lhe money. .They equal custom ehoea in style end At. Their wearing qualities ere unsurpassed. The prlcee are uniform,—stamped on roto From $1 to $3 eaved over other makes. , If your dealer rannot supply you we can. ■ H| BDCC To introduce our goods aud to I |H I nCC secure local and geueral agents ■ we will send one ounce Ked Ink and twoouueew Black Ink FREK, pret aM, upon receipt of 6v. postage. KIXG ill K(j. CO,, D 41, Chicago. WANTED in Every TOWN VT* ftt.le to write a plalu hand. Address for particular TOMPKINB BROS. & CO., A 974 Bth Ave.. New York I AAlf for our announcement in fiICVV i?aue ot th» LUUA paper It will »ln>w a rut KbAI of l style o DAVIS CREAM SEPARATORS It would take several PNfe* to glv* detail* about the*« peerless machines. Rnndsorne UiuMnaed Pamphlet Mailed Free, if awts Wantvd DAVM A RAN KI 'IB Lr C. AMD MFG. 00. > Sole WanuMctu.eic, Chicago. HgWBMEM Ceylon ban ladies' cricket clubs. Dogs aro the favorite pets of Mrs. Gladstone. Mrs. Oliphant lias written seventy eight novels. Denmark has an insurance company for "olil maids." English women are taller than their American sisters. No unmarried woman in Armenia may speak to a man. The list of society women who are writing novels is extending. Hetty Green has $00,000,000, but is said to live on $7 a week. Mrs. John J. Ingalls is said to bo one of the best cooks in Atshijon, Kan. The new ribbons aro in small chocks, and hair lines, and in protly, delicate colors. Wedding cake has been tnoro gener ously distributed this season than ever before. There is no reason to believe inter national marriages are going out of lashion. Square crowned hats are only be coming to the few —the pretty girls, particularly. Mrs. Cornelius Vanderbilt is muni ficent in her charities and untiring in her good works. The shirt waist is so numerous as to entirely negative the rumor that it is not to be popular. Boston girls are accused by a Bos ton newspaper of wearing paste dia monds to the opera. Russia has five female astronomers who have submitted papers to the Academy of Sciences. There is a new button made ap parently of twisted wire, with a larga stone ball in the center. There never was a time in the his tory of artificial flowers when violets wero as fashionable as the present. Miss Anna Shaw, D. D., says the best way to address an audience is to talk as if you were scolding your hus band. A few courageous women, tired of the lorgnette, have adopted the mon ocle as it is worn by certain London women. It is considered bad form to correct the butler who mispronounces your name in making drawing-room an nouncement. A fashionable dress designer in the West End of London is computed to make on an average between §25,000 and $30,000 a year. The best veils to wear have light sprays and spots on a clear ground, and greatly improve the appearance of a poor complexion. The wife of Prime Minister Crispi, of Italy, is an ardent lover of cigar ettes, and enjoys puffing a cloud whenever she is disengaged. Collarettes and movable berthas of the same variety of materials are in all shapes and sizes and as plenty and pretty as fancy can pioture. Almost every bodice of recent date, for evening dresses and walking gowns alike, has a pouched front, which con ceals the waist line and overhangs the skirt. The Women's Foreign Missionary Society of the Methodist Episcopal Church has issued over 5,000,000 pages of missionary iiterature during 1894. When the wash gown has a round waist sleeves ore bishop shape, made very full, and are most becoming to rounded arms when three-quarter lengths. The chiof exponents of music in Japan aro women. Most men would consider that they were making them selves ridiculous by playing or sing ing in society. The Countess Castellane, nee Gould, at one time attended the fashionable ladies' school at Ogontz, near Phila delphia, and was noted for her pranka and violation of the rules. As President of the Red Cross So ciety, the Due d'Aumale has received SSOOO from a woman who wishes her name kept secret, for the relief of the wounded in the French Madagascui expedition. A Mr. Clark, of Calcutta, says that the prevailing impression as to the life of woman in India is entirely er roneous, and that the women there en joy quite as much liberty as their English sisters. The gloves most fashionably worn with dressy stree; toilets are white ot pearl-tinted dressod kid, but beige tiuts are worn when they harmonize with the dress, and in beige the un dressed kid is the best choice. "Throatlets" formed by garlands of artificial roses, violets or chrysanthe mums are the next thing after the rage of the wrinkled stock of satin or velvet. Aro you fair and young enough to wear one, girls i Try it, but be wary. One of the newest patterns in or gandies is in wide stripes of plain color with floral stripes between. Still others show the plain colored stripes, lined with white stripes upon stripes, divided by floral designs in vine patterns. A San Francisco girl, disappointed in love tive years ago, has built a cabii. in the woods on the Upper Sal mon River and lives alone. She is au expert hunter and has raised a pair of grizzly bears, which are very affec tionate toward her. The manufacturers of launderod shirt waists aro showing a larger as sortment of textures, colors and shapes than at any time since their in troduction iuto the fashionable world. Some of the small checks are very clear and pretty, and cannot, espe cially when made in a dressy style, be easily told from a silk. The era of chifton is at an end. Its fate is settled, and all becanse a lead ing Parisian modiste has seen fit to taboo it. It has had a mo>t successful reign while it lusted, though. In its place are marvels of new snd exquisite lace that have for their foundations a transparent gauze or net, in itself n marvel. Tulle is also becoming very ushiouable a^ain. HOUSEHOLD AFFAIRS. CRKAKINO DOOM. If the doora are of heavy, old-fash ioned make, the hinges should be looked to now and then, as the weight of the door often loosens the screws, and the whole thing is thrown off the balanoe, in which case, tightening the screws will sot it right unless worn very loose, then it may be advisable to insert longer screws, whioh will pene trate deeper into the woodwork. Looks want an occasional inspection and a touch of oil. If the door has shrunk and no longer fits tightly into the frame, a pieco of baize or list nailed round the framework renders it quite tight and prevents draughts in winter time.—New York Dispatch. THAT TROUBLESOME MERINGUE. The secret of making the meriugue for lemou pies so that it stands tall and thick is in the baking. Whip the whites of the eggs to a froth that will not fall out of the bowl when turned upside down ; putin about a table spoonful of granulated sugar for each white, stir very little, spread it on the pies when they are just done and still baking hot without taking them out of the oven, and let them bake with the oven open. If made hot enough to brown, the meringue will surely fall and become worse than nothing. Five to ten minutes is enough to bake the meringue dry and straw-colored. Sift granulated sugar on the top of the meringue as soon as spread on the pie before baking.—Philadelphia Times. BROWS PAPER IJJ THE KITCHEN. It is a very common practice for cooks to use brown paper as an ab sorbent for superfluous fat on crullers, fritters, oroquettes and the like, aud this custom has grown to be general without any consideration of some of the possibilities that attend it. Au export in the manufacture of paper, upon seeing some of the com mon brown, unglazed stuff used for this purpose, delivered a lecture that his hearers are not likely ever to for get. Ho showed them the serious danger by detailing some of the sources of supply and giving the par ticulars of some of the processes of manufacture. The paper stock is gathered from every refuse heap and roadside, any where and everywhere, without regard to its previous uses or its immediate condition. The material is put into tanks and goes through a sort of wash ing that removes the grosser impuri ties. At no stage of its preparation is it any way disinfected or ma Jo fit to use. "Asa matter of ho said, "the practice of wrapping meats in paper of this sort is attended with the great est risk. There is no telling whether a piece of paper used in this way may have been thrown from a Bick room or employed for purposes that would render it utterly unfit for coutaot with articles of food." Regardless of this, freshly cut meats, full of moisture, are wrapped in it, and it is not an unusual thing for some one to remark that ho can taete the paper after the steak lias been cooked. There ought to be a very strict san itary law regulating tho gathering of waste and materials for paper-making. Every scrap of this staple should go through a degree of heat sufficient to kill all known disease germs. This is not impossible or even difficult. It might entail some expense to the man ufacturer, but this is a small item compared with the results to human ity. Above all things, brown paper as an absorbent of hot fat is not only un wise from a hygienic point of view, but positively disgusting. Old linen is a thousand times more desirable for such purposes, and, in addition, has advantages on the score of economy. A woman who has for years used bits of linen in this way, says that she has made all of her hard toilet soap by dropping the cloths into clear, strained potash water. This cuts the grease from tho linen, and the liquid is boiled, then putin an earthen vessel until enough of it has accumulated; then it is boiled down, and the result is a soap that is smooth, strictly hy gienic and more agreeable than almost anything that can be purchased. It is better to eat fat galore than to fill the system with germs of the most horrible diseases simply because there is a fad for utilizing brown paper as an absorbent.—New York Ledger. ORANGE DESSERTS. The simplest aud most common way of serving oranges is to peel, slice and spriuklo sugar between the layers. Whipped cream is au excellent addi tion to this form of preparing them. Other del cious desserts are as follows: Orange Pudding—Soak a cup of bread crumbs in a quart of rich,sweet milk. Beat three eggs until very light, add a cup of sugar, a small lump of butter, the juice and grated rind of two oranges. Add this to the soaked bread crumbs. Turn into a buttered pudding dish and bake in a hot oven. Orange Short-Cake—Pare and slice tive or tix oranges, removing all seeds and bits oi' white pith, sprinkle a cup or more of sugar over them and let stand while making the crust. This may be of any rich biscuit dough, uting sour cream and saleratus, or sweet milk, lard and baking powder, as one prefers. Bake on buttered plates, with soft butter spread between the two layers. Bake quickly, separ ate and spread thick with the orange both between and on top. If liked a cup of whipped cream may be spread over tho top. * Orange Pie—Grated rind and juice of two oranges, four beaten eggs, four tablespoon fills of sugar, one of butter and one pint of milk. Bake with one crust, spread a meringue over tho top. A good tilling for layer cake is make of the juice and grated rind of two orauges, two tablespoonfuls of oold water aud two cups of sugar. Set in a pot 0/ boiling water and when scald ing hot stir in the yolks of two beaten eggs, and just before removing from tho tire stir tho white of one egg slightly beaten. When cold spread between the layers ol cake.—Amer ican Agriculturist. Tbe largest prioe paid in England during 1594 lor a work of art at auction sale was Bj7,7j'J. This sum was given by Mr. Charles.l. Wert liL-nmr lor Bejrujlvl'd "Lauy Butt/ iJ^luiO." A YOUNG GIRL'S TRIALS. NERVOUS TROITBT.CH KND 1W XT. VfTITS' DAHCC. I'hynlelans PownrlfH—Th« Story Told by lh« Chilli'* Mother. (Front the Reporter, Somertrt, KyA Among the foot bills ot the Cumberland Mountains, near the town of Flat Honk, Is the happy home of James McPherron. Four months ago the daughter of the family, a happy girl of sixteen, was strtoken with St. Vitus' dance. The leading physicians were consulted, but without avail. She grew pale and thin under the terrible nervous strain and was fast losing her mental powers. In fact the thought of placing her in an asylum was seriously considered. Her case has boen so widely taked about that the report of her cure was like modernizing a miracle of old. To a reporter who visited the home the mother said: "Yes, the reports of my daughter's sickness and cure are true as you hear them. Her af fliction grew into St. Vitus' dance from an aggravated form of weakness and nervous I trouble peculiar to her sex. Every source of help was followed to the end, but it seemed that physicians and medicine were power less. Day by day she grew worse until wo despaired of her life. At times she almost went Into convulsions. She got so that we had to watch her to keep her from wander ing away, and you can imagine the care she was. "About this time, when our misery was greatest and all hope had fled, I read of another case, almost similar, that had been cured by a medicine known as Dr. Williams' Pink Pills. Almost in desperation I secured some of the pills and from that day on the wonderful work of restoration commenced; tho nervousness left, her cheeks grew bright with the color of health, she gained flesh and grew strong both mentally and physically until to-day she is the very picture of good health and happiness. "It is no wonder that I speak in glowing terms of Pink Pills to every ailing person I meet. They saved my daughter's life and I am grateful." The foregoing is but one of many wonder ful cures that have been credited to Dr. Will iams' Pink Pills for Pale People. In many cases the reported cures have been investi gated by the leading newspapers and veri fied in every possible manner. Their fame has spread to the far ends of civilization and thore is hardly a drug store in this country or abroad where they cannot be found. Dr. Williams' Pink Pills for Pale People are now given to the public as an unfailing blood builder ami nerve restorer, curing all forms of weakness arising from a watery condition of the blood or shattered nerves. The pills are sold by all dealers, or will bo sent post paid on receipt of price (£0 cents a box, or six boxes for $2.50- they are never sold in bulk or by tho 100) by addressing Dr. Williams' Medicine Company, Schenec tady, N. Y. Paper linns. Paper guns hnve freqnently been suggested as feasible, but have, until now, existed only in theory. Paper pulp, when compressed, is more elastic than metal, and can bo made practic ally as durable. Only the body of the cannon of which I am speaking is of paper, the core being of metal, and the outside wound round with five lay ers ol copper, brass, and steel wire, and a final covering of brass bands. With a gun of this kind the chances of its bursting are considerably less than they are with metal cannon, by reason of the tendency it has to ex pand when fired. Moreover, it com parative lightness commends its use lor field service and for rapid trans portation and all that sort of tiling.— New York Dispatch. Alt Indinu Song ol the Revolution. Captian Sopiel Selmore, tribal chief of the l'assainaquoddies, was recently elected to the Maine branch of the Society of the Sons of the American Revolution. He is not only the de scendant of a patriot, but one of the few living sons of a revolutionary hero, his father, Captain Selmore Soctomah, having been one of a band of fifty In dians who captured an armed British schooner in Passamaquoddy Bay dur ing the Revolution and delivered her to Colonel John Allen, tho American commander. He was also engaged in scouting duty during both the Revo lutionary and 1812 wars. The great grandfather of Captain Selmore was one of the few survivors of the massa cre at Norridgewock.—Atlanta Con stitution. The Largest Telegraph Office. The largest telegraph office in the world is that of Loudon, England. It is located in the general post office building and contains more than 3000 operators, of whom 1000 are women. The latter have a room to themselves and do their \rt>rk with Morse instru ments, with registers and reels. In the other parts of the office all sorts of instruments are used, the Hughes printing instruments being the most popular. In Paris 1000 operators are employed, one-half of whom are women.—New York Dispatch. A twenty-two-pound wild oat was shot in Barry County, Missouri, lately. Deafness Cannot be Cored by local application', as they cannot reach the diseased port ion of iho ear. 'i hero ia only one way to cure Doafness, and that Is by constitu tional remedies. Deafne-s Is caused by an in flamed coudition of tiie mucous lining of the Eustachian Tube. When this tube gels in flamed you have a rumbling sound oe imper fect hearim/. and when it is entirely closed Deafness is thu rosn It, and aniens the Inflam mation can ba taken out and thin tubu re stored toils normal coudition, hearing will be destroyed forever; nine raws out ten are caused by catarrh, which is nothing but an in flamed condition of the mucous surfaces. We will Rive One Hundred 1> dlarj for any case of Deafness (caused by catarrh) that can not be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. Seud for circulars, free. F. J. Chenky & Co., Toledo, O. Sold bv DrntrKims. 7.V. If Yon Are Troubled with Biliousness, Constipation, Sick Headache, Dyspepsia, Indigestiou, Chills and Fever, or any Kindred disease, your liver is torpid an I your system needs u thorough cleansing to re move the cause of the complaint and restore your liver to working order. Quirk's Irish Ten —a combination of herbs— will put new lite into you at once by ucting directly upon the af fected Imrt. At Druggists, or mailed for 25 cents. Elliott <V Rogers, 2d West One Hun dred and Forty-first Street. New York City. The Skill and Knowledge Essential to the production of the most perfect nd popular laxative remedy known have en abled the California Fig Syrup Co.to achieve n great success in the reputation of its remedy Syrup of Figs, as it is conceded to be the uni versal laiatlve. For sale by all druggists. Health Is Ermioiio. A well man can do «s inn U work as two men who are " under the weather." and do it better. A box ol Itipans 'i'abitles in the office will save clerk-hire. A War Mop Showing the location of battle> in Kentucky, Tennessee, Ai<th»ma an.l Georgia bus been published by the Louisville A Nashville K: t(.. and will be sent Irtte upon application by pos tal to E. U. John-on, Geuerui Advertising Agent, Louisville, Ky. Mrs. NViuslow's Soothing Syrup tor children teething, softens the gums, reduee* intliumuH tion, allays pain, ernes wind <-olle. n bolt It Fortify Keehle Lungs \gaiust Winter with llale Money of II oreliouii'i uii't Tar. Tuuthuchc ii.'jjic Carn iu uu: minute Hunting Ihc Sea Otter. Tho North American Commernlal Company'* nchoonor, C. O. Whito will onon Hail on a Hen-otter hunting expedition to Alaska. Hhe carrie* twenty-five men, ritles anil the usual outfit, of animal butahery in tho north western waters, also four engineers for the steam launches which the com pany uses in preference to tho slow moving ennoes of the Inrlian hunters who are supposed to do the hunting for the pelt of the exceeding valuable sea-otter. The revenue laws aro most strin gent on the point that no white man shall kill or capture this animal in tho waters of Bering Sea and alone; the Alaskan coast, but the C. G. White has signed the proscribed hunters here, who will receive S7.i>o for every skin they bring over the 6ido of the schooner. Moreover, they are pro vided with a stock of new Winchester rifles, the use of which will make the vessel liable to seizure, as only clubs, spears and shotguns are to be usod by the Indians, who alone are permitted to hunt. The sea-otter, like his brother the seal, is fast disappearing from the rocks, und coves of (lie northwestern coast before the ceaseless and untiring quest of the white hunters. His valu able fur, which is worth from S3OO to 8500, and sometimes twice as much to the man who takes him in his native waters, makes lifo a constant burden and his fate from a rifle bullet almost inevitable. Unlike the curiosity-loving seal, who will stick up his foolish black head within a boot's length from his poach ing foe, the sea-otter can only be caught by skillful and experienced hunters. Stout steam launches and far swifter Winchester ritie balls are now taking tho place of tho crude ap pliances of the Indians. It is the intention of the Govern ment that the sea-otter should be left to the Indians, that this helpless people, often starving on their bleak wintry islands, might receive some re muneration from the valuable pelt. But the charitable design of tho de partment will fail of realization. Hunt ing vessels clearing for the Alaskan coast make a pretense of employing native hunters and often carry two or three Indians among the crew for the edification of the revenue offioers. So the sea-otter, like tho seal, is passing. A Tree That Owns Land. There is a tree at Athens, Ga., which is a property holder. In the early part of tho century the land on which it stands was owned by Colonel W. H. Jackson, who took great delight in wotching its growth and enjoying its shade. In his old age the tree had reached magnificent proportions, and the thought of its being destroyed by those who would come after him was so repugnant that he recorded a deed conveying to it all laud within a ra dius of eight feet of it. Highest of all in Leavening Power.— Latest U. S. Gov't Report DrfV£\| Baking lxvS! Powder Assommv pejbe : Webster's International | \ Invaluable in Office, School, or Home . JTV • j [ New from cover to cover. <[ ! | It the Standard of the U. S. Supreme Court, of the U. 8. \ > JI j® government Printing Office, and of nearly all of the Schoolbooks. <[ j > ft " warmly commended by every State Superintendent of Schools. J, ]| ■JfO 1., 112 i A College President writes : 44 For ease with which the <[ , i '(+j \ o e s' e fl n d» the word fought, for accuracy of definition, for ef- j | <j K fective methods in indicating pronunciation, for ter*e yet < > U 1 1 comprehensive statements of facts, and for practical use ] | IIS :> work ng dictionary, ' Webster's International' excels S 'i ImSSro i" ttl,y otlu-r siuglu volume." <[ :! JJ G. &C. Merrlam Co., Publishers, !| 1 1 j Springfield, Mass., V. 9. A. !« !i HAVE YOU FIVE OR MORE COWS? _>JfcZ3 jbttaC* you every year. Why continue an Inferior system ■, —panother year at so great a loss? Dairying is now the fjf fl only profitable feature of Agriculture. Properly con ifwJ4, ducted it always pays well, and must pay you. You TSr Joj£™T3a>. tt JKmci. lieod a Separator, and you need the BEST,—the w tC<|ff( "Baby." All styles and capacities, l'rices, $75. I! \ fH ßv\\ upward. Bend for new 1895 Catalogue. ttSs lL THE DE LAVAL SEPARATOR CO., SlT* Branch Office*: General Office*: " Knowledge is Folly Unless Put to Use." You Know SAPOLIO? THEN USE IT. 112 nicn'o n iin ill Ul %II % | 11 Bk only medicine for oougha." r I BB■%B ■B B 811 —jennie pinckard, I IV VVW wll fc Springfield, 11L > ° ct - 1 > ' 94 •> CONSUMPTION Cures Where All Else Fails. BEST COUCH SYRUP. TAMTKS GOOD. IJWE IN TIMK. HOI.U BY IHM'GUISTS. US CT». [|[| | Weak Mothers j * and all women who are nursing babies, derive almost incon- 0 A ceivable benefits from the nourishing properties of A | Scott's Emulsion ;; A This is the most nourishing food knowu to science. It en- | | 112 riches the mother's milk and gives her strength. It also I I intakes babies fat and gives more nourishment to growing < ' children than all the rest of the food they eat. ▼ Scott's Emulsion has be eat prescribed by physicians for ▼ twenty years for Bicketi, Marasmus, Wasting Diseases of Ohildnn, Y Oougha, Colds, Weak Lungs, Emaciation and Consumption. Y Send for pamphlet on Scott's Emulsion. FREE. I Scott * Bownt, 01. Y. All Drussiata. BO cants and •!. 112 A Dinner In Korea. "Korea, ths country whioh has cnuomt all the trouble between China nuil Japan, has many qneer social cus tom*," said .T. A. Morrill, the traveler, "and I remember going to a banquet Riven by a member of the foreign of fice there, which, in many respeota, wan quite nniqne. The guests arrived long before the dinner hour, for in Korea an affair of this kind lasts all day, and were ushered into a pavilion adjacent to the one in whioh the din ner was to be served. After several hnlf hours bad been whiled away in smoking and in conversation, the din ner was at last announced, and we were summoned into the other hall. As soon as we had entered, the officials began to divest themselves of some of their clothing, for part of a native's wearing apparel seriously incommode him in taking food. We took our places at a large rectangular table, which was heaped with food of all kinds in brazen dishes of hemispheri cal shape. For the first course we had soup and sul, which is a kind of wiue, and for the second the waiters handed around some of the other dishes which stood on the table. These contained meats of various kinds, beef, pork and fried fish cut in thin slices. At this juncture there entered several Korean singing girls, clad in the gaudiest costumes, and whose busiuess it was to make themselves generally agreeable when at a banquet, for they constitute all the female so ciety that there is in that oountry. Their singing was not what an Ameri can would call good, nor was their dancing, but their conversation and presence certainly added a zest to the oocasion. "Long as it is, a Korean banquet eventually comes to an end, and this one closed with a decoction of pear juice colored crimson and spiced with pine nuts. This we sipped at our leisure, while the attendants lighted pipes for us. After watching the performances of the singing girls, we summoned our chairs and were car riod to our various homes, I at least feeling much wiser by having partici pated in one of the queer customs of a queer people."—New York Advertiser. The Delectable Grape Fruit. That delectable and piquant fruit variously known as the shaddock and the grape-fruit in this country, as the puineto in China, and botanically as the citrus decumana, was first made known to Western palates by a certain Captain Shaddock, who was in the East Indian trade. Why the Florida fruit growers should have named it the (-rape-fruit is a mystery. These growern, though they have not in creased the size of the fruit, have im proved its quality, producing a fruit of finer flavor and more juicy than the original.—New York Post. A British caaimauder-in-chief when on active service receives $375 a week. WE" - "" -=GIVE AWAYc- Absolutely free of cost, (or a LiniTED TlflE ONLY, The People s Common Sense Medical Ad vise r, By R.V. Pierce. M. D . Chief Consulting • Physician to the Invalids' Hotel and Surgical Institute, Buffalo, a book of over 1,000 large pages and 300 colored and other illustra- Q (ions, in strong paper covers to any one jr sending 21 cents in one-cent stamps for packing and postage only. Over 680,000 Z copies of this complete Family Doctor Book © already sold in cloth binding at regular & price of $1.50. Address: ( with stamps and 3 this Coupon) WOULD'* DISI KNSARY MED* SICAL ASSOCIATION, No. 663 Main Street, Buffalo, N. Y. WALTER BAKER & GO. m The Largest Manufacturers of Ulfcß PURE, HIGH GRADE COCOAS ADO CHOCOLATES vHb 7 thli Continent, have received wMzF® HIGHEST AWARDB from the great MWi Industrial and Fond SI Mil EXPOSITIONS . i; |m;ln Europe and America. I Msll fclj t'nUkethe DutchPrcceis.no Alka or other Chemicals or Dyes are In ony of their preparations. Their delicious BREAKFAST COCOA Is sbeolutely pure sad soluble, and cottt leu than one cent a cup, •OLD BY GROCERS EVERYWHERE. WALTER BAKER & GO. DORCHESTER, MASS. " N * N U—l4 The Greatest fledical Discovery of the Age. KENNEDY'S Medical Discovery, DONALD KENNEDY, OF ROXBURY, MASS., Has disoovered In one of our oommon pasture weeds a remedy that cures every kind of Humor, from the worst Scrofula down to a common pimple. He has tried It in over eleven hundred cases, and never failed except in two cases (both thunder humor). He has now in his possession over two hundred certifi cates of Its value, all within twenty miles of Boston. Bend postal card for book. A benefit Is always experienced from the first bottle, and a perfect cure is warranted when the right quantity is taken. When the lungs are affected it causes shooting pains, like needles passing through them; the same with the Liver or Bowels. This is caused by the ducts being stopped, and always disappears in a week after taking it. Head the label. If the stomach is foul or bilious it will cause squeamish feelings at tlrst No change of diet ever necessary. Eat the best you can get, and enough of it. Dose, one tablespoonful In water at bed tima Sold by all Druggists. COIjK'S New Domestic Coffee Bum. BETTER THAN A GOLD MINE ISfEC than one ceut a pound. high tarliT store coffee S). The poor mail's friend anil rich man's delight, attires north or south in four months. Plant any time up to the 5JUth of June; 20,000 supplied and every one praises it. Has produc d over 6»» bushels per av*re. Some prefer It tostor- coffee. Pro duces two crop* a year in the south. Large packet postpaid 20 ets.; or enough to plant 200 hi lis, 50cts. or »t -imps. Will ni k-* 300 p >ts of most delicious coffee, good enough for a king. Is sunersedlng store coffee as fast as its merl s become known. Large c talogue of 50 new varieties of seeds and testimo nials from pa rons all over the Union sent free with each order by C. E. COLfc*» Sefdntniin, nuckuer. )10. "GSKTLSNKN Regard m; piu.ne i xor tno coming yea* Would say, icv hojte to douh'r our last year'» output of Atr motor*, or, at leant, a* we hare in the f>o»t, tell tternty four out of ri'tfff twenty-fire trimlmiHs that are *ol<l. Mnc4 commencing the tale in IM9, WE 11AYfc bOLD A 1)0IT 500 AERftfOTORS W» do not attribute this fairly rood record entirely to our ef forts, but to the superiority of the poods which you wake. Bvatut k DAYM Urban*, 111 . February 18, lfiv)s " tiaaiLsnKK : We bought and put u;» Aerniutor No. 2, and out of the first fifty which you made we haa thirteen. Siucs that time we have sold about 400 AERftIOTORS ID our small territory it represented the history of the Acrmotor and the Aermotor Company from Hie l*ginning 10 the present hour. That history is oue oi unbroken tri union. Aside from the Aeimotor AV there have been hut few other windmills put up in o<»r tcrr.tory—just enough with which to •ffirifl i~f compare and show the infinite au- Priority of the Aermotor in deaign, workmanship, flnuh Oil |>U.s.uJ ~ •''« oompl*. tion), and ability to run 'JWIwT and do effaotive work when all othen stand idle for want of wind. We should have so.'J more, but this region was well supplied with wind i»ower "17* ~ when the Aermotor ap peered, it beini only <fc 111 ilee 111 to C hicago, tnd had for J ears been the battle ground 112 1 for ten or twelve of ths argest, best known and 111 etrongest windmill com panies. all beinc located I1 1 within 50 miles of us. ■ ICR OF ©I'R RU9INRSS I I 11 AM CORK Kl'.OR HK. PLAfIKO WOtIUEW AND |±l OTMF.It I'XSATtSfAC TORY WHKELB WITH fcj M AKKROTOR.H. You say you have during the past EvLyn year auri-assed any pre* TIOUS year's record by nWv about one-half, and that you expect to double your lAJ last year's output the coming year. Count on us f«r onr portion of it, for the Aermotor never stood farther above nil competitors In repu* tation and in fact than today. SMITH A Bateur, Marengo, 111., February 28, 1896." _ a The next Aermotor ad. will he of pumpe. We shall offer for $7.50 A sls three way force pump. All dealer* should have il or can get it to sell at that price. AU Aermotor men will have It The week following will appear our advertisement of galvanised steel tanks at 2** cents per ration. They neither shrink, laak. rust. Bor raakawaUr taste bad. ASTtintnr Co.. Cbleat*. 4% I Q Cts. a Paekat W Aflflll ** V.u K l»n> aUUIIIk KalrCalinni«,N»»turHuin,. ■JIaRIIJI 1-anilns and Sweet I'eaa. ■gulf u mm Oliei'kt.earlioftheiefam uu, cpeelaltlei.« (or lllctl. Vauolian's Bargain Gatalooue Tells the Whole Story for (•arUen, LAWI II<I Farai* FHKK TO INTBNDINO BL'TRRS. Write east or west j prompt servtee from iht» two crreat centers. S seed STORE. Z ,r A How Consumption Is Now Cured! Pamphlet fully describing the Treatment sent Kree on application to ROBERT HUNTER, M. D. 112 11? West 4£th St.. New Vork. DO DV P»»itively lellt-wd and cured II" \J ■ w I by a ' Imple, s:if»» v.g .nhl« remiMly. sen l for positive pr«*»fs and n-lln le eiMlorM*roentH fr<»-n |■♦•opb* y«»u know. AddnM*l)r. J. U. bt.N'EL>I.T S CO., 4 ani 0 CYd 1 at.. New V. rk,
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers