THE PYRAMID OF SKULLS. A OHASTLT SCEWE ON AN ISLAND OFF THE AFRICAN COAST. Twenty-five Thousand Ha man Skulls riled up on the Sands How They Came There. The Church of St. Ursula, containing t"je bones of eleven thousand virgins who were massacred by the lluns, is" a cham ber of horrors that few can resist on reach ing Cologne. Near the roadside on one of the Balkan passes, however, is an im mense structure built by the Turks con taining thirty thousand Christian skulls. Tiiuour left many similar tropliies of his bloody reiirn in the deserts of Central Asia; but in point of hideous and grim austerity no relic of barbaric aires out vies the Tower of Skulls on Jerbeh, a most ghastly mausoleum of the dead. The 1 4c of Jtrbi h is a patch of and lyini? oil the coast of Africa near Tunis. Its history is little known in these days. No tourist thinks of stopping there, and few know of its existence on the map. But occasionally a traveler returns from the East who has seen the Tower of Skulls and had read a forgotten, page of world's history. lie has heard of the horribiw massacre which occurred there three cen turies a;ro. On deck of the little steamer headed i'or Tripoli the grim monument is often pointed out by an Arab's bony lin ger, as w ith many a tragic gesture he tells the tale of "the Saracen butchery which the tower commemorates. No less than twentv-tive thousand skulls are up- piled here on the yellow sands. The tower rises in a pyramidal form until it stands out in clear relief against the sky. Its face, cemented with clay, has been partly decomposed by the action of the weather; and as we approach the island a compact mass of grinning skulls, grouped on a trestle-work of ribs and thigh-bones, may be seen through the open spaces where the structure has crumbled away. In loiJl a Spanish fleet lelft Malta to conquer Tripoli. It was under the com mand of the daring Count la Cerda, who . & 1 til:'" tt . e . - . , . us sens out uy irui-ip 11., 01 cpiun. .is favorable breezes bore them on, riotous scenes of drinking and hilarity prevailed under the very shadow of the cross, which emblem had been reared aloft as an auirur of victory. On shipboard of the little 1 armada, amid much jesting, and dicing, and clanking of swords, deep potations ! were drunk to the health of King Philip, J in whose honor it was proposed to set up j on tne sands or Africa tiie royal ensign of Spain. But an ominous cloud brooded over the dissolute army of La Cerda. On nearing Tripoli it was discovered that they needed heavier guns to bombard the city. A detachment was at once 3ent back to Malta in a galley for suitable arms. In the meanwhile Jerbeh was sighted, and the order was given to de scend upon the " Saracen dogs," seize their chattels and burn their homes. A fierce havoc ensued. Women and children fell under the sword. One of the Spanish leaders, Juan de la Saera, led on his men until their hands were reeking with blood. Sated at last, they staggered in drunken delirium through the city of Gerba with many a shout and paan of victory, while the af frighted inhabitants who had escaped with their lives lied in dismay. Hundreds of the Spaniards sank in a stupor in the streets of the deserted city to sleep oil their potions. But the Saracen chief, Yokdah, was wide awake. A clangor rung out through the night air. Incited by the avenging spirit of Yokdah, the Saracens seized their swords, and with the cry "Allah ackbar"' (God is victor ious! fell upon the drunken foe. Ia the slaughter that followed all perished who did not leap into the sea. "The Span iards, being put to the worst, sought to Uy unto their ships; but even thither did the inlidtfls pursue them, rairinir. like sav age wolves. The fiirlit was waged in dark ness amid the waves of the sea a thing unthotight of heretofore. And with such rage did they grapple oue another that many sank and were drowned thus locked together, refusing to juit their hold." A great many were borne down by the weight of their armor as they tiung themselves into the sea. The flashing clnietar did its work of destruction with such deadly eilect that not a single foe escaped. The last to die was Juan de la Saera, lie had al most gained his ship when a Saracen grap pled him and would have put an end to his life, but Yokdah. with a tierce yell, cried out: "liana hira net: I keep him for my prize." With much itruirilinir on the part of his captors, who had breasted the waves to seize him alive, he was dragged back to the shore. The buttle was then over, the Saracens gathered the heads of those who were slain and built them into a tower. Saera was tortured, beheaded, and Lis skull laid on the sum mit of the pile by Yokdah, "as being a fit ting crown to the monument." The Isle of Jerbeh contains a triumphal arch in Imnc-r of Antoninus, the bitter fue f Christianity, ami his father, Venis. S.,me years aio it w:is well-known in the East for its nianufai tare of shawls. Other industries thrive in Jerbeh. where tropical fruits are cultivated, and in the shade of the palm spicy od.jrs fioat on the breeze; but its chii-f interest will always be asso ciated with the vcn-ance of Yokdah and Lis pyramid of skulls. '-. Yvrk ijit- Xelody in ieeeh. A curious paper by an En'il-h organist upon "Melody iu (.-. ( !." a. erts that a cow moos in a perfect ll:'h and octave or tenth; a dog barks in a tilth or fourth; a donkey brays in a pi-rfei t tave; a horse neiirhs in a dt-sci.-tit on the chromatic scale. Each it-r-ou Lis his fundamental key in which he gem r:nly speaks, but which he often trau-i ", in svuirmthv to other voices, or when he is ev iled this connection it is pi"' : t. n-f, as discord iu spi-ei-h. the ( i ' :. i: r.i ial ! a beautiful -taua by a lady -oloisi unday, as follows: Haw aw auja' ' lvv tar pia'v. Lm uiaw liawd maw -aw 4.i th, lx i wataw aw tne biaw rraw tne wawmLawe.1 s.1 h ti l, buw a-v sn tin- ilit bl i-a r, fcu fram su u uiaw m aa: 1 V"y l :. . Ii r t.;. on ,f : la-t A curious looking wnti h, believed t , Im; of the time of .eeu Elizabeth, is in tlie form of a silver duck. TLe feat:. .-is. are ( based on the silver. The dial J.i.it ; is encircled w ith a gl.t ornamental des.'a cf jjoriat. d sen.!:, and well executed angels' hca is. The wheels work on sm.il i rub.c. SCIENTIFIC AND INDUSTRIAL. Mr. August Carter, of the Royal Aqua rium, at South Kensington, examined many thousands of newly-hatched trout and salmon. He found a deformity in every 1,000, and one case of monstrosity such as twin or double-headed fish iu every 4,000. "A Chicago man has invented a steam log-hauler which is in successful opera tion in upper Michigan." says the ArtA vtntem Lumberman. "It has four drive wheels furnished with teeth, which can be kept hot with steam so that they will set into an icy road without tearing it up. It draws from eiht to twelve sleds, each loaded with from 2.000 to 3,000 feet of logs, at the rate of four miles an hour." The frothy substance which is often found on grass, and popularly known as "frog-spittle," says the Boston Jimrnal of ChemUtry, has no connection with that animal. It is caused by a little insect which secretes a viscid, transparent fluid, with which he is completely covered. To enable him to breathe, he reaches out a pair of lesrs, and. inclosing a little bubble of air. brings it down, and afterward allows it to escape into the liquid. After a while the numerous bubbles convert it completely into froth or a substance re sembling saliva. While some forms of fungus are most destructive to vegetation, it is now be lieved that there are others which render assistance to the plants on which they live. Frank found that the fungus cov ering the young root points of certain forest trees, as the beech and the oak, seems to help in the nutrition of those trees. Another interesting case has lately been studied in Germany by Wahr lich, who finds that a yellow blader-like fungus of the root-tissue of orchids works no perceptible harm to the plants, but on the contrary probably aids them by changing woody matters into a form that they may more readily absorb. Experiments have been carried on La various German localities looking to bet ter protection from lightning. A Dres den nickel has been successfully used as a material for construction. Its advan tages are that it is non-corrodible and will keep bright at the points, thereby in creasing the efliciency of the rods as col lectors of atmospheric electricity. City Architect Schiller of Essiinger states that lightning struck a pear-tree thirty-three feet high. On one side was a school house 115 feet away, with a rod fifty-six feet high; on the other a church, 323 feet away, with a rod 13-4 feet. Both rods were tested and shown to be in per fect condition. The Liquor Code of Turkey. A common impression prevails to the effect that the Turks, among their other virtues, number that of sobriety. This cannot be literally true, for our Lite Min ister, Mr. Cos, has been investigating the matter. The Turks have laws upon the subject of drunkenness and its punish ment, and this is one of the clauses: "In temperance is proved either by admission of the person accused, or by witnesses who have seen him in the act of drink ing. The flavor of wine from one's breath is not a sufficient proof; he may have eaten quinces, which give the same odor." Of course, every man who is fond of the bottle will lay it on quinces. It is possi ble that quinces supply in Turkey the place of cloves in American barrooms. Very few men will admit being drunk, even when their tongues and lesrs become hopelessly taniiled. In view of the pun ishment provided in Turkey for the of fense, it is presumed that quinces have to bear a heavy burden. "Punishment for intoxication is, 'gnod advice for the first time;' a severe admonishment for the sec ond time; and for every subsequent time eighty blows of the cudgel over the stripped body. The striker, in operat ing, must not lift his hand higher than his shoulders, and the club he uses for this occasion must be a short one." Date or the End or the World Sir W. Thompson, lecturing at the Royal Institution, London, lately, set forth the latest scientinc theories concern ' ing the origin, total amount and possible ; duration of the sun's heat. After refer I ring to the theory of Ilelmholtz, that th sun was a vast globe jjradually cooling, i but as it cooled shrinking, and that the shrinkage which was the elfect of gravi I ty upon its mass kept up its tempera ! ture, said: " The total of the sun's heat I was equal to that which would be required I to keep up -ITU. 000 millions of millions of horse power or about 7),0o0 horse power '. for every square metre a little more than a square yard and yet the modern dynamical theory of heat shows that the sun's mass would require only to fall in or contract thirty-live metres per annum to keep up that tremendous eneriry. At this rate the solar radis in 2. 00O years' time would be about luOth per cent, less than at present. A time would come when the temperature would fall, and it was thus inconceivable: that the sun would continue to omit heat surScient to sustain existing life on the globe for more than 10,OUO,000 years. tltdadelphui Ltd-jer. S?ren Wonder of the N World The group of natural objects that have been cloas;d as the seven wonders of the new world are Niagara Falldj Yellow stone Part, the Mammouth Cave in Ken tucky, the Canyons and Garden of the Gods, in Colorado, the Giant Trees, cf California, the Natural Bridge of Vir ginia, and the Yosemite Valley in Cali fornia. Inter- O'-'ciwt. Denver, Col., is stated to be the high est State capital iu the Union. Its eleva tion is 3,17 j feet above t.He sea lcvuL Hun. M. A. Foraa. cf OU.o, n-auilit: I H u e at ........ .1, .. I ...I - - . i- oh w i iia ujb v. i-uua j . i re.ieved him a,.uuj LoUuy pa.mj. hvEHvda' Farrs;as conaume forty-nine u filt. Ions .r -ua. s in tl.e.r season. i'Le are b)..ei ni '.te or ri , i!rr. extracted t m ':. -ie.t. iire-st'l i.i rn su but r-r a.nl rfiiri.e. tlieri r p a eil ill tUe iiie.l. CDWieit ith e;u,try aiei O'eu cra.uijs. ai..i Lna..v sliuuiereU iu Mle W'.ue. A bottot of ket star ( i,u,''a L are aial a th. r.iiir.1 ari l j,erniauefiC cure of a ecM aj sewn: ia.ii I cuu .1 in, i 1U. uy .Mr. J. K I-l'Mieu, a-sisianL BUt.ei laleudeiit New V jrit t't-i.tra Merf.-ia ar L,imiii:ir Asamu tr i f prw tjt.un fur the satViv cf eUi,.iL'--. uilt .a BU-persUetl n certain A'l ti Mil eil m lies, m U.t.i.riiii jj,a.-ei. iluriii H "il t :ie t.il MNirler. I llav'lli I. ecu .riVtri niai ti.e ciuau.i y n.nl mien-itj ot tip .mn a ':i.-es ,Tni. in. rtasu ia ttic utmijaUerie l.-sure H-iU-a.3l.es. HARTELOtS CHANGES. Wbal lit Patnr Will Beta Tk(M wa Hr(mr la Mllvr. I this country nneoiiwiounly nmlfriroim a wonderful etannifn, t th clianifa to Uka pIa- Iwfore i art" ar of th fact, ami when it biM taken fua-e will w wntnlr hy wo ilitl not we it brfra :t wan too late' Those that ee th rhaii(r rly arail themselTtM earlr, ami thereby rwepiva ber.a tit. The shrawj iron man e the iron intor et transferrwl from 1'ittsl'urj ami I'cnn avlvaniato Birniineham, Alnbama, and in hit far ii!it.lnew ' thu fumai-ea in f'oniinyl rania torn down an4 ilmtrtei for thia nw and prolitic tielil tt m rln ioe.1 by tlx Imn men of Alabama that the low price at which iron can he pnniui-wl thon- will reaulution ize the iron intirft-s of the worUL We tare wn tne (frain-nr'iwin entrva of this country nhif tel to the Wet. We hare a the pork packing industry flit from Cincinnati to Chienct). anil from thorn- to Kansas City an-1 i imaiia. Southrn i-ott-n miiLi nmli'r-Il Nw Knlanil ami Ameru an ntarkta, ami hallnce the wnrld. We haveweu and are init all this take place before our t'ves. and kn'w that other chanKea are taking place e(ually a pnitn l nent, ami we womler a we twhoi.l them. Ten yean ago the m.-uran.-e rumpiinm only required an analysis o( the fluids when they were taking insurance for very lame amounts. To-day no fint-cla.-M company will insure any amount unles they have rigid analvsis if the fluids iusmmxI, ami if any tnn-vs of certain disorders are apparent, the application is rejectwl. In their rvporta they how that the death of sixty of ererT loo people in this country, is uue either di rectly or itniirectly to siii'h disonlers. The Urompton Hospital for Consumptives, Lon don, England, reports that sixty of every b0 victims of consuniption also have serious dis orders of the kidnevs. Among scientists for the treatment of ! this dread malady the question is being dis cussed: "Is not this disorder the real causa of con sumption." Tuu yean atfo the microscope was some thing seldom found in a physician's office: noweverv physician of standing has one ami seldom visits his patients without calling for a sample of fluids for examination. W hy is all this.' Is it poesiblo that we of the present generation are to die of diseases caused by kidney dis orders or shall we master the cause by Warner's safe cure, the only recognized speoirie, and thus remove the elTects? It is established beyond a doubt that a very large percentage of deaths in this country is traceable to diseased kidneys. For years the proprietors of Warner's safe cure have been insisting that there is no sound health w hen the kidnevs are diseased, and the v enthusias tically press their specific for this terrible disorder npon public artention. VV'e are con tinually hearing its praises sounded. This means wonders! Cannot the proprieto rs of this great remedy, who have leen warning us of the dancer, tell us how to avoid a disease that at first is so unimportant, and is so fatal m its termi nation Are we to hope against hope, and wait without our reward 1 The most signidcartt of all chanees, how ever, that we of to-day can note is this radi cal change of view to' which the public ,s been educated: It was formeriv thought tnat the kidneys were of very small importance: today, we believe, it is generally admitted that there can be no such thing a.s sound health in any organ if they are is the least degree deranged. A Jlean Husband. The meanest man lives in West Castle ton. At the bciiinninsr of February he made a wiurcr with his wife that she couldn't drink a quart of milk alone for thirty days in February. If she did he was to give her a new silk dress; if she failed she was to buy him a new suit of clothes. The sruileless and unsustH'ctinj woman finished her sixteenth juart of milk (after a heroic struggle with her re bellious stomach i before she discovered that February had but twenty eiirht days. The horrid husband, ho says: 'T knew it all the time," is claiming the wajjes of his sin, but we susjwet that the tempera ture will be very low when he gets it. Xaxludli (Jyi) Seic. "Over and Over Alain." Repetition is sometimes the only war to impress a trnta upon tlie m.ml. Acennhnc y take notice that Dr. PUrce's "I'lfa-ant P'lrua tive Veilets." itiie orm nal Little Liver Piusi continue tube wonderfully effective in sic It ami nervous headache, consti patimi. indiges tion, ruh ot blood to the lieiid. colli extre ti tles, and a 1 aliments arising truin obstruction of tne bodiiy functions. The. r action is tlior onutl yet gentle, and tie ingredients be.nii e -tireiv vegetable, tliev can be taken icli im pnn.ty in o the most delicate stomach. All drutfuists. A statistician says the average acre of Eu ropean ifirls when they marry is twenty-six years, and of men !mui twenty-eight. The Weaker Mi Are immensely strentrthene I by the use of Dr. ii- V. Pierce' "Favorite Prescription,' which cures alt f m vie deranijemenrs. and gives tone to the system. Sold by druggists. isPELLlMi! matches are now at theirhe gilt In EngiamL When even-thing else fails. Dr. tape's Ca tarrh Remedy v u res. Thrk.1 bull-flitht-s in Pans have produced the groas receipuof Oan't Keaa Tkie if you have a sufficiency of th.s world's goo.ls, hut if you have n il. write to Hoiie't v Co., Pur'Uind. Maine, and receive, tree, fu 1 partic ulars about wor tuatyou cnn do, and .ive at home, wnerever yon are locat I, at a profit of from J.'to $i per d ly and upwards. All suc ceeu: boiii sexes; a.iares. All is new. Capi tal not required. Ha.ieit Co. will start yuu. Lion't dtiiay: invest, Kale at once, and grand success wiil attend you. If you have Humorless m arms and limlje.heart skiim beats. ttiiimiS or tlatU;rs, or you are nervous and lrruaule in danger of shock Dr. Kiimer s EAN-VVhtD reuuiutes, relieves, correct.- and cures. 'RoriL fitCK' mends anything! Broken Chi. no, Ijiojs, Wood. Free Via s at I'ms Jt Ciro Rel.ef is immeiiiuie. and a cure sure. Piso's P.e nied y f or C ai arr U. i)e. COCKLE'S ANTI-BILIOUS PILLS, mEQREAT ENGLISn SEALED Y Fr Lit Blls. Ind; jtlon. br. Trm from Her ur. ciaiAiai ni P-irt- vjtatilt Inbrr-oleaLtv Aeat: t. N. t It I TT fc N TO . w Vork. inEJOj .STER i ue umiF-i. iicKai. are,c l.'l t mot (Xjwerfill rt-uieUy Ituivwn f .r Uueiiiiiatinai. cleunsy. euriurfia, LuitilMtvo. bncn.u:lie. WniHui-i,, u..lil la tlltt -neC mi. I .i ueliep 4111 ijams. hii!.iM-.l iiv 1..nti Fnvi-i-iiiiisaiiil I.Tiiu st -it ti. ti.i;n-ii: rpiite. Beaj,on t-li.-i-r pin.eil.y r.i, e jml ,-Mra wriere .tuer p.ar.-r ana tfreasv mIvb. uiiliiirnt nl IfiCtni. are iiwimkii u. bew ire of on, en urns anaer Mini iaf .un.f toe QHtijes. tuna a i .ie-u.ii. ' -i iieuj. ' i rti.cine. ' a- tli,-y ari titl.-riv worrli ana inteD lea t.i ae. eiv.-. A.,a ua faiSS. A,j TAdK TrtlHa. A.i -iT'l tfSl -U. StAill Ki IJ1 'U.ssov cropnetorn. New y.irli. POROUW-ffi Why did the Women of this country use over thirteen million cakes of Procter & Gamble's Lrnox Soap in 1SS6? Buy a cake of Lenox and you will soon understand why. i ( ) A Second-Hand Clothes Harltt, As a matter of fact, the Temple Jlurket is no longer to-day what it waa originally intended to be, snvs a Paris let ter to the San Francisco Cfironirle. It is not even what it was a few year ago that is to say, a place for the sale of old clothes only. It was to the Temple that all the cast oil overcoats, hnts, shoes, un derwear, etc., of Paris found their way. Everything was rcpnired anil cleaned, so that for a short time it might resemble, after a fashion, what it had been when new, and it found purchasers among those who wished to appear dressed be yond their means. It was at the Temple that a workman who had but one shirt nuild by paying ten cents echunjre it on Sinday morning for a clean one. It was place where a man who had only twenty francs to spend on his clothing could find a coat f.r twelve francs, a pair of trousers for two f pine. Ii(v for two francs, and with the three francs remaining supply himself with a hat, shirt and "a cheap ciirir. Many a hard-working mother with three or four children to support with clothes and shoes, and whose day's lalor would only bring in four francs, would save up sou by sou until she had enouirh to buy what they needed on the l arreuu. Up there the venders were for the mot purt as or as their customers, and prices were within the rench of the slenilerest purses, (.'outs ranged from one to three francs, and shoes from four to tea sous. All sorts of things were in those day sold on the t'nrreuu du Temple. Shoes so old that the soles and upper hail al most parted company, coats in the last stages of threailbarrness, hats from which all the nap had disappeared, cor sets with every whalebone broken, soiled gloves ripped in the tinkers and button less, ribbons and feathers, brass watches, imitation jewelry, old pots and puns, in short a little of everything, and all was spread out on the floor in rows with paths left between them for customers to pass through and inspect the stock. But now nearly everything at the Temple is new, and if you want to find second-hand arti ch you must go elsewhere, to one of the many shops in the small streets of the ' neighborhood, which make a specialty of that line of business. Dwn stairs, with hardly an exception, none of the bou tiques contain anything but new goods, for the most purt of the cheaper sort, and al though the manhande will invariably bcin by asking three or four times what they are worth, she does this with theei pectation that the customer will beat her down to a price somewhere in the near neighborhood of its real value. Up stairs there are still a certain amount of second- , hind articles, but here, too, they are the exception rather than the rule," a id on the whole it is not exactly a place I shall recommend as a good one to go shop ping. AVhen does a man impose upon himsA'lft When he taxes his memorv. Elys catarrh rPPlM BIT Ml "r.vi. sioooMK to any was, rHftTEYERfJS . Woman or Child pr CATARRE Stt a Ifcnlii or Sauf. A particle la applied tnuieach Qosrrll antlla HAY-FELVEP aicnwable. Frier in a a uru" ov man tst(ttr1 ai .-t cmilari free. ELBaijTaR3, Drunlnta Ow..ft. S . A LETTER From the Mother of Miss Jessie Booeotoelo. Rochester, X. Y., April 23, 1S. GwsmxMxs: It is with pleasure I add my testimonial to the many well-known cores which jour most excellent remedy has effart ed. For more than two years I was a (reat sufferer with rheumatism, being scarcely free from pain during the time. I found no relief until I procured Dr. Pardee's remedy, and it cured ma completely. It is now two years sine I discontinued its use and I bare had no symptoms of the disease sines. I know from my own and from the experience) of many others also that it will cure any case of rheu matism or neuralgia. I am, very truly yours, MRS. H. S. BOXESTEELE. Syracuse, Y. Gzxts: I have been troubled with Rheu matism for three years, at times very badly afflicted; was in that condition about two weeks ago, when I got a bottle of Dr. Pardee's Rheumatic Remedy, and in three days' time was greatly relieved, anil have not been trou bled with it since I tiniahed this bottle. I feel like recommending it in the highest terms, as I believe it will do all that is claimed fur it. Yours truly, JOHN BLODGETT, Madison St. Lock port, 2f. Y. GasTLJEMSN: I think the medicine pre pared by the Pardee Medicine Company is in fact the best rheumatic- medicine now on the market; its equal is not known. My boy only nx years old was connVnol to his bed with rheumatism; I got a bottle of the medicine and in a few days he was out of bed and play ing around the house. I can chtrfully rec ommend this medicine to ail rheumatic suffer ers. J. K. PERRY, Shoe Dealer. Ask your druggist for Dr. Pardee's Reme dy and take no other. Price, $1 per bottle, six buttle, tX Pardee Mlii ineCo., Rochester, N. Y. ACE NTS WANTED for the LIFE OF HENRY VARD BEECHER D S'T. la Atifhanct- o.l Lii.iiu.M4 Huu.rv of bu Lira and url Iiuui lur i-b.1i ui ,ta. ut. Mkulalnlll I I. T.. HH-sf Mid tiiurlsr. fin,, ilinly U.uatrkll. Ml lit .!,.. tnm w liu ...n.lr..... fur ik. l.-tm mi , 1. sa fo, , ir l usia iillum r u. IU., Krtfnnl, Cmu Pensions HAM, Ait y. WautUiugUva, u. J TLFCRAPHY If am tun tad 4&ni rui-UikuotL wriu 7..IUUM Br. . Jlo-iUp. W rv--r--:'"-; 1 J "fsfsott rfoftf, ' Hixxl's Sarnaparilla.' Can't Fool me Turtce." aad't Sanapanlla la a peculiar mrdlrlaa. ta vairr aiaar isMpecta It U a dirfarml from anf anil all starr aiadl la orrmt to the puhllo tbat K la wtm paniilar for.a aait proprtf that It mar aaaid te be PvceLU to Imai.. It la pernltar to Itetif. ta a vuictlr meiliciBal ens, la three Import aal parUcaiara, via : flrwt. ta tke eombmatkia of taDjadlai acanta need ; mcvmt. In the proportlua la Peculiar waleb Uwy are. aiized i tSird. In the praeees br walcb tbe active raraUve pro parties of tba prepara ttoa are aaeared. . Toeae taraa Important points make Rood's taraa aarUla peculiar la tba wonderful euree tt has aeeom yliaksC wholly uaprecadeated la the history of wdJetae. aad ftvtnc ta Bood's Sarupaxllla a clear rfht to the utle of "The (reataat blood purUIar avar dlaeovered. Hood's 8arsaparilla old by all druce'eta, (i : at z for as. Prepared kj CL HOOD CO., Apotnscanea, Lowell, Sin. I OO Doses One Dollar iftff. t, j g, jfjf if LmiALPlXIHiM'S VesetIblI jwouifl Eaa atnod the taatof twenty yaara aaaaaiady SaeFamaia Ciiiiiw, raliartaa; periodical palna, peo aoaiK aaalUnfoi raaralaritjr ot eaaaona and aurln waaJtoaaa, rW"lT veuon ! tt.T Tnu THS LitniTl ITIALn"! o r-r" - tit i it u raiiarr im ac-ni'B. su waat sss wssus aaTS or m ssmns. nttaburg, Ha.. ot. 6U. ls3. Mr. Ld!a K. Pnkham: A lafreqneutlTthecaaa a ith mother who baee reared larca famnir. I hare been a great nfferer fur Tear front compiamt incident tn mar ried life. I bae trml uia aalil vf a aumber of pheriane and the virtu of man meilicinr w.lh out relief, and aa aa fier.meot I cinclinied to try Sour. I caa aaaure J ia that the benrflu I bare ertved frrim It rame tMtt bacanae of any faith 1 hail in It. for I had but ti?til bur of any perma nent g'Msl, I am not a aeeker after ootortetr but J Kant to ttU ymt A. I Aoee Sera truaiir'Wi'y bnstkitKi bf yoter aaatiliaa. I am we a-ini; my fourth btt,a and it wou.d take but litti arifninent to pmna.le ma that my bea.ia lauily rejfore.f. I hnnld Uka to wulrly clis-iuate the firt of It wonuerfnl rnratiee power.." rHUDl '. KiX'I'. ths SASSr nrwm wn l itmi yer. rmira n. aa. iri4'li"'ii' liivyfr 1tf'i- fiiiV 'li OOQCOLUniBUS JLiJl j MANURE SPREADERS y .FAR Ws,uiwwyw ,-trt rn HmoiM tarwijir ut aad tn -C i ' fm' r-, a m ia T V-fc.y All wit. i-asgspsf Mary lmm4 KJLvrcirs Oa of errry flro we meet has Viau form ot liiwrt bieeaeu, anil tain i-on-arajit ilanirw of Apoi'lexy, bin k or sudiltn iVatb 1 lUia iieuMNiy n ijuju-, ra liree. correcta aiul cure. (aelTaparvit at lr. k.imr ami-assAar. SlnhMntna. N. X ICesfL CfOC l.et'resufliwi.itr ajiaw $. aakr . i. t, ui IW.iii. sm I J5. 7 MitrSnnuu uf liwpitr aiiaweeeit. i rmi lata. BEiT I?T Till WOtttD U (1 C A U C EXHAUSTED VITALITY 1 GrutMidlc.l Work forTounr and Kidd'-Al(i Man. KNOW THYSELF.i&:l Jt BI.I-HFD kr th PEA BODY MEDf. !. W.H.U. PARK EH, M.D.I Aatltr. M.r Cta&u one uill t-.a op.e l xmmvm mnta Nervuu mmi flivai.-at riiU(.y fisjm (ur jjstcim. Euau-lnl li.itr. Ia.,airi1 igur, Mil Iaipuriue-f of tuj biuud. aai Ui uiiUjiJ aiik r m ruournt uiereun. tj..nuan jibj iv-. uf 4katii miHeM rl trtating. fuil ajnt. rruimt mm bsMtt popular mo Hi ttl treciMj pubtianl in Cue ha luta Jauitf'iarfe. frit:' ou:y $. ,j luuJ p(pitl. omifeawetl in a ytiu wrppr i . istnuiv tamtam vm it juU atol dow. A dart: lv. AtKmaf Ulis pup r, ADIMtl Hrtbli i'mrrd. Trttimeoi rent oa tn UrtUMhLMA.Sb hr-MKbV t o , Uifaytfti.-. Iu t PATTMTC ObttimrtL St-atl sluiu rjr f I Silt I W Iautsr' tsani.j. u. tiijo- iZ Jf r J U FISH BK ttlM baW desv4 tlatm. Ifusin lAm tmtir Brne" Ir-Mier-tBsu-K. N f ack-aoha aad aonai BR l cma su iui fAni. J I 1 Beat luuah Hynip. TaalM'-aaL CM M r 1 in time. Ka.id tw dniwa-eta. - SaS -S V '. ' w ''." ' . t jr. : 3 Hood's Saruparil'a ta pn'tillar la the patBomenB rerord of the aa.ra It has attaini-d. near mualed br aaatbar prvparacinn In liort a time. Older medli-lnes ha brn fomtd to itnd aatde whaa ral medicinal mrlt wan ruiiHidHrail. and to-dav Hood aSarsiiiarllla (tanils th. llnu motl.-ln of IU kind la tlie r.iunlr.r. It In pn-ullarla IU MrrnuUl tail ei-nntimT- Vu iltwi nni dulhir. t 1 a concra tratail eilra. t mini 8 .rsspurll a. I k. Juniper Prrrias. Msn.lra. Dandi'lUm. and other valuable vegetable reuieUl , and Is niui'Q stronger than any to itself tlmllar prepuratti-n upon the market. Hanca, murk mailer .lines of ll.wr Sni-tspnnlla are neceaaary than ta the raaa with other me.ll. im-a. A dollar bot tle of Houd'a Saniaiarllla runfalna an average of mora than IU) dntea, antl will laat a month, while other will aeeraK to laat ait oear a week. Benoe oa the almpia question of eeonomy Hocd'a Sana parllla la iriven adet-liled preference. If eoa have haeer triad thla mcdlt-lne, do to this aeaana. Hood's Sarsaparilla Sold br all dratralita. $': atz for S3, rreparail kr C L HOOD CO.. Spothecarlaa, Lowell, Mae. IOO Doses One Dollar A "25 Years;;. Poultry Yard" f Md Edition. 10H pie. How to rt HM, and POll. Mil lliui im, uris u.l Hull i unite It a x J it. at or r . i il,hj --.I IMII'ITUV k.lm. -SJ., nipiom and raniedlea fur all iinaa t.. i.e.) r.ir t ries. '"ie. ia utaiiiD. Aeuay or t-2 ir.rnr., ...... . y. ---r- -Tliaiuia Dale I'aultry lard." rnalalniac Ulna, (atal'iiraa aad Trie List of .K) rarietiaa KUr K. A. M. LANG. Box 840, Cincinnati, O. HJ 0-11 BMtCouiri Symp. Ta4-i tfXHU Ue in tintaa i)ii h v i, nii'i' Ht IIainf.svili.e, N. J., Uctobor 1 )r 1S. E. T. Dfir IIazet.tixe, Warren, T&. I was taken with t very severe coM last Sprintr, and tried every cure we bad in the sture, and could get no help. I had our village doctor prescribe for me. but kept gettinj; wore. I saw an other physician from Pert Jervis, . Y., und lie told ma he used I iso's Cure for Consumption in his prac tice. I bouurlit a bottle, and bt'loro I had tnken all of it there was a change for the better. Then I gat my em ployer to order a i.uuntity of the medicine aad keep it in stock. I took one more bottle, and my Cough was cured. litsi ettfully. Fuank. McKelvy. Beati.ui,'h bjrnp. l aeti-a it'SMi. Cae in tln.e. ..t ilnii'i.'.-rn. FOR Th HONEST! aiiKMinia of f jaw lo f :u ycsirs tim. lit. buriJauoii.tt to aouti. teLiit I aaiutiut you citn aftiv um, ai;o i I ami CM(-iiputiiii. 1'h- v(m in 1 r utl, wi:ti t iCinA. U:.. b rr. ou rf- I. HITU li, scc'y, JlSuUrVAII, 0Mu J JOjaES PAYStheFREICHT Ta aua r 'oa i t- -i.. tie n i. !, himj f M ltt.sua ki 1 B.im H- i (Lr. S3CSO. Krarvrit- a.c. rJt ,r.T price Ila aw.'t".B i" ',ij...r kud ,,i tr. mits of ihghim rts, DIM.IIA.Ii ION. N. V- IT si ni1Pon ',", ''"trVa..!,, laremeal rflHl I l.eleuv. In-.i.iriieil i ir.-u.m-free I MllllIU j. l. M IM II ., Ir ,t vi. S5 s day. Sample wirt.i KRE3 I.iue. u..l iii.Jlt :r..- i,, r - r.-i.-t. A,tiLre "''" iSAHir. K..1-, 11 ,i.U,..i, H.,.y .tt C ti Ut rt Tu bW f ' WMr.L i - Hv suiiaui tliut;ie-4 "tdu .Kw ,1 ,..!i '!tuuJi.M ..i 23SLaWj 0 1 ri . LJ ..aim i iuwei-sjrj; i I 'Is Lfcs ill 7 .