win. man HOW TO BECOME FLUMP. ADVICB TO PEOPLK WHO WANT TO INCREASE THEIR WEIGHT. Proper Food and Drink -Breathing Fresh Air and Tnk ln Warm Dm ha Moderate KTrrclso. Henry T. Finck gives in tho New York Kxxh the following rules whereby lenn people mny become plump: fl. Kntinir anil ilrink in?. "Everv woman who is thin would liko to be stonier," Fays urmnt-rovarin in nis iragmentary chanter "On Leanness," from which, however, the following sen- tence is worth citing: "Men fiittcn sheep, ralves oxen, ponltrv, carp, crayfi.ii, oysters; and hence I derive the general maxim: Whatever eats can bo fattened, provided the food is well and suitably L'hosen." The famous Mr. Ranting, who reduced his weight by more thnn titty pounds in one year, found thnt sugar was the most j fattening thing he could eat. Hence, to increase, your weight eat cakes, pudding? syrup, honey, candy nnd pastry, always taking care "that it be crisp and digesti ble, tor indigestible food is a chief cause of leanness. New Kngland piecrust is ' probably responsible for the appearance t a i . i . i , c . ' ii uiv ivpicni gaunt lnnacc. wiucriiu tening articles of food are tender lamb, salmon nnd eels, milk and cream, corn, bread and butter, nnd those vegetables which grow underground and of which sugar is made beets, turnips, etc. Hoilcd or baked potatoes, mashed on the plate and seasoned with suit and fresh butter, make a delicious dish, rapidly fattening. Eat often nnd very slowly, for it is not the quantity that is eaten but tho amount thnt is thoroughly digested thnt nouishes the system and rounds the bodily contour. Hismnrck's private physician, Dr. Schweninger, owes his international reputation to his success in diminishing the Chancellor's weight. The secret of his method is never to allow his patient to drink with his meals, or if l.e does drink to do so very sparingly. Hence follows the converse rule, that if you covet stoutness you should drink freely with your meals, always, however, In such a way ns not to interfere with the digestive processes. That is, you should never drink while you have food in the mouth, for the "food ought to be moistened by the saliva alone. Ice water, too, should be always avoided. It chills tho stomach anil is the ciiikc of three-fourths of the indigestion nnd con sequent leanness prevalent in" this country. Mountain tourists know that ice water never quenches the thirst. Yet we con stantly spoil our water by putting in ice. The ice should never be allowed to come in contact with the water we drink, but only with tho outside of the pitcher. In this way we avoid also the dangers from microbes hidden in impure ice. (2.) Breathing and llnthing. Air is food, as much as beef, the only differ ence being that beef is assimilated in the stomach, air in the lungs. Hence if you wish to be plump, Itccnmo an air-glutton. Breathe all tho fresh air you can get, nnd avoid foul, stuffy air, especially at night, s you would putrid meat. Always breathe through the nose, and cultivate the habit of slowly tilling your lungs with twice ns much nir ns you commonly inhale, exhaling it again as slowly. This purities the blood and stimulates the ap etite. Frequent warm baths before re tiring, or cold sponge baths in the morning, followed by brisk friction with a coarse towel, have the same effect. (8.) Hcst. Exercise is commonly pre scribed as a method of reducing one's weight, and brisk and long-continued exercise docs have this effect. Hut moderate exercise is an antidote against Icanuess, because it stimulates the nn- petite, nnd thus more than atones for i mo loss following muscular movement, liesides, if exercise is altogether avoided, there js danger of losing grace and sym- 'Bndn-re'strhspPllhlly'tndicatcd In (he case of those who objict to leanness. Moderate brain-exercise is. indeed, essen tial to perfect health, but excess should be enrclully avoided. Emotional excite ment and worry arc fatal to the chances of becoming plump and pretty. If an annoying thought haunts you, forcibly fix your attention on something else. Above all, never allow thoughts to tor ment you after retiring, nnd thus to pass AiwiffWtf'Ubly Into your dreams. Eight hours of dreamless sleep, in a well-ventilated room, form the most potent cos metic known to man or woman the traightest rond to plumpness and benuty. r The Willow a Useful Tree. There is no tree that is so sure to grow without any care as the willow. A twig from a branch of the tree stuck into the moist earth, and the labor is completed. An article in a German contemporary, which is a great authority, recommends the cultivation of willow trees, not only from an economical and industrial point tf view, but also for hygienic purposes. Tliey nre especially useful where the drinking water is taken from fountains r natural wells, nnd still more where there are morasses and meadows; for in the vicinity of willow trees water is ilways clear and pure. Let those who doubt this fact place a piece of willow which has not yet begim to strike, into l bottle of water, and place this, with mother bottlo containing water only, in warm room for eight days; in the" first pottle will bo found shoots and rootlets in clear w ater, while the other bottle will contain putrefying water. Holland is covered with willows, and their dam works are made stronger by the net-work formed by the roots. Drain Work. There is as much danger of hurting the hraiu by idleness as by overwork! According to a writer in faith ami Wort, Dr. Furquhar.tou argues that intellectual power is lessened by the lint lessness in which the well-to-do classes generally ipend their lives, l uder such conditions the brain gradually loses its health, and, although cquul to the demands of a rou tine existence, is unable to withstand the Jof sudden emergency. So, when J of work is unexpecicdlv thrown it in its unprepared state, the worst asequeuees of what may be called rerwork. show themselves. Similarly man accustomed to Sedentary pursuits is liable to be physically injured by tak ing suddenly too violeut exercise. Dr. Fsrquharson further says that so long as a brain-worker can sleep well, eat well, and take a fair proportion of out-door exerciso he is safo to keep on. When any of these conditions fail it is time to cry halt. Southern I'lne Hills or the South. Spots can be found all over tho pine hills of the Southern Mates its healthy as any forests in the world. Some invuiids are beginning to understand this fact and profit by it. At least a million in valids mid wealthy people in the North and West would winter in these South ern pine hills and on the gulf shore if they knew the honest truth ilout the climate of tie Southern States. -X Chicago Tint. FARM AND GAB DEN. Thorough and Frtncnt Cnltlvatlon. The advAntAgcs of thorough and fro qnent cultivation are Apparent tinder nil circumstnncrs. In dry weather the tine, loose ion makes a non-conducting eov orinir which preserves tho subsoil moist and prevents injury to the plnnt.; in wet weather it absorbs and holds the rain whioto would otherwise run off without doing all tho pood it might. Two or three inches of fine, pulverized soil is a mulch, and. holding a lnrge qnnntity of air among its pnrticles, cools the lower eon ana prevents excessive evaporation. j wncn a rain comes, then is the timo to ; run the cultivator through the crops and loosen the crust which is apt to form the first hot day afterward. In a dry time ! the evaporation from the soil is prevented by frequent stirring of the aurfaco and . the fine porous lavcr at everv change from ! hot to cool and from cool to hot again hns currents of air passing in and out as the expansion ana contraction alternates, with the more decaying vegetable matter in tneson, the more moiturc is absorbed from the night dews nnd the more oxidn tion and vitrilication goes ou ns this moisture nnd heat nre nbsorbed by the porous surface. Never mind how cleun and clear of weeds the soil mny bo; kill- ing weeds is only a side issue in tho work t 1. : . . : - r - of summer cultivation of crops.' York Timet. Poultry Hint. Confine the old hen in a coon placed near the garden, and see what havoc the chicks will make among the insects. Work quietly and gently among your fowls. Never allow them to become frightened. Never allow a strange dog on the place. Charcoal has an important clenning influence on the fowl's system, nnd is es- Eecially vnlunblo when fed to the laying ens during tho w inter season. Dampness is fatal to young turkeys, and causes greater loss than anything else. Iho essentials to success are nitrogenous j food, warmth, dryness and frequent feed ing. It is not so much tho little red mites in the hen-house thnt do tho damage to poultry ns it is tho large gray body-lice, which work on the heads "and necks. Look closely for them, as they do not leave tho body of the fowls. The sleepy disease in chicks, drooping spirits in the hens nnd failure to lay, tliough well fed and in apparent health, may be traced to the large lice on hens. Ducklings grow faster than chicks, nnd with proper care nre ready for market at the age of from eight to ten weeks. The eggs hatch well, requiring no turning, and aro thirty-one days in hatching. They require much the same food as chicks, but require more meat, as their nature demands fresh nnd raw articles mostly. They do not require water until they are well feathered, except fordrink ing, nor must they even get wet. Cin cinnati Commercial-Gazette. Fighting Poultry Vermin In Summer Frequently the most difficult work of the poultrymnn is that of ridding the premises of vermin. Most persons do not become aware of the presence of vermin until tho little red mites nre seen in myriads. These can easily be destroyed by using proper methods. The great scourge of poultry is not the mites, but the large body-louso that hides at the base of the feathers, on the head nnd neck. As they nre only found there ou the fowls, an examination of the quarters does not reveal them, when they may be busily at work on the birds. When the hens seem to droop without apparent cause, the chances are thnt a close examination on their heads and necks will reveal swarms of these lice. Little chicks, especially those that feather very rapidly, such as Dorkings, Games, and Leghorns, will soon succumb to large lice, nnd often the cause will bo ascribed to something else. To prevent lice on fowls, the best thing is the dust-bath, which must con sist of fine dry clay or coal ashes. If the quarters arc kept clean, the hens will Crevent the attacks of lice by dusting, ut when once the lice put in an nppcur ance, the poultryaian is compelled to take active measures, as the lice must be fought until not a single one remains. Kerosene must not be used on the bodies of tho hens, ns it will sometimes kill them. For the large body lice, first grease the heads, necks, and vents with a mixture made by adding a teaspoonful of crudo petroleum to every gill of lard. Vse it warm, so it will spread well. Then dust the hens well with Californian or Persian Insect Powder. Repeat this every third day, and dust every portion of tl:e body, but do not grease" the body only the head, neck and vent. American Agri culturist. Peach Trees and Peaches. In a special report made by J. M. White to the New Jersey State experi ment station nre given in detail investi gations concerning peach yellows nnd the treatment of the trees in New Jersey by some of the more prominent growers". Numbered with those who related their experiences for this report is Dr. Henry Hacc, of Pittstown, Hunterdon County, who has used potash salt and bone for the lost six years. He has found that when trees bear an excessively large crop they are liable to an unhealthy appear ance. The leaves turn yellow, small J reddish shoots start up from the large brandies near the trunk, and the wood soon becomes of a dark brownish color. Whether these symptoms represent the specific disease called the "yellows or not, Dr. Itace does not pretend to sav, but claims that muriate of potash and superphosphate of lime, applied as soon as the crop is gathered, in the quantity of four hundred or five hundred pounds to the acre, with good cultivation and pruning, will prevent this premature de cay or arrest it if just commenced. If the fertilizer is withheld till the wood has liecome dark brown, its application may improve the appearance of the tree, but it will never be healthy und vigorous again. T. E. Hunt, of Greenwich, considers it of great importance that only healthy trees be set out and also that the orchard be well cultivated and cleared of briers. He works his orchard until July, plough ing it once and then doing tho work w ith a wheel or Acme harrow. Ho fertilizes with muriate of potash and bono, using two hundred pounds of potash and three hundred pounds of bone to the acre. This orchard occupies ten acres anil the ma jority of the trees are in good con dition. Isaac M. Smally, of Hoadstown, has been using kaiuit and bone for five years with satisfactory results. Ho has 3,.jil0 trees set on corn ground, and he crops among his trees with corn the first two years, pract sing clean cultivation and removing all briars whenever the e ap pear. He fertilizes with kaiuit and bone, using three hundred pounds of each per acre, applied in early spring, and has no yellows. Win. licdiiiond, of Jamesburg, has 10, 000 trees from two to fourteen years old and in healthy condition, l'euches from the old trees took the first premium ut the Monmouth Fair last season. Mr. Redmond fertilizes with yard irmnnr and all tho ashes ho can procure and practices thorough cultivation, believing good cultivation eipial to manure, lie carefully selects his buds from healthy trees in order to secure healthy stock to begin with, which ho considers of the utmost importance His soil varies,some being sandy and gravelly nnd some clny lonm, but all well drained and rolling, with a clay sub-soil. Messrs. Culver and Blow, South Hivcr, hnvc 4,000 trees, many of w hich aro thir teen years old, on sandy, gravelly loam, with clay sub soil and rolling surface. They have fertilized with bone and lime. Their practice is to sow buckwheat in their orchards the first two years, and after ward to cultivnto without any crop, ploughing very shnllow twice in tho sen son. Their orchards have produced flno fruit, being fairly remunerative, and tho majority of tho trees nre now in very good conition. r rom the experience and practice of tho most successful peach-growers, Mr. White closes his report with tho following conclusions, viz.. ; That for successful peach culture the soil must bo adapted to the development of tho trco and fruit, properly located nnd drained. Then acting upon tho principle that it is better to prevent than to cure disenso, perfectly healthy trees should bo selected for planting, and after being planted they should bo thoroughly cultivated, judi ciously pruned nnd well nourished with tho proper amount of food best suited to their healthy growth and productiveness. Jeie lorle World. Farm and CSarden Note. As a rule, the best quality and the best yield go hand in hand. Employ extra help for the kitchen as well as tho field during harvest. Give breeding cows the run of a clover field all through the summer if you can. Stable manure, savs Professor Chamber lain, of Iowa, is tho best fertilizer on earth. Poultry thrives in orchards and do the orchards much good, for they kill many insects. Tho Crown Prince of Germany sells 1,000 quarts of milk daily from his dairy farm near licrlin. Cultivation should bo moro and more shallow ns corn increases in size, says an Ohio Experiment Station report. The swine breeders of Iowa have come to look upon white clover as an ex cellent summer pnsturngo for hogs. Most farmers can keep a few hives of bees to advantage. Honey, liko fruit, should be found ou tho farmer's table. Tho Farmers' Club Journal savs: "Tho rock w hich wrecks many a breeder of swine is a desire to breed too young." Keep tho hoc moving; it will not only kill tho weeds, but render tho .soil mel low, and thus promote rapid growth to the crops. Prof. Morrow savs: ''Cut hay green. Nearly all grasses loose value as they be come fully matured, some becomo com paratively worthless." When the mere fact of a dam being a registered animal makes a dillercnco of $'.'00 to t'lOO in her progeny, it is tho height of folly to raise scrub stock. When working your corn when tho ground is dry, do most of tho work in the early part of tho day nnu dress the rows near the stalks, removing clods. To have stock on your farm which will sell at high prices, breed a good grade filly, sired by a registered draft horso or trotter, while tho mare is young and strong. A successful horso breeder says thnt an animal needs as much feed tho first year of its life as in any subsequent year, nnd thnt it should be fed a little at a time, as often as it will eat. A Scotish writer savs always sneak to a cow as if she were a lady, and speak to .inn treat a unit as it no were a gentle man. Animals possess far more intel ligence thnn is usually attributed to hem. An exchange says churning should never go any further than to bring the butter nnd lenve it in granular form. Butter should be worked but little, and the only otlico of that little is to liberate, the brine. When your horse shies at anything, make him acquainted with it; let him smell it, touch it with his sensitivo up per lip nnd look closely nt it. Continue tho lesson nnd you will cure your horse of nil nervousness. All stock particularly work horses should havo frequent small drinks of cool, pure water. They require salt at least once a week. If kept in the stable, so ns to be "handy'' for use, tho salt should never be left uncovered. A man who raised 300,000 cabbages last year kept tho flea beetles away. Ho poured a gallon of spirits of turpentine into a barrel of land plaster, and when the plaster was dampened through he spread it broadcast over his cabbage patch, applying it when the cabbnge was dry. Horses nt hard work need special care, both in food and general treatment. They cannot do hnrd work on grass alone nnd should have a proper ration of oats. An occasional washing, in addi tion to currying and brushing, will help keep the coat in good order. I'se a cot ton sheet to keep off flies. Water fre quently and they will not drink to ex cess. Clean and sweet stables promote the health of the animals. A )iioer Fact Concerning the Eyes. "There's lots of advice to be given in gard to the care of the eyes," remarked an oculist tho other day, "and go much lias been said and written on the subject that it scarcely seems worth while to say anything more. There's one thing, how. ever, that I've never heard mentioned, and that is in regard to traveling. When a man is on a train he almost invariably looks at the landscape through the win dow nearest him. This is a great mis take both for physiological and aesthetic reasons. In traveling at tho rate of forty miles an hour objects present themselves to the sight in rapid succession, and in order to look at them the pupil of tho eye has to undergo very rapid changes. For instance, when you sec a house a mile away the pupil is dilated; when the house is 100 yards from you the pupil is contracted. Now, in traveling, you turn your attention first to an object a mile distant, and next, perhaps, to one twenty feet from the car. The change is made almost instantly, and the pupil does not have time to dilate or expand, as the case may be. Now. if you look through a window on the side of the car opposite from where you are sitting you will find that this does not occur. The different ob jects iu the landscape blend and spread out into a slowly moving . panorama in stead of being rapidly whirled past your eves. You get a much better view aud have the comfort of knowing that it has no bad effect upon your sight. Chicaao Herald. A Gciman entomologist declares thai spiders destroy more insect enemies thai do all the insect-eating birds, NEWS AND NOTES FOR WOMEN. Ths old-fashioned sandal is re-established in favor for ladies' wear. The rage for two colors extends even to passementerie ornamentation for dresses and mantles. A novelty which is likely to provo in valuable for wearing during outdoor pur suits is mittens of light cnlf leather. A new silk glove is long enough to go over thn sleeve, and so trimmed with bows ns to appear as if fastened by them. Children's drosses aro longer-wnisted thnn last season, being mnde down to tho wnist line nnd sometimes slightly be low. A much favored ornnmcnt of the mo ment consists of necklaces of pnssemen terio composed of several grndunted rows. Tho long redingoto polonniso is much favored for all costumes for walking and morning wear, and ninny vnrintions of it are seen. Homespun costumes usually hnvo a decoration of hussar braid and buttons extending from tho top to tho edge of the skirt. Coarse homespun clothes nre still worn, the newest showing brond stripes of colored fluffy dots on their fawn-colored or neutral-tinted grounds. Brocho costumes are mnde with pique waistcoats, which may be of any shade from pure white to tho darkest orange embroidered with colored spots. It is becoming customary to make tho trains of wedding gowns separate from tho skirt, so thnt it mny bo removed when the dress is afterward worn at balls. The Princess Mampour, of Ismnil, is a very extravagant young potentate. She is up to her jcvMed cars in debt, nnd yet siie thinks nothing of paying f.")00 for a pug. Thn. once ugly waterproof has devel oped into an elegant garment in wool or silk of fashionable pattern and color, nnd is a very desirable addition to a lady's wardrobe. When belles travel they more and more tnke to what mny be called aggressive costumes. Enveloping cloaks are made of pronounced plaid, and sometimes a skull cap is worn to match. Mrs. Stephen Morley, a Montreal woman of wealth, kept over 200 cats in her house. Tho board of health raided her, and she lost her pets. Now she is suing the bonrd for damages. Skirts made of fancy stuffs, with which different overdresses may be worn, arc fashionable. The draperies aro usually arranged high, leaving tho skirt the con spicuous feature of tho costume. In scarfs nearly every style iow seems to bo worn, including China crepe, India silk nnd cashmere, plain and embroid ered. However, tho Spanish lace scarf still continues not only staple, but the favorite. For silk nnd wool combination dresses contrasts of color nre again seen, with fine, soft camel's hair for tho waists nnd drapery over a silk skirt of Ottoman, Bengaline, faille Francaise or any good repped silk. Miss Annie Thomas, of Billings, Mon tana, is the busiest woman in that busy territory. Sho conducts a 0.000-acro ranch, looks after valuable timber prop erty nnd has nn interest in two paying mines nenr Butte City. Very elegant looking costumes liave plain but ample draperies, which uro ar tistically fastened here nnd there with ngraffes of old silver. These pretty orna ments aro also seen upon the crowns and brims of stringless bonnets and lnrgo lints. London photographers encourage the idea of American women being presented nt court. Every woman immediately has her picture taken in court costume to send homo to her dear 500 friends. The photographers nro growing rich under this new dispensation. The wife of tho Viceroy Li, of China, recently paid a visit to tho foreign hos pital for women ntTion-Tsin nnd showed much sympathy with tho poor patients. She ordered her attendants to distribute money to all alike. The incident is re garded as noteworthy, as Chinese digni taries heretofore have paid little heed to charity. It is estimated thnt there are 8,000,000 workingwomen in England, about one half of whom are in domestic employ ment. Further, that half the working class families of the laud are maintained bythewotkof women's hands nt ridic ulously low wages. Tho liritixh Weekly suggests that jubilee year is a good timo to make some efforts looking to a better ment of their condition. A dainty flower parasol of real blos soms was lately presented to the Czarina by the officers of a Russian corps on regimental fete day. Polo pink roses formed the centre of the parasol, with a border of deep red blooms, while sprays of lillies of the valley hung all around the edge in a graceful fringe. The arms of the regiment were embroidered on a white satin ribbon knotted around the ivory handle of tho parasol. The latest fancy in hair dressing is the coiffure a la vrai Urcquc, not high on the head, but drawn in a close coil, rolled under something liko a French twist on the back of the head, brushed off tho temples and forehead, with only a few light curly tresses falling from under a riviere of jewels, or a Greek fillet that just touches the top of the forehead and describes a straight line to tho back of tho head. The whole effect is very close, nnd no additional hair is required". To Properly End or so' a Cheek. Very few otherwise intelligent and ed ucated M!ople understand how to prop erly endorse a check payable to their or der, and few realize this inconvenience they cause by placing their endorsement in an awkward position. An observance of the following rules will enable any body to place the signature iu the proper place : 1. Write across the back not length wise. 2. .The top of the back is tho left end of the face. a. To deposit a chock, write "For de posit only to credit of ," and below this write his own name. 4. Simply writing your own name on the back of a check signifies thnt it has passed through your hands aud is pay able to bearer. It. Always indorse a check just as it appears on tho face. For instance, if the check is payable to "G. Head," in dorse "G. Heed;" if to "Geo. Head," indorse "Geo. Bead;" if to "Georgo F. Bead," indorse "George F. Bead." If the spelling of the name on th face ol the check is w rong, indorse first just as the face appears, and below in the prop er way. 0. if you wish to make the check pay able to some particular person, write "payable to or order " Iu England ull checks are payable to bearer, but in this country all stran gers presenting checks for payment uiust be identified by some one known '.o the bank. Commercial Nwt. Sunstroke Symptoms and Treatment When during tho hented term one who has been exposed- to the sun's hented rnys begins to suffer from the hend-nche, giddiness, nausea nnd disturbances of sight, accompanied with sudden nnd great prostration of tho physical forces, sunstroke is probably imminent. If such an one will take timo by tho forelock nnd immediately retire to a cool ptace, mnk ing use of some simple restoratives, such ns nromntin ammonia, Ac, ho mny bo spered further trouble ; but if he persists with his business he will doubtless soon become very ill, which illness takes the form of heat exhaustion, heat apoplexy or genuine sunstroke, tho thermic fever of some writers. Thoso who nro exhnustcd by tho heat linvo a cool, moist skin, a rapid, weak pulse nnd respiration movement nnd tho pupil is dilated. In fact, the symptoms aro thoso of collapse. These patient will probably recover promptly, an event nh'ih maybe hastened by the use of n tonionnd restorative trentnient. Those who suffer from heat apoplexy frequently become nnconsciousnt thu on set. The heart nnd breathing apparatus is not mnrkedly disturbed, nnd tho pupil may be normal, but tho unconsciousness deepens nnd the cn-o runs on to a fatnl termination. An nrtery has been broken in tho brain, nnd tho poured out blood pressing on the nerve centres brings about the fatal event. A treatment calculated lo draw tho blood from tho brain to tho extremities hot foot-baths, bleeding, Mc, promises to bo the most useful in inch tpiscs. The thermic fever pntient is uncon icious nnd convulsed, nnd his body tem perature may be 10S to 110 degrees Fah renheit -thnt is, ten degrees abovo nor mal. Tho skin of this patient feels ns tliough it would born your hand when !nid thereon. In this caso the thorough nd prompt npplication of cold is needed, lee to tho head nnd colV wntcr to tho body generally will be in order. Medical idvice should be promptly hnd in cither jf the two cases last referred to. Com plete recovery from sun-stroko is rare, the brain being permanently crippled in many cases, llesideiice in n cola climato iffords some hope for such patients. Vhi'.aJflhia Timet. Jim Ponce, of St. Augustine, Fin., go ing through tho woods heard tremendous quawls, yells nnd roars, and, cautiously investigating, camo upon a seven-fcot panther fighting with an nlligntor, which had the panther fast iu its ponderous jaws. Ponce sided with tho under dog and shot the alligator, whereupon tho Iianther, freeing himself, mnde for tho iitntor, who hnd a hnrd tight before ho killed tho ungrateful beast. An Oflenfflvft llrrnth Is most lfslrtKsintf, not only to the person af flicted If tic have any pride, bat to thoso Willi whom he conn In contact. It. Is a delicate mailer tn seak of, but it haa parted not only friend bill lovers. Hint brvnth anil eatarrll are Inseiwriible. lr. Sao'sl'HtHrrh Keniisty euro Hie worst case., as tliousaiuls can testify. Com .i.t..i. ivmmcnitiks are blest In the proportion In ieh money is ilitl'uscil through the whole nf rwM,l..ll., rantco of population 3 M PELLETS oooW qqqU BEING ENTIBELT VEGETABLE, Dr. Pierre's Pellota operate frlthont disturbance to the sretem, diet, or occupation. Put tip In Rlnas vials, herntcllralljr sealed. Alwajra fresh and reliable. A LAXATIVE, ALTERATIVE, or Fl K6AT1H), theso Utile Pellets give the most perfect satisfaction. , SICK HEADACHE. Hllloiia Headache, Dlzzlne... Coif lipatloii, I nd I goal I , llllluii. Altacka, and all ilt-ranm'im'nts of thn stomach and txmeis, are promptly rclipvd and permanently cured by the line of Ir. rienxi's l'teoaiint Vurifntivo Tellcta. In ex phinntion of the remitim! power of these. rellets over sn great a variety of liaenH, R msy truthfully be anld that their action upon tho system is universal, not a R-innd or tiaaue eaeHplnfr their sanntivo Itiiiuenee. Sold by druitKisIs, for a" cents a vial. Manufactured at. the t liein Ical Ijibornlory of World's Uibi'Snsaht Mkuicau Association, Iiuffalo, N. V. f C(cuoooJ) FOR A CASE SYMPTOMS OF CATARRH. Tlull, tiesvy heartache, obstruction of the nomil pnscnyea, dis charKes Inliuifr from the head into the throai, aoiueiinies pio Jiiae, watery, and acrid, nt others, thick, tenacious, mucous, purulent, bloody nnd putrid: the eves am wink, watery, and iiiflniuedj tliero is rink'uig- In l ho eure. deafness, hmkiiia' or cniiirlunir to clear the throat, eipectorutlnn of oireusivo mutter toKcther with scatts from ulcer; tho voice in ehniiKel nnd has a nasal twantr; tlio breath is oir'tisivei amell and mate, nro im paired: there Is a aeiisntion of ilizincus, with mental ileiin.asi.in a hacking- coiikIi and (teneral deliilitv. However, only a few of tho aliove-named aymptoms are likelv lo Ih pi-ewnt in any one ease. ThoiuMnda of i-aca annually, without, iimnifeatiinr half of tho above symptoms, result In consumption, und end In the trmve. No dU'iise is so common, more dcivptive and (hinu'i-ro.is, cm iimlersioiMl, or moro unsu'ostully treated by physicians, liy its mild, aootliiny, und lienliiir pioperues, toll. SlUr'S CATARKII KKMLDY CUBES THS WORST CA8K3 Of Catarrh, "Cold In tha Head," Coryza, and Catarrhal Heatfacho. SOLli JIT DKUOaiSTS EVKHYIVJIERU. 1'IUOB, CO CfEJXTTS. ffl Crab Orchard Wafer; CRAB ORCHARD WATER 'CO.. Vron'ra. S!asWHr5Br?CWr?is Why did the Women of this country use over thirteen million cakes of Procter & Gamble's Lenox -Soap in 1886? Buy a cake of Lenox and you will soon understand why KNPfrtiilly t Wtmfi, "Fwwt Is rrvcmrc esprrlnlly to womnn," sstrt thn RirtfMl, tint. iiHtiRlity, lionl Ityron. Hnrely )m wns tn bn linnior wtirn ho wrote, such words. Put. t hero nro complaints thnt. only wo men mifTfr, Hint two rnlTvlnu ihiiiiImm-s of thorn down to rnrly Knives. Tliero Is how for tlmso who snfTor.no nmtlrr bow sorely, or severely. In lr. It. V. l'lereo's "Kavorlto Prescription." Safe ill Its netion If fs n bloRHin, rxjircoi'v to inurKM nnd to men, I.hi, for when women suf fer, tho household is nskew. Prt.r-nKvrnrNCR, solf-knowlodito, solf-ron-trot, those throe, nlono load life, lo sovereign power. Organic wonknoss or loss of power in ojtlior sox, however induced, siwdily nml periimnolitly cured, hlicloso in cents (nstmnps tor lionk of particulars. World's liscnsni'y Medknl Association, llutTalo, N. Y. Two lions In n monnirorlo tn Cornwall. Kiifl- land, liitoly died of excessive heat. novAt. fti.ItR' mentis anvtliliml ltrnkon Chi. ns, ttlans. Wood. Free Vials nt Oraic oi (Iro If nfflipted with sore eves use Dr. tsn'io Tliomn- son's Kye-water. Drtiiulstsspll nlV. per bottle Yo f hihfm In Plso'n t'nrn for t'onsumntion. Cures where, ot her remedies fail. V Warm Weather Of n rnuri txtrrme tlrrd forMliif and deMlltjr. and In the Wiftcrnrd condition of th yttrm dlstwefl arltln from Im ur. blood r lo pp-r. To fnln Mr"i(ih, to nroivome dlWMnc, and to purify, i tlnllx nn I urit h ths blood, Ink IIotdi Sirs pattlift, whWh is peculiarly adapted to lh noedt ot thli ncrmon. When Hook Hood's FarsftpariMa that hraTtnMm tn mj utomaoh Irft j tho dulltifi In my brad, and the gloomy, dmpondrnt frrllnjr dltppftrd. 1 be Iran to art stronger, my blood gained betler circula tion, the coldneni la my handi and feet Irft me, ind iht kWneyn do nut hnthep v b a before." O, W. Hum , Atturaey at Law, lltllcraurg, O. Hood's Sarsaparilla fl1rt by a'l tint (mint. 91; (tlx for aA Prepared oaly by U I. llOUO A CO.. Apothrrurlea, Ixwell. Mast. IPO D osos O no Do M a r COCKLE'S ANTI-BILIOUS PILLS, THE GREAT ENGLISH REMEDY For I.Ivor. Illle. Inllifon,n, ete. Free from Mrtr enrji contain ontv l'nre Vei'latilo Inurotlliwiti Agent: f. N. It ITTKNTON, !w Vnrlt. dr7baird'sgranules Kil liATK TIIK FY THU m.O(M), why) i)vsri:i. SI A. 1'ILKS, MA LA IMA, JIHAD. ' ' AC1I FN f 'nrrlr ( nonnllenl writ,..; "Ii.xit mm mm NT ttdi a fever iisctl t remilaW rtin'iiii'r: iirr nro m llri'tl v,omlerriil. They tlo lint t'ttyfllc, but act aa loulo 6 fir. W, M. PAIlin. PhT.ioia,, an. I Siirnenn. OnVe, W n-hlmrl n. N .1 . nml l:.; Went li SI.. New York. Speaker N. J. limine Aii,.t,r. eK-l'reaMent Wasft limton. N. J., Hoard of Health, ci county Physi cian, e., e. Another: " W(1H rnred of a fevrro attaek of pile. Iv tholruHfl. Cannot loo Irsli'y exiTea. my rt'SAol for I hem." K.iT In take, na they are nn Inrtrer than a mint rd PT.'d". ItV. st Imx. & iHum, SI ; of OrtiKtO-t or by nintl. vlatte pri'pjld. 1 ra.le Ktliilled liy v. huloaali ilneTct.!-. TKV TltCM AND YOU Wll.t. IIP. CUNVINfKll. ABtllU llnlitl Cured. TroatmaiU sonton trial UrlUrn UUMA.NU lU.UKOi' CO., LalayoUe, lad PATENTS T. A. I.tllMANN.fiourrrr'R tr I'atwhtk, Wsuhlnrtnn. 11 C Wo chojy utiints talent 1 neeurrU. Send lor OtrruUl THE ORIGINAL LITTLE LIVER PZLLS. 11EWARE OF IMITATIONS! Always ask for Dr. Pierce's Pellets, or Little Sugar-coated Granules or Pills. that time I hud no been troubled with I Uiko olio or two The Best Cathartic. tho house all the time." OF CATARRH WHICH THEY CAN Untold Agont from Catarrh. that every day, towards sunset, my voice would tiecomeao boarse could hardy Hak aliove a whiaiter. In tlie mornlns my coukIi Inirnml clearinir of my throat would almost stranirlo ine. liy tha use tif Ir. Saire s ('atnrrh Hemedy, in three lnuutlis, I was a well man, and tho euro hits been permanent." Constantly Hawkins ahd Spittins. Jr. tiacc's Catarrh Itemed y, and I am now a well mun. I bo. beyo it, to be tlio only sure remedy for catarrh now manufHo tnriMl, ami one has only to (rivo it a fuir trial to eipeneuoe usiouiidiiiir results aud a pcrmuncut cure." Three Bottles Cure Catarrh. a IX'rnmni'nt euro, und lieurty." DYSPEPSIA. SICK HEADACHE. CONSTIPATION, r.cme.lvlnr.11 Dif..f of tho l.lver, lild. w,"ne it. I wo It... ii.kjii I HI "l .1. JONKK. Mui..a. r. I .!., Ill,, K Cmiino ...It. u.lH u 1. 1. ill 11 IsaEaaD Laetoir 01 'ROUGH ON RATS." n i ri-1,1. im whnt.bllljMlvmirnnnTfattleT. rlllinitS. Avoht nythliit containing it. tliroinrhoiit. ytn future useful ill caree.. W older bMKls Jeot to Its Kjwciftl KouKh'Dcss, nnU'TrflAI sway time UUI1 I rUUL snrl money In futile efforts Willi Inaoot pow- ler, bontx or what not, need M rmiiomn ell over the house to (ret rid of ltoaches,Wtor-boir, Dree-1 lee. For Id I ritirnM sr.ri.uuoi "llotrnnoM U.Te ilrvnowdor.l. . Mlmitfc arwt rlown flie alnk. drain 1 i.in. fcirat. thinirin the mnmrrur wftftn It all away down tliesVnk, drain pipe, when all tha Inaoota from garret to cellar will dlaappear. The secret Is lii Uie f aot that wherever fimerta are in the houao, Uiey oiiws D ft k fl U C O drink diuinKtlionlfrht. nvAvilCa Clears out. liats, Slloo, Dod-biura, FUea, Beetle. "Kot'on o Ratb," Is sold all around the world, in every clime, t the mont extensively advorttsi'd and has the laroKt sale of any artji'le of Its kind on the fare of the globe. DESTROYS POTATO BUGS or rVitnto ilupt, Inserts on V tnes ot. a tnhln. poonful of tho powder, well ahnlren. In a See of water, nnd applied with sprtiiklln I, Fpmy avrinire, or n his tiroom. Keep tt wen Lrred up. IV., o. and f 1 Boxe A nr. Hm. 'ROUCn-RATS -CLEARS OUT- FLIES. fUu hes, tvnta wntor buirs, motha, rata, Brtoa, uvva. laek rilililta, enulrrela, gophera, 16a nvrn III u-so t it i hi) . Li 7VV PSY ' TREATED FREE. Hnra tnatM !ropy and It complication! with nnnl wondrrful mid'c. um vnr tnhla rt mft'iiin, rntirrir hnniiM'Rc. itstrt'ivn an ft.rmpoim r lmpHj In S to .JO lny. Curt patient Iironoiim-fil hoiK'lt'Mx hv thn linit piitftlrlnn'. From ln itoAn nviiiploiii rni.UllT dUtpprnr, nnd In trn 1hv4 nt iin "t twiMhl:U of all mmntnni ar rt imm1. Homo ti ny rrr huinlmtf without knowing nn thinic niMtiit It, Kninnnlr It r-ot yon nothlnji to ri'riltr.c tin i nrlt of our trrntim-nt r.r yimrwlf, Wr rMintnnt!y mrln riwM of Ion n'nmllnjt -raoi'H tliHt havst imrn tnpprM a H'tintxTof tin.cn nnd th pilh'ttt ilrclnrrM inmefB In llvi a work. (Hvn full hl-torv of fusn, n.im, nrr. how Inn ami'MiMl, ?tc. K nd for frof pamphlet containing tcsUim.tilnl. Ton dura tn-Muirlit fnrntfthrd fn liy mull. If you onlr trtrtl ymi mimt rrturn thH al prtlHrTncnt to tin with HictMiUln I'kinpi to pay totflr.' Kpllnp'V (KMh) ponltlvMv ciinti, II. II. (.Itl'I N V MINK, M. Da. I'niii ftl ttotel, J.l I iV i V. nnnl Hi., N. V. R&aiQS ROOT BEER Iln if, wholestuna lap venm-o. BoM hy rtruKt?s f malloa tvrl-o, UK. Hl(iKH,S N. lJrla. Ave., I'hlla., l a. A Oil ftCrCD To Introthira them, we wll Dili Urrtilt ;iv Away l." HWf- ()t'nitltitr VViinhhiK Mat'lilnna. If you want oneufnit im your naiutt.r O.and rxprrMoftli-o atomv. Thr Nnilotinl i .. il i T BI..N.Y. S5 to S n dny Knnnilfv. wrirfh ftl VI VRKK. i. inra mi iiiiint me ihtw h itH'i, rite HivwMt. r Haf. ly It-In HohWt'P.. Holly. Mich RloirV Dill Great English Gout and Dlall S r IUS Rheumatic Remedy. Ovnl box, a 1 1 roanit, 1 . Fllla. PATENTS Procured at ffar I kll I 0 rost thuii ohiamal win-re. irt of n-ir-r. ne'!i mid Inventor LESS ahl !- orai' flu trial m All nt irtM'. , . nil Attorney OPIUM .lA.Mr: II. I.N:ATLKU, Tat- i iirnntinny, n, l liyt Mnrphtnff II a hit CnrM In 141 lo 2t ditya JVo pay till CurrA Dr. J. feu-puma, Lcbantfa.Ulil. 11 A T P MTft Obtained. 8nd tamp r mmm-m w m ui veil torn uutuo, 1 m a I ham, Paitmt Lawyer, Wellington, U, O. B B u i 1 Wim.iaii It Allien, Esq., of Jffmfrn, Kearney fritinfi;, HntlC I jWliniAl.il, wrilea: "1 wns troubled with noils for uuika I thirty years. Konr years airo J wns so attlicted with 1 1 II R P n I them thnt I could not wnlk. I bought two bottles wuiilu. f j,r picrpe', I'lrnannt l'urpstivo Pellets, and took mmmmmmmmmt on(, ,.N.., afUT each meal, till all am) o-onn. lv IhiIIs, and have had none aince. I liave also aick hiuilnche. When 1 feel It conilns' on, ' Tcllcta,' and am relieved of the headache.'1 Mrs. O. W. Itnowif, of ITarxihrmtta, Onfn, snn: " Vour I'lcaannt I'lintallve relicts' ara without qucRtion tho btft eatlmrtlo ever sold. They nro iilnn a rnont cfltcicnt remedy for torpor of the liver. We luive used them for vcura iu our lauiilv. and koeD them in NOT CUBE. Prof. W. HArsNitn, the famous tnesmer. 1st, of Uhaca, N. '., writes i "Some ten years ago I suffered untold aimtiy from chronic nasal cutanb. My family physi cian travo me up as Incurable, aud said I must die. Mv caso uaa such a bad on permanent. TnoMAS J. Hcshino, T.k Iso., fsos ffne Sfrrrf, "1 was a irreat suf- M. JvOins. Mo., writes: lerer irom cotnrtfi lor three years. At times 1 could hardly breathe, and was con stantly hawking- and spittinir, and for tha last ciirht months could uot brent he through the nostrils. I thouifht nothing could Tie rlonn for me. T.iu.Lili' I w... njl, iu.1 . . Eli RoniiiNS, liunwn P. O.. CoIumMa Co, P.J., says: "My Uuunhter had catarrh when sho wus flye years old, cry bmlly. I saw Dr. Hnire'a t'atiirrh Kciuedy ailvertised, and procured a boille for her, und soon suw that it belpiMl her: a third bottle eifectcd cue is now eighteen years old and sound Plso's Remedy for Catarrh is tha fl Beet, Kusieal to Use, and Cheapest. I I Bold bydrngKistaorsentbymail. I i 50c. ii. T. JluulLiuu, Wurrtm, l'a. 1 . a ul Mldnr Troubles, Ner vous lebllll. Uleialtkl r lli;al-l WrtskBMi tht Blotaui Mrnr Hitlers lail uitursj. ftO tit, Hrk Mediotu C. la !H. I lih hi.. l'l.iia.l(.iii. I'sv. buld b; 11 UruUiM. FRAZERe V.ST IN TIIK WOlt I tl.t) UIILHOt M B to Hoi Pensions lo SolJler ft He In. BendnUmi usjia mwm H t return mall. Pall Deserlvilnt n C utUc. U0ODT tfc 00., CiooiiUiAa, 4 1 0
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers