ALONG THE BIG SUEZ CANAL AN ARTIFICIAL RIVER IN MIDST OF A DRY DESERT. THE How the Cannl Wam Unlit and tho j Saml Dredged Out Tho Great Distances It Hnvcg to Ships. It is fifty-eight yours since Ferdinand tie. Lessops first enmo to Egypt, in the French consular service, find it is more than a generation ago since he persxiadod the Viceroy of the country that the work of building tho Suez Cannl could be ilone. When ho began it, writes Frank O. Carpenter, tho English laughed at him and scientists all over the world pre dicted his failure. John Hull shook his tail and said, with a sneer, that Franco and Egypt were burying their money in the sands of the desert, and it was not until the waters of the Mediterranean were mixed with those of the Ked Sea that they would admit that the thing could bo done. Now more than two thirds of the ships which pass through the canal belong to Great Britain, and the English, in order to protect their in terest in India, have had to put some thing like $17,000,000 into canal shares. It is not a bad investment, for in 18S5 tho net profits of this canal were more than 66,000,000, and after all expenses were paid the shareholders received n di vidend of 17 percent. The canal increases in importance year after year, and that to such an extent that it may be necessary to build a second alongside of the first, and this plan is now much discussed. How much is saved by it can only be understood by considering the steamship routes of the Jiast. Before it was opened ships in fjoing to China and India, had to go by way of the Cape of Good Hope and it was then more than 12,000 miles from London to Bombay. The voyage was one of months instead of weeks, and it necessitated the coaling of steamers. At present the distance by the Suez Canal is only 7000 miles, and the saving in dis tance from London to Hong Kong is about 4000 miles, or 1000 miles longer than the distance between Liverpool and New York. In 1880 more than 3000 vessels passed through the canal, and cstimatiug that each of these vessels to India, Australia or China made a saving of at least five thousand miles, it will be seen that tho aggregate saving in one .year was more than fifteen million miles, equal to a distance of six hundred times around the world. Undoubtedly more than one hundred and fifty thousand passengers are taken through this canal every year, and the charges are $2 on each passenger. It makes heavy charges upon tho vessels which pass through, estimating them according to their ton nage, and the receipts of the canal make it one of the best paying institutions of the world. And still this canal is only one hundred miles long; it is only one-twelfth of the length of the Red Sea, into which it con ducts tho waters of tho Mediterranean, and these two bodies of water are of nearly tho same level. They now flow into one another without locks, and the canal is well described as a ditch in the desert. This ditch is about three hun- tlred feet wide at the top, and ono hun dred and fifty feet wide at the bottom, and the water within it is as quiet as a mill pond. It is of beautiful sea-green, and the contrast of this color with the bare yellow sand which lino the banks of the canal make it wonderfully beautiful. I fie canal is so narrow tliat ships can pass only at certain points, and tho manage ment govern these passages just as tho train dispatchers regulate the passage of trains on our trunk lines. There are, from time to time, through the canal wider spaces where the ships must turn in while others, which have the right of way, may pass them, and at a distance these ships seem to be walking, as it were, in single file through the desert. They are not allowed to go over five miles an ,y hour, and this is largely due to the depth of tho canal. Its average depth is about twenty-four feet, and many of the ships which pass through are more than twen ty feet deep in the water. There is so little water under the bottom that there can be no great speed. The banks of this canal are of dry and thirsty sand. In some places they are kept back by pavements of stone and in others by a network of twigs like the jetties of tho Mississippi. It cost nearly 8100,000,000 to build the canal, and in some places the channel had to be cut through solid rocks. In others there was little dredging needed. Tho waters of the Mediterranean flowed into long, natural lakes, and these required but littlo excavation to make them deep enough for the transit of the ships. One of the great problems in milking the canal was fresh wuter for tho work uieu. The work was begun in 1858 itud the ruler of Egvpt provided 25,000 laborers. These were relieved every three months; but it was necessary to feed them. It took 4000 water-casks, which were carried On the backs of camels, to supply them with drinking wuter, aud this was kept up for five years. At the end of that time a fresh water canal was arranged so that the water was curried from tho Kile to Ismailia, aud there is now a pipe which runs the whole length of the canal, and which carries fresh water from one end of it to the other. Tho work of preparing harbors ut Port Said and Suez was very expensive, and I took a look at tho piers ut Port Said, which are intended to ward off the accu mulations of sund aud mud, and which form the navigable entrance to tho canal. These piers are made of artificial btone, composed of desert ?nud and ce ment. The machinery to make them was brought here from France, and the stones were made to throw into the sea. Each stone weighed twenty tons, and it took 25,000 of these massive rocks to form the bases of these piers. On the top of this foundation the piers were built, uud this artificial stone will, I am told, last as long as the natural article. Immense dredges ure now employed throughout the canal. These pump up tfco sand, which blows in from the des- C - ert, aud throw it out beyoud tho buuks. " There are stations or guurd-houses ut in- tervuls along the course uud a few small towns huve grown up here und there Outside of these towns and the guard "house you see few signs of life. Here a caravan trots ulong over the desert, thu long, ungainly camels, with their riders bobbing up uud down uuiust the char sky of the horizon. There a flock of long-ueeked cranes springs from the water into the uir, and now, uwuy across the hot sands at tlie side of the ship, comes into view a new hip and new wuters which loom up uu4, of the sands uud which looks us rcul KJ Die green wa ter through which we art moving. This is the wonderful mirutfe of the Libvun dwert, which 80 o'ten deceive thirsty travellers when passing through it on camels. It fades as you approach it and becomes a very castle in the air. Tho opening of the Suez Canal took place in I860, and the ceremonies cost Ismail Tasha, tho father of the present Khedive, more than twenty millions of dollars. Among tho other notables who were present was tho Empress Eugenie, and a grand palace was fitted out for her entertainment at Cairo. SELECT SITTINGS. The walls of Jerusalem were built 44S B. C. Savannah, Ga., has a flock of red headed geese. Near Hogan, Montana, is a large de posit of petrified clams. A Kansas editor says 60,000 cars will be required to haul tho wheat crop of his state. Tho elephant is being killed off so fast that twelve more years will see the last one wiped out. A well in the South from which a strong breeze rushed for years has suddenly taken to spouting water. Gilraltar was taken by the English Julv 24, 1704, and ceded to England by treaty of Utrecht April 11, 1713. A Mussulman woman in India died re cently at the age of 150 years. She was blind, deaf, dumb and almost inanimate. A Philadelphia wholesale druggist pays a gallon lor uamienon wine, which is made from the plant growing wild on so many farms. A largo and mysterious fissure In tho earth in Princess George County, Va., is exciting alarm. People arc unable to ac count for the phenomenon. It is a curious fact that no complete edition of Shakespeare's works has ever been printed and published in any of tho many dialects of Hindoostan. In the course of seventy-five years, from '83 to 1857, the kingdom of Naples lost at least. 111,000 by the effects of earthquakes or more than 1500 per year. William the Conqueror was wounded in battle by his son Robert, who had joined the French King Philip I., 1078. The scene of the battle was Gcrberoi, Normandy. In a St. Louis hospital a man had a dream which covered 10,000 miles of travel and six months' time, yet ho was only a minute and a half covering the whole business. A Hindoo has reduced laziness to a fine art. He says: "It is better to walk than to run, better to stand than to walk, better to sit than to stand, and better to lie down than to sit. A prize offered to stenographers for the largest number of words written on a postal card has been won by Bylvanus Jones, of Richmond, Va., who wrote upon a card 86,764 words. Mrs. Phillips, of West Fallowficld, Pcnn., has found a remedy for gapes in chickens. She slits the windpipe length wise with scissors, and with a horse hair lifts the worm that causes the ailment. Queen Victoria is said to own the costliest china in the world. The china in tho Windsor and Buckingham palaces is worth more than a million of dollars. The Sevres dessert set is valued at $500, 000. Fresh roses arc sent to five of the Lon don hospitals every morning by a society of little girls, not one of whom is moro than twelve years old. Tho funds to procure the flowers are realized by work of self-sacrifice. A citizen of North East, Penn., made actual measurement and found that his corn grew between four or five inches in twenty-four hours. Ho drove stakes in the ground, stretched up tho longest leaf, and marked the stake. The next morn ing showed the growth stated. The huge organ for th3 town hall, Sydney, New South Wales, has been completed in London. Its most remark able feature is a sixty-four foot stop. The lowest note of the stop, expressed in organ builders' language us "CCCCC,"is two octaves below the lowest C on the pianoforte, and, as it gives only eight vibrations in a second, it cannot be per ceived as a note at all. Its effect lies wholly in tho extraordinary richness and power of its upper harmonics, by which it re-enforces notes given by the higher pipes. Plant Protected by Their Juices. When a drop of the juice of sorrel, garlic, saxifrage, or nasturtion is put upon the tegument of a snail, the animal manifests pain aud exudes ubundauco of its mucous secretion ; yet it is not thus affected by a drop of wuter. When snails avoid plants marked by such juices, we have a right to regard the plants as defended by a chemical armor. 1 he of fensive substance may also be important to the nutrition of the plant, but that is not the question we are dealing with here. Many plants are evidently lacking in this means of defense; for, of some plants, nil the unimals experimented upon have been found to prefer fresh to dead parts. Others ure never touched by them, whether living or dead. Hence we may conceive that un infinite variety may exist in the degrees of chemical armoring be tween total absence of protection and complete protection. Plants pertaining perceptible tannin aro disagreeable to nearly oil animals. Only swino will eat acorns as if they re gard them us food. Other animals re ject theiu, except when they can not get anything else. Leguminous plants con taining tannin in weak proportions are eutcn by horses und cattle, but snails are not fond of them. But the garden snail, which lets fresh clover alone, will eut it freely after the tannin has been extracted with alcohol. Popular Science Monthly. Preferred Primitive Methods. A very peculiar individual, who has been living the life ol a hermit in too wilds of Robeson Township, in Pennsyl vania, has been unearthed by tho Board of Directors of the Poor, and brought to the almshouse. He owned a small tract of land iu the lonely locality, and for the last four years has lived alone, re fusing to see any one, und subsisting cu tirely on corn meul, which he raised him self und ground in a primitive mill of his own uiuuufueture. He believed it was necessary he should live on this diet in order that he mi flit gain hi a .en. He believed in self-inflicted punishment as a means of gruce. As he was likely to come to want through his peculiarities, at the request of his relatives he was taken iu charge by the authorities. Chicago Herald. Is the sculptor troubled with strubis wus when he has n cast in his eyetj iJCu THE FARM AND GAB DEN. rnosrnATH for turnips. In England phosphate is not applied to grain crops directly as here, but if used on turnips, and these are fed off by sheep on tho laud where the roots grow. Sheep that have had some experienco will dig out the interior of tho turnip very quickly, leaving tho pungent peeling on the outside untouched, save whero the1 holo was made to get at tho centre. In this double working of tho phosphate in tho roots and through tho animals' stomachs, it gains very considerably in effective valucfor grain, and when eaten by sheep is distributed quito evenly. The animals are herded or confined in small plots on the turnip field until tho roots are fully eaten. Aetc York Wit nest. RRTTINO MILK rOR CREAM. It is generally conceded that for tho best results in butter making, where tho milk is set in deep cans, the milk should be placed in the creamer as nearly as pos sible at tho temperature at which it is drawn from the cow, there being a con siderable loss of fat in skim-milk if tho milk is allowed to cool to any great ex tent before being set. Of late thero has been considerable controversy as to whether it is advisable under any condi tions, to warm the milk before setting, and as to tho limit of temperature beyond which it is not safe to go. Mr. I. P. Roberts concludes, as the result of inves tigations at the College of Agriculture a( Cornell University, that first thero is a loss of butter when the milk is heated, there is no rusk of injuring the quality of the butter by incorporating in excess of cascine, even when the milk is heated as high as 185 degrees. jVcio Yvrk World. THE DARN. The man who goes about his barn with a pipe or cigar is recommended to take out an insurance policy at once from on of the old line companies. We recom mend the old line companies, in such case, for two reasons: First, such carclessnesi should be made to pay as high as possi ble for its fun; and second, such a man ought not to impose upon his neighbors who form the basis of tho farmers' mu tual companies. We saw a man not long ago smoking while ho was currying hit horse in the stable. He said he had dont it for years and had not had a fire yet. It is possible that a man might smoke in a powder mill for years without causing an explosion, but ho would be a verj reckless man who should attempt it. It needs but a spark among hay or straw to burn down a barn with the probable los of all there is in it. Never do anything which is likely to cause a fire. If a firt in the barn does occur, thero is one thing that it is well to remember. Horses art frightened "out of their wits" by fire. You cannot lead a horse from a burning barn in the ordinary way. Tho best way is to blindfold the animal. This may be done by throwing a coat or blanket ovei the head. Western Rural. HOW TO TLAKT LIMA BEANS. It is almost a universal practice in New Jersey to plant lima beans by thrusting them into the ground with tho cyo down ward, farmers claiming that tho bean is not so likely to rot and the plants appeal earlier than when the seed is set otherwise. Tho idea in planting lima beans in this way probably originated in. some one observing that when a bean sprouts both root and stem start from the eye and the bean is lifted above ground the two catylcdons becoming tho first pair of leaves, usually called the seed leaves. This is true with nil species aud varieties of the bean, while with peas, which belong to the same family of plants, the seeds remain in tho ground or below the surface when they throw up a new shoot. We have always practised planting lima beans the same way that we do other kinds, that is, drop them on the ground and cover them with a hoe, and we have yet to discover that it made any difference whether seed was covered when lying on the side or set up on its edge. Try a row of limas next year, planting each alternate hill in tho row different, and see if those with eyes down succeed any better than thoso with eyes up; or on the side, laying the bean flat and coveriug with a hoe A'ao York Sun. HINTS ABOUT HORSES. Once during lifetime is all any man need expect to be suited in a family horse. Be kind but firm with tho horse; petting is as much out of place as abuse. Feed j the horse out of a trough placed on the ground ; this is not only the most natural position, but it prevents the propereleva tor muscles of the shoulder becoming rigid and fixed, which by constant use of high mangers and tight reining is frequently the case. How often do we see horses worked in towns to heavy carts or light carriages unablo when turucd out to grass to get their heads to the ground without setting the fore feet out wide, sometimes going down on one or both knees, or set ting one leg forward with the other as far back as possible. Twelve quarts of good , clean old oats, with twenty-one pounds of i i ij i. !. i.ii goou, cieuu oiu liuy, wuu u sprinuiiu oi salt, is sufficient ration for an ordinary sized horse for one day. Beans are the most muscle producing food given to horses. HorBes iu the hubit of swallow ing food without thoroughly masticating can bo cured by covering tho bottom of the feed-trough with loose stones about the size of an egg. Never offer unsolicited advice for tho medication of a neighbor's sick uuimul; if it recovers you huve nothing to gain, and a good deal to lose if it dies. Be fore venturing to uso or prescribe a medicine, become thoroughly acquainted with its nature und actiou; better leave a sick auimul alone to nature than impose blind assistance. Never buy a horse afflicted with a mucus discharge from one or both nostrils; by general ob' servance of this much could be dono to prevent spread of glanders, equivalent t thousands of dollars in some districts. Never trot or run a horse suffering with tympanitic colic, which presents a swol len appearance. Walk the animal slowly, or allow to roll at pleasure, taking car to provide a suitable place. Cm'rots about one pound each morning, an houi before break fust is good for a hors troubled with worms. Vuluuble horse! have been sacrificed by the ignorant practice of administering mediciiu through the nostrils. Ground oilcake in single hunuYuU at regulur intervals foi all kinds of btik is a first-class condi. I tion powder. AlNtpimals, to thrive well require change of UWn-,too much same ness produces nausea.-ifeio York Tri bunt. TH CROP-ROtTlTD FOWT T Tho crop-bound fowl is not ono which lias simply gorged itself with food, but one which has tho passage obstructed through which tho food passes from the crop to the gizzard. A fowl never cats more than it can digest, provided tho food cau get into tho digestive organs, A fowl rarely swallows anything which' rannnt easily pass into tho gizzard. The' trouble is solely caused by tho accumula iion of tho food in quantities in the crop, to which condition it becomes packed in I solid mass. Farm, Field and Stork-man. FARM" AND GARDEN NOTES. Stnko the lima beans. Is the strawberrv bed clean I Don't leave the Paris green around loose. Don't hill up the onions, level culture U the best. Don't leave the potatoes in tho hot sun nfter they are dug. Keep tho raspberries nipped back, and don't let the weeds grow among tho bushes. It is a fact that young pigs aro often overfed and hurt, sometimes killed, by overfeeding. As soon as a crop of vegetable is har vested, elenr off the ground and set out late cabbage or celery. Unleached ashes applied about tho plants and washed in by rains aro said to destroy the cabbage maggot. Don't make the mistake of overstock ing the pasture and expent the stock to come in in tho full in good shape. Grass should be made the basis of our pork. Iu grass includo not only com mon pasture, but clover aud green corn stalks. Like nil domestic animals, to bo profit able the hog must bo well bred. Tho scmb hog like tho scrub steer is poor property. When young pigs are weaned they should bo fed iu a shallow trough, from which they can take their food only very slowly. Protect the youug trees from the sun. A shield of lath woven together with an nealed wire will answer; it will also pro tect from rabbits iu winter. Chop off the burdock shoots as fast as they show above ground. Burdocks de light in plenty of food and rob tho soil for a considerable distance around them. If you have no better use for the ground from which you have taken the early vegetables, sow it to corn for fodder. Where the crop is, there will be no weeds. In sowing turnips uso care to scatter the seed regularly and evenly. Don't have big bare spots, then patches whero the plauts aro so close together they can make no bottom. Clean cultivation is tho best remedy for the root plant louse in the apple orchard, says a Kansas orchardist. Keep it up till the 1st of August, then the scythe should be used to keep the weeds down. A few sods and a littlo cow manure mado into a heap now where you can throw kitchen slops, will muko au excel lent compost for your flower pots next summer. But don't have the heap too near the house. If you want somo nice crisp lettuce, or fresh green peas when cool weather comes again, sow them now; use tho early va riety of peas. Sprout them slightly be fore sowing, by mixing them with fino moist soil for a few days. Anything in tho nature of lye will de stroy the apple tree borer, or the young borers before they penetrate tho bark very far; but after tho borer is once un der the bark, following it up with a wire is the only way to destroy it. Massachusetts Ploughman suggests that in tomato blight or black rot rotating tho tomato with other crops may prove un ad vantage, as it is well known to be with cabbages and turnips, which aro subject to the attack of a disease called club-root when repeatedly grown on the same laud. WISE WORDS. Little men cannot pardon. Strong reasons make strong actions. Timo and opportunity lost is eternnlly lost. The secret of life is not to do what one likes, but to try to like what one has to do. It cannot bo denied that amusement is one of the most powerful influences of life. Great things are not accomplished by Idle dreams, but by years of patient itudy. Wit should bo used as a shield for de fence, rather than a sword to wound others. Wo always like thoso who admire us. We do not always like thtise whom we admire. More failures are to be attributed to i-ilorts misdirected than to the want of ;xertion. There aro mora people abusive to others than lie open to abuse themselves, uut humor goes round, and he thai laughs at me to-day will have somebody to laugh at him to-morrow. Ability is often re-enforced by nece9 illy. He thut will not suffer himself U be discouraged by fancied impossibilities, may sometimes find his abilities invigor ated by the necessity of exerting them at short intervals, as the force of a current is increased by the contraction of its channel. A FiHh-Horse. 'I know a colored muu who uses a fish for n hoine." Mr. Vi. C. Casey of Augusta knows more ubout lish uud nake stories than any man iu Georgia. Cattish, when frightened, ho says always un down stream. On this he builds a narrative, and swears to it. A colored man, fishing in the Savan nah, he says, hooked a huge catfish, which ran down stream at a rapid rate, the boat and man following, the cat not stoppiug until exhausted. It was then captured, but placed in the water. The next day the captor tied a rope to it, at tached the line to his boat and turned the fish in the river. Down stream the boat went, faster than oars could carry it or wind propel it. The fish is fed and petted with care. A set of harness has been mado for it. The muu is now tryiug to educate It to go up stream. Atlatdn Journal. Tho consumption of lumber, bricks, cement aud building materials generally throughout the country is going on at au enormous rate. ! The KoU Nut The commercial importance of the kola nut has, for some time, been stead ily growing. It Is a valuable dietetic and therapeutic agent, and is allied in com position to cocoa, coffee and tea, but contains a relatively large amount of caffeine. The properties ordinarily as signed to kola are those of a strong tonic and stimulant to tho nervous system, counteracting Bnd removing the sense of exhaustation after fasting and fatigue; it has also been credited with having an antagonistic action to alcohol, and is fre quently used in tho countries whero it is grown for that purpose ; it is also said to purify water. It has a peculiar stimu lant action on tho nervous system, temp orarily strengthens the heart beat and in creases tho arterial tension. In times of exertion and fasting it wards off tho sense of mental nnd physical depression and exhaustion. As a water purifier, there is reason to believe that its action is purely mechanical. In a report which has been recently made on this nut, it is recommended to bo used as an infusion in the treatment of diarrhoea, where it astringent action is beneficial. Hare That HwrM CJIrlt Don't let that beautiful girl farle. and droop Into invnliriifmi nr sink Into un early grave, for want of tiiuply rare at tlie most critical Mage of her life. lr. r'leree'a Favorite l'reserliittnn will aid in rettulntlnir her health aud estab lishing It on n firm hals and may have her yean of chronic suffering and coUMMiuent un happiness, A more pleasant physio You never will nnd Tbnn Pierce's small "Pellets," The PurKatlve kind. Ron Evans, of Washington, has blacked the boots of every President, from Jackson down. A School of the lllghext Order for Y.nai Ladle.. 1 Ingham University, I.e Roy, N. Y., estab lished over fifty years, offers superior advan tages In its Literary, Muslo and Art Depart ments. Excellent home. Attention given to social culture. Rates moderate. Send for catalogue. Address Miss R. M. Webster, Principal. GtrrnRiB, Oklahoma, has already floated a $.'0,000 municipal loun. All wbo uso Dobbins'. Klectrio Soap praise it as the btt cheapest and mnf tconomital fam ily soap made; but if you will try it once it will tell a still etroncer tnle of its merits itttlf. Vlcaat try it. Your grocer will supply you. Thb English sparrows have almost extermi nated the wrens, orioles and mrniiow larks. Taking it altogether thee never won a timo when our country was enjoying Rrrntwr pros perity than tit tho pretw.it moment, and yet there nro thousand of people, in the land who are fussing nnd fuming alnrnt hard times. No doubt but what many of them are honest in their complaint, and it is oiler, because they tmve not r found the Hi; tit kind of work nr the right wav to do it. Sow. if busiuetta is not moving along with you satisfactorily, take our advice and write to B. h Johnson cVTo., Hich inoud. Va. It is more than likely that they can help you, at any rate. It would cost you nothing but a postage stamo to apply to them. llclrs Wanted. . Information ts wanted of tho whereabouts of Johanna Wilson, daughter of Mark Kweoney, wife of Thomas Wilsou, born In Limerick Co., Irel tind. She Is, if living, hfir to an estate. If dead, her children or next, of kin aro wanted. Address, W. J. Covil, Webster City, Iowa. "TansiU's Punch" 6c. Cigar to most 10 centers. If afflicted with sore yes nse Dr. Tsaao Thorn p 'Eye-water. Druggists sell at -5c. per be tile Summer Weakness Is quickly OTercome by the toning, reviving and blood purtfylng qualities of Hood's Sarsaparltla. Tills popular medicine drives off that tired feeling and cures sick headache, dyspepsia, scrofula, and 11 humors. Thousands testify that Hood's Sarsa parllla "makes the weak strong." "My health was poor, as I had frequent sick head aches, could not sleep well, did not have much ap petite, and had no ambition to work. . I have taken less than bottle of Hood's Sarsaparllla and feel like a new person," Mas. W. A. Tim eh, West Hanover, Mass. N. B. If you decide to toko nood's Sarsaparllla do not be Induced to buy any other. Hood's Sarsaparllla Bold by all druggists. $1; six for f5. l'repared only by C. I. HOOD CO., Apothecaries, Lowell, Hall. IOO Doses One Dollar NYN U-3-i fSF-LATEST IMPROVED i ft B 7-1 machine, for TH H KKH IM 1 1 1 'I,K A N I NO Uraiu.alio Machine. torNAVl IM; H 11(111 . , with Circular ad t'reu. AcknowUdtW IjJk. Cul I)ra Haw. THE $ DSIFT. DUfl6II.IT t V'UMN I Iff Of WOfiX "KSi A. W. GRAY'S SONS, Fiikiuii Airo Sou Maxctactuiekj. M I D D I.ETOW S KPit I Nt.S, VT. DROPSY rrix lOA'r m rn i ;i:, Positively Cured with Vegetable ltemediea. Have cured thoiwaud tf eacs. Cure patlt-nts pro nounced hopelesi liy bent phyttlclans. Fruiii first dose symptoms disappear; Iu i-n days ut leant two-third all symptom removed. Send for fie IkioIc tmrimo nlals of miraculous cures. Ten days' treatment free by malL It you on lor trial, tend luc. iu kuimp to pay postage. Da. II. H. Ottr.EN A Sunu, Atlanta, ia. fjOalTHEBM PAG.FIG. la LOW PRICE RAILROAD LANDS & FREE Government LANDS. MILLIONS of ACHKH of curb In Minnesota. North Dakota. Montana. I la ho. Wat-hm ton und Oivk u- C C un CftB 1 indication withMaiwdracr-liiutrtke vtltU r un be-i Arr nil t oral, raitiK a: d T uie lift i.aUUS DOIVUii-D t H- ttlul MM.BjUBOII, K- ttlois. mrut tree. AiMrtuu illUl I'OillUJiKUtOIH'l f f . I'hiiI, .11 i n u . WOMAN'S DIRKCTOKY 1 months on trial forldc. If Address Uikeitokv,41 State St., Hrooklyn, N. Y. Apt H h day. Samples worth 1 4 Free. j3s'y4 Lines not under huisps' feet. Vrlte llrev IsW strrhafety Ueiu Holder to., Holly .Mich JONES jii: PAYS THE FREIGHT. ft T'-n Uuiod f-i-hlrff. Iron Levai-a Htecl i rurij'r. jiraas ljt ftejn a-Ki lectin lice tnr ETrr S"alc. k or trt pr Mat mi ntJoa thia par.-r aud it'i f:- JONES OF blNQHAMTON. B1NUIIAMTON. N. V. mm ..sasES It doesn't make us tired to tell about the merits of SAPOLIO. Thousands of women in the United States thank us every hour of their lives for having told thejn of SAPOLIO. Its use saves many weary hours of toil in house-cleaning. BEWARE OF IMITATIONS. Grocers often substitute cheaper goods for SAPOLIO to make a better profit. Send back such articles, and insist upon having just what you ordered. ETiOCM EV.ORCAIT8 SONS CO., KEW YORK. ST" SHE TELLS HIM " Later unto Amicola Came a pole ace preacher, Uachlng Peace and progress to the natives, Wooed and won by Vanita. She nobler to make his calling, Whispered to him nature's secret Told him of the herbs so potent For the healing and the taring." txTiucT raox rvia or 'tanit." Treatise on Blood and Skin Diseases mailed free. Pit. KOKHMCR FAVORITE COLIC MIXTCBK t . for all doinostlo animal, will cure 99 out of every 100 rases of colle, whether flaS ulent or spafeiomlio. Itarely more than 1 or 9 doaes necessary- It does not era Mil t. ratlier acta as a laatiT and Is entirely harmleM. Aftr 30 years of trtaP in nil-re ilisn mo csars. r.ur usrantce I worth something. Clio mast m It en led irmiily. Viprud a frw cents and yon nave a cur on hand. reajr m ken needed, and perunpa a?e avaluaMe horse. If not at your druggist's, siv lit ar ft) c lit for trmple t-Mtli. sent Jprl aid. 1 vte rr. Kihlrr'M "utxrif IVHc JLafrf" riaht aUmg irith tmrrtss. It 4$ tht tr$t cohv mtttinnr I nair etrr seen. JSAAC MOOii, Horn VniVr, Urooktfn, Srv York. jit" rta 1 1 n JOSEPH H. HUNTER. SBgS CAUTIOK shnes without V. I. !orffAr4 name and price stamped im them, aud say a they are Just aa good., do not U- tW-clved therehy, t.ut m'.hI direct to the Factory, for you can get what you want by return mall,. potftd paid. lcalcrs make more profit on unknown sho. that are not warranted by anybody, therefor ito tint Im 1tiiliitHl til liiiv li.w (hnt havo no rtsiiiitnlimt. Muv itnlv tliotu thut hftvA W. I.. I0 1 ' tl I, A H name nnd price stamped on the Intttora ami you re mire to get full value for your mon-T. Thousand of dollarsaro savinl anuually In this couutry by the wearers of V. I,. DOM. LAS' PIIOKA. la order tun; by mall state whether you want ronm,. Button or Lace, Umtlon cap toe, plain French toa, or nar row cup Ue, and be sure to fiive slzi and width you wear. I can fit any foot that in not deformed, as my shiws are mnde In a (treat variety of widths, sices and half sites. I guarantee a fit, prompt delivery and perfect satisfaction or money refunded upon rclura Urocklon. Mass. ttv. "-i" " ll-r , 9-VOOO will be natd rn tiny pitmoii who ise f oiion ing i.inra win be Sou ml to be ol 85.00 SHOE $4,00 SHOE $3.50 SHOE $2.50 SHOE $2.25 SHOE $2.00 SHOE 82.00 SHOE CKM INK l!ANI - shoes that cost from gl TIIK OIMCINAI, MKI K. Kt.uwii. cut torn Cil TTMIO VOI'TII'H SlilUOL, O s n I I V I 1 J kIk In the w. rlil. 4 I 'oV rV4N j',A All made lu iVUKress, l:uttoti aud l.acc. W. L DOUGLAS $3 AND $2 SHOES FOR LADIES. Both Ladles' Shoes aro made In sizes from 1 to 7, Inelurilrif half sites, and B, C, D, K and EE width. KTYI.lirt OF LA niV.ti' Ml OKH. "The Freneti Oriern," "Thn eunnl.u Areli Opera," "The American Common Benoo,' "The Medium Common Hentr." All made in Million In the Latex Hljrles. Also Frenels Opera In Front Liter., on 93 Hhue only. ron.unier should rememter tbat W. L ROUOLA3 Is the largest aud onlr shoe Manufacturer In too world supplying sliixs dlrtvt from factory, thus glvluj all the middle-men's pronu to Uia wearer. W. L. IMM'OI.AS, ftrorklon, Mass. Ed CUHtS WHillt ALL LLSt (AILS. BeStl'OUfll byrnn. arles good, in ii:iie. nolo ny aniKCiMs. AS BUTCHER'S FLY KILLER slakes a clean sweep. Every rhei-t will kill a quart of file. Stop buKxltig around ears, diving at even, tickling your tne, rikliw bard wurda on. I se cure petu-e at trtflliiK ex.ve uae. eud 1.1 cettlMfiir 1 alit-eu to K DinTHI.K. fct. Alhant, Vt. GOLD a0 SILVER FOR 25 cts. Tos'aiT1. handruino Cabinet of BcattiUul Oro Stectmtna from 20 diflerc.it mines in Colorado. Addrexs Kooky Mountain Specimen Co., Denver, Colo. P.n andWblafeeyKsrt. mmm r. a itacureaat nometritu r-fi-'-si nnt ontpaia. Book of ps isr Oculars aent FttF.K. U.U.WOiMJV.ai.U. UtUCO ft V2UUUusU Sk FARMS EES ;aniti fr circVr to I 3 tt, a 3 ii road way, 52B AN HOUR ?;iVis ilIi-KfttrKS MA If III AUK PAPKRr-e. ?no Ladles and Ocnta want currcijuudt'iiu. TUet.lube. York Pa. A sents wanted. $1 an hour. 50 new artlclei.Catl'Rue and temple free. C, K. MaHshaix, buffalo, N. V, awn w a 5a.yi"When the wind blows your pire.ib is useless to Ure yottfselfi lbouV half- ofvourboil caw be; i..aiVoided by Hie use of Saplfa r - r . sv til I i -J -... H M. Ml THE SfcCUET. An KHw' Expcrlenoo. M.jnr Sidney IlMbort.. "-ko onraa)ta t nirrlcnltural clirlr., write Prl- '" WW: Som nvoycar. .k-o 1 wrote a lette" toK ,hu " 8ecinc hud cured me of Mrer ri'nm.U.m. Blnea tliattlrae I have had no return or'h" trouble., .Ilhongh frequently expoaed C ,h? encct that produced former attack.. Sererv m friend, had a similar experience, and are firm to v1 ronrlctton that 8. 8. & brought a permanent ear. The .earchlng power of thle medicine It shown 1 the fact that It developed a ecmfulou. taint that WW concplcnon. In my blood orer thirty year tm. and" ha. removed the Inftt trace of It. I have also tested H. 8. 8. a. a tonic after a severe attack of malarial fever, which kept me In bed for three months, and am convinced that It. curative and strentrthenlna: tironcrtics insured my recovery from that tllueaa, aa was lu a very low condition of health. tituMEt IIikbiht, Atlanta, Ga. Swirr's gricinc Cohtakt, Drawer t, Atlanta, Gav nuriii.r n a . irm irnrnii ras HV ehftr fully rtmmmtnd lr. Kotthttr' "frnvrttr Colic Mirtrt," H'owfet no vrithout it as loner as re Aliv kori. ISAAC MOSKS BHO., Salt and Frrhung Stabtta, lYwfon, V 1.. DOI ;i.AW name and tri price arf ataraeed on the bottom or all Hhocs advertmcd by blm befnrm leaving hi factory, this omtrcUthe wearers againrt high prices and Inferior good. If your dealer ducn not keen the stylo or kind yon want, or offers youi of the shoes In good condition. V. I. DOUULiJ W.L. DOUGLAS 3 SHOE FOR GENTLEMEN Is a fine seamless calf he, with Poneola tops catf oak Leather bottoms. They are made In Oongreasv Itutlon and Ijm-p on London Cap Toe, Narrow Cap Toe nnd Plain French Toe leasts. In sizes from I to 11, IncludliiK half slaei and In all widths. If you have been paying from 6 to $6 for shoes of thl quality do not do so lonvcr. One pair will wsaras I as two palra of common shoes sold by dealers) that are not warrantee! by the manufacturer. our claims for this shoe over all other $3 shoes ad rertlaed are: 1st, It contains better material. V-l. It Is more stylish, better fitting and durabla. 'M, It gives better general satisfaction. 4th. It costs more mouey to make. . h. It saves more money fitr the consumer. nil. It Is sold by more dealers throughout thsU.L "till, Ita ttrcat success 1 due to merit. nth. It cannot Ihj duplicated by any other manu facturer. vth. It Is the beat In the world, and has a larger demand thau any other $3 ahoe advertised. will prste the above statements ta ba antraa. the tMinr quality oi eKceiicurei KVKI, which takes the place of cOJtom-madsr to :'. AM) OMY II A X D-MEWKD WELT 94 -made shoes costing from ae to art. KOIt PO I.ICK.11 KN, Itallroad Ken and Letter Carriers all wear them. Smooth Inside us a liuud-Sewcd 8h(e, No Tacks or Wax Thread to hurt the feea IS IM-:.( KI.l.FI) FOlt HEAVY WEAK. Rest Calf Shoe for the price. Ut K 1 .M AVH. Is the best In the world for rough wearj ons pair oiiKtit to wear a man a year. ISKUI'ATi TO hllOI.S THAT COHT FROM 0.1 TO 3.5 ft- one pair will wear louccr than ouy shoe ever sold at the price. FOlt lIOVMIs the best School Shoe In the world. gives the small boy a ctaanee to wear tta sort CANCE NEW TREATMENT. ABALTIG, Am amnllawt am lha Ai aoDlled at the Holland Ucdlcal aud cancer Insttfjute, buffalo, S. Y. removes Cancer without pain or use of knife. Booree of patients speak In unqualified terms of praise of the buccess of this treatment. Write for clreular. HOLLAND Al EU1C1N K CO.. Buflale. IS. Y. Newspaper Readers' Atlas Colored Mapi of each SUU and Territory i alio Mp of every Country lu tha World i fivM tli auuarti nillt-s of nob feute, aeuie me ii t, population, chief clfiea, arrrue tern isr i at ure. aalary of unu-itUa, uuuiWr ol furm, tlitr production ttia value aaau. ifskturea, number uf euiptoyr, eU s aire are vt each furrira Con 11 try, form of Itotemmt-iit. population, uroduct, amount if trtutaj, religion, um of army aud t)- riii. Diinitteruf htiitHW, cnlils, aherp. Ac. tKttV ratJiM muu l navk or., m !'. full rasja (iw. IVfltpaJd for Mo kuuk rlK. uuia. Untrt St., N. I. Cay. XjEjintid yo cm. UimM Uw-rrlt. (.EJtaUN VICriUKAKf publlahetl, t the rvniaukaBly low pile of only Sl.ou, poatptiid. Una hook run llu ti'U finely pruitad patvt of clear tjps ou excellent paper and la faaitd akunely yt erUeably bound In cloth. Utfitoa LtiKliftli word Mill, the (k'nnau iHiuivalentai and pronunclialtiu, aal (sermtui won la rlth EutfUah deflcltiuiui. It in luvHluable te German who are uot thorouifhlT familiar with Kutcibih. or to Amerlt'tut who wieJi u lesxu Urrman. a o ure km. wnn si w, i mi ri s. hoi'sk, it! PU, Hw lark flty. ATI AS0' u- S. and World Q n iisuiy of inein L-o!ored. Alo a vut aiuemit of inf.trin tl.'Q relative to tlitTe-rent btta aud Coxatrlas, Korui of (ioverauient, r'arm ProducU a&d VaJua.Ac, Duly t&c. In sUinpa. Audrea iious Pea Hum, Ua Leonard St., N. Y. PEERLESS BYES SLJI BT ieaDeUiSTS ,i LV flty.