, NEWS AND NOTES FOR WOMEN. Plaid ribboni are in fashionable favor. I Even poplins come in fancy plaidi and clan tartans. The fancy tartans come in silks for visiting gowns. Surah silks will bo restored to favor for spring toilets. Sir Edwin Arnold, tho English poet, is quoted as pronouncing tho Japanese women "semi-angelic." Many of the new suitings brought out for tailor gowns have fringed borders in a contrasting color on one selvage. Straight sashes of three-inch padded silk aud angel sleeves of gauze are char acteristics of a very novel house or party dress. Tho iuror for plaids this season re ceived its first i mini I so from the tartan clonks and gowns made for the Duchess of Fife. The directory styles, with sonic varia tions and accessories, will be as popular this spring as they have been for the last two seasons. Pretty cotton, merino and chnllic cloths have printed borders along one selvage that will work up neatly for house gowns. The late Empress Augusta left Queen Victoria a splendid gold bracelet con taining tho words "For ever-' set in precious stones. Iowa is the banner State for women educators. Fourteen of the State Su perintendents arc women, aud four-fifths of the teachers are women. Barred, pluided, checked, and striped mohairs and alpacas come in all tho color combinations seen in the wool tartans und Kephyrs of this spring. The new mohairs and alpacas are more lustrous than thone of last spring, and they come in all the new colors that are seen in other spring fabrics. Miss Louise Meyer, of New Orlcaus, is tho latest Southern writer for the magazines. She is only eighteen, but shows talent of a high order. , Mrs. Marshall Field, wife of the Chi cago dry goods millionaire, keeps a lady secretary, whose solo business is to dis pense tho private charities of her mis tress. ' Mrs. Stanley Brown, who was formerly Miss Mollie Garfield, is now living very quietly in Washington with her husband. The only house she visits is Secretary AYindorrTs. Street gowns grow more and more quiet and Puritanical in effect. The re verse is seen in house gowns of all kinds, for dinners, teas, at home iu the after noons or evenings. The Dowager Empress of China tkc3 a great interest in the development of the Celestial Kingdom, and spends a great deal of her time in consultation with railroad projectors. Mrs. Calvin S. Brice, wife of Ohio's new Senator, was before her marriage a teacher in tho public school ut Terra Haute, Ind., while Mr. Brice was a strug gling young lawyer at Lima. A woman who, like Charles Dickens's Jenny Wren, made her living by dress ing aud repairing dolls, recently died iu St. Paul, Minn. Hundreds of her little friends are mourning for her loss. New cheviots have dotted stripes aud stripes of broken lines in clustered clfects. Then there are tarlan and striped cheviots in all tho clan tarlan and new fancy French tartan combinations. Lady Paunceforte, wife of the British Minister, is setting the Washington women an uncommonly good example in the matter of walking. Perhaps she may yet make exercise aud health fashionable. Light spring woolens, beiges, mohairs, light ladies' cloths, camels' hair serges and nun's vviliugs, of a heavier quality than those worn last year, flood the retail dry goods counters and are selling rapidly. Mohair glace iu two tones or two colors will bo more woru this spring thau last, while those iu pure shades of Eiffel, gray, biege, reed grecu, navy aud deep sea blue suede aud tau will be as popular as ever. Heliotrope and black are introduced with tine effect in new f.incy tartans of French, importation, the other colors ranging through all the rust aud Eiffel tower reds, the new grci'us, blues and yellows. A Minp tha' ia so't Is u'li wattr, lialf or two-lklrdK its wu nlit irubnbl, thus y. u my aeven ur tWIit cents per 11 -iriil for wuur. iHibbilia's KltH.'trio Snap is alt nuupantl lwailul-i-rntion, tkureforv tlu cheaptst and twjf. Try It costs $i.!rJ par carat to cut diamonds. A tjox'safefy rmifcj' freo" to "sindters of "Tat.iU' Punch" Ik-. Cigar. Purify Your Blood 1 Wken cprinf approaches, tt ia very Important that the blood shciulrt be purine J. a at tun aeaaon lm purltles which have betu accumulatlag for moat as or area years, are liable to manifest thenielvea aaj erloiuly affect tha liraltb. Rood's Sartapaxilla la undoubted tlia bet blood partner. It expels every taint, drlTei out arrnfuloui humors, aud (Ives to tLa blood the qu lit y and tone eentlal to juod bealia. Kow la the time to take , Hood's Sarsaparilla wMy daughter suffered terribly with sore eyes, euaed by scrofula humor. We were obliged to keep her out of school for two jrara. We had medical attendance, but she failed to f.a reller. At last, knowing that Hood' SarsajmrWIa had cured my mother of rheumatism, aud belie log U mut be good for the blood, I concluded to have my daughter try It, and tt has entirely cured her." Cokxkui'S Vuork, 42 ast Mala Street, Marvealltuwn, Iowa. Purifies the Blood "Hood's Sarsaparilla baa cured me of salt rbeum, which I have bad for years. I do think It Is a splen did medicine. I am 40 yean of age and iny skin ia Just as smooth and ftlr aa a piece of glaas." Mu. Ian Cutuc, South Korwaik, Conn. Hood's Sarsaparilla Sold by all drujfln. t); Hi for ti. Frtparcd aa!? kj C. I. HOOD CO , Lowtll, llau. I0O DosesOna Dollar Ely's Cream Balm Wll.l, It KK SgLD.Nr.fc-0 CATARRH l A ' f Prlca"5QCa"ntb. Apply Balm into eaco. n-Jiuil. ELY BROS., M Warrrn SI.. N. V. ;f 7C TOHZ.1QA MONTH can be muda working I ftl for u. iVrMius prffi rnd wlwi uu furni-h a borne aud k'v tllr wu.l llmu to it.r bulu.-t. biaxu moment may lm pn. titi.lv ?iiiUi also. A few vacaucN si t towuftau-l riiie. H, k JUtiS uS t o.. '( Maui ht., Itichiin.n.l, 'a. PENSIONS It yon want your pension without delu.r. iiut our claim tu tha bun u WASHINGTON, 1. 4 . F REEMAN A .MONEY. Waalilua-inn. U. t ii. i, ili-Ui-y, IU eJ4 lniUr of Couwj. A. rieeuirfii, h )eJS Jut t l . . All t?u. Ll PrTocTi,! I xiliiUiai IT t BloIl Bur.ll. THE'rARX AiTO GARDEN. CAM t9 BOCS PLASTS. Ring pft-aniums, if not mora than six montiia or a year old, should never be pottod in more than a five or six inch pot. Begonias like plenty of water, rich earth and all tho tun they can get, so as to dry off daily and drink again freely next morning. Heliotropes should he broken off at Iri, once a week for six months. Brea.'i rfi the Inst three inches of each breach's growth, and make a slip or cutting of it by pulling off the leaves tor two inches, and set this plucked 'Hera down firmly in tho pot. By so dc.ng with a young heliotrope one can, in I few months, have a mass of foli ago and a wealth of blooms. Amtricnn CuttictrW. HEMRDT FOR rOTATO Bt'OS. AA item was extensively published so;ic time since, to the effect that a bean s'.ed in each potato hill would keep away tho potato beetle. The theory was that the smell of the bean was so obnoxious that tho bug would not feed in its vicin ity. Having this in iniud I have planted this season several rows of late potatoes, alternating with rows of early red Valen tino beans. The beaus were up some time before the potatoes, and, according to tho theory, should lia7e acted a "scare-bugs." But at soon as the potato sprouts appeared above ground tho omni present beetle found them and went to work with his usual activity. Although tho bugs confined their depredations to the potatoes I several times tound thcin upon the bean plants, but never any evi dence that they had been feeding there. As the pods began to develop on the Jeans, while the potatoes were in the first stages of growth, I was compelled to desist from applying insecticides for fear of poisoning the beans. Thus the potatoes bid fair to be a total loss. Has any one else tritd the "beau remedy V FEEDING POULTRY. The food given poultry in the morning should be soft food ami well cooked, and iu cold weather it should be fed when nearly at blood-heat. Comment and ground oats, of each one part, aud two parts of wheat brau, makes good food for breakfast. Cook or scald it. and feed it dry enough to crumble between the thumb and fingers; no food should be given poultry iu a clammy or sloppy state. Season this with salt and pepper as if for your own table, only making it pretty hot with pepper in very cold weather. Have a portion of the floor covered some six inches deep with straw, and at noon scatter among it some oats, rye, barley, wheat, and once a week sun flower seed, and let them scratch for it. The exercise will be beneficial 10 them. Hang a cabbage head up so it will be some two feet or more from the floor; they will find a way to reach it. Their evening meal should consist sole ly of good, sound corn. Wo say feed corn at night for two very good reasons; it takes corn longer to digest than most foods, and by feeding your fowls corn at night they will not be nearly so hungry in the morning as they would bo were they fed upon Either food;nnd, again, corn is a great fat-forming food, hence a heating one; and as the nights are colder than the days, and the fowls are upon their roost, aud taking no exercise, hence whatever will aid them to keep up the animal heat will be highly bene ficial. JfOVEL WAY OF PROPAGATING HOSES. Recently I was conversing with a man who is a rose enthusiast, and he told me he had stroug bushes cf some of the best hybrid perpetuals upon their own roots, that he had rooted himself in a way quite new to me. Having obtained a suitable shoot, or several of them, they were placed in au ordinary' bottle which contained some water, and this bottle was hung upon the wall nf the house in a sunny position and there left, water being supplied to make up the deficiency caused by evaporation. Iu this water, which often becomes very warm from the heat of the sun, the cuttings re mained, and after a short period they calloused, when they were taken out and dibbled into pots in the ordinary way, the formation of the roots soou taking place. The above plan was claimed as expedi tious, as the cuttings calloused much sooner in water than they did in the soil. It is known that many things root readily in water, and oleanders are fre quently propagated iu that way, whilst some Sedum spectabile that I have lately had in a cut state had rooted freely long before the flowers faded. With the roses, if cutting is once nicely calloused, success is almost a certaiuty, and if this needed state can lie brought about by immersion of the base in water, we then have a simple and valuable aid to rose propagation, because it is much easier to preserve alive a cutting placed in water than it is one in the soil during its early stage. I'tVt'i Mariatiite. CARE AND PROFIT IN SHEEP. If your sheep pens are not iu order, yon cannot repair them aud get them in comfortable condition any too soon. Sheep need warm, comfortable quarters So that they will not need to huddle too close together to retain a little warmth. No open holes or cracks, however small, should be left for the wind to blow through aud the snow tu sift iu, making a cold streak clear across the pen. The ceiling or roof does not need to be high, yet good ventilation should be provided for, while an agreea.ile temperature of 50 to lid degrees is kept throughout the sheep peu. No cheap rickety concern will answer the purpo-e. But ho.v many really good winter quarters for sheep are provided? In the recent storms iu Colo rado and Texas hhecp perished by the thousands for want of shelter. They suffer everywhere from the same cause. The time is coming when men will better protect their auimals. The profit on sheep grow ing does not U come from one somve. It is not con fined to the receipts for wool, nor yet to what the mutton and young lambs bring. Nor, iu the case of blooded Ktock, is it confined to receipts for animals for bleed ing purposes. Neither is it confined to all these three combine 1. There is value in the droppings of the sheep. They en rich the laud wheiever they go, uud not only consume weeds that would other- wibe be au increasing nuisauee. but they , meu who, after much difficulty, rescued live ou much that would go to waste be- the child from its chiliy batu. The littlo c.use other auiuials reject it. With good ! onu was almost unconscious from cold fences they give littlo trouble, because i when takeu out, but had bravely clung they attend strictly to business. Iu sum- to the clothes-line all the time, holding uier give iheiu u good range, plenty of its head above water. The happy mothei salt uud good water, and keep the dogs hugged her rescued one ami wept for away. Beyond these they do not need i joy. while the assembled crowd threw anything inoic than is ucccs-nry for the I up their hats aud cheered in ackuowl owpc or iiiiiMcr of the floci p up a t Jgcmi ul of the baby's grit, familiar acquaintance with them. ifr ror and Former, A 800D Pt,Al OF BOTATIOX. A good system or plan of rotation Is to plow clover under, and sow to wheat and with timothy, followed in tho spring with clover, securing iu this way a stand of grass. Cut two crops of hay, and plow up the meadow in the fall, and plant to corn the next spring; then sow to oats and clover again. Other crops can bo used or added, with a truck patch for potatoes, sorghum, beans, cab bage an I this class of crops, with a sup ply of tree and small fruits, and a garden. This will, of course, imply the plow ing up of at least a part of the meadow last year, and planting to corn and of the clover, and sowing to wheat, l'arl of tho farm should nearly always bo in pasture, if stock is kept; and if the best profit is realized with this sys. tern of rotation, a sufficient number of, stock should be kept to consume nearly or quite all the products. But it is not always tho best plan to cither plow up the pasture or tho meadow. Properly managed, these can be kept in grass for a number of vtars without ehansre, and yet profitable crops of grass be realized. ltn the meadows especially, it will be necessary to apply more or less fer- tilizcrf, iu order to keep in a proper con dition to make a good growth; but this can be done by applying a good dressing of well rotted aud properly lined manure over the surface. In sonic cases a good harrowing that will fine the manure and loosen up the surface, can be profitably given, and so long as good crops of grass can be secured it will not be necessary to disturb. In many cases a meadow can be readily thickened up by harrowing thoroughly and then sowing seed, and using a brush to cover. Tho meadow and pasture ought to pay as good a per cent, of profit as the rest of tho farm ; and a very important item in this is a good even stand of grass. And when this is secured, it is often not best to change at lcist not as often as will bo necessary if tko meadows and pastures are made a part of a regular system of rotation. Whenever either fail, from any cause, to yield a good growth of grass, it will be best to turn under and plant to something else, and depend upon a new meadow aud pasture for grass and hay. This is especially the case when, from the texture of tho soil, seeding to grass either for meadow or pasture is con sidered as uncertain. Prairie Furmer. FARM AND GARDEN NOTES. Fowls should never bo permitted to have uccess to the horse stable, nor the feed room nor haymow. Their rooms should be cntiii-ly separate from the stable, so that they may not always be ready to slip iu whenever a door iB opened. Most amateurs in gardening err in growing their vegetables too closely . that is, in not thinning them enough. So treated, they are not only much smaller, but also inferior in quality. Those who desire good beets, turnips, parsnips and carrots should remember this. One of the drawbacks to the germina tion of seeds is that they are covered with toonuch earth when planted. The smaller the seed the less covering re quired. Such seeds as kale, cabbage, turnip, lettuce, carrot nnd parsnip need only one-eighth of an iuch of earth over them. The buds of peach trees have swollen unusually for this season, and there is a prospect of the crop being destroyed by lato frosts. If tho trees are young the failure to produce fruit may be au ad vantage, as the trees 'v ill probably make a longer growth and bo in better con dition for producing fruit next year. Chestnuts, walnuts, almonds, butter nuts nnd pecans can be grown and will give a good variety, aud on many places ou the farm they can be planted and grown to advantage as easily as other varieties of trees that bear such fruits as nuts of a marketable value, while the wood of the nut trees are of equal value. If one will go through the orchard in winter, or any time before the leaves come, and cut off and burn all twigs which have the eggs of the tent caterpil lars, he will save much trouble. Tho eggs are in rings encircling the twigs. This preventive measure is practicable only with low-headed trees, unless a lad der is i:scd.r Oct as many early chicks out as you can, it means early laying pullets in tho fall and eggs in winter you know are valuable aud profitable. But weed out the culls quickly after you see what you have; no use feeding poor stock, they eat as m.ic'u as the good. Now where is tlie economy iu keeping them? This system of managing your stock should result well in every instance. It is always better to test a new plan before adopting it; wo advise you to try this and see what there is iu it. Variety in feeding is not only highly appreciated by poultry, but, iu the ex perience of those who have tried this plan, as well as the more general system of feeding out whole grain only as a regular food, it has been found that the former is much the best toward keeping domestic fowls constantly in good thrift. Hy variety we mean both raw and cooked food meat, vegetables, scraps, green food, corn, oats, rice, barley, wheat, pounded bones, etc. Kither for laying fowls, for breeders, or for growing stock, the varied feeding plan is always most beneficial. A Brave Four-Year-Old Child. A plucky four-year-old baby lives in (Okaloosa, Iowa. It is the child of Mrs. Wilson, and while playing about the mouth of a deep well, covered by loose boards, fell in. The Well is thirty feet deep and contained ten feet of water at the time. The mother saw the child fall and, frantically grabbing a clothes line, lowered it into the well. The oh i Id grasped the line, but of course could not hold ou tight enough to be. drawn out, so the mother tied her cud above. "Will pet huld on tight till mamma runs for papa!" tremblingly cried the mother to the little one. "Kss," camu a brave little sob from below. The mother hurried away aud soon re turned with the father ami several other SCIENTIFIC AND INDUSTRIAL. A phonetic alphalet for the blind has been devised by a citiren of New York. Harvard is to have a "photogrnphio double'1 telescope to aid in making star maps. A new process for printing in colors employs ennmel pigments, which set at once. The printing surface is metal. About two-thirds of tho 'oW oil which is used in putting up sardines comes from the American cotton plant. An English doctor report over thirty cases of headache nnd facial neuralgia cured by snuffing powdered snlt up tho nose. A new compound locomotive ia being tried on the Michigan Central Railway. It has not yet proved a success, having been sent back to the shops for readjust ment of tho valves. To make white lines on blue-prints, use an ordinary solution of lyo. To make red ones, add about twenty-five percent, nf solution of carbonate of potash to any good red aniline ink. Printing presses are now in prepara tion which will work three continuous webs of paicr at once, making six -page or twelvo-page papers just as fours aud eights arc now produced. There are now some 4200 species of flowers which are cultivated in Europe; and it is a matter of some surprise, as well as regret, that only 420, exactly ten per cent, are odorous. A New Jersey inventor proposes to use tho dynamo in warfare to make artificial lightning. Ho claims to be able to pro duce a flash of lightning which he can direct against a body of men a mile away. Au electric plant (vegetable plant) is said to have been discovered in Iudin which has the power of affecting tho magic needle at a distance of twenty feet when tho weather is favorable. In rainy weather it has no electric influence what ever. Dr. G. Munro Smith states that a diet of twelve to fourteen ounces of chemical ly dry food, digestible and with the in gredients in proper proportion, is suffi cient for the daily needs of an avcrago sized man on moderate work. Most per sons eat literally twice ns much. It is hard to realize what wonderful proportions the use of the electric motor has attained. There are now iu opera tion in the United States stationary elec tric motors aggregating between fiOOO and 10,000 horse power, besides 6000 to 8000 small motors, fau outfits, etc. Ice Yachting. Ice yachting is the king of winter sports on the lakes near Faribault, and gives great excitemcit nnd pleasure. The boats travel a mile a minute. Un accompanied by the rumble and the roar of the traiu, the ice bont is shot over the glassy surface by a power equally as tire less as steam, giving to its passengers a feeling of exhilaration and excitement, the pleasure of which is not lessened by the elements of danger. The novel sensations, the exhilarating effect of icebonting must bo experienced to be appreciated, and if you would actually fly through the air take a posi tion as ballast on the end of the runner plank, nnd grasping the small wire rope which supports the mast on that side, hang on for dear life, for while you may at times be ten feet in the air and mov ing at the rate of a mile a minute, you must "stick" until the end of the jour ney; you can't let go to get a stronger hold, nor get oil aud walk until the meteor comes to a standstill. You are booked for a through passage, unless somethiug breaks, iu which case very likely you will get off, but will not stand upon the order of your going. The boats are constructed with three sharp steel runners iu the form of a triangle, the oue at the rear being used as a rudder. These runners are connected by a strong framework of plauks, bolted aud fastened in every manner possible to givo the greatest strength, for the strain on them is tremendous. The expause of sail, in comparison with the size of the body or framework of the boat, is im mense, and the material used must be the strongest aud tho mast well braced with wire ropes. MinneajwlU Journal. Followed a Horse Car 40,000 Miles. An Owcnsboro (Ky.) dog followed a street car in that place for nearly a year, and traveled in that time 40,000 miles. His travels were cut short by a piece of poisoned meat, and the Owensboro Memeiujer thus illuminates his career: "The queer freak of the dog's follow ing the car was a singular illustration of his faithfulness. Iu the early days of last March a countryman came to town, bringing the dog with him. Ho con cluded while here to take a street cur ride, and when he got on tho car the dog trotted along behiud, us he had been wont to do with his master's wagon. When the man got off the car ho passed out the front, instead of the rear, where he went in. The dog thus missed him, and nothing could induce the animal to leave the car without his master. He followed that car for days, almost re fusing to eat, but at last he grew to like the busiuess aud followed it to the day of his death." The Laughing Plant. The "Laughing Plaut" grows in Arabia, and has beeu given its name from the ef fects produced by eating its seeds. The plant is of moderate size, with bright yel low floweis and soft, velvety seed pods, each of which contains two or three seeds resembling small black beaus. The na tives of the district where the plant grows dry these seeds and reduce them to pow der. A small dose of this powder bat similar effects to those arising from tht inhalation of laughing gas. It causes the most sober person to dance, shout and laugh with the boisterous excitement ol a madman, and to rush about cutting the most ridiculous capers for about an hour. At the expiration of this time exhaustion sets iu uud the excited person falls asleep, to wake after several hours with no recol lection whatever of his antics. LUMUAGO. Lumbaxa li a form of ibu chronic tuw of rhttumalUiu, in tUe luutUtr region.or muscles ui ibu back. which ia rendu r ,..' cured y rubbing 1 the parts fittely with Ct Jacobs Oil. It lscommuuly kuowu u B A C K AC H E . Victoria, Tea., Juue 22, lssS. 1 was la bed two montlm with backache; putlcreii about three, months. 1 uua cured by tot. Jacobs Oil pciniuciitly ; uu ri-turu lu 14 iiwuil.s. O. W. JEKrtltsO.. AT PaUoUlf'lS AND DKALfchS. THE CHARLES A. V0CELER CO., B.ltiiwie, M4. Improvement In Artificial Limbs. The latest improvemett In artificial limbs consists in forming the leg and foot part of a single piece of wood, hav ing the grain curved naturally in its growth, such pieces being procured from the parts of the trunk contagious to tl roots and branches of trees. Limbs rondo in this way are stronger with tho snmo amount of wood remaining in them than when mado of parts nnd glued together, and aro mado waterproof, which is a valuablo feature when tho occupation of tho wearer exposes it to constant damp ness, or to water i;self, ns iu fishing, mining, dredging, etc. By making limbs in this manner from natural curves in tho growth of tho wood, it has become practicable to make light and substantial artificial feet, adapted to partial ampu tation of tho foot. Tho advantngo de rived from liphtncflu of artificial substi tutes will readily be apparent when tho resistance to motioa from inertia is con sidered. A Few Palmers. The recent statistics ot the number of deaths show that the largo majority die with con. sumption. This disease may commence wltli an apparently harmlois cmik'h which can be cured instantly by Kemp's llulsara for the Throat and Lunzswhlch is gnarautord to cud and relieve all cases. Price BOe. and It. Tiial also free. Vat sale by all drum I sis. A LiviRPnoi. dentist extracts teeth, cleans them and restores them to their socki-u to do further duty. Anoirr a,0J0 telephones are la uso In this country. There Is more Catarrh in this section of the country than nil other diseases put together, and until the last few years waasupimsed to be incurable. Kora ureal many car doctors pro nounced it a htcal dineAe, and prescribed lo cal remedies, and by constantly fiulinistu cure with local treatment, pronounced it tucnritlile. Science has proven catarrh to be a constltu tlotml diseases and therefore requlrrs constttu tlnnal treatment- Hall's C'nturrh I'nre, manu factured by F. J. Cheney .te Ha, Toledo, ( Into, luthe only constitutional c ire. on the market. It Is taken inu-rnally iu doom from 10 drop to a tcaspoonful. It acta directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of thexvKtem. The offer one hundred dollars for anrc'aseit falls to cure, tend for circulars and testimonial. Address, K. J. Ciikkkt A Co., Toledo, U. 1 India the Government lixo railroad rules. The 1'rlde ot lite la. He was a britfiit, Icind-mnn bov of sixteen, sunny-, eniperixl, brilliant and euKSk-lint. the delight of his parents tho Joy of his home, and tho prido of his class. It jt a shadow fell across hi bright prospect. It tuvao with a tritliiiKcuuti;soon came premoniti ns of con sumption, his streudth failed, his cheeks grvvr hollow, and he seemed doomed to au early (rrave. Then a friend advised )r. 1'lerce'a (inlden Medical Discovery. He tried It and waasaved. HoAlth and strength returned, hi cheerful voice rani out again across the school playground, his cheeks a-frtln (fre rosy. Ills eyes briKlit. He Is still ' the prldeof hi class" and he graduates this year with hlghesi hon ors. Chronic Natal Cnuirrh positively cured by Dr. Safe's Catarrh Jtotuedy. 60 cents, by drutjlsta. OKRMAXr has lfUTil postoliices, Kngland 17,. lui, France only 7.HH. If afflicted with sore eyes use Dr. Isaac Thnmp ton'e tuve-water. Drutfglstspellat-ftc.uer bottle Watch for "Murray" ItUKKy adv. next week. s r O-VEJ ENJOYS Both the method and resulls when Syrup of Figs is taken ; it is pleasant and refreshing to the taste, and acta gently yet promptly on tlieKidncyg, Liver and Bowels, cleanses the sys tem effectually, dispels colds, head aches and fevers and cures habitual constipation. 8yrnn of Figs is the only remedy of its kind ever pro duced, pleasing to the taete and ac ceptable to the stomach, prompt in its action and truly beneficial in its effects, prepared ouly from the most healthy and agreeable substances, its many excellent qualities com mend it to all and have made it the most popular remedy known. Syrup of Figs is for sale in 60o and SI bottles by all leading drug gists. Any reliable druggist who may not have it on hand will pro cure it promptly for any one who wishes to try it Do not accept any substitute. CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO. 8 AH WANCISC0. CAL. toutsviLLE, m. tew roM, n.r. Stop tJ3.Vt Chronic Cough Nowi For If you do not It may becomo con sumptive. For C'ioiiiiifait, Srrafula, OtHrmt JMnllty and lltutli, JJitcturt, there U nothing liko Of Pure Col Liver Oil and HYPOPHOSPHITES Or Iiiina ataacx ocl. Tt Is almost as palatable aa milk. Far better than other eo-culled fewulsiuua. A woudertul fieau. producer. Scott's Emulsion There are poor imitations. Gel the penulM.I EVERY Ml -mis- By J. Hamilton Aver. A. !I.. 11. I. Tnl Ha most valuable boils Mr tbs ho'ifthohl, .owjiims iv id)i ind tm!tiiy-ui4iLiuiueu ymp umitf tUtfereut dlsaa-iei, tha ca-.ei au.l menus of V'rvvuuUn moti a 164, ami th Miinuit-at rtntt.itei wUluti will iilleviuLe or cur?. AHM njo uitifuaelv lilu-trauJ. Tuu book U wrlttcu lu pUla every-tlay fcuKlliU, tuJ Ik frttu fro-u tlie Unliukal term M'huU icudiir moil tljwUr boo'; w vaiuclt;-. to tlie yttue.'- mm) 01 rttturr. UUly UUc. p ttlp&iJ. Give a cui ulete auttly.u of every tuiutf usri' mln totitjurUulu, lurrluHu uJ tho irdiii:kltu auJ I'diing of Iteuliuy ,ajniit.-t; wKet.itr wuii vftiutiLtie .'cciurt twit prv crtptiuu. ejtpiuutittou of bM-ilcul pr :Cutf. reel u or urUuury lierbs. iVah Ibt oook III (lit J:'ue I'te-rA m ut ejf.;ue for H it Kuuwluij wlmt Us mi iu mi emergency. nruA aoauM nolo or pual im SCOTT'S Friiyissor, OWN MM -iinif us !) Ul-UOiUIUeUl'JU UUl IttTgOi lUfttl 9 l'Ul' ntt. Hull, m WMr4 M-. . 1. tttr. "MY WIFE IS A TERROR ! " anld mlM tempemt twin In our hearing. "Hhe snai and snarls ami sivtnk her children, and finds fault continually. I can't bear it any lonr." Don't lw too serer on her, my friend ; you littlo renlia her sutToriups. Hhe lma hwt her former sweet disposition, and ill health ia the cause of it all. lr. Pierce s Favorite Preaeriiition will make her welL As a powerful, Invigorating tonic, it im partt stretiKth t t'16 whole system, aud to the womb and it apiMuidnee in r ticular. For overworked, "worn-out," " run-down," debilitated teachers, milliner, dressmakers, seamstressce, " shop - tirls," houaekooters, nurmng mothers, anil iocino Women irenerallv, lr. Fienv's ravorite Pro scription is the (jrentwt earthly boon, bring unequaled aa nn appetizing cordial aud re storative tonic. As a soothing and strengthening nerv ine, " Favorito Prescription " is uuecnmlcd and is inviilunble in ailuying and subdu ing nervous excitability, irriWbility, ex haustion, prostration, hysteria, ajtasuui nnd other distressing, nervous symptoms, com monly atUMKlunt. uHn tiinctional and organic disease of the womb. It induce refreshing sleep nnd relieves mciiUd anxi ety aud despondency. CATARRH Irj E HEAP' mr m m mnmaimai matter of how long standing-, la per-' mancntly cured by DR. SAGE'S CATARRH REMEDY. 60 centa, by drurirlsts. EVERT II IIIB 01 DOCTOR My J. Hamilton Xjcrn, A. .11.. M. D. Thlilismmt taI liable lw.lc IVr the hoitehl t leftoltluit h it does t'10 easily- Utla tutalt? I m- tviiiiMoi tUtToreui uianase, me t'auw nun mruivn urvf ntlutf Buclnl.tsuaao. auUtlut ttuiiu4 rmi? li t which will uil.'via.M nr oun. AM i-mm r,ifiiijr t!lutrtt.1. The xtk in wrltUm in pUlu fvery-Uay feittfll-tti, ami U fr from tho uviiiilcal lorm vm"i mitler nitMt doctor IkIch vuluelf i to lh Kunr- lll jr of nailers Only UUr. po-t,mtl. uive n tt.ni lUtf miulyislit of evorv.liliiK port toning to court iitt, marrittiM hii.1 Out liroiliirUo'i lml retirtutf of llf.tlt )V famlll.ft; lot-OuT with valuable tv.Ki ami ris tcrlptlout, explanation of li t.tU' tl pr-st'tha, c tr- rrct ur 01 ordiuary iutos. w 1111 uu ooo o houe thertt l nncine for not koowrliu what M In an rimriMMV. i'nl tmtal uot or MMa ituuiip uf any tk'uomluiitlon not larger tu u & i-euti RUtlli Pin, IMMitK. 1st Lmr4 S4., K.I. ERAZERbrhcI WEt IN tiik woaLaw iiitnw av lyOflttoUflnutno. BoW fcTerrwhere. OPIUM 11AU1 1. Only CerlaU aaii tail C t K r. lu uio orix u r. J. 1.. B'l i.l'ULNM, LUuiou.O JONES ji i: PAYS THE FREICHT. A Tun iiuuu frnlc. Itow lioaun ajxl V.t-.uu foe Ettt lan P Fur f no fr, tint n nKu in . iks;h r uim utinn -H JONES OF BINGHAMT0N HlMiH ADITO.v, N. . DROPSY ri 1 1 1 ; a i i : i 1 1 1 ; i Poaltlvolv ( y rt1 viih raeOiblf It riiif illra. Have ourrd tltoUr.anlri of obmm, t un- t-utU nln pro nounced bopfit-Hit by tM-kt pli.viiit-lani. frtmi hrfidourt ynil't "H dlM!iiM ar; lu lu daya at it-.'iM two tlilriii ail ayinpioniN ri'inuvtu. cni mr mw "iir Ulai of oilrucul. -uu curt-. Tn days' tn-atmi-ut f re by mall. If you order trial, end Pk. In stamps ti jiay ot&jc. lr. II. H. ttnr.t.N A t-oNK, Atlanta, ua DI?. Mi .. ahdrake Pill DR. SCHENCK STANDARD FOR OVER HALF A CENTURY Cura TmlipMtlon, Pour Stomarh, Ilnart burn, Flatiilaury, tUi-,aiul all IilHaM- of the bluuuwh; Cos-lite tii, Itilhuuiiiatlou. Jiiarrl'-ua, FitM),aul liiiearauf the HweU; t uuittiitUon, ItiltuUMDvM, Juuudico, Nnca, liAiKlaeho, tiiUilniew", Kenroiunew, Wan dering I'.iiui, Malaiia. Lir Cuniplalut, and all L)i4eaeft ai ir.ug, friu atiurged aud blufCKiol Liver, 'ilir-y clean tli mutoua TCIHG It ft Pm itiva Cure fur DYSPEPSIA fiial, leduca gorpi a or coueifu cunui tiuun, Ine4.l1 up tubUiruruiupiii utiona, re ture free, healthy artiun tu the urgun, aud aia lh Hytttcin a iiatice tu rcuartwU And all Diaordcra of tha Pi- aud tiBiifciU. Th-y ara ffilSi'i ir'i.'X'C PURELY VEGETABLE, S.S.IS'biiMiJu'J: STRICTLY RELIABLE. o u.uhi,. Kur sal. t.y ail no A BSO LUT E LY SAFE. DiUBHit.. Price, 51 twiierDul. tla. Ir. Srhrut'k'a Nw llouk Tut Sale l.jr all PrujuitU. Pike 25 eta. a LunH, Llvt-raiid Stuuiaxb pr U.x; a U.xt for cla. ; ur iut by PiailiriM. Aililnu, iimil, .iut frfi, on rmi-ll-t uf lr!c. Or.J.H.Sclnnck Son. Phils, lir. J. 11. Ui.iii.k Sou,l'ullaarlihla, l'a. JTS Best Cough Medicine. Itwiimm f-i Cili-es wliuro ull elbe fuils. 1'luas.tiit u 3 taute. ( liildreu tako it without objec I)r. Tierces Favorite FreCTlptlo Is t legitimate medicine, carrfullv cempounded by an experienced and skillful physician, nnd adapted to woman's delicate organixa tion. It is purely vegetable In ita romposi.' tion and perfectly UuriuLsi In airy condition; of the system. i " Favorite Frcscriptlon Is a positive euro for tho most complicated ana ctwti nnte cases of leucorrhea, excessive flowing,' painful menstrua) ion, unnatural suppres sions, prolapsus, or falling of the womb,! weak iiack, "female weakness," antever-i sion, retroversion, bearing-down sensations, i chronic congestion, inflammation and ulcer-1 ation of tho womb, intlammation, pain and. tenderness In ovaries, aocouipauied with " internal heat." It is the citf medicine for woman's recti, linr weaknesses nnd ailments, sold by drug gists, under a positive guurnntce from the manufacturers, to givo satisfaction in evrry , cose, or money inid for it will l promptly refunded, rteo inrmifre printed on bottle-, wrapper and faithfully carried out for many years. For "nil Must ratal Treat lm on Diseases of Women, lt luigcs, (scut mrnled In pluin envelope,) eneloho ten cents, iu tmw, tO WllllI.D's DlMIKNSAUV Mkiucai. Akno ration, No. GUI Hum Street, Buffalo, 1)11. KOKIll.tlt'S I AVOICITB COI.IO MIXI'UKK roralldnmectlo huluus tu o irj Ji 1 1. etje uuttnjl ojliJ, WtidCior ta ulemor-.lMMin.Hlla. iUM-oly nuro t.iAii of i J.i ui iiu n t.-y. ilJwmajn htlniite rather uu tantiif j a.i 1.4 J Utr Mf .Mr nl.ui. AflLjr 41 ytfkfJ t tail 1 In more thuu oiumwi, ur KUsrsuuta 1 worth ttouteUihi. ('olio mitt Ij treat eel ermitptlr r.xMUtoa lew centMaml you uav a oureoa hana, i-oaa w hen nreitrd, Mlt,t lr!iHu arti a valua:Ut iijr'j. ir uot at your uruigut' i tUL'loMu .weetitH ior 'inuilo o till.', o:it r.v.l I. cuilow m ro p, Kot.; ..mi ,V !.. Iletulohem. I'm. j M In- AucilW 'luivt-Um lolwl M chrtrluuu ncommeiui Dr. KmV i fal-tre" rlvtit i tone tra. iirofu. Jl u I "" "uivt a tono M'-rtur. ttouU M.t t..l rcu niicii J bum eeer area. 1 so. tu ailAuvtl tlu .orxa j ,oiifa. Arte lor. .-on nnd tjvhutija MuMei, AUtofc P.l UW12 DR. TOBIAS' Yenetian Horse Liniment -A X II- Onrbr Condition Powders. Wunh Their U'rlsbt In Uold. ' See the Ortincate of Ihe late Colonel n. U ra let ami liumlr ilhof otlierH fmiu prmtluut Uotao ntca tlirouuliout tlie eouutry at ttio IU-ikii, 40 lit It It A V hTIltET, NEW YOUK. j s.tl.1 lir alt PrutrirlKtu anil Ra.lllem. N Y N U 10 I've Got It! CHEAPEST -:- FAMILY -:-ATLAS KNOWN. ONIiY GO O333NTT0 1 191 Pages, 91 Full-Pago Maps. Crlr.rid Mapa vt ro.'h State and Territory in fha I'liittl btt. a. AIko AlapK nf ery t ountry lu tbn V-riil. 'lUe l tti-r irtis Klvca tU wjuuru nilhaof i,.h Mutt ; time of wltieiiu nt ; iopulutiou; vhU-t tit ii-: avt-ra" tetniTutuie; hlury f citu-luli anJ Ihe pnii.-ii iti ioMmuxt rti in Oi Htate; umubt-r of it. nii. v ttli tneir prtKlut tiouxaiid tin- uluu tlnxtxtf ; ditltifiit mauufut'iim-H ai;ti nuuiifr of t-mi loyea, rtr. et AIm ilirt aitui of racli 1-oreiKti t ouuirj ) U rm nf tvs. mini nt ; populu t nn i principal pnxiueia i ml their inclit v vitluc; ami'iint cf trailu; ri-litfiouj tir.t- of i rinv; no h ft r:lri::il aud teh-Krpli ; num I r f h"i ". cat tl , h-'i, nnd a vnfat Hiiuniiit of iu lorniMft n v.iliint it- toll 1'oaipnid fur )4'r i J.UOK ITK HOI Si:. VM L.iianl M., S. Y t'ity. ' ASTHgVIAP,Jri,RP.fD.-FREE Uf ! ia-.ftrra. li r R M'llll-'l-HAX.lit.rftBl.HlMi. y . set ft so l ;-a.'. fcn r. V. SCHENCK'S OR.SCHENCK'S 'ULMQNIG SYRUP VIII Cura COUCHS. COLDS, Autt All lmuatl of the THROAT AND LUNG. It li )leaiant to tba Uata, Olid not contain a uarticla of opiuui orauytlilug Injur! unf. It uitlia lU-t Coul'Ii ilwl liino In ilia World. For Sola by all UrutrBlsti. I'rlc. 11.00 lierlMtllo. lr.6uhcnrk'i Uook on CoiiBumpUon and lu Cura, inallMl fie. Adilrta Dr. i.H.Schenck II Son, Phils. nded by Phyaifians. utl agrceuino to iuq tion. lly Urunpista. J
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers