THE FARX AND GARDEN. I iOTn0 WITH BOTH HAHDi. We hT8 known many farmers who iisvs learned to uso both right and left Imlidj alternately in (owing grain or graM stea. in tins caso a wider path acroe the field is seeded and when there ia do wind the seed may bo distributed mora Tenly than it can with the use of only one hand. The motion of the arms keep time with the lejpi in walking. The Bowing of grain by hand is now not com mon, as it is generally believed that it can be distributed more evenly and cot red to uniform depths by drilling. There are also grass seed sowcis that throw farther and distribute much more evenly than it is possible for the best sower by hand to do Boston Cultivator. SALTISH BUTTER. The excellence of the butter made from the fragrant pastures can only be pre ferred for any length of time by the beat methods of churning and salting. Butter that otherwise might be classed M good is often reduced to an inferior grade by the manner in which it is treated at the time of salting. A great deal of butter ia orerchurned, by which it ia pounded Into creamy, pasty condition, exactly the opposite of what it should be. To got the best results from salting butter the churning should stop when it haa fairly granulated. At this stage the but termilk should be drawn oS and the but ter washed with cold water or cold, weak brine, until it runs off clear. Then strong, clear brino may be poured on to remain until the butter has absorbed enough of the salt, or fine, dry salt one ounce to the pound should be sifted on and worked in so that it will dissolve. After this a light second working should be given to clear it of any buttermilk that may be drawn out by the salting. Throughout the entire process the utmost care should be taken not to break the grain of the butter. Aire York World. i GRASSES FOR PASTURE. The farmer who depends on clover and timothy for pasturo grass doea not get the best from tho soil. The timothy will die out and the clover fail to hold its own, yet three-quarters of our pasture lands are sown with thesetwo grasses. For a pure pasture land blue 'grass is much better, for it is never per manently damaged by frost or drought, 'nd it seldom runs out. Another favor able point of this grass is that cattle can be turned upon it without damaging it at least a month earlier in the spring than upon a pasture sown to timothy and clover. Blue grasa will also grow in the shade, where timothy and clover would flie, and a profitable crop can be made to 'grow under timber trees. A blue grass 'pasture is a permauent thing, and more of our fields should be sown to it. Dur ing severe winters the clover and timothy re frequently killed, and as a result the number of cattle has to be reduced. .This never, or very seldom, happens when good blue grass pastures are on the farm Chicago Timet. A HORSE'S SENSE OF 6MKLL. A horse will leave musty hay untouched in his bin, however hungry. He will :liot drink of water objectionable to his questioning sniff, or from a bucket which some odor makes offensive, however thirsty. His intelligent nostril will 'widen, quiver and query over the daintiest bit offered by the fairest of hands with coaxings that would make a .mortal shut his eyes and awallow a 'nauseous mouthful at a gulp. A mare . ia never satisfied by either sight or whinny that her colt is really her own until she has a certified nasal certificate to the fact. A blind horse, now living, Jwill not allow the approach of any stranger without showing signs of anger not safely to be disregarded. The dis tinction is evidently made by his sense of smell, and at a considerable distance. Blind horses, as a rule, will gallop wildly bout a pasture without striking the sur rounding fence. The sense of smell in forms them of its proximity. Others will, when loosened from the stable, go direct to the gate or bars opened to their accustomed feeding grounds, and Swhen desiring to return, after houri of CBeJess wandering, will distinguish one outlet and patiently await its opening. The odor of that particular part of the fence is their pilot to it. Turf, Field and Farm. TO KrLL FLOWER IK8ECTS. An excellent fumigating device is made of stout copper in the form of an ordinary clay pipe, but with the addition of movable cap in which is inserted a tube for a mouthpiece. The ends of this pipe should be tinned where it is put into the mouth. In its use one has only to get little ordinary smoking tobacco; re move the cap off the bowl of the pipe. Fill the latter with the tobacco, light it in the usual way, replace the cap on the bowl, then, inserting the end of the pipe connected -with the cap in the mouth, give it a gentle, continuous blow and jou produce a dense c.oud of smoke, which can be directed to any part of the plant infected with the insects. The fumes cause the insects to dislodge them selves at once, even in the most remote part of the sheaths ol the leaves or Sowers. Wherever it has been tried on a of plants it has been found to answer ex ceedingly well. For instance, on many orchids experimented on there were thrips far down in the sheaths of the leaves which no insectitude would reach without injuring the plant, but after a few moments' gentle application of to bacco fumes they were destroyed, and no harm done to the pUiut. Then again, for window plants an appliance of this kind Is particularly valuable, as it enables each plant to be kept free of insects at a mini mum of cost aud trouble. AVw York Unald. WATEH FOR FOWLS. Did you ever notice how often a hen Will go to a vessel of water to get a drink, if it be couvenieut, in course of an houft If you put a fresh lot of water before fowls, did you ever watch the ageruess manifested to get there first! When such need of drink is so plainly seen, doea it not seem a cruel thing to let hours, days, or even weeks pass with out luruiahiug the necessary supply I H it stated that three-fourth of tho compo aitiou of the egg is water. When the ben is not conveuieutly supplied with the necessary article do you suppose she can derive enough moisture from what she 00 gather about the yard to manufacture n rjfg every day, or even every other day I All who are interested in the com tui aud welfare of thu creatures around thaw will da what they can to alleviate U tu&vtmu tiiat mj ruult tim liiint. yjan . Those who hava not tie Urn to supply rreaa water ever day or two cm eon struct founts! ia soma shaded place which will furnish supply until the water is exhausted, lake a ten-gallon keg with small auger so that row of them may be close to the bottom. Con struct cover to this, the rim of which mar be an inch sad a Wf larger ia di ameter thaa the head of the keg, and deep enough to cover the holes. Fill ths keg with water from the perforated end, place the water-tight cover oa it, and the water will rise ia the extra width of the cover until the holes are covered, and there it will stand, three-quarter inch trough all arouad the keg, foun tain which will keep fresh in ths shade. and into which the fowls cannot step, and thus befoul the water with their feet. Dnkota Farmer. GREEN FODDER BILL OF FARC Twenty-Are years ago I fed fourteen cows all summer oa the produce of eleven acres of green fodder, and had enough put away dry to carry them half throughathe winter, writes Pennsylvania fanner. And I was only beginning the practice of soiling then. By this way of feeding land can be cropped twice, or even three times. To begin, one ahould have winter rye to cut the first; clover or orchard grass to follow; early sweet corn to follow these; sad ths last will carry the stock through the whole sum mer, although it ' is desirable to have some change, sod oats and peas mixed and sown together serve excellently in this way. This Is the programme, which can be followed whole or in part. The rye is ready for cutting la May or June. As soon as stria of it ia cut through the field ten or twelve feet wide the soil ia turned with swivel plow and planted with Narragansett sweet corn, which will be ready for use, in roasting ear stage, in sixty days. When another strip is ready this U plowed, joining furrows to the first strip (the value of the swivel plow now appears).' And so on. After the rye the clover or orchard grass, or both, which are best grown separately, come in sad last until the first corn is ready. As soon as this is cut oil in strips new plantings are made. By-asM-by second cutting of clover and grass will be ready, or the oats (Si bushels) and peas (1 bushels) sown together. All that is needed ia to have enough, which is more thaa can be fed, and the surplus is cured and put into the barn for win ter. With a crop of mangels for winter the system is complete and no silo needed. Sett York Tribune. FARM AXS GARDEN JTOTES. Mulch the strawberries. Resolve to make a good corn crop. Feed the potato beetles parls green. What as to corn fodder and ensilage? "Snow-white" gladiolus is a favorite. In favorable season a second crop of orchard grass and of clover can be read ily secured. Tour team as well as you gets tired. Remember it is doing the heavier work. Give it a rest. If you stake your trees be sure that the stake stands firmly. A loose post doea more harm than good. Hungarian or millet make a good hay, but they need a good, rich soil, well pre pared, to secure a good yield. In transplanting trees more loss is oc casioned by exposure of the roots than by their mutilation. Avoid both. If you grow Japanese buckwheat, do not grow it by the aide of the common varieties, if you want it to keep pure. Good onion seed will sink in water, while that which -floats either does not grow at all or produces only scullions. Some object to cutting hay early be cause the stock will eat so much more of it. This ought to be a good reason for early cutting. Orchard grass if first to ripen, then clover, followed by timothy and then red top. If properly cured, all make a good quality of hay. Wheat or oats are grown for the grain or seed tout grass for the straw Or hay, and e&cn must be cut at the proper stage to secure the best results. The form of the animal and the qual ity of the meat depend mainly upon the breed, but the growth and development depend mainly on the feed. The seed of most grasses are a very small proportion of their seeding value as compared with the straw, so that the lat ter should receive the most attention. When the price of dairy products has fallen low, it will not pay to let our care of the cows fall off. If we do, they will not be ready for business when the price rises. Do you know of any better use to which you can put your best clover bay than to feed it to the cows I If you don't, store it handy to their stable when you cut it. a tviwoui uiuuivr aj sue puiauj vcetis has twenty-five parasite enemies. Tet notwithstanding these and all the poisons now Heroically svanas up sua aeaes an nihilation. Professor Augur, of Connecticut, rec ommends sprinkling cabbage with brine strong enough to bear an egg as a rem edy for the cabbage worm. It is also good for the cabbage. In an experiment at the Indiana station the annlinatlnn r9 )uni..n1 w miM nearly doubled the crop of potatoes over inai oi me neia not manured, and the tubers were just as sound and smooth. It's Bard to Hit a Mas. A crowd of revenue officers were talk ing, when one of them remarked : "Do you know it's a heap harder to bit a man shooting at him, than it is to hit a squirrel the same distance!" "Of course it is," was ths general as sent. It was a harder question to decide why this was so. "One time," resumed the first speak er, "I ahot eleven times at a man, not fifty yards away from him. He ahot tea times. Neither of us hit the other. Both were dodging behind trees, but all of mine were pretty fair shots. I'll give you my word, I wasn't frightened until the whole thing was over. I aimed like I was shooting at a target, and I'm not a bad ahot, either. They tell me that fellow could hit a nickel at a hundred yards ninety-nine times out of a hun dred, and I don't believe be was scared. But it's a fact you can hit a squirrel five times where you couldn't hit a man ouco."MltmU Cotutitution. a vi du uuoipuvca sua. o a," 000,000 babies are bora every year, And that their cradles placed is line would read) round tie glob. j HOUSEHOLD AFFAIRS. HTALTH-GrVraO ODOR IN THS ROOM. If you want a lovely odor in your room, break off branches of the Norway spruce and arraage them in a large jug well filled with water. In a few days tender, pale green branches feather out soft and cool to the touch, and giving the delightful health-giving odor. S-i-tntijlc American. TILS OF HASTT COOKIKO. Too much haste Is the cause of much bad cooking, according to a commentator on modern cookery. The majority of cooks bake brown bread and baked beans, for instance, in from one to two hours under a hot fire. The Boston cooks give from ten to twelve hours of baking to their beans and brown bread, and have the satisfaction of hearing that in no other city or country can such "delicious beans" and "lovoly bread" bo found. Kev York World. There are three classes of lard prime steam lard, pure kettle-rendered aud re fined lard. Prime steam lard is the leaf fat of hogs and the selected fat trim mings cooked in a close tank, by wet steam, at a pressure of from thirty-five to forty pounds, for from twelve to sixteen hours, after which the tank is allowed to settle and the lard is drawn off. Pure kettle-rendered lard consists of the fat backs and other trimmings of hogs, ren dered in an open kettle, and agitated while cooking to prevent burning. Re fined lard is a compound production. It includes, besides a certain proportion of the higher grades of hog fats, the lard stearin left in the extracting of lard oil from the leaf lard, the settlings and scrap ings from the kettles from which the neural lard is made, and all available fat tissues of the hog, to which are added the beef stearin obtained in the manu facture of oleo oil and a certain auantitv of a double refined cotton-seed salad oil. The preparation of this product in volves the employment of a somewhat complicated arrangement of steam jackets, hot air agitators, settling ket tles, filters and other machinery. The nrst two grades are inspected bjr the Board of Trade, and branded with a cer tificate of their purity before being put upon the market. Yis OrUant Ximet Democrat. CARS OF TUB riAHO. Many people are apt to think an old piano does not need care. A friend of mine, oa forgetting to close her piano before retiring said, "I'll not go down stairs for It; it is an old piano; when I get a new one I'll take care of it." Pianos are like people in one respect, tho older they get the more care they require. I do not mean by this that a now piano does not need care, and the care of it does not end with simply shutting it at night. Damp air should be excluded from it at all times. Too much heat as well as cold is injurious. A sensitive ear will soon detect the change of tone in a piano that has been neglected. It is well known that the tone of a piano is much better when it is moved away from the wall, yet we often see them moved close up to the wall, and. occasionally in a cor ner. Many rooms are small, and the close arrangement of furniture may seem nec essary, but a piano an upright does not take much more room when standing across a corner than when it is moved close in against the wall, and it will repay you even for a little space, and I should give it if possible. It is also well known that a number of books and ornaments on a piano injure the tone, yet they are often loaded with books, music, and even bric-a-brac. Many people wonder why a piano does not sound the same in their home as it did in the store, and they are often tempted to think the piano they received is not the one they chose. In a store there is nothing on a piano. There arc no close walls, and the room is not car peted and hung with heavy curtains. All this makes a great difference with the sound of a piano. Prairie Farmer. RECIPES. Hastv Muffins T wo run flntir tvn eggs, one tablespoonful mixed butter and lard, two teaspoonfuls white sugar, one teaspoonful baking powder, wit spoonful salt, one cup milk. Into the eggs, beaten very light, stir the melted shortening, the lurrar. the milk and th flour, well mixed with the salt and bak ing powaer. Btir well, and bake in thoroughly greased tins. Parisian Potatoes From peeled and washed white potatoes scoop out little baits with the cutter that comes for this purpose. Boil them for five minutes, then put them in the frvinu nin with two tablespoonfuls of melted butter. our mem aoouc until every ball Is well coated with the butter, pour into a col ander and set them in the oven until brown. Sprinkle with salt and a little minced parsley before serving. Beef Loaf. Three and a half pounds of good beef chopped fine; roll fine eight soda crackers and mix with the meat; add three well beaten eggs, one half tablespoonful salt, one teaspoonful ground pepper and four tablespoonfuls of thick cream. If the beef is very lean add a piece of butter the size of an egg. Mix all thoroughly; make into a loaf and bake in the oven one and a half hours ac cording to the heat of oven. Yery nice for lunch or tea. A Delicious White Cake One cup of granulated sugar, one-half cup of butter, one-half cup of milk, one and one-half cups of flour, one-half cup of cornstarch, two teaspoons of baking powder, whites of six eggs. Cream butter and sugar and add the milk. Mix flour, cornstarch and baking powder, and stir into butter and sugar. Have the whites beaten very stiff beforehand and add. Any flavoring can be used; almond is especially delicate. This cake can be used also as a layer cake. Beef Kidney This is a very delicious way of serving beef kidney: Cut tho kidney in thin slices not more than an eighth of an inch in thickuess; cut out the centre, which is tough and indigest ible and gives it its rauk taste. Soak in salt water for several hours, then parboil for five minutes. Put butter in a pan aud when very hot lay in the kiduey, with a teaspoonful of fiuely-minced onion, salt, pepper, two tablespoonfuls of tomatoes, stowed and thickened, a minced gherkin aud some celery salt; add enough of any kind of stock or gravy to cover it, thicken with a tablespoonful of flour wet with wuter and simmer for tea minutes. Pour over toast. Russia has ordered a large quantity of Ammunition ia Fraace, NEWS AND NOTES FOB W0M13T. . Crioket is becoming a popular pastime among English women. Queen Victoria wears broad-soled, squarertoed, heavy shoes. Narrow ribbons in lieu of strings are used for lacing low shoes and slippers. Beaded wraps rank amid the most dressy outer garments for summer wear. Rustic belles have green leaves em broidered in the corner of their handker chiefs. For the first time in its history the Boston Dental College has graduated a woman. Laver do soie is the classio name for the washable silks used for children's frocks. Elbow mousquetaire gloves for sum mer wear have Vandyke points cut along the edge. Amethyst and pink roses look well when artistically combined, although a parody upon uatu.e. Crownless hats have the trimmings arranged to cover the crown sufficiently to conceal the top of the head. Tuscan yellow straw passementerie bands trim some of the silk and etamine toilets from Parisian workrooms. Navy blue or brown flannel, in short plaited skirts and plain blouses, are the thing for camping out in woods. One of the prettiest ways of displaying a lace barb is to gather it round the edge of a bouquet holder and finish it. Silver serge is a novelty cloth, woven with a peculiarly twisted quill thread, which gives tho warp a sheen effect. Slippers of French gray Suede kid foxed with patent leather may be worn with impunity by ladies with shapely feet. Archery will continue one of the fash ionable, out-door recreations in the coun try. Some of the archery sets are very handsome. The favorite baptismal name for young women in New Orleans is Viola. There are also many Ophelias in the city, but not a Dcsdemona. Miss Joanna Baker, who was a tutor of Greek in an Iowa college at the age of sixteen, now occupies the chair her father filled seventeen years ago. White alpaca, plain or sprigged with rose-buds, is one of the antique novelties of the season. For a tea gown or gar den dress it is luxuriously cool and light. Pundita Ramabal and nine of her fellow-workers were delegates to the fifth annual Congress of India. The appear ance of women delegates was unprece dented in that place. In a lecture on the Transvaal (Africa) Republic, delivered by Miss Annie Rus sell in Now York city, it was stated that at one of the diamond mines alone 12,000 women were employed. ITair is dressed quite low on the neck in braids, pinned up and down, in the form of the letter S. The front hair, on the other hand, is fhort, often the curls and crimps being less than an inch deep. Parasols rival hats. in their ornateness of material and garniture. A beauty is of ceil-blue tulle composed entirely of knite-pieateu nounces overlaping each other. The handle is of mother-of-pearl. Lamps encased in bamboo have come to correspond or harmonize with the bamboo furniture for country houses, where comfort takes tho place of style. They are just as ornamental as they are usetul. While making baby clothes for her tiny niece, recently boru to Chief Justice Fuller's eloping daughter, Miss Mildred Fuller composed the "Jolly Wizard," a dainty poem that is going the rounds of the press. One of the first women to preach in Kentucky was Mrs. L. M. Woolsey, of Cooneyville, who was licensed to fill a pulpit by tho Kentucky Presbytery three years ago, and has done successful relig ious work since. Modern pillow shams are works of art. The old fashioned ones of linen no longer obtain, and the substitutes of China silk, lace or very handsome tinted cheese cloth are things of beauty and joy to the possessor. Leghorn headgear, covered with white plumes are called "Maud Muller hats," but it is very much to be doubted if the young woman who figures in the poem had any such toggery, unless in those days it was given away. The Zouave jackets can only be worn by very tall or very slim ladies, but a half Zouave, that is to say, only the front of the bodice and not the back, cut in Zouave shape, is becoming to any one who is not really stout. Simple costumes are the best for car traveling. If dresses and wraps are elaborate the wearer will be quite un comforable on a warm day in the cars, and will look even much more uncom fortable than she really is. A pretty fashion is to have a pot of ivy concealed and its r prays twined about the sticks and bars of an easel. A big flower study may have the leaves and vines of ivy twined about and covering the frame with artistic effect. The Queen Regent of Spain rises early, takes a cold bath every morning, even in winter, and performs her toilet with the help of one of her waiting-maids. She usually dresses very plainly, and nevei wears jewelry except on ceremonial occa sions. Mrs. Lillie Devereaux Blake is one of the best-looking of the women suffragists. She is tall, and she has a delicately poised head and soft gray eyes. II or hair is turning gray, but her hands and her throat have the pretty plumpness oi youth. Mrs. Martha Lumpkin, of Upson Coun ty, Oa., is in her ninety-eighth year and enjoys good health. When ninety-five years of age she knit sixty-five pairs of socks during the year. 6he has 400 children, grandchildren and great-grandchildren. CCBKS VaOMTLT AKD PERMANENTLY LU5LBAGO, RbiuniatUm, IISeMlavlxa, Toothache, S ll R A I N H , Keuralgla, Swellings, Frost-bites. II 11 U I N 13 M . THC CHARLES A.V0CELER CO., Sslum.rs, Hi. The Wooden Shoe Trade. 'Are there many wooden shoes sold in Cincinnati!" was the query the re porter addressed to a dealer in the ar ticle "There are 10,000 pairs sold annually, at an average price of thirty-five cents a pair." "Where are they made!" "In Indiana, chiefly. A solid block of poplar wood is shaped on the out side with draw-knives, and tho cavity of the foot is gouged out with peculiarly shaped instrumeniU." "Are they wnrm and light?" "Yes; more so than leather. A man with wooden shoes on his feet appears clumsy, but he is wise and feels moro comfortable." "Who buy most of them!" "Dairymen, gardeners, street car drivers and actors. For wear where the feet will bo subjected to damp, nothing Is better, and there is nothing on earth that can equal them for making a racket when containing tho nimblo feet of a skilled clog dancer on a polished stage floor." "When is tho trado in them at its best!" "Just at the opening of winter, when slush and mud btcouio common." Cin cinnati Time-Star. "(.riddling-" the Beggar's Fad. Sunday begging appears to bo grow ing popular and flourishing in Lambeth, a London suburb. Two sturdy fellows, Spinks and Wilkins bv name, who were ' brought before Mr. Biron, belong to a gang of beggars who have introduced a little novelty into their professional call ing by singing or shouting hymns in tho streets on Sundays. To this system tho name of "griddling" has been applied, and, according to the evidence, it is a paying line. Tho defendants had col lected some pennies from passers-by in a very short time, and tho "grlddlers," it was stated, were known to boast, as they returned to their haunts in Deptfoid and Southwark, "how much they could make in a few hours, and how they had gulled the benevolent." Xeie York Journal. Flowers in London's Heart. In the very heart of the City of Lon don the Bank of England boasts within its sacred precincts as fine a show of rhododendrons as may be seen anywhere in the London radius. Tho garden is tastefully laid out in a rectangular stylo around a central fountain. The young Stock Exchange men slip in en route to business and get a buttonhole from this superabundant supply. Xtie York Jour nal. More diseases are produced by using brown and perfumed soaps than by anything elr-e. Yhyrnn eucu terrible risks wheu you know Itohblns's Klectrlo 8oap Is pure una perfect. Dobbins 's preventa hands from chapping;. A IX tli Governments of Europe are making active preparations for a general war. J.A.Johnson, Medina. N. Y., says: "nail's Catarrh Cure cured me." Bold by Druggists, 76c. Fifteen Btates have, within about three years, enacted Ballot Heforin laws. ('named. The favorable impression produced on the first appearance of the agreeable liquid frutt remedy Syrup of Figs a few years ago has been more than confirmed by the pleasant experi ence of all who hare need It, and the success of the proprietors and manufacturers, the Cal ifornia Fig Syrup Company. FITS stopped free by Da, Kline's Great N'EKVa Restorer. No File after nrst day'a nae. Marvelous cures. Treatise and $2 trial bottle free. Dr. Kline, Ml Arch St., l'hlla., 1'a. Beeoham's l'llla act like magio on a Weak Stomach. Health and Strength Boon replace weakness and laag-aor IX that reliable medicine. Hood's Sarssparllls. Isfatrlysnd faithfully tried. It Is the best medicine to oreroome that tired feeling, pnrlfy the bkmd and cure eomfula, salt rheum, dyspepsia and aU other disease arising tram Impure blood or low state of the system. Olre It a trial. Hood's Sarsaparllla Sold by all druggists, $1; six tor S3. Prepared only by O. I HOOD a CO., Lowell. Msss. IOO Doses One Dollar AD WAY'S READY RELIEF. A CUBE FOB ALL SUMMER COMPLAINTS 1 Dysentery, Diarrhoea, CHOLERA MORBUS. From 80 to flu drops In hall tumbler of water will In few tnomebU curs Cramps, hiiam. Hour Stom ach, h'auaea, Vurnlilng, heartburn, NruuMfMs, BlMplesADNA, Mck Heulhe, IiLarrurpi, lysvuu-ry. Cholera Morbus, i ohc, latulfivy, and all lnirnal Palas. For severs canea of Uie furtguiiif Cumi'laiuU see our printed directions. Applied externally It instantly relieves Meadae-be, Tooiaaobe, Neurit Ik!, Kbeuniattsm aud all psln arlsiiif from Colds, $ ruiuM, I ruiscs ur any cue whatever. 1'rtoe so oents per bottle, Bold by dru relit. AIIWAY'S " PILLS, km Excellent and mtld Cathartic Purely vegeta ble The safest aud bet medicine In toe world fur lite cure of all disorders of lae Liver, Ntouicvch or IloweU. Takes errerdlnv to dtrerttena they wtll restore hen lib mud renew vitality. r'rk 36c a bo- bold bv all druUu, or mailed by KADWAY ft CO., SU Warren blret, Mew York, oa rvoeipt of prloe. If T N V i9 WM. FITCH & CO., 1 g"4 Coreoran BuUdlnc, Wathlnctoa, D. C. PENSION ATTORNEYS Of ever vt A years' experleuee. Successfully prow eute pensions and claims of all kinds In fibortest possible time. s7No r-r.lt umums uvocmmmwvu Tie Mexican Restate. A new and wonderful remedy for Liver, KMney, Blood and Female IHseaae. Trial perkaire, 2Ao. by nialL LOWE STAft MKUK'INB Co., Houston. Texas. BRAZERqM DESTIJI THE WORLD U II UHO 17 f sr Get the Genuine. Sold fverrwUere, PENSIONS oTeTt PENSION Bill Is Passed i n snil r a.thttrs are rn- tltlrU to nianas rree. ioah.ru N. Ml slut. Atu. nusUfisjs. n. t. eliO ivlifn lull nt our munev. HERMAN EHSLS 4 FOR ONC DOLLAR. A Sit-tla' "ioBi.r t.tus out 1 small i"" " wtfi.i tas stud, ol th. (iuruia deu!Uus imi;buf sunk. aV'ad a ttiOta '('. lln,R. l4 l....rll tMisaslsaejsUaaatSaitWM m, oVad SI.OO te r V ELEGANTVR( '" " f jl 1 a here llli 7 in HIT?! U hi - ed. with bi ed, rack under seat for carrying parcels. Room on Seat for 2 persons, THE FINEST ON EARTH. Vs write im- mediately for our large Illustrated free catalogue containing; full de scription of this Oart and the world renowned MURRAY $55.95 BUGGIES and $5.95 HARNESS WILDER H. MURRAY MANUFACTURING CO, "MURRAY BUILDINC," 139 W. FRONT ST.. CINCINNATI, Q. THC WONDERFUL ( 3vO-' f K. 1 -UBUrgchair151 eoMsiNiNs5AaT.euKW l nr eiiDMtTiiM XT tUil at the Jowm. AmU Mr M ail end p room te be nt(d for on dliTrr. 111! IX H 4.1ft Btrad siunp fur 01. BPKriAL PKia TO II I Ml. LCBUKO HF. COw, 145 A. sih 8t lU4tr WONKY IN MM KF.N. For fee. a iuvpf. (molt, ixMrlrnoe a yearn. It tearliu how to li'tvt nil niniiiiMsM! io iptHi i or tKK and for fttfninir; which fowlaw MV for hrffMllnjf, Ac. Ac. AiltlreiM HOOK J'Ua JiOl R, 1.H4 lonanl St,, N. Y. City. FEN8IONS&?& "Successfully Prosecutes Claims. I't l'rlnetpttl Exftmtnnr U.B. I'tmetun IHiretsu. Sjrelu last war. MljiuUcaUugclattun, attyaluce. PENSIONS Write in for nrwlawn. Sent fri'i. Dtirtri ra lUrad Inrcii or (. MttOoralek oat, WatkUf tea, O. 0 , Ctacl&Bftti, o. IS vri knsrliinra A W The New Pension Oill. KTpry ftnlritfT who ta djMttled from anT can no. y. err anldier wlttow. father or mother, abnuM write tiR at once for hlana and tnatrurtlona. Ten yeitra' epeiienoe. H mall fee. No charge for alvu.. dreaa ( HAS. E. V AIRMAN A CO., Wanhlngton, D. ( NEW LAW CLAIMS. A,T Milo B. Stevens & Co. Attorney. MIS F 8c, Washington, II. V. Hr.nr. timer., tie Tflnnd. Drtroll.t hlrsgo. CUrttS WHUtf. AIL LLbt I AILS. t niitrh ttyrun. 1 astos good. Use in time. KnM rT ilruKG'M. cvery WATEHPHOOF BE UP TO THE MARK 1 mm 7 v2 r ml ml 3 11 .4"BeM NEEDS NO LAUNDERING. CAN BE WIPED CLEAN IN A MOMENT. THE ONLY LINEN-LINED WATERPROOF COLLAR IN THE MARK RT. ?3nouiama.Ke j irvAc&.Kc A SENSE OF DECENCY Constrains many people to hide the dirt of tlieir kitchens. Thoy maks the kitchen a secret chamber, into which it is forbidden to enter; but hall the trouble which they take to hide the dirt nnd the disprace which it en tails, would kep the kitchen clean, and all ita pota and pans bright a a dollar, tkat ia, if they use BAPOIilO - LOVELL HIGH CRADE I CUICT nnilDI C rTinu DCimnirn "DIAMOND" SAFETY- Diamond Frame. Rtfel nn p Forxlngs, Steel l uhlnt e Ailjuicabl. lull Learinss V' ull Huualim 1'urts. lu cluiliug l'pdals, Suti.eiitloQ t.tldle, Fluent nmturlal & money can buy. Mut!iet In aismel aud iili'ket. B1UK TI.V HUIH (JKAUB IN vtKV I'AH I It'ULAR. S No tlra-aa Mai hins M 41 e at asj l'airit. LOVELL LADIES' and BOYS' SAFETY. I 86-INCH WHEEL ETEEIi DEOP FRAME. Only steel drop frame 36-Inch machine In the market aisvi. xjm sure you Kot a Mucn wueei. aae no oilier. 11-? VS"l I I IIIAIIf a Guu. Br I JJ HVHia lioalua t. Goods. (-Bend els cent In stumps for .-. .-.-.. vwtiMvyii s ev fury, ana vimyv - Ytt' i'i . JOHN P. LOVEL-SiiflS CO. 147 AVASHINOTOX STUEKT, C01t"dott, UOSTOX, MASS. Tht ToulKf Companion ists of this wrll-inown Ho.tnti concern - 1 ,ilS P. LliVF.LI, ARMS CO. h.T. betn tit otlsllie.i fur ntly v.art, atui iiivir iiueut, is uevunii fire Anui, stc., lo America, autl uu can Witl pcrlcctly .uie Just think I oaif Tor the IMPROVED ROAD CART, Illustrat with bundle Aoknowl- ' ed ared to be the only practical Road Oart on the mar ket. Every Doctor in the country should have one. The bundle rack serves as a place to carry their medicines and lnstru- TnATltj.. IMPORTANT TO FARMERS I Hava Ko Mori Sick Cattle or Hortn. I'SB jyiJ. TOBIAS' VcuRiiun Horss Liniment AND Derby Condition Powders. M enh Their Welchl la Uold. Bo the Certificate of the 1st. Col. T. Morsnlell sn4 tmmlreiU of others from prominent lluresmea tbruugluml the country, st the Ufcl'OT, 40 Ml II It AY HT NEW YORK. Wold hr nil I'mrgtm snd wsitiHrrs. KTK U 'ift PENSIONS S 10.000,000 to he paid out Mil year under the new inability I'enalon Aot K ery toMler InchMed who arved 'A daya and la DOW (Mrvtitidi, no mur wnni the caiirW) or in case or III ileath hi widow ami minor children. Impendent Mtrt'titH alfto bettefltWl. Write at onoe for blank! amt alvlce lo nKO. l. MITrHKl-U feiltcller Of Peti tion and 1'atcntA, Hoi 258, WaAhlntrton, it. c. (!lerk Committee on 1'eusluua of the U. a. benata foe Che lent noTfMi yearn. DEPENDENT PENSION BILL htifl Ikvuiiiu h law. ft. -J Tfc.ll MONTH to ail boiinralily illftt'hnrKfd Soldlem aud Sailors of the late war, who aro Hit aoai'itwtil from eariilnar a aupporfc Widow lh Mttne, without rricartl to cauaa of death. Impendent rniotit aud Minor Children alao Inter mod. over ivwii' vxierlrnce. Uef erenoes In aU iiRrt of tin country. No churn) If unwucceaafuU write nt once for " cpT of Law," Man It and fuM In tiui-tttuit i. ritrr to It. Mr A M.IKr hK A CO. .iMu'ceuM'rs to Wm. t'oitard ft Co. I O Mes 7 1.1, W nhlnnioii, It. V, nit I lit HtinT. Only Ortnln n4 IlKSlll.l r-r 'l 'HK I" theWorld. Ur. fall I Will J. hTKI'IIKN-, Utivm, O. THE DEPENDENT PENSION BILL Drsnts iwnRlnns tn nlitlerft Mailer, and tbetr Widows and t hll.lrrn. Pre-enl Hr.sle.e Increased. Write linmwtlslely, stating tout case, J, V. DKlt IM V. AU-jr-st-Law, Chsnnre) Imltdlim. W A f II I XtiTON, I. C. COLLAR or CUFF vJA.V- THAT CAN BE RELIED ON ISTot to Qi3llt! JNTot to Discolort BEARS THIS MARK. TRADE mark. rneir nouses iook lnyour - nexr - w ' """"" "u' S KIIOTS, 38 CALIHUE. (Uliifr3SS. w.c. t. tannage.) The moRt Improved rou Me Arlluu llcvulver la Uie market. PRICE, 10.00 SWIFT AITOMATIO HAMMERLESS REVOLVER. 010 Am itorral I. anwvam Li W w 3 MIOTS. 3S ( A 1.1 lilt I ll'.luit :h s. it w. C. I?'. C annate.) I. steal A nil Kest II. merle. I'.uvulvur lu lue UlarKuL. PR'". 'II.OO. filSHOTlGUI 1 5 v-assiiar - ml FT A a 4 f , ' i ill ! T7-. I . T" Pistol flrlp Stack. Patent Fore-en Faetea. Inn, Double liolt. liiM.t uin aetllus the "Caauyi iluu." It jotu dealer ua.u't It, SL'Utl to us. 1'LAIN RTEKL UAHKF.I.S. Imported TWIST BARRELS 1'i "ore, Sll.itl ??( Sent C. O. D. on receipt of $5 to guarantee ex. charges. Thti out U W f Ite of knife. Fine fieri lllndes, Hlrong CorUarrew, Vhtta llHitille. Firmly put tnuetlier. Wurrauled Uie beat autre tuaLM n bu doukiii rur the mouuy. KIHe, Kevof, ialiiuv Tackle. Cutlery. Blrrcle. loves, rSIV;7.l. (irmuasluin, wholes. Pi IOO-. to TitATEU ATA LOCI K. fiucW ' ... .. KUales, Police uiiciiijit. inevt. 1. ,HK (no laie.i u.itrr ui utiwuui iuvu.. tlu.1 su- fiooUs urucr.U ol una nrin W1U be Ju.l as rcurc.siuca. ".I
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers