D t f a. 81 b o ' I t THE FARM AND GAB DEN. A GOOD WAT TO ItAISK rLAHTs. ! A Ifliod V to miaa tnmafn nr rK Wgo plants, mn a Nebraska farmer, ia .to take tlio cans (small size), liold over nenre una unsolder the bottom and Bidwi, then take a string and tie around the can, then pet a small box Bnd sot the cans in; now fill cans with dirt and put two or threo tomato seeds In each can. yt hen they come up pult up all but one in eacu can. in tho spring when ready to set out, dig a hole size of can, untie string and set dirt and plant in the hole; pack dirt around solid. In this wav tho plant will keep right on growing. Now is the time to sow the seed. ! snKEp ra tiik Arr-LE ouchard. One of the methods of decreasing the codling moth in apple orchards is to al low the hogs to roam among tho trees, but the hog, not being very alert, is apt to miss many of tho fallen apples, allow ing the larva to escape. An Oregon or rhardist recommend! that sheep aro bet ter in the orchard than hogs, being much more apt to get every fruit which drops. The greatest drawback, how ever, is their fondness for gnawing tho trunks of the trees, especially if they are young. If the trunks are washed oucc a month with a solution of soapsuds, whale oil and sheep manure, the trees will not be molested. This inclination upon tho part of the sheep is often brought about by a desire for fresh water, which should be supplied in abundance at all times. A Qt'ESTION ABOUT RAISLNQ CREAM ' The question has been asked, Why will not the cream rise in deep pails as well, when kept in the air at a tempera ture of forty-flve degrees, as in water at the same temperature? That it will not o rise is a matter of fact, which surprises omo persons The explanation is simple. "When a pail of milk is set in cold water it is cooled very rapidly, and in a short time the milk will be reduced to the low 'temperature of tho water. The change of density of the milk, produced by the cold, causes tho lighter cream, or the butter globules, speaking more correctly, to separate and nso to the surface very quickly. If the milk be set in tho air at the samo low temperature, it will cool very slowly, because air is a very slow - Conductor of heat, and water a very . quick one. Conseqently tho upward motion of tho cream is si slow and weak that it cannot force its way through tho depth of milk before a change oc curs iu tho milk by which the motion of the cream is stopped. Rapid cooling is accessary for the rapid risiug of the creatn. American Agriculturitt. I j WARBLES OB WOURXILS IS CATTLE. i ! During tho midsummer months, says jthe American Agricultural, there are numerous inquiries about bunches on cat tle. These aro caused by a large fly, 'called CEstris bovis, which attacks cattle, piercea,the skin and deposits its eggs in 1 jthe wound. In a short time a swelling as observed which causes a deposit of se cretion from the irritation of the grow ing larva which has been hatched from ttho egg deposited. These tumors or lumches may attain the size of a walnut, fend when there aro several of them on a young and feeble animal they produce a i pood deal of irritation and fever. Usual ly nature sets np a discharge through an 1 Opening from which the insect is ex . jpclled, and, it circumstances favor, it toon develops wings and renews the iiarental instinct of depositing its eggs in iving tissues whose temperature hatches khe eggs and protects the insect. It is therefore desirable to relieve our afflicted I cattle thus attacked by enlarging the t Opening, and squeezing out the immaturs I Insect, injecting oil into the opening, or Wiling out the grub by a small, sharp ' Jiook. A crude carbolic mixture brushed 1 tover tho backs of cattle at the time of I khe appearance of the fly may protect them. fj : THE COMING HOO. 1 The coming hog will be a goo d feeder. 1 Jlran, corn, peas and middlings will be -SJ lis common diet, but he will graze on . clover and glean shack in tho woods; syill thrive on dairy and bouse slops, and If Necessary will clean up the refuse of I the countrv butcher's sluno-hipr bruise na, by bis great power of assimilation, . r-- 1 convert all these things into delicious Jean meat. But he will not cat the slop ef distilleries, for distilleries will not then exist. The coming hop; will be an iAmerican hog and will crowd Irish bacon from our market and all other foreign tiork products, and will enter the mar kets of the old world and lift the French nd German embargo from American Jiork. He will be a great source of wealth to this country and will make many a poverty-stricken homo independent. "Vhether he will be white or black is a Question. Tho breeders of white hogs will expect him to bo white, and the breeders of black hogs black. His char acteristics will be short noso, smooth face, not too broad, small jowl, short, Clean neck, medium-sized shoulder, su- erb back and loiu and a splendid hum; le will butcher clean, without a prepon derance of slush or waste; belly liL'ht nd smooth, body of medium size and tirra tail snRll, eyes well out, ears thin ud slightly drooping, but not enough to Interfere with sight; body Ions and erovered with a thick coat of fino short liair. Ohio Farmer. POMOLOGY ON PAPER. "A Veteran Pomologist'' writes in the Jfew York Tribune: A speaker at a re lent Boston farmers' meeting referred to 25-bushcl crop of apples from a single tree, and calculated that an acre of 70 trees bearing at the sumo rate would j.roduce 570 barrels, "which H better than is done by most of tho 10-acre orchards. But cut it down to two barrels a tree, and we havo 110 barrels yvt acre, and how niauy reach that ilgurvf llo thought very few." Now, u orchard with 70 trees to the acre vould be too much crowded to succeed v eil. The treoe might havo sullicieut loom while youug or half-grown, but uot Alien large enough to bear an average of 5 bushels each. Many orchards, prob etbly a majority of successful ones, set their apple trees 33 feet (two rods) apart, winch gives 40 trees to the acre. At 25 ImtheU to the tree, this would be .'i,i3 bur rule, if all the trees were equally ptr ft iu form, growth and productiveness. Hut there are uiauy other orcharding who jnefer u distance of 40 feet, giving only 27 trees to the acre, und affording 27 barrels. But trees are not uniform in fMuwih; tho soil in dilfereut places may illect tho quantity of crop, and a part of tbc ti.. would not probably bear nearly tb i buihtU, Cutting duwu the prti- duct "to two barrels to the tri," after rejecting all not free from worm f and the punctures of insects, there would be only SO barrels from the 83-fect orchard, and 84 from the 40-feet orchard. This yield would be safer estimate and would avoid the too common error of giving ex travagant paper calculations. CONVENIENCES FOR DIVINO. Bees will cluster on a limb of a tree, which can be either cut or sawed off.car ricd to a hive and the bees shook off, which they will enter. But it is not always poetry like this; there aro other contingencies that wo must bo prepared to meet, like swarms clustering in tho tops of high trees, or on their trunks where they cannot be dislodged, on fences, grape stakes, etc. Sometimes the co9t of hiving is more than tho swarm is worth, provided there are no conveni ences at hand to lighten the labor. Mr. Planum, of Vermont, has my thanks, and should have those of all women, for his contrivance for hiving swarms. It consists of. a wire basket, at tached to a long pole, which is light and convenient. By standing on a chair, I have been able to reach swarms with it that I could not possibly have saved without the aid of ladders. By placing the basket under the cluster, and giving it a sudden jar, the bees fall into it. As tho queen is generallv on the outside of it, many times she will be secured, and, by standing the basket near, the rest soon follow. A peach basket fitted on the end of a polo would many times prove a bless ing. hen many bees are kept, low arrow ing trees, like peach and May cherries, are a desideratum. Large forest trees are not desirable. I know a farmer who keeps his bees near a largo oak, and his children told me that they had hard work to get tho bees down from it, and now when they see a swarm issuing, they they throw water to wet their wings, so that they cannot fly so high. Prairie Farmer. FARM AND GARDEN NOTES. Flat culture is better than hill cul ture, in dry weather. It is not necessary to wait till the 4th of July before beginning haying. Clover hay makes a capital feed to go along with corn silage ia winter. A good grindstone will save horseflesh, hay ami time, if rightly used during haying. Thousands of farmers are yet unappre ciative of the value of drainage to a cold and heavy soil. Use horse-power whenever possiblo in handling hay; it costs lcs3 and is quicker than hand power. How is that mowing machine! Are the knives ajl right! Are the bolts with their nuti all in place? A good road always adds valuo to tho real estate near it. In all road discussions this should be remembered. Farm work is rarely carried on with the care, forethought and regard to little things which busiuess men show. Many farmers forget that coal ashes are excellent on heavy clay soils, not as a fertilizer, but to make tho soil light and porous. Small farms and better farming are needs of the day. Many farmers would make money by cultivating half of their land on the intensive plan. Grass allowed to ripen seed before cut ting has lost from one-third to one-half its value as fodder, and the chances of getting a second crop are less sure than if cut early. If you have a largo field of clover and the weather is showery and "catching" so that you find it hard to cure it iuto good hay, try the silo; farmers tried it last year with success. If your barns will not hold all your hay, and you are obliged to stack some of it out of doors, build the stacks as large as possible, and cover tho top with fresh cut slough grass. Tbo farmer who makes his soil deep and rich with high culture and manure, and whose cattle are sleek and gentle, is the one who. complains least about the depression in agriculture. How are you cultivating yours? Some men like to cut their grass late because it spends so much further I But how do the cattle look in spring nfter eating such hay? And how do their milk and butter compare with that from cows fed on early cut hay? Tobacco smoke quickly contaminates delicate fruit of all kinds. A few whiffs1 blown upon a box of raspberries will en tirely destroy the delicate flavor and render it unpalatable. The same in a degree may be said of strawberries. The Minnesota experiment station has had excellent results in spraying native plums with London purple to kill the curculio, but cautions about syringing the trees until after the blossoms fall, so as not to poison any bees in the vicinity. Good ventilation at all times by night and by day is highly essential to tho health of our poultry stock. Much of! the disease which the birds are afflicted with from time to time may be traced for its origin directly to a neglect to ventilate the fowl-house. What folly it is in a farmer to buy ton after ton of artificial fertilizers, and waste tons of manure in his barnyard by exposure and neglect I It is about as wise as for the same man to spend as much annually for tobacco as his taxes cost, and them complain'of- hard times. A New Collar Bone. A boy of eighteen years was admitted to the Mount Sinai Hospital, suffering from a swelling over the region of the collar bone. It was evident that the bone was deeply affected, and the only recourse was an operation, which was made. The entire bone was found dead, destroyed by inflammatory action, ne cessitating its removal, but in doing so the membrane immediately next to it, ami which nourishes the bone, was care fully incised, stripped from the bone ami replaced in tho wound as nearly as possible iu its original position, the object being to form new bone matter throughout its length and thus reproduce au eutire col lar bone. The wound having been dressed the arm was subsequently kept iu tho same position that a fracture i f the collar bono would have required, tho result being that ten weeks after the operation the patient was discharged with a braud-new collar boue, completely reproduced with new joints at either end, and the perfect use of his arm. Aeu lurk orld. Tho President of the Senate pro tern pore und the Speaker of the House luv the Came salary $o000 per uuuuui. HOUSEHOLD AFFAIRS. a bovsekkkper's don't. Don't allow the broom to stand oi the brush end when not in use ; hang it on a nail by means of a ring in the top of the handle. Don't forget that a broom will last much longor, if, after using, it is dipped in boiling water for a few minutes. Don't fill the best windows in the family living-room with plants. Don't neglect to air t he house thorough ly every morning. Open opposite doors and windows for five or ten minutes, even if it is stormy. Don't undcrtako extra work to eivo pleasure when you know that you havo neither timo nor strength for it, and that, as a result, seme one will be sure to be overtired and cross. Don't forget, if you aro a tall woman, to have your work-tablo and ironing board a few inches higher than they aro usually made. This little precaution will prevent many a backache. Don't neglect to havo your namo plainly painted on all jugs or bottles that aro sent to tho store for vinegar, molasses, etc . Then you will be sure to get back your own. Don t think when you sit down to rest that it is necessary to pick up that un finished mending. Ten minutes' abso lute rest is worth much to tho tired muscles. Don't allow soiled clothes to remain In the bed-rooms. They taint the air and mako it impure. Don't keep for company the best room, the best dishes, and especially the pleasantest smilo and most entertaining conversation. American Ajrieulturut. TIIK RAVAGES of tab bcffalo-bco. It is found that few of the usual pre ventives are of any use against tho at tacks of this beetle, and for this rTnn it is a difficult pest to eradicate. In i.. places it has proved so destructive that carpets have to be dispensed with, and in their place nigs aro used, as being more conveniently examined. Tallow or tallowed paper placed around the edges of the carpet, which aro often the parts first attacked, is said to be ef fectual. In many cases the carpets aro cut, as if with a scissors, following the line of the seams in tho floor, and as a remedy for this it has been recommended that the scams be filled during the win ter with cotton saturated with benzine. Kerosene, naphtha or gasoline are offen sive to the beetle as well as benzine, but benzine is perhaps the simplest and safest preventive in use. Io can be poured from a tin can having a very small spout, it being necessary to use but little. Before tacking down a carpet it should bo thoroughly examined, and if possible steamed. If in spite of precautions a carpet is found infested, a wet cloth cat 1 e spread down along the edges, and a hot iron passed over it, tho steam thus generated not only killing the beetles and larvae, but destroying any eggs that may have been laid. Clothing is some times attacked as well as objects of natural history such as stuffed birds and mammals. It was believed that the beetle must feed on some plant, for in a number of cases it was captured out of doors, and it was finally discovered feeding on the pollen of tho flowers of spiraas, the bee tle living on the plaut for a whilo and then returning to the house to lay its eggs. When this was proved, it was suggested that spiraeas should be planted around houses infested by the beetle; by doing this the plants could be often ex amined and the beetles destroyed. Pop- ular acience Monthly. Sirdine Salad Use a cupful of chopped sardines, free from bones, to a pint bowl of lettuce or sliced cucumbers; season with salt, pepper, a little mustard and vinegar, and serve tho salad as soon as it is made, because the lettuce begins to wilt directly it is dressed with salt and vinegar. Lyonnaisa Potatoes Slice cold-boiled potatoes into neat rounds; cut a medium sized onion into thin slices, and put it with a good tablcspoonful of butter or bacon dripping into the frying-pan ; when the onion is colored, add the potatoes, about two cupfuls, and stir them about until they are a light brown. Strew with chopped parsley, and servo. Cold Chicken Wings Tho wings, drumsticks, necks, livers, hearts, and gizzards of a pair of chickens, with any good portions remaining from the first service, make au excellent dish for cold use. The pieces are first to bo boiled in enough water to cover them, with a pala table seasoning of Bait and pepper, until teuder, then each piece is to be rolled in cracker meal, dipped in beaten egg, again rolled in cracker dust, and fried m plenty of hot fat like doughnuts. Cold nam With Plum Salad Ham properly cleansed and boiled with a few sprigs of sweet herbs, a bay leaf, an onion stuck with cloves, a lemon sliced, a red pepper, and plenty of water is a very dilfereut meat from that done care lessly without soaking or trimming away imperfect parts. Boil tho ham slowly, and when it is just tender cool it in its broth and cut it after it is cold. Tho plum salad is made by slicing tho large California plums with a silver knife aud serving them with salt, cayenne, and sherry. Peach Meringue Use fresh eggs and ripe peaches peeled with a silver kuifc, cutting them in halves. Beat the whites of the eggs to a stiff froth; gently mix in a heaping tablespoonful for each egg of XXX sugar, sifted free from lumps, and smoothly blend it with the beaten whites. Lay the peaches on a soufHepan or a platter which withstand oven heat, heap the meringue over each, aud quickly brown the surface in a moderate oven. If a crisp, sugary surface is desired, lightly dust over it a little powdered sugar be roro browning it. Tho surface of the meringue should indicate the little mounds of fruit under it. If properly made with ripe peaches the dish is de licious. Electric Roads Crlpplo Watches. If many gentlemen whose timepieces have for years regulated the rising and cutting of the sun now find them irregu lar and unreliable, will pause long enough to recall that they have lately been enjoying the rapid transit of the electric t ars, they will learn the cause of tho trouble. To sit over au electric motor with a non-magnetic watch is to work its ruin. Watches are now pre pared to resist magnetic iuflucnctis by substituting for the usual steel balance wheel spring one made of the new metal, pttUudiuuui, bt. Lvuit istar oayingt NEWS AND NOTES FOR WOMEN. As sleeves grow longer gloves aro shorter. The rrinceis of Wales dresses very youthfully. Moscow, Russia, has a society for the endowment of poor brides. Orange-colored sashes bf China silk are to have a long fashionablo run this sum mer. Eight out of ten woman who have joaching sunshades seem content to walk. One of tho new colors Is a brick red, with a green cast, very striking, but hard to wear. Sleeves are worn so long that two-button gloves are permissible for all but tvoning toilets. There are new designs in night-robes which rival tho comfort of tho Mother Hubbard yoked gowns. Diamaninc, or diamond cloth, is a new fabric woven in brown or gray wool, with a silver line forming a diamond pat tern. Forty tucks in space of ten inches was tho trimming of an azalia red poul le soie robe for evening. The tucks were band made. Mushroom is the fashionablo shade for gloves, low shoes and leather goods such is side-bags, coin-purses and field glass sase aud belt. Somo of tho beaded bonnets aro made of horse hair. Lined with somo bright ilk to throw out the design, the effect is gayety materialized. Fino corkscrew cloth is fashionablo again for jacket material, and long trav eling ulsters of this material provo ser viceable and durable. Tho Swedish glove is a sassafras kid of Suede finish and elbow length intended to tuck under the bishop sleeve just bo low the bend of the arm. Tho best shot of her sex must be the "ountess Maria von Keusky, of Bohemia, who on one day last winter on her estate of C'hlamce shot 13S hnres. Yellow in its mellow richness is the color that prevails in natural flowers for table, window, and nil other decoration. except for bridal ceremonies. Swedish embroidery is the rage. Tho stitches are long and easily mastered and the use of colored silk and white canvas, or linen, makes the work interesting. Shot silks are coming out in rather sensational effects. For iustauce, piuk dots on a maroon ground, ecru on a yel low field tnd almond against coffee brown. Checks are very popular this season. Tho newer checks are irregular ot broken. The sleeves of checked dresses arc made in gigot style and ended with n small puff. The three most popular women in England, according to a vote taken re cently, are the Princess of Wales, tho Baroness Burdett-Coutts and Ellen Ter ry, tho acress. Mrs. Robert Goclet, of New York city. has a cottage at Newport worth 1250,000 and an annual income of 6180,000. She is a handsome, fair-haired woman, not yet thirty years old. White gloves, either in suede or kid, are worn with white and light dresses in tho evening, and aro also coming into use for day wear with dressy summer cos tumes, being finished for such occasions with fine small stripes on the back of the hand. Mrs. Shaw, the whistler, Is stopping at Hastings, England. In order to persuade her to como to London, England, and whistle at his ball, Colonel North provided her with a special train from Hastings and a new Paris gown to change cn route, and a check for 500. Fashion is cultivating the glide walk, a species of locomotion that keeps the feet on the ground. The heel is but little used, the weight of the body being sustained by the ball of the foot. It goes without saying that high-hccled shoes are not conducivo to this serpent-like tread. To relieve the monotony of dark cos tumes, Parisian ladies are wearing scarlet and mangold-yellow blouse vesta beneath their jackets, with open fronts. These vests have high collars, like a gentle man's stock, or are worn with a cravat of the same silk, tied in a hugo bow. This year, while all the essential parts of a costume are supposed to harmonize, it is not at all necessary that they should m-itch. Hats and bonnets are no longer lonsidcred in good tasto made of a ploce it the dress, aud one bonnet iu a neutral tint is made to do duty by the economi cal with half a dozen gowns. "Washington women are adopting di vided skirts," said a dealer in such femi nine equipments to a Washington Star reporter. "Only the other weel: two ladies of Cabinet families bought them here. I will venture to say that 500 women in this city are wearing them to day, and within a year there will be 5000." The black crape veil has been pro nounced a nuisance, as it weakens the eyes and injures the skin. Rubbing against the nose and forehead, it often produoes abrasions, and, tho dye being absorbed, poisons the Sesh. To the eye enfeebled by weeping, it is most danger ous, and occulists have protested against its use. A number of women at Washington, at the suggestion of Susan B. Anthony, have formed an organization called the Wimodaughsis, with a capital stock of (25,000 in $5 shares. Its object is the education of women in political science, In art, literature and physical culture. A building is to be procured for the use of the association. One of the finest pilots on the Missis sippi River, from Vicksburg to New Or leans, also the Atchafalaya River and its tributaries, and who is registered as a regular pilot at New Orleans, is Mrs. Lottie L. French. She has acted as a pilot on the Mississippi River for twelve years under the direction of her husband, Uup tain A. B. French. Cet The Best to a good motto to foUow In buying a madloln, weU u la rerjUUog 1M. BT m uuitwmi unir f wUoa It bu stven, mui b tu uq renurlubl euro It liu aooomplbhed, Hood't UanapvUl bu proven lUelf unequaled fur bulldlni up ul MrencUi enlnf Uie yUim, und tut mil dine rtiln from or promoted bjr Unpun blood, b sur to ot olUJ Hood's Sarsaparilla gold by U d:nglt iUnUforSS. Prapired om b C. L HOOD 4 CO., Low.U. Mul tOO Doses One Dollar The Joyons News Win Life to Him. The Russian sculptor and Socialist, Kamenskl, who, for slxteon years, has found a refuge in the United States, at tracts attention by the depth of a scar over his right eyebrow. The scar is not connected with some romantio tale of Siberian horror. It Is the result of a kick of a Kansas mnlo. No little sur prise was created at the timo that it did not cause instant death. It came, how ever, vory near doing so. The sculptor was taken up unconscious, and when his reason returned he was told ho was about to die. In a semi-comatose state he made his last will and awaited the end. Mean while over the wires flashed the news of the assassination of Czar Alexander. A friend who knew Kamenski's principles vowed he should not die without hearing the news, and, evading the doctor in at tendance, she cautiously stole to his bed side and whispered in his ear the fate of the autocrat. The fast-chilling blood became warmed and pulsed gleefully through the feeble heart, life was re newed and Kamenskl recovered. Tht Epoch. Nature's Hotel. The most remarkable hotel In tho world is in California, on the road be tween Santa Cruz and Snn Jose. It is a well-known fact that California poisesscs the largest trees in the world, and a shrewd hotel builder has conceived tho idea of using a group of these mammoths, thus saving himself the cost of building or rent. Tho hollow trunk of one tree, . whose circumference is about twenty two yards, is arranged as a reception room, and tho surrounding garden, sheltered by a thick roof of spreading branches, serves as dining-room and smoking-room. A number of other smaller hollow trunks make comfortablo bed-rooms, furnished in the most ap proved stylo, and somo trees at a little distance are occupied by the hotel staff. JVW Tork Dispatch. A Thunderstorm Recorder. At the lost annual conversazione of the London Royal Society was shown among other Interesting exhibits a fine instrument constructed by Messrs. Rich ard Frcres for recording tho various meteorological phenomena of thunder storms. In this apparatus tho variation of tho barometer, tho velocity of the wind, tho duration and intensity of rain fall and hail, the instant at which flashes of lightning occur, and tho timo and du ration of tho corresponding claps of thunder, are all recorded on a sheet of paper moving under tho recording pens it the rate of six feet per hour, so that it is easy to read the time record to half a second. Trenton (X J.) American. Modest Salaries in the Old Days. There was not a postoffice in the United States in 1839 that paid a better salary than (2000. That was tho salary at New York, and there were twenty other offices with tho same salary. Pennsylvania had four of them. James Page was Postmaster at Philadelphia, James Peacock at Harrisburg, Robert Cochran at Erio and Robert Lynch at Tittsburg, all drawing 62000. A notable thing in connection with tho postoffice at Lancaster, which then paid $1483, was tho fact that Mary Dickson was postmistress, almost the only instance of tho blue book of 1839 of a woman holding a profitable Gowrnmcat office. Philadelphia I'ret. Starting an Alligator Ranch. It is reported that cert, in parties have purchased from B. Genouar, Esq., ten acres of land a short distance north of tho city limits which will bo inclosed by a barbed wire fence and stocked with al ligators. A stock company will be formed and a large building erected for the manufacture of satchels, pocketbooks, boots and shoes and other articles for which the hido of the alligator can bo uti lized. Tauned hides will also bo shipped to manufacturers. The capital stock is all subscribed and an important indus try is promised. Any one having alliga tors can address P. O. box 935. tit. Auguttine (Fla.) Democrat. The first permanent settlement of Ohio was at Marietta in 1788. Both the method and results when Bjrup of Figs is tak en ; it is pleasant and refreshing to the taste, und acts pently yet promptly on the Kidneys, Liver and Bowels, cleanses the sys tem effectually, diapels colds, head aches and fevers and cures habitual constipation. Syrup of Figs is the only remedy of its tind ever pro duced, pleasing to the taste and ac ceptable to the stomach, prompt in its action and truly beneficial in its effects, prepared only 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 4l 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, SAN FRAhGWCO, GAL, 16WSVIUE, Ml. EW rOUK, M f. EVERY Lliil DOCTOR By J. UaqIUa Ayars A. Af &L p. This la a moat Taluhla book tor ths hoa sehaAd Jbaulitac as t dsa Ui aUr-lUt.a'ulh6a tfnub- ikuuot airlerant dUoadtiA, U causes and noun pf ftrvvoaUotf ttuoh dwaa, aud Ui uupto rsmou las wjuen wui auuvjin or our. arj la pruiiiAaiy it, jjw-ytod. Tti bo-jk is wriwa la pUla eyor-dsy silky Of roitilnrfb Onif b(i, ptMU,il Olfusaeor- inaxriAtfa aid wo Bwiuattoii s.i4 riu&f uX tW' fituilLirt: U'tl.Qr wish valnaU ic4.i atj xrliOua-i. OAdUuiaUv or touuVM prcupd, qor root xiao ot uxdlury h.db Wilq Uiif btmic la ths Q9 Ui ma twwKoitgy. caa pwwi HUfy ur jpfti 1 i i-W- in mtnvntiA. Hl(inkt,fl And wonltmn Whntiea With It look Hkft WfM and thr i nbmhitl t nn drinking. No other porp In thm world will do iuob perfect work. Wive It t trial now. TFRnnnM thlrtr Hectrio launch on thm Elver Thames, London. E. R Vfc1thn11 A Co.. DmratMik 1Toth Cn. Kv.. rati "Hull's C'Rtftrrh I'ure cures eyer one that taken It.1 Huld by lrufrUt, 7fo, A Munich (Bavaria) oarriajre Is propelled by RM. A Fart Worth Knowing? No hnrsB nwid die of cnlto If Dr. Tobias's Venetian Liniment Is on hand when first the animal Is attacked; a single dose revives an overheated bnrxe, and puts new life Into him. It quite cures pulls, sprains, old sort's, scratches, sore throat, elo. Tho l)erby Condition Powders aro ued also by the best nnrncmen In the country. They are no cnenp nrncio, mil manuiariuren imm me best ingredients that can be purchased, and are perfectly innocent. No ono has ever umhI them but continues their use and recom mends them to his friend. AU uruKKlsts and saddlers. Fbance makes tho world's quill toothpicks. rirnne lont Forget It. That T)r. 11. James Cannabis Indira Is nre- mred In Calcutta, India, from the purest and N'st Native Hemp, and Is the only remedy either In that country or this that will posi tively ana permanently euro tmmmpiio Jtrmichid. Athrrw. ft'wi7 Cntatrh andArmi IXhUity or break np a fresh cold In twen-tv-four hours. f.'-.fi a bottle, three bottles for fil.AO. Crnddock Ar Jon iVoprietora, 1UB Haoo street, Philadelphia. FTTR stormed free mr Dr. Kupis'S O nit AT Kkhvk Hcmtohrr, No Fit after first day's use. Marvelous enree. Treatise an 1 $ trial bottle free. Dr. Kiln. Kit Arrh St., 1'hlU., l'. If RfniotedwtthanraeyM ua Dr. Iwute Thomn. ,nn'n hTP-w.t.r. l)riiKBlnt..eUalUfto.prbnttia "A EACE WITH DEATH!" Aminn. itk nanmlnu horrw. TIOnA rA more worthy or martyrdom than he who rode down the valley of the Conemaugh, I .1 1 - 1 1 V.. TK ... . town flood. Mounted on a powerful norse, iastcr ana insior went mo riuer. but the flood was swiftly gaining, until I. . . . . . 1. ...1..nl... I. . ui A m n n mrt lb CUUllb WIU UlUUvIl" lllllOvlUOU nnu swept on, grinding, crushing, annihila ting both weak and strong. In the same way is disease lurVIng near, like unto the sword of Damocles 1 - 1 1 ! . Y. . . . AH It. trlpfinv whn .Hnwa hU ivgtcm to be come cloeced up, and his blood poi soned, anu inereuy ii is iivaim cuuu.ii gored. To eradicate thew poisons from the system, no matter what their namd or nature, and save yourself a spell of II . l. ! 1 . 1 1 1 . 9.,am a .,i.AHlnM tiimAH anrl Vin dred, disfigurements, keep the liver nd Kidneys noai.ny anu vigorous, vy mo uie of Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Dis covery. It's tho only plood-purlfler sold on trial Your money is returned If It doesn't do exactly as rccommenueu. A concentrated vegetablo extract. Sold by druggists, In largo bottles, at $1.00. L EWIS' 98 r, LYE Powdered and Perfumed. ll'ATF.STKD.l The fronut and purett I.ya made. Will make the best per fumed Hard Soap in 20 min ule without boilinQ. It lathe beat fur disinfecting sinks, closets, drains, washing bottles, barrels, paints, etc. PENNA.SALT MTQ CO Urn, Acts., Ihlla., Pa. PENSIONS S40.000.000 to paid out tiltyw under th new Dlubliltr Pmstoa Act F- ry tolAivt loo I u led who aervftd 90 6mj Snd Is now disabled, no matter what tha rause; or In cone ot his ileLh his widow snd minor t-hlldrrn. Dtprudent putn(i stso bonefltsM. Vr1fe at ono for blanks aud sdvlce to HKO. I. wnvHKI.U fmitcltor of 1q stons and 1 'struts. Box vfM, Washington, 1. C. Clerk Coramiiu- on 1'ensious oi Ui U. a- ficuats fur lbs last aea yaars. PENSIONS fi S dtnahlfKi sold tern, wiuuws, ac, or no blanks sent free. II. ('. TANNEK, I'ateitt aud laim Attorney, 1317 wannmt"H, u. u. MONKY IN i-ll ll'KKNK. For ittc. a UpaR Ikm k, experttnos of a practical poultry raiser durtiuf VV I'yeani. it UMn-nes now to tU'tot ami cureftiM'Mtw; u irfa iitckki and for fattnluK; wblca fowls to save for brnling, Ac. Ac. Address JooK I'UU. liuUKE, 184 leouard 8t N. T. City. Bethel Classical and Military Academy I'rr pares for Business, I'ulv. of Va. and West Point. Address MuJ. A. U. Smith, Iktl.el Academy f. U. Va. I f fl If C T U I V . Uook'ttftupinfT, Business Forms MUlTit Penmanship, Arithmetic, tShort-hsnd, etc. I I tnoroutfhty tauKht by MAIL. Circulars freo, Bryant' College 47 Malu Ht., HuHalo, N. V. OPIUM R'SeS r (t real a and in the World. Ir. KM, Lebanon, u. pensions; OLI TAI1H HKTTLKU I Ml-;it NK.W LAW. for blank applications ant. information, Patrick O'Karuiua, K'iimIou Axfut, WfttthiugUtn, V. C. PATENTS V. A. l.KH.VI ANN, Wa.nlnatan, I). C. h.ND vob Ciacul. Thri(-t-iscw resus cleanliness lllial JRjraav mix If is e. solid c&ke ....vWscourin soa.pL 3. i. V A ! Try iHnyournexr house-clswiing a.nd beh&ppy CHEAP COMFORT Can 1)0 secured htj the snutll investment in ono cake of SAP0LI0 when you have a house or kitchen to clean. From the paint to the pots ami pans, and including the windows and floors, it is ths very best lahor-saiinj soap for firin'nf and cleaving. .Ill Grocers sell it. every WATERPROOF COLLAR or CUFF BE UP TO THE MARK TRADE IlSiFt UULO jrf,'.- wee;;--' j;5 NEEDS NO LAUNDERING. CAN BE WIPED CLEAN IN A MOMENT. THE ONLY LINEN-LINED WATERPROOF COLLAR IN THE MARKET. TTftCnnftTaYl --Vj SURE riSJpzfi"' CURE. CLEAN AND PERFECT CURE OP Hurts and bruises. A Doctor daw It. Tjiwrencp, Ksnsss, An. , 1W Gmnre Pullcrmin Ml fhrni a itil-sturjr window, trlkhiKB fence. I fouml III m lining Ht.Jaonhs Oil frtt'ly all over lila ImrtH. I kbw htm next rnnrnlnif at work ; all the Mno upots had on leaving neither pain, scar nor welling. V. K. N Kl'MANN, M. D. rromT anu jirAi.rns. THI CHARLES A. V0RELER CO.. B.lllmor.. M. N T N U .10 THE BREAT ENGLISH REMEDY, BEECHAM'S PILLS For Billons and Nenons Disorders,' "Warth a GnW a Box'1 bat sola for 25 Cents, BT At. Mi nnruuiN'ra.- WALL PAPER BARGAINS! Wa wm guarantee all then rlmn nrw good, J alt tnarta, and full tongUt fanla u Ui roll Aa rWa. rail Wallabaca raprr. la If I AaH-ra. rail Ullt I'npor, 0 la 10a. As H-tK rail Kmbaaaaa (Jilt lasr.HllS. Will Barbara. 4 ta 1H lacbea wlaa, 4 mm 3c 9r rr. Baraera wltaaal Ullt, II ta laokaa la. r' ,ara. rVnd 4r tn trtampa for sample of ths) bs aaa gt aatrst banralns In fcha nmutry. IX. 0-flL.J3TaTf 1 303 1IIUII MTRKET, MmUoa this paper. rravlJaitrf. K. T. (3 Plso's Itemed? Ar Catarrh la tha Brat, Kaall to I'M, and Uieapeat Bold rir dnigginta or sent bT mall. 60c H. T. UiiulUua, Warrau, I'a. annnrablr dlKhargod Soldier, and Bailor o( the lata war, w bo ar. Incapacitated from earning a Nlpport. Wklow. tn. Mine, wiuiuul regard w ratu. oi oeaui. lierwndeol l'.rrnl. and Minor Children alo Inter. uvnr SO rear.' exnerlenc. Kufererelfi all' partanf the country. So charge U nn.accetaful. Write at once or "Copy ot Ijtw," tilankf and rull In traction. 4lJ.mil to K. McA I.l.lbTKK 4k t'l. (hucceeaora to Wm. Conard 4 Co.Jt I". O. Max 710. Wah,lnglon, l. . PEIMSIOIMS.dapyenusW Invalid, Widow's or Minor's, or ara wa drawing fras than $M.0U per month 1 liav you a claim nendlnf bo want ftlef nosy 9 Write us and rec-streW return mall ftpnrovrtat blank and full liuttructlons for vca, with a copy of UM new anl liberal I -aw. LUf wSn AW X HAI.X.AIU' lWx 44, Waahlng-ton, IX a Here recces given. WM. FITCH & CO., lOH Corcoran Building, Wellington, l. O. PENSION ATTORNEYS of over jreara' experience, "ucrn-arnllr P" cute penaloiu and clalm of all kind. In aborteag poMlhle lima, trWo V KK cm.aea .uoraeervi- , fiRAZERGALsEE BEST 114 TIIK WOULD U II LHJ Vt IF- Get the ueuttlne. Boid Everywhere. PENSIONS NEW LAW. Holdlera, bailors widow, and roil dren. No dlmcultjr In proving claim. lo fee till yon get pension. Advice and hlnuk iron. Write Itatlng cue. J. V. lISrl.Hl V, AttatlJlw, WAflllNUTON, I. C. nriioinno '1 lie) PENSION Bill Or eat rr aiiiiva. i.o..ca s.Mt--. Is Passed. tftind l-'athera ar tltlcl to $11) mn ! ce iH' whru JoU get your monif. blanks free. X)SarU H. MmTKa, lm. s4lilstua. P. t FIENSION 'Successfully Prosecutes Claims. Lata 1'rtiiclpal tiAmtnwr U S l'oualon Buraau. JjrsluUot war, .SaljudicaUi.g claims, atty aiuoa If roo arethlnklnrot pulhuug Uoue yonongn. C'lAluwWf, f.llleer'e American Arch, ten" lira! or every uien complete In Jder. prepared ,f"PaluVr tallllrr f I "., the well k nown archlteuut Vhire la'not a fei'lner or any one injenjinj fcolld or oth.ralie Interested that can afford to b wUhputlt. It II a practice! work uld everybody buji bined on Building, ftcerly I wt huu ASehooklnaluaud ftyle,but wehsvi tuekeltmeet the popular tlrinsnd.to t 'l no peit, c.iieepe.1 ana 'vi""- r "7 leaon Building, pcerir uur f ami me umea, 14. book cqut.lne H4 p.lfee lull inohel 0 1, ad oon.l.t. ol Urge Siia pl.te rire, V,'U E'iSS eleeatlou., peniwctlve .lew., deeirlpllou., "ncr B.mea, a-itu.) 0.t ot ooMtruvUorj,tip puraa W"rl. eudln.tnicUone Hove l HiilTd TO og". U'e, J.oubte Houe... Drlck lilock Boiieea, aullabla fol rltxaubnrbe, town end country, ho me. for the fans gnd worklnamen'e hmnes f.ir all a;tlons cf tht tountry, and coetiogf rum :W) to . . el.o buui. eublei., Hohool H,"l.e. Town 11.11, cLurtJie. and o:h.r poblio b ulldln., tog.th.r with Pfel'etlone, form ot omitreot, an d a lre emoun t of irrlornieUos on the erei'tlon ht buildUige. eeleotlun of ette, er loymen of Archllecta It iiinHWif ut wewUI.endJtlo peper cover by niall, postpaid. on reie: ABU1U Ue-MenUon 'iTils i'eper.U good revenue SAP0LI0-' TON SCALES Of $60 BIN6HAMT0N VBeamEtoxTirtBaam yA N. Y. a, THAT CAN BE RELIED ON isjcrt to S.T3llt! IVot to Discolor ! BEARS THIS MARK. ' Mark-
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