s. with Tflre- ito worms in (heir plants oc je water. This liberal quantity of 4 it to stand until the .car. This is a simple is prompt and reliable. Companion, ROW TO OltOW SACK. .aise sage in perfection the ground id be very rich, with frequent culti Jon that will keep it clear from weeds. "ne seeds can be obtained from almost any dealer who 'keeps an assortment. They should be sown quite early in the spring, ami the young plants should be thinnedfut, so as to leave them stand ing o&out fifteen inches apart. When onFJ. estnlilislipii Mm r - , ...w uiiu .V.... Will llk. rom rear to rear, and the lnni tnn Ko multiplied bv dividing thorn. Thln.v nnd tender shoots possess sonic medirinnl qualities, but are mostly used for culinary purposes as a flavoring or dressing. They should be cut off as the plnnt begins to flower, and be dried in the shade. Aiw Xrl World. ANIMAL ODOR IN Hlt.T. The influence of animal odor in milk upon butter is as delecterlous as upon cheese. If the odor of new milk is car ried into cream, and thence worked into butter as it often is by cooling new milk too low and ton suddenly the but ter has a modified flavor in consequence. The fine aromatic, and clear and de licious taste of the olei-ie and its essen tial oils, which nro developed iu butter from milk free from siieh odor, aro ob scured and modified o much as not to be recognized, and a strong and indis tinct flavor, ns if something foreign and impure had been mingled with the but ter, trkes the plnco of the naturally agreeable taste. In like manner, butter made from milk which has becoino affected with odor from a feverish con dition of the cows, or from carrying in oIofcIv covered cans before the 'animal odor has escaped takes on an unnatural, strong and unpleasant taste, and a greasy appearance, unless the odor is re moved before the cream is raised American Vairynan. FEKDIN'a OUOt'ND GlUtX. Ground grain will give just as good results with poultry when it is mixed with bulky, food as it will when it is - in uu water ana leu. lu Tact, it is claimed that by adding it to some food (.such as clover liny cut fine, nud then scalded) better results will be obtained rora the vise of ground grain, as the nixture of the whole is not so conccn - 'rated. It is true, also, that hens can be e profitably fed on cut food and grain as can cows, only that the food for tho hens should be cut exceedingly fine not exceeding half an inch in length. Any kind of hay is accepted by poultry, but clover seems most suitable. Poultry will also cat ensilage if it is cut lino enough. There is nothing superior for laving hens than cooked turnips or potatoes," to which ground grain is added. When grain is to be fed it will save time and labor to feed it unground, but there are also times when it is advantageous to allow ground grain, but it should always be given as an addition to cut food, "if all the cut foodis scalded before adding the grain, the1 entire mess will be improved and all flasscsof fowls will cat it readily. Farm i aud Fireeide. ! COcfJ TV0RD9 FOB-.TJtR COW PKA. The cow pea seems especially adapted to the wants of Southern farmers. Its extensive and deep root system enables it to withstand the long dry spells com mon to the climate and also to gather nourishment from soils on which shal low growing crops would starve. It respouds rcRdily to fertilizers, and on fair soils will produce as large a yield of nutritive matter as almost any forage crop that can be grown. In the South two crops can bo grown in a season, and the growth is so luxuriant that all nox ious weeds are choked out. As the result of analyses made at the Bouth Carolina Experiment Station, the follow lrp( favorable conclusions were drawn in regard to the cow peavi 1. for . the production of a nitrogenous food iu the shape of a forage crop the cow pea ines are almost without a rival. 2. Although no digestion experiments have as yet been made with it, there is every reason to believe that this crop is equal ly os digestible as leguminous plants iu general. 3. On an acre of ordinary d this prep will probably produce .gcttible food than either oats or .. 4. The manure resulting from .eeding this crop is of the highest value and should be carefully preserved and returned to the land. As the cow pea obtains a part of its nitrogen from the atmosphere and a part, together with some of its phos phoric acid and potash from the sub soils the large amount of these constit uents left in its roots and stubble and dead leaves dropped by the plant tend to enrich instead of iuipover ( tish the soil. In other words, its power of collecting nud storing fertilizing ma terials from sources beyond the reach of the cereals makes the cow pea a valuable remedial crop. In addition to all this it Is thought more than probable that the br.de pi oduced by the luxuriant growth of this crop during the summer months, wbeu nitrification is most active, greatlv . promotes the formation and storuge of i uuraics m me son. f CAME OF CALVES IN WINTER. I It is the common experience ou many farms that young stock do not much more than hold their own from fall to pringj,. What growth they get is ob '" ed 04 pasture, and, too commonly, becomes appreciable only when they "Nteredupou their second summer. Cubits should tie kept growing during their first winter',- for more than one rea son. In the first place it is foolish to brow away the feed ,of a whole winter, 1 get no return for it. In addition to ' is unquestionably true that calves the dairy are dwarfed in their 'lowers, and their future use 1, by the lack of care and -owth in their younger ble to raise calves at ' to keep them ' day of their ' v. SoviVi be .'"V". food as will promote the growth of bone and muscle. Pens are much bettor foi calves durinrr their first winter than itm chions. They can be kept warmer in this wjr, inu imvj a oetter Dea to sleep upon mm iuiy grow bettor if civon a chance to move about without the fret tmg caused by restraint. When calves are 'Watered but onea a Hv ami then brith rery cold water, tho whole system 1 MMttvna iintk - .UuL . 1. - . . V f i . . . a oiiuviv mm. HTOW W11S out OI U . . .... iua auesuon. thin must tut n h every one who has seen these little things alt ering over a irougo. ot Ice water, from which their thirst has them to driuk greedily. If older stock must drink this, at Wat lot fllr.;.. quantity for the calves be tempered by a kettle of hot water from the kitchen stove. Fine llSV. Of Which a nnrl simiil.l ha clover, if possible, with a little bran and crushed oats, and an occasional foml of pulped roots will prove a desirable ..... iccu ior caives at tins timo. They need no fattening foods, nrnviiloil tlinir Am housed warmly, but plenty of tho ele ments that give growth. If skim milk can be soared for them it will rrU- nnn,i . .. ... h. . g..v. returns in increased size and in the de velopment of tho heifers. It pays to keep the ycung things growing, for when growth ceases, not only is thero no interest on the investment, but the time spent in caring for them is lost also. American Agriculturist. FARM AXD GARDEN NOTES. Now hunt up the horse blankets. Protect the water pipes from fiojt. Push the fattening pigs and poultry. It is poor policy to winter poor stock. Better sco to covering the grape vines. Harvest and safely store or market all tender vegetables. Don't miss any meetings of Farmers' Clubs or Institutes. Don't wait too long before getting tho raspberries and blackberries covered. Fresh set trees will be as well mulched as left exposed to all the rigors of a se vere wiuter. It is not necessary to cover the straw berry bed till the ground is frozen hard, then you can drive on it with the wa jon j that will save time and work. If one potato would produce, when planted, but ten potatoes, in ten years tho total product would be 10,000,000,. 000, which would stock tho whole world with seed. Do not leave tho cabbages and turnips out too long. They wilf stand a moder ate frost, but continual freezing nnd thawing will not improve their kcepiug qualities. Don't forget putting tho beets, car rots nud parsuips (if you dig some in the fall) into soil iu the cellar. If you have never tried it you cannot realize how how much better they keep. Some market gardeners say that it doe not pay to stake tomato plants, but if fine, clean fruit pays, then staking should bo adopted. Some of tho finest fruit is to bo seen from plants so treated. Cultivation and manuring of fruit trees, this late in the seasou, would in duce a .lato growth which would not ripen well before freezing weather, and next winter would hardly fail to produce serious injury. "One of the best ways to make money is to keep down tho expenses." But don't keep tho expenses down so low that there is no return; that is feeding at a loss. Feed for growth or eggs, ajl for mere existence. In successful gardening one of tho most important operations is frequeut stirring of the surface. After every ram, just as soon as tho ground is dry euough, the hoe or the steel garden rake should be brought into use. From 400 to 600 bushels of onions may be grown to the acre, but when you are figuring up the profits, a New York onion grower suggests that you do not forget to take out the cost of about fifty loads of manure to the acre. Keep on culling; do not winter a single bird that you have no use for. The profits are all the greater when the expeuses are low. Therefore keep them down, by not feeding stock that you do not need or cannot make profitable. Why not have a flower show in your t iwn or neighborhoodi Take the Schtsbr-f ' ulrict, as the bounds for instance, and 1 'Id tho exhibit in the school house. Try it and see if it does not pay iu neighborly friendliness, if nothing more. Pear blight is less abundant in orchards where but fair growth is made than among trees forced along by strong manures. Moderate growth well ripened is the best for pears. For this reason in districts where blight abounds the trees are often grown in sod. Buckwheat is a staple article of food for poultry iu France, Germany and i sular provinces in the pcuinsula. It is heating and stimulates the egg functions to greater activity. In wiuter it pro motes early laying and fowls soon ac custom themselves to it. Use every means to tame your birds; some breeds are mora easily tamed than others, but if you keep your poultry as tame as a house dog they will lay more eggs and will also lay on more flesh than if you have to chase them about every time you want to look them over. ' A Pirate Bird. Ex-Governor William G. Bterett, oi Dallas, Texas, says: While on a fishing and huuting expedition on the Atlantic coast in North Carolina a few days since my uttcntion was attracted by a shrill and frantic ciies of the sea gull. As I looked upward I saw a bird resem bling a hawk strike the gull under its claws, when down came the fish and the pirate bird after it. The flsh had not gone ten feet before the pirate bird had it in its stomach. Then he soared up ward with lightning rapidity, and de scending equally as quick, struck the screaming gull ou its back with such force that the contents of its stomach were forced out of its mouth, and the pirate caught it in the air as it fell. At this moment I took aim at the pirate with my abutgua and brought him down. St. Lou it (J lobe-Democrat. A Whale's Jaw. Some men who had lost an anchor near Linekin, iu the town of Boothbay, Me., grappled for it the other day aud thought they had it. Twenty men dragged it ashore and up on the beach, wheu their prize proved to bo not the anchor, but the upper jaw of a whale. U Aias thirteen feet long from the bow "i (iuit to either end joint, and seveu ""i a uiilf feet across from eud to end. uicaua Timet, KTWS AND NOTES FOR WOMEN. Pale blue has dethroned yellow. Gold beads continue to be worn. Fur capes are as plentiful as ever. Melgash red looks well with gray. Sealskins sacques are on the wane. It is a fad to use only one perfume. Silk underclothing has had Its day, Marquise rings are again in fashion. Tho Princess of Wales wears a No. 8 shoe. Buckskin undorvesU are lined with satin. Pearl and tan gaiters continue to be worn. Very small handkerchiefs aro all the stylo. Pockctbooks are almost square iu shape. Black silk has returned to popular favor. Luxurious petticoats aro on the in crease. Cape wraps of fine cloth aro hizlilv favored. A fantasy has sprung up for necklaces of colored stones. There are dainty little fobs osneciallv provided for ladies. The LndrQuide Association in Lon. don is a great success. The collection of spoons is a rccorr. ..... .. " ui.cti msie oi too uay. Oklahoma has decided to allow womcu to vote at all elections. Five womcu Health Inspectors have been appointed iu Chicago. The catogan braid is a favorite for mula in artistic hair dressing. Two-faee satin ribbon is used for pur poses of household decoration. Seven Amoiicau girls are in residence at Ncwuham College, England. Some of the new steel-blue shades are very trying to the crmplexion. Gray nnd canary yellow are a now com bination nnd a very effective one. Salem, Oregon, boasts of a girl eight years old who weights 110 pounds. The Queen of Roumania is writing a story for a syndicate of newspapers. A "peanut party" is one of the latest entertainments invented in Canada. Tortoise shell hairpins, set with dia monds aud turquoise, aro fashionable. Senator Quay's second daughter has gono to Bcriiu to complete her educa tion. Twenty-eight por cent of all the stu dents in tho University of Michigan are women. Even watches are put into mourning, the works being transferred from gold or silver to onyx. The Marquiso do Lanza is reputed to bo one of tho best dressed literary women in the country. Pretty Pompadour ruchings retain prestige with ladies whi appreciate their becomiugness. - Mrs. Piatt, wife of the ex-Senator of New York, has 16,000 photographs taken with her kodak. Watches run small to medium in size, and there is a marked tendency toward d ceo rati vo cases. Blue-gray aud leather-color are oddly combined in visiting dresses of bengaline and camel's hair. Coral pink is one of the prettiest shades in millinery. It combines well with black velvet. The bridegroom's wedding ring is be coming of quite as much importance as tho bride's from a fasbiouablo point of view. The number of women who avail them selves of the co-educational privileges offered by Michigan University is con stantly increasing. Tea balls are bidding for favor. One little moss-like marble is tossed into the teapot aud hot wator poured in, in a jiffy there is tea for two. The coming button is said to be one of cloth or passementerie, and a Berlin authority predicts that it will monopo lize the market iu the spring. Miss Laura Burns, of Martinsville, Iud., has a head of natural hair seven feet iu length. Miss Burns herself is only five fect three inches tall. The stylish new coats are what aro callod the three-quarter ones. They are military in effect, being tightly fitted aud trimmed with frogs and cords. Among watch chatelaines the novelty is a small affair that expresses itself in form of a flower or other motif, and which is fastened at one side of the cor sage. Mrs. Maude Howe Elliott and his sis ter, Mrs. Florence Howj Hall, have undertaken a full account of the life and education of their father's deaf, dumb and blind pupil, Laura Bridgmvi. Blanche Wakefield, who with her sis ter, Ethel, has been playing with suc cess in Paris, recently performed on the violin on the highest platform of the , Eiffel Tower, and was heartily ap pluuded. A shoe dealer says that girls between sixteen and eighteen have bigger fect than after twenty-four. The foot is fleshy at that time and large, but as years come the foot decreases and the muscles grow more firm. Mrs. Oscar Wilde, Mrs. Alma-Tadema and several titled ladies in Loudon have an organization to supply tasteful and well-made outfits for children and young girls and to furnish regular employment to women of narrow means. Hanged In Buffs She Had Invented Mrs. Turner, who was hanged in Lon don, England, in 1635, for complicity in the poisoning of Sir Thomas Overbury, was a handsome creature. When she in vented the yellow starch she used it on ruffs displayed on her own fine person. Being a companion to the Couutess ol Ewex in the house of her father, the Earl of Suffolk, Mrs. Turner easilj brought her invention into fashion. On her conviction Lord Chief Justice Cok addressed her with accustomed brutality. He told her that she had been guilty ol the seven deadly sins, declared that at she was the iuventor of yellow starched ruffs aud cuffs, so he hoped that she would be the last by whom they would be worn. He accordingly gave strict orders that she should be hanged in that attire, which she had rendered so fashion able. Mrs Turner came to the scaffold as if for some festive occasion, with her face rouged and a ruff stiffened with yellow starch about her neck. Numerous persons of quality attended In their coaches, and the yellow ruff was never more worn from that day. Jfei York Hun, TEMPERANCE. WHAT WRKCItS HIN'i FACES. ! Rum has no tra.lurw Ilk til face and fnt of one of the men who, a short time airo, was P"inwn out w evwyone as "The of fashion ami mold of form." When hix nam is spoken now mm lauh nt It, while Indira who hvo honnl of him and see him in thrae davs for the first lime, marvel aloud that such a face and figure ever could have led the iwt, Lat hours, deep potations, lonjr continual self-indulKciiee th are the bacilli that have wrought thnt wreck of which all the city talks just now. A CVniOVS DREAM. A laborer at the Dundee harbor lntolv told his wife, on awakening, a curious dream which he had during the night. Uedreanml that he saw coming toward him, in order, four rats. The first was one very fat, and was followed bv two lean rat, the rear rat being blind. The dreamer was grvatly per- 'lesed as to what evil .Might follow, as it las been understood that to dream of rat denotes coming ralamitv. Ho appealed to his wife concerning this, but she, poor woman, could iiot help him. His son, a sharp lad.whii heard his father tali thestory, volunteered to be the interpreter. '"The fat rat," he said, "is the man who keops the public House, that ye gang till sae often, and the twa lean anes are meanJ my milher.and the blind ane is yerself, father." 6'cofcA i'aver. A STORY OF JOHN B. OOL'Qtt. On a summer night a temnerance mcetlnir was held in New Haveu, Conn. A gentle man, standing under the old elms of thatcitv, saw Gough, partially drunk, wending Ilia way to a wifoou. He touched him ou the shoulder, and. in a srimtatliotio binn. !,. sought his "hipwreeked brother'' to go aioug with him to the temperance meeting. Mr. (tough consented, and, greatly im- Iiressed by the appeals to which he listened, le signed the pledge of total abstinence. Jlis suhwquent history as a temperance leader is known to the civiliied world. The gentle man who relates this incident says that he has never forgotten that moonlight meeting with Uough in New Haven. believer, in after years, he heard the thunderous ap plause that greeted John B. Uough. on the temperance platform, he caught the echo oil that soft tap on the shoulder, under the graul old elms of the New England capital. i AFRAID OF HIMSELF. A llr tll 1Vt...... . WAll.lriw.wr. VtnfAl V.A i . .. ...... ,Ur miiri lllgUI Hb BUUUI eleven o'clock, and demande 1 bis money, which was locked up in the safe. The clerk bluntly told him that he couldn't have it "Aiu't the nionish mine?' he asked wrath fully. "Yes: but you can't have it till to-mnr row. You'd better go to your room," Tht kussi, urggeu aua inreulened and demanded. llllt tnnn lltl1-rvOtf Than 1. n I... A 1 1 1 I take him upstairs. When he had cone tin elni-lr 1 i ..n." - n hjimhuu?! . io-uiorrow morning thnt man will come down here and thank me for refusing to let him have tin money. W heuever he comes to town with the illtAntidn rxf V. . " , : . m )ito 110 IMKeSOUT ot bis wallet all the money he wishes to spend that tight, and hands me the remainder, lull ...p, ... i.r i U, lor nml mm reiuse to let hlltl hnv it. until ha i . i midnight or a little later ho will come in and ..o um jusi now wy to make me giv up thecash. Hut to-morrow morniii he will come down and thank me for refusing." Aeto 1'orA: Tribune. I BLUE RIBIIOX INVITATIONS. "Blue ribbon invitations'' to dinner are a , social innovation iu this city indicative of : the steady progress of tho temperance re form. According to the New York I'ridiin there has come to be a difference in practice among people or good taste and position in New York, who enjoy the presence of their ' friends at dinner," with refereuce to serving wine. It says: "In many houses, as a mat ter of principle, wine is never placsd upon the table, and in others wine is occasionally omitted for special reasons. For a low? time there has been a social need iu the city for some quiet, pretty, and effective manuer of indicating in invitations to dinner, whether or not wine will be served, in order that in vited guests may have full knowledge of the 1 facts. A movement has beeu begun, origi nating socially and seconded by one of the popular stationers of the city, for indicating that wine will not be served during the affair by attaching a knot of blue ribbon to the lower left-hand corner of the invitations." A ' delightful dinner entertainment was recently j given iiKn this plnn, attended by a large number of society people. The Tribune adds: , "It is believed that the blue-ribbon invita- i tiona will solve a ditliculty, with which so-1 cioty has long contended, requests for one's presence at a dinner to which the ribbon is ' not attached speaking for themselves." i TEMPERANCE NEWS AND NOTES. The man who drinks a little drinks too much. , There are 1,800,000 children in Bands ot i Hope iu the United Kingdom, "Shainewater" is an appropriate name given to strong drink on the bark Contin ent Forty young women of Des Moines, Iowa, i have signed an agreement to receiva the at- I teutiousof no young man who drinks, chews, ; smokes or swears. . One thousaul two hun lrel and B3ven licenses have been granted the last year in the City of Washington to sell liquors, yield ing a revenue of fSVJOO. i The Women's Christian Temparance Union, , of Detroit, Mich., hat decided that tho drink- . ing of ginger ale, ginger beer, home-made 1 wine, root b eraud raspberry syrup "violates ' the pledge." i The report of the Edinburgh Royal Asylum j for 1M9 says: "We never, except in lfTu, bad so tnauy cases sent here iu which the assigned cause of the malady was alcoholic : excess as this year." In the Wesleyan Methodists' Connection there are now ti.VJ adult Temperance Socie ties, with 4:i,4Hl members, aud 8301 Bands of Hoie, with B70.HS1 meinliers. An anti- , gambling pledge has b.m issued. ! The Lancet remarks that while England 1 Is taking a very active aud creditable part iu ' tho attempt to prevent the importation ot alcohol into the iuterior ot Africa, she eau- ' not do bettor than labor to abate the at- coholism of home comuiunitiei, thriving and well employed but kept back by drunk- ' enuess. The recent W. C. T. U. annual convention 1 passed numerous resolutions on the usual ' snhjects. Among these were a request to ! both capitalist a id labor to study the tern-! perance question in the interest of their reht- i lions and a commendation ot the action I of the Uovernment iu refusing the use of j the mails to lotteries. i 8 ( THE POSITIVE C a ,1 ELY BKOTUEK8. 6s Warns. V IT H A FEW HENS ts the motto and teachings of the P'lt Poultry Paper published. It Cottt Only 60 eta. a veart tlx luoutlw IS els. Cash or slsniiw. Uample free. Address FAKM-fOULTHY, Box 2118, ilostun, Uw, H0THINGNEA.Rn. WILL it llrfl uvj i i 0 ( A ill? JUL3 IF YOU CAVT GET IT W.Ail IIOMi:, SKXI TO IH. H Is AbaoluMr Pur. !ll(rhtr fjn(-ntrKtd. Mont Kouliunilrs), tMH-suw. nui-b mll rtiMH4. Strictly a ItMlVlns. Nut I. 1-uod. 1 ou .'an buy .r niln futxl a. . limp a we i.i, I'ik.fiiU. ;iii J Cur, Mil li iwumm uf I'oiiftry. W or III Inure tlili irolcl ll.' n holm i- Moulting-. "Hum larifi. run huviI me S'u. im-ihI ix iu..i u iiri-vrnt roup Mil uliitrr," wtr.suuat.mx'r. Fur Milt) bv (lru-Kl.-.u, ru.i., p,.n,.iA) t.rt uiid rifil Urjilriv. Nu i.itu-r iu.1. Ilk.- it. We will wild iM.liiiti br insll mj, f.illowo. A lu-w imnlly tllutrul-l -...,' ur Hie uK.thUI.KH' rul l.lKV RAlHlNil (if 11 IK " (price ft i-euU. ( Vintain. delly poulti v si'i'iiuut wurti Uic Prlre) aitrj twwkumll psrkuri-e ul l-uwilxi fur Auo-iit. i ur, uuu lar II I t p. mnd van lur SI imirulek irt.uj ami iniltl.- fie. hiouple pe.iT, V:, S.e fur S' !- Si larwe nuie, eil.reee prvHuii, $4.M). S. ud U.iuuu ur iuIl In iiiant ily ou.te Ire. Uiau uutrtuutU petit a dy per UeO. leeUwul4siavut true, I b. JUU.SSO.t 4 CO., l untoru Hunee blp-ul, SueUto, stssi, The hollyhock disease, which appeared In several New York florists' houses a few years ago has proved a Yery serious post, the loss the past season la one es tablishment being over (tfOOO. Don't be afraid to give skim milk to the liens ( it may make them lay, but that is a desirable effect when eggs are worth present prico. In Italy 83f) Tillage communities have no graveyards. There In nnfhtnn ftintM It tu, lit -w-4i. n. . rhlne) that has lightened woman's labor us mum as noimins s r.iectrto Ponp, ronsMtMtf sold since lHtii. All grocers have It. Have lfm maue us acquaintance Try It Tna United Stales have T7HJJ00 miles of tele. grniiu wire. leuinea C an't bv l urrit Bf local application, an the rnr.nnt ranch thedlsmsvd portion of the enr. There Is on y one way tj cure d.-afness, nnd thnt Is by con- an inflamed condition of the mucous lining the KuMachlnn 'lube. When this tube BeU iiiii.inrii j.ui nnvo nrunintinij eoiinu or im perfect hearlna.and when It is entirely closed, IH-Alnese Is the result, and nnli.nst.hA Inilntt,. niatlon run be tnken out and this tnls re stored to Its normal condition, hearing will be destroyed forever, nine cases out of ten are osupn ny catarrn, wuicn in not mug but an in flamed condition of the mucous surfaces. We will give One Hundred Dollars for any oaeeof Deafness (caustvl hr rtjt.rrhi thitm cannot cure by taking Hail's Catarrh Cure. lean xor circulars, rrre. F. J. i'ucNCT Co., Toledo, fX Sold by dniBgtsts, ia cents. Tna salt works at Saltair, Utah, cover BOO alius. A t'leastna (Seaee Ot health and strength renewed and of ease and comfort follows the use of Syrup of Figs, as It aots In harmony with nature to effectual ly cleanse the system when costive or bilious. For sale In fiOo. and St bottles by all leading druggists. Guaranteed live year elht per oent. First Mortgages on Kansas City property. Interest payable every six uiontbs; priuoiual and inter ealoollectod when due and remitted without expense to lender, t at sale by J. li. Uauerleia k Co Kansas Pity, Mo. Write fur parUontari Money Invested In choice one DundrMdnl. lar building lots in auburbaof Kausas (Jltr will pay from live hundred to una thousauif per cent, the next few years under our plao. cash and i per moiitu without Interest ooa irulsadosiriblelot. Parttoularson apiiUoaUoa. J. U. ilaaerlrln . Do.. Kansas t'lty. Alo. FITS stopped free by Us. Kama's (?avr Nbhv r. Hbstohkh. No rlts after llrst day's n Marvelouscures. Treatise aai $J trUl ihUj free. Ur. Kline. lt Arch St.. I'hlliu, i'a. Timber, Mineral, r arm Lands and Ranohst In Missouri, Kansas, Texas and Arkausas, uouahtandsolil. Tyler AC. Kaunas city. Mo, Ok lahomaUulde Hook and Map sent an r whir t on receipt of flocts.Tyler dfc CoM Kansas Olty, Mo. Beechain's fills euro Bilious and Nervous Ills. The people at the World's Dispensary of Buffalo, N. Y., have a stock-taking time once a vear and what do vou think they do? Count the number 01 Domes tnatve been re turned by the men and women who say that Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery or Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescrip tion didn't do what thev said it would do. And how - many do you think they have to count. One in ten ? Not one in Jive hundred Here are two remedies one the Golden Medical Dis covery, for regulating and ii vigorating the liver and purify ing the blood; the other, the hope of weakly womanhood, and they've- been sold for years, sold by the million bot tles; sold under a positive guarantee, and not one in five hundred can say : M It was not the medicine for me!" And is there any reason why you should be the one? And supposing you are what do you lose ? Absolutely nothing I . Stop XTCLZXt Chronic Cough Now: For If you do not It may become con sumptive. For VutmiinpHon, Scrofula, tittunrat TtrbUily and Halting VUwl. thero la nothing- like SCOTT'S FilOLSlON Of Pure Cod Liver Oil nud HYPOPHOSPHITES W Xjlmo snd Soda. It Is almost as palatable as milk. Far better tlmu other so-called Emulsions. A Wonderful DcsU producer. Scott's Emulsion There are poor Imitations. Get the genuln. f ir-r-"mnjr-1 ure. rmm c IMceoilct.sWdr V-Li2j BU Hew York. I I IS f CONDITION POWDER u II Hew a Olrl Maria Montr. M a. Unrron l am tempted to giv mv "t- crlmce for the heneflt of others, I sent fl to II. f. Dolno A Uo., Columbus, O.,aod rocelTed a tine machine for ilaiina' with sold, sliver And nickel. The iilatlnu Isdnne so nlco nry person Wants work tlono, I net all the knlvn forks and Jewelry I con pleto, I made the first day, '?7.t0 the Unit weekt In one month I had Slilil clrar profit. My brother makes f lu to:) por day selling plates. Any one can do aa much by writing to the above urm tur circulars. Your tmlv, iji 't'CtT V. BADBtT. ! Yea lever ftpooalatsf Any person oondlni ns their name, ant at. oressvrlll reoelve information that will leal K1 ft.fn,,.no HmJ- lwls s Uj, Beourlty UulldlnK, Knnsrts city, Mrk Ie Waj Chinese Headache Cure. Harm less In effect, quick and posltlvo In action, hent prepaid tin receipt of tl par bottle. AdelerAOn, Wrnnilottost..KiinsiuiOlty,Mo Life Is ftlisory To thousands of people who have the taint of scrofula In their blood. The aiooles caused by the drrarirul rannin soras sod other manifestation of tatsdlsesss are tieyonit description. Triors ki ao remocly txputl to Hood's ssrwosrlita for scrofula, salt rhsuin and STory form of Moid diss. W know that It has cured tho sererost easet, and It will bsnent all who it It fair t laL A book eontalnlns statements of curat sent free. M. B. If you hsvs deckled to buy Hood's Sarsa parllla do not b Induced to taka any othor, Hood's Sarsaparilla Sold by all drnmtlirta, , ! i for St. Prsparad only by C L, HOOD a CO., Lowell, Maaa I OO DosegOne Dollar AOWAY'S 1 0 READ? RELIEF. THE GREAT C0NQUEA0I OF PAIN Ih'i'hVeTI.V'Iii !,ru'"e"' nncltache, fain la -... est orNldo., Iloadnulie, Toothncho, r nuy ol icr ,,. r,,r, pu, R ,FW ,-rai. I. uns rubbed on by hand, act llko "rlaloT "e"n,t olds, Hroiirtiltls, Paea. mou ItiUHininnilmis, itbeiimiiil.m. Nra. and rrpfNl rd appllrHtlous art. uocrssnry" i..Ji.,,"v"''m' ':"'". "nrrlin... (olio. J"l.m, ,niisoa, l-nlntlna Mvolls, Nertsua. SHV.-t Vf'1'" f fr" pelleed Instantly, rVi." V'htr ;" red by mklna Inwardly UO IS. UU .Urof 1,1 a tumbler ol wator. ftUc.aWotilu. All Urusalat. BH PHI H B U KlaBtB.j?ij a excellent and mild Cathartic. Pit rely rptnbp. The Molest and Most ttcilli luo In the world lor lbs Cur ol ail Disorders LIVER, STOMACH OR BOWELS, Taken according to directions they will restore health nud rvuow vitality. Price 35 ots. a Bot. 8ol4bjrll Dm jirlsti "K-WREN" roi; 1MIHAM Att TIUK'IIKPOSiriVKi.Y lurNi CouvIin, o.ltU Had ki JUroiii na fcuiiK Ulftt-arven, 'ri . II. l'ie, of nnhnkttl, M. .T nay hi 'TU wo ilertul lv HK.V nmMHlleK curw. iny uoofacrjuuy C(liiviihln.lvt hour." Tnn-lipfi, lt-c itnit 2rVr pAlram, WV. A Ma DHt'HUlsTS, or aUdrrnt M.U. K t.f.1' t CO. ,63 K. lath St,, N.Y. Best Truss Ever Used. 111 bolil the wor'.t i with romtort. Worn otpM and day. Positive ly euros rupture. hnt by niall vvnrywbvra. bend f or deserli. Ut rat aluffuc and testimonlRlt to ti, V. IKM hit HIFIJ. '., 74t llrual way, New York City. Read Law AT IIO H K, u !! cau't attend Law t olli-ire. 'Ilia SprooDe Correspondence School of Law Is ojieutoynu. Aildrrss MM. V. M fit A UU K, I.. I.. II.. Vt hllner lllork. Ilelrnll, Allrh. ffcttSthttifotZkCu St. Louis, Mo. . LVArtUtle Metal Workera.1 ; 3- luei, Iran enJ Hnin lUilisn. renin-, N.iti tlJ'I Vi'MVfll''"" 11 "CnutlAU Kllk . Hniln Inil'falrWlAlllliSi.-K eiioiik-litu ciivct &CB "u Ina aOu.1 Uw ISO. .Uhit ieb'lj.i-laU)iurry N J Ttost Pnittrh Modlcinfi. Cures wlicm all elxo fails, iA9sv4gry M .L ML I taste, t. mill ron take it wiinout objection, tiy urupuii fSOS DR. SCIIENCK'S . ll.AtlDnAKEpiLLS DR. SCHENCK Seaweed tonic STANDARD FOR OVER HALF A CENTURY Cur IndlfTMtlon, Poor Rtomarh, ITrart burn, Flat u Ivory , Colic, and ll DImum of th 8tomat h; ('uatlreunta. Iiil.amiiiatioiit l.ariiua, Pllfw.aiid li oftb Itoweli; ConMtiun, Hlltouiii- .dice, ISautea, Ue(lache, U.ddittF tineM, Wan dering Fa! lit, MalitrK (Viniplaiut, and al I DiwMuea ahing Gurgnd and tUuicgUI. Liver. Tbey he muouui Oftau, reduce gorKd or trd ooudl- U ft PotitiTe Cur fur DYSPEPSIA tiuna, break uij itulilMirn en. tiou, re tort' free, liaithy action to l rgaut.and give tne eyeteu a rtiaitce lu tfi toue and ilrengtu. TUejr are An 4 all IHaoruen of tha Pi guativo OrKKiid. Jtlt HkowiNe a orrobontttve or HtrenKtn nlng MrHiktDe, and ny b Ukau wilU bem-nt itt all ch.- of Debility, for H4I0 by alt imiftKl.U. Prlc, 1. Wymr bot tle. I'r 8 'hrark'i New bok on LunftK, Llvoratid Stuniach mailtMl fie. Adilrt-M, Or J.H.Schenck A Son, Phlla. PURELY VEGETABLE, STRICTLY RELIABLE, aao ABSOLUTELY SAFE For Rale ly all PruyyliU. Prlre cts. prr boa; S Uixns fur 60 eta. i or srlit ly mall, pitnce frre, un n-rrlpt of price. Ur J II Ki'liriirk it Sun. I'hlliulrlilila, I'a. -VASELINE- FOR A UNK-UOL1.au RII.Leeniiu by mall we will deliver, Iree Ml till cbartfai, Lu auy pereoa la the UultfNl i is lost, aU A uo toUoli turUole fully (Maukeit One two-ouooe bottle of Pure VaMllae. . 10 cts. Ime two-ouiiue btttLe of Vastellne PuiatMlet li u One Jar of Vaatdlue Cold Creuiu, - IS Oue iake of VuMtllue Cainptiur loe, - W One Cake of Vaiteliue hoap, uuaoetited, 10 OueCaaiLeu VaskjJlot Soap, exfiuUitly soeuted.sU Oie tw-vruuce butue of While VaUuea - U ITTT Or for poatao afampe any atnjls arttol at th prfoe named. On no aooounl & pant undo I to owp I fium your dru wist any Vainor propartUi ttvtrefr m tinice labtu&i wil our naine, beuauM you wUt osn tatruyreoiuan imitation wAioh ha Utile ormtval Cheeebrouub Ali. In., wun Ht., N. V. uwauininw jnni imu m. H 0rrURNITURB . -X tfCta 'IN VALI D W HLLL CHAinS'jr Ve UJl at tlia lou-ut hUiU Jii tmrv prxcet, aud b'u goodi to bo j id fur uu delivery. 1 aieUcuili Drake ea all (uttaM RBaKl t HAlM 1U UlltK. luue, AUMW IftHitiS disirtd. DHL l k.a I, D SuccessfiiJfcEjfO- ' aLt) W--- ssstl - a- 1 iori( ss'-fl ssteo.il. Unas vv, lr.Ai.FRFE Mm BR1 FROl INPLAH ANl... ) HURTS AND ILLS OF MHM TiMn RFZJST. N T it U At HOW TO GET WELL ITho Dr. ToblR Venetian Lini ment 11 you are sniftering from Chronic Rheumatism, Neu ralgia, rains in the Limbs, Hark or Chest, Soro Throats, Colds, Stiilened Joints, Con tracted Mnscles. Warranted for orer forty years to gif perfect satisfaction or tho money refunded. A bottle hits nnyor ret boon retaraeif. Hold by all drugaisl. I'rloo tl.lo. and SO IIKI'OT. 40 AHKKAV MT NEW TOR K URA I ECUL-CUMPOR TINtX PPSS COCO BREAKFAST. By tborouxh tnowlwlire of tho natural as arbtcn iroTorn the "r.eratl ins ot dige.tlon and nut 4 in, and ny a earerul apiillc sllon ..f the fine prop. Ueaof srelm lectcltiicoi, Hr. Kp' has prone Mir breakfast tables wltb a deUoatoly AaTourad be eras: onloh may says us many hoary duotora bilk It Is by the Jmlloloui use of auon artlelus of dl that aooottttutlua may Os irr dually omit upuntt ttrons eoouxtt to retltt eury tomienoy to dlnaasa. Humlredaof subtle inalsllea are buatlns around as nadyto attaok wherarer there Is a weak point, " may eaoaiie miin v a fatal abaft by keeptos ous selves ernll rurlinea with pure tiluod nnd a propaslf nottrUherl frame. ""tit .sertXoe O oserta. Male simply with bolllni wator or milk, dobl only In hatf-p-iund tins, ny Oroorrs, labelleil thuat JAAIKS kfl'lS 67 CO., Honnoopalblo ITirmleSa LONDOX, KNUI ASD, A XMAS HEALTH GIFT (Exerciser Complete $5) Is Best or All. Circular Fksi. Hookm For "An lilrsl Compleilon ft Complrte 1'hy.ical Devrliiumrnt." to Ills t.octt. ,lHrittth St Strenirth In Phyilral Culture." 4C Ills cts. t'hsrt ol 30 lilt lor Uumb Iti-llt a Pullrys, cts. Ad. JNO. E. OOWD'S Vucal 4 Physical Culture school, 116 Monroe St. Chicago Does linn IPUCO Are You Your UUU niillL I Nervous! BRQMQ-SELTZER ia A GUARANTEED CURB Trial also . , 1 or .i nt ny nwin prepoa at alt IWS230N ISCSOOT UUlbnnliUi Hu.TiauKS, Ud. NEW LAW CLAIMl lMiloaSteiCi. Atlorneia. 1419 f Mtn Waablnitan, l. 0. II ranch ItlUcra, ( Icyclond, Itetrolt.l'blcasa ft Rocnimnnnflnil hv Phvairiana. l'lcnsnnt and agrcculilo to the r Ki mm DR.SCHECK'3 Pulf.;o;;ig SYRUP Will Cure COUCHS, COLDS, Aud All Diseases of the THROAT ANO LUNOS. It Is pleasant to the taste, and dure nut cuntsln a particlo of opium or an) tiling Injuri ous. It 1. the Bret Ouutch Mod Irlne In the Wurld. t ur Hale by all Prufnl.u. Prlre II (O ier lttle. Dr. ttrhenrk'. book on Ooiuuiniptlun and its Cure, niailud free. Addreea Dr. J.H.Schenck Son, Phils. $1,000 REWARD! The aooya reward will lie paid for proof of the tiiintrnco uf a better tlNIMtlJ'f than MERCHANT'S GARGLING OIL or s hotter Wot in Ki'inedy Hutu MERCHANT'S WOK TABLEIi. boluevervHUtiro. JOHN IIOUt.K, Woo'y, Morcbanl's tiar)liui OU CuV, lokort, N. V., U. s. A. F R ilZ E W iA?lec UtST IN TUB W01C1.U Oet UuiUonulao. Oola Kvec-ywhare. PATENTS! luatruutlout free lo luvcutort. Write at ouuofji hand-book Us lu li. CHAMib V CO.. Wuitbiuiften, !.?. DIPOV 1UrrC PoiTirBi.TRkHBniBx. DAUUI MIC. LO Ort-eljr 1 'aut htrtlier. Atlopud iT stuJi'iiU sit Harvard, Auiliont, aiMl eCief CulUwei. alfto, bv sniff Mtuuai and butt. lie raau ijr Wltera. If out tor iale lu tur town eie to . J. UittKLY, 716 Wahli.vun Wlrtrt. boa too. I MP Tl! I V, Ikxik kw-pliiK, HimlDt-Hi K.vrnil, UUIflk p,.iuimiiriliijt ArmnauUf, Sli-.rt liand, vto., I I t)i.nUKil' truflit by WAIL. Circiitiin fi. lli'ynut'a i'ollruf, 4 i7 Maiu bt.t Hu fulu, S. Y. tdo -v-nrr k Out a Good tiu I Knowlir 11. kaMMM,4 COM p si Ws xje. ' hoi sasaearsr-' "e til MMClilCMr9 til I
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers