THE FAKH AND GARDEN. MAKB A TEST OV TUB BII,0. The former ho has not yet tried a silo and in feeding corn Rtnlka cured in the field would do well to find out the nearest ailo and ro and interview the owner of it and nee for himself the re sults. If he can get in his hay for tl.SO per ton, all costs counted, he may go on making and feeding hay and leave the ailo to other, but if his hay coats him more than thnt he will find the ailo an economy, even to store his green clover In. vA'ew York 1'ime. TITB IDEAL DAIRY FOOD. Fresh grass, -succulent and rich, is the Ideal food for the dairyman, and it pro duces more milk of a good quality than any of the highly prepared foods in vented by man. This is tho standard summer food, and tho dairyman needs to ituitato it for the ideal winter food so near as possible. When the question is analyzed, it will be found that rich grass prod lire plenty of fine milk because the cows like it, and because it contains the very best milk-producing elements. The ideal winter food must then boar two stumps upon it. It must be relished by the cows, and it must contain certain constituents which can readily be turned into milk. Courier-Journal. FEF.D THE TTOH IS WINTER. The well-known fact that animals do not grow as rapidly or take on flesh as readily in cold weather as in warm leads many farmers to delay feeding grain to their pigs until spring. Thus there is a long period in which very little growth is made. .Not only is time lost by this method, but tho animals get in a condi tion less favonihlo to fattening than they were at au earlier period. If warm peus are provided and suitable care is given, feeding can be profitably conducted even in the coldest weather. If these points arc neglected the auimnls will return no profit and make very little growth, even though a moderate quantity of grain it furnished. American Dairyman. or.isDiNo cons and cob together. Tot a long time corn-cob meal was divided, because analysis did not show that it had much nutritive value. Yet the story of the woman who kept her cow mainly on corn cobs and refuse from tho table nnd kitchen showed that cobs had some value. The experience of fanners also confirmed the value of corn cobs when grouud with the grain. Corn meal alone is too condensed food. It vmcks in tho Btomach, and even mixed with cut Via? it ia tnn Iinnvtr fnrl ln. lm........ Grinding the cob with it enables the sa liva to mix through tho mass, and more of the nutritive value of tho grain is ex tracted. But it is important that the cob be grouud as fiuely as possible. If the cob is moist, as it is opt to be early in the winter, it will pay to mix equal parts of oats or barley with it before grinding. This enables the miller to grind even dump corn and cob much finer than would otherwise be possible. , Ungrouud pieces of cob are indigestible, and instead of making the meal more nu tritive they detract from it. Boston Cul tivator. CURING SnEEP-KIIXIXO DOGS. A live stock paper gives the following way to cure dogs of tho sheep-killing propensity: Young dogs can be made bo thoroughly afraid of sheep that they will not attack them in their mature years. Tie tbc dog to the head of a ram and let about eight feet of rope intervene, then placo them in a clear field. The repeated charges of the ram will so disgust the dog with tho sheep business that he Will ever after avoid the ovine race. An old dog who was caught in the act of killing all. inn ip.b nii.ml ..f .1.. 1 .l.l DU" I' " vu.vi iuc fiiujicuaiiy iu nils manner in my presence many years ago. As the ram continued to charge upon the dog tho latter worked closer and closer to the fence and when he had reached it the ram drew back, and as ho made the final charge the dog went over tho fence with a "ki yi" that made the onlookers laugh uproariously. The cauine could only touch his hind feet to the ground, and as tho ram would back up to make another charge this would draw the dog up a lit tle. His struggles to get released and the ram trying to get a fair clip at him ca- 1 a gee-sawing across the fence that m ,.i as a circus to witness. This - roic treatment, but all said "Good ..uuga lor Hun." Ha lived several years, but was not known to molest sheep after that. St. Louit RepuUia. A TJNiqUB HOT BED. The following suggestion we find in AmeruanUardtn: Take a hogshead and bore two or three boles in the bottom. Set it down its full depth in the grouud, on a slant, so that the southern side is six inches lower than tho northern. Take some- good fresh ' atable manure and thoroughly mix with it an equal quantity of leaf mold or good ion soil. Let (Ins lie in a heap untd fer mentation bus taken pluce, which will be a two or three days, when it should be timed and allowed to heat and fer snent two or three days longer. Then put it i. the hogshead and tread well down until the latter is about half full, allowing it to stand till heating takes place again. Fill in with six inches of equal parts of well rotted manure and garden mold well mixed. Cover with a sanli. H sash is not convenient, a large piece of coarse muslin may be laid over the head of the hogshead and fastened by means of a tightly fitting hoop. A. When the licut of soil is about eighty. five degrees sow the seed. Water with tepid water, and give air every pleasaut day by lifting the cover. On very cold frosty nights, or in snowy weather, cover with boards of matting. The seeds may i c.u.n IrHI. 0..,i .!, ..l..a .Ui 1 nv lit v.. ma, ou4 LUU fJIQUH VlllUUVU out as required. -Vet York Wor d. rorcoRN for cnop. The daik-colorej is not wanted by cousumera. All the bo-cullod "golden" varieties should bo tested as to popping qualities before they are planted; some of them have a thick, tough brau that is uudesiraLle. Common rice coin sells well aud is a good yielder. Popcorn makes a very teudur growth at first, and it is best to sued heavily aud thiu when tour or five inches high. It will prob ulily yield best iu drills, but ai I have never checke 1 auy I caunot speak from experience in comparative tests. Two ..r three stalks tun be left iu a hill, the 'lilla beiug flftetu to eighteen inches purt iu the row. As the growth is ruder, attention must be given to thiu .g iu time. 1 left a field of six acres u is considerably injured. Husking I .5ve, as it cost si or seven. CfcULs per bushel of forty pounds two level half -bushels. Unless the seed is excep tionally pure, some of the corn will be too large to be marketable. Borne seeds men cull out the best of a lot and sell it for pure seed, and it appears so; but a crop from it will have mixed ears. I have lost as much as flftoen bushels out of 100 from this cause. Care must be taken to cure the corn well. The silks and ribbon should be taken off, and the corn be cribbed for a year. Consumers do not want it until one year old, as it will not pop woll before. From fifty to sixty bushels of forty pounds can be raised per acre, and the average price is nearly three cents per pound, although one year ago I sold 450 bushels at two to two and one-half cents, owing to over production. It is absolutely necessary to exclude all mice from it. Any taint or discoloring is ruinous. When every thing works right, popcorn is. a paying crop, but it requires a good, fine soil, pure seed, a good crib, and ability on the part of the grower to wait a year or two for returns. liural Xieu Yorker. FARM ASD GARDEN NOTES. A wet bath to ducklings is geucrally fatal. Oil meal and bran makes a go 3d feed for growing pigs. If you have the means of cooking food for the hogs, try it. The parent colony is the colony from which a swarm has issued. Keep the stables clean and let tho horses and cows have a good bed. Every apiarist should aim to keep hit place, his extrcator and receptacles clean. Musty, dirty hay is the cause of heaves. It docs not pay to feed such hay and de stroy the usefulness of a good horse. Manure in the barnvard is as much dead capital as is money lying in a safe. set it to earning something as soon at possi blc. Horses will stand a great deal of cold, nevertheless au open field with a barbed wire fence for a shelter is not the best placo for a horse in cold weather. Contrary to common belief a Jersey will mako excellent light beeves. The meat is tender, juicy and well flavored, and the Jersey steers make good light working oxen. A littlo oil meal given occasionally with other food will prove beneficial tc fattening hogs in preventing constipa tion and maintaining the appetite. It must not, however, be fed to excess. Keep up an intimate acquaintance with the calves. Keep them clean and treat them kindly. Teach them to lead readily with a rope. Tne lesson now given will never be forgotten, and will prove very useful when the animals are matured. Thcro is no excuse for having a slovenly yard of fowls. If a man has no time to attend to his fowls better tell him to sell them at once. The best thoroughbreds soon become scrubs in tho hands of a slovenly noultryman. Hasty thinks three pounds or less of honey will make a pound of wax; Sim- mms less than 6 pounds; tradition, twenty pounds. "Don't we stick to that twenty from mere habit?" asks Dr. Miller in Oleaningt. "I do. Has there been a single experiment of late years to confirm it?" An ox at ten years of age may begin to use his teeth naturally, especially the front ones; or the covering membrane of the fangs may be diseased. A cure may possibly be procured by sponging tho gum with tincture of myrrh, giving the ox a quart of raw linseed oil, and feed ing soft food, as bran mash. Bloating in cattle indicates indiges tion. The treatment should be as fol lows: Give a pint of raw linseed oil and repeat in two days. Give bran mash or cut hay, wetted with warm water, add ing bran or cornmeal. The emaciation and rough coat will disappear as soon as the digestion is restored. Somo linseed steeped in hot wtter would be a useful addition to the feed. We notice reports of a number of milk dealers, or rather cieamerymcn, who are in hot water by paying more to farmers for their milk than it is worth. If the farmers will sell their milk or any pro duct to a man on time who offers to pay tham more than their product is worth, they must soqner or latter be losers by the operation, for no man that intends to pay for what he buys can afford to pay more for an article than he can sell it for with profit to himself and pay the producer for his product. Now examine your young trees care fully and see what insects have tucked themselves away for the winter. You will find various web-covered things glued to the branches, also nests of eggs here and there, and plant lice hid in cracks and broken places in the bark, on trunk and branches. Destroy now everything of the sort and thus save yourself a big job next summer. We have found more apple-tree borers on that part of our orchard near a wood land than elsewhere five times as many. Hence we infer that timber of the woods harbors these insects. Why Cannon Burst. The bursting of ordnance has been the special study of M. Vielle, the inventor of the smokeless powder, who has com municated a paper on the subject to the French Academic des Sciences. Can nons sometimes burst under a lower charge than the metal is calculated to bear. By means of a delicate process ol registration M. Vielle finds that the pies sures at the moment of burning the pow der do not shed themselves uniformly over the gun throughout its length, but that a wave of pressure starts at the seat of the powder and transmits itself. On its birth it it capable of exercising a dy namic action thrice that represented by the effort equally distributed over the gun. Nta York Witneu. A Desirable Fruit Can. The manufacture of automatic cans foi canning fruits is now a great industry iu California, the machine for this purpose beiug a master piece of ingenuity. Tho process is begun by a set of steam scis sors cutting a piece of tin 11x20 into four parts, which is passed to a feeder, then fed by 4 rosin flux of oil; then, by means of clamps on a revolving wheel, the cau is formed, carried through its various processes by means of Hteaui tramways to the fiuishiug touch, a hy draulic machine, that is, which dips it into water aud subjects it to a tett pressure, lastly disposing of it in crates, a perfect can for fruit, made without any inside solder aud free from acid, pt tivit Frtt Frn4, TEMPERANCE. COONTIKO TBI COST. Cmuohod on the diniry, old ston pier, Watrblne the water dark and awn. Bit poor, old, blrar-pyed Carl I Mora, Mut'iing ss ono in troubled alaop; "O artful (lend, with cursed bowl, You've robbed m of all that man counti dear; Drownpd all my hopen, my life, my soul Now mock in delight at my pain and fear. "Friends, home, happiness, heaven and restj ItelmtleMi you've taken. What hove 1 now?' The voice rose higher; the hands were pressed In awgiiish against the fovered brow; "For all of this, O nVnd aorurst, What have you given? You answer sweeps o'er my soul in burning thirst, An earnest, iu truth, of the drunkard's helL" Backward he sank to the pier again, Mut'ring, and gaa(l in the water deep; "Oh, for an end of the gnawing paiu, Oh, for the old-time restful sleep! Water, you ever have been a friend, Cover and hide my wretched face; Let me come to the bitter end. Cradled at last in thy cool embrace." The veil of t wilight sank over day. Along the headlands the beacons shone; Bnt never a cheering, hopeful ray Came to that soul as it watched alone. The night wind echoed the sailor's song, The waves moanod sadly against the pier; They had not meant to do a wrong In answering poor old Carl Le More. 8adly they sobbed along the shore. And laid their burden u;on the sands. Then rolled away, with nuilllni roar, To beat the "death march" iu other lands. And passers look on the wreck, shore driven. And looking, linger to count the cost Home, happiness, lite and hope in heaven. All staked with a demon, and lost all lost. -JcnnyL. 110, 111 Temperance Banntr. THE ONLY SAFE WAT. Archdeacon Farrnr, in one of his temper ance addresses, remarks: "Cruiksuauk, the artist, tillered $.W0 for proof of a violent crime committed by a total abstainer; and the money remains unclaimed to this day. I offer as much for proof of any one case either in the church or out of it where drunkenness has b?en cured without total abstinence. Under present circumstances, the only safe way of ch inking as an Irish man put it is to 'leave off before you begin.' " THE DRINK EVItly RUSSIA. In a private interview with Miss Willard, George Kennan says: "One of the worst fea tures of the Russian (ioveriiment is, that the tax on wliiky is the largest item of the trea snry. fst ill worse, the fait) of intoxicants is sanctioned by tho Russian pi i"sthood." Tue dedication of a church is an occasion for the whole l opulaiii.n to go on a spree, priests included. If, however, the men of a com mune set together nnd declare they will not lmva liquor sold, it is prohibited. In this way many villages have prohibition. There has been no Ronernl tsmperanee agitation, but the people are becoming e.lucated by seeiug the terrible ell'ects of drink, and there is now a class of total abstainers, numbering some lit teeu millions. These are the dissent ers iroin the State church, and are the best piop.e in Russia. THE INEXORABLE FACTS OF HEREDITY. "I have drank whisky every day for thirty five years," remarked a gentleman of sixty, rather proudly, "and I don't see but I have as good a constitution as the average man of my age; I never was drunk in my life." He was telling the truth, but to learn the whole truth you would have to study Ids children. Tue oldest, a young lady, had perfect health; the second, a youug man, was of a remark ably nervous aud excitable temperament, ai different from bis phlegmatic lather as pos sible; the third, a youug lady of seventeen, was epileptic and always had very poor health. Did the father's whisky-drinking have anything to do with these facte? The instance may be duplicated in almost every community. Think over the families of your acquaintance in which the fathor has long been a moderate drinker, anil observe the facts as to the health of the children. The superintendent of a hospital for children at Berne, Switzerland, has found by careful sbservation, that only forty-tive per cent, of ;hose whose parents used intoxicating liquors habitually had good constitutions, while sighty-two per cent, of the children of tem perate parents had sound bodies. Of the children of iuebriates only six per cent, were healthy. Can auy man "drink and take the Musequences," or must his children take the Sonsequenc.es? The Voice. WHO BUILD THE LIQUOR PALACES? In a paper presented to the Twentieth An nual Convention of the Catholic Total Absti nence Union of America, Mr. T.V. Powderly said: "Before the delegates to this convention separate to go to their homes, I would ask them to go on foot through the streets of fittsbur; aud study the temperance ques tion as they go. They will see handsome buildings devoted to the sale of liquor on the principal streets, and if they estimate the cost of one of these buildings they will learn that it runs away up into the thousands, tar above the reach or the workingman's income. On one of the streets ot I'ittsburg will be teen a saloon, the plate-glass front of which Is worth SoOOO, the bar and fixtures are worth atO.OOO.the paintings and other decora ations are valued at STOOD. All of this is teparate and apart from the building itself, and of the plot of ground on which it stands. Btand guard at the door for twenty-four hours, aud thousands of men will be seen passing in and out. Of the number, nine tenths will wear the garb of labor; they will be the workers in the mill and factories that make Pittsburg famous and foremost in the history of manufacture in the United Btates. Follow one of these men to his home and contrast ita appearance, condition and sur rouudings with the palace he stopped at on bis way home, aud not one lota of semblance will been seen. Inquire if be owns the house he lives in, and it is more than likely that the answer will be in the negative. Ask him why he caunot nllord to bve in a better or more comfortable home, and his reply will lie: "I cannot atford it." Take a walic through the entire city and It will be seen that the palaces in which liquor is sold are costly aud well furnished, while the homes of the toilers are cheap and poorly furnished. Go still further and it will bo discovered that the men who live in the illy-ventilated, poorly-furnished, stuffy, unhealthy tene uieuUor dwelling are the very men whose dimes and dollars have furnished the M'alaces of Hell' with plate-glass wiudows, expensive bars and fixtures, costly paintings aud neat surrouudiugs." IKMPKRANCB NXWg ASd' NOTES. The San Francisco Chronicle gives the wine product of California for leUU aa lb, 'JOU.OWJ gallons. The Sheriff of Glasgow, Scotland, says 30,000 people get drunk iu that city every Saturday night. The Chicago Jnter-Ocean estimates that a 6aloon keejier can live and even get rich if he has tweuty "regular customers." The KiiiL' of Siam has issued a proclama tion prohibiting the purchase, sle, or use of intoxicating liquors 111 his dominion. llerniautowu (Teun.) ladies,ata late village election, nominated a Prohibition ticket,aud prevailed on their husbands, brothers and sous to elect it. Recently a vessel Balled from a Belgium port tor West Africa, having on board four teen missiouaries, four huudred and sixty casks of gunpowder, eleven cases of gin aud ten thuusaud casks of ruiu. The Woman's Christian Temperance Union, of Washington, !. C, has been petitioned by a mother who wishes the uniou to use its influence to stop the sale of rock-and-rye drops to childreu. Along one side of the Victoria Road a Londou paper buys that every fifth house is a public house which, being interpreted, is a gron-siiop--aud, ou a lute Saturday even ing, tiom 8 o'clock to 11, the appalling num ber of tttU persons was counted entering one of them. Dr. Kate Bushnell left Chicago on her greut tourot the globe iu the interests of the Woman's t'liristiuu Teuiporance Union. She represents &O0.OU0 women, aud wherever she goes sue will "orguuiee, instruct aud eu courage" the branches of the Order. She lias traveled extensively and is a physician, aiaWi' and auikgf of aMwUKoijMli. . Chronic Rheumatism and wrtotu dtaordnr of tM ltrw and ttamtmh hera trtmbtorl roe for more tfiau tea yaara, durtof whMi time I bar uand ftlmua! rmrj medicine rmtr mndw1 without fliultng may retlaf whatever until I trtod Hood! SaranpartUa. ThU baa dona ma mora food ttiaa anything alaa that I mava avw taken, and 1 aka pleaanr In racomm finding It In the blgtiat ttrma. It haa been worth Ita weight tn gold to dm. rasnmcK MiiXKa. Limerick Centra, ra. Hood's Sarsaparilla Md by all dnunrtRt. $li U fnr as. Prepared onl by a L BOUO CO, Apothecarloa, LoweU, Maa. IOO Doses One Dollar 'Successfully Prosecutes Claims. Late Principal Kifcmlnnr V B. Pennton Murciaik. ilvrtiu Ual wr. 15iMM"hull"KClaiiuA, tt A Halloonlst's Fright. H. Ilcnncquin, of l'aris, France, who has had somo experience in aerial nava tion, arrived iu the city yesterday from tvin rrancisco on Ins way homo, and dining his stay iu Chicago called on Mr. Pennington, of nirship fame, at tho Graud Pacific Hotel. Mr. Ilcnncquin was in Fontenay at tho timo Tissindler and (.tower had their startling adventure in a balloon. The traveler is an. intimate friend of Qower, and tolls tho sto y of their fall of a milo as tho balloouist ro tated it to him. "They ascended from Tissindlcr's house in Paris, and floated oil toward Vinccnucs, and ns the wind was Bome what strong from the northeast, tho two men soon disappeared from tho view of Paris, having risen to a height of about 1500 feet. When they had reached Fontenay, they were fully 6000 feet above tho earth. They were sailing along smoothly, watching tlio scenes bo low, wheu suddenly they seemed to fall into a hole iu the atmosphere ami down they went at a terrific rate. Oowcr glanced at tho nccdlo of tho vetticlo scale. It was traveling with liglitling speed. A roar filled their enrs, and both men thought their timo hud come. Nothing hud happened to tho balloon. It was in perfect condition, but thcro seemed to be no air to hold it up. Tis sindler dcsiierately threw out sand-bajrs, They were falling so rapidly that tho bags wcro left far behind and disap peared above tlicm. lho carta seemed to be rushing nt them with tlio speed of a comet. I uero seemed to be no atmos phere left, and thef could scarcely breath. As a last resort Tissindler threw over tho anchor and the remaining ballast, nnd the big balloon, after a rush of a milo through the sky, regained its poise, and they were saved. TUo earth was but fifty feet below." "This goes to show," continued Mr. Ilcnncquin, "that too much preciution cannot be observed in carrying pleuty of Ual Inst. 1 uero are in the air occasional mreincuons unci wnen a balloon once gets iuto 0110 of them it drops like a piece of lead. Goner and Tissindler s li led into a veritable pit in tho uir and bad tucy not bud lots of ballast aboard they would have been dashed to pieces." .incago inlmne. The Inventor of the Lifeboat. It is not a century siuco tho lifeboat was invented by Lionel Lukin, a native of Hythe, one of the Ciuquo ports. As yet no memorial of him exists excepting a tombstone over his grave, but it is now proposed to place u memorial window in the chancel of tho Church ot Hythe, near wuicn lie lies buried. Chicago Aetct. A man who has prueticej medicine for 40 years ought to know suit from sugar; read Toi.kiio, O., .Inn. 1ft, IK87 Messrs. P. .1. Cheiifv a- i i:..,.ti.. ........ have been In thu general practice of medicine for most l years and would say that in all niy practice and experience have never seen a preparation that 1 could prescribe with oa much coiilidenee of Miccesn as 1 cau Hall's Ca tarrh Cure, luamiincturcd by you. Have pre Serilied It a ureal many times and Itsetfeoi it wonderful, and would say in conclusion that 1 have jet to Ilnd a cate of C atarrh that It would not cure, if they would luko ii accord ing todircctlun. Yours truly, L. L. tioHsrcn, M. D., T , , Offlce, 21-. Summit St. Wo will give $W0 for any ease of Catarrh that cannot he cured with Hall's Catarrh Cure. Taken iniernalty. K. J. i ii km: v At i ii,, l'rops., Toledo, O. .if t-old by liru nuistH. 7.V. TnEfletof grain-currying vessels winter ing at Lhicdgo, In., numbers h.'i. OklaboraaOulde Hook and Mapsentany when enreeuiptof juets. Tyler OoK.aua0ity, Ala. s. s. s. is the most popular remedy for boils, pimples, Because, while it cure, It acts gently, builds up and improves instead of substituting one disease for another, potash, and Books on Blood THE SWIFT H"4ELY'S CREAhVi BALWl-Cieaiise. v V ,1 1'UMi.uKes, Allays 1'iUii mid ullunuimtie Vv llm scores, Kep.t4rt' l a.,1, hiiiI hmell, nt OlveH 1. nit-rat ouixs Am'iu into th AattnU. I took Cold, I took Sick, COWS rksult: I take My Meals, I take My Rest, AND I AM VICORUIS ENOULill TO TAKE ANYTHING I CAN LAY MY IIANHS ON ; celling lit l", for Scott's Emulsion of Pure Cod Liver Oil and Hvpophosphitesof Lime and Soda"1 'ni.y cuKEi) my incip. lent Consumption hit built ME UP, AND IS NOW I'UI UNO FLESH ON MY BONES AT THE KATE Ol' A POUND A DAY. 1 1 A K K II jus r AS FASII.Y AS I HO MILK." SUCH TESTIMONY IS NoTIIINU NEW. SCOTT'S fcMtTSION IS DOING WONDtKS daily. Take so other. Ills I!nlqn Sign.' A striking signboard may sometimes bo the means of making its owner fortune There are plenty of places in New York where old umbrellas are mended, but tho west side mender who nut ui the siirn "Umbrella Hospital" struck an Idea that none of his rivets had thought of. Tcoplo laughed -nt it, took second glance at it, looked nt tho placo, and told their acquaintances about it, thus advertising tho umbrella hospital and sending customers to it. Unless tho signs fail, that signboard will yet enrich its Inventor. Detroit Fret I reu. A London (England) 'matrimonial agent boasts of hnving arranged 40,000 marriages between members of all classes of society. Dohhlns's Electric Soap l ehnxixr for yon to no. If vou 'iWMrf lf'rc(ii, than any oth-r son would be If oiivu to ou. f r by It ne doffics nr nurd. Clothe corn more tha i soa. Ask j our groc.r for hohMnw'. i'ak' Ttinnttnrp In Kuropcan Kui'r.)BUtiar fac tories, produciiw ui;ar fr..m beet. Tourist, Whether on pleaure bent or business, should take on every trip a bottle of Syrup of Figs, as It acts most pleaiautly and effectually on the kidneys, liver and bowels, preventing fevers head lehes and other forms of sickness. For sale In 6U0. and ft bottles by all lending drug gists. The Convenience of Solid Tralna. The Krle is the only railway rttnulng solid train over Its own tracks eel ween New ork and Clilcairo. Mo ehaiwe of mm for any clans of iasseni:er. Kates -lower than v a. auy other hrst-elaw llni Money invested incuoioe one uundrmt dot. Inr building lots in auburbsot Kansas City will nv from llvu hundred lo one thousan f per cent, the next (ew years under our plan. t-U cash and $" per mount without lutereit caa- trulsade-ur.-ioieiou rArnotiiars in tpimottkiuu. J. 11. llauorlei n Co.. Kama, City. Ma (Inaranteol lira yew eit par cent. Pint Mnrtiraveenn Kan City nro'jerty, lnterjt payahleeverysix months; principal and inter. FKtcollecled when duo aud remitted without expense to lender, t or sale by J. 11. liauerlelu at tih, tvansus ny, o iory .ivuuh Do Voa Kver Seoalat ' Anvporson e;i llnr us tliair ns m an 1 al dresswill receivo tutor. nation that will lo&l to a fortune, rlouj. uewu 0 Oj, Sjounty lluiidiug, Kansas City, Mo. FIT1 t nr I tras b? I tit. rfi.tM Oittlt KkhveRkstoiikii. No rttsaftorrtr.it day's ute. Marvelousouro. Treatise aa.l il trial Uuul free. Ur. Kline, ml Area St.. I'hllt.. t. LeeWa's Chlnoe Ilea laohe Cure. Harm Itts In effect, quick nnd positive in action, tent prepaid on receipt of fl per bottle. Adelerik Co.,"i"- Wynudot 10 St.. Kansas City.Md Timber. Mineral, tann bin Is aal llnoht In Missouri, Kausa., Texas and Arkansas bougUlaudohh Tl lerArCo.. Kansas City, Jl For a disordered liver try Heccham's I'llls. 5TJACOQS on GOVERNOR OF MARYLAND BATS) IT EXECUTIVE CHAMBER. IS 1nnaioHs, TI., Jan. 6, '90. " have often used ST, JACOBS Oil., and Ilnd it a good Liniment." ELIHU E. JACKSON, THE Gov. of Md. BEST. READY RELIEF. THE GREAT CONQUERS I OF PAIU ForSprnlnn, llmUm, llnrkache. Pain la lhC'livt or nlrif'n. Ilendauiit. Tuuthnrlie. or nuy Hitr exteruitl uam, a few appllt'a noun ruoomi on by uaau, act like uiatflu cuiihIuu itit uniii to liiHiitiitlv ttu.' Kurt ouurMiuiifMColriit. liruncuttlM. Pnea in until, juHitniHiaiiwu, Uttrumuilmii, NeuJ riiiuiH.. luiiibUtfo, .-Hjiuiletu mora tbaruuva au repeal eu uppiicaiiouH are ptn'Mnury. All Internal t'utu. Iltarrlitru. 4. olio. MinnniM, .Naimea, Kaliitinn rHell. Nertom ieft Me ruleMiH'H uru relieved InntMUtly. aud quickly cured by Inliiuj Inwardly '411 iu uu j ru pa iu hull u luiuulor oi water, ouc.u butilu. All UruuKlnt. AD WAY'S PILLS, An excellent and mild Cathartln. I'nrol Veffelalile. The Salent aud Item .Medicine luiuo worm ior iuo turo 01 ail vioruurj LIVER, STOMACH OR BOWELS. Taken according la direction thuy will restore liealia aud reuew vitality Price 25 of. a B ox. Bold by all DrqggiaU blotches, .etc. never fails to the system, y.A AY 10 increases the appetite, the general health, as is the case with mercury mixtures. and Skin diseases lreo. SPECIFIC CO., Atlanta, Ca. Nnnal IlealH A 'linen ior i uld in llt-ud. it Uiicklu Ahtu,rhrd. GRATEFUL COM FOR Tl NCI. BREAKFAST. "Py a thormiKb knowUdne ot the natural lawi wbU'ta K'Vt-ru the fiM'rali(ii8 of (liK'i)tl"U and tiutrl- ima, mm ny a direful uiilrut luu nf the flue ,iruii-r-ti.'g of w.-ll-Ht k., t.-.l cocoa, Mr. K-l ha provide our brcakfiLdt taliU-n with a delkaU-lv flavoured liev- truKU w hk'li may uv uu many heavy dix-tora' tiiUa. It In by tho judk-inuit um of mn h arlicle of dit that couhtitutlou may be terminally built up uutU Htnmtf ruiiuKu hi rrniei, every leuueucy W UiauaMJ. UUU- drtsla of BiihiUi malatllea are floating around us, ready U attuck wherever there 1 a weak ih'lnt. We may p-ae muny a fatal khaft by keeuliiK uur Selves well rortith-d w llli iuut Idooil and a properly nourished frituit." ("ii ii Sf reive Uttzttte. Hmle Hlmply Willi boiling water or milk. Sold tuny in uair itinu mid r.y (innvrt, laltelled thus: JA.tlLH iCl'l'h V t.i llomteopalhsi; CheiuUiU, ! IN U H, r.MH.AM. Best Truss Ever Used V ill hold th worm with rmiilurt. Woru wifAf and uuy. Positively cures rupturo. bent by ii i Ml I everywhere, beod for deitrripUv catalogue auu iebinuoniMi to 4..V. Ildiine irv.C' 7-11 lrtml n y. New urk 4 M lis. IX'NJ.Kt . , M. I)., ,-au ! coiikulttid court ill diiiliallv (iu nil li- -IliUle CoiiinJuiUla: electrl! HlveU When lieuellelul. llh W e-t M St., 1 to i t. M. I iiuoVU oiui-e, r.j i uuiojj u to V4 dully. EPPSS GOGOA ffai as T ioy No one doubts that Dr. bage s Catarrh Kcmcdy really cures Catarrh, whether the disease be recent or of long standing, because the makers of it clinch their faith in it with a $500 guarantee, which isnt a mere newspaper guar antee, but "on call" m a moment. That moment is when you prove that us makers cant cure vou. The reason this : Dr. Sage's for their faith 13 remedy has the rieht cure proved itself lor ninety-nine out ot one hundred cases of Catarrh in the Head, and the World's Dispensary Medical Associa tion can afford to take the risk of your being the one undredth. The only question is are you willing to make the test, if the makers are willing to take the risk? If so, the rest is easy. You pay your druggist 50 cents and the trial begins. If you're wanting the $500 you 11 get something better cure EvEBYf0THER Should Hare It In The Ilonae JJroppett on Sugar, Children l.ov lotekn Johnson's AxnDTv Likiwittt for Oronn, OtM, Rore Thrtwf, Ttintllltla, t'.-llo, i t-amp ami Taina I; UavM Auuuuer Cuniplalnta, Cut. Bm(W llk in agio. TlliSK OF li In une over 40 YKAHw In ono family. Ttr. I. S Jiitmnw A Pn - It 1m 1tv nsn tlnr I fir I! Ittmed of your jonxaoN' Anonyms I.'imhkxT; tor mom thaHfitrty frmml have used It In ntv fumllv. I rrfc.nl It aa oihi uf th tt mid Kuft'Kt family n-tmtllra that can he found, untvl internal ir external, in all rar. O. H. iMtALd, lcft-ii lend lipttt i'himh, Haniror, n. Every Sufferer 1Z WSSTS tmw Hraiiachf, Pltthprta.Couch, I'alarrh, Hronrhttla. Ant lima, C hnlfra Mirlnin, lilarrlura, LuiiM'iiesii.HoreiirMi In Bk1t or I.iml. Htllf Joint or Strain, will And in thla old Anoilynr nlinf nnd coily cur. l'anthlttt tn. Hold evrrvvih'nv VrU f i eta., by mail, 6 In-ttlf a, lUprea paid, t 1. H. JOHNSON A CO.. IkmToK, Maaa, THE NEW WEBSTER JUST PUBLISHED ENTIRELT NEW. WEBSTER'S INTERNATIONAL, DICTIONARY A GRAND INVESTMENT for tlio Kamlly, tlis Bohool, or Hie Liiimry. RpTlnInn hwrwn In prog reu for out Id Years. Moro tlmn IOO e.litorlRllalwrers mploye.l. 9:iili nii(lpxpondfti l-fore flrpt copy m prllilod. Crlllctl oiamiimtlon Inrltcd. l-thi Ilrt. Bold by all Hooksrllcn. llluitro(el pamphlctlree. G. A C. MKItlCIAM & TO., ruliliibera, tiprliiKllelil, Msi. V. M. A. Cantlnnl Thrre liars roccntly been lued rTeral rhnip reprints of tlio 1M7 edition of W'etKtcr'a Uiibrltlizwi DU-tlonary, an edition long lnea superannuated. Thei ln.ka are given various name. - WehMer'a I'naridired," ''Tlio Great Weliater' lm tionnry," " Wetaier'a Wk liietionary," 44 WebsUT's Kccyclopodio I'iL-tionur ry," etc., etc Many announcements ennoernlnR tl.em are Tery nilfileadiiir, as the Nxly of t-atrn, frrini A t. , is 44 years old, and printed from oheap latea made by photographing tho old pages. IN THE WOKLU IW Qml Uie Ueaula. doia rarrwOar, DIPPV lUCCC POSITlTBt.T HKMK.I'IF.D. DAUUl rVflLLO Orelr l ant Htrtrh-nr. AdopWil by t(ulfi.ti at llarvaid, AroUrrat. and ntlir Coltec?i, alao, bv pnfvaahmnl anl bualnaa mm avcijrv irharo. It utt fnr aale In your town nd 3 to B. J. UKKtCLY. 71a Waahlntrtoa Ktrn-l. Hoaton linUC TIIO Y. ok-ICBpin, Hualnivu Kor.ni, UUiflC fvamauHhip. ArlthuioUc, Short-hnn t, otx. 1 1 thoroughly UurHi by MAIL. Circulars fro. ttryvnt'a .'oiitn( - 7 am au, nuuatu, .-. i. "Ri'PTURE.,,f:,.rr, caaen curtxl without twin or inrnnvt-ulfiu-t?. (.onault- Intt hours tl to 1. Vha. HAKDIMI FIXI.KY, aJ Weat kl St., New York, bt ud for teHtlmnulala. UK A P "A Little That With K armor. " rine brntk: bnuod; pajx-r, SHK; cloth, 0o. A. WUhaina, Jttii Chain bur of Commerce, Chicago, 11L PATENTS P. A. I.KIOIANN, Woafatnictou, II. t!. MLMU FOB L Uit'VUAa, in:iTiavi;i:i;: ann d neaiitlfui Kllk A Kalln HntHllf ll tC IBVM &nfl Ml .11 tK.i beat, 45c. lJUiAuiK'shiLK U ILL, Lit lie Ferry N.J. IDlin LinTCI Hwth St. and bromlway. Select AnnU nUILLa family hotlj rooiru eu aulio Or UiKy $1 )nv day and upward. TlOnUI tldOortliMiOI-arafullr laM.e1barf 1001 laVVmHbrliii llll l.l fruai InlMl tart aa, IsVlUMi lSksfMtt (O., TALUS. WaaU. 4,Beer ou of the wQrld.lrha.n ou I- of the FAshion"- It is Ml forhouse-cIeinin- Itisok solid J J. -eVi I-Jk Cike of scourtngsopTry tr Cleanliness Is always fashlonaole and the use of or the neglect to use SAPOLIO marks a wide difference in the social scale. The best classes are always the most scrupulous In matters of cleanliness and the best classes use SAPOLIO. H.... fV.ii(7ri fHli'oi'nA. Curos where all else fails. taato. CliUdren take it r-wrsTi A. U a-. X 1 1 so m a- , o nnviii Bn r S iTl Iw M NEED Condanav! a bandy refereuue CuuUiluiaif iu a books to iafer to, he can learn nothing; but her, with this on volume be ran turn at ouos to the judex and Had the paRti, and tue whoU tltlag I dearly and uouoHelv explain U. bt paeit, iirofuaely tlluatrated, buut iKHttpaia oa rtojlpt of Buc. iu Kdiupi, poetai nolo or jtUvar. liuuH 1 UU. iloUE, IU LsWuarU nt., W.Y, MONEY IX CHICKEN 8. For i3c. In staiupe we aud a 100 k AUU UOOJk givuiii the eaperleuoe of a praLieai J'wullxy lUiar-uol au uutaU-ur, but a uiau woraiu for dollar and cxuiudvu iii -5 yvani. It Umchea bow to lHteui dOiti I'UTtt IJlba-lUi'M; s-'ss-s f.,r L-.. ai. for Fatu-uinKi which Kowli U bav for Urbciiiiv, HVdr. n u I sV L 1 uubtlU! for prouuble I'oulu-v rala- a booh ia BLisft.au "German Syrup" For Coughs & Colds. John F. Jones, Edom.Tcx. .writes' I Lave used German Syrup for the fast six years, for Sore Throat, Cough, Colds, Tains in the Chest and Lungs, and let me say to any one wanting such a medicine German Syrup is the best. B.W, Baldwin, Carnesville.Teun., writes : I have used your German Syrup in my family, and find it the best medicine I ever tried for coughs and colds. I recommend it to every one for these troubles. R. Schmalhausen, Druggist, of Charleston, 111., writes : After trying scores of prescriptions and prepara tions I had on my files and shelves, without relief for a very severe cold, which had settled on my lungs, I tried your German Syrup. It gave me immediate relief and a perma nent cure. G. G. GREEN, Sole Manufacturer, Wnodlmt y, New Jersey, U. 8. A. m r x vi DR. SCHENCK'S QtAWEED 0 TONIC la a Poa!Ure Care for DYSPEPSIA And all IXurderaof the nigest. lo Organ It ia IlkawlM corroborative, or strengthen ing Mediciue, and may be taken with great benefit in all rasMof lleblllty. For Sale of all Dmgglite. Trire, II . OU per bottle. Pr.ttchenekV New Hook on Lnngs l.tvernnd Stomach mailed free. dlra. Or. J. H.SCHENCK 4 SON, Philadelphia. VASELINE- FOR A ONK.UOLLAK Bl LL mnt iu by mart we will UUrer, frtw of ail uliaraa, to any proa I Uia UuiU-d duiot, au ot uu iuuowtaj ariiuiaa, or lully aokji One two-ouooe ttottle of Pur Vaaolloa. . , 10 Ot Oue iwo-ounce) tmiti of Vailua fotuad - 19 " Hue Jar of V a line tkld Croain, IS Oue Cuke of Vawllna Camplior lorn, W One (Jake of Viuw,no ap, unacental. 1J Ooauaaeof VaaeiiuaSoai, c-utaiiely Jaatad.iU Ou iWiMjunoa UU wf WutU Vawtma - Or for pott ttfimp (iv f7 article tilths prim named. On no oooounf be perttiaied to avMi-1 from your druggist any VaeeHi6 or prepiraiUt tKereft m aaiaw iabeiUd will our ivimm, (iMtiui you wt44 et tain, y rcti an imitation aVtMA aoa Mth or iw ntUaf ( Uaoebroitih Mm. o.. it Wtaia Mt., N. Y. "HE DID IT." H using the K-WRKN Remedies) I have curod all Uie oolds In mf (aniHv, nu.l lntlieklnllyformUea around, luiludlug babies tbreel eno.1 with croup.'1 K U. BOSiLie. VerKvnnt', Vt, K.W1U':! Oonrt Rnlsara eal Trot-bos euro hoursenesa lnaf-er niluutes, bal coiiijbs and oolda over uUrht. Balsani, Soo.i Trorbt 10 and iv. fly mall or drugKl.te. H. U. KlvKHOO..iaK.13UiBt.,ll.r. PROF. LOISETTE'3 NEW MEMORY BOOKS. Criticisms on two recent Memory Ryslems. Ready about April 1st. Kull l uliles of Contents forwarded only to tlMMt who send suuiited dlnvu-il envelope. Also rniKpecliis I'usl hKKKof Uie Uilsettlaa Art Ol Never Foi Ketllnx. Address 1'rof. LUISK'ITK, Sli Hfth Ae New York. Are You Nervous I BROMO-SELTZER 1H A GUARANTEED CURE i a I.v nmll nmsS VIOc. at all EBSSCbH I3U5 CO, Onigglste I lULiiMou, Ha. . !' . T?wnmTTinnlnl hv PhvsiciaUH. Pleasant and Bjirticublo to tho wmiout oujortion. uy urugitism M V ri T. . S I rl ,-si Eucyclapedla mt I'utvaraul Knawlrdr; up upoa uearly uverr aublaot thai an ba (uuukuuu. ooadouiMMl form what uau utbarwlaa ba lttaxuati unly PAaHMmteyaamej j '3fl 3 leVi, . rr,a ltr.m i f roia a great many lr(e EuuycluiKHliaa, DIctlouarlM, Au. Iu reaalu niiarly auy book or pair there ao frequout riWHaoi to a Chouaanil aud one matteni wbU-b th ifeaer.U r ader would like to underHtand a ItlllA tinr at.lt Mir. ami isvhl.-ti nnUti hsk h u lua- lit.r.trw (if CttMtlV IjX33STX3 YOU11 at u rrt4tt iianai uii'iiuKsvbv puUiaUtxl, at Uim reiaiiu kubly low prloe of oulj 91. eti, ijjal-aiJ lun Hook nun lalua it fluuly pnuloJ trt uf vlar tjlte uit loetluut pi.MJf i in I ia ud auiuvly yoi rtn'Bl.ij Ltnuu 1 ui clulti. llefivaa llrflLfcU Vtal I- Willi IHtJ inuuwi qUlVeUeUU aUl IJOjUUlil'leVtluU. VU (iuriua-i. wunlawittt hugluii t-iliiitlon It ia tn atualile to Uarmaju who us u--i IharuiiafLl tau.iluu- wiUi Kua-klah. ur ti iuianceviig wbe vklab to laaiu Uarutatt a