rr- S TEMPERANCE. . THS TKMrKRANCK Rnl.nii:R. . ' T.lft up your banner, bor, llird on your nwont, 'Tin jtoort to lie ft soldier In the fray. I To lie a foe to wrone, Ami battle for the right With nil ourKtrongthand might, Hay by day. If we go Into ramp, boyi (Soldiers often do). Or turning in the city For a time, We'll never drink a drop Vt brandy, wine or gin, Becniiae it lends to tin And to crime. March, march nhernl, boys, Uever W afraid; 8how your toniperance colors In the strife. And when you first not out determine on this plan, To le a temperance man All Tour life. Mrs.M.A. Ajiftfrr.in rpmiifrniief Manner. A ORKAT RINOKH'S TESTIMOSV. Madauie Tatti, in making up a recipe for "How to become a great singe.-,'' throws in this wholesome ingredient: "Alcoholic stimulants of any kind tend to Irritate the throat, and should be entirely abstained from. Kven light wines are no exception to this ruin. Most peoplo are familiar with the hoarse voice of the hard drinker, and It , is often said of such an individual that he tins burned his throat with drink. Even a modern te use of alcohol may, therefore, ternl to make the voice husky." TOTAL ABPTIXENCK AND I.ONO MFB. Tbc report of the Register-General of Eng land, for 1SS5, contains the results of an of ficial inquiry concerning the death rata of all males between twenty-five and sixty-five years of age. The report place the average death rate of all males at 1(0. The Investi gation was made by occupations, and while the general average death rate was 1IXX clergymen were but Vif ; farmers, fiSl; but brewers were lHfil ; saloon keepers, beer deal ers, etc., 1521 ; hotel servants, bartenders, etc,, were aatf. The report says with much significance: "The mortality of men who are directly concerned iu the liquor trade is ap palling." Abstinence from alooholio bever ages means increased chances for prolonged lite TKMPKRANCI NEWS AND XOTES. The fifth district of Illinois has eleven new "VV. (.'. T. Unions, the harvesting of a paid organizer. Now North Carolina comes to tho foro with one of the beit scientillo temperance laws yet passed. A W. C. T. Union has been formed in Egypt at Cairo, with a membership of seven American missionaries. The Scottish Union of British Women's Temperance Association hns forty-four societies and a membership of about 7U0. The b?r crop of Illinois thrives under tlia high license reign. Internal revenin re- 1orts showing on annual increase of 10,00.) barrels. The Loyul Temperance I.'vion of North Attleboro Mass., has a niemhership of 4'U. Thirty-eight of thisnuintxT have been pres ent at every meeting during the past year. It isa significant fact the Y. IV. C. T. Uuions everywhere are occupie.l with physi cal culture. " The gil ls are not getting up muscle for nothing. Let all whom it may con cern take notice. Ohio W. C. T. U. this year has six hun dred local unions including ono hundre.l new ones, and ten thousand paying members. The convention which nut recently was one of the best ever held. Even the parrots have caught the tem perance fover. A polty in Atlanta, Ga., heard the crowds of children drillei in staging for the Atlanta national convention, and since then it sits aloft and sings: "Saloo.is, n loons, saloons must go !" The Sanitary Board of Vienna, Austria, has declared against the establishment of asylums for inebriates, and in favor of all drunkards being, as public dangers, sen tenced to periods of hard labor. The order of Rechabitos, a large tem perance society of England, rejoices in the returns given at its late aunutl conference, ehowiug an increasa of 10,010 members dur ing the year 1.J. This is all the more en couraging a it is a b3ii?!it club, as well as a total abstinence s ciety. THE ADVANTAGES OF TOTAL ABSTINENCE. For the last fifty years the great question that has occupie.l the minis of Curistian men, has been the liquor question. This is to be my subject this evening, not forgettiug, friends, however, that it has been a subject thnt has been thought upon and talked upon by the most prominent men of the day, but seemingly without avail, such a strong hold has it upon the nution. Nevertheless, the fight still goes on, and I hope some day that we shall see Uiupvraiice triumphant. There is not a drunkard iu the world who will not say, and say with a sigh, "I wish I never knew what drink was !" Now the great ques tion is, what is the best thing to do, under the present circumstances, if we .go back a number of years and look over the record of the penal institutions of this country or Eng land, we shall find that according to the sta tistics no less than eighty-nine per cent, of - the crimes that have been committed can ba traced to strong drink. Now, gen tlemen, 1 don't think the majority of people really understand this shocking state of things. Let me give you an example. There are, in round numbers, 700 men in this institution. Now, according to statistics, if teniicrance ruled the way, there would only be seventy-seven men here I is this not truly a condition of things that every man and muian should think deeply upon? Why do men drink 1 have heard that asked, but I never knew an habitual drinker who could give a sensible answer. A sister, mother, or perhaps a wife, will ask, "John, why do you drink so, and make snch a fool of yourself" The answer will be four times out of five, "I don't know;" and another will be, "Oh, be cause all the other follows drink, and they would think it queer if I didn't," or "driven to it by trouble of some description." The last answer, and that only, is what you may call au excuse, and that is nothing but weak ness, ami the man who tries to drown his sor rows and trouble in drink, might easily have been saved if he hid a friend to say a word of encouragement to htm. I am afraid we don't all of us know the value of an encouraging word. It is surpris ing how it will help a man when he is going down hill. 1 rememlier a young man who, when about to leave here, was asked by a friend, who, I am glad to say, is a member of this society, if he was going to drink when hegotout. "I guess so, said he; "I don't think 1 could resist it." Well," said his friend, "do you like it?" After thinking a moment, he said, "No." Then he asked if ho needed it physically, and if he was not better in health while here without itf lie then said, "Krank, I never thought of that before, I am goiug out to-morrow or next day. and I say now that I shall not touch a drop," and as far as I know he has kept his promise. Ho you see, geutlemeu, that a little argumeut and a few words of reason are not always lost. Ho it seems to me the great thing is, "to get at'' the young men and tell thein the curse that liquor nas brought upon men, and gee thein to seek the comiiany of teraporato men, and spend their leisure hours muslc--lly, or in the company of ladies, and I am sure if they do they will be better en tertained tliau iu a bar-room. P. H. Con t.ui a. Prepare For Spring Ily Building up Your System So as to Prevent That Tired Feeling Or Otlier Illness. Now Take food's v Sarsaparilla THE FA11X AND GARDEN. rnKPARlNG XRKKF SKINS. Make a paste with fresh lime in water, thicker than whitewash, and spread it over the flesh aide of the skin, and then fold it together so as to leave the wool out. In a day or two, or more, it will bo ready to pull; try it by examining. Bometimes fresh wood ashes ia added to the limn in making the paste, and some persons use wood-ashes wholly. This is the old method. Country Gentleman. SAT.TKfl RAT. The baling of hay does not add to its feeding value in any way, and would not pay for mere ease of storing it. But for transpoi tntion it is indinpcnsiblo. The best machines are those presses known as continuous that is, they take in hay at one end and turn out bales at the other without stopping. A press worked with two hcrscs and costing about $140 will turn oi t ten tons or 100 bales, in ten hour, with three men. No. 16 wire of soft inn, made specially for this purpose, is usee . The fastenings are hooks and eyes, ihich are purchased ready made. Xei York Timet. wnn T sell noosv Scl' your hogs when you can get the most noney for them at the least outlay. The i ns and downs of prices we cannot readily control, but by careful attention to fc ding and the use of the scales we can t ;11 closely whether we are making corn into pork at a profit or not. If not, there ought to be a change of ration or an immediate sale of marketable stock. It dues not pay to hold beyond the time of piofitable growth and fnttcuing. Most successful feeders believe it pays best ono year with another to sell tbc pork when the highes; point in gain has been reach, letting the question of probable higher prices alune. Corn used in keep ing over-fattened hogs will mnko twice as much pork if given to other animals. It is a losing game to hold for an In crease of price as a rule. Make all the pork you can out of your corn in just as little time as possible. Wettern SteinthirJ. CHAN01NQ EGOS. One of the. practices among farmers is changing eggs with each other in order to avoid in-breetlng. Iu the first place, the eggs themselves are a risk, as no one can tell what they may produce, perhaps no two chicks from them being alike and no breeding of value ia the stock. In the next place, the chnnging of eggs makes the flocks in a community oil of one blood, so that really nothing can be gained by the practice after it has been persisted in for n while. Get pure-bred males from sonic source, or eggs from somo breeder of pure breeds. If you must cross, do it correctly. Do not waste time iu the attempt to better your flock by changing eggs for some nonde script stock thnt has no merit nor pos sesses any advantage. To Improve a flock, one should know the kind of stock he is using, and what can be expected from it. The changing of eggs is a practice usually pursued by those who do not know the value of the breeds, and such persons should not be encouraged. farm and Firetide. IMPORTANCE OP C0IIS HUSKS. Doubtless to most farmers the husk on corn as well as the chaff of grain seems a useless nppeudage, though apparently un avoidable. But when all corn and other grain grew wild the husk was a very neces sary port of the plunt,to preserve the seed from vicissitudes of weather until the time came for it to grow acain. Corn iu the husk and on the stalk dries out be fore its vitality can be injured by severe freezing. The lightest frost nips the husk, which thereafter dries up and forms a dry covering over the graiu. It is for this reason, rather than from mere shiftlessuess and laziness, that many western farmers wuo grow Dent corn leave it until nearly spring before thvy busk it. If they threw bushels of wet ears iu a heap they would either rot down if the weather was warm or freeze so as to kill the germ during weather when the thermometer went down to zero. But the husk in cultivated corn each year grows of less importance as better means are devised for drying corn artificially. It is likely that improved corn may be bred with very few husks, making the work of clearing them off much less difficult. Baton Cultivator, EFFECT OF IRREGULAR SHEEP FEEDING. One of the defects of a large quantity of wool which finds its way to our mar kets is an uneveuness in the size and strength of its fibre. This greatly re duces the value of the wool for manufac turing purposes, and necessarily dimin ishes the price which it will command. The cause of this defect is usually to be found in irregular feeding, or ia uudue exposure of the animals, with consequent injury to their health. If the sheep are well fed part of the time and poorly fed at other periods, the fibre of their wool will certainly be uneven. Anything which injures th health or reduces the strength of the animal will have the same effect. Not a few farmers who have been obliged to sell their wool at low prices have blamed the purchasers for paying so little, but the latter have been merely acting for self-protection. The sheep from which the wool was taken had been badly kept, and the wool was of an inferior quality because of this want of skill in feeding and caring for the flock, No way has yet been discov ered by which sheep, or any other ani mals, wjiicn are neglected can be made to return as large a profit as those which are well fed and properly tended. American, Dairyman. COWS CLEAN BY COMPULSION To "board up mangers so hiL'h that stock cannot reach forward far enough to sou the platform on which they Btiyiu is well, but it does not always ef feet the purpose, writes 0. 8. Bliss. I have bail cows that no shortening of their stalls, before or behind, whether in stanchions or otherwise held, would re strain from not ouly soiling the platform, but themselves. One which was so val uable that I very much disliked to part with her tried my patience for a long while, and I adopted various expedients, only to be beaten every tiwe. She would arch her back and crowd her hind Icet almost to the fore ones, in spite of every thing in front of hei. I finally, as a last resort, with a view to turn her out if she failed, hung a frame down from the ceil lug over tier back. I he plunk acrobs her buck was six inches wide. This she contrived to get dowu by vigorous lift mi' and ku'iyiur herself from side to side. ihvu put up another, the cross piece of which wan made of gooittim ber, but five-eighths of an Inch Ihick where it came in contact'with herHiack about six or eight inches behind the shoulders. It was placed about anjinch. above her back when standing in her natural position, and was firmly' bracod in IU place. It accomplished, the pur pose most effectually. She was later on given much more freedom of action in her place, and from being always soiled on legs, flank and udder, bocntnetas neat and cleanly as could be desired. The ef fect was in no wise harmful. She was simply compelled either to abauslon the bad habit of doubling herself up or to bark away from under the sharp edge of timber and step down from the plat form. 'She tried both, and evcntunlly accepted the first, and has since been all right. It should be added thnt she is fastened in her stall beside . another cow on the opposito side by a strap around her neck with a running ring upon an upright stanchion at her; shoulder. AVia York Tribune. FARM AND GARDEN 'NOTES. Artiflcialstimulants are rarely heeded by fowls. Warm, dry quarters are essential1 to the laying hens. Tat is a better protection . for fowls against cold than pepper. Dry or whole grain should I never rbe fed exclusively to laying hens. The queen cells ara elongated and' are the ones in which queens are reared. Sunflowers aud sorghum can always be fed to advantage without ithreshing. Remember that the Lyringps will thrive and do well in nl most mnyrfsoil and situation. A tablespoon ful ot ginger in a quart of water is a good remedy 'for 'scouring in poultry. Siunll colonies of young becs winter better than largo oucs composed of old or worn-out bees. If you give the sheep a good warm bed these cold nights they will stop that noise and let you sleep. "Ripe" honey is honey which .has by evaporation become sutliciently'thick to be scaled in the cell. Ground or crushed bone is an.excellcnt egg-food for poultry. It may bo given ouco or twice a week. Sprinkling fine ashes or lime over the walls and roosts is one of the cheapest and best remedies for lice. When bringing tho horse in on a muddy day, always wash his heels out and thus prevent scratches. Soft soap rubbod on tho legs and al lowed to remain dn a short time is a good remedy foriscaly legs. If you can get manure for furnishing straw for bedding at the livery stable iu your town it may pay youo do it. Vigorous, thrifty fowlsthat are given a good variety of food will rarely need anything in the shape of cod diluents. If properly managed geese will lay about as many eggs as turkeys, while they will cost about one-half to raise. One of tho poorest places to fix the poultry house is along the , side of tho barn or sheds for any of tnofotuer stock. Some breeders claim that by feeding the hens liberally on cornet this season it will aid materially to make them broody. The feet of the sheep should be core fully looked after. If the toes are long cut them off. Do not wound(hc feet in so doing. Fowls that are healthy andithrifty are invariably early risen, and at this time should be fed as soon as they fly down from the roosts. If the fowls are healthy to begin with, and are well fod aud cared for, no arti ficial preparations arc necessary to main tain good health. The Polyantha roses, which bear their small double flowers in clusters, are what is known as perpetual bloomers, and are a good sort to have in one's garden. At a recent meeting at St. Catherine's, Canada, a vote was taken on the ques tion of outdoor versus indoor wintering of bees. The majority favored packing on summer stands. Seeds should always be planted in fresh, most soil. If the soil is dry, it draws the moisture from the seed, if it contains any, and the seed has to lie and await the necessary moisture before it can sprout. A calf cau bo prevented from having horns by an application of crude potash to the spot where the incipient horn can be felt. The cost is next to nothing. The plan of dehorning is gaining in favor and done in this way has much to commend it. Thomas O. Newman urges the import ance of making bee and honey exhibits at the agricultural fairs, and gives some very good reasons for so doing. Ther is no doubt about the attractiveness to tho average fair goer of bees in glassed hives and honey in glass craUis. A herd of eighteen cows in Vermont produced 1C2 pounds of butter per yea! for each cow. The amount is not a large one compared with the records of noted cows, but it is excellent for a herd, and shows what dairymen can do by usiug well-bred cows aud giving them propel care. A New Tork farmer raised an acre of sunflowers for seed, and'found that the seed was an excellent addition to grain for the use of hogs and poultry, a small mill being used to grind it for hogs, The stalks mado excellent kindling- wood aud the beads and seeds wen ground together. If you cannot grind or pulvarize the old bones you can reduce them by laying them iu wood ashes, and keeping the mass damp, not wet. A small quantity of urine, poured over the bones aud ashes occasionally, will hasten the decompose tion of the bones. If you canuot do this bury the bones uround the fruit treel and grapevines. The food that is purchased and brought on the farm is so uiuzh manure added to the land. Many furiuers experience but little gain in the sale of extra milk oi butter, but they become richer in the in creased fertility of the soil, due to th better quality of the manure applied, al though such results may not be apparent for several years. A wool grower advises sheep ownen to keep a well trained Scotch terrier in the sheep barn. lie will cleau up till , ruts and give notice of the approach ol prowling curs or thieving tramps. The sheep soon become fumiliur with hit presence, aud he umy ruu between thcii legs or over their bucks without exciting thtm in the slightest, J The Totr Milliner of rrl. The Amrrfran Jointer describes the story of a "dog modiste" In Taris: The sights were very amusing. The plnco was not so much of a store as an estab lishment, with halls nnd rooms richly furnished. Ladies tripped in and out all day long, most of the visitors having with them pugs or terriers. Tho pet do)js were scattered through the rooms, each Awaiting its turn. Many small mats and rugs wero around tho waxed floors, and every bit of carpeting of tho kind was occupied by somo pretty littlo creature. Theso dogs have various Ores c. Thorolio used in tho morniug is a garment of dark blue r'oMi. It is railed A pnlctot, and is lined with rod flannel. From a leather collar little bolls jiruilo as its wearer walks along. Sometimes a bunch of violets is fastened on the left shoulder of A dog. On very cold dnj-s the pet is clad in senlskin of tho sanio pattern, the collnr being in fur, mounted in silver. Chicago Jeraltl. Tho Telephone ns a Weather Prophet. The telephone is about to have a new application that of foretelling storms. A new discovery has been made as to one of the properties o( this means of trans initting sound. By placing two iron bar at seven or eight meters distance from each other, nnd then putting them iu communication on one side by a copper wiro covered with rubber, and on the nfhi-r sido with a tidi nlinne storm ran ! million can lie Inken out nnd this tube re otuer suio w itn a tuc pnone, a storm tan ,m.rt (o , or)lml coniu,on, hearing wilt be be predicted at least twelve hours ahead I di-stroved forever; nine eases out of ten are through a dead sound heard in the re ceiver. According ns the storm advances the sound resembles the beating of hailstones against the windows. Every flash of lightning, nnd, of course, every clap of thunder that accompanies the storm, produces a shock similar to that of the stroke of a stono cast between the diaphnvgm and the instrument. Chicago Herald. ' Etanescent Jewelry Fashions. Fashions iu jewelry and oruumcuts are constantly chauging,said A local jeweler. r or a while the demand for bangles was very small, but now theso trifles aro worn very freely on tho arms of girls of fashion. Fruity effects nro produced by combining various shades of silver., A broad dark silver band, simply chaocd, is placed next to n fair twisted silver wife. Next comes a Shakespearean bnnglo of antique silver, with a design representing the hend of the bard of Avou and a quotation from ono of his plays. Dickcus's bangles, a gold dollar memento, nnd several nondescript ban gles of varying shades of silver make up the kaleidoscope array on ono arm. Tho other arm bears a heavy oxydized ox chain, or, mayhap, an engagement bracelet. St. UniLi Star-Savings. Beet Pulp Is Wood Fodder. An important fuct in the beet sugar industry is that tho refuge pulp makes a valuable fodder for cuttle. The tops are also available for tho same use. This refuse is stored in mounds, and will re main in good coudition for six months. Wherever beet-sugar factories have been established there has been an immense improvement in the agriculture of tho surrounding country. It is fouud that although three tons of tho pulp aro eqiil in nutriment value only to one ton of the best hay; jet when fed in connec tion with coarse provender it possesses a vtiluo of its own in keeping animals in a sleek, growthy condition, and, strange to say, one not indicated by its chemical analysis. Chicago -AVtri. A Hindoo Obituary. In tho Bombay (India) Garette appears the paragraph announcing in all serious- uets the death of a prominent young merchant: "Alas! he is gone; gono fur from us to the future world, leaving his beloved rib and pet children to tho ten der mercies of friends to bemoan his 'oss. In the twinkling of nu eye death pounced upon him and ho was no more. His soul, severed from its clayey tegu ment, must have been borno away. lie was a loving husband, a kind father, nu uuiuble friend, and, in a word, ho .was fat, fair and forty.' " HOW TO is a question of vital importance, but it is equally important that you use some harmless remedy; many people completely wreck their health by taking mercury and potash mixtures, for pimples and blotches, or some othel trivial disease. S. S. S. is purely vegetable containing no mercury or poison of any kind. And is at the same time an infallible cure for skin diseases. Treatise on Blood and tSkin diseases free. THE SWIFT SPECIFIC CO.. Atlanta, 6a. ELY'S CREAM twwtorr m ttitt 4lv K cliff at uuvu Apply into ths toftrit. rugglaU or by null KLY ADWAY'S READY RELIEF. THE GREAT COitQUER!) l OF PAIN For lralaa,'Brale. Hackacue, l-ala la lbelbeat ur nldea, ileaUauhe, Toothache, or ar other external a.iu, m. few awiillcav. lion rubbed ou by baud, mot like iumhIo. causing tueeatu to luslitutly hiuu. for CoBireailoa, Cold, Mranchltla, Pne. ,1 moula, i uttituiuiatluaa, JtbeuumUaui. Neu. ra-ieiM, i.auiBN.a'O nuiatloa. luvro tblreutt and repeal ed ayyllceiloaa are Beoeeaurr. All loleraal fnlua, Ularrboea, olio, fenaana, Nauaoa, itin!liia Buelle, Nervoue Bean, Blueuleeaues ure relleYod luaiuully, bad Quickly cured by tuklns luwardly Ut la 00 droits Iu half a tumbler ol wular. joe buula. All wrussiaia. MD WAY'S PILLS. ad esrHlent and ml Id t'athnrtio Pare!? Vrs(ikbl. The Galeae aiul lieal Medtula In the wwrld Iwr luvlur ml all lilvwrUer) LIVER, STOMACH OR BOWELS. Tekea according I direction tker will reatoro beullh uudlrouow vliollir. Frio 28 on, a Bo. Sold by all Dra fglsti ! I Tratse of ITAckney ITe The Introduction of the hackne, of England into this country mark, important era in tho breeding of earring horses. Thero Is great need in thi country of a good, fine acting carringo horso and I think you will find him in the hnckney. Both the hackney and out trotting horse are founded on the me blood, thnt of the Arabian, In fnrt, our trotter came origlnnlly from a Norfolk hackney, old Hellfounder, who was very fast and of great bottom. A horse to trot must have a rench, nnd to have a reach his shoulders must lie well into his bnck, or In other words ho must have what tho Knglish call a "totiby appear ance Tho hnckney' undoubtedly has this, and having been bred bo long for ono purposo their every idea is bent to ward that one thing to trot. A"i York Telegram. "Penny wise anil pound foolish" am those who think it fNri"m to nw cheap Sfln nnd rosin sonpa, 1ntiiri. of the point old lohhln's J'lectrlc hoap; for pule by nil itrocfirs since l.nM. Try it onoe. lio sure, bur geuuln. OKKMANVis the classical land of sulcldos nnd Saxony ia Its most suicidal province. nenftieu fnn't be fare Ity local applications, mi they cannot reach the diseased portion of the r. There Is only one way to rare deafness, nnd that Is by constitu tional remedies. lcnfness Is caused by an In ntmd condition of the mucous lining of the Eustachian Tube. When this tntio gets In flamed you hnve a rmnhlinijr sound or imper fect henrlnK. nnd when It Is entirely closed. iieninessis ine result, and unless the iiinani censed by ralnrrh, which Is nothlnu but an In- named condition of the mucous surfaces. Wewlll give One Hundred Dollars forany case of deafness (caused Itv catarrh I that wo cannot cure by taking Hall's t'ntarrh Cure. Hend for circulars, free. F .1. Chunky Co., Toledo, O. Sold by druKiglsta, ( cents. IjOvnna of Spanish olives are distressed to hear the prediction of a scarcity of them. We taVe pleasure In callbiK the attention of our readers to the advertisement of the Chesc broiiKh Manufacturing ConiiMiny, which ni pears in another column. This conumny are the original discoverers and only manufactur ers of Vaseline, which Is known all over the world ne the lest emollient, nnd the most val uahlo family remedy In use. Thetr iroods are sold by druutfiKt throughout the country, but we wish to caution our rcadcrm, when baying, to accept only irissls In original packages, and lnlwled ChesehroiiKh Manufacturing Com- Iwny, as sometimes unscrupulous dealers try o substitute preimratlons which are of little value when compared with vaseline, aud some are Injurious and unsnfe to use. Hy sending the company a dollnr by mail. the sender will receive free iinite nn nssortment of these beautiful and valuable goods without any charge for delivery. Wo know whereof we write when wo say the "Vaseline" Soap is a revelat ion. I rag res. It Is very Important in this ago of vast ma terial progress that a remedy be pleasing to tho taste and to the eye, easily taken, accept able to the stomach nnd henlthy In its naturs nnd effects. Possessing these qunlltics, Hyrut of Figs is the one perfect laxative and most gvntle diuretic known. A (ilrl Worth Having. After hearing Mr. Orav's experience In thi plating business, 1 sent f to tho Lake Klectrio Co., Kuglewood, 111., for a plater, and cleared J-l In a week. Isn't this pretty gosi for a glrll There Is tableware and' Jewelry to plate al every house; 1 hen, why should any person be jioor or out of employment with such an op. portuulty at hand. A hi uscmntu. Cause no Xnnen Pr. lloxsle's Certain Croup Cure ts tinlver snlly conceded to lo the ouly sure and snfo remedy for croup sold. It siieedlly allays in flammation to throat or lungs. Hold by dnig- riMs, or nddreea A. V. lluxsie, buffalo, N. V. 'rice 60 cts, The Convenience olMolld Train. Tho Erie Is the only railway running solid trains over its own tracks between New York and Chicago. No chauge of cars for any rlitsa of passengers. Hutcb lower thuu via. any other n rat-class line. FITS stoptied free by Ph. K Line's Grkat NF.HVK KKKTOIIKH. 0 tit its after first dav's use. Man free. Marvelous curve. Treatise aud &2 trial buttle Dr. Klluo. Ktl Arch St., l'hlla., l'a, Deecham's Fills cure 81ck-Headache. (ure of Ttrpurirr . GET WELL Null rCATifVT: a and hiiiM, lor 1 ulil In lifMl. It U Utiickly AburbtL 1108., It Warren bL, H. T AGENTS are Coinlnir Monev ONE AGENT SOLO in FflTuurr. l.adir 220 IN 18 UATb IN 1 do ua Wfli aa fcUltloo uf tba IVrrlr. Allttiuf tlif M or ill. kibe lar flu) mar In colors. ArcurHte)iK aiiintt'tiwui.citit'.rMr.. tint liartia rotK.fl.etc. OniUN i if F.vrrvlMMjy wanUtt. fell on Ifht. AcenttClrnr 1 00 itr re. Kort-rnmuMrt.i Mist, auf Jul iiuf ii sua, n uuii tc 1141 p. P R O F. LO I S ETTE'SNE W MEMORY BOOKS. mtlciamton two rwvut Memory Kyiiomx. Rehty bout April Int. JruU Titbit of t'onUmu forwanltsj only to tlioae who wiitl hiuiiilxmJ dlrwu! tmvelope. ol ISevur ForuettliiHi. Atlrire i rof. Lolfatrni, u7 i-iftb At.( New York. FRAZERA?RI ttkT IN TUB WOHLI) W Ut lua Oenuiua. Hold Oarrwfiei. rnut HTI'KY, Uouk keaplnt, Buslnou rr,Qi, aiUfnCfeiimajUMhip, ArltaiuuUi HQurtrhau't, alj II Uurou-ltly u-uUt by MAIL C ircuUtni fro. Ilryaui'a ollege, 447 Main sc., UuiTalu, X. V. GET WELL kessIS! PATENTS---'- cue raid. ge boiik free. Hit II. If, le YflPnEJl StOOor l00tr.ally U, liWUMAlrl,, IVM AL1 V ttuM tit TmI r. TAIU1U UVfcalK.ST CO.. MlSL klN I A A 9 CO., lALOXU, WASH. MONEV IN OHICKKM,. I4 Fur t. lUp4; book, CApOflOUJ ft 'yem-M, Jl Utaohoa Luw to duJi fcu.d uur(lliMi WO fa (of utft Mtva for ttn-nHntf, Ac. ao, Addrnaa 'w iMiivi.iuni wuiuu (owiabo uua i-iii, uuuota, IX lou4 V, Y. 01 1. For mm Let's reason together. Here's a firm, one of the 'rgest the country over, the (vorld over ; it has grown, step by step, through the years to greatness and it sells patent medicines 1 ugh I That's enough I Wait a little This firm pays the news papers good fixncy (expen sive work, this advertising!) to tell the people that they . have faith in what thev sell, ' so pinch faith that if they can't benefit or cure they don t want your money. 1 heir guarantee 1 is not indefinite and relative, but definite and absolute if, the medicine doesn't help, ' your money is "on call." j Suppose every sick man ( ana every ieeDie woman inea these medicines and found I them worthless, who would be I the loser, you or they ? J The medicines are Doctor , Fiercc's "Golden Medical Dis covery," for blood diseases, and his " Favorite Prescrip tion," for woman's peculiar ills. If they help toward health, they cost $J..(X a bottle eacn I it they don t, they cost nothing VERYJOTHEB Should Have it In The flonae. lroppefi on Huyar, VhUdrvn hove totakiOToHsannl Akodtmb Ijxivkvt for OP- Oolrfa. Hiro Thnt, Timxtlllls, Collo, t raini-i ami Pain. Ha Uarea 8uuimr Coinplaliita, Cula, lirurwoa Ilka tuaio. r.vc of n la nae over 4(1 l.Alltf In oun femUr. IV 1. H. JoiirMo A t.-lt la atvhr rtam rtnea I rtrrt Irartwx) of ymir Jiihmn'i Anodyne LlMVKKTi fur mor$ than forty ymr-a 1 have u it in my fanillr. 1 reward It a oru of tin iNvtt and aafrat family rfinfsllf" Uiat ran br found, uatit (ntt-riml or fitrinal.'ln all cama, O. H. 1NUA1XS, la'n tnd Ha)Hirt rhiirrh. Han".-, Me. Every Sufferer i",? "'XT tntp H fad ache, IMnhthrrla.CouirhK. catarrh, Hronrhltl. AMhnva, I'hnlrra Murium, IXnrrlitrm, 1 ntHaa. Snrent-aa In Botly or Umda, hUff Jolnta or Ktialna, wiU find In thla old Anoityn rellf and apredy rurt. I'antphM frr. Hold PTrrrahar. )'rl i ., by mall. I Ironic, LiMI-rac taUil, $t 1. H. JOHNSON it l.. lioKToH, UiM, TEN POUNDS IX TWO WEEKS THINK OF IT! At a rieah Producer thero can k no fueition bat thnt SCOTT'S DLSIOU Of Pure Cod Lifer Oil and Hypophosphltes Of Lime and 8oda i without a rival. Many havo pained a ponnd a day by tho uie of it. It cure CONSUMPTION. SCROFULA. BRONCHITIS, C0U6HS AND COLDS, AND ALL FORMS OF WASTINO DIS- IIGCt AU I'll jrjutK? A ajrfv . NmiuM mam tl tlm n.unl.1 mm ! w. m poor imitation. V C 1 I LADIES! Wa will jimwU ron a field AVatrh. a 811 'c rcan. or your ohofr. from loootlitr ariu lin. Full fiHtrumoua and aatnplu worth on dollar wat you mm mui auunp u imy rviuru puaiatfv. 8. L. PAINE A CO., ft H'oari He II oat on, Mana. Tn aalTftraat IWrar a- rnrdod TiujKuktAJT a Truer toUiiDCabbafa KOW ld me to olfec a 1. a. aow Onion, tkt Umit r4lo tiJUt (a aVMaVtw. Tolnmadmltand aliow ltaca,kBliiHttm 1 will pay $100 for tha bnrt yield obtalo M from 1 onncr of perd whk'h I will mall fur 40 ta Cata logue fW. laaao F. TIHInahatt, ' La Pluma Pa Best Truss Ever Used.! i laaaaa-an W 111 hold th Moral cm v Hi hold th worat with comlart. Worn ntAI aiHt day. toalttvely ourea ruptura Kent by mall everywhere. Beod fur d eaor lpt I v catalog u and tvatuuonlal to IIoimi MfB.Ca, 144 Itroadwny. Now orlt tilTo BAGGY KNEES tonmVKL.T aU.MaiIKD, idopUd by aiuilcitta al Harvard. Amhwat m,tA no.. Collide, tlo. br proraaalonal anil butlnaat ran vrj Vhra. )f not for ial tn yur town id SO. to . J. OHHK.LV, 716 WaahUifto 8Uet. ftaatoa. UK A II "A Little Chat With Kariaera." Mne took; bo u lid; piai-rr, W-i t'loth, 5u. Geo. A, WUllaai lam C bauiU r of Coiuinerie, t'blt o, 111. IU kI V4'HMftIl,aVM,tUtM rt raaiittfuiHIlk A Halln (ror.; beat,4c LtMAKHt'ablLlt MllX LltU Ferry rBti riajiailla)MM enough tc ox-vet &0O Mq. In i. In n.Z PATENTS P. A. I.KHMANN, Waabtntf!, !),(!. baMD ron CiacDLaaa. --KSnge indeed lti&l"s- alike SAPOUO shoul I '-- - -l OaMeaaiaaaB;1' Tli i a I. a. iatW' nn&ke everybhind so bridhhfc "A needle clothes ohhersnd is trs no,KedTry ihirt yournextho.use-cle&n What folly it woulj be to cut grass with a pair of scissore! Yet p pi. do eiiually silly things every day. Modern progress has grown from the hooked sickle to the swinging scythe and thence to the lawn mower. So don't use scissors I But do tou use SAPOLIO ? If vou don't vou are as much behind the ape as it you cut grass with a dinner knife. Once there were no soaps. Then one soap served all purposes. Now the sensible folks use one soap in the toilet, another in the tub, one soap in the stables, and SAl'OLIO for all scouring and bouse-cleaning. 4r Rest Couih Medicine, Cures" whcre'ttll elo fails. taste. Children take it vitnout objection, iiy uruRgibts, Itooka to ifer to, be cau lara uotb nm but here, auid nnd lb p4t,e, and to wnolvtoiutf t u'arly land &a( Pip'd ou roitt of aou. tn auunp, poaiai avte "German Syrup" J. C. Davis, Rector of St JatneaP Episcopal Church, Eufnula, Alt.i " My son has been badly afflicted with a fearful and threatening cough for several months, and after trying several prescriptions from physician! which failed to relieve him, he DM been perfectly restored by the use ol two bottles of Bo An Episcopal schee's German Syr up. I can re com pactor, mend it without hesitation." Chronic severe, deep-seated coughs like thil are as severe tests as a remedy can be subjected to. It is for these long standing cases that Boschee's Ger man Syrup is made a specialty. Many others afflicted as this lad was, will do welt to make a cote ol this. , J. V. Arnold, Montevideo, Minn., writes: I always use German Syrup for a Cold on the Luns. I hava never found an equal to it far less a superior. 9 G. G. GREEN, Sole Man'fr.Woodbury.NJ. THE Remington -:- Standard Typewriter rrrspnti the practical result achiered by the brat inventive aud mechanical iklli, aided by' capital and the experience gained during the Fifteen Year$ in which it ha been the Standard Writing Machine of the World Wyekoff, Stamans & Btnedlct, J7 Uroixl w-n y, New York. GRATEFUL COMFORTING. EPPSS GOGOA BREAKFAST. MPr a IhomriRh kmwltdgn of tha naturat law which vovern the nHrt.tlnna of deration d nutrV tloo, and bv a ran-ful atinlk-ntlon of tha Am prop Ufa of Wfll-acltHMmJ CiHMa, tr. Kp,a baa iruvld4 our ItrfAkfaat Iwblca with a drllcau-ly fluvourwd b" erMKt which may av ua ninny heavy doctors' bill. It In by the Judli-loua urn of niwb artklo of d lot tbal afimalliullou nmy lw Kriulually built up until tron eiiotiKb to rrtt evry tudi-ury to dlauaee. Hub dmla of pub tie nialkull art floatiuK around u nady to atiwlt whtrvvir there U a weak point. We may em-nix many fatal abaft by keeping out t'lvca well fortirw! with pure blotnl and a prupvrl nourished fmiic," tfii'i Srviv Untttt. Made elmply with boiling waU r or milk. 6oM only In half pound Una by tirorera, la tilled thua: lA.UKli h-VVH t- i'O.. lloin.np.tlik) ChmnlM -VASELIN FOR A ON K-DOLL. A R RILLmqIu br wa will deiirar, (re ut aii ohftrtfaa. to any paraoa ta Uie United Stai4 ail a ut fiMiuwloj arUiii or- Ittlijf j One two-ouao bottto of Par Vaaollnc 10 Una two-ouiica uotua or VaaelliM fuiiaada, Uu jar ot vur Uu Cold L reuk, On Cak of Vaaetin Camphor loa 10 Ca Cak of Vaaelln hoau, unaoented. 19 lnCakof VaUnoi, zqulalllyoatalatt 0 4UUi Op for portao atttmm say efaTia aeftot al ta prtat naawd. M o aeoonnt h paraava iad to aooap I from Iroartlntvfftaf aay Koaeiia or prwporofWa thor r mi. tninutttd wit our aaaM, tomnM yon wtU oe fawniVrvoMwan imttiMio which ha HiiU oraonuiiM Cbabroysb Ita. ., I4 Hiate Hi., No V. OJBURGACHAIR tiSVfF X?m iciail at iha low and p-p ffoooa u uo naid for on delivery. "I - . LbUUMU MFU. C9., tia .u bit. ou mmm Recommended bv Fhvsiciuiis. Pleasant and aerecab imo to me 3Vl L " " 0 In 1 1 in i i A Can dan Caeyoloaadia mf TnlToraal Knawledtr a Uaiitiy rafaruo upoa wuuiy wery atbjeot Lhut cua b iuouuiof. CouuduiaK lo aoouaeuaed form what ottu otherwlae b learuect only troin a itrvat wauy iarg Kuuyolopfdia, llctlou4u-.tia, ao. Iu retvilu nearly any book or pter tiire ai frequent rofrreuce to a thouaaiid aud on matter wkU-h the aeueral r a lur would lUe ai uudei atabd llllle mora abiut. Miid wttloli. urUii haa a Iuj-i 1 1 or air V of uoMtlf with thi urn xilum lie im.i turn i ouc to tbe JNnrk eonodelr iiUI d. 6JJ p, prt uaely tllutUated. ur allver. tfvua t kiouS, la Lour4 V 'v V i