The Forest Republican. (Tionesta, Pa.) 1869-1952, May 06, 1891, Image 5

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    T
The nihln Wall raanlnta."
"Anrl lieltoM If the jlBRiKb in the walls
tif the house with hollow iitreak, fr.reenl.ri
orrediliali, then lite priest shall (to out of the
hotme to the door of the house ancl shut tip
the house seven tiny. Ami he shall
cause the housn to le ecrnpid within rounil
almut, end they shall pour out the dust that
they wraneott' without the city into an un
clean place."
Thin matter of looking to the sanitary na
ture of wall coatings seams to bt considered
of much Importance of late. A supplement
to the Michigan State Board of Health con
demns wall paper and kalsomine for walls,
and recommends Alabnstine as being sani
tary, pure, porous, ermancnt, economical
and beautiful.
To each of the first flvo persons In every
city ami town, who write tho Alabastine
Company of Grand Rapids Michigan, giv
ing the chapter containing the above pass
ago of scripture, will be sent an order on the
Alnbnstine dealer in the town for a package
of Alnbatino, enough to covor fifty square
yards of wall two coats, tinted or white.
To test a wa!l coating, take a small quan
tity of it, mix in equal quantity of boiling
water, and it it docs not set, when left in
the dish over night, and finally form a stone
like cement, without shrinking, it is a kalso
snine, and dependant upon glue to hold it to
the wnll, the feature so strongly objected to
by sanitarians.
Continuing this sanitary wall-coating re
form the 7Wbiine ofllces have leen nicely
decorated with Alnba-stine. The elTect is
pleasing, and the rooms are very sweet and
clean. Detroit Tribune.
Strange Story of a Dion in.
It was some time in the spring of I860
that Jcthro J;ickson went to Kcsara to
look for the grave of his son, who was
killed in buttle. Like ninuy others, he
wished to find the roinnin, and to take
them to Gritlin and inter them in the
family burying ground.
The comrades who laid young Jackson
to rest (avo tlm father a description of
the spot where they had buried him, tell
ing him about tho rude pine, collin made
from the boards taken from the bridge.
After many days of tireles search Mr.
Jackson failed to locate his son's grave,
and returned to his home iu Grillin. A
few nights after his return he dreamed
that his son came to him and pointed out
Uie spot where he was buried.
The dream was liken vision. lie saw
Ms sou standing beside his bed, and heard
him say:
'Father, I nm buried under a mottnd
which win thrown up after 1 was killed.
You will know tho mound when you see
it by the pokeberry bushes growing upon
it. Go n lid take me up and carry mo
Lome to mother."
00 strong an impression aid tins
dream make upon Mr. Jackson, th.tt he
returned nt once to llesaca, taking with
him one of the comrades w ho had buried
his son.
The niouud was found just as de
scribed in the dream, and the pokeberrics
were growiug uioii it. An excavation
wa made, and a few feet below the
earth the rough pine cotlin was found,
and in it were the remains of young
Jackson, lie was fully identified, not
only by the coffin and tho shoes, which
were a present from the father, but by the
name which was on the clothing. At
lanta Journal.
More light colored clothes will be worn
as the season advances for evening visit
ing. Lood Blood
Is absolutely
Essential to
Good Health
You may Lave
Both by taking
Hood's
Sarsaparilla
The best
Blood Purifier.
It possesses
Curative Power
Peculiar
To Itself
EvERYjVIoTHEB
Should Have ai In The IIonit
JJropped oh Sugar, Children Lore
to take Johxroh' Aodtk UviMrvT for Proun. CoMi,
bir Thrust , luii-iltttn. Colic, f rain in and I'alna. li
itovea ttuuuuvr CumlaiuUt, Cut, iiruntvt UV auagio.
TIflXK OF IT.
Ia uae o.er 40 EAIls Iu uue family.
Dr. I. 8. Johnson A Co. It im tiity year tunc I flrnt
learned of your Johnpuk'h Anuivk 1,immkm fur mart
than forty yraml have uwd it in my family. I rvh'tuil
It m one of the bout and Half nt family n-mrul that tail
b found, uwd litU'inal or f&wnuil, in all chw. U. 1L
JViAlXS, iJ.-ft-uu l'i,J liput ( Imnli, llaiitfiT, Me.
Every Sufferer SiriK
voti. Hot'ltu'he, Iiililhert,fmirh., trrli, lirutM-lillii.
A11ula. l'uol?r. Murlion, lu&rrl.if. I.im-nt, buif-ikr.
In IkHlv or I.nitU, Sntr Joint, or HUiuii., U1 llnd la
thl uld Anodyne rriicC ami KiH'eily cure. I'.iuiihlet
fr& '!! e.-i v hern. 1'ri.T n t., by mall. 6 Unltlra.
KxureM pud, . 1. s. JOHNbuN A Co.. bo.ru. Uam.
PADVAY'S
IU READY RELIEF.
hi HK CHICAl-KfiT AMI HK.ST MKIH
CINK l-'OK KAMI I. V INK IN XHK
WOItl.ll. m: Kit I'All.S
TO 11KL.1KVK
PAIN.
(Cures and I'leveum Colds, fnuuhs,
bore Throat, Inrlnuiinai ion, JOicu-
inutiMil, uralKiu, Headache,
Toot lia lie, Anlliluu, liili
'iilt lin-at hinif.
Ct'KKS THK WuKMT J'Al.Sbln fnuil one to twenty
AnluuL. Not ouc hour after rca.lliK thlH utlvt-rtlM-Jui
ul u .l unv our M'r'KKIt WITH 1'AIN.
IM K1ISAI.I.V. it liuir to u t. un.(ul In l.iilf a
iuinblt r ot M atcr will Iu a f.-w ii.luiitt'k cure t'rui.,
(win,, Kour htomu.'t, Nauvu, VdiiiIIIuk, llt-url-urii,
NtTV.uiMif, .Sl.t'l'lev.l.w.rt, hick llciulurlitf,
'Utrrhu-u. I ollr. r lululi-ucy ui.'l ull Internal imiIum.
flu.. IV r Hut. I.'. Mi lil l.y llruwiala.
ilADWAY'S
iiB PSLLS.
An Kxcell.-i.t mi'. MiM Cat hartir. 1'uteljr
tvtfetublo. Xlie mli-st uml bftt uietliriue ia
ftitf world .for the cure of ull disonitTb of tbe
Liver, Piioiiiufh or iiiutU.
Taken tvjxinhuK ( iliructtuu they will routore
fctaltti ami renew viiaiily.
Frttf.'M'. a btix. iv-M I'.v all ilniK'nUl. or mailed
y HiNAY V urrt-u hlieel, Sew Vura,
rt'i eitt of line.
,JROF. LOISETTE'S NEW
MEMOKY BOOKS)
nit i.u. mi i mii iH t-ut Meiiurv hvirtniM. Itctt lv
Hi
A ' ri-'i t'Ji i-Ki.fc.of Um LuUilHau 4i'
i'rf. h. d-il i lttti Av., New Wire.
X. 1 fill ter n.nott. mii.I ex(u:u-fcell Nnwry Stoek
ME FARM AND GARDEN.
n.owtso CKDKn rtr.
Rye is not of much benefit for plowing
tinder for manure, but it serves some
useful purpose. If the lnnd is poor
the rye may be turned under in Jlay
and buckwheat sown ; this may bo turned
under early in July and another crop
sown, clover bein sown with it and tho
buckwheat harvested. This will pay all
tho expenses and leavo the clover, which
may be left for hay and the aftermath
remain to be plowed under in the spring
for corn. JV York Timet.
IMPHOVINO mi FLOCK.
Ouc of the surest ways to "run out" a
flock of good sheep is to follow tho too
common custom of selling all the best
lambs. No matter how good the ewes
may be now, they will be post thoir prime
in a few years, and their value for breed
ing purposes, as well as for the produc
tion of wool, will be greatly decreased,
in order to maintain, and if possible im
prove, tho condition of a flock, a few
of the best lambs should bo raised each
year, and enough of tho older or poorer
sheep should be sold to keep tho flock
down to the desired number. American
Dairyman.
11 V TO SKT A tlEN.
Very few people know how to set n
hen properly. In tho first place, re
member that you can't make her sit if
she don't want to. Cut a barrel in two
iu the middle, then cut out one or two
staves, so that when it is stood on its
end there will bs plenty of room for the
hen to pass in and out. Place the bar
rel on tho ground with tho headed end
up, and then scoop out the earth to a
concave shiipo ond put in a very little
flue hay, and tho uest is ready for the
eggs. If it is not convenient to put tho
barrel on the ground, a grass sod placed
underneath the nest will answer. It is
best to place the hen on a few glass or
worthless eggs at first, as she may not
take kindly to the nest you have pro
pared for her. Place her on tho nest
after dark and she will get nccostomed
to it through the night. If she seems in
clined to sit after this she may be given
tho eggs which are intended to be
Matched. If the hen is allowed to leave
her nest every day a small coop may be
placed in front of the barrel, and then
she will be sure to return to uest. She
should always have near her a cup ot
water and plenty of food. If the above
directious are followed and the cegs are
well fertilized a good brood of chickens
may be expected. Agricultural Journal.
COWS TOM BUTTRR AND C1IEKSE.
The fact that cows differ as much in
individunl characteristics as auy other
animals goes to show, writes a Pennsyl
vania dairyman, the futility of tho nu
merous experiments made and making by
experiment stations, intended to prove
the iitncss or tins or that breed or this
or that kind of feeding for certain de
sired results. Thero nre well known
differences between breeds of cows, re
sulting from long habit and training, and
these very much affect their value for
certain uses, especially for the making of
cheese end butter. There is no doubt of
the greater value of the Jersey or
Guernsey for the butter dairy, of the
Ayrsmre or Dutch cow for mils or
cheese, and of the native for either as
she may be made available. Few dairy
men can afford to keep pure bred cows,
nor has experience proved it to be de
sirable. Th? large product of some
pure brcds if which history records less
ihan 100 out of more than 10,000, or
about one in 100) would be a most fal
lacious evidence in favor of furnishing
a dairy wijh such cons. But the nat
ural habit c.f tho Jersey and Guernsey to
give exceedingly rich milk gives them a
high valut for crossing on the native
stock which should be taken advantage
of by all butter or cheese makers. It is
too often supposed that rich milk makes
most cheese, and that of a higher value,
the choese innkcr will find most profit in
the best cows he can procure. Aeu
York Tribune.
SCIENCE IS AGBICCLTCnE.
In an address on the subject of agri
culture in public schools, J. E. Bryant,
of Ontario, Canada, has said some things
that will be of general interest elsewhere.
Thus a knowledge of the nature and
composition of tho soil is the foundation
on which all else is built, and the farmer
who has been taught to discern the
difference in soils scientifically, is the oue
best equipped for his business. Plants
should be studied with their various
methods of feeding aud sources of food.
How soils become exhausted, and how
this cxhaustiou may be made good again,
are vital questions, and bring up the
whole subject of measures, both natural
and artificial.
It is declared the sheerest nonsense to
say that a fanner can best obtain a suffi
cient knowledge of these matters from
practical experience. Agriculture re
mained at a standstill for a thousand
years until it began to be studied
scientifically. The whole doctrine of
scientific manuring is scarcely a half
century old yet, aud it is safe to say thut
the practice of agiiculture has been more
tbau revolutionized within that time.
Equally important with the treatment
of manures is the subject of tillage, which
naturally includes drainage. Although
the value of drainage in removing water
from wot and boggy lands is freely ad
mitted by most farmers, but few under
stand its value in improving the pro
ductiveness of all soils in almost all
situations independently of the removal
of the water. To be fully understood
this requires a scientific presentation of
the subject, which practice alone cannot
give. Aeie York world.
GAl.J.ED 8I10I!LDF.11.
Unless enro is taken in the spring in
beginning the spring work with the
teams thero is danger of getting the
shoulders uallcd or sore. Like many
other thiugs, this will be fouud easier to
prevent than to cure. When it can be
done it will be a good plan to be
working lightly at first and then g radii
ally increase as the teams become uccub
turned to it.
It is important that the collars an
luinies be well fitted. In very many cases
it is more because the collars aud hames
do not tit the shoulders properly than the
work that causes the sores. Every horse
that is to be worked during the sprin
should have at least a collar properly
fitted. It would be still better to have
u set of harness fitted to each horse, but
u collar thut is used on the one annual
ulontt will be a great improvement. Kec
tin: eollurs clean liy scraimiK or evei
washing, if necessary, to keep clean. I
commencing work it will also be tm item
to keep the shoulders cloan. It will be
a good plan to wash the shouldora regu
larly at noon and at night with cold salt
water; this aids materially to harden
them and at the same time reduces any
inclination to fever. The collars should
be pulled away from the shoulders when
the horses are standing at rest and should
bo entirely removed at noon and at night.
With good-fitting collars and hauiat
and caro at the start, the horses' shoul
ders can bo kept well. If theyget galled
they mutt be protected ; pads must bt
nrranged so as to tako tho pressure of!
tho sore place. Veterinary vasaline is
one of the best remedies to uso for galls,
washing the sore in tepid water and then
putting on a good application of the vasa
line. The animal should rest If passible,
as it requires more than ordinary care to
henl up a sore on tho shoulder while tho
animal is at work every day. St. Louit
Republic.
FARM ASD GARDEN NOTES.
Feed cottonseed meal cautiously.
He sure to get good seed to plant.
A promising new early grape is tht
Winchell.
Feeds have two values feeding and
fertilizing.
Hens iu their natural condition seek a
variety of footl to tupply their wants.
Ashes with bone meal or acid phos
phntes nre acccptnbld fertilizers foi
vines.
When the poultry have a free rang
they pick up a great variety of food that
they need.
The faults of registers are that they
register pedigteo only, and not tho merits
of the animal.
The man who makes good cheese for
home consumption will find a market for
it near home.
Don't let your hoes sleep oil a ferment
ing manure pile, unless you want them to
be sick and rheumatic.
No farmer can succeed unless he prop
erly cares for his stock. And we maj
add, he never ought to succeed.
Cows kept in the stablo in summei
need frequent washing. Nature washei
them when they are in the pasture.
Care must always bo taken in putting
any kind of oil or grease on young chick
ens; too much will often prove fatal.
T. T. Lyon reports tho yellow trans
parent apple as hardy, productive and
more free from sap than any other early
apple.
A good rule is to sow the smooth peas
for the earliest crops, as these are hardy,
and reserve the wrinklod kinds for latct
plantings.
At a meeting of tho Massachusettt
Horticultural Society was urged the ad
vantages of instruction in horticulture in
public schools.
Tame hens sit better and will fatten
better und easier than when they ar
frightened every time something ap
proaches them.
One advantage with ducks is that the)
grow rapidly and can be turned intc
money in a short time in less time than
almost any other fowl.
The largest geese for market are se
cured by mating a Toulouse gander and
an Embden goose; with good feeding the
cross will grow to a large size.
Whenever it can be done, eggs from
late batched turkeys should never be
used for hatching; they ought to be se
lected from well-matured hens.
One-of the advantages with geeso it
that if they can be given a good pasture
range they will need little extra feeding,
at least during the growing season.
Droopiucss among the young chicken!
almost a sure iudication of lice. A
little grease or coal oil over the top of
their heads and under their wings will
usually remedy the trouble.
Whenever tho hens lay thin-shelled
eggs it is almost a sure indication that
they need lime. Generally fowls that .
uu at large do not need to be supplied,
but those that are confined must have a
egular supply.
For impoverished lawns in which the
grass shows thin aud poor, apply a good
top dressing of cotnpo9t If you have it;
if not, apply wood ashes and bone flour,
or any complete fertilizer, at the rate of
about 600 pounds per acre. '
The influence of the human voice on
all animals should ever be kapt in mind,
especially in managing horses. Not
loud and boisterous, but quiet, confident
and masterful. It should also be youi
rule invariably to speak to a horse before
approaching.
Cutting off and burning black-knot of
plum trees both spring aud fall, carrying
the knife below the affected surface, was
recommended at the recent meeting of
the Western New York Horticultural So
ciety, aud dressing the wound with lin
seed oil or kerosene was suggested as an
additional benefit.
Fowls require a great deal of water,
drinking only a small quantity at a time;
so it should be supplied abundantly, and
kept clean aud fresh. Fowls require,
and must have, carbonate and phosphate
of limo for their shells, and it must be
given them in unstinted quantities and
in the most convenient maimer for them
to pick aud swallow into the crops.
A Qiilck-WItted Barrister.
Mr. Digby Seymour, Queen's Counsel,
who was recently appointed to the County
Court Judgeship at .Newcastle-upon-
Tyne, England, was formerly a well-
known figure on the Northeastern Circuit,
and bis witty observations were always
wclcouio "in court. On one occasion,
however, he was completely silenced. It
was during the bearing of a case, and
Mr. Seymour's opponent (uu Irish barris
ter) was greatly aunoyed by being inter
rupted. At last be exclaimed:
':Now, Mr. aaymour, do be quiet."
"My name ia Seymour, not Saymour,"
was the reply.
"Very well,'' came the retort, quick as
lightning, "see more aud say less."
VhiUdcljihia Jlecord.
Most Startling Fact In Astronomy.
Professor Charles A. Young, the emi
nent Princeton astronomer, recently sat
chatting in the court of the Palace. One
of his listeners could not refrain from
asking him in an off-hand way:
"What is to you the moat wondeiful
and startling fact of astronomy!"
"The fact that your great Lick teles
scope reveals about 100,000,000 of Btars,
and tlutt every oue of them is a sun, the
oietically uud by analogy giving light
aud beat to his planets. You know tht
l.ick telescope reveals stars so small that
it would require 30,000 of them to be
visible to the naked eye." San ian
citcv Exiuniittr,
TEMPERANCE.
Mm. TOMMY TITTl.KMOVSE.
I.lttlc Ttmiiny Tiltlemouf
I.ivfs in a little limine.
Though in a hit house tmec livwl he.
But Hie Li lurow went for lxxr,
And i Ite'n living here,
W here fr ar all the comfort one can see.
Put the little house will oon
Find its wv to the mlnon.
As the tlevil and the keeper gleeful grin.
Then the keeix-i'll turn aliotit
And kirk jxHir Tommy out,
And the pool lion-, then, will have to take
him in.
J M. Scott, in Trmtiei anee Banner
Al.t OllOI.'S KKKKCT.
The first t fret of alcohol on the system Is
to aervlrratu the mi ion of the heart and
mis, the toineralure of the body ttbrmt l,1
deprees. It is this rlTVot which makes it
valtiaMe in riues of fainting or collapse. The
m-condnry I'lTtvt, however, is to lower the
temperature which sometime falls two or
three decrees Itelow the norntnl point of
liinety-rinht tlcRtees, and the warmth of (he
body' cannot l rrtored as quickly as it i
lost. For this reason drunkards are more
likely to niffci- from exposure to cold than
temperate people, and the stupor is apt tc
pasts into the sleep ot death.
FNOt.AXn'S nntNK-HII.L.
Tn a letter to the London Time Dr. Pawaon
Burns lias placed in array a few plain un
carnislietl tacts which constitute lii.loous
blot upon Kuglisu boasted progress anil en
lightenment. Last year, he states, the peo
ple in the TnittHl Kingdom sH'iit one hun
dred and thirty-Hint) million, sterling, or 8
l.ls. per head, on intoxicating liquors. This
is an increase of seven million over tho drink
bill of 1SNI. This vast sum equals one
twelfth of the estimated income of ail per
sons in the United Kingdom; it is eleven
times the capital of all the industrial ami
provident societies, andmost sadly iguitl
eant of all nearlv eisht times the expend!
ture of all tho Christian churclios tur all
,iurposes
DKRTROYINO THEIR STOMACHS.
A New York physician, whose name Is not
given, says, through the New York Attn, that
many nieu, who think they are too busy to
cat lunch at mid-day, and therefore resort to
alcoholic drinks as a substitute, are doing
the worst pttssihle for their stomachsj tliut
"Alcoholic stimulants are the worst thing in
the worltt fur an empty stomach, finally
causing catarrh of the stomach, interfering
with the secretions of the liver, and dtwttroy
ing the ability to assimilate food." Whin
men come to him in that condition he take
away the whisky or other alcoholics at
once, aud prescribes hot milk and viehy.
Where cold milk or solid food would lie re
jected by the enfeebled stomach, the hot
milk, with one-third vichy, will be retained,
and many under this treatment have beou
reclaimed.
TEMrERANCE TOWNS.
The multiplication of temperance towns,
made so by condition of their charters or
t heir deeds, is an encouraging factor in the
temperance problem. Much town are now
scattered lrom the Atlantic to tho l'acitic,
object lessons whose effectiveness is en
hanced iu most cases by financial success.
An old Iriend in California write enthusi
astically of the John Brown Colony, in
Fresno County, another of these enterprises.
It founders incorporated perpetual prohiui
t on of liquor manufacture or selling, of
gambling ileus or brothels in its deeds, do
nate site for all churches aud schools apply
ing for them, and provide for a public
library and pleasure grounds, all of which
they can well atford to do, haviug no saloon
to drain the pockets and lay heavy burden
of taxation for the support of its victims.
I.'nion Htynal.
CAUSE OR EFFECT?
The committee investigating the causes of
intemperance among the Belgian factory la
borers call attention to the suggestive fact
that strikes and periods of financial distress
have almost invariably resulted in a increase
of drunkenness. The alcohol habit appear
tc be both a cause and an effect ot nard
times, at all events it is unmistakably asso
ciated with a state of physical and aocial
degradation, while every step in the progress
of true culture is a step iu the direction of
temperance reform. Iu Continental Europe
Russia aud Eastern Germany not excepted
the educated classes have long ago re
nounced the alcohol worship of their fore
fathers, and progressive mechanic are so
often distinguished bv their sobriety as by
their intelligence, though in times of distres
the after-effects of ancestral habits or th
contagion of the tax-ial atmosphere may
tmpt tham to drown their cares iu the Leths
ol intoxication. i oice.
ETHER DRISKIKO IM 1REI.ANU.
Casual mention has been made for a long
time past in statistical and other works on
Ireland of the prevalence of the ether-tlrink- .
ing habit iu certain portions of Ulster, but.
recently a special article in the London'
Timet on the subject ha attaeted great at
tention. It seems that iu the counties of.
Tyrone, Derry, Armagh, Monnghau and Fer
managh, with a total population of SS0.U0O,
there are some 40,1)00 people who actually
drink 17.0U0 gallons of ' vite," an impure
form of ether, an abuse said to have origi
nated year ago when illict stills were finally
suppressed and Father Matltew's crusade
made whisky drinking disreputable.
The ravages of this habit are described as
comparable only with those of the use of
opium among the lower classes of Chinese.
Insanity is largely on the increase iu the dis
trict, aud the death rate among the children
of etheromaniucs is very heavy. In whole
communities like Draperstown lind Cooks
town practically every adult is a victim to
the habit. Tho th ug used is called methy
lated ether, being a compound of ether and
methylated spirits. Owing to the lastwhich
is admitted free of duty for use in the arts
and sciences, the compound is extremely
cheap, so that an impure ether mixture can
be made ten cents worm ol wmcu will niase
a mau wholly drunk.
A point about it is that recovery irom ine
inebriation is remarkably rapid, so that a
man at a fair can bo drunk ami sober half a
dozen times in a day. Druggists, publicans
aud traveling haw Lens all sell it. When Par
liament reoi-sembles urgent attention will be
called to the evil and two project will be
advanced as remedies one to rcimpose the
the tax on methylated spirits, the other to
compel by law a mixture of naptha with all
preparations of ether not absolutely devoted
to medicine or manufactures, a compound
which would produce nausea, vomiting aud
headache.
TEMPERANCE NEWS AND NOTES.
Down iu Maine they are proposing
to
render liuunr dealers and persons w ho drink
liquors ineligible for jury duty.
Dr. Anna Shaw is having an unusually
successful series of meetings iu Kentucky
uuder the ausoicesof the W C. T. 1 of that
rdtaU).
George Blaiklock, the London temperance
lecturer who is traveling iu this country,
says that his city coutaius tW.OOO paupers
and spends annually for drink about TO,-
uoo.ouo.
Mis Mary Fowler, Superintendent of
Loyal Temperance Legion work for Southern
California, has recently organised a society
among the luJiatl scholars ia the Govern
ment school at Koboba. Some of the boys
of the legion have alreuJy written temper
ance essays.
A luadina manufacturer iu Bessbrook, Ire
land, wisely refusw to concede the term
"The trade" to the liquor traffic of the North
of Ireland. "1'he traltic there," he says, "is
the 'liuon trade,' a pure, useful trade, which
is, in fact, the only kind of business that cau
be called a 'trade.' The reverse is the cas
with the manufacture, sale aud consumption
of strong dunk."
TUa King of Samoa Is determined that bis
subject shall be oler. The following order
it his owu proclamation, auy broach of which
is to be vtsiUxl by heavy penalties: "No
spirituous, vinous or teituented ii.iuors, or
intoxicating drinks whatever, shall be
sold, giveu or uttered to be bought or bar
tered by auy native Suuioau or Pacific
islander resident in Samoa."
A Spoon CoIWtlnr ManU.
And now the mania for keepsake
spoons has broken out in America. 01
lat years it has lieen the custom for
Americans traveling abroad to pick up a
spoon patterned so as to bo emblematic
of each city they visited a spoon with a
bear on it in Byrn, one with a liver (a
nonescript bird) in Liverpool, and o
on. This year New York silversmiths
have produced spoonsno remember this
city by, and and there are alrcrdy em
blematic spoons lor Balem, for Boston,
and for other cities. Am York Sun.
Kcflned Punishment.
In the valise of an English tourist to
Greenland was a big red apple, and tho
Custom Houoo men, having never seen
one before, and being unable to find any
ono who bad, took it for a bomb and
made the Englishman sit down and eat
it. Thev were ouito put out when bo
didn't explode and shatter things. liot
ton Gloln.
Pot S4 year DoWdns' Eleotrlo Koap has
been fmlt.MVd by unscrupulous aoap makers. 1
trhuf Hecanso It Is bent l aland ha an Im
mense sale. He sure and get lrfittn sno ut"
no other. Your grocer has it, or will get It-
The I.adlc Delighted.
The pleasant effoct and the perfect safety
with which ladle may use the liquid fruit
laxative. Syrup of Figs, under all conditions
make It their favorite remedy. It 1 pleasing
to the eye and to the taste, gentle, yot effec
tual In acting on the kldtteys.llver and bowels.
A King In Ike Family.
Dr. Honsie's Certain Croup Cure for colds,
coughs, croup ami pneumonia lia no rival.
Cures without nausea or auy disarrangement.
Bold by druggists or mulled on receipt of UlcU.
Addrww A. 1'. ll.ixle, ItulTulo, NY.
The Convenience el Molid Train.
The Erie is the only railway running solid
trains over Us own trucks between New i ork
and Chicago, nocuangooi remi.iriiiji
of paaaengcr. lute lower than via. any otlier
lirst-claas line.
UTS stopped free by Dn. Ki.iNa- IIiikat
Nkiivk Kkm-ohkh. No tltsafter llrst day's use.
Marvelous cures. Treatise aud trliU bulllo
free. Dr. Kline, Kit Arch St., l'lnln., 1'a.
Patent medicines differ--One
has reasonableness, an
other has not. One has repu
tation another has not. One
has confidence, born of suc
cess another has only
hopes."
Don't take it for granted
that all patent medicines are
alike. They are not.
Let the years of uninter
rupted success and the tens
of thousands of cured and
happy men and women, place
Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical
Discovery and Dr. Pierce's
Favorite Prescription
on the side of the comparison
they belong.
And there isn't a state or
territory, no nor hardly a
country in the world, whether
its people realize it or not,
but have men and women
in them that 're happier be
cause of their discovery and
their effects.
Think of this in health.
Think of it in sickness. And
then think whether you can
afford to make the trial if
the makers can afford to take
the risk to give your money
back as they do if they do
not benefit or cure you.
"German
Syrup
99
The majority of well-read phys
icians now believe that Consump
tion is a germ disease. In other
words, instead of being in the con
stitution itself it is caused by innu
merable small creatures living in the
lungs having no business there and
eating them away as caterpillars do
the leaves of trees.
A Germ The phlegm that is
coughed up is those
Disease. parts of the lungs
which have been
gnawed off and destroyed. These
little bacilli, as the germs are called,
are too small to be seen with the
naked eve. but they are very much
alive just the same, and enter the
bodv in our food, in the air we
breathe, and through the pores of
the skin. Thence tliey get into tne
blood and finally arrive at the lungs
where thev fasten and increase with
frightful rapidity. Then German
Svrup comes in, loosens them, kills
them, expells them, heals the placerl
they leave, ana so nounsn ana
soothe that, in a short time consump
tives become germ-proot and well.
TheCod
That Helps to Cure
Tho Cold.
The disagreeable
taste of the
COD LIVER OIL
is dissipated in
SCOTT'S
or Pure Cod Liver Oil with
HYPOPHOSPHITES.
OF LIMB -AND BODA.
Tl - n-..t ciilVikrinfT Crrtm
it ....w.. ...... ,
CONSUMPTION, i
HRO'l'IIITIsi, 'UI :ll, 'OIJI. Olt )
V AallNU lllftKAst;., may tan mo
remedy wllh as uiu-h utlsracllou as lio
s no i
thrr )
would take ntlltc. fnyniciaua aro prest'
luK It erery whera. It Is a perfertaiyli
and aouderlul ne.h prtMlurr,
Juke mo Other
STAMMERING.
'HK Ut'AHANTKKU.
Ki ll'l M. Lot I. ttl. Ilc.ltur.1
f,BT WELLl
I, s:i. H-tfunl Av ISreuklvu, N.
I1m Ilk II riper
FREE
DraftiCM Cma't V Cared
Py loral applli ations. they cannot reach tht
dlsewwd portion of th ear. There ( only on
way to t-tire deafnrwt, and that is by const II u
tloiml wtnrilli's. licHfness Is caused by an in.
flamed eonillllon of the mucous lining of th
KuslnchlRn Tube. When this tube seta In
flamed you liavea rumbling sound or Imper
fect hearing, and when it is entirely closed,
deafness I the result, and unless the Inflam
mation ran be taken out and this tulie re
stored to it normal condition, hearing will be
destroyed forever; nine cases out of ten ar
mused by catarrh, which Is nothing but an in
flamed eonillllon of the mucous surfaces.
We will give On Hundred Dollar for any
case of deafness (caused hv ratarrh) that we
rannot cure by taking llall' Catarrh Cure,
beud for ciacnlars, free.
r. j. cHKNiT A co. Toledo, U.
Sold by Druggists, osj.
CniOAOO ha 7UH0 mile of wire nlaced under
ground.
For a disordered liver try Peecham's Pills.
From Fatheto Son.
Scrofula is a blood poison which descends from parent to child.
It is a taint
which must be
eradicated from
the system be
fore a cure can
be made. Swift's
Specific, S. S.
S., drives out the
virus through
the pores of
the skin and
throat and noso,
was so sore that
food. When I begun
entirely welL"
thus relieves the
BOOUS ON II LOO D AND SKIN DISEASES FREE.
THE SWIFT SPECIFIC CO., Atlanta,
ELY'S CBernBAI.M-C1iw flFftwiro
P.. All
rH. HWHirrp ihsi
t.tves Kelief nt once
Ajwly into tht A'o$triU.
600. Druggist or by malL ELX I
PAINT.
REQUIRES ADDITION OF AN
:QUALPARTOFOtLv4 OR
AKI.NO COSTfe5ll pj j2
7348 PAPERS
Will UitD IN
Wit err we Imve ti Aueiil v nrrnu
with ny m'lltr lri hsiit. I,. V
Best Truss Ever Used.
v ill nuiM me wortx en
with ronittirt. Worn
n wM amt Uf.y. ritmltlvely
t'ur4 ruiur. hfiit by
mail et'rywlif re. Send
for litwripUTe catalogue
and U'Ktimmll lo
U.V. 1Iaim Mlir.C.
7(4 Itrnttriwnr,
New York t llf.
PriASCID HAYlMDl
CjtEW-DEmKTURE- BuPrALQ,h.Y.
PATENTS J
W. T. I lfrvernlrl.
anlittiif luii II. t'.
upnie UO0H ir'i,
An
f ! . I ' l ' 1 SI
ET DOWN WITH HIGH PRICES,
WHY not bur from
lUiHiHuiaia
srnct
LUBUR8 CHAIR
Combine a room-full
af I hair In on. Iiosult
Tin WOSOCSruL I
s -sAlt a l;fu-a- a. f 'v-
m&klng a luiiaa. Hrd.urC'oachr
Invalut appltane uf every
IIISASV OCtM.
Kanrr t bulra, Koraer, so.
W rluj at ono fur
Send iMmpl mat
THE LUBURC MANUFACTURING CO. PHILADELPHIA. PA.
ll.pt. A lua. No. 3J1. UiJ. Nuilh M k reel. ,
He h&d sma.ll skill o horse f-lesh
who boughra, goose l-oride on3ontbaJij2
A&TM- ordinary soops , ter
fitPU.
is SAPO LIO,
Try o.ca.ke ofihand be convmced.
af r I"" svi An Q o r 'ft accomPB satisfactory
Va O III iTI Orl OOuU results in scouring and cleaning,
and necessitates a great outlay of time and labor, which mora than
balances amy saving in cost. Practical people will find SATOLIO
the best and cheapest soap for house-cleaning and scourinfx.
I
ti f,k fnHr(nn.
Cures whore all else fails.
tante. Children take it
il Mil l all '
.
IIUU mor.
took, to rater to, ha oao leara nothian;
but here,
and aud th.
al uoatuali
,,.d ttud th. pa.. auA tu. Bul. tuliul U olaarl.
Ljuaia aa ruip w wa a wuitB,
1
M
m
StJacoLsOil
cures n
sKKiwe
and all AGHES
Promptly-
MTU 0-15
AFFLICTED FROM CHILDHOOD.
Mrs. N. Rltchey, of Mackey, Ind., says: "Justice com
pel me to say that 8. 8. S. has worked little short of
a miracle In my case, in curing me of aggravated Scrofu
la, which aOUctnd me from childhood. It attacked my
and threatened my lungs. My throat
I was compelled to subsist on liquid
8. 8. 8. I was in a wretched condi
tion but commenced to improve at onoe, and am now
blood of the poison.
Oa.
s m nuirii,
QRT0BIft$
Has onlv to be used to b appreciated.
It Is
warranted uirior to any other
article, or no pay.
In Pint Bottles), at 90 Cents.
FOB TII CUUK Ot
l.Kiilrnrss, Hpraln. titilU, Slipping MtlfJ.
u ..I Urol.... I'm.. Ilvr.llal
In, More Turol, folic, Nnll In th ' f
Fool, Wind (ialla. Iplliil. Sec.
All who own or employ horses are aasur4
that this Liniment will doall and more than Is
stated in curing the above-named complaints.
DUUINO roHTV YEARS IT HAS
Nrvrr Failed to (ilve Hntlalactl la
Y
SINGLE INSTANCE.
Sold by DruccifitH, KniMlcr and Storekeeper
"'ai Ti-l ..- IT. Utnm t.
OKI'OTi 40 Ml' Hit A V KT. ftEWVOH It
-VASELINE"
L. .
.VOIt A ONR-UOLLAK H 1 1, 1. ent nt of mail i
we will deliver, iru o. all cUiUi, 10 auj perwrni j
1UI1V !MiCK.tKll
One two-ounce oottla at Puro Vaolln, lOotl j
oue two-ounce bottle of Vaseline r'uium.o, 13
Olie Jar it Vuiwllnu CoKI Oreaiil, 13
Oue i I'll e of V uw I lue tjampiior loe, W
uu Cake of an hue ai, uiiswnto t, w -Ouel'attvoT
VastellueSou, cx-nilsUWly atd,J3
Oue iwuuuuce botue ol wuiie eguue
1.1 j '
rrprfn
Or for oatn7 itnun rtny arftrt' tit tk prfne
nuwuvf. On no aocouttf bt iters u llt 1 1 t from
ytmrdruQvist any Mtetrrriistsi ".,
urUfM totxiit l with our na nil, Mo itw you toUi or
tatlyrtonvan imKutoM lOitf't hat Httls or no oMt
( hcirbruuuh tilj. t'o 41 Slut rtt., N. V.
FRAZERax.HEI
HKMT IN THE WORLD
ir tKt tli Ucnulna.
UllbHOI
Bold Ererywher.
RAGGY KNEES
rOSITITBLT RkHBDIBD.
Orerly Hnt Htretehen
A.Iudu-4 by iuWnU at Marvaitl, Amherat aad otbel
Collr, alio, b erofcMloual tni butltvtaa mmn
wtaare. If Dot for
le in ur town fi4 I
B. 4. UKKKLY
7U Wuhinrtoa Htreei. Beatoe.
th I,arrst FurtarT r
CiuC jiwiim" or
OMIL Dealer' yrsHUi.
tr 1.000 Artlelea
RCFSICCSaTSRl
l Ulrwl to eonumrr, thereby
I 30 ta SO ver cent.
Our New
DtuDtatlc Ilrtilca
KMU'lIt.
FREE.
Ill ICC CSCSTt.
CsaamsTio
dtmvipUon
ClluKtitj.
menlUm ofU vMtl.
- Mt-
ItwnmtTiBndod bv Pliysiciana,
Pleasant and agreeable to the
witliout objecuon. ry urut-gisui.
.aw - -am .a
!
" 2tem .osH
.HJItlf H h.-bf.-.b
rsLoias stos. I
Hi
A Caaaaa Bncyelala a UnlTral ivaawiaaK
iuly r.rr.uo uikid aitly ery .ubot tat cut; h. ibotwbi.t
Conuoola la a oondeanxl turto whst cuu olhersrUb leiuued onlf
lruia a st.h aiaoy lar. aacydopwliM. DlollonsrlM, c. In fas llaa
aeulr aur boo or umlt Iber. ai rrequnt refi eaua. lo a UtouMoiO
aud oa aialtar whUJi the aarl I a.ler would IK. u uBd..;ld
about, and a-blou, uulen h. liu a uu library o! oo.U
wllh tal oa. volume he can tarn at oacm wj
aad axp alj "i,""! iiuara at" t.
" . ivv.iv-."--
J
to