pKIWS AND XOTES FOIi WOMEN. Srolvct Is much use J. 1 Looso-fitting gloves are thn latest. Turrjuolso jewelry continues fashion bls. , Brooklyn has a new colored worunn doctor. England has a Woman's Agricultural School. r Tho honeysuckle Is a popular design In silver. Victoria's crown jewels oro worth 4)15,000,000. . Electric pins havo becomo a fad of English women. . Chicago colored women havo formed a World's Fair Committee. f Tho daintiest brooches for summer dresses arc those which tako tho form of flowers. . Bracelets to tho number of three or four are worn, not as bauglos, but close to the wrist. : Green leather card cases and purses are fashionable, also dull red; any color, indeed, but blnck. Finger rings showing thrco rows of goms, five in each row, give, when cn tho finger, tho impression of thrco flve stone rings. A favorite bracelet with horsewomen consists of a curb-chain, ornamented with a pair of similes and . a diamond horseshoe. A tasto for the cjtquisito china and wide, shallow cups altectcd by the Em press Eugcuio has come in with tho Em pire gowns. An attempt is being made by Mme. Bclloc in London to establish a homo for the dying poor, who have now no shel ter save the workhouse. A collection of 7000 butterflies, oil bred from eggs, has been given to tho New York Museum of Natural History by Mrs. M. Schuyler Elliott. Rare specimens of tho orchid, faith fully represented in enamel and mount ed in gold or silver, are worn in tho hair or used to fasten the corsage. There arc in the United States, Canada, England and Scotland thirty-four women's missionary societies, and they have 1397 missionaries in tho field. The new gauze parasols destiucd for anything except to shado tho face havo gilt frames. Ono of green gauzo has a heavy cluster of roses drooping at ono side. , The Queen of Denmark Is an expert dressmaker and a good pastry cook. Her daughters also aro all clever needle women, and so is her sister, tho Czarina of Russia. Copper bronzo is to be tho fashionable shade of hair this season. What it will be next season cannot be satcly an nounced until tho now colors aro de cided upon. '. Mauvo and silver gray are being well worn for evcuing in place of tho tan shades so long popular. Two-button gloves are finished with short stiff gauntlets about two inches long. Tho colony f -."!;: by tho followers ci loittoim iiussia nave uecn reinrnronri by a number of ladies of high rank, who faithfully follow tho prescribed rules and live like tV. peasants around them. Tho popular red parasol, effective, dressj aud bright as it is, has a decided drawback. While it gives a most becom ing tint to tho checks, it odds tho same rosy tint to the nose, which is not at all desirable. It is reported to be a fancy of thi fashionable girl that after wearing her long suede gloves three or four times she takes them to a shoemaker and hoi made from them a pair of slippers for her chosen admirer. Hetrt-shaped brooches, tho Stuart heart pierced through with an arrow aud the Douglas heart, are the dearest love tokens in the world, and, if they are set in a frame of diamonds or snowy pearls, perhaps tho costliest. Virginia is to have a woman's college. A real estute syndicate ot Lynchburg has offered the Rundolpb-Mncou College twenty acres of land, with $40,000 cash and $00,000 in bonds, provided an en dowment fund of $100,000 is raised.. .. That ; Tired Feeling lprTlU with lti most enervating and discouraging fleet In iprlng and early lummer, when the toning ffeot ot the oold air la gone and the daja grow warmer. Hood'a llaraaparllla apetedlly oreroornea "that tlrod feeling," whether caused by change of climate, aeaaon or life, by overwork or Ulneaa, and Imparta that feeling of atrcngtn and aelf -confidence which la oomfortlug aud autltifying. It also curua ate headache, blMui-uia. Indigestion or dyvpopaia, i Hood's Sarsaparilla ftold by all ctruwUU. si; mx for 93. Prepared only 1JC. I. UOUU Cu ApuUiocorlua, Lowell, Man IOO Doses One Dollar "German Syrup" Martinsville, N.J., Methodist Par :Sonage. " My acquaintance with your remedy, Ltoschce's German Syrup, was made about fouiteen years ago, when I contracted a Cold which resulted iu a Hoarseness and a Cough which disabled me from filling my pulpit for a number of Sabbaths. Alter trying a Physician, without obtaining relief I catmot say now what remedy he prescribed I saw the advertisement of youi remedy and obtained a bottle. I received such quick and permanent help from it that whenever we have had Thr' t or Bronchial troubles eince in our family, Boschee's Ger man Syrup has been our favorite remedy and always with favorable results. I have never hesitated to report my experience of its use to others when I have found them troubled in like manner." Kkv. W. II. Haggarty, of the Newark New A Safe jersey, M.U. Comer- ce, Apnl 25, 90. Remedy. 8 5. GREEN, Sole Man'fWoodbury.N.J. THE FARM AND GARDEN. WOJIM8 IN roi'I.TT.V. Poultry of all kinds aro n.'Vcted with worms, not only in the intestines, but sometimes in the flesh. How tha worms originate, or how they find lodgment in the flesh, is not known, but they may come from substances eaten or frcm con tract with afflicted fowls, as the drop- fings may bo a source Tho best remedy s a tcaspoonful of spirits of turpentine in a quart of corn meal, tnado into dough and fed once a day tD twenty fowls. Timet-Democrat. EFFECT OF OVKHFERDINO A VOrNO CALF. Yhcn a young calf is gorged with milk indigestion follows and the stomach is clogged with a mass of compact curd. Tho consequence is that tho ani mal be comes dull, dribbles at tho mouth, and grinds its teeth. Tho treatment should bo to give a tcnsponnful of carbonato of soda or saleratus in a pint of water, which will desnlvc tho curd and nid its passage through tho intestines. In six hours after givo 0110 tablcspoonful of raw linseed or castor oil. Offer no food until the bowels are cleared out, and then givo only ono quart of warm, fresh milk at a meal every threo hours. When a calf is drinking milk it should be fed slowly and with intervals of rest, and cold milk should never be given, as this chills the stomach ami provokes indiges tion. American Dnirymtii. roPCLAMTY OK KNSir.AGE. It is unquestionably true Mint ensilage has greatly increased in popularity dur ing the past few years. A largo propor tion of farmers who have tested it, and who have reported the results of their experiments, liavo been well pleased with tho returns they have received. At the simo time the current does not all set one way. There is a minority who ore not entirely suited. Aud thoro nro many feeders who, whilo believing th:it it is profitab)o to use, have found that sonic of tho claims put forth by its more zealous advocates, were highly exaggerated. It is not so much better or cheaper than everj thing else, as it has been sometimes represented to be. Tho men who bclievo in feeding roots aio assuring their readers that tho dairyman can make as much money by raining roots as he can by growing ensilage. In a test in feeding dairy cows nt tho Ohio Experiment Sta tion mangels gavo a little better returns than ensilage. It is claimed that as great a weight of mangels per aero can be ob tained as of ensilage, and that, even when cusilnge is used, tho mangels will make a useful addition to the food supply. That mangles are excellent winter fcio.1 for cows cannot be denied. It is possible, however, that tho cost of growing them has been somewhat underestimated. American Dairyman. TO FEEU FOR ERGS. A correspondent of the Californxi CacJ.hr, in relation to feeding laying fowls, communicates tho following: There has been a very great complaint in some sections about the hens not lay ing as they should. I think every caso can bo accounted for. I was recently called in to sco a lady's flock of eighty-eight hens, that were looking, to say tho least, fine, yet she said she was not getting as many eggs from them as I was from a pen of eight that were always confined in a yard 8x20, with a tight house, and hers had free range. I purchased a dozen from her, and after killing a couple I found that her hens had not sufficient food to produce eggs. While this I believo to bo generally the cause of failure of eggs, yet it is not al ways; some feed too high, and not that food which will produce eggs. I have been for some time experimenting on what kinds of food will produce best re sults, and have found the following by far the best: Ilran or barley in the morn iu, scalded with milk; givo all they will eat up clenu. In this we havo that which is gencrnlly acknowledged to pro duce tho greatest per cent, of tho white of an egg and very little fat. At noon feed wheat or screenings. In this we have tho lime for shell and also a good per cent, of the yolk. Give all they want, and if you have an ash or manure pile mix a little in for them to scratch after. At night give a liberal feed of corn, acd do not be afraid of making too fat. I do believe, contrary to the opinions of some, that corn will produce eggs, and lots of them, especially in winter. Feed beef scraps every other day (cooked), and plenty of bjue meal, with a liberal supply of green food every day. " Hons fed in this manner must lay, if auy good ut all; if not, get rid of them. An old saying, and a true one, is that a hen properly fed must lay or get fat. Of course this will not apply through moult ing time. CARE OF DISOWNED LAMBS. It frequently happens in the spring that one or more lambs in tho flock arc orphaned from some cause qr other, and rather than permit theia to perish we have them brought to the house and raised by the hand. Sometimes a ewe refuses to own her lamb, auother will appear to thiuk all the world of her offspring but will be unable to furnish a drop of milk for its subsistence, whilo a third perhaps dies, leaving her little ono helpless and miserable. If the lamb is healthy when it is brought in it is al ways ravenously hungry, aud before we learned tho danger of overfeeding we lost one or two trying to satisfy theirappetite. The tmt meal of cow's milk given to a lamb should be not 111010 thau one-fourth of a gill, which quantity may be gradu ally incre;i8ed to half a pint given every two hours when the lamb is one week old. This is enough for a large healthy lamb; a small delicate one should have even less. When very young, lambs aro liable to to be troubled with scours, in which caso the milk should be boiled for ono or two meals. If the opposite tendency is ob served, a little white sugar or uiolii3ses put iu tho milk will generally prove a corrective; when it does not, however, a teaspoonful of castor oil should be given in thu milk as ofteu as considered neces sary. The milk must bo perfectly sweet, as fresh as possible, aud slightly warmed. After two weeks the interval between feeding should bo gradually lengthened, and the quantity of milk iticreascd, as a robust lunib at thu ago of two months can take with impunity one and a half pints three times a day, and when threo months old this quantity twice a day is HUtlieient. When the lamb is a few weeks old, if milk is sesree, half the quantity advised may b given, mixed with thu same amouut 'of well cooked yruul luudo of line corn rieul or out uuul ; and when this Is done, in order to keep tha lamb's digestion in good order, add to it food a teaspoonful of flaxseed jelly once daily. Tho jelly is made by boiling flaxseed in eight times its bulk of water for twenty minutes. If the weather is very cold when the lamb is brought in, we keep it for a few days in n box in tho back kitchen, where a big wood fire burns day and night. Here It lies and sleeps on tho clean straw covered with an old blanket, only awak ening at its regular feeding times, when it begins a piteous and plaintive bleat that stops only when its hunger Is ap peased. It is not long, though, bofore tho littlo fellow learns to jump out of his box and then ho goes frisking about, poking his inquisitivo littlo nose into everything, searching for something to eat. Then, lest ho runs into tho fire, I have to banish him to an outhouse, or on bright sunuy days to the garden where he soon learns to nlbbln the rose hushes and tender shrubs in the dainty manner peculiar to sheep. This is one trouble with pet lambs, they begin to eat en tirely too early, tilling their stomachs with food they cannot digest. To obviate this to some extent, wo continue to feed the lambs milk oftouer and for a longer period than would otherwise bo abso lutely necessary. They aro greedy little animals, and when allowed to como about the yard and kitchen rapidly acquire a tnsto for ull sorts of things. When I first began raising pet lambs, I used to feed them from the bottle, which was a great doal or trouble; now I use the bottle and rubber Only for a few days at first, and then I teach the huub to drink by pouring tho milk into a shallow pan and letting tho lamb take one finger in its mouth, slowly immers ing my hand in tho milk until it is able to draw a littlo into its mouth. At first the littlo fellow is sure that he gets tho milk from tho end of my linger, but he soon learns better, ond dispensing with my finger altogether, ho plunges his eager mouth down into the pan of milk, and after lunging about awhile, feeling for something to take hold of, and half strangling himself, ho settles down to business, aud tho milk disappears in a marvelously short space of time. I do not know that theie is any real profit in raising lambs by baud. Tho milk they consume, and tho time required for car ing for them nro doubtless worth more than the lambs themselves; still, rather thau see them die, we always take them for pets. They mako the most gentle nud most interesting pets in the world, and wo soon become so attache 1 to them that the work of attending to them be comes a pleasure. They ore grate fill too, aud repay our care with such quick interest, grow so fast and keep so healthy, that it seems but a littlo whilo that they need feeding so often. American Agri culturist. FARM AND HARDEN SOTK8. Fussy hens generally make mothers.- poor Keep the hen homo clean and well veutilatcd. Cheese boxes arc good for nests; they aro generally easy to get. When you begin shipping poultry pick out what you want to keep. Put coal oil on tho roosts, and air slacked liino about the building. Pullets that are hatched early and are kept growing will begin laying early. If a show pig is wanted study the in dividual ; if a bleeder, study the family. Fowls that fatten readily should havo plenty of exercise or they will get too fat. The young poultry should have a good rango as soon as their growth will per mit. Fowls that fatten easily should hnve plenty of exercise, unless being fed for market. So far ns possible keep the young fowls to themselves, nt least until they can be given free range. Whenever a fowl shows signs of a sickness separate it from the rest of the flock as soon as possible. Chicks do not require to be fed until they are twenty-four hours old. Why I Nature provides a supply. When you have thoroughly learned to manage a few fowls it will be time enough to manage a large number. ' Using the straw stack for bedding in the stables, will givo more comfort to the stock than using as an outside shelter. No matter what ails the fowl, a sick bird should at once be removed to separate quarters from the well ones. It is a precaution that always pays. Bo careful of tho eyes of animals. They are just as delicate as the eyes of human beings. Peoplo often work around stock very carelessly with forks. Tho swino breeder who feeds oil meal occasionally will not regret it. It is a tonic and a regulator of the bowels. Care should bo taken not to toed too much. On a farm good facilities, good man agement and good markets are more valuable than the breed of fowls. We must cater to tho wants and accommoda tions of tho business. Too much stimulating food causes over egg production. The result from such a course will be poor hutches, weak chicks, aud inferior stock. Feed breed ing fowls judiciously. By having all ages und all eijos to gether in one feeding place the profit in tho hogs will be largely reduced. Less feed will bo required and better lesults secured by dividing up into different lots. Ileus should bo graded according to si.o and general qualities. Yard Leg horns and lirahm&s in the same enclosure and the feed necessary to keep the Leg horns just right would over-fatten the Ikahuias. Keep a watch of the potatoes. You may find them sprouting, and if they are, of course the temperature of the cellar is too high, l'lnntiug sprouted potatoes i ono re:usou that some peoplo do not have better luck in potato-growing. Dr. C. I). Smead, at tho farm rs' In stitute replying to the question, "In a basement barn containing 2,800 square feet, how inauy sheep can be wintered!" said - "Calculate for merinoes four square feet for each sheep; for the coarse bleeds allow at least six feet, and not as many iu a pen as of duo wool led varieties. It is better to have tho stable divided into small peus thau to have one large pen. There is a lurge lake in Hutchinson County, South Dakota, well tilled with Corn -fed linn (bullheads). They got away with seven acre of coru which was left iu tho litld, shocked but not busked. TEMPERANCE th rmnmtARn's racoit wkak. A Ww bit raggls latltlie gangs wmilorln' thro' the streot, Waclln' mang the maw wi' liln wp.i hnre feet; Sniverin' in theoauld blast, grretiu' wi' the pain. Oh, wlia's the woe hit callantf He's the drunkard's raggit won, He kens dsn fnither hive, and he kens nae mitlier'e car, Tne sooth his wee hit sorrows and tne kaim his twt It hniri Tae kisa him when he iraukens, an' tae smooth his bed at e'en; Oh, wha's tha wee hit callantf He's the drunkard's ragit wean, Then surely we maun try an' turn that slnfu faither's hairt, An1 try an' get the mither tae act a mtther's party An' nink them leave tha drunkard's cap an' never taste again, But cherish wi' a parent' car their wm bit faggit wean, "iee. A HCI.NTIFIC WARNISO. The SHrntifla American says concerning the beer drinker 1 "Compared with inebriate who nn rlif ferent kinds of alcohol, ha is more incurable ami more generally diseased. It is our ob servation that beer-drinking in this country produce the very lowest kind of inebritv, closely allied to criminal insanity. The most dangerous claas of rufllans in our large oities are beer-drinkers," DARKKST LONDOXt London has ts&t miles ot streets and a population ot 5,M,00i n Aire than the whole of Mcotlnnd or of Ireland, It has only 4.W church buildings, It has n'mit SKK) people to the equal) mile; 14.(KX) paupers, one third of whom are children. London has over fW,000 registered habitual criminals. There are over 1 1,000 policemen, which cost the city over t7,lKi,(XK) a year, London has also 14,000 grog-shops. How much these cost nobody can figure up. Never will tbers beany way out of the "darkest1 London, of the l-ottomlertn miseries and degradation of any other city, so long as the grog-shop curse is toluratod. Advance. THlt B-tKR DUINKINd ICATIOXS. According to a recent article on beer and the beer trade in a German periodical, it ap pears that in 18SS-89 Uuruiany was the larg est beer producing country; that Great Uritnin and Ireland stood second, ami the United states third; in proportion to drink ing, Belgium, according to this authority, leads the other nationalities; tireat Britain and Ireland next; (Germany third ; Denmark fourth, and the United States fifth. But as the proportion of abstainers in the United States is much larger than in either of these countries, it seems probable that the per capita quantity of beer consumed by actual beer drinkers hero, is at present larger than in either country. There is urgent need of increased missionary labor on this side of the Atlantic, as well as the other, to pro mote the teaching and the practice of total abstinence from all intoxicant. Rational Advocate. THK ROOT or AtTu CRIMR. Mr. Justice Hawkins said in 1SS3, at the opening of the Durham Assizes, that he "had considerable experience in courts of law, nit I every day he lived the more firmly did he come to the conclusion that the root of all crime was drink . It affected people of all ages and both sexes the inidtUe-ne I, the young, tue lather, tlie son, tne husoan I, and the wife. It wa drink which was the in centive to crimes of dishonesty; a man stole in order that he might provide himself with the means of getting drink. It was drink which caused homes to be impoverished, and they could trace to it source the cause ot misery which was to be found iu many a cot tage home which had leen denuded of all the necessities of lite. Ho believed that nine tenths of the crimes of this couutry, and certainly of the county of Durham, were engendered withn public houses" And again, on March 13, eW, charging tho grand jury at Stafford, the same judgj remarked that he believed "that eighty per cent., of the punishable crime of this country was caused by drink at least eighty par cent, of it," HE KEPT Rig RESOLmOiT. Talking to a hundred or more men at St. Bartholomew's Mission, in Nuw York, Gen eral O. O. Howard related an incident in his own life, for the purpose, he said, of show ing wkit great results sometimes come from small efforts. At the battle of Fair Oaks, on June 1, lKti J, General Howard's right arm was shot olf . "As I was making my way to the hospital, he said, "weak from the loss of blood and from pain, I saw a young man in toxicated. He was so under the influence of whisky that he could hardly walk. As I came near him I stopped long enough to tell him it did not pay to driuk; it would ruin him and he had better stop before the habit had control of him. I paused on to the hos pital, had my arm amputated, aud was sent borne t recover. I saw nor heard nothing more of the drunken soldier until a short time ago, when a letter irom an ollicer in Washington told me hissubsequent history. Impressed by the fact that iu my wounded condition I had taken enough interest in him to stop and give him advice, he had then and there resolved to quit drinking. He kept his resolution, and wnen the war was over set tled down to a life ot steady, honest hard work. He gradually lose, and the letter from Washington told me he had just died, a J udge ou the Supreme bench in the Statu of New Hampshire, one of the foremost men iu that Commonwealth " A SUCCESSFUL, REFORMER. Tt Is not often a saloon-keeper becomes an efficient temperance reformer. But a few years ago in one of the thriving cities of Kansas there was such a reformer, at least he was successful in making oue of his cus tomers a temperate man. Several men were sunning themselves in front of the saloon. Among them was oue Jack Over, a man quite successful at his trade, but who depos ited most of his earnings in the rum-Beller's coffers, and Jack saw no more of his hard earned money. The saloon-keeper thought ttiat he would have a little fun. so he said, "Jack, did you know that I hail become an artist!"' "No. What have you been doing!9' "Come in and I will show you some of my painting " Jack rose slowly, and with rather indif ferent curiosity followed the self -styled art ist to a large mirror and pointed at the im age of his customer. "Tnere, do you see that? I painted that rose red." Quick as a flash Jack turned upon him with an oath, saying, "You'll not paint it any more." lie left the saloon a different man, and kept his word, aud enjoyed his own earn ings. The writer has on several occasions in the past few years visited Jack and his happy family in their pleasant home, and has seen the evidences of his joy aud pride and pros perity. He thinks that prohibition is the greatest blesaiug that ever came to the State. He is not at all in favor ot resubmission. A., in Christian at H'ork. TIMPERANCK KIWI ANO NOTES. Poregorio is a favorite intoxicant in the prohibition districts ot Maine. The first Convention of the World's Woman's Christian Temperance Uniou will be held in Tremont Temple, Boston, iu No vember, lS'Jl. it has been proved by statistics that a life insurance coiuuuy on the total abstinence basis gains thirty per cent, by reason of the suprior vitality of its policyholders. Iu Ireland the numlier of arms la for druukeuness steadily iucreases. in 1887 there were 7t),OUO arrests for thut cause; in lhb. the number reaches 87,000, and iu IHb'J climbs up ti ll-J.OOU. China now has a National W. C. T. U., with thn necessary equipment of general of ficers hfbien vice-presidents and nine su perintendents of deiuirtiiients. Of the unions organized by Mrs. Leavitt in her first tour ot the world, all but oue are flourishing. Mr. D. Lloyd George, M. P. for Carnarvon, In contrasting temperance seutiment iu the couutry forty or titty yeurs ago with the iireseut day, noted the fact that Charles Jickens has not a single teetotaller among his male characters, whereas it would be im possible for a Charles i'iekens of our days to Iguore them. There were lOU teetotallurs iu U10 House of Commons. Finland appuars to be tho most favored country in tiie world as records teniperuiioo lobulation. Local option is an old established reform, which e uutry districts have so far derived beii frit from that they are free of dviuk-shos altogether. The temperance so cieties provide wall-stocked htii-ariu, properly-lighted readiii,j-noms, aud cuuifortuhl'i and eutieiug cotl'ee-'iouo-.-s for those they de sire to weau from the publie-Uouxj. The Best Pat Ufa of the War. John C. Ropce in an articlo on "The War as Wo See It Now," printed in Scrihrur'i, is responsible for the follow ingt The national instinct on this subject Is perfectly correct. It was at Gettys burg and Chickamniiga that our Ameri can armies were at their best and did their best. Never were they cither bo fore or aftor thoso memorable engage ments -ao stron g, so well officered, so fierce, so determined to win, ao resolved not to yield. They wcro then, wo re peat, at tholr best containing none but seasoned troops, tinder veteran officers, Inured to wnr, both armies confident of Victory, and protty nearly, taking all things together, oqunlly matched. And ho ono can read tho story of those groat battle without being proud of his coun try and his face, for never wns thcro more rclnlute and obstinate and gnllnnt fighting done, nor ever wcro severe losses more unshtinkingly borno. Nor can it be truly said of either of those battles that tho beaten army did not fight as hnrd and as long as its more successful antagonist. There is glory enough for all. Iltnco It is fitting that both fields Gettysburg and Chicknmaugn should bo dedicated to the perpetual rcmem brunco of the great battles ao worthily fought there. Tho earth's l,BO0,000,000 human In habitants speak 30,14 different languages and possess about 1000 different relig ious beliefs. London has 100 miles of wood-pared streets. There is mure catarrh In this section of the country than all other diseases put together, and until tlieln-t few yen was upiueed til be Incurable. For a great many years doctors fironolmced It a local disease, and prescribed ocal remedies, and by constantly falling to cure with local treatment, pronounced it In curable. Science has provcu catarrh to lie a constitutional disease, and therefore requires constitutional treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cure, manufactured by F. .1. Cheney A Co., Toledo, Ohio, is tho only constitutional cure on the market. It is taken internally In doses from l(ilron to a tcasnnnnful. It acts directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of tho system. They olfer f lil for any rase it fails Ui cure. Send for circulars and tentlmonials. Address , . V. J. Chi:sft Co., Toledo, U. If" Sold by nriigiflsta, 7.rH-. Over 5,(Xl0,ntx little Russians wore born last year. f yrup of Pigs, Produced from tho laxative and nutritious Juice of California figs, combined with tho medlclual virtues of plants known to bo most beneficial to tho human system, acts gently on tho kidneys, liver and bowels, effectually cleansing the system, dispelling colds and headaches, and curing habitual constipation. The Convenience ol Oolia Trains. The Krie Is the only railway running onlld trains over Its own tracks between New Vorlj and Chicago. No change of cars for any rlai of passcngera. Kates lower thuu via. any otkul first-class line. ills loetl tree by Uit. Kliss's OkkaJ Nkkve hKcmiiitiit. No uts lifter lirst day's ee, Marveloua eurea. Treatise and i'4 trial boltltl free. Dr. Kline. IKI1 Area M., IMilla., i'a. There's a patent medicine which is net a patent medicine I paradoxical as that may sound. It's a discovery I the golden discovery of - medical science 1 It's the medicine for you tired, run-down, exhaust ed, nerve - wasted men and women ; for you sufferers from diseases of skin or scalp, liver or lungs it's chance is with every one, it's season always, because it aims to purify the fountain of life the blood upon which all such diseases depend. The medicine is Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery. The makers of it have enough confidence in it to sell it on trial. That is you can get it from your druggist, and if it doesn't do what it's claimed to do, you can get your , money back, every cent of it. That's what its makers call taking the risk of tlicir words. Tiny, little, sugar - coated granules, are what Dr. Pierce's rleasant Pellets are. The best Liver Pills ever invented ; ac tive, yet mild in operation; cure sick and bilious head aches. Ono a dose. ADWAY'S READY RELIEF. IHUCHRAI'W A.VUBKHl' MKD1. C1NK fr'Oll FAMILY VHK IS THfcl WUHLI). NKV KU FAILS XO HKLIKVU PAIN. Cure and l'reveiitu Cold, Contrhs, bore Throat, Ii.Hamn.ation, Hheu tUAt.Hin, Nourulla, tlcaducho, Toothacho, Asthma, JJilU rult Ureal hliiif. CURES THK WulthT PAINS in fro in one to twenty snluiit-a. Not oue hour atr rcadlug thu adrerllB Dtt-tit ueed any ne 8 UK EH WITH PAIN. IN TJC 1th ALLY, a bait to a teaipontilu. tn half turn tiler of water will lu a fuw miuutes cure Cramps Bpaaina, Hour ISlomarh, Nauaea, Vomttlug, Hraiv bum, Ntu-ouQ?, KltArpleaaatMa. Hick Ilt4iu'k LJUuTbuttjColic, Klatuli'Ucy and all Internal patufc iOc. Per Buttle. toltl hy OrungUtt. ADVAY'S PILLS. An Excellent and Mild Cathartic, l'ural Tfgetablo. Tha rafoat and best medicine in tho world for the curs of all disorders ot th Liver, Hioimtuh or lioweln. Ttkea fttxxinllUK tu diroctluQf Uje will renter bealtb and rtmew vlutllty. I'rlca, ttc. buz. bold br all druirffUta, or mailed by HilJVVAV CO., XI W'arn-l street, Hew Hut. a racelpt uf prloe. II A V CClCD CURED TO STAY CURED, llnl sLl Lll We want the name and ad dress ol every suttcrer in the Q. H QTUM h ana Canada. Address, U. S. ana Canada. Address, f . lUnU Isjtm, M.D., sohlt, s'l. oc nu uiun r. If YOU WANT TJ MAK MONEY VILSt ANI DOS T KNOW liow, arml 1 Ot-. for t-iituloKiu-, bi XV. II A It V K t liUtbNL I Hl.hmun An... Il.li oil, Mlrh. PRIVATE? for IH winner up to 1 .UIMI Iff i. A I KIC I A PUIVATK TM.r.nnn r. i ti,, i ttroiulwny. New Y I'M ri-l r. I (.. I Hi TE LE PH ON ESS 1 5 fct'tlU atlillcsw to OMAHA ilATItlilUMxt, would, omana, bruts-a, fur UKK Our, ot KUa i rhi nurnui.. mid t orre..Mru!t',tw ut(Mr tiuoutitovl. OA TCMTC W. T. Mlmgera Id " " 1 w lli-iup book tree, w fsff KolTur Vol' plH4itnt work, exclusive wr- iiv.uj ,(i uvpr f uu urr com, pront rroul Iht. Hurl. Ad(tri.i.ii fn.'lnaliiir .tiimn MK LfcV- .tl iM Fti, ( O., Vlureno . A Wonderfnl Promo Pagoda. A missionary who hat settled in the province of Pz-Clnmn, Central China, and who has visitod the great Buddhist peak, Mount Oniol,doscribes the temples around -the baso as still showing many wonderful works of art. Near the foot ot tho mountain there still stands rmgoda of bronzo fifteen stories high, be loved to bo upward of a thousand years old. From tho ground to tho polished ivory tip this immense structure is liter ally covered with delicate figures of men, beasts, birds and roptilcB. Of fig ures of Buddha there are no less than 1700 within tho province, most of thorn In tho immediate vicinity of tho sacred peak. A Magnificent Walnut Tree. A vencor mill in Grand Kaplds, Mich., tecently purchased a magnflceut ' spcot. men of blister walnut, which cut up in to fivo logs twelve feet long and ono icvcn-foot log, all of them as round and regular as if turned in a lathe. The logs nn 1 go from forty-eight inches in diuma ler at the butt of the trco to thirty in ches, and will cut about C000 feet of rnro and very valunblo stuff. It is to bo cut into funcy veneers. Philadelphia llrcord. Quit Everything Else. S. S. S., is the only permanent cure for contagious blood Taint Old chronic cases that physicians declare incurable; are cured in every instance where S. S. S., has had a fair trial. I honestly believe that S. S. S., saved my life. I was afflicted with the very worst type of contagious blood poison and was almost a solid sore from head to foot. The physicians declared my case hopeless. I quit everything else and commenced taking S. S. S. After taking a few bottles I was cured sound and well. Thos. B. Yeager, Elizabethtown. Ky. vERYjJoTHEB Should Have an The Home Dropped on Sufar, Children J,ora toUttr JnHxnnx't Amohtkb I J win hwt fnr Ormin. Ooirtu Hnre Throat, Tonul Htm, Tollo, Yaiiii and I'nlitlL " Itovoi Hummer (.VnipliUnU, CuU, lirulx ilk mafia, TMXK OF IT. -In a ovrr 4tft YKAHW In one family. Ir. I. K Jotix-oK A Tn.-U UtT Tmr rtn 1 fln Itwrm'tl of your Jon-! Anodyne UiiT; lor mr-i (in forty mr I ha um1 It lit hit faimlT 1 rtntaiil It a- one of tlif Lwrt nnd nafext family rvim'i!l- thai csn he fntint, umit Intern! or rtml, tn all cnnra. O. It. iM.ALUi, Niu-un fnet llaptlst rhurrh, l!anror, M Every Sufferer KT;:,r5: mw HtWh, !HpMhfria,Otirrii, ratarrh. Itroiirhltla. A tuna, I'll of m Mortma, I'larrhip, Um wm. Horvm-M In BoOr or 1.1ml, Stiff Joint or Ktralna, will find In this uM Annynr rrtfot and ppdy rum I'aiiiphlrt frv. Sold t'vm-rwhtTP. I Vict rin., by mall. 6 botil.-a, lUp-Ma iMUd. i II. JOHNSON A CO- lkwioN. Maw PAINT. rrsrl requires addition of an UIIBi I EQUAL PART OFOIL nR r u tttMAKJ.NO COSTrJ-Ll 3 JSSrE. in 734 3 PAPERS k era we havo no Atrvl will nrrauis Willi mr -ciItb llrnhmil. I.. Ac N. I. ANew Use lor Petroleum Tho most mnrvcllous results aro now being obtained from the use of petroleum in tho treatment of caturrh uf the lioa 1 and throat and lung troubles. Bend for pamphlet free describing tho new treat ment to tho IIkai.tii Si-n-LiKsCo., 710 Broadway, New York. BUY A BUFFALO Wyoming lot. It's the coming clly of Wyoming, lis" walcr-wnrks, electric Ughis, flouring niliin. Localod In the canlen of Wyoming, l'rorincvd lUo Irlr.e potato crop of the Vnitcd Matos Iu ltM. 1 or inape and information apply to .11 ANN .V THO.M. Hulliilo, Wyn. FRAZERA?k uitsT id Tim uokld UKlbHyC JT Ut Ui tieuuluck Quia JCrorywiutra JUuful It tu.tt-nu at lUrvanf, Amhmt, a ltd oUvf ColU-ffea, alio, b pmtYatiuiial an. uifxs mn vry Vlttra. If at Ur ) in yvr town mi 4 sa to OUKKXY. IU Vaahttiitoa 8trwt. Boato. ET DOWN WITH HIGH PRICES. WHY not buy from u und in inn world, and Ovtr i li-- iirniriW.10''! tttrrri tn cunivmrrM. llirrctijr fy-tix- kr -Ury , s, 30 , so p,.r j F lHi c5si"E' i t-B- tusurli finis. I wjj? Vi' t.'-Yr I IU ICt CSCITI. rrCC " '-fhiS V Pjf mFtTi - r- l i. Comhln-a a room-full N rii?iyU P"V-i:.t" J L "i5 n klna l.ouuae, Brl,or CourhTVClR. a"f S s""11 TUB WONDERFUL LUBUR6 CHAIR Combine, a. room-full f i hairs In onu, huli-a making a Iouuho, Hrl,ur Conrh? Invatxd appliances tf every IIBSSY DCtSS. II Faacr ( aalra, Horaera, ui. Kanrr C lialrn. Uorkori, AOi AJT Writ at one fur Mend ifnmvM arut THE LUBURC MANUFACTURING CO. PHILADEIPHIA.PA Deul. A 1(13, Noa. 3il. UHCH i tvt X 'Ousndsf-ornohhing. -vri i he house . ,: uu cr nexbhouse-c!eKnin5end be convinced "iG-roEtiirrcE of the ,aw excuses n man," and ignorance is no excuse for a dirty house or greasy kitchen. Better clean them in the old way than not at all ; but the modern and sensible way is to use SAPOLIO on paint, on floors, on windows, on pots and pans, and even on statuary. To be ignorant of th uses of SAPOLIO is to bo behind the age. Cz Beat Cough Medicine. Recommended by Physicians. Cures where all elan fuila. l'loatwiat und agreeable to tho tavte. Children take it without objection, liy drugtriata. BASE BALL-, Pains and Aches -AND- THE BEST REMEDY ARR IN'RSrARAKI, FOR THE PROMPT, SURE CURE OF Sprains, Bruiaes, Hurts, Cute, Wounds, Bnckaohe, RHEUMATISM, ST. JACOBS OIL HAS NO EQUAL. M Y M Ulta Send for our new book on constitutional or Blood Diseases, mailed free. The Swift. Specific Co., Atlanta, Ga. UNEXCELLED! AITi.IKI) EXTEKNAI-LY roR Rbeumatlsm, Keuralgia, Pains in the Limbs, Back or Chest, Bumps, Sore Tbroat, Colds,- Sprains, Bruises, Stings of Insects, Kosquito Bites. TAKEN INTEKNAI.I.Y It net IIUp n rlinrm lor Cholera Marbaa, llliirrh.ru. I) m-nlrrr. tulle, Cram pa, aa hen. Hick llrntlai'lie, &C Wnrramrri prrlprtly hnrmlraa. l,,,,.?,,lb; nrcmnpu n lug rnrh hot l It;. " j"'ri:,.'1 !," loru Il- MMITIIIMi "' l'lvl.IHA. TINti uunllllt " nl lilt llllliiedlntelr. I't It nud l . oiivlin rtl. I'rlce and 30 ceuia. Hold by all drag glala. I'DT. 40 Kl 11 II A V HT. KEW VOWK. LEVIS' 98 LYE Powdered and Varfomed. (F4TKITBD.) S'f rontMtand purrat i.yemada. Miikiw tho beat )orf umcxl Hard 1 ESonp in W nunuts iritAout boiU t'iKj. It is tbe IM-Ht for sof toning wiifcir, cleansing waste pipes, disinlo tiiiK sinks, closets, wash ing bottles, pajuta, treos, eto. PENNA. SALT MFfi. CO., lieu. Agent, i'liilo.. la. RUPTURE CURED I Poiiliver, Holds Rupture. HOH MI1IIT ISP lla.MJtlJ !. to muW la-- U-tatrtt .km 1 t 1" taa r .. Miami. M I T" at w O. V Mouse Mr a. Co. T44 ewowa.H.V.ClT irrn iuirn x. TXT? A T TTI CALENDAR Bui of X A l,i,e tot tchday of at. uv. ! 1,11, ill iikii lor 1. rarii locUr. ftO,lll In n. r -.li iir" .l lor Hie inaa vmnoutlrall 1891 Cook Book WKAit, NKiivors, Whrtciu-u mortal a tfet well atitl kH' well. Health Hell tt'li Uow. IjOcH. a ytMtr. Isantule uuu lr. J, II. DYK, K.lltor. HUllalo, N. Y. th MMraemt Fartory of Ciwr jtiidille nf n or urtft lictilvra pruntai. tlRI6CAISR 1,000 Articles "irrri tn oiMtinm, iin-n-iiy drcrtitum fBLulSli BIOS. t'aiaiutiutt. mrntun QtxxU wnntrd. 3':l, SIS Noilh Mi Mtcrl i i vus?z :i IT ELASTIC r$ IXTR u s Lyjy ruenrroDe aone r oudhh Vo be ciee-ned- l : -r t. :
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers