The Toad and the Centipede. la the Court house yard there are quite a number of laiize, sleek-looking toada. One of theso (owls w seen by the lourifrrr. nbout the jitnec cnuaped in an earnest attempt to swallow something that seemed to tax nil Ids energies. A cloter cxutniniitiou revealed the fact that the toad had seized a centipede, by the rear end and was slowly and placidly stowing him nwny within his jutvs, In epito of the viiitinn frantic efforts to es cape. Nearly oncdiulf of tho reptile had disappeared, when the centipede, with the nncnl.iumbercd balance of his 100 fect.succcei'cd in getting a ground hold, and with a desperate effort freed himself from tho jaws of the devourer, and was moving rapidly awiiy when the toad, finally realizing the situation, made a jump and again caught his victim. This time the centipede seemed to realize tho hopelessness of his situation and fran tically turned to the right and left, each time nipping his enemy severely upon the lips and head, but all to no purpose. The toad would coolly brush nway theso Bttacks, first with one foot, and then with the other, al! tho tinio taking the centipede in, until nt Inst nothing re mained bu'. the toad calmly and serenely seated upon his haunches, considering tho next move. El Taso (Texas) Herald. How to Cnre for I'cnrls. An old-fashioned receipt to prevent pearls from losing thoir brilliancy is to put them away in a box with a pieco of ashroot. AVise men in their own esti mation will probably lauh at this ad Tice, but it is just n? well to let them laugh ami not have one's beautiful .jewol become dull and dead. 1Vhy the root of the ash tree should have this'tnarvcllous effect is hard to determine, but it is a fact and one which is worth taking ad vantage of New York Herald. Mr. S. a. Ilerry of Prov denca, R. I. Widely known as proprietor of Dcrrys Wa terproof Harness Oil, tells of his terrible sufferings from Eczema and his cure by HOOD'S Sarsaparilla "Gentlemen: Fifteen years ruja I hn1 an attack Of Inflammatory rheumatism, followed by Salt Rheum breaking oat on my right log. The humor iprcad al) over my 1k( back and arm, a foul maaa of area swollen and Itching terribly, causing In ten w pain If the skin was broken by scratching, and dis charging constantly. It Is lmpoMlble to describe my 13 years of agony and torture I spent Thousands of Dollars tl futile efforts to get well, and was discouraged said ready to die. At this time I was unable to He down In bed, had to sit up all the time, and was a an ale to walk without cratches. X had to hold my arms away from my body, and had to have my arms, back and lefrs bandnfred twice a day. ii all j- a friend urfo'd me to take Hood's Sarsa parilla. I began by taking half a teanpoonful. My Stomach Was All Out of Order But the medicine soon corrected this, and In six weeks X could see a change In the condition of the hamor which nearly covered my body. It was driven to the surface by the Sarsaparilla, the sores, aooa healed, and the scules fell off. I was soon able to giro up bandage and crutches, and a happy nan I was. I had b-n taking Mood's Sarsaparilla for seven month; and tlace that time, 3 years, I have worn no bauiloKt whatever and my legs and arms are sound and well. The Delight Xf myself and wife at my recovery It ts Impossible to tell. To alt my business friends In Boston and over the country, I recommeud Hood's Sarsaparilla from personal experience." S. U. Dfrry, 43 Brad ford Street, Providence, R. I. Ifyss srcBIUsus take Hood'i I'tllo VODYttfc FOR HOUSEHOLD USE . r r" . ... r w 3V ORIGINATED For INTERNAL much at EXTERNAL usa. . i By an Old Family Physician. Soothing, healing. penetratinQ Jtrepped en Sugar, Children Lor to take Julmson'. Aivl)ni IJnlmrnt for Crmiri. Oolitei Ror Throat. T.inflllll". I'"'"'. (Tamp, and I'umi He. lirre Summer omi plain'. ,cnlau: hrul -i-n likemnyio. Ciirt. Cu'ufM. AeUiu., Cutanh, ltruur'nm, rlioliTa " rbut, ( t?illilr1ii. ( S'.innf8 In H.i'lv or I lull,, TtilT Juwle cr .Mi-alii.. lnhi.li. Ii.r Siituui Hwnlfc ho, "li'Bt'd l'..ini,lil-l tl ' e- "M i-i yvh.-i u. I'r1. eta. iADWAY'S 3l READY RELIEF. CtrRE. AND PREVENT Colds, Coughs, Sore Throat, Hoarseness, StifTNeck, Bronchitis, Catarrh. Headache, Toothache, Rheumatism, Neuralgia, Asthma, Bruises, Sprains, Quicker Than Any Known Heinedy. Ko maltrruw violent ur xcrut-tatluK thu iutn (he Rueuuiall IteUriitilru, liitirm, riileu, Nervm, lieuralKk, ur irufctruu-cl wit.i rtlh -aa-. may uRi-r, RADWAY'S READY RELIEF Will A third InntHiit Knar. 1STKUNA 1.1. V A Imlf to a tensrnrfnful In flaU a luiuhl. -tut wuiiTwiil In a fin iiiliiuu-s cure . ramp, hittms. ur Momm'h, Nmuc, omitltiK, Heju-lhuru, Nfrvotiftiicnf. l- plt t.-ii. ks. Melt HHhd aoh, lJlairtm a, tulkc, riutulcucy and all luUrnul Malaria lu Us vurliiiM frniH rur.-1 uinl prceutel. I hare In nut a rm 'iin.1 b.'i.t In the iri i il.at will .'iu '-vtr an I ak'i nil fihr ft'ser milt-d tv KAIU AV I'l quiLkly as KAU V A n It tA I) 1 Wt Lltr. V aix uhi GoiM-. rrlct all rente. Kur c it we will st-nd by nihil one of our Tuiiuih I.iik aii-1 LJuOroicleiiUM Ma- jij'uor tiii sua tmwuaeiy ri f.iu I . - etft'I pnrc f.f .Mfl'-ne tl p'i. 7TV t wis n ) L MEHT ECl)Rt GENTS TREATMENT OF A BROKEN HORN. There is no diflicalty in repairing a broken horn, as only the shell of it Is lost, and the inner core quickly secretes the horny matter for new covering. As good a way as any to treat tho injury is to wrap the hora core in a strip of cot ton cloth smeared with common tnr, hut not gas tar. This protects the tender core from the air, and the new covering is made in a short time without any more attention. Tho bandage may bo left on until it falls off, or it may be removed after a week or two. New York Times. MACHINE TO PUMi WEEDS. A ronchine has been brought out to pull weeds entirely out of the ground or to kill them in case they are well rooted by stripping off their seeds and leaves. It is uduptcd to be drawn by horses and a sprocket drive on the drive wheel is connected to rotate a forward shaft turn ing in suitable bearings, this shaft hav ing a gear wheel by which a drum is ro tated on a shaft turning in bearings on the front end t'f tho main frame. The drum has longitudinal slots in its rim in each of which moves a comb, the teeth of which form V-shaped openings into which the steins of the weeds readily pass Hnd arc (irmly gripped. The ma chine issaid to have given great satisfac tion in practical work, being well adapted to pull up weeds in cultivated ground in which the grain has appeared, without injury to the grain. Chicago News. LOJS'KS OP EARLY LAMBS. Tho most telling commentary on the prevalent carelessness and poor manage ment among old-fashioned farmers was their acceptance of the loss of a consid erable number of early lambs as a matter of course. Those who were more care ful timed the breeding so that the lambs were dropped late when thers was com monly mild weather and a good bite of grass. In these days thousands of lambs arc born in midwinter, and such care is taken of them that losses arc very rara. A basement stable warm enough by the warmth from a flock of sheep so that water will' r.ot freeze in it, is needed. Then there must be green or succulent food, roots and some bran or grain, to encourage a flow of milk when the lamb is dropped. Tho logs are carefully cut so that it is easy to get to the teats, and if the weather is cold a watch is kept so that the lamb does not chill before it can ct to the teat and suck. After it gets bold of the teat the lamb will usually care for itself. Of course, lambs thus cared for cost money, but they bring money, too, and enough to repay the cost. This kind of lamb-growing is very different, and also more pleasant than tho old way of keeping sheep, feed ing mostly on straw with a little hay, and letting the earlier lambs, which are always most valuable, die for lack of the necessary attention. Boston Cultivator. ALWATC. Always belicvo in farming so long as it pays. Always blanket the warm horse stand ing in the wind. Always milk the cows regularly, kindly and with dispatch. Always have a snowplow ready when the heavy snows come. Always count your chickens after the period of incubation is passed. Always thiak twice before the boy Is set to a task you would not do your self. Always keep cellars cool as near thirty-four degrees as possible in which roots are stored. Always prepare for the spring work during the comparative leisure of win ter. Always clean the mud from your horses when you get home and rub them dry. Always go to the barns at night just before going to bed to see that the stock is all right. Always keen the fences and gates in order, and have a supply of posts ready in the shop. Always select the most vigorous and well ripened shoots for cions,alter which pack in bundles and store in the cellar. Always keep posted about the work of the month, and read the agricultural papers, not forgetting the advertisements of implements snd seeds. American Agriculturist. agricultural stations. The good work which is being done in the various agritulturul experiment stations of this country is amply demon St. -ted by the experiments of the past year.' From the periodical pamphlets compiled by the able scientists in course of these stations we cuu judge of the merits of the work, aud it gives us pica&ui'o to bear testimony to the useful ness and excellent results attained by re cent experiments. Theories are good, but stubborn facts are what wo need most, and it is because our knowlelge ou muuy subjects has been advanced by the work done at the agricultural experi ment stations that we deem tho scientists in chargo worthy of such high praise. Enlightenment iu regard to tho science of agriculture is certainly much needud, and no one tan maintain that the agri cultural stations arc not doing their ut niofct to supply this neej. Indued, our only fear is that they will go ahead too fast. However easy it may be for them to arrive at satisfactory results by means of simple experirucut it tuunot be ex pected the averago uusiieutilic agricul turist will arrive at the same results with equal ease; aud it might therefore be wi ll for the scientists to pause occasion ally, iu order that their less erudite brethren may have time to thoroughly test tlie experiments. We make this fcuigestion on the assumption that the object of tuote agricultural stations is not solely to advance the cause of pure science, but also to benefit and iustruct agriculturists. Experiments which show conclusively that improvements are pos sible in soiug branch of agriculture are of inestimable value, and the more popu lar they become the greater benefits will be reaped thiough them. Popular, how ever, in the ordinary mtauing of the word they ciu hardly become, at least for a considerable time, uules pains be Wkcu to bring tUcoj to the notice not cf scientists, but of average hard-working farmers. Excellent as the pamphlets containing an account of the experiments are, they are not as widely circulated or as thoroughly appreciated by practical farmors as they should be, and until they aro their real value as exponents of pro gress will not be clearly understood National Provisioncr. transplanting cabbage plants. "For three consecutive seasons," says Professor Dailcy, of tho Cornoll Univer sity station, "we have endeavored to determine what foundation there may be for the common notion that deep-set cabbage plants give better heads and a larger proportion of heads than those sot at the normal or natural depth. It is a very general practico among gardeners to set tho plants to the depth of the first leaf when transplanting to the field. As exhibited in tables in Bulletin No. 37, the results of three years' tosts show that no advantage is to be gained by such a practice." In 1889 tho experiment was tried unon twelve varieties, about twenty plants of each being set up to the first leaf, and as many more set to the same depth at which they stood in the seed bed. Strangely enough, it appears that one hlf the varieties gave better results from shallow setting and the other half better from deep setting. There were,however, rather more heavy heads from the deep setting. Combining all the results, the gain in weight from deep setting was as 13.60 is to 13.46, a difference so small as to lead to the conclusion that the par ticular method of planting probably had nothing to do with the yields. Iu 1890 the tost was repeated, tho early AVakcfleld cabbago being used for the purpose. Tho plants were growu upon a heavy and rather poor clay loam. Here the shallow planting gave decidedly the better results, both in the percentage of plants producing good heads and in the averago weight of heads. In 1891 the test was again repoated, this timo with early Wakefield and Pre mium Drumhead. The plants were grown on a rich and well-prepared loose clay loara; and all the conditions through out the season were such as to insure a fair and uniform tost. The average re sult was io favor of the shallow setting so far as the weight of heads is concerned but in favor of deep setting in tho per centage of plants producing good or mature heads, but the differences were slight aud no greater than might be ex pected from two or mora lots of plants treated iu the same manner. The two varieties, however, gave different results. The Early Wakefleld gave better results from deep setting and tho Drumhead from shallow setting. Upon the whole the results of the entire investigation leads to the conclusion that the depth at which strong aud stocky cabbage plants are set docs not influence tho extent or weight of the crop. New York World. FARM AND GAHDEN NOTES. Broad tires are a disadvantage on a rough road. Keep your watering troughs scrupu lously clean. Vary the feed; feed greens during the winter, birds lay better for it. Hatch early in season ; the earl; bird brings tho highest broiler prices. Dig the yards over frequently; this will prevent much poultry disease. Be sure that coops are moved fre quently; foul ground Is worse for chick ens than old birds. llcnew drinking water for the fowls every day; twice a diy would be better if time cau be found. Buy fowls when starting suitable to wmits. Never buy egg machines when table poultry are wanted. I-conoray is the proper term for goofl farming. Save tho littles all around. Chi pi will make as good flro while the last as big cord wood. The big fruit crop of 1881 may not bi repeated in 1892. Let us take care ol the orchards and vineyards this year; be prepared to fight insects and blights. Not more than threo or four per cent. of business men succeeded without nt some time becoming bankrupt, Where do you find a farmer who fails in busi ness I They rarely do. With fair to gov! draft-horses selling in Chicigo at $135 to $2 JO, and in good teams at $225 to l i7 each, it appears that there is still moacy to bo made in raising good horses. There are four ways of handling man ure piling it against the barn to rot and leach, scattering it over the barn-yard to wash, drawing it into the field at once, aud composting it as gardeners do. The New York Tribuno says: "Get rid of the fences !'' Taese words should bo placed at the held of every page of the agricultural paper until public opinion is completely stiri-o 1 to action. One year ago with twcuU-.lve fowls a farmer hai fiva eggs u da. Now, with tweuty fowls, he has from twelve to foui teuu. The five missing birds were roosters, which accouuts for the whole story. Tubers of the single dahlia may bo started this mouth if it is desired to multiply some choice kind from cut tings. It may, however, ba done later. Seeds of the single dahlia sowu in the open border as lato as May will produce tloworiug roots. ! A whole chapter would not suffice to tell how much farmers, aud other peoplo, too, ioso uy putting olt necessary work uutil they "have to" do it. It is tho mau of forethought and forchandedness who wins, aud ho is the only one de serving of success. In autumn aud winter get everythiug possible out of the I way oi tho rush anil throng of our short spring aud hot summer. Many of the current run of papers have had a good deal to say about feed for idle horses, but few farmers can afford to have tuch things. They can no more du so than to nave idle nieu. Both are all sorbents of profit which no sensible man. able and willing to plan aud contrive, and therefore to run a farm successfully can or will tolerate en his place. Have something for bands and horses to da, and utilise their services winter and sum mer. TEMPERANCE: ROUB AT LAST! A llttla child I fatr-halred, with wondering Fast, through an opon door, into ths treat. .... 6h wandered on, lost in a land of siRhs, And wept, "Is there no rest for weary feetr Deep in the dark a door stood open wide, A Heht streamed from it brighter than the "V! A mother's voioa kept calling t "Here! . Abide I Come Homo, my little onel you've lost your way ! Come Home!" A wretched man, forlorn, with inattwl hair. Stood In a crowd of sots, more beasts than men; Deep eursce rent the air, and dull despair Bupermely reifrned in that aocursed den. But nigh above its revels rang one eounJ, Clearer than sea-bird's over roaring sea The voice of wife and woman 1 "Lost but found ! Come Home, my Husband! Cornel Ohl follow me! Come HomcT' A poor lost sou), cast down with wretched ness; Fale death was ringing out his fatal knell; No one to pity, no one there to bless The parting hour of one who loved so well. Then suddenly a voice "Oh! which is best? To live or die? Ever to sing or sight' ' This voice eternal whispered "Come and rest! Come Home,sad soul, and ret eternally I Come Homer' Clement Bcott . POSTOFFICES IN SALOONS. The latest rallyiuz cry of our temper- ancersla, "No more postofflees in saloons." It seems that there are at least eight iu the beery metropolis of Milwaukee, Wis., and pleiilly elsewaere in the Badgar State and in the South. Crusaders, "let no guilty man escape." It is too late in the day to tolerate liquor and letters in the same shop. Will notour Jtrother Wanatnaker move in the matter? We believe he will and that right speedily. Union Signal. DRUNKENNESS IN IUR0PC. The Chicago Tribune reports a Paris doc tor as saying: "I think more liquor is con sumed in Paris than in any city In the world. Regarded as a matter ot drink supply, I have no hesitancy in saying that Franoa is a country of drunkards. I saw some sta tistics as I was leaving which showed that 6000 people have been sent to inebriate asylums; they had drunk themselves craay. This is frightful. Aud the appalling port of it is that tee majority of them were women. The proportion was f iree to two. Drunk enuoss it also increasing in Austria, in Ger many and iu England. Uelgium is reeling from drink." AN RARLT PROHIBITION PETITION. The Atlanta Constitution recently pub. lisbed the following petition from King Hagler, a celebrated chief of the Catawbas, dated May 36, 1756, addre?se1 to Chief-Justice Henley, and discovered in the State ar chives of North Carolina: "I desire a stop may be put to the selling of strong liquors by the white people to my people, especially near the Indians. If the white people make strong drink, let them sell it to one another, or drink it in their own families. This will avoid a great deal of mischief, which otherwise will happen from my people getting drunk ani quarrelling with the white people." Whether the petition was brought to ths notice of the Govornor, as promised by the Chief Justice, and acted upon, does not appear. Hagler, who was assassinated by the Catnwbas in 1760, was, says Schoolcraft, "a great mmi." PERILOrS WORK. Away up among tho wires of the great Brooklyn Bridge, at their greatest height, I saw several men busily painting the wires the other day. It strained my neck as I looked up at them, and made me feel dizzy at the mere thought of being suspended iu mid-air as they were. There they were, hun dreds of feet above the river, but as busy and painting as calmly as though they were on solid ground. "Ah !" I tbought, "you men must be good teetotalers, or you could never work at that dizzy height It needs men of steady nerves, of clear brain to work where you are. No man stupiiled with beer or muddled with whisky could do what you are doing, holding on with the left hand and working with the right, away up hundreds of feet, with the river below you, and knowing that a slip from what seemed a very insecure seat, would cause a fall, an 1 very likely instant death." Yes, we need temperance men for careful work and for positions of trust. Temperance Banner. OVERBURDENED HEARTS. The heart at seventy beats a minute will beat 4200 times an hour, and 100, 800 times in one dny of twenty-four hours. With five ounces of blood propelled at each beat, 5H, OOOounces are propelled each day, or31,500 pounds. Imagine 81,500 pound balls on the edge of a platform, and let a strong man bo required simply to lift the balls one foot and drop them from the platform. He would work well if he landed twenty in a minute, or 1300 in an hour. By continuous work for twenty-four hours, without a mo ment's rest, he would lift aud drop 38,800, or 3700 less pound weights than the action of the heart represents. Flail)1 we see he could not perform the supposed task for one day, nor indeed for twelve hours continu ously. No living man is the equal in his muscular ability to his own heart in the line of action. And yet it must be remembered that this heart is simply in size like one's closed baud, and weighs only about ten ounces. Truly there is no such powertul piece of machinery known to man. lto mo tion also is perpetual it knows no rest until lite ceases. Now, the moJerato drinker will consume two ounces of alcohol each day. This alcohol accelerates the action of bis heart by 6000 beats in twenty-four hours, re quiring it to prjpel 70.000 onnces more of blood, or shoot forth 1875 pounds in addition to its ordinary enormous work. Poor, dear beard The drunkard has no pity on it, and it is no wonder that it seeks relief in an early death. Herald of (Jospel Liberty, - STRONG DRINK AND TUE CUII.mtEN. Strong drink which is responsible for so much cruelty and suffering, affect, with perhaps its worst results, the children. It Is sometimes said that if you let drink alone, it will not hurt you, but the exrerience of the children who do not themselves take it, but who are in many cases victims to a fear ful extent of its demoralizing iutluence upsu parents and guardian, sulliues to show that even those who do not themxelvos indulgo in it. may be, ami many times are, among it most unhappy victims. The Seventeenth Annual ltoport of the New York Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children, for the year ending December ill, 1M.M, fur nishes many striking an I iwiniul illustra tions of the way iu which children are thus made to suffer through strong drink. It ap pears that for the year 1KII1 the society re ceived and examined 76f.'i complaints of cruelty to children; that it instituted 3803 prosecutions, and secnrel 3761 couvictioni; thut it rescued Vj61 children from pernicious surroundings, and that it slieltured, fad and clothed 1607 children iu its re ception rooms, aud t' it inves tigated in additiou, 3i"il i.og of alleged cruelty, ut the instance of the Police Justices and the courts. These figures represent a great deal of timely and valuable labor iu behalf of exposed aud victimized childhood, and show that the society discaarges a most useful function iu this metropolis. But it is safe to say that ttire-fourtus of its work is rendered necessary, either directly or iudi rectly, through the ageuc-y of btrong drink, lu very many of tho cases recorded it has been obviously a chief factor of the cruelty lrotu which childrdu have suffered. In one case mentioned in tho report, an oftiiier of the society was detailej U care for little Hose itorlmau. He found the little creature crouching in a corner of the apartment be fore her druukcu mother, who was stagger ing toward her in a drunken fury, shouting; "'I'll kill you, you little brat; I'll murder you for this," aud just then the otiicjr put iu an appearauue and rescued the little one whoee lite was really in danger. The report says of the mother who was taken to the station kouse. "hs bshavei like a mad-woman: drink had literally crazed bar." Her two little ones were taken Iron ner ana com mitted to the Aaiiiican Femile Guardian Society, -National Advocate. Japanese HonsM. In the construction of their houses, which are built of wood without an atom of paint, the Japanese, unlike most builders, begin with the roof. This is built on the ground, and when framed n overed with shingles about tho size of two fingers, as thin as a sheet of paper. When it is done they raise it on four corner-posts, and it is a plcasuro to sco, it Is so light and yet so Btrong. The walls are mado like the side-scenes in a theatre, of thin strips of wood, over which aro pasted sheets of a cottony, transparent paper. They are slipped in to grooves as soon as the roof is raised, nnd the house is finished without the use of a nail. In tho evenings when the lanterns dispense their soft light round the lnsido of these white buildings, the spectator seems to bo looking at a magic lantern. During the day time tho sides of the houses aro slipped out and tBo house becomes only a roof resting on the four light corner posts, tho whole inter ior being thus opened to tho air. Every part of it is exposed to view and every thing done in it can be seen, while bo hind it appear tho chnrming littlo gardens situated in tin rear. The great luxury of tho Japanese consits in their mats made of plaited straw. They nro perfectly rectangular in shape, about three inches thick and soft to the touch. They aro never stepped on with shoes, since the Japanese go about their houses always barefooted. Of furniture tbey have next to nothing; a small furnace in. one corner, a closet made like the sides of the house nnd intended to contain the mattresses, a small set of shelves on which are arranged the lacquered plates for rice and fish, this is all tho furnish ing for these houses, in which they live, as it were, in the open air. In the mid dle of each house are two articles of general use among all classes brazier and a box for tobacco. Being great tea drinkers, great smokers, and great talk ers, the Japanese pass a great deal of their time, in groups of seven or eight, seated on their heels around the tea kettle. Detroit Free Press. llijf Potatoes and Turnips. E. J. Lawrcuce, a farmer at Peace River, Canada, says: With the most ordinary cultivation, we grow from two to four hundred bushels of potatoes, and upward, per acre. The heaviest potato that I have weighed was three and one-fourth pounds, and, from three pounds of Early Hose seed, I dug 672 pounds of sound potatoes. Last season I weighed a turnip, that hnd had only ordiuary field culture, without fertilizing, which weighed twenty-two pounds ten ounces. I after ward picked up four more that brought up the weight, with tho first ono, to ninety-three and a half pounds. Tho number of lighthouses in the worm has quadrupled during the last nity years. "August Flower" " I am happy to state to you and to sutlenng Humanity, tnat my wife has used your wonderful remedy, August Flower, for sick headache and palpitation of the heart, with satisfactory results. For several years she has been a great sufferer, has been under the treatment of eminent physicians in this city and Boston, and found little relief. She was in duced to try August Flower, which gave immedaite relief. We cannot say to much for it." L.. C. Frost, Springfield, Mass. RKILMCR'S Kidney, Liver and BladderCure. Rheumatism. Lumbago, pain In Joints or back, brick dust in urine, frequent calls, irritation, lntlnmation, gravel, ulceration or catarrh of bladdor. Disordered Liver, Impaired digestion, out, Villlious-headHrhe. j A n l-iOT curts kidney difficulties, ixi&rtppe, urinary trouble, bright's disease. I ill pure IHood. Scrofula, malaria, gcn'l weakness or debility. Guaranty Vwr content of One Bottle, If not bee eAled, lJru-tfiaU will refuud to you Uie price paid. At Druggist, SOc. Size, $1.00 Size. "lnniidV Oulde to Heelth"frt-Cooulttion tree. DlU KlLMIB CO., UlNOHAMTOH, N. T. Tuff's The flrnt done often astonishes the invalid, giving elasticity of mind, bouyancy of body, GOOD DIGESTION, regular bowels and solid desh. frloe, 25a Ely's Cream Balm WILL t IRK CATARRH i irii ,v fnn Apply JJslnl Into each nostril. KI.Y UROS., M Warren St., N. Y. r'Ca'SU-rV Illustrated Publications, with MAP$.lKrrtiiiiKMim.fxoL, Vjrtll PftlLDlaV, UuUl4WlaV,l(Uln, Varhiiiiriii and Tf afou, tlie L'ULi.'1'iit'L u a. u a.- k'r AM til K AH NORTHERN PACIFIC R. ft. I PfSl Arf' H'UillirsWWI a- k now cirtn to sNfttlera. Mailed KliKK. Adrireu in if abd lliiirer Land1" tint, ju la num. lj torn. . r. u. n,, 8t ym, CONSUmPTiON bt( UAHLK. AJw Asiiinia, HroucliltitsCatUu-rti. The lotittluiiuii Mel boil. f0 jwr oent. cured Uurlutf 0uaviV prtii-iice, it'ttiiniouiitU famish, ou ailUi'ut.oii. Httii.tHlidaj for lmpuru JilooO, Cousttliisv ttuo, IypfiKU. Writw or jjarncutur. Ageuta WHDird, The ( h. Uerjfiuaa Mnliclue Co., tifttce, OilTorj build mg. Juiiiuauotvu, N. Y, WELL DRILLING Utnhinvry lr WHiolny d-ptti. (roin auto 3,onft feet tor Wur, OH in (jtv Our JduuUd blcain DnUum tid lortitle Hora t'ower MnWiiur6ax.-l to wm k icvjOniinutti. G uar sUiU-il lu drill uti auid wiih lea power tbtui uy oihar. faproially udi)Ul lu drill In (r V vii in artfi or rtMk 90 toi OX) fWt. nil and o(brar inalflnar X6 to $4U pr star with our machuiorv aod u o! SuK-oai t buMDea for winter or hummer. r th oMuit. und Urtftttt MiiufnfiuM'i la I he bu-iuc&4f. 6hM for lltus trul.nl i aUuJi.au X Plating fully what i r)ijmid. fH.Hi t stitftu ftix Birm to&o bvttt-bt., xw Voik. Pills r9 mm FEE! Scotland, whose ontnut in 1889 was 2.1 217 IRS tons, fnminhnd almost An. seventh of all the coal mined in Great Britain. There are a number of beautiful caves in California. Those In Miriposa, Caln- vcrns and Flaccr counties aro the largest. Deafness Can't be Cared Py local applications, as they cannot reach the diseased portion of the ear. There Is only one way to cure deafness, end that is t'V constitu tional remedies. Den fuess is censed by an In flamed condition of the mucous lining ot the Kustachian Tnlw. When :l.ls tube (rets n llamed yon hsve a rumbling sound or imper fect hearing, ami when it i eutirely closed, deafness is the result, and unless the inflam mation can U tsken tint and Ihis tube re stored to its normal condition, hearing wili lie destroyed forever: nine cases out of ten are causeu by catarru, wbicu is notnniK but on in- uiunru contuiion oi me mucous suriocea. We will glve Oue Hundred Dollars foi any case of deafness (caused by calnrrhl that we cannot cure bv tnkinir Hall's Catarrh Cure. bend for circulars, free. I! . J. Chenf.T & CO- Toledo. 0. Sold by Druggists. T5c. The Hklll nnd Knowledge Essential to the production of the most per fect and popular laxative remedy known have enable I Ihe C.tlifornli Fig Kyrup Co. to achieve a gret suoce lathe reputation of Its remedy, Syrup of Figs, as it is conceded to be the universal laxative. For sale by all druggists. M r.C. D. Payno, publisher of the Union Signal, Chicago, 111., writes: "I never saw anyl hing I bat would cure headache like your Brad yc rot ine.' All druggists, lilty ccntH. FITS stopped free by lilt. Kmsk'i Oiieat NrtnVK Kkmtohku. No Ills alter llrst day's use. Marvelous cures. Treatise and trial bottls free. Dr. Kllnpjttl Arch .St.. lMilla.s l'a. "Brown's HKo.sciiiAr. Tiiornrs" are widely known as an adiuirai.lo re-ncdv for Bron chitis. Hoartenes's Coughs and Throat troub les. ,S'i(t( onlu in hojvs. HF.RcnAM's I'll.t-stnko the plate of an entire medlciuo chest, and should be kept for use lu every family. i'5 cents a box. If afflicted with sore eyes use I)r. Isoao Thomn on'iEye-water.Uruggistaaeil at i!&c.per bottle Obstinate Blood Mumor. I HAD TERRIBLE ECZEMA in bed six months at a lime body and limbs swollen and scaly like a dead fish. The itching was terrible, and finally LOST MY SIGHT. After treatment by five physicians, and other .emedies without relief, I look B. 3. S. and it cured MR. My skin is soft and smooth, and the terrible trouble is al gone. R. N. Mitchell, Jlfacon, Ca. I know the above statement to be true. S. S. Harmon, Macon, (to. I was for some lime troubled with an obstinate BASH ORHTJMOR, that spread over my face and breast. I consulted physicians, and used many remedies without a cave. At the suggestion of a friend I Used Swift's Specific, which completely cured me. This was two years ago, and I hive had no return of the trouble. E.H.Wells, ChesttrtitM, Vm. S. S. S. " ,he safest and best remedy for all troubles of Ihe Blood and Skin. It cures by removing the cause, and at the same time builds up the general health. Send for our Treatise, mailed free. c" ttr- . - r.r-. rr.r- rn Atlanta. Ga. W. L. DOUGLAS $3.?? SHOE For gentuman la a Hoe Call Bbos. mads sesmlsss, oi ths beat lestbsf produced In this oounuy. Thais ara no taoks or wax threads to hurt tba lest, and Is mada as smooth tnslds as a band sewed shoe). It Is as stylish, sasy llttlni and durable as oustom-made shoes oosUng from $4.00 to $9.00, and aokoowledred to be the Best In the World for the price. For GENTLEMEN s5.00 Genuine Hand-Sewed, 8 A Art Hand-Sewed 4sUU Welt Shoe. s3.50 $2.50 82.25 s2.00 Good wear Shoe, Polios and Qv v h ... , . 3 Extra Value lk r -rr i . .Siei Call Shoe. W " , Working- C JL man's Bho. f .4-C w Eet5TAKE NO SUBSTITUTES. IX IS A DUTY you owe to yourself and your family, during these hard times, to get the most value for your money. You can economize iu yonr foot wear if you purchase W. L. Douglas' Shoes, which, without question, represent a greater value for the money than any other mnkes. f I r W. L. DOUGLAS' name and the price Is stamped VnU I IUIsi on tho bottom of each shoe, which protect tho consumer against high prices and Inferior shoos. Beware of dealers who acknowledge the superiority of W. L. Douglas' Shoes by attempt ing to substitute other makes for them. Such substitutions aro fraud ulent, and subject to prosecution by law, for obtaining money under false pretences. W. L. DOUGLAS, Brockton, Mass. II uol (nr .nlo In your plnre arntl direct In Fn.-tnry. Miming- klmt. aifti- surf wldlli waul ttil. I'unlHiic Inr. .KitM's 11 A STK.II. Will nlvc cxi'luxive aule lo shoe dealers wkere 1 liiivtt no nm-nl mill mlvrrlt.n ihtm irrv In Inonl pHitt-r. EVERY FAMILY, School, Library, and Office S-H-O-U-L-D Have a Dictionary. Care should be taken to GET THE BEST. THE INTERNATIONAL, Kew from Cover t 'over, Stii-ifrir of Uip "('nabridukd," IS THE ON TO BUY. y0 10 year spent rerWng. f $ofoC looe1iton emplDycil. a ' ' niS faw.uuuexptmleti. iar RuMi,; WEBSTER'S A II lln.,1 ullni J I Rem) to in 1 i:luN At lUiNALr O.A C.MEKltlAll tfc Co DICTIONARY , 1'ubiHlM'DI, Springflelu,MiuM.,r..A lor free pfrltneu iingi. nn not nr deceivfd with Putin. fciunibTs, snd Faints wtrlcB .UUu Hi. hi.nl. In In r I lie I mn anil hum nff. The Hislnn Sun Buno Fount! U lirllllant Odor less, uurauie, aim me cuiwuiuor pays iw uv tui or sissa pai'ltatie wiin evury purcnaso. RIPANS TABOLESmoiJ . tin Ktuiiiau'i!. liver ami lxwli ? imrlry Uiu hlood, are wire ana tr I fiM'tuttl. The U-st ittmeral family I UK-tiU me kiiuv. li for biUouiit'tf.S Constipation, i'VHpftmia, foul brtNatli, llfiultti'he, Husu luurn.LtNKi ot AjilM'tlU', ttuauu ut'presftum, gainful niMtloti, I'Unpl.-a, Hallow (Xiniiili xlou. tirvd FwlUitf, f overv vmnUirn or divaae rtwultlntr from 11 aud iinpun-' ltislilvel) Cured wlik Vraiabl Keasefilca ILfcvt) cured Lhousao d of tui. Cure paiieuu pri onuoad huiiole-va br baet physvioian. Vrttm tLrtvi dona ayiupturus rapidly diwiipaar; o 10 day two third of all 7 ill 11 to mi remtif Iseiiil for Irtta ink of LadtiiQuotal ot tnlraeulou cures. IO duya Irfatwent iVea by tail. lf ytu ordsir trial, i--inl h e. in tiinr4 U paj p't as. 1U. II. II. O KiKN V fcONb. AUauta, O. liJlJ SJIOIV S3 One nil &OI.Ill U Vt aisatiletl. . U- lor incn-aHe. ji year ex-perlrit-e. Write for i. aw. A.W. Mi ( uhmu i terli qnh'a WAililNuruN U. U 1'lNt INNA'i'l U. $65 A .!! Til lor brum louun lieu ir 1ai1i lu vtictx ivuuly. AildniMi I. Va Ikl.l.l.U .V. I )., I'blla., Ha. assBw, jHsnsf tJoBauanpllvea aud pmt'pla who have w eak lungs or Asib uia, should u 1'iao'B Cure for CooBumptli'U. It has eured ttsonaauids. It ba not tnjur eti n. It I not bad to tats. It l tus boat couyb syrup, hnld erarr where. SAe. niM;i.Lir: T innrniriuiiniin i fs V Jto iMrforin their proiw r runttinu. l'eniuiijtTtn to? 5uTcratlngarlen-iiiliiyUdl''ifaTAllt tK after Z Jua4.-hnujil I'l-ii-e.hy mall.. Ki-a-l.t I boltlelAc. Ad J I Aa-rata Wmitrdt KHillTV per real arall. I torvaioMT mi Ought to b tmaRt the jTreat, griping, old-fashioned pill. There's too much unpleasant ness for the money. Ought to be) belter, too. They're big enough, and make trouble enough, to do more good. That's just what Dr. Pierce'i rieasant Pellets do, more good, Instead of weakening tho system, they renovate it ; instead of up setting, they cleanse and regulate it mildly, gently, and naturally. They're the original Little Liver Pflhi the smallest but most cffeotWe, purely vegetable, perfectly harmlesn, and easiest to take. Onlv om little Pellet for a gentlo la-.viT three for a cathartic. Sick Head ache, Uilious Headache, Constipa tion, Indigestion, Bilious Attacks, and all derangements of the Liyer, Stomach and Bowels nre promptly relieved and permanently cured. They're the cheapest pills you can buy, for they're guaranteed to givo satisfaction, or your money is re turned. You pay only for the good von get. It's a plan peculiar to Dr. Pierce's medieinca. For LADIES. $3.00 s2.50 $2.00 Hand- Sswsd. Best Bongola, Calf and Donfola Tor XI8SZI. 1.75 For BOYS' & YOUTH'S. $2 tc 8L75 SCHOOL SHOES. ORATEFUls-COMFORTINa EPPSS COCOA BREAKFAST. By a thorouirb knowlwlfre of tti nAfiiral law which govern the operation of d Ikm t ion and nutrt uon, ana ny m isareful applU-Atlon of tha Ana propel ties of arell-MlecUKl Cocoa, Mr. fippa baa provide! our breakfasi table with a dellcatWy flavoured bav entire which may ve u many heavy doc Cora tnlla. it la bj che Judlclou ua ot turn article ox dlai UiM aonnsntuuon may u urutiunuj uuu. uu hum tiinKo ssiniiiirh to roKlt)t everv tendency lo i liundre1 of mlrtl maladies are floattun around OS ready to attack wbareviT there ia a weak point. e may etu ai many A fatal haft by keeping our eivea well fortlned frith pur blood and a pivparl lourlrined t rani, Cirit Sri-vi- a UaaflTa, Made simply vMb oolllna watoi or mOfc BoM snly in nad-itound Una by Urocera, labelled thus. 4AJUk4 tVl'S A- CO., Homix)paU.k) Cbejualat laONDUN, EMU LAW Q h v vn j tylU-.UL'UIs- flj' Uf tf 1 MUSHROOMS :. MILLION E u There's money in growing Mushroom a. Ut "A Constant deiaaud at good jrice. Any one U1M Wlin a R1IW ur eia- ar ble can do it. Our r l rnucr & JrioE-lit Kr tella now to grow ' thrin. Free, bend i for it. A trial brick of Bpswn (enough K for a J14 ft.eaperl- , ...nil k.m.11 T.At. f t,S paid, for ic. Byea-Tf Jpreu, 8 n tor 11.00; be iH lb for (2.00; y i P tnr c m Hnedal B2 rate, on Urge lots. Johm C5AniNs At Co., f Seed Orower., Importers snd Dealers, ft I'liilarlrlohia Pa. C s-Gardiner's Seeds: New Catalogue k . . L . .. ., I. , Knri fur It. V- v .in .. "..j . - We Send Free by mail to any woman a beautifully Illus trated book, containing over 90 pages ot niobt important information about all forms of female complaints. No woman should live without a copy of "Guide to Health and Etiquette," by Lydia E. PiyUiam. Thousands of women have been benefited by Mrs. l'inkham'a advice after all other medical treatment had failed. Send two 2-cent stamps to cover postage nnd packing, when you write for tii. book. Address in confidence LYDIA . PJNKHAM MED. CO., Lyuo, alat " . 4MU ' ,-,..11