The Forest Republican. (Tionesta, Pa.) 1869-1952, December 07, 1892, Image 5
TEMPERANCE. rn iNDKrirtnitxT ciTirK. ITere each man a kinR may te Enthronail nninns h ptn, and freo To work nn i win renown; And hold his mnnhood with the best, Whn plot will not disturb his mt. Nor tain his laurel crown. The patent of nobility Datura bestows, without th fee That comes of jrnl Jon gain. Tis a white chartor, plainly writ. For the wise men, whose mother wit Outweighs a crown with brains. He fears no train of ilynamita, No powder plots that oft affright Princes and emperors. His cot. tape is his palace, there He reigns a king, his elbow-chair The throne no earthshock stirs. CJive honor to the man of worth, Mot to the accident of birth. They come not from above. The cradle unadorned may hold Full caret of the purest gold A human heart of love. The true man's king among his peers, No rivals rise to wake bis fears And take away his crown. His title wears no mold of years, Nc stains of human strife and tears, They come from Adam down. His crown Is honor without stain. His realm is home, where he may reign He's temnorate, true and just. He is the king, his wife is queen. His sceptre love, his laurel green, In Heaven he put his trust. National Temperance Advocate. JUAKINU WHKCKS OF MEN AND WOVEN. Will you credit this? There is a place in deed there are places where for five cents a man may insert one end of a tube into a bar rel of beer and drink through the tube till he can't drink any longer. It's a long pull and strong pull, its length and strength are only regulated by the capacity of the drinker, and the price is five centi. The tube is ready for all coiners wrecks of men and wrecks of women what next. MR. MOODY ON WINE. The League Journal, of Glasgow, Stotland, In a recent issue publishes the following: "Mr. D. L, Moody, in addressing the noon day prayer-meeting in the Christian Insti tute, Glasgow, on Monday week, referred to the miracle performed by Christ at Cana of Galilee in turning water into wine. He said some people bad a difficulty about this sub ject in regard to what kind of wine Christ made. They were somewhat afraid to deil with tbe difficulty, but be was quite crtain Christ never made alcoholic wine. He never made alcohol in nature. It was only when men took the good grain and destroyed it that alcohol was produced. Mr. Moody said lie was in Jerusalem lately, and he asked a Jewish rabbi there what kind of wine they used at their feusts. The rabbi replied: 'We use the pure juice of the grape, we do not use leaven in our bread, and, of course, we would have nothing to do with alcohol In our wine.' When the pure juice of the Cape could not be got, they poured hot water on the raisins an i drank it. Thosa people in this country who have some scruples about the use of the unfermeute I wine at the communion need have no diffi culty in this matter.aa it is quite clear Christ never made or used alcoholic wine." TUB XATIONALW. C. T. XI. CONVENTION. Trinity Methodist Church, in Denver. Col., was crowded recently with delegates to the nineteenth annual convention of the Woman's Christian Temperance Union. The building was handsomely decorated with bunting and flags, among which were banners bearing appropriate mottoes, the most prominent of which was bung over the stasre and bore the words: "No Hex in citizenship." Around tbe speaker's desk and back of it were seated the btate Presidents, members of the Executive Committees and Superintendents, while in the body of the house were about 800 dele gates. An overflow meeting was held at tbe Unity Church, where Lady Henry Somerset would speak. A second overflow meeting assembled at the Central Christian Church, where speeches were made by Mrs. Mary H. Hunt and Mrs. 8. E. V. Emory. Miss Frances E. Willard. the President, called the convention to order, and after a brief prayer by Lady Somerset the regular routine convention work began, which included reading of minutes and reports and the ap pointment of committee Miss Willard read her annual report. The report reviewed tbe work of the union for the year and spoke of Its plans for the future. Miss Willard said in part: "There is no object that we White Kibbonerg so much desire to photograph upon the brain of very voter as the American saloon. It is an institution the character of which be comes each year more clearly defined, and one that, because of our form of govern ment, exposes us more than any other peo ple to political corruption. Because tnese things are tru?, the temperance women of .America have gone into politics, and have taken sides with the men who first, last and all times cast their ballots against candidates for offices who are pledged to the saloon. "While I am heart and soul in svmpathy ..- with very movement for the uplifting of labor, it remains true that three-fourths of the whole labor question is summed up in the following: 'iV here are our carriagesf said an Anarchist, as some capitalists drove by. 'Why,' replied a red-nosoi follower, to tell you the truth, a saloon keeper yon der is riding there in mine.1 "We expect to convene the World's W. C. T. U. the first week in June at the Co lumbian Exposition, and we hope that tbe National Association will be held at the same time. Tbe only new department of which I give notice this year, is for the building up of the local auxiliaries If we could put a capable woman at the head of the department of work for the local W. C. T. U., and this coul 1 be carried out into all our borders, we should find that this con vention had not assembled in vain." The report of the National Secretary, Mrs. Caroline B. Buel, shows that the uniou is in a most flourishing condition. The total number of auxiliary and including "Y's" is 7857; total membership. HJ.-VW; number of 'Y" unions, 7.V1; total membership, 12,31; numlier of cotfne houses, restaurants, etc., 2KJ; money raised by local unions. 24.71: rail by State unions, 1123, 7WJ.4J; paid National Union in du-g, 12,bia.01; for other purposes, fl 1,577.3;. In Colorado. Nortu Dakota, Idaho, Illi nois, Kansas, Maine, Maryland, Massachu setts, Michigan, Montana, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, Oregon, Vermont and Washington there is school suffrage, and in Wyoming there is full suffrage. The report of the Treasurer, Miss Esther Pngh, shows that the total amount of money raised by local unions in tbe lait year for temperance work is tVjiJ, 244. 1. There has been paid Into the National Treasury for Slate dues, $13,506.16; for other purposes, ll,57K.2o, ami for the temple, 2,iKW.5J. New Yorx paid dues on a mem'iership of ftt.OO'J; Illinois on more than lti, 000, Penn sylvania on more than 16.0J0, au 1 Ojio on upward of 10,000 members. TEMPERANCE NEWS AND NOTES. The pleuro is stamped out, but t le stloon retnaius. The pleuro kills cattle; the saloon, men, One illegal rumseller of Portlaud, Me,, at the last criminal court iu that city, was fined tld'JO, and sentenced to sixteeu months in jail. There are in the United Kingdom 2,613,. 000 young people who are members of the Band of Hoie or other juveuilo temperance organisations. Over seventeen hundred indictments gainst liquor dealers were recently returned bythegraud jury of Jefferson County in Indiana in a siugie month. A Vienna paper ha collected statistics bowing that 40,4 W breweries exiatel in lf.il In twenty-one cuuutries, a decrease of al most a tuousand in one year. Dr. Guibert, writing to a Havre journal, state as the result of his eipjrieuc that habitual inebriates have very little chance of recovering from au attack of cholera. An enterprising veu ler has purchase I the privilege of sellin - poorn at the World's Fair tor 160,(100, aud another guarantees the Fair managers not lus than $ 1 no. on J for the privilege ot telliug peuuuts. Ihe price of the bear and whi&Jcy concessions is much more. if rain can i.e mauUTturrd, wny not cold waves' Here 16 a chance for a S'-jaruor indus-try tbat would make ltb inventor.-, rniUir.riaires uay, trill lonaires in a week, -av- 4 Empire styles are creeping in. Some of tbe cloth capes are lavish. Plume and curling feathers are again seen. The "Capucine" robe is a new cos tume. Colored lamb's wool Is one of the fancies. Large revcrs are one of the marked features. Ribbons of all kinds are much used in trimming. Cut steel is coming once more greatly into favor. Sloping shoulders are slowly bat surely returning. Tbe latest shoes for street wear are white doeskin. Miss Mary Anderson is said to be an enthusiastic fisherwoman. Rev. Mr. Pott, an aristocratic New Yorker, has a Chinese wig. Three hospitals in Philadelphia are managed entirely by women. Seventeen American women keep boarding houses in Paris, Fiance. The best table for surgical operations now in use was invented by woman.. The loug, slender, pointed foot u no longer considered a mark of blue blood. Broad Alsatian bows of "satin anti que, "a kind of soft-haired plush, are seen on broad-brimmed hats. The Queen of Siarn has the smallest feet yet seen on a titled woman. She wears one and a half in boots. Squares and circles of white silk edged with a frill of Oriental lace make pretty mats for small polished tables. A three-cornered hat, "the Marquis," Is the new fashionable headgear among the women of Paris who sot the fash ions. The Inventive Society of Paris has re cently awarded Mrs. F. B. Mapp, of Georgia, a gold medal for her invention of a bread raiser. Tbere is a club in Boston composed of women who are all fifty years old or more. To be "between fifty and a hun dred" is a condition of membership. The ex-Empress Frederick of Prussia, the Queen Regent of the Netherlands and the Empress Augusta all hold the posi tions of regimental chiefs in Prussia. Mrs. Laagtry has returned to the style of coiffure with which Americans were made familiar on her first visit the low, loose coil on the nape of the neck. All kinds of plaided woolens are shown, besides the striped and corded, and as for camel's hair, it 'will beyond a doubt be very popular during the lall. In New York City there are-250, 000" women, exclusive of the domestic ser vice, who are bread-winners and who are obliged to rely upon their own efforts solely for support. The white felt hat with an indented crown, and at the side a full bow of white velvet, makes a very pretty shop ping hat, and serves well for an after noon promenade. A novelty in woolen goods is a kind of velvet cloth, which is chamois color and looks very much like suede kid. In dark tints it makeu quite smart-looking frocks, combined with velvet or satin. Earrings are no longer fashionable, and the best dressed women appear now in public without even the solitaire pearl or torquoise screw which was the grad ual abandoning of the ornamental ear bobs. The Bernhardt toque, a dainty stylo of headgear for the fall, makes a very ac ceptable head dress for driving and vis iting. It is made in black velvet, with colored gauze twisted in, and quills at the side. Victoria's maids of honor, who are paid 11500 a year for their services, earn their salaries. They are obliged to appear before theQueen in a new gown every day, and to be in readiness to at tend her Majesty at any and every hour of the day. Police matrons in Chicago are re quired, by a recent rule, to wear uni forms while on duty. The uniform is to be of blue serge, with tight-fitting basque, double-breasted, blue serge but tons and skirt underlined and clearing tbe ground. Damask rose crimson and a bright. uecp cherry color are the favorite tint1 for torsades, or bows of velvet, to brieht en up dark hats or bonnets. Pretty combinations of these colors nre the cherry with purple, and the Jacqueminot with heliotrope. Rope picture frames are the newest faucy. Take an old frame and twist around it fine hemp rope until it is en tirely and completely covered. At each corner coil the rope in small circles. With a coarse thread and heavy needle fasten the rope on the wrong side of the frame. It may be left in a natural state, or bronzed or gilded to suit the fancy. A delightful material, and a useful one as well, for winter petticoats, peignoirs and little warm breakfast jackets, is of narrowly stripped crepon-surau in old time shading. They come vnjth a fine design woven on every other stripe, and shot with several colors, and in tones of dove gray, pale green and lemon. They look very quaint and Marie Antoinet tish. A new feature is the breast piece. The front holding the double row of buttons or, more strictly, one row of buttons and the buttonholes is separate from the coat, and bound round with braid, or has three lap stitcbings. Pockets are set in this piece crosswise and lengthwise. There are inuer breast pockets, and out side pockets with buttoned flap and double pockets, a pocket in a pocket. A rustling silk skiit is no longer tbe luxury it was. It may now be had for tbe by no means ruinous price of &2.5U aud sometimes for even U-ss than that. The newest skirts are of softest brocaded silk, furbelowed in the most delightful and most frivolous fashion imaginable with lace and ribbons. For ordinary day wear with tailor made serge drfst.es there are smart petticoats of shot striped silk trioime4 merely with flowers to match, HOUSEHOLD AFFAIRS. TTMKLT TCRIIT KRCTPK8. The standard holiday dish is roast tnrkey with oyster stuffing, which is first put Inside the turkey, and afterwards put inside those who gather at the dinner table, Tbe turkey is drawn and roasted as usual. For the stuffing take bread at least one day old, grated fine, and one-fifth of the bulk of the bread in oysters. Add, for an ordinary sited fowl, two onions chopped fine, four ounces of molted butter, pepper, salt, thymo and snge according to taste, and a little of the fluid of the oysters. Baste tbe turkey until it is roasted to a light brown. Mako a gravy out of the giblets, heart and liver, thicken with flour and add a dash of Worcestershire sauce, a lump of butter, pepper and salt. With this dish should bo served the old-fash-ionod cranberry sauce, mado of equal weights cranberries and brown sugar, to which are added two ounces of butter and a dash of cinnamon. Let the whole simmer until the skin of the cranber ries la tender. Set to cool on Ice for three hours before serving, which will make the sauce like a jelly. For a roast turkey with chestnut stuf fing the same recipe applies, except that boiled chestnuts, grated or mashed very fine, are substituted for the oysters. The large Italian chestnuts are best. For an onion stuffing, considering the turkey weighs fourteen pounds,chop five onions very fine and substitute for oys ters, with sufficient bread crumbs, but ter, pepper, salt, sage and thyme. If one should want fried turkey a la Creolo for a change, which is a favorite Southern way of serving the bird, it should be disjointed. Then make a batter of equal parts of milk and eggs, well beaten, to which a little salt Is add ed. Dip the sections of turkey into cracker dust, then into the batter, and then into the cracker dint again, after which fry in equal parts of butter aud lard. For this dish the sauce is mado ol three ounces of butter and two heaping tablcspoonfuls of flour, melted together, to which add a pint of milk and dash of salt. Serve with small boiled potato balls, spriukled with chopped parsley. For the ordinary fried turkey, dip In baiter as before and serve on diamond shaped pieces of toast, with cranberry sauce. This kind of sauce is made of one quart of cranberries, two ounces of butter and eight ounces of light brown sugar. Allow to simmer until cooked, and then either pour over each portion or allow each guest to servo himself. In serving fried turkey with applo sauce, prepare the turkey as before. For tbe sauce, peel two quarts ot sour apples, take out cores and add one and a half pounds of light brown sugar and two ounces of butter. Boil together with one peeled lemon, and set to cool until ready to serve. In serving boiled turkey with oysters the turkey is stuffed with bread crumbs, moistened with oyster liquid, and oystcri to the amount of one-fourth the bread crumbs. To the stuffing is added three ounces of butter; pepper and salt to taste. The turkey should be tied in a linen cloth, as before. Serve with white sauce, made with four ounces of butter and three tablcspoonfuls of flour melted together, to which is added a little salt and a quart of milk. If a housewife builds her Thanksgiv ing dinner on any of these recipes, she will be very happy, and her husband will be very proud of her, besides being very well fed. Mr. Geo. IF. Turner SIMPLY AWFUL Worst Case of Scrofula the Doctors Ever Saw Completely Cured bu HOOD'S SAJl SAPAMLLA. "When I was 4 or 5 years old I had a scroful ous sore on the middle Anger of my left hand, which got so bad that the doctor cut the fin iter off, and Inter took otT more than half my hand. Then the sore broke out on my arm, came out on my neck nnl face on lHith sides, nearly destroying the siiflit of one eye, also ou iirnl arm. Doctors sunt it whs the Worst Case of Scrofula they ever saw. It was simply awful! Five years ago 1 begun to take Hood's hat-Haiuirilla. Urailunlly I found that tne sores were Im-l'Ih. niiig to heal. I kept on till I had taken ten U.l ties, t6n do lars! -ust think what a return 1 got for l hut investment I A thousand fiercent? Yes. many thou-aniis. r or the u.st 4 years l have had no bores. 1 Work all the Time. Before, 1 could do no work. I know not what to say atronK enough to express my Beat itude to HtHKl's Sarsapnrilla for my ierfert cure." U. W. Ti'hnkh, Kariuer.lialway, N. V. Hood's Pills do not weaken, but aid digestion and tone the utouim h. Try tliem. 2.V. N y M u tit DR.KI LM ER'S "eAT KIDNEY. LIVERS blc.r Ililioiisiicss, Headache, foul breath, sour stomal b, heart burn or dysci8itt, cousti nation. Poor Digestion, distress after eating, pain and bloating In the Stomach, sin irtuess of breath, ixuus In the heart. Loss of'Apiietitc, A splendid feeling to-day sad a depressed one to-morrow, nothing seems to taste, good, tired, sleepless and all unstrung, weakness, debiutv. Guarantee CMOonttuts ol On. hMtle, it sot bra IllM , Di uirg-i.i. will rcfuud you tuc price p.14. koo? I At Uruiul.il, ioc. U, Sl.OO SUe. 1XlTkl!4 Guide to HeulUi" trmm Consultation free. I'm. KlUlIB A CO., UlNUHAMTONN. Y, . !l2jgjs HstiSsaaafJaTI U6e The last year has been subscribers. The Bravest Deed I Ever Saw, will be described in graphic language by Officers ol the United States Army and by famous War Coirespondents, Qcncral John Olbbon. Oeneral Wesley Merrltt. Captain Charles King. Archibald Forbes. Things to Know. What Is a Patent? by The Hon. Carroll D. Wright. A Chat With Schoolgirls; by Amelia E. Ban-. Naval Courts-Martial; by Admiral S. B. Luce. Patents Granted Young Inventors; by U. S. Com. of Patents. The Weather Bureau; by Je-n Gordon Mattlll. Newly-Married in New York. What will $i.oooa year do? Answered by Mrs. Henry Ward Beecher and Marlon Harland. More than Knlttlu' Susan. An Able Mariner. In the Death Circle. Uncle Dan'I's Will. A Mountalnvllle Feud. On the Hadramaut Sands. Mrs. Parshley's First Voyage. An April First Experience. Bain McTickel's "Vast Doog." Riddling Jimmy, and other stories. The Cats of Cedar Swamp. A Boy's Prool that he was not a Coward; by ;. Strong "Medicine." The amusing effect oi a brass instrument on a hostile Indian; by Send This Slip with $1.75. j 1 j To any New Snbsciitter who will cut out and send us this slip with nam and address I . J I 4 I and S1.7S, we will send The Companion Free to Jan. 1, 1H03, and for , Full Year rrora X jfV f Vaf"V " I I " 2 that date. This offer Includes the Double Holiday Jtumhwrs at Thanksgiving, Christmas, Lll iC3 Sew Year's, Easter and Fourth of July. Tht Soumir of r fompani.m UluttraltH in tolors, "" J 41 page, dttcribing Ihe rw IluiUHng, vith all Hi in drpatmrnlt, trill Mill e rtctipt of six eeiis, or yrte to any one retjuentinn it who $eudt a 9itbrripti.. for one pe.tr. 44 r Specimen copies tent free on application. Mllilarv Iialloouinr. Most people will remember tbe un lucky fate of M. Eugene Turpin, the well-known French scientific man who iuvented melinite that terrible explo sive and who about twelve months ago was sentenced by a military court to five years' imprisonment, in connection with tbe trials for treason instituted by tbe Ministry of "War. Turpin accepted his fate uncomplain ingly and it appears that he has been at work, so far as the prison regulations would allow, since his conviction. He is at present in a bouse of detention at Etanipcs, where he is allowed pretty large liberty for studying military science tod aeronautics. Ha is oven allowed to write to the papers, and a recent journal expresses a regret that valuable discov eries such as Turpin claims to have made should be dated from between prison walls. Among other things, lie professes to hnvent last solved the difficult prob lem of aerial navigation by the construc tion of a balloon which can be guided ac cording to the will of the occupant. He hopes to attain a speed of , forty kilome tres an hour. In another field of aerostatics uamely, military ballooning tbe imprisoned en gineer hits been studying an apparatus lor making pure hydrogen fjas, wbicb will icqiiire only one-ninth part ef the machinery now in use an important consideration when on the march. A new fuse for shells when used at sea, which prevents the projectiles from exploding from ricochets ou the waUr, is also among the inventions to which Turpin has devoted much time. New York Journal. (ionscberry Rats. Q. Ileade, in the Zoologist, says that the ripe gooseberries in his garde a were disappearing very rapidly this year, and he supposed that the mischief was being done by blackbirds. However, bis at tention was called to a large rat taking tbe berries off with bis mouth and drop ping them to other raU below. Pres ently another climbed the tree and helped to gather tbe berries. In a little time botb came down each with a berry ie its mouth, having a curious appear ance. Mr. Reade saw the performance several times repeated. Then he placed a wire cage under the tree, sod in three days caught nine of the intruders. $out()$ the most prosperous of the Sixty-five years of The Companion's history. This support enables it to provide more lavishly than ever for 1 893. Only of Authors, Stories and Articles can be given here. Prize Serial Stories. The Trlzes offered for the Serial Competition of 1891 were the I-argest ever given by any periodical. First Prize, Sl.OOO. Larry; "Aunt Mat's" Investmrnt and its Reward; ly , Miss Amanda M. Douglas. 5econd Prlie, $1,000. Armajoj How a very hard Lesson was bravely Learned; by Charles W. Clarke. Third Prlie, $1,000. Cherrycroft ; The Old House and its Tenant; by Miss Edith E. Stowe (Pauline Wesley). Fourth Prize, Sl.OOO. Samj A charming Story ot Brotherly Love and Self Sacrifice; by Mls M. O. McClelland. SEVEN OTHER SERIAL STORIES, dming the year, by C. A. Stephens, Homer Oreene and others. Your Work in Life. What are you going to do? These and other similar articles may offer you some suggestions. Journalism as a Profession. By the Editor-in-Chief of the New York Times, Charles R. Miller. Why not be a Veterinary Surgeon? An opportunity for Hoys ; by Dr. Austin Peters. In What Trades and Professions is there most Room ? by Hon. R. P. Porter. Shipbuilders Wanted. Chats with great shipbuilders on this Subject; by Alexander Walnwright. Admission to West Point; by the Supt. of U. S. Academy, Col. John Al. Wilson. Admission to the Naval Academy ; by Lieut. W. P. Low, U. 5. N. Young Government Clerks at Washington. By the Chief Clerks of Six Departments. Short Stories One Hundred Short Stories and Adventure Sketches will be given in the volume "I low. I wrotk Bkn Ht)R," by Gen. Lew Wallace, opens a series, "Mchind the Scenes ol Famous Stories." Sir Edwin Arnold writes three fascinating articles on India. Rudyard Kipling tells the "Story of My Koyhood." A scries ol practical articles, "At the Woild's Fair," by Director-General Davis and Mrs. Potter Palmer, will lie lull of valuable hints to those who go. "Odd House keeping in Queer Daces" is the subject of half a doien bright and amusing descriptions by Mrs. Lew Wallace, Lady Blake, and others. All the well-known features of Tur. Companion will be maintained and improved. The Editorial will be impartial explanations ot current events at home and abroad. The Illustrated Supplements, adding nearly one-halt to size of the paper, will be continued. THE YOUTH'S COMPANION, Boston, Mass. Cats Am Independent Animals. Tho cat's spirit of Independence, in deed, is the most distinct characteristic of her nature. As Mine, de Custme rightly said, the cat's great difference from, aud, according to her sentiments, superiority to, the dog lies in her calm insistence on selection which invariably accompanies her apparent docility. To the dog proprietorship is mastership; he knows bis borne, and be recognises with out question the man who has paid for, feeds and, on occasions, kicks him with all the easy familiarity of ownership. He follows that man uudoubting and un noticed, grateful for a word, even thank ful for an oath. But tbe cat is a crea ture of a very different stamp. She will not even stoop to conquer, nor be tempted out of her nature by oilers ol reward. She absolutely declines in struction; nay, eveu persuasion is lost upon her for auy permanent effect it may be desigued to have. You may be the legal possessor of a cat, but you caunot govern her affections. Henriette Hon ner. Russia Appreciates the Sunflower. The sunflower could not have been first cultivated in Russia or other coun tries of Europe, for it is a native of America sod unknown to the eastern world. It is quite probable, however, that the sunflower was cultivated here for its seeds thousands of years before the a i vent of Europeans, for this plant is found widely distributed over North and Soutb America. While the cultivation of the sunflower is being neglected in this country, it is on the increase in many Europeun countries, its well as in China. The seeds are highly valued for feeding pigs, poultry, sheep and cattle. Tbe oil expressed from the seed is equal to olive oil for almost auy purpose. In Russia the seeds are sold in the streets as pea nuts ate sold here. New York Sun. Coals of Fire ou His Head. A suigeon being sent to bleed a lady belonging to the nobility, did tbe opera tion in such a bungling manner tbat he cut an artery, of which miscut tbe lady subsequently died. In ber will she left him au annuity of (160 "as a balm to bia troubled conscience, and tbat by having a competence be may not be ob liged to cause others to run tbe same risk which bas resulted in my death." Argonaut. Qompauioi) Great Men at Home. How Mr. Gladstone Works ; by his daughter, Mr. Drew. (Jen. Sherman in his Home; by Mrs. Minnie Sherman Fitch. Oen. McClcIlan ; by his son, Ocorjre B. McClellan. President Garfield ; by bis daughter, Mrs. Molly Garfield Brown. Over the Water. How to See St. Paul's Cathedral; by The Dean of St. Paul. Windsor Ca.tle. A picturesque description by The Marquis of Lome. A Glimpse of Belgium. The American Minister at Brussels. A Glimpse of Russia; by The Hon. Charles Emory Smith. Adventures in London Fogs; by Charles Dickens. London Cabs. "Cabbies;" their "hansoms." Charles Dickens, Jr. A Boy's Club in East London. Frances Wynne. and Adventures. Capt. D. C. 1 The sardine factories at Eastport, Me., consutres 8000 barrels of cottonseed oil In a season in the process of turning small herring into imported French sar dines. The first cast iron plow was made in 1797. In Oldra Time People overlooked tin Importance ot per.i a nently beuetlclal effects and were satisfied with translen aotlon. but now tint It la (gen erally known that Syrup of Kiss will perma nently cure habitual ronatipat'on, well-informed people will not buy other lasatives, which act for a time, hut finally Injure the system. Ir you are constipated, bilious or troubled with sick beaiaclie, Hecchanrs I'ilU afford Immediate relief. of iliufftfiHts.2rceutM. Itev. If. P. Carbon, Si-otland, TakM says: "Two tiottli-Hof HalrsCatarrfi --rt-t-ittpli-1tly cured iny little en Sold bj D iKKista, Toe. If afflicted with sore eves intu tir.Uiiao rhomn sonKvo-watr.l)ruirlsU el At - a.ir bnttls "August Flower 99 Eight doctors treated me for Heart Disease and one for Rheumatism, but did me no good. I could not speak aloud. Everything that I took into the Stonirch distressed me. I could not sleep. I had taken all kinds ot medicines, lnrougn a neighbor I got one of your books. I procured a bottle of Green's Aug ust Flower and took it. I am to-day stout, hearty and strong and enjoy the best of health. August Flower saved my life and gave me my health. Mrs. Sarah J Cox, Defiance, O. WORN NIGHT AND DAY I Holds th worst rup ture wilt, ease un der all clrcunistsinr. Perfect J';,'. New rL lijipruveinm Ulus3t rlM :i. an.) ru lex for mult tnassur nir.nl u rural BfAitvi. Ha. ftj. Ia.aar, 144 Broad y, New 101H City. i.nrtmm inn f mm urn sans J W w- mm oauaaua, Cure CouotaiafttioD, keaiorti Coiuplftiicu, St- DwclciV fcuiA bsuuitie fre Oajtrutoj Tau Co.,U W. uih ftu, N Y. Cures SickHeadacne It has now over 550,000 a partial list for 1893 Quality's Temptation. A Bad Night In a Yacht. Leon Kestrel! Reporter. Uncle Sim's Clairvoyance. How I Won my Chevrons. W. J. Baker. Kingman, U. S. A. Send Check or fotl-Oflc OrJtr at our rl. Jl They ail Testily T the EScacj I the World-Kin Swift's SpscI iiw Tho old-tlmo slmpla - rcnioclyfroin the Georgia swainps and Acids fen trooo forth to tho anuiod.. a&UinuvhtnfitheskepUcal uTi-t ; eonfoundlag tho Uieorla - 1 thosowho depend solely on t physlelan's skill. Tbre la iv ia tatntwhloh ltriocanotlmmMllt.(. - eradicate. PoUons outwardly obcorbod or n-sult of vile diseases from wltlitn all yield to i" potent but simple remedy. U is au aneiu--. hmlc. builds up the old and f eoblc, cures all d Ur at i arising from Impure blood or weakened TlUU.y bead fur a trcatuw. Examine th proti. Cooks oa " Blood and Kkla Diseases " Balled (ma. JhruggUf Sell It. SWIFT SPECIFIC CO., Drawer a. Atlanta, Oa. DC NOT Hk OEUEtVHO ltb I'ft'tct, Enamels, ana .tainuE wbicti i (lie n ti ti. tninru tho iroti. una uurn orf. liio Hintnii Sun titovt fc.ilb it, JJrtiltont. (W t leas, tfurmtiiu and tho consumer payi ior uu;.u I Ot gliasVi psckiatfe if 1th every yurctutAO. j sMIIII aCsm tjsasj 1 ISOUtH CURf Cure Consumption, Coughs, Croiip, Boro Throat. Bold by all Drugritu oa a. OuanuitM. SAMPLE FilE Wa WahI Vaii 190 our atalortup of fat i. nB nail l lUU Patented novelties. ni It aad we will send with It, a sample of a n r. maker. El IIEK.t MAM FA Tl 1 1 m. t o.. Bos KM. l.t ro.r, !., Lr. K A. nillBJ Morphlno Habit t'omd ia ) II 1111 1 1 so No 1.07 tin ci, , Ul IU 111 bR. J. STEPHENS, UDanon.o . F"! P loo's Remedy tor Catarrh b u.-i I ff 3 Best, slt to T'se, and Cheapo? t ! I I bold by druggists or soul br uu.il, too. k. 'I'. llaicltuM, Warrau, 1'r. Tf i f III in WU3 i i 11 ma w I I It LV BB mMmim i