Indian llnne nt tho World's Fnir. Near tliu Ant lrortnlogir'al TuiUlintf nro several ontilunr tlisliiys of ninro than iiHiiul iulorcst. The jmrty sent nut l'.v Professor Putnam to tho ruins of Yucatan ninl ('nn secured Bt I'xmal, 'liichen-itzs, ami Laliiiiih "stiieezes" of hkiiio iloorwnys, cor nels, arches, etc., showing every tle tivil of ornament ninl symbolical carv ing. From these mollis cants have I'eeii liimlo exactly reiroilneiii the Mrnctnrcs. A group of five of theso lies nortli from the Anthropological tnililing. North from this is an in t crest iiifc series of homos of various American luilinns. The rialni-tliatclicJ lint of the ArnwnliH of (tninnn; tho Ion tt house of the Iroquois, construct ed of Imi k, ami ilivnlcil into six simoes within, one for eiieli of tho Six Na tions; the liirch-lmrk tout of the Pen obscot Indiana of Maine; the skin oovered ti'i'ee of tho pining tribe ; the (loine-Hhiipetl framework of poles, cov ered with rush matting, of the Algon kins; t he plank-covered houses of the Kwiikiool of Vancouver Island, nnd the Hiiiilah of Queen Charlotte Islands with their symbolical paint inrs nnd totem posts; these rnnpe nloiij; tho edijt; of the lrtpoon on whose witters tloiit various canoes nnd boats of tho natives. These houses have been lmilt from proper niaterinls by the luilians themselves, ami most of thorn are in lialiiteil by families of Imliaus, some of whom carry on their native arts and industries. Very interesting in this connection will lie the series of dances of the Kwakiools, fur which Doctor Hons has arranged, which will take place nt intervals through tho season. Popular Science Monthly. Drnfnrod Cannot be Cared hy local application . as thojr cannot rcai-h the tliwHwii ixirtlim "f ilip rnr. 'J lie re Is only one way to euro !eafn's, a-ut that Is by contitu t'onnl roni-iH.'. infn-n Iscau-vil by an In fiamod romll Inn at the munv.19 lining of the hustarliian Tube. Wiu-n this tube gets in flamed mi Imvo a romilin? sound or linper fiTt limrlr-f. anil wtien it is entirely cl ired Di-afniw is tho result, and unless the Inflam mation run b tnle n out and this tube re stored 1 1 tis normal condition, hearing will be tlestmyel fot'i'vrr; nine cases out ten are ravwd by cntanli, which Is nothing but an In Iliimcd c m.l.tiori d tho mucous surfaces. Wo wil- aive One Hundred 1) illars fur any pnoof i nfin'S (caiiM'd by catarrh! that ran iint lie cur i by Hull's Catarrh Cure. Sind tor circulars, free. . , A , ,v-3- rHB?"'T & Co., Toledo, 0. l3r-Sold hy IlruuRists, 75c Til.. True l.nxntlve l'rlnelpln (If the jilants used in manufacturing the pless nt remedy. Syrup of Flits, has a permanently ncn' flrlal r fleet on the huninn system, while ihe cheap vegetable est racts and mineral solu lions unially sold as n cdielncs, are pernia. nriuly injurious. Hoidi well Informed, you will use the true remedy only. Manufactured by the California Fig Syrup Co. Mornings eecham's 1'ills with a drink of water. Heecham's no others. '! cents a box. Hatch's I'liiversiil Cough Syrup costs no more than others and lieneitts more. If afflicted with soreeyes nse lr. Isaac Thomr ton's Kye-water. I irunirists sell at iV oi-r bott le. No Pen Can Describe The suffering I enduretl ten yean from JVB' letna. I tru'd almost evi-ry medicine and a,! mmtt puve up hofie uf ever hvinu any !ellr. Hut lIxdV Sinimriila vave mo relief very noon and now M atn entire ly rurett uf dyMRtia, and advise every one to try Hood'R Karsaitarllla. Airs. J Fen ton. .MBS. JOHN T KNTON, H7 l'ride St., Pittsburg, I'a. Hood's53;4 Cures llood'n PIIIm not easily, yet rtnptly. An agrrncablB lxatlve anfl Nrav Toirro. Bold hy DruggUta or sect by mail. 5CntiOOb and i.oo per package. Famplea free. fTk XJ f The Favorite TOOTS rWTHl iXJ LZJ for the Teeth mxl UauKSoa "THE KIND iT H THAT CURES d N N a .r- a .i.Vi?-. a BJ MKS. KKIXDA IIAM8, Victory Over Disease IS H ' Terrible Pain In Head and S 19 Stomach I " pj M ' My Face was one Maia of L, Eruptions ! ' ! 83 "Walked the Floor Night Q 'I After Night I" t" Tha following from Mrs. Himi proTen tho WON OKEFUL f OWH tff DANA'S l- f over dlKcanj. m tirNTLIMKN I Bill .14 VfMO IfP. AU.Ul - HIIHrH, .1 hail li.. 1-UI-B Lit li. "J i wry 1:I lute. I nf t.wt II II V. I -K MAflNMI r.' it'n'' mtj a 'I' f. 11 Ul-E. Mlil.K I' 11 V MY IIHI ( M B." tn ) i-uutl t-y l,Ur 'I'routtlf . 1 . luttt ttfit-r niiclit 1 im -oiu m lli-d to Miilk tltf U.m.i- Uiu uf U, M ' (i-t'i .ItU- p:il(, m :ii ihi i it '!, m -: Qlttl'f n lt lllltMB l T(llloaB Ml liu. M . 4t l,:m-a (. Ih l UVTI't HtUttl fllllrt-l r-t m II h M-ultt. I r.iij jjui umikji, aiiU U.Uk!!' -Si U.iLI .!. IkAtlrul H Fi DAXA'S H - SAUSATAKILLA iili I littii ln.it ii.miiv ti.flrr.-l 1 lm-iit in , . ' - ti mi y In I ' : I,, it Vt!..- (oiiii It. t.'ir J I ljk it uiii' hulllt- 1 f.-i ifi'Cttt lt-iilflS llt-r. J t J. I. i Ukdl luu. l,il .iu l. 1 - Kl ft ft Aft I . Iilla l Rfi Jri(l. iittill lt-t:n l. i. I'j.r On J I -' I ia i 1 imt i t-uilrrly ifiiite. l m ,li t is II. 1 I'.n k, :i.i i.iMit ifXtle m, K1 S3 .. ...i .:-t.t.., Y. -.. tfi.: . T...i.a. r..r-a. . y Mils. iiamk. ra Ml -H..IM it iuv i-oi.ttiui i ti.r.-l.v ttinfv L. ' t..v ul .. 1'. W UAHKV. 'i it ..uU.-rugM, V Y. l'lu..!. IX K3 Dana SArkaparll'e Co., Belfast, Maine. . 1,000,000 OF LAND Ajuixs HOHtWtU CLARKE. Xud uuuuitiuuel et J?ui M.iis - - i : X . -,1 ' ' - ttarC i ;.-.-.4K-! Li in IiOSS OF YOt SO TtTtKEVS. Yonng turkej-a nre ilillicult to renr B ilhont every convenient provision for safety from damp anil wot. It is beat to house them nt night in n long, low aheil, divided into njiartmcnts, one for onch lirood. Hero they ahoulil lie fed in the morning before they are let out and in the evening when driven in be fore the down fall. Tho coops niny be five feet high at the rear and three feet in tho front, with one glazed snsli, hinged, for tho door. Kiitrance will then bo easy to clean tho coops and talto in the food. Tlie flocks slum hi be driven up early and then chut in tho yard in which the coops are made. Exposure to one cold rain will kill every one of n brood until tho red of tho head and neck, which is n aign of full puberty, appears. After that they are not so tender, but will yet need cure. New York Times. rsA vrsEs as mantre. When a full crop is taken after pick ing green peas for market it is a usual practice to gather the pea vine9 and cart them out of the field. They are often worth more hm a fertilizer to be plowed tinder just as they arc. If a few seed peas are left ripo enough to grow, it will lio none the worse for tho future crop. Tho pea vine is strongly nitrogenous, und makes a fertilizer richer than much strawy and lire fanged stnblo manure. It has tho fur ther advantage of being somewhat wet, as the moisture lias not had timo to dry out. We have seen tho best crops of late turnips grown thus, and they were seemingly not at nil injured by the few pea vines that came up among them. The pea root gathers nitrogen from Bir in tho soil, as tho clover root does, and growing it as green manure adds more to tho fertility of soil than does any other crop excepting clover. Boston Cultivator. HOW TO MILK. It is very important to free the udder entirely from milk for two rea sons. The first is that theso "strip pings" will dry up the cow in n very short time. Tho other is tho fact that ono pint of the milk lust drawn con tains us much butter fat as one quart of that obtained at the beginning of tho milking. In addition to these there is the actual loss in the amount of milk at the time. To show how considerable this loss is tho following test was recently mode : Five cows were milked for a period of four weeks by two different persons, both being competent parties, ono of them doing his average milking and not aware that an experiment was under way, the other fully informed as to the nature of the experiment and ex pected to contribute his best skill for the purpose in view. In tho ease of the one unaware of the experiment tho yield of milk for tho two weeks from the Ave cows was 8i31 pounds. With no more cows or chance, the man who was posted got 1131 pounds, or 267 pounds more than tho other. New York World. CCLTTVATIOS OP THE ORCHARD. The opinion of horticulturists differs widely on tho cultivation that should be given to the orchard. Some believe that tho best results are obtained when tho grass is allowed to grow in the or chard, while others recommend a shal low and frequent loosening cf tho soil, while still others favor a deep plowing several times during the season. Many have tried subsoiliug before planting Bnd some continuing it after, and al though the expense was quite heavy, they heurtily favor that method. Disk harrowing has been tried in many sec tions ond good results lmvo been re ported in the majority of cases. Another point on which a difference of opinion is expressed is where to plant the orchard, on the low land bordering n stream or on tho upland. In the Arkansas Valley, those who ruiso fruit for tho market select tho iirst bottom for tho orchards. The laud there is well drained and has a good anb-irrigatiou. In other parts of the State orchardists, fully as extensive growers, avoid planting on tho lower ground, beginning their orchards well up the hillside and continuing to the summit. American Farmer. PUOKIT IN WillTB KIEI.D llEASS. What to raise in the place of wheat, which has not been u puying crop for several years, is a question which is agitating tunny farmers, wr'tcs W. J. Thomas, of Michigan. I beliovo that, for some districtn, beans come nearer to tilling the place of wheat than any other crop. Like wheut there is ul wuys a ready sulo for it, it has fewer enemies, can be kept over with much less shrinkage, as rats and mice do not trouble it, and eomnuiu 1.1 from two to three times the price of wheat, while tho vines and pods lire fully equul to hay for feeding purposes. A poor soil may raise a fair crop of beuns, or a fuir crop may be raised with but little work. On tho other Laud no crop will better respond to good treatment than will beuus, and the better the soil the better will bo the beuns. Land that will, in u good season, raise ten bushels of wheat per acre, will ruise ten of beans, uud laud that grows twenty of wheat, will yield us many of Ii. iuih. Formerly the crop required a good deul of labor, for it wus all done by huud, yet then it was it paying crop; now that we have improved imtcliiuerv for planting and harvesting, tlie profit's ure doubled. tine ouu ride neurly ucrosa the Htuto of Michigan and see on ulnioht every farm from ten to forty acres of beans. Here we tine a com bined hurvctir und planter, with which one man und team can plant from ten ti fifteen acres in a day, und pull them in the suum time. They cuu uUo be cultivated with u riding cultivator, which makes beans the cheapen cultivated crop grown, so far us labor and expense are concerned. Wo aim to plant in early summer, taking care to have our groiiu I well pl'epured. With the planter we can plant the rows thirty, thirty-two or thirty-four inches apart, and from twelve to thirty inches npart in tho row, planting in hills of from three to ten beans in ft hill. With a riding two-horse cultivator we cultivate from two to four times, and by September 1st pull with tho puller, which, wlien properly handled, will not shell a peck of beans on ton acres, no matter how ripe they may be ; this allows plenty of timo to follow with wheat if wanted to seed down, or with ryo to"pasturo or plow under. The bean crop hero is threshed entirely by machinery, and is destined soon to become tho leading crop in Michigan. American Agriculturist. FARM AND GAH11EN NOTES. Clenmtis likes water. Mulch tho sweet pens. Chilled buttermilk makes a refresh ing drink. The successful dairyman foeds and milks tho cows regularly. Tho temperature of tho milk is an item of first importance. If you have not Btartod a compost heap for next year's use, do it now. The ahortcr tho silage is cut tho bet ter. Half an inch or less gives tho best results. To get tho most good from bran it should bo fed along with corn and sim ilar food stuffs. In raising tomatoes employ thoso fertilizers which give up their food ma terials quickly. If rains wash off tho insocticido or fungicide, renow it as quickly as pos sible after rain ceases. Top dressing of good manure upon tho timothy field will be quickly pro ductive of good results. If tho clover pasture has dried np feed tho shoats fresh cut corn and keep pushing them right along. Don't wait till tho grass is wood be fore yon cut it. Thero is more milk and butter in early cut grass. Fairly strong walnut water is re commended as an excellent wash for horses troubled with insect peBta. The best animals for tho farmer are thoso which keep in a good and thrifty condition with very little difficulty. Provide shade, water ond succulent food for the mileh cows during a dry spell, if you would have them do welL Do not feed the horses on an ex clusively rough ration at this time of tho year, but give a supply of grain feed. These scorehingdays afresh, fragrant bouquet is doubly grateful to tho sick and the aged ; do not neglect or forget them. Don't force any nioro new growth on plants that are to winter out, but allow the growth already formed to ripen. Tho man who works with well laid plans is seldom crowded with work ; he is in a position to do the crowding himself. Lime greatly stimulates and makes active tho inert elements of tho soil, aud makes them available iu plant growth. All milk utensils are better cleaned if rinsed with cold or lukewarm water before scalding water or steam is op plied to them. A perfect Cheddar cheese is ono that has a clear skin, thut is white in color, solid and lirm in texture, aud that has a slightly nutty flavor. A kiud master is one who has the horse's good will, and such a man can get more work out of them than ono who treats them harshly. Y'ouug orchards are very apt to be injured if not ruined by overbearing. Young troes need growth. The heavy crop should come afterwards. At this time of the year extra teams are in demand for farm work. It is poor policy to buy thein if you cannot keep them in good condition. It does not hurt tho horse now if ho is allowed to work without shoos. Unless there is an abundance of rocks, it is not necessary to have them shod. Do not wuit too long before cutting up the corn if yon wish tho fodder to bo "tho best." Tho same warning is to bo heeded if you are going to silo it. WISE WORDS. Justieo is frozen mercy. Ambition is a loaded gun. A sharp tongue cuts off friends. A kiss is affection's ginger-snap. The laborer is not always worthy of his hire. Short ubseuco quickens love ; long ubseueo kills it. Unexpressed thoughts are seed dor mant iu tho ground. America is tho homo of tho homo less ull over the world. When u mau hasn't enough money to go to law he is in luck. Some men are so stingy thot they refuse to use buit when they fish. Adversity is tho diamond dust Providence polishes its jewels with. Never say yon know a man till you have divided an inheritance with him. Having money requires as much genius us writing poetry, and it is of B heup better sort. An able man shows his spirit by gentle words and resolute actions. Ho is neither hot nor timid. There is not iu nuture a thing that mukes muu so deformed, so beastly, as doth intemperate unger. Doing is the grout thing. For if, resolutely, people do what is right, in time they ooinu to like doing it. If a woman looked into her con science us nfti'ii us she 1 joks into her mirror she wouldn't be any the worse for it. The happiest lot for a muu us far as birth is concerned, is that it should be such us to give him but little occasion to think much uliout it. IIOI'SEIIOM) AFFAIRS. NFW FMTT rilKSERVATIVB. A man who has been working ten years ot a new process for preserving fruits snd vegetables now offers to housewives the fruit of his lulor. It is in tho form of a powder which, added to water, preserves tho fruits by destroying tho germ which causes ferment. By its use it is claimed thnt certain fruits, notably poaches, pre serve their natural flavor so perfectly that they may bo served as fresh fruits. This mysterious powder has tho fantastic power to turn black ber ries white, while it, deepens tho hues of some of tho light-colored fruits. When ready to use a jar of the fruit in the winter, if preserves nre wished, a syrup is prepared and turned over tho fruit. Duo hundred and twenty-eight quart of fruit may bo prepared from n pound of the powder. New York Post. WHEN NOT TO VKE BOOS. Not in rice pudding, which you do not want to hnvo turned into n cus tard. The genuine rieo pudding is made rich and creamy by constantly stirring into it tho top skiu of tho milk, as it forms in tho baking pan, as soon as it begins to turn yeliow wit h tho heat. Continue to stir in this top until tho rice is well softened and the pudding nearly done. Then you may let the top brown, and yon will have a perfect pudding wheu cold as good as ieo cream. It needs no fla voring except a little cinnamon, al though some people like to grate lemon ponl into it. F.ggs are not needed either iu a muflin. Good F.uglish muf fins are made of bread dough softened to a batter with milk. One egg to a quart of milk, flour to muko a batter and a spoonful of baking powdor makes perfect English muffins. Two eggs spoil it aud make it quite another article. St. Louis Kopublie. EIGHT WATS OP PREPARING CABOAOB. Thesimplest way to prepnro cabbage, writes Clara H. Everts, iu Farm. Field and Fireside, is to mako cold-slaw by shredding it ond adding a little salt, peppor and enough sharp vinegar to almost cover it in whch sugar has been dissolved iu tho proportion of a heaping tublespooufnl to a cup of vin egar. A more elaborate cold-slaw is made by using a dressing of half a cup of rich cream, tablespoonfnl sugar nnd half cup of vinegar. Many prefer sour cream to sweet, but it will requiro nearly as much nguin sugar if sour cream bo used instead of sweet. Cabbage Halad Cnt tho cabbage fine. Mako a dressing by stirring into a cup of vinegar a wcll-benteu egg, n heaping teaspoouful of sugar, small lump of butter, salt and pepper. When it boils odd a scant tublespooufnl of flour in a third of a enp of milk. Cook well and pour over the cabbage. Mix thoroughly and .set aside until cold. In winter it will keep nicely for tlrroo or four days. In hot weather if water is nsod instead of milk it will keep for two days. Many complain thut un cooked cabbago is hard to digest. In that cose it should be finely chopped, thoroughly salted aud allowed to stand for two or three hours. Then if all the water arising is carefully squeezed out before the dressing is added it w ill be as digestible as the cooked. Creamed Cabbage Chop, add boil ing woter till it shows through the cabbage, but is not quite covered, salt, pepper und cover closely. Cook till tender, stirring now ond then. Add more water if necessary ond when done add a small lump of butter and half o cup of milk in which a tablespoonfnl of flour has been smoothed. Cook two or three minutes longer and servo hot. Fried Cabbage Chop moderately fine and put in a frying pan in which is a tablespoonfilj of hot butter and one of meat drippings. Salt, pepper and cover closely, stirring often to prevent scorching. Whou delicately browned odd a little water and simmer until done. Boiled Cabbago Soft or coarse heads of cabbage that soeni hardly fit for use may bo boiled and prove very nice. Cut in quarters, remove the heart ond boil with a meat bone, or odd to tho water enough soup stock to give the desired richness." It should be almost covered with water when be ginning to cook ond ought to boil J ironi an hour to an hour und a half. Serve in side dishes, in which it is cut up and vinegar added to suit the taste. linked Cabbage Take o sinull firm head uud with a sharp knife cut out tho heart, without otherwiso cutting tho cabbago. Crumble a HtifUciout amount of bread, add suit, pepper and butter and moisten with boiling water and fill the cavity with this. Place in a baking dish with a pint of well salted boiling water and a good sized lump of butter. Cover and bako for an hour or two. Just before serving remove tho cover nnd browu a little. With tho aid of a saucer carefully re move, without breaking, to a hot dish, and to the water in the buking dish add a little flour smoothed in cold water aud poured around tho cubbuge ; or tho breud may be moistened with rich soup stock uud this used instead of water in tho baking pan. It should be thickened and used os a gravy with tho cabbago the same as tho water was used. If the flavor of pork iu liked it is very nice to almost cover tho cab bage with very thin slices of salt pork. When the cover is removed from the pun theso will brown nicely. Hot Slaw Chop tho cabbago mod erately fine, ulmost cover with boiling water, und cook until tender but not "mushy." To a cup of vinegar add a heaping teaspoouful of sugar, a well beaten egg and a tablespoonfnl of flour smoothed in a little cold witter. Pour all slowly into tho cooking cubbuge, stirring constantly. Add it small lump of butter, stir till melted unci serve at once. On seeing u young coon iu an oak, near Cincinnati, u boy climbed tho tree, with the intention of capturing the auiiiiul. As ho noared the top uu old coon attacked him from behind. Tho lad turned to face his new foe, and a tight continued for several min utes, when tho boy fell uud received fatal injuries. Fine silk has been manufactured from cobwebs, but th i industry is im practicable, since tliero ure not llies enough to feed tho enormous number of spiders which tho business Would require. TEMPERANCE. Tnnct milmox Bourn ArricTitn. Mr. Calvin E. Konoh estimates that thrfle millions of hornet In this Nation are affoctmt by thr drink curse, and that each homrnvor Btres tour pomorii. He shows how ths 'J0n, 000,000 spent for liquor wouhl furnish thoss twolvo millions of poonlo with food, fiml, clothing ami a ootiitortnlilo limine, ami mun ufBturors ami farmers bo correspondingly bonclltcd by tho demand for t900,000,000 worth of supplies. OX MA!' DOWNFALL. Tim T.eeclilitirKli trials, says a Flttsburg (l'eun.1 pHper, point a moral and adorn a tale. It is a sad story. Hero wore young men of respected families, of good educa tion ; nmonn them a man upon whom fond parents lavished nil ot parental earn, gnvo Mm tho IichpiH ot a university education, saw him Kradunte with biti distinction ami choono an honored prolosslon. Ho was Messed with a loving wife, Lad a homo that might navtr Iwn hu earthly paradise, saw through thn vista of coming years, bouors, tho Itivo mid esteem of his fellow kind. To day ho sits in tho gloom of a felon's cell, life's fair promise blasted, with no future before him but shame and disgrace. At tils side during the trial sut tho bowed forms of an aged father nnd mother, stooped wltli weight of woe ami grief unutterable for their erring boy. Oh ! the misery of it. the wretched confession, l.nto hours, bad companv, card playing, thenwful curse of drink Indulged In excess, snd this tho bitter end. Into how many homos will tho papers containing this story goy How mnuy will rend it who are taking tho fatal steps which lend to such tragedim A scotch ritTsieiAM's opikiok. PrOeorge It. Wilson, of tho Moval Asy lum, Edinburgh, In his book, "Drunkou ness," denounces as fallacious the beliefthnt tho sudden renunciation of alcoholic stimu lants by a victim ot alcoholism Is dangerous, nnd that it is spt to bring on grave nervous disorders. There are- but a few eases in which a real danger exists, and that Is usual ly a risk ot henrt trouble, which may be Ig nored tiy all but the physician. As to the influence of drunkenness In pa rents upon the children he says that, given a child ol an unstable nervous system, which ho has Inherited from an aloohollo parent, It only requires surroundings which do not ef fectually provide against temptations to drinking in order to develop the vicious po tentiality. Tho influence of parental per sonality is much the most Important envi ronmental factor In molding character, not only because bud family arrangements and hahils give sanction nnd opportunity to tho Indulgence ot vicious propensities iu the children, but because the whole bearing aud habits of mind of tho parent unconsciously furnish Just tho kind o" moral environment calculated to foster In the child tuo very ten dencies required to be chocked. TO KOnKBATE 1BINKERS. Are you a moderate drinker? No, we don't mean you. as your rod nose gives you away badly. We see what you are i we mean that shek, well dressed young man. Hs seems to take the world easy. He apparently Is not troubled or worried with unlucky turns ol fortune's wheel. He Is above tho petty an noyances that ehnrocterlro the lives of bws favored men ! Ho can afford to Indulge his moderate drinking! Bo he thinks, at least, and by his Indulgence he encourages drink ing, and he cultivates the habit In hlmselt and his more unfortunate brothers. The moderate drinker is doing more harm to his fellow-men than he can ever undo ! We ask only that he give us his attention thnt ho think seriously on this question. Ho Is a man of intelligence, and must see, If he will give the subject earnest thought, that he is In the wrong. If temperance in drink is benellclal and necessary to man's happiness thpntbo highest form of temperanoe total abstinence Is absolutely necessary In order to best teach temperance. What is meant by the term moderate drink ing? Who can define It? It Is a lamentable truth that of two men given the same amount of liquor, ono will hardly feel the effect, while the other becomes so drunk that he will beat his wife and children. How often we hear the expression "Oh ! I know when I have enough! I can drink or let it alone, S3 I please," and then, poor man, he takes another drink adds more poison to an al ready poisoned system, and turns with pity from his more unfortunate neighbor, who drinks no more nor oftener than he, but from the effects ot this same quantity he becomes a disorderly, disgraceful drunkard. The quantity then, "in moderation," cannot be dor) tied. Is moderation understood to be the drink ing ot mild liquors beer, light wines, etc. This mny be the understanding some men have of moderute drinking, but do not theso milder drinks contain alcohol? Certainly Ihey do, nnd their use loads to strong drink. Tlie mild drinks create tho appetite for alco hol. The drunkard begins on beer and ter minates his career with brandy, and tha re sult can be traced to Its source which iV lie small percentage ot alcohol in the nillVr drinks. The danger in drinking beer or light wine is thnt by their use the habit is formed, tho Insatiable craving for alcoholio drinks follows. It is this craving that has made men toasts ; that has made muu loso every spark of man hood ; that has made him commit every crime in the catalogue, that has made him the epileptic, tho paralytic, the lunatic, the suicldo! Kid I say has made him? Aye! And Is making him to-day all these things! Iu this bright city to-day men are Baerlllclng home, health, wife and children, frieuds, character, everything, to satisfy thisT craving for liquor. You, moderate drinker, think ou these things ! Moreover, did you ever reflect on the impurity ot these mild drinks? No, of course, you have not. Well, ol the thou sands of gallons uud barrels sold, not ono gallon Is pure. Of the thousands sold not one la free from drugs and poisons, sold thut men may grow rich ut the excuse 0j ,,8 lives of their fellow-nieu. Moderate drinker, you must stand where you belong ! No hoalthy body needs stitnu Jsuts of any kind, mild or strong. You, there fore are indulging a bad habit which will suriily lead to bud results. You belong to the drinking fraternity, and you must do ono of two things reflect aud join the total ab stainers, or refusing this you may become a drunkard. It is said that fifteen per cent, of the mod erate drinkers dio druukurds. Hhall you ba one of this lifteen per ceut.? The facts ex plain that all drunkards were only moderate drinkers once aud thatmil drunkenness comes from modersto drinking ! It one is the high way to ruin the othor is the broad, inviting gateway leading to it. Wiwtoru tlross. TEIICERANC E NEWS AND NOTES. Too many men try to pull themselves out of trouble with a corks -rew. During one month the Day and Night Nursery of the W. U. T. L'. cared for 1003 children. Of thut number thoro were 2'JO free of charge. The Indians W. V. T. l furnished barrels of ice wuter aloug the hue of march of the veterans at the National Eucuiupmeut of tho U. A. II. in lndiunapolis. In the report of the Massachusetts fituto Bourd of Charities it is stutod thut the pro portion ot crime traceable to intemperance must beset down, as heretofore, ut not less than fuur-llfths. It appeurs certain that from seventy to eighty per cent, of crime, eighty to ninety per cent, of all poverty, and from teu to forty per cent, of tha suicides iu most civil ized countries arc to be uscriuod to alcohol. Iu one place in Africa one missionary und fifty thousand burrels of whiskey wore lauded at the same time. From July 1, 1KU0, to July 1, ls'.H. there wuro l.Oln.S'jl gallons ol rum shipped iroiu Host. m to Africa, lur lpm tho tradu was almost doubled. Dr. Nauseu and Lieutenant Peary, Arctio explorers, have both excluded ulcohollo drinks from their list of supplies, as nut ouly unnecessary but harmful iu the Polar regions. Mr. F. C. Seliius, for twenty years uu African explorer, ab.tuins not ouly from ulooholic drinks, but tobacco. A Loyal Temperance Legion auxiliary to the World's W. ('. T. U. bus been organized iu Sail Sebastian, Hpitin, by Miss Ainu A. tiordou. tor sixteeu years Mms Wiliard's traveling compauiuu aud helper, uud a sister ot Mrs. (lulick, the American missionary in thut place. This is tho Iirst whits ribbou so ciety iu Spain, Highest of all In Leavening Tower. Latest U. S. Gov't Report IX ABSOLUTELY PURE - Alaska Pish. In thin modern day of Government schools, rendy-mado clothing, nnd two-dollars-a-day wages, almost tho only pietnresiptoncsB left to native life is during tho salmon runs. Families nnd tribes bctako themselves to their hereditary fishing grounds to catch nnd dry their salmon for winter use, nud isolated summer camps break the forested shore-line with fine effect. A row of black ennoes on tho bench, a cluster of bark or matted tents, with frames of drying salmon overhanging tho camp-rlres, nro sot between some clenr still green water foreground Bnd p.n abrupt screen of greenest men.ie or tnerton spruces. Tho racks offish give touches of high color to the scene, as tho further north they are caught tho redder tho Pacific salmon arc; nnd in Lynu Canal some of tlieso camps look as if decorated with red bunting. All is salmon that comes to tho Tingit, and ho makes no distinc tion between king, red, silver, hump back, or dog salmon, rather preferring, ou tho whule, tho coarse, rank flesh of tho last, which no white man wants ; hence ho rages at tho cannery's wasto nud tho destruction of his chief food supply. Wince tho corrupting touch of trade liaseven reached their salmon Btreams, the natives now make per manent summer villages beside tho canneries. Tho men work for the coinpnuy, and tho women and children do a little independent fishing, but moro regularly follow tho cannery scows and fill their canoes with re jected salmon, as canncrs uso only about a third of all fish seized. Thus", in midsummer, Alaska villages nro ns empty of their first families as any Eastern city, nnd tho tourists see closed houses, nnd not a third of the regular inhabitants. Census enumer ators work zealously, but vainly, in attempting to count the natives when they are scattered in remotest nooks nil over the archipelago, half of t)yii paddling their canoes fiom one place to nuother, and as likely to be counted twice ns not nt till during the summer. Tho whito malt's fisheries are more prosaic, less fragrant, and never pieturosipte in themselves. Ono titubi tho canneries in tho furthest nooks and niches of tho urchipelugo, each with a finer landscape) setting than tho lost. Thero is always a mountain background and a clear brawling stream coming from tho dense forest. Harper's Weekly. Tho Vision ol Birds. Birds have very aeuto vision, per haps tho most acute of any creature, aud tho senso is also more widely dif fused over tho retina than is tho case with mau ; consequently a bird can Bee sideways as well as objects in front of it. A bird sees showing great un easiness in consequence a hawk long beforo it is visible to man. Ho, too, fowls and pigeons find minute scraps of food, distinguishing them from what appear to us exactly similar pieces of earth or gravel. Young chickens aro also ablo to find their own food knowing its position and how distant it is as soon as they aro hutched, whereas a child only very graduully learns either to boo or to un derstand the distance of objects. Sev erul birds apparently tho young of all thoso that nest on the ground cau see quite well directly they como out of the shell, but tho youug of birds that nest in trees or on rocks are born blind nud have to bo fed. Chambers's Journal. "German . Syrup" Justice of tbe Peace, George Wil kinson, of Lowville, Murray Co., Minn., makes a deposition concern ing a severe cold. Listen to it. "In the Spring of 1888, through ex posure I contracted a very severe cold that settled on my lungs. Thk was accompanied by excessive night sweats. One bottle of Boschee't German Syrup broke up the cold, night sweats, and all and left nit in a good, healthy condition. I cau give German Syrup my most earnest commendation." r R. PBADVAY'S ft READY RELIEF f'l'RKN TliK WORST I'AINK Iu from onci t tw.tuiv nilimto. M iT ONK H H'll aru-r rvu llu Uittt frlver tlM-ineut utfoJ jui one UL'frl-'KU WlTtl I' A IN. Hadwiy'i ltettly UrlU-l In a riurr Cure for fcvrrjf I'ttln, Nimilii. HrulNpt, .literal liiit'U, lluriiH. tiitfi tii ih Hrtt U, i'kt'xt or Limit. It wu Ihe muiI U ibtt OM.V l'AIN ItK.MfcllY That Instantly Mopi tho niwt ex- rui'liitluv pain-, u Ihvh Intlniiuuatlou aai riirtm Couk"i hiw, whftuei ul ttittLuutj, btomtich, Howel or other ytautlb 1 STKHNAIXY. from JU K i .Ir tp Iu h ilf a In u Olrrof wau-r will Iu a fw iiiIiuiUm euro Cri-ii4, S post ii, Sour SUiiiid'-li, Nuiimiu, Vttiullin.li'tartixir.i. NVr vt mail barf, Met-pli-AMie, Sick Ilea Ittjiiu, Cull", b'luiulency uud ull lutc-rual Pauio. A ( IHt FOR At, Is SUMMER UVSKNTKHV, ill tit It llt (HOI. tit A .11 Oil III . A half to n t4asKhmrul of Ka.ly Ki'llef Iq a Uulf liiiiillt.r of wuti'r.rfp,-au. aoftim u-i ilmtllni'lmrxi't i-onlluue, kuiI u Ituuuul auturate I Willi Kualy K .ll.tr. plat'ii! ovr Hie t'tii4i-!i ami bowulu, will ulT.ir 1 iia mtnllaui rWluf aul moou oifwt a cure. Tliert Is uot a remittal u'tn In tho wurM th i'. will ruro Kuvrr aii'l Anne aul ull other nitlurlim., blllnuii al otlmr fevura.utih-l liv HAIl A AY'sl'lLI.H, u iiuk'klv as KAII . AY'S lO.AHY IlKI IKK. Hrli y. ,tl.-. u lion ly. r-ulil by llruuaUla. DON'T BORROW APOLIO 'TIS CHEAPER JioTT Jersey's Hurled r'oroHts. A piece of contemporary geology in being worked in New Jersey. TIio whole coaBt lino bus been long sink ing, ami the process is still going on. A curious industry isearriuil ou iu tho southern part of tho Htnte thn mining for eeilnr. Some of these noblo trees cxliuineil from their swampy burial exceed three feet iu diameter, with tho timber perfectly sound. Tho "lay" of these uprooted trees indicates tho devastation, probably, of extraor dinary cyclones, occurring nt immense intervals of time, thus leveling one forest upon another that bad been thrown down long before. Tho cedars growing tliero to-day send their roots among their long-buried ancestors. Thn rings upon the exhumed trceii show a growth of ld;lH, or possibly 2011!) years, and tho existence of at least two buried forests below tho present growth is indisputable. American Naturalist. DU, KII.TOi:il'H CURED ME. La Grippe I Grippe I Grippe I After Effects Cured. Mr. Illlgcr writes:-'! Im.l a hail attack of the Grippe; nfu r atiUH'tuiiuht rnlil ami tiail a second attack. Jt settli-il la my Kidneys and Liver ami Ohl (nidi pain anil uiipcry In my bark mid Irfrs I The liytk-iaiis' niNliclno am! "titer thlnps that I used miitlo no Impression, anil I couliiiuully grow worse uutl) I was a Physical wreck and elTrn up to tll. Father bniurlit rue a bottle t.f lir. hllmcrNWAMI-KOOT, and U fiiro I liail ukoI nil of the second bottto I felt better, and to-iluy I ma Junt as wi ll ns ever. A year lias passed and not a truco of tho Uripfic la left. Swarcp-Rcot S?ved'y Life. 1). It. BiiAiKit, HulmVvino, Pa., Jjiu. loth, lsuo. At Irnpil tOrrnlt unit $1.00 also. "Intral!' OulOoto Health" fr--Cwultatfcli fn-ft. Ir. K llmcr Co., - IHnphaictoii, N. V. Or. Kilmer's i AfclLLA LIVER FILLSr th Ball 43 IMlla, 85 rents. All OruKirlsta. Unlike tlie Dutch Process No Alkalies OR Other Chemicals ars nsrd Jo tha lireiiaratluii ot W. BAKEIl & C0S reakfastGocoa which i abaottilely : pur and $otubl. t bs morMan thrt timet he trenjth uf i-coo utUeJ villi bUr?U Arrowroot or niL'r, aud U far ui:r eco nomical, cutting let than on cent a cup, It in delicious. nourihlug. aud kaailb DIOMTKU Bold by (iroora Trywhtr. W. BAKER &C0.t Dorchester, Moo. 00 Mot Be Deceived with t-Mt.i. Kn.imi-1 nrl FAlntr wnk-h I lain the D&ii,t, Inliin- lh, Iron mid Imni nil. Ihe RlnliiK Sun Suivi, l'..nh la ltrllllaut, Orinr Im. llurahl, nnil llio nitiHtimi-r imiv fur no Uc or Rlus iMU-kmKe with hv,tjt pun-niuKi. SYS I'-.f S MEND YOUR OWN HARNESS WITH THOMSON'S Ffl3 SLOTTED tW VW CLINCH RIVETS. Ko tools rnjii.ml. only a hammtr ndc1 to drive fin.l c inch lh in eaily and Ulck.y, lviuff tho cltnoit (jto uily uiovUu Uct)uirhig no tin e to (4 ui.-irto in ih leather nor burr h U Kivota. Tlia arc a Crony. 1 011 Kb titd durable. Ui Ilium duw hi urn AU kiik-liit, uniform or .irtM, put up tu boxen. Ah your dralrr lor ihfiu, or kfivI 40c in Uuipa fur a box ol luu, aurtcd uc. Mau M by JUDSON L. THOMSON MFG. CO.. M il.Tlltti, MAft. I AN IDEAL FAMILY MEDICINE 1 1 or indlftetmoa. tlllluusnrMu I llt-adttuac, 4,HttttMituR. lii a f ana aU UiAui-dL'iM uX U bUrtuacii, RIPAN8 TABULffi f lij drUKfilBureMit l.ymtu). Bm l (o TuuH), toe i-tu'kuri(ft Uoxea), 9. 1 L tW f nyi uuii i.lam liddrvt-a JiU'A OiuitJAico., New Tark. R AXLE Bestinthe World! SOREASE Get the Ge SoldEverywhe If any one doabta tha waoao cum the qji.m ob I male uao in tu 44 ayg, ka bim wr.tafor parltfultu-a ond lnvtl irmtoourretiitb'liiy. our lln nrl U liewkiitff ta (-00, Wlitn uiricnrv BLOOD POISON A SPECIALTY. lu'Udo pot turn, aarsaptrflla or llt Bpriujfs (ail, If 11 iraitUw a euro and our Aim-io C)plilUiiu 1 tba only lh If 1 c (1ml w.ll euro tHrniinuntl, P ikIiitu froof avn M iiuiiiili-t'iil N ' (st-iunl I ftiriulii liim. .1 in la I, llmtiftl, l.V WVM SMI M., Nw York Oonauaaultvca aiMl people who txmfm wwat tuna or AfttlV I mav-altoaidua fiao'aOurefor 4tootiiuatf a. ft u not fcnur t oue- it it i 1 o&4 io lava, II it uta otti coufb ityrup Hold vrywhr. ttfta. TROUBLE." BUY IN THE END. SWAiF-flQOI iSJSW Nil mat
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers