X- CliHiiir in S'onllirro .Vretboils. Tl'ho on forced connomy of tho Inst 1 woT.rs lins rniiKoJ n complrtp clmnijo in Southern fnrm mothoiln mxl tho credit Karnt(m i bring fMiprrsrilpil by A cbrIi liRsis. Tho low jTice of rotton for the lust few yrnrH forooil upon farmprs the liprpsnttv of riinpr thpir own food BtulTe, nnd ndded to this was the deoidion of bankers nnd factors to ndvanea nnieli less money on cotton than formerly. The result has been n change that for tho timo being, while jiassing from the erpdit system, with it liberal Inlying, to a cash system, requiring the closest economy, there has been less trade with farmers, and lienee a decreased volume of general business in the South. Hut this has brought about a more olil condition of the business in farm trade throughout tho South than we hare hnd for many years. Merchants are carrying small stocks and buying only as needed. Farmers are paying off thpir debts to such an extent that, without exception, letters from bankers say that tho farmers are less in debt than for yenrs. Tho money that formerly went North nnd West for provisions and grain has been retained at home, and the full result is that this section is probably less in debt to its own banks and less in debt to tho North and AVest for supplies than in any year since tho war elided. New l'ork World. Most Destructive ol Weapons. The reply to this question nat urally divides itself into weapons which havo been tried in actual war fare, and those whoso powers have only been tested by experiment. Of the former the distinction would be about equally divided between the torpedo and tho machine-gun. In tho Chilean war tho Blnnca Encalada, struck by one torpedo, went down in few minutes with 400 men on board. ...The game war proved that no living creature can remain in an exposed po sition within tho range of machine gun fire for more than a few minutes, and this conclusion is accepted by all authorities. In tho second category the palm must be given to M. Turpin'a new "war machine," which is a light calibre machine-gun, manipulated by four men and drawn on a carriage by two horses. It will project a hail of 25,000 missiles every fifteen seconds at a range of nearly three miles, over a space measuring 160 yards each way. Yankee Blade. A Palp, Sound Trust. Not corporations alone make the best trusts, for morally speaking we plaoerelianee In things most successful, nnd thereby estab lish a most substantial trust, and this is the way to do it. "My wife," says Mr. J. W. Ames, Fairmont, Neb., suffered intensely will) sciatica, nnd was helpless. I tried many things to no purpose. Although the doctors aid 'no' I got a bottle of St. Jacobs Oil and tried It. It stopped the pain and in a sbort she had no use for crutches." Now ' cere is a trust founded on the'surety of cure from the experience of being cured. Let any doubting Thomas take, the same course and make a trust for himself. (..rasa and i'lnver rrd. The largest grower of Grass and Clover Seed In the world Is rxilzer. La Crosse, Wis. Over CO hardy varieties, with lowest prices! Special low freight to Xcw York, Pa. and the East. Jr YOC WILL Ct T THIS OCT AND SESD IT With 4o postage to the John A. Salzer Seed Co., La Crosse, Wis., you will reoive eleven packages Trass and clover sorts and his mvmnoih farm seed catalogue: full of good thintr. for the far mer, the gardener ai'd the citizen. A Beware of Ointments for Catarrh That C'auialn Mercury, as mercury will surely destroy the sense of smell and completely derange the whole system when entering it through t he mucous surfaces. 8uch articlea&hnulil never be usetl except on S rescript ion from reputable physicians, as the amuge thry wilt do is tell fold tn the good you can possibly derive from them. Hall's Catarrh Cure manufactured by F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, O., contains no mercury, and is taken internally, acting directly upon tue blood and mucous surfaces of the system. In buying Hall's Catirrb Cure be sure to get the genuine. H is taken internally, and is made in Toledo, Ohio, by F. J. Cheney & Co. Te-timoniaUtree. iy bold by Druggists, price 75c. per bottle. An Important IHlterence. To make it apparent to thousands, who thin't themselves ill, that they are not affected with any disease, but that the system simply needs cleansing, is to bring comfort home to their hearts, as a costive condition Is easily cured by using Syrup of Figs. Manufactured by the California Fig Syrup Co. No Safer Kkmkiiy can be had for Coughs and Coldd, or any trouble of the Throat, limn "HnoH'ii'n ltrtmchial Tnkhet." .Price 25 cents. &Ad uttly in tmjfu. A Meaulilul pouvrnir ripoou Will be sent with every bottle of lr. lloxiit'i Ctrtain Lrovp Curt. Ordered by mall, post paid, 60 cts. Address. Hoxsie. HufTaio, N. V. Read the adv. of Scott's Arab an Paste Co. They make the best Veterinary remedy known, Sold by nriigiriMsani Harnessmakers. Beecbam's Pills cure indigestion and consti pation, rh-eclmm's no others. gTi cts. a box. Hatch's I'm vernal Contra Syrup costs no more than others aud beneiits more. If afflicted with so reeve use Dr. Isaac Thomr son's Kye-water. lrui'i:itsellat2Ac per bottle. ltev. O. II. Voice I' Symptoms of Cancer Apiieared on my lip. DiMgieeahlo eruptions iame on my nee'. After taking! bottlei of Hood's Sarsaparillu, all the traces of discisu have disapiieared and the medicine La. given me renewed vigor aud strength. 1 utn now al most TJ years of awe, un.l trork like a t i And 1 know that Hood's Sarsuparilla has had much to do with my vigor and strength. 1 reconimu'ided it to my wife, wu i has suffered to much with rheumatic trouble, as also with female weakness. In two years Hood'sSaJ Cures She has use t about 3 bot lies of II. mil's Sarsi paiilla, and M-day, and lor tho lust tl months, he se iu like a new b-iiu'." lit v. O. II. puff. Ml, SO Hanover Slrjet, Chicaa i, Illinois. ilOWtl's I'llUeur.-uh liver Ilia, lice. Il.iif...tii,), hi, licit'Liclit.. b.liounue a, JUU11- IM.TI: NTS" '''"" ' MlrN, f l uiulunu uouiu J iv'i.i.. fur luvtaiur'a oui ii BTOAB FOB HOnstES. Most horses nro like children, ex ceedingly fond of sugar, and indulg ing them in it will soon fnmilinrize them with tho giver, and tho petting will tench them to obey his will read ily. The sugar is fattening, and will give them shining conts, and also free the stomach from any worms. A few lumps of sugar from tho hands of tho master will thus benefit tho animal in every way. New York World. SEPARATOR Mtl.K FOR CHKE8R. in a Western farmers' institute Pro fessor Ihibcoek expresses himself strongly in favor of separator milk as making a better cheeso and one likely to hold a good flavor longer than did cheese made from milk not put through this process. The cream and milk are run together through a sieve after sep arating so as to mix it thoroughly, but there are certain offensive matters that come ont of tho separating that can bo kept distinct from the cream. These are trifling in amount, but when set to work by the rennet their effect after two or three months is to de stroy tho flavor of the cheese. Up to that time cheese from whole milk and that whieh h-vs been put through the separator cannot bo distinguished. Boston Cultivator. riSEASE OP FOWLS. liens ore subject to several diseases, but mostly those of the throat and the intestines. Tho first class is due to exposure to cold and damp, or to con tagion. The latter is the result of bad feeding and indigestion. Tho most prevalent of the first class of diseases is one known as ronp, which is very similar to the human diphtheria, and, like that, exceedingly contagions. It appears as a thick adherent mucus or cheesy matter inthethroat and mouth, stopping the breathing and making the swallowing difficult. The head swells, and of course the birds stop eating. The remedy for this disease is to wash the mouth clean with warm vinegar and drop a pinch of powdered chlorate of potash in the throat. The food should be soft, and a little hyposul phate of soda should be dissolved in the driukiug water. Excessive warmth is not desirable for fowls in the win ter, only such as will keep the tem perature at night of not less than fifty degrees. Another frequeut disease is that of the liver, by which tho nerves of the lower limbs are so affected that the birds cannot walk. This disease resembles that of pigs by which the hind legs become useless and are dragged abont as the animal moves. Overfeeding is the common cause of this disorder, and the remedy is to stop the cause, giving no food for two or three days, but only water, and then beginning with small feeds, gradually increased. Xew York Times. STRAWBERRY CULTURE. Trofessor W. R. Lnzenby, before tho Ohio Horticultural Society, pre sented the following summary of sug gestions to be kept in mind by straw berry growers : The moBt profitable varieties for the commercial grower are those not easily influenced by differences in soil and climate. Those which succeed well on wide areas are usually better than those which have a mere local reputa tion. Pistillate varieties, when properly fertilized, are more productive than the sorts with perfect flowers. Ihe value of a variety for fertuizincr pistillate flowers docs not depend so much upon the amount as upon the potency of its pollen. ihe flowers of pistillate varieties are less liable to be injured by frost than the flowers of perfect varieties. arieties that are neither very early nov very late in point of maturity are the most productive and have the long est fruiting season. As a rule varieties that have the most vigorous and healthy foliage are the least productive, while those with a weaker growth of foliage and a greater susceptibility to leaf blight are usually the moro prolific. inter protection may be dispensed with upon well-drained noils, but ap pears to be a necessity upon heavier ones. The leaf blight may be checked by using the Bordeaux mixture, begin ning jnst as soon as the leaves appear, and continuing tho application every few weeks throughout the season. BW1NE HUSBANDRY. Make the hogs comfortable. You cannot grow pork profitably in winter in a sty filled with mud and mire aud where cracks are even more visible than boards, ltemember, in the first plucc, that boards, clapboards, thin gles and buildiug paper aro much cheaper materials for arlordmg pro tectum and keeping out the cold than is corn or other grain. Another cau tionnever burn corn in the bodies of hogs for fuel when the Bauie is not needed, but rather Biipply a warm, snug piggery and plenty of straw bedding and absorbents. Corn no doubt will form tho basis of all grain foods, but do not depend upon com alone. heat is very cheap, ana a mticli better balanced food. Therefore feed as much w heat as corn. You should make wheat pay in tho vicinity of $1 a btihhel lor swine feed. Hush tho fattening swine to matur ity and slaughter before extremely cold weather, if practicable, for it hhould be known that in cold weather much food is consumed to keep up the nuiuml heat. The small hog weigh ing from 'J50 to 300 pounds is the mobt satisfactory ono to the farmer, as Bineo most of the growth can be made in wuriji weather tho first 2UU pounds are produced most cheaply, aud nine mouths is all tho time required for turning ofl'the fininhed product. Finally, b t mo advise renders to work up u fancy trade, for pork pro ducts. There are thousands of "well to do" families who enjoy ham uud pork, but thty want to know how tho Lot; have bt't'U fuil, what ia eaten, uud where it comes from. Will you bo one to cater to thin nristocratio de mand? New York World. RAtSIVfl HORSES TO KKLb. Generally tho farmer cannot afford to raiso geldings and keep theinon the farm for a tbam. He can mako them pay very well if ho w ill keep them un til they are four or five years old, and then sell, taking caro in the meantime to break them well, bo as to got work enough out of them to pay for their keep. A horse that has been given good oaro so as to make a steady growth and development from the time ho was foalod ought to bo broken to light work when past two yenrs old, taking care that only light work is giveu him and not too much of that. Then, whenever a good fair prico can be realized for them, unless they are needed on tho farm, and aro worth more to you than the price offered, it will be best to sell. With good young mares, however, the case is different. The better the young marea are the stronger the reason why they should be kept on the farm for breeding. No farmer can afford to sell the best of his animals of any kind, especially those that he can use to good advantage in improving his stock. By mating a full blooded sire to carefully selected mares, good grade colts may be secured. Then if in turn the very best of these grade mares arc selected and again mated to pure-bred stallions a still further im provement is made. By keeping tho best and breeding in this way, selling all that are needed on the farm, a considerable improvement in quality of the horses can be made. Keep mares and young, growing horses to do the necessary work of the farm, keeping the young horses until they are reasonably well matured and thus selling whenever a fair price is offered. In this way considerable work can be gotten ont of the horses while they are growing, and by taking caro to keep them in good condition they can bo marketed at any time. But if the best mares are sold off, and what cannot be sold are bred un der present conditions, the colts, even when reasonably well grown, will be hard to sell at any price. The cost of raising the one is as much as the ot her, and the difference in value when ready to market represents to a considerable extent the difference in the profits. St. Louis Republic. FARM AND GARDEN NOTES, Overworking butter spoils the grain and gives a greasy appearance. Onions are said to be good for rid ding fowls and fowl-houses of lice. Don't attempt to crowd tho fowls if yon would keep free from diseases. The most successful turkey raisers breed only from well-matured stock. The pouter pigeon is so called from its power of filling its crop with air. Keep youug ducks away from a large body of water during the first month. To make a complete diet, add meat and vegetables to your poultry ra tion. Do not give yonr fowls much sul phur, and never feed it in damp weather. Never use any but the very best grade of dairy salt, regardless of cost the best is the cheapest in the end. In Nebraska alfalfa is considered a boon to farmers. It ranks among the most profitable crops of that section. Mice must be kept out with wire cloth, three meshes to the inch, bo sayi Dr. Miller, and poison and trap be sides. After the skimming is performed, the cream is still at the mercy of at mospheric conditions until manufac tured into butter. The cost of bnilding an acre ol green-houses is about $16,000, while hotbeds covering that area will not cost less than $9000. Snow is generally considered a good thing about a hive so long as it is not melting, but cases of injury have been reported. The entrance should never be allowed to get clogged. Large brood chamberj are recom mended, because they save time in tak ing out and replacing- combs for the purpose of reducing the brood nest in winter and expanding it at other times. The advantage of beekeeping as an occupation for women is that it can be carried on at one's very door; and again, it takes about as little capital to Bturt with as any enterprise which they might attempt. Plums do not thrive on highest ground because it is apt to be too dry, and if grown on low ground, late frosts may catch the blossoms. They will thrive on a rich, rather moist, but well-drained soil. A cow that will fatten rapidly after she has pussed her usefulness as a milker is of especial value as a dairy animal. This is not tho main point, but it is ono of the points to be looked to when buying dairy stock. A Southern puper says: "It has been shown conclusively by carefully aud exhaustively conducted experi ments that the feeding of cotton seed or cotton seed meal very considerably raises the melting point of butter." PeachuBshould be Bturted from good, healthy stock, on high, dry laud, should receive moderate and cleun cultivation up to miilbuuiiucr and not afterward. Cutting back helps both fruit aud wood. Care must also be taken not to let the trees overbear. A uniform ration for an entire herd is unwise. It is no more possible for a small cow who is a "good feeder" to assimilate the umouut of feed that her neighbor does who is not bo fortu nate, than it is for one child to eat as mnch candy as auothcr aud not suffer. Study the individual tastes and dispo sitions of your cows, ami try aud ad just the environment and treatment tj thetfl, HOUSEHOLD AFFAIKS. oft A irrooL. Women who havo mnch housework to do should provide themselves with cheap stool, high enough to allow a freo use of tho arms. In this way tlipy may sparo themsolves much unneces sary standing, as ironing, dish-washing and multitudinous household duties that are generally gone through with while upon the feet may bo dis posed of quite as satisfactorily in a sitting posture. It is a rest, too, from time to time, to draw tho feet up upon the rounds of the stool, taking all the weight of tho body off tho floor. Now York Journal. CARE OF FINE NEEDLEWORK. It is noticeablo that in tho best noo dlowork the wrong nido of the article looks nearly as smooth and well fin ished as the right. There are no ends and knots and no unnecessary stitches crossing tho surfaces where tho right side is plain. Where theso faults do occur they will bo sure to show ou tho right side after the nrticlo has been laundered. It has been found, too, that the beat imported silks are the most economical, because they wafh best. Very hot water will make even theso run ; so if your work is mousy aftor it is finished, dip it in cold water, and if soap is necessary use only tho best castilo on tho wrong side of tho embroidery. Itinso in cold water and be sure that the powder used in stamping is all out. Squeeze gently when washing, and if soiled use at first a tepid water. After washing, lay tho embroideries, whilo still damp, on a clean, thick flannel, cover with a clean cloth aud press on the wrong side, ironing from the centre of the design toward the edges. When the figure is well pressed out aud the linen dry, go over the plain part on the right side with a small iron. Embroideries worked in a franio wash letter than those that are not. New York Post. HOW TO WASH TABLE LINEN. Be Btire that your linen goes into no vessel that is not clean and freshly rinsed. See that it is put to boil in sido a bag of clean cheese cloth. If stainod, wet the spots with alcohol, and wash out in clear cold water before allowing suds to touch it. Stains of milk or soft eggs must bo soaked in clear cold water for ten minutes wheu washed. Use a mild white soap, or the Brown Windsor thatcomesin long bars. Make a strong lather, only let ting the soap touch the fabrio at somo obstinate grease spot. Tea cloths or others with delicate colors wash brighter if a handful of salt is added to the firBt suds, which should be bare ly lukewarm. Tne second may be hot ter. Wash quickly through both. Fold smoothly for tho wringer, then pop into yonr bag and set to boil in cold water for ten minutes. Kinso first in hot, then in lukewarm water. Have your bluing water cold and freo from Bpocks of color. Dip your linen in very Ahin Btarch containing a sus picion of bluing, andhaug, if possible, in the snn. See that the line is clean. Take pains to hang each piece square, as if dried awry it will be very hard to make it even again. Let everything dry thoroughly and do not dampen or fold until a little before ironing time. After a oloth is properly wet, pull the diagonal cor ners as hard as possible and fold with a length-wise crease through the mid dle. Boll smooth and tight and let it lio for twenty minutes. For rich da- mask or embroidered eloths put an extra blanket on the ironing table under its muslin cover. Lay the em broidered part smoothly over it, right sido down and press with a heavy iron just below scorching heat. When al most dry and very smooth, turn and iron on the right side, using very light irons on the embroidery and heavier ones on the plain round. Stretch the fabric well with tho hands before pressing embroidery. When the right side is properly done, fold it lengthwise along the mid dle, then begin at one end and lay about six inches-lightly over ; do not fold it down but roll until all the length is coiled. Go over the cloth! twice or thrice with a hot iron, chang ing irons freeqnently. Iron till ther pattern shows plain on a glossy whita surface. If not thoroughly dry when ironed, hang upon the horse for an hour or two, then fold or roll to suShl compass as required for the closet. Mirror and Farmer. KECIPES. Rissoles of Lobsters Mince up tho meat of a boiled lobster very fine, sea son it with a little powdered mace, pepper and salt; add two ounces of butter melted, aud a sufficient quan tity of bread crumbs to make it into bulls. Dip them in the well-beaten yolk of an egg, roll in bread crumbs aud fry in boiling fat a nice brown. Serve them in a dish with half a piut of good gravy. Welsh Rabbit Grate some Glouces ter or Gruyere cheese, and pepper it with cayenne pepper. Fry some slices of bread in a little buUer (on one Bide only) until perfectly yellow. Spread a thick coating of the grated cheese on the fried side of the bread, plaoe the slices in a baking pan, put them in a pretty hot oven, take them out when the chesue begins to melt, and serve hot. Mashed Totato Peel, quarter and boil about three pints of potatoes J drain thoroughly, and shake for a few" minutes in an open doorway to make) them mealy. Mash them well, and mix with them two ounces of butter; two yolks of eggs, salt, pepper ami milk enough to make them of a proper! thickness. Set on the fire for two or1 three minutes, stirring constantly, and serve hot. When on the dish smooth! them with tho hack of a knife or scal lop them according to fuuey. haw the Stomach Work. The studouts of the Baltimore Col lege of Physicians and Surgeons the other day were treated to an inside view of a man's stomach at work, and it is said to be the first time that the spectacle was ever Been. By means of a flexible rubber tube a diminutive, but powerful eleetrio light was intro duced into the patient's stomach, aud the lights in the room being lowered, the darkness permitted over 2000 Btu dents to see the workings of the stomach. Tho experiment was conJ ducted by Professor Julius Friedeu- i waul. ew Orleans Plcayuua. TEMPERANCE. TBI OKtt WAT. Ths enly way Intemperance can bsclisoksd Is for a growing body of men and women to praotlc alwohite total abstinence. In view of the awful extent of the curse, God's people cannot do l.ws than throw their Influence and words attaint the evil In every way pos sible. Total abstinence Is not a popular theme In New York, but the pulpits should thunder It. At present they rarely sound a protest. New York Advertiser. TtBTJNKRNHBRS IX KNOLAKT), Now and then there Is some new presenta tion of (acts that indicate a etartllnx In crease In drunkenness. The HeKlstrnr General of Great Britain reports that In 1"X) over 4500 Infants were killed by druuken mothers who overlaid their children or otherwise killed them. The increase of this death-rate accords with the reported In crease ia consumption of alcoholic, liquors in tbat country, which Is now running at about 5,000,000 a year. In Franc the In crease Is even greater. The amount con sumed per capita In la50 was equal to one and a half litres; In 1SG9, two and a halt Hires; In W)l, four and a half litres: and wines, which are the prevailing drink, have been replaced by braudy, gin and absinthe, Uunday-Sohool World. ALCOHOL JW THK TaONC. Mrs. Mary Clement I.eavitt, who ha had a very laruo experience of travel In hot cli mates, says of the use of alcohol In the tropics i "At fifty-live yenrs of aire, having passed most of my life In New England tip to that date, and having been a totnl abstainer all my life, I llntt entered tropical lands. Thenoo to the present time, seven years, I have been the greater part of tho time In tropical cli mates. India, Ilurmah, Madagascar, west coast of Africa, from the Congo to Ulcrra Leone, nnd Ilrazil. are among the couutrles I have visited, and to which I have remained some months each. It has alwavs been safe not to touch nnythlngalcohollc, I have never taken a drop even as medicine. Alcoholta drinks are especially deadly In hot climates. Everywhere I have found total abstainer! leas linlilo to fevers, bowel complaints, rheu matism and other dlseasee than those who use alcoholics even In moderation. In one town la India, I remember, an English couple were the only white persons exempt from mnlarial fevers during a three years' residence, and they were the ouly abstainers in the place. Alcohol Is a poison and acts quicker within the tropics than elsewhere." WHAT THE DOCTORS SAT. f)octor Charles O. Davis, of Chicago, In a paper read before the National Temperance Convention, and printed in the Journal of the American Medical Association, speaking of the National Temperance Hospital of Chicago, says : TajbMhi principles npjn whl"h this In stitution rests may he formulated as follows : 1. Alcohol Is a poison. 2. When taken into the system. It Is not assimilated, but passes the round ot the cir culation, and is dually thrown off through the organs of excretion, unchanged. It. While passing through the body it dis turbs the various physiological processes, and In this way lays' the foundation for disease. 4. It does no! stimulate or strengthen, but It depresses and weakens. 6. As It is not assimilated, It cannot lie a food. 6. As it dlsturbc every physiological pro cess. It cannot be a medicine. ' 7. There Is no ditense afflicting the body, that , cannot be more successfully treated without than with the use of alcohol. Sneaking of the success which has attend ed the treatment of surgical and medical eases without alcoholic, or fermented drinks, tie says : "The lesson already taught has been suf ficiently convincing to impress the most skeptical that alcohol Is not only unneces sary as an active medical agent, tnt that, In a majority of cases, it Is nu actual hindrance to tho recovery of the patient. Hlowly but surely, every year, this great truth Is being impressed ou the minds ot the medical pro fession." LONIt LIFE AND INDEPENDENCE A well-known writer says: I saw In the carefully-prepared statistics of insurance so cieties that total abstinence, as an indisput able fact, contributes to longevity. Then I saw that so far from alcohol being a neces sity lor great feats ot strength, that many of the greatest athletes in the world, from Ham son downward, whose drink was only the crystal brook, bad achieved without alcohol fonts far more mighty than they could pos sibly have achieved with it ; and as tar as in tellectual exertions are concerned, great writ ers, though they have not always said with Pindar that water Is best, have yet constant ly drawn from temperance a far better Inspi ration thnn they could possibly have pro duced chemically from the fumes ot wine. Then I found that a great number of our most emlneut physicians had declared most positively that In hundreds and thousands ot cases alcohol was the rruitlul source oi ois ease, even to those who took It in quantities conventionally deemed moderate ; nnd, on the other hand, other physicians who were opposed to totul abstinence as a general rule still confessed that theyoungand the healthy, all who eat well aud all who sleep well, can do without it and are better without it. All these proofs and many others convinced me that It was not necessary for me to con tinue to touch any form of alcohol ; and I gave it up the more readily because the aban donment ol It was one clement in mat very needful simDllticatlon ot life which gets rid of all artlflcinl wants and which Is peculiarly desirable in an age of luxury like this. "Tem perance puts wood on tne lire, meal in tne barrel, flour In tbe tub, money In tho purse, contentment in the house and clothes ou lbs children." Believing that abstinence would tend to simplicity of lite, to health. to strength o body, to clearness ot mini), to length of days, for me, at any rate, It became desirable to give up alcohol altogether ; and I did so, with perfect gladness, and without over hav ing suffered ill consequence even a single day. IEMPKBANCI NEWS AND NOTES. There is no crime that Intemperance does not ooinmit. Tbe saloon says : "You furnish the boys. We do the rest. If there were no moderate drinkers there would be no drunkards. The man who makes a business of drink ing will soon drink for a business. The unchangeable decree of God Is, "No drunkard shall Inherit the kingdom ol God." The saloon-keeper sells whisky to buy houses. Other men sell houses to buy wbieky. The parents who neglect to teach their boys sound temperance principles help the barkeeper. Omaha has a Gospel Prohibition Associa tion, whose object is to uulleallthe Christian people aguinst the saloon. Tbe man who can drink whisky for a whole lifetime, without being hurt by It is very apt to net be of much account for anything else. An enthusiastic reception was given re cently in Londoa to the forty-two teetotal Mayors of England and Wales. Eighteen were present. From January 1, 1890, to January 1, 1891, ther were 1,018, Ml gallons o ram shipped from Boston to Africa, Ia 1811 the trad was almost doubled. Tempernnoe women cf Norway asked the fmbllo authorities a short time ago to mak t unlawful for women or girls to serve In public houses. The request has been granted, and at present au alehouse keoper oannot employ uny other woman than his own wife. The poisonous breath of alcohol pusses over the homo ; it is the passage of death. Alcohol's hellish work goes beyond the drunkard's home. There Is physical and morul contagion, other homes ure smitten, aud aioohol lifts up Its sceptre witbiu their enclosure. Archbishop Ireland. Hir Buiijamin Itichar.Uon, In au address on "uthletl.- lile," :iy that nbtiuuuco from al coholic lluld Is absolutely nuoebsary. "Al long us you ure in course of training don't touch the hurtful thing. It will undermlue all the qualities on which you depend for success, will injure your precision, your de cision, your presence of uiiud and youi en-dufaiKtt." Highest of all Sn Leavening Tower. Latest U. S. Gov't Report 11 try ABSQHmLY PURE Mastodon Honrs round. Tho ppoplo of Frnukfort, Marshall County, Kansas, nro greatly excited over tho discovery of a mastodon's tooth dug up in the streets of that town. Tho peculiar thing abont it is that a minister, Rev. 8. M. Hopkins, found it in front of his residenoe, and as ho is mtperstitious, tho good man thinks it is a terriblo warning, and has preached About it to his. congrega tion, assuring them that it is tho fore runner of troublo to that people AVhen llov. Mr. Hopkins found this mnmmoth tooth ho callod in tho neighbors and n measurement was made of it. Tho great tusk measured fourteen inches in length, six inches in width and six inches from the grinding surface to the end of the remaining portion of tho fangs. The bone portion of the tooth is petrified, but tho enamel is just as bright nnd perfect as it ever was. It is an interesting spocimeu and pooplo have traveled many miles to look at it. Parties have been digging for other evidences of a former mastodon, and havo been rowarded with rich finds. They unearthed several monster bones, showiug that A mastodon of great proportions died their many years ago. St. Louis Republic, On being informed of her father's preferent, Miss Herbert is credited with saying: "Appointod Secretary of tho Navy? AVby, he can't even swim!" the: microscope. A careful microscopical examination and chemical analysis of the urine, is a valuable aid in determining tbe nature of many chroma diseases, particularly thoe of the nervous system, blood, liver, kidneys, and bladder. Thee aids mak it possible to treat such dls easee succesafully at a dis tance, witbout personal ex amination of the patient. Thus Bright' Disease of tb Kidneys, Inflammation of the Bladder, lira Tel, and other Disease ot the Uri nary Organ ar success fully treated; Nervou De bility, Exhaustion, Dropsy, Liver Disease, and many other Chronic Maladies are cured without seeing the patient. Writ for question blanks, treatise, and other informa tion, describing oaa, and fatclo 10 ceata, la tamps, to pay postage. Address, World's Dispensary Medical Association, No. 603 Main Btreet, Buf falo, N. Y. 0 AD WAY'S 113 PILLS, Purely vpfr table, mlUl nt rp1lktl. cuw Prr CtH't liK"tluu. complete bttnrptmn anil healthful r-Kttlritr. Kr th cur of all dlnrtlrr of Uia Htomach, JJver. Bowels, Klilaoya, UlaaUer, harrou Dlaeasea, LOSS OF APPETITE, SICK HEADACKE, INDIGESTIOH, DIZZY FEELINGS, FEMALE COMPLAINTS, BILIOUSNESS, DYSPEPSIA, PKHKKOT muEHTIOS will ba aecomplUh! by (akin Had way a Pllli. Hy their ANTl-H.LhH'S !roptrUf tttfy llimiUus tint liver lu Uie eecrettuu of tue bile aud lu Uinc&arKe throua toe biliary ducts. Thrae pills In front two to four will quW'Kly rt-KUtaw the actlnuof ihe liver and fro the lat.fut from ttietMt (lltorih-re. One or two at Had way's PiUm, taken dally by l hot subject in blllom wlus aud torpidity of the liver, will keep the ay tem regular aud secure healiuy rtiiretlon. Trice, -itc, Prr Box. U by all Ornvflata. KADWAY As O., NKW YOKK. In the Early Days of cod-liver oil its use' was limited to easing those far advanced in consumption. Science soon discovered in it the prevention and cure of consumption. Scott's Emulsion of cod-hver oil with Hypo phosphites of lime and soda has rendered the oil more effective, easy of digestion and pleasant to the taste. Prepared by gH k Bowne. W. T. All druritUta. WALTER BAKER & C07 COCOA and CHOCOLATE Highest Awards (Mt4Uand Diploma, World' Columbian tipontion. On the following arttol, namely; BREAKFAST COCOA, .ratmi io. i mocoiiTB, r' .if,VAlLLA fHWOLiTK, 'i Kmtk BlUHt. for "pnrtry of material, Baoellrnl flavor." and "uaW foiiu evru euuiuuiuuuu." SOLD BY GROCER CVERYWHEIIB. WALTER BAKER & CO.. DORCHESTER. MASS. JAPANESE TOOTH "ilivVK. iiallf1 fur Hn Laim limit t:t.. Pl,ll&il,,i,hiM p. IE mi ' Thoughtless Folks Have the Hardest Work, But Quick Wilted People Use A P A llnsjr llousrlioM. l?'.iy-liftri(k'il mnnt linvo boon the women-folk of a contury nurt ft half KO, It in recorded thnt ono family in Newport, E. I., made, in tho apace of eighteen month, 487 yards of cloth eardinp, ftpinnintr, dyointt and wear iiiK every inch of material mmd, nnd alao aooomplinhed tho knitting of thirty-six pairs of Rtoeking not the thin, doliento, and often flimsy ho siery aeon nowadays, but ench as would bear much heavy HBe, and even be "handed down to posterity." It is added that another Newport family distinguished themselves by making, in tho spuco of fonr years, 980 yards of woolen cloth, two coverlets, two bed ticks, and all the stockings needed for tho family. Detroit Free Pross, Tho way to reptoro eonfldonco is to bo confident. Boston Traveler. ERCUHIALi Mr. J O. Jon, ol Fulton, Arkanftaa, Irtvsor mW a "About ton Tear tro 1 con-1 tracted a never rat of blood rol- on. leading phyMrlau prowrtlwit mullein after runUclns, which 1 took without any relief, I lso tried mercurial and potaah reined lea, with unsuccessful result, but which hroncnt on an attack of mercurial rheumatism that mad my Ufa RliEUU&TISU on of atrony. After silflertnir four years I gave up all remedies and ben using; B. 8. 8. After taking several bottle I was entirely cured and aMe to resuins work. Is the greatest medicine lor Mood polsoulng to-day ou the market. Treatise on Tllond nd Pit In Diseases matlad free. hwift ppkciviu 'o.. Atlanta. U. " COLCHESTER " SPADSiJG BOOT Kor Kftrmrm, Mlnm. K. K. Hand r k ml othfr. Ill mitPT or lap S mtle xtmiia th whole toiiRM - - of the mI ilowri tit thn hoel. proieriinB tit Altniik In ditrhlnfj. 4ltr King, Ar, i' tonality Ttiraiia ! N Y N I N T...IorGt.A8 1 flHOB tvml ciiAtoin work, cotilna I ton) ur ine money ne and jirktj lorn, liv en ike no ubitl. apcrs for full Vl.tTThuWmi.iw description of our completa lies and gen. end for iustrattd Catalog srivinv in. tt ruction how to or l.TlLATtal IT-OJ. rlerbv mall. In.tae- ftre, You cm rrt the best batXiilna of dealers who push our shoes. WORLD'S FAIR AWARDS: i and on Dlp'omit for tieuiy. 1 nirenfrtii -nd 'lifapnrM,OTr .ki.iiu oi met. veuirirn omvm . net n sold dir i to lu peupie. nmiu ji imk hfc uuv iiui,ii vrj eat nloKtie i K J of vtrjf kind ot vehtclr t Nairn aualft- book of tt'sdinuQia.K, thy mr tree. an Sim. ALLIANCE CARRIAGE CO., CINCINNATI 4 T v. v. t. r T v A A A A A a Greatest of Family Games Progressive America. The most entertaining and Instruct. v game ol the century, it delightfully teaches American geography, w hile it Is to yuune; and old as fascinating as whist. I -an be played by any num. ber ot players. Sent by mail, postage Prepaid, lor fifteen 'J-ccnt stamps. The rade Cotntiany, boston, Mass. AAA A. A A A $1 O Tn tf0 C ,nh,wdrworhlDafor I A. I U iDLJ 0 i'Mr,it preferred who cam M' lurulftl, home and travel A Iff pr II thi-oufti the country. Um, Li f I" K ,l,"u"' not mwutary. A I ass hs l few VHC&nrlf hi towua svnd i nitis. iru HUH vVOII.HU 411 gtHHl (.'iiarUOltT Will nD4 Ibis an ext'epilouftl opHrtuulty for proll table ein- ttttfe. H. P. JOHNSON . V CO.. 1 Itb and .Httiu nu., KUhiuoud, Vt. 1,000,000 ACRES OF LAND for sal. by the Saint Paul A IH'IAITII IlAlLaOAD Company In Minnesota. Eeud for Mop. and Clrcu lar. They will be sent to Ton Address HOPEWELL CLARKE, Laud Commissioner, 1. Faul, Minn. CAKED UDDER AND GARGET Is positively cured bj the us of Scott's Arabian Paste. (it'AHAHTlED. Will not soatter or re duce tlie t!i,w uf milk. Hent bf msll on rvivlpl of iirlc. ij, I n .Mk. ; llb .Sl.OO. MJOTT'A II LTMTK KM, hVA it aud dWKAT. Price 1 .110. Hum's liuul i'aalo Cu.( Huctiustur, N. Y. Gnnil I IIP If MamilnOutllt, Alphabets,! U W U LUvn ilin,ro,l,.r I'ail ami eupy f iome beoMtijul, a monthly on hetMtU.work, Ktainu lny. we., pot alii, Karuhsm a, IK W. Ktn Kt.,N.T. iisrH 4 a.- A.. ..a HAi-lsila who hav weak lungs or Amu tu a. should uss) f iso'aCura for Consumption.. It baa card thoassutds. It has not injur ed one. It is not bad to laAe. Itis tba bostoouKh syrup. eoiu averjwnera. voe r"r O L 7
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers