V Rc-fitly-Maile ForeM. Machinery linn become so perfected that, establishment now offer to re move trees from six to twenty feet is diameter and reset. Knrli trees arc now lift oil, topethet with from one to four tons of soil, anil reset before one's door. Tree-moving liepnn in tho West anil reeords its greatest success there, but quite lnrpo nntlcrtakinps of this kind have lately been successfully carried out in New England. Boston Globe. The fnr and the Toot. An utterly unknown British poet recently sent some verses to tho Czar ootigrntulntinR hi in on his recovery. Apparently so surprised and pleased at getting a good word from Englaud, lie sent the poet, much to his aston ishment, a magnificent fur coat. New York Journal. It im feme. Will II lis (ientlef Ocntlo spring with the flowers of May may woo us into a careless In ill (Terence of uni tary laws. It is the old story, a thrice told tale of hcint; rash nnd takinir the conse quences. Thereto no time in the wholerounti of .'he year when results nre more serious from an or.lin.iry want of care than now. What with a chanceful temperature and In lix'tlous dampness, rhenmaticm to most prev nlent anj in the most aggravated forms. Even In the pursuit of the season's pleasures, its pastimes and sports, there will be a pro diRlous crop of sprains and bruises, of lame backs and stiffened limbs, of neuralgic alToe t ions and sclatio troubles. Men and women will suffer Intensely, and only because they fall to be provided with what Is known to be the remedy for them all. When it to said that Bt. Jacobs Oil to that remedy. It ts only say ing what thousands know and thousands have pronounced ft the best. Itm.t has twentv-one universities, with300 professors and OOiio students. Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root cures all Kidney and madder troubles, ramphlot and Consultation free. Laboratory Binfjhamton, N. Y. Tnis Union TaeinV Kail road owns or con trols 7CH1 miles of line. 1 Bn. w ,. llalu Prom One Has. Seed. This rcmtrkable, almost unheard-of, jrlsM was reported to the John A. Salsor Seed Co., La Crosse, Wis., liy Frank Winter, of Mon tana, who planted one buViel of Great North ern Oat, carefully tilled and Irrigated same, and believer that in PW he evi urow inn one bushel of Great Northern Oats throe hundred bui-hel. It's a wonderful oat. Ir too wii.u cut this or r amo sknd rr with so nostaee to theshove linn you will receive sample packaue ofabaveoats and their mammoth farm seed catalogue. Kkilnh's Care Is sold on a iruarantee. It cures Incipient Oon gnmption:it iMlip Bo.t Coiuth 'iirc::Ae..5Hc.. f 1 r,A wonderrtil stomach corrector Heecham's Pills. Heecham's -no others. S5 oents a nx. Reach Haven, N. J. EIGHTEEN YEARS k Seafaring Man Snffers From Impure Blood I'els.nou. Telut F.xDcllett nnd Health ! "C. I. Hood A- Co., Umell, Mage,: "Iwinli iolrt you know what Hood's Snrsnpa rllla bus done for nie. 1 have Iwo troubled wilt A IScrotuloHS Hare for about eighteen years. For the past year the poisonous impurities have spread tliroliuhuiy system, and sores have broke out all over my iKxly. I tried many kinds of medicine, and HoocTs'P' Cures nothing did me any (moil until I began to try a liotllc of Hood's Sarsuparilht. I continued with it regularly aud have taken four bottle. 1 am Now Perfectly Well and sound, bring : years of age. Several of my friends noting the beuetit H.ssi's (jursapa rillit hue lieeu to me are now takiug It with gMHl roil I is. J shall ghullv recommend Hood's arMpariUa at every opporlunilv." Captain ThomahC'hakk, Ueiudijlaven, N'ew Jersey. Head's Hills are the best family catbarlieTseB lie mid effective. Try ln. a i-eots. N Y N U- 1 3 .Hi "L7 i"mI.t"" " po"", bu l inch I.?.Ti TV. .. lu iMbt.fra.ita ,.thu torn il.i If .i,ta.r. .nju.reJ ,. b.,d. ca b. put in m J.nr ILn. sikn l.n, cuu,l, ,a p , m z, i" '" " ""n , Truck ..furn.UU HUH, .11 I.U fl. lliu, ui Ml. nw. b. I . ..lul lu Molarta aul V..r, .1. ........ ..! f., V. . ''""" Ai.ellle. Sw,,U)i.. A litv llrertlli. I tireA tliel ..tu.. e . H..l.lt I. ..... . W .... rL-.tjr,,. v,iisa,' ' by tut, Natural KatMHIV. s, u I ir 1:1, i.'i t.r U " A t-eiit ,, ki.e. NJa.,a or ,Afaf N,Ut. A fUMMI.IAU, l-l ' WD M,,li,.V.I: f Janwary 'it Febraary I ! . 13. , March 1. 15, . l i er reul. 1 I 1.1 " H H TOTAL Ve have aU ta ear ru.lo.ner. la J dava I'roiitA paM l.lc ,:am1i iiitiiiil.i luou.-y cm oe WHlmrsvtD any Mine; JU loluuucau be Iuvb.u.1 write f.ir tiifDrii.uti.iu. HMIlll A CO., Hanker, aad K raker. laiid IU Hraadwa, Srw Vark. H.l ser rent. VtTi vr. I nocf.i.As 3 shoe n rr i r rnu I If lull .nrk r.i.nna tn. I C 'Hll'HF i' it "' b''"' vah"' '"' 1,11 in..ney WtlT, Vl"iped on the butloin. Lvery Ofltoitlet, I'" warrant. l. 'iAkcno,.l,si,. ."SyJCaklfS": lute, bee !..,! pjrs for lull vstrAA.UL'irtr.h ftV dccriptiou nt our comph lL-i W LtST.--Jf. llri.un or send f-.r .Jlrs,HAirr- ei.o.f in I s . ... - t t ; . .ii. -.j A L'ti .liar i , .. , dcrtvn.jil. irrt . Vt.i, t .m get Uic tvt eJ wjxsr FERTILITY UNDER WATER. POSSIBILITIES OF THE BOTTOM OF CHESAPEAKE BAT. It Is One of the Richest Afrloulttiral Itcirlons In the World Adapted Only For One 'rop. Gy HKSArEAK; BAY, sa.tr tbo ' Washinpton Htar, is one of tho richest apricnlttiral roRions of tho cartli. The fertility of it bottom can bo compared only with thn of tho valley of tho Nile aud Iho (tanpos nml tthcr proat rivers. But it is ailnptotl for pnulticiiig only ono crop tho oyster. This niollnsk, it must be rcmctnboroil, lives on vege table foo 1, as do nil animals directly orindircotly. If there were no plants, nil animals would starve at once. All human food is vegetable in its origin, whether eaten in tho shapo of plauts or nsbocf, mutton and epps. In tho sen the blue fish preys on smaller fishes; many of theso on smaller ones; those, in turn, upon minute crusta ceans ; those on still smaller creaturea ; nnd those last pasture on the micro scopic plants which swarm at the sur face of the ocean. All nnimals ou land and water depend for their existence on vcpctnblo food. To the superficial observer the vege tation of the sea appears to be very scanty, aud, except for the friupe of sea weeds aloug the shore, tho ocean seems, so far as plant life is concerned, to be a barren desert. But tho micro scope shows that tho surface swarms with minute plants, most of them of strange forms, having nothing in com mon with tho trees aud herbs and grasses of the laud except tho power to changes mineral matter into food that is tit for animals. Most of these plants are so small as to be invisible to tho tiuaided eye, and, even when they are gathered to gether in mass, it looks like slimy, discolored water. They seem too in siguificent to play any important part in the economy of uatur but tho great monsters of tho deep, beside which the elephaut nnd the ox and the elk are small animals, owe their exist ence to these microscopic plants. Their vegetative power is wonderful past all expression. Among laud plants corn, which yields seed about a hun dredfold in a single season, is the em blem of fertility, but it enu be Bhown that a simple murine plant very much smaller than a grain of mustard Beed wonld fill the whole ocean solid in less than it week, if oil of its descendauU were to live. As couutless minute animals nro constantly pasturing upon them the multiplication of these plants is kept in check, but in calm weather it is no rare thing to fiud great tracts of wntet many miles in extent pocket! so fnll ol them that the whole surface is con verted into a slimy mass, which breaki the waves and smooths the surface like oil. Tho ao-ealled "back water" of tho Arctic and Autartic Oceans con taints of a mass of these plants crowded together until tho sens are discolored by them. Through these sens of "black water' roam the right whales, the largest ani mals on earth, gulping at each mouth ful hundreds of gallons of the littlo mollusks and crustaceans which feed ou the plants. In tropical Beas ships sometimes sail for days through great floating inlands of this surface, vege tation, and the Red Sea owes its name to tho coloration of its water by warms of microscopies plants which are of a reddish tinge. It has been surmised that man may at some future time assert his dominion over tho fishes of the sea, sending out flocks and herds of domesticated mnrine animals to pasture aud fatten upon the vegetable life of the ocean and to make its vast wealth of food available. Chesapeake Bay receives tho drain ago of more than 4(1,000, 00,) acres of fertile land, the most valuable part of j the soil from which is received eventu ally in the bosom of its o,uiet waters. There it is deposited all over the bottom in tho form of fine black sedi mcut, kuiiwu as oystur mud. This is just as valuable to man aud as fit to nourish plants as tho mud which set tles everv year ou the wheat fields and rice fields of Kgypt. It is a natural fertilizer and it is so rich in organic matter that it pntrifieg in a few hours when exposed to the sun. In the shallow waters of the bay, uuder tho influence of warm suulight, this mud produces a most luxurious vegetation, but with few exceptions the plants which grow from it are mi croscopic and invisible. They are not confined like laud plants to the sur face of the soil, their food beiug dif fused iu solution throughout the whole body of the water. As they are bathed ou all aides by nourishment, they do not have to go through the slow process of sucking it through roots ami stems, and they grow an 1 multiply at a rate which has no par allel iu the laud plants. In fact, they would quickly choke up the whole bay if they were not held in check by couutless minuto animals which feast upon them. The oyster is an animal especially adapted for living in bujIi waters and for gathering np these microscopic plants and turning them into food for man. Microscopic animals also contribute to its diet. These are rather abundant iu all water, though not so much bo as most people ima gine. When a professional exhibitor shows you, under the microscope, what he calls a drop of pure water, it is nothing of tho sort. It iseither a col lection made by filtering several bar rels of water, or elwi it is u drop squeezed from a piece of decayed nioss or from some other substance in which such small organisms have lived aud multiplied. Took the Hint. There was a man iu our town Who was not wouirous wise For though be Lad fresh rooJs to sell He would not advertis. But when he saw bis rival sell More ioods than e.'er could he, He stormed about bis grouery As mad as mad could be. He soon found out the other man Had "ads." in sheets, lietiines , He took the hiut aud did llk wiae, Aiui now idles lu the dimes. I'laus have been approved iu Lou don for a great Ferris wheel after the Chicago pattern. Jt is to cost a quar ter of a million dollars and will bo !kuown us the "(iiantio Wheel and diworisutipji Towet." HOUSEHOLD AFFAIRS. CHICKKV WITH TOMATO. .Vtv tho chicken a littlo brown Then put it into a hot. dish. Tour into the pan in which tho chicken was fried one pint of boiling water, half an onion chopped fine with a sprig of parsley, two tomatoes, half a table spoonful of butter nnd half a table spoonful of flour. Ijct it stew for fif' teen mitintes. Turn it upon Iht chicken and serve. Now York Herald. SWF.ET POTATO t'ROCtTnTRS. For sixteen croquettes take tho fol lowing ingredients : One cup (modi nm size) hot milk, four large table, spoonfuls butter, ono level table spoonful salt, four cpgs, two tobonsed for tjrir.itiir; one quart of mushed and sieved potatoes ami ono pint bread crumbs. Add the buter and hot milk to tho pot at, es. When cool add tho eggs, tho whites nnd yolks beaten separately. Hi st until tho mixture is light nnd smooth. Then shape as de hired, glaze with egg, crumb, nnd itn- merso in deep bath of smoking hot drippings. Vso tho frying basket. When richly browned drain on brown paper, thou arrange on platter with a garnish of green. Now York Tele gram. rvMritiN ptu. Tare and cut the. pumpkin in pieces about one inch square, put them into a stewpan with just enough water to keep them from burniug; stew slowly till tender (about half an hour), then. press through a colander. To every half-pint of pumpkin add a piece of butter the size of n walnut and a nnar ter teaspoonful of salt ; mix nnd let it stand till cold. When cold putonepint of thispumpkininto a large bowl, add to it one pint of milk, half a teaspoonful of ground cinnamon aud one teaspoonful of ground ginger ; mix all well togeth er and sweeten to taste. Beat four eggs until light, then add thorn to the mixture. Lino four deop pie dishes with good, plain paste, fill thorn with this mixture and bake in a quick oven for about thirty minutes. Xow Yolk Journal. a ntoicK dean sorp. One of the best of the puree soupf is made from blnck totirtlo bonus aud stock. It is choice enough for any diuner, though, as it is quite nutri tions, it would not be as suitablo as a clear soup for n dinner of many courses. Tick over a pint of the beans nnd Bonk them twelvo hours in cold water. Tho next morning drain nnd cover with three piuts of boiling water. Cook slowly until the bonus are ten der. Drain the beans, press them through a fine wire sieve. Heat throe pints of beef stock, add the beans, and stir thoroughly. Heat to a boiling point, season to taste with salt and pepper. Garnish the soup with slices of lemon. Hard-boiled eggs aro also excellent in this soup. Cut them iu thin slices and use with the sliced lemon. Have your soup plates hot. New York Advertiser. IIOrsEHOI.D HINTS. Keep a dish of water ou tho bnck of a tight btove to purify tho nir. A clean apron worn wbilo hanging the clothes helps to keep them clean. A teaspoonful of ammonia to ono teacupful jf water for cleaning jew elry. Place a strip of wood hack of the door where the knob hits the paper in opening. Before laying a carpet wash the floor with turpentine to prevent buf falo bugs. Powdered pipe clay, mixed with water, will remove oil stains from wall paper. In bottling pickles or catsup boil the corks, and whilo hot yon cau press them in the bottles, and when cold they are sealed tightly. Kid gloves for ordinary wear are painted ; only the bright opera tints, such as fashionable ladies wear to match their colored dresses, aro dyed. Vinegar and salt will clean the black crust off sheet iron frying pans, lint they should be thoroughly scoured afterward with sand soap or any good scouring soap. If shelves nn ! floors of closets nro wipod with hot wator with cayenne pepper and afterward sprinkled with borax aud nlum, roaches and other vermin are kept at bay. When the fat's in the fire it is never wise to throw water upon it. If fat iu a kettle boils over aud there are ashes convenient to throw ou the blaze, it is the surest, safest way to put it out. A simple plan of disinfecting rooms consists in putting a Baucerful of suit iu the middle of the room aud pour ing on it a dram or two of sulphuric acid. The funics that arise do the work of disinfection. Kilver cracker jars with separate re ceptacles for different kinds of bis cuits and crackers are a novelty. An other new effect in table silver are tho wooden bread platters Bet in broad rims of worked silver. A silver bread knife goes with them. The chimuey of a lamp should never be touched with water. A few drops of alcohol, or even paraffine oil, will re move the dimmed, smoky effect, aud make the chimney as bright as possi ble when it is polished with a soft flannel or chamois skin. To clean hair brushes quickly and easily, take a dessert spoonful of hartshorn to a quart of cold water iu a wash huud bnsiu. Dip iu tho hair of the brushes, and rub them together until clean. Then riuso well with cold water, rub dry with a towel aud stand npright at an open window. A Seventy-Foot Dragon. The Elasmosaurus, a giant serpent which lived in one ol tho latest of the geological ages, frequently attained a length of seventy feet. Its chief habit seems to have been the shallow sous that formerly lushed their waves over the prairies ftf Nebraska, Kansas and Indian Territory. A skeleton of one of the creatures found in a West Kan sas canyon a few yearn ago proves that thirty feet of the beast was neck ; the remainder body, tail and flippers. Ht. Louis Kepiiljlic. Every President of the Unit-,! States has ! either becu u luwycr y soldier, or jjoth. TEMPERANCE. OKNKRAT, HOW AND THB MOLASSES MAt.IO. Oeneral Neal How ssys t list nrter the Mains rirohlhltory law was passed he met a larirn mporter of molasses who said to him' "I bid glad your law has passed, thounh it will ruin my business." lie sold his molasses largely to distilleries. Mr. How assured him that for every gallon he sold to tho distill, erles tinder the license law, be would lie able to sell two to the common people uuder pro hibltlon. It proved to be true, TRR army eras. The Moslon Traveller snys : "The PosS Exchange is directly responsible for drunk enness in the army. It should he the policy ol the Government to protect the men serv ing under Its flng from the curse of strong drink, aud not only for the snke of the men themselves, who are entitled to its consider ation, but for the sake, also, of the service. The more temperance prevat Is in tho army, the more efhVlcnt It will become, and, as we pointed out not long ago, the morn it will Httract a superior class of recruits." HOW WOULD IT BK. If there had been no selling and no ihink Ing of liquor for the past three years in this country, would there bethe want and differ ing now prevalent? It drink had been dis countenanced by those in position to pivo weight to their disapproval, there, would not now be so many cold and hungry. But it Is useless to sit by the rivers of llahylon and lament. Such a course will not oheek the evil. The work agitation, education aud organiratlon must te kept up ny rallies distribution of literature, and indlvidua effort, so that the public, may recognir.e the enormous cost ol drink. camone, coiunv bian, THE SAME EVERYWHERE. Prink is the great curse of Australia. High. Wages only too often lead to indulgence in bad colonial beer, and wine that Is even worse than malt liquors or spirits. Girls and women drink much more in ths colonies than they do in England. This is unit I v uwing tu me nnru wors, partly to the not climate. "I shouldn't like the girls who made me this shawl to see me in this nlaee." aid a girl, while unpacking her box n a miserable Meilvourne lodging house. She looked up, and there stood the maker of tbs shawl, tho daughter of a noor hut rear.net. able farmer at home. Both girls bad iieen emigrants, anu uotn nad come to grief through drinking. WHISKY AND WAR. Rimon Takago. the son of tho Indian chief who ceded to white men the ground ou which Chicago stands, visited the World's Fair. He was vexed by the sale of liquor In the grounds and afterward wrote a letter in which he says that the Fort Dearborn massacre ot lHli was cause,! by liquor furnished to Hie Indians. In defence ot his race be denies that it was a massacre, but a battle, in whleh the Indians lost more thnn the whiles. But, he says, "my father said 'rattlesnake water' had more to do with the fight than anything else. When shipments were received at I ho fort there were ttve barrels of snake water to one of flour and meat nnd that it was a common thing for traders to say : 'Whisky is legal tender for the red mau.' He often said with a sigh, that ho had seen lnuskrat skius sold for a sewing thimbleful of It ; a deer skin sold for a driuk of II ; n buftalo robe for a pint of it, nnd a bear skin for a quart of it." Tbo Organizer. ALCOHOL Ht'BTFl'I, IN MEDICINE. Dr. Charles G. Davis, of Chicago. In a paper read before tho National Tempornneo Convention and printed in the Journal of the American Medical Association, speaking ot the National Temperance Hospital ot Chi cngo, says : "lhe basic rr Inclines upon which this Institution rests may lie formulated as fol lows : "1. Alcohol is a poison. "2. When taken Into the system, it Is rot assimilated, but passes the rouud ot the cir culation, and is Anally thrown off through tbe organs of excretion, unchanged. "3. vi title nisslng through tho body It disturbs the various physiological processes and in this way lays the foundation for dis ease. 1. It does not stimulate or strengthen. but It depresses and weakens. As it is not assimilated, it cannot be a food. "8. As it disturbs every physiological pro cess, it cannot be a medicine. '7. There is no disease afflicting the body that canaot bo more successfully treated witnout man witn tne use oi alconoi. 8DOakiug of the suiteess wliieh has in tended the treatment of surgiealand medical oases without alcoholic or ferineuted drinks, he savs : "The lesson already taught bus been suffi ciently convincing to impress the most icepticai that alcohol is not only unneces sary as an active medlclual agent, but that, in a majority of case, it Is an actual hin drance to the recovery ot the patient. Hlowly but surely, every year, this grent truth is be ing Impressed on the minds ol tbe medical prolessiou. PLENTY OF MONEY Ton MQCOR, The times are hard. Many people are out Of work, because manufacturers have beeu obliged to discharge numerous bands or have closed their establishments altogether. The consequence is great suffering to many fami lies. All lines of business are affected. Busi ness men generally complain of tliininished sa'.es and prollts. Yet there is one class of business men who nppeur to be but little af fected by the hiirJ times those ongaged in the liquor trnfllc. Investigations in differ ent cities show that Hie quantity of liqnoi consumed right along is euormous. Tho city of Worcester. MiissnchuseltH. contains a population of 85,003 people. In that city are found eighty saloons which pty a total sum of tllH.000 for licenses and ttji.003 for rents, and during the past year sold liquor to the. enormous amount of il.'JOO.tlOO ; that is, each saloon received on nil average 50 a day. Where did this money eomo from' Lurgely trom the laboring class, and this is the clii that is sulTerlng mostly from the hard times. Iu our eity of Heading we have nearly 2U0 places where intoxicating liquors are sold. The license foe is 1500, which makes a total of about KMI.IKIO for fees alone. Not only have applications been made for all tbe pres ent stauils. but also for some new ones. No failures have occurred among this class of business men, and the business appears to be prosperous. Here, as elsewhere, tbe saloons are supported mainly by the workfngclasses. Tbunk Go I, not all workiugiueu are drink ers ! Thousands ot them are among ih.i most exemplary citizens. Yet it is easy to Bee what a drain are the saloons upon ths community. It lias beta stated that iu this eity more money lb spent for liquor thun for bread, and ttie statement isno doubt correct. This state of things will go far to explain the cause of the existing dcbtitullon in very umuy cases. l'.eformed Church llecord. TEMI'EHANI E NEWS ANU NOTES. Intemperanoe annually cannot 509 persons in 1'rubsia to commit suicide. Illinois has 300 active Loyal Temperance Legions with a membership of 25,OOi. Filteen English brewers ami win' mer chants who died last year left over 30,0()0, 000. Htreng drink Is not only the devil's way into a man, but a mini s way to the devil. A'lani Clark, 1). 1. The Imports of mult liquor in the Dutch Ea.it In. lies amounted iu value in to 10D.415 Dutch norms. Whisky, good to preserve corpses, ought never to t'iru you Into a corpse. Do not touch it. Dr. Tn linage. l he city at London has about 1000 charit able institutions, 75ti of which expended last year a total of 27.747,470. A recent Minnesota law pumsbei the drunkard by u line ol 10 to (40 for tbe first offeuge, from 440 to ftiO for the second, and ninety days' imprisonment ir. the workhouse for the third. All Intoxicating drinks are poisonous. The lighter beers aud the finest fermented wines ure as truly, though uot as strongly, lutuxl catiug as am the courses! aud cheapest spir ilous drluks. Dr. Norman Kerr. Any one who is familiar with the action of poisou upon the liviug animal body, aud has made turn asiilqect of spccliil study, hits uot the emulleet husitHtiou iii saying mat alco hol is a poii-ou. Dr. W. B. Carpenter. The Conunihslouer ol internal IWhuum is sued i0,'J7s tux receipts to retail liquor deal ers in tne Htitte of New Vork tho llr.tt llseal year, and 15-44 fur retailing mult liquor only aukin,' a total ot 42,5ti retail liquor dealers. The (Inncbo's Dietary. Tho dietary of tho South American gsucho (cowboy) is simple, ao his rooking is elementary in its rharno tor. As a rule, ho eats only oneo in tho day, toward sunset; when, jour neys or toil being ended, supper, con- sisting of a thin pieco of meat, is roasted upon a spit of iron or wood stuck slantingly over a quick firo. If this should be in winter, all sit around on tho skeletons of horses heads, and with their long knivosor facons (falch ions) cut lumps from tho haunch, This, being held in tho loft hand by ono entl, is soizod with tho teothnttho other, arid a tempting tit-bit is skill- lully cut off. l lwi hard, dry moat, do ficient in fatty cnntititticnts, is washed down by copious draughts of mate, made from tho favorito yerba. The hut, dimly lighted by a lamp in which bullock's tallow is burned, bears some resemblance to a stable, from tho bridles, saddles, spurs, bolas, and lassos which decorato tho roughly daubed walls. If tho (lanoho happens to be a family man, fat, blnek-eyed, good-natured, neorly linked children in do I go in antics during the meal, while tho poultry wink drowsily from their perches. No wayfarer is turn Ml from tho door, for tho hand nud heart of io child of tho pampas is ever open to tho stranger, nnd tho arrival of such is made a convenient excuse for bringing out tho caua, a coarse spirit, which has jicrhap been provo cntive of more evil thau anything olso which he can call his own. Water melons nro sparingly partaken of in their season, but these aro almost the only vegetables the wild horseman' cares for. Temple Har. A Mrat-Eating 'atlon. Tho recent dinner of tho Vegetarian Sooiety in this city has attracted con siderable attention. A gentleman from Germany who has rocently made a tour of observation iu this country, commenting on this vegetarian move ment, said it was jiiBt what tho tTnitod States needed. Ho added, "Ameri cans eat too much meat. I have ob served that fact wherever I bavn rrnno Yon have meat for breakfast, for luncheon ami dinner. la Germany our breakfast is a cup of coffeo and a boiled euir or two. Then mid-day dinner in courses, a simple supper anu a snacK tiorore wo go to bed." My German friend was com pelled to admit, however, that ho was not as frugal in his diet as he pro tended to be, for he said that tho Gor man people nlwavs felt free to take a saudwich and a cm of eolfen or a irlouu of beer betwoou their meals and as a rule managed to eat at least live or six times a day. Englishmen are grent meat eaters. Perhaps we iuherit our appetite and our taste from thorn. xtew xotk Aiau aud exoress. The Suud-ln-Sngar Fiction. Nearly everybody entertains th Opinion that a dishonest merchant will mix sand with his sugar for tho purpose of gain. This is indeed a popular error, for sugar is but rarelv adulterated, from the fact that unless scientifically done, and then only with a certaiu kind of clay, the fraud would eomo to light without tho consumer applying auy test. If sand is mixed with sugar it would bo discovered by the sugar eater, or the sand would bo found as a deposit at the bottom of the coffee cup, or it would betray it self by the grit in the cako. lloiuo and Farm. -- lion's Tliia I W.i nffna IT.,.. ... 1 1 Ti , a .... ...... . ...t. i,.e. . ... iii.inirs nrwnru rnr any rate of Catarrh lhal catim.l be cured by iiwi o v.m.ni are. r . -I. Chfnkt Co., Toledo, O. TV. tl.A ,IMfluwi.....,l 1. L- 1 ..... ..... ........ . .... ... ln. , .. r . , . . lir- niv rnr llm Ih, K i ..... t.l...... 1. ' - ... j . mi... 1 1' ' o 11 1 I l.T- frelly h.inoralilu In ull buinena transact loiin I."'. ....(...c noy not', in carry out any ouuga tien made by lhe r firm. Wkst Tiicax, Wholesale Druggists, Tuledo, Waloimi, Kinvan Marvin, Wholesale TURK'S. , 1 '.ICllll, tfllUl. lift T. 1'l.Urrl. I'll-A iu l.lrun I n tern . 1 1 ... ........... ,.' ...v. iii... iii.ict.us siir- lacesnf the system. 'iVstlm.miaU sent. free. Price, 7.7c. )-rlmttie. hold l y all DriiEiiisU. Your wife can hnv several Mrti,l..-i f..r i. VOU need Si Wort ll of niMih.lilt. itr(i... I tT..! drug line; you mail the order to K. A. Hall, Charleston, s. C and save $1. Your wife in happy, your lire, uud so w ill Hall be. Free catalogue. Ftllt TllltOAT IllSKAKKS. I jpflWluiil relief is fnuiu. iu Hir use of "liniint nmnt ttuu 'irtK'He." irUe ni'iits. SUl onlu in Japnnre Tooth l'order, l-euulnr. . lttrirn box iimi.p.l fur 1 emit.-.. Iii.n Hmv Co., lMiilatMpiiiri, Pa. lr. Ilx4t'(t On Ml it 1'reup ('nre Jaaaehfai. as it la cuirc. One liiimlrctl rli-. for i'Oi'iK u res the Umiiy col la ior a whoJo I'eur. No mi 'i fa. Hutch's I 'nl verbal ('ouuli Svnm iw & r'..itl--. turtB f r("nii!i. rents al (t'ruintiM. KNOWLEDGE B "inps comfort nnj improvement and tends to personal enjoyment when rightly used, 'lho ninny, v.-lio live bet ter than others r.nd enjoy life more, with les expenditure, by more promptly adapting the world's best products to the needs of physical bt ing, will attest the value to health of the pure liquid laxative principle embraced in tho remedy, Syrup of Fig. Its excellence is due to its presenting iu the form most acceptable und pleas ant to the taste, the refreshing and truly beneficial properties of a perfect lax ative; effectually cleansing the system, dispelling colds, headaches and fevers and permanently curing constipation. It has given tali.-faction to millions and met with the approval of the medical profession, becnu.-e it nets on the Kid neys, Liver and I'.owcls without weak ening them und it is perfectly free from every objectionable substance. Syrup of Fiiis is for sale by all drug gists in TiDc nnd $1 bottles, but it is man ufactured by the California Fig Syrup Co. only, whose name is printed on every package, also the name, Syrup of Figs, and being well informed, you will not accept auy substitute if oiltiod. v Successful i fro&t'cuics ;Ui!t BU.i "t Hi a. .1U' r. Jsta.ii. in. ti ttijr ulriii, JlfilUisWk MsU. IvsWUllM-iUUtlitiSI-'lUa. mKlj Mltwtt 1 A1V v Take no Substitute for Royal Baking: Powder. It is Absolutely Pure. AH others contain alum or ammonlaJ fllood Drinkers. Tho Zoothermio Institute in Home is a "euro" plnco, where peoplo go to drink fresh lilood for tho euro of gout, rheumatism and tho great prostration and anmmin caused by tho malarial fevers of tho Toatino Marshes. The blood to bo imbibed is first rapidly froed from flbriue, by a carefully aseptio method, the animals from which it is derivod having previously undergone inspection by a veterinary surgeon. Home patients bat ho either a part or tho wholo of tho body in tho warm blood, and the Italian doctors think with great benefit, iu spito of which, it seems a barburio survival. Tho poor aro treated gratis, but tho highest fee is equivalent to fifty cents of our money. Now York Indepcu- ueni. Tho total area of lnnd and wator in the united kingdom is 77,7'Jt,7'ja acres. After read In ths foilowlnu letter can akt vu n.uger uouos vnai a trustworthy remedy u. uhu w-rriinj xiimu maiatiy, consumption, has at last been found! It thnw l..nn hn.i been written by your bast known and most esteemed neighbors they could be no more worthy of your confidence than they now are. coming, as thev do. from well known. intelligant and trustworthy citizens, who, iu weir several neighborhoods, enjoy the fullest con Aden os and rospoct of ail who know them. K. C. HoUn, Em., of Kempiville, Princess Anne Co., Va., whose portrait beads this article, writes : " When I commenced tak ing Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery I was vary low with a cough and at tinirs spit up much blood. I was not able to do the least work, but most of the tints was in bed. I was all run down, very weak, my bead was diizy and I was extremely despon dent. Tbe first bottle I took did not seem to do me much good, but I had faith in it and continued using it until I bad taken fifteen bottles and now I do not look nor feel likt tbs sama man I was on year ago. People are astonished and say, 'well, last year this time I would not have thought that you would be living now.' I can tbauk tully say I am entirely cured ot a disease which, but for your wonderful 'Discovery would hava resulted in my death." Even when the predisposition to consump tion is inherited, it may be cured, as veriticd by the following from a most truthful and much respected Canadian lady, Mrs. Thomas Vaiudcklin, of Brighton, Ont Hhe writes : ' I havs long felt it my duty to acknowledge to you what Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery and bis 'Pleasant Pellets' havs dons for me. They almost raised me from the grave. I had three brothers and one sister die of consumption and I was speedily following after them. I bad severe cough, pain, copious sxpsctoration and other alarming symptoms and my friends sll thought I bad but a few months to live. A( that time I was persuaded to try tbe 'Golden Medical Discovery' and tbs first bottle acted like magic. Of course, I continued on with tbe medicine aud as a result I gained rapidly la strength. My friends wars aston XTVA TT"" " wrffl If Pi'TTI 'T' ' "t4 935' " jr '"" '--:'t "IV". " ' Especially lor Farmers, .Miners, II. It. Hands and outers. Iiouelo sole isu iidini? down to the heel. KXTKA WK VKIMi QliAIMTY. Thousands of lOIIlt Hoot wearers testify this is lhe ItKST they ever bud. ASK Hub tier DKAI.KIt KK Til KM uud don't be persuaded iutotin interior article vtuuw wr; uuuuitl til JII'IUI! VWeUl.lo J fur tho utllllou. Sft tl.OOlKMtliuM. IjirLM'Ht o-r,,w. i -i .if ni!jlo pk. "G t Tht're EM" uu iu- 4Q ixwuLtft). niaiuijutj mono, ior j.ojtUnc. rfcAifi h'r.'ilUfv.iTill1 a. IF AT FIRST YOU DON'T SUC CEED," TRY SAPOLIO &o k ll itftRipn u Ttiii.i st , I ,!L " A.M.LEGO&CO.S.11,: iQXtmi, U. C, ATTOIC Mi H l'OR I- kM'UKH, 1'PJcurH IjuUi Atuuru-uil un I Foreign l'cttriiUi. Buy ami 'tli nu in ait i-luHM-B I luvfutjiiusi. Litil.v iteuirs fveiy w tit-re itul pay Ulti SaLaHIES. t'uriv.pon- d,-ucfl Uuui luvttitvrv -aid U nuuu ausiu Uxl. Layers of IVIrifiicllon In the WouC North Colorado and parts of Wyom ing and Montana are genuine mines of petrifactions. There aro petrifactions of every kind, including many varie ties of wood, ferns and plants, fish, toads, snails, frogs, serpents, sholl fish and objects which ennnot bo classified. The deposits often occur in layers aa though somo great natural convulsion had destroyed the animal lifo of wholo tlistru-t Bt once. The scientists ' make very few and tolerably weak at tempts to explain the singular phenom enon, and thn fact, in evident tho they know no moro about the matter than do tho men who pick out the best specimens and soil them to tourists Chicago Herald. Tho New Eugland Historical Society is tho proud possessor of a pipe used by General Jackson when he was l'rosident. ished When T commenced the use of you! medicines, six years ago, I weighed but IU pounds and was sinking rapidly. I now weigh lU5,and my health continue perfect' "Golden Medical Discovery" cures eon, sumption (which is scrofula of tbe lumr). by its wonderful blood-purifying, invigorat' ing and nutritive properties. For weak lungs, spitting of blood, Bhortnessof breath) nasal catarrh, bronchitis, severe cougbf. asthma, and kindred allectioni, it is a sov ereign remedy. While it promptly cure the severest coughs, it strengthens the system and purifies tbo blood. "Golden Medical Discovery" doe not mska fat people more corpulent, but for thin, pale, puny children, as well a for adults reduced in tlosh, from any cause, it is tbe greatest tlesb-builder known to medical science. Nasty cod liver oil anS its "emulsions," aro not to be compared with it in efficacy. It rapidly builds up tbs system, and increase the suJiil flesh and weight of those reduced below tbe usual standard ot health by "wasting disease." la bract tip the entire system after ths grip, pneumonia, fever, and other prostrat ing acute disease ; to build up needed flesb and strength, and to restore health and vigor when you feel "run-down" and " used tip" tbe best thing iu the world is Dr. Pierce's Golden Medicul Discovery. It promote all tbs bodily functions, rouses every organ into healthful action, purities and enriches to blood, and throuKU it cleanses, repairs, and invigorates th enft'r system. A Treatise on Consumption, giving numer ous testimonials with phototype, or half -tons, jxirtraita of thoso cured, numerous refer ences, nlso containing success! ul Home Treat ment for I'hronio nusal catarrh, bronchitis, asthma, and kindred diseases, will b mailea by tbe World's Dispensary Medical Associa tion of Buffalo, N. V., on reoeipt of six cents iu stamps, to pay postage. Or The Peoples Common Kenso Medical Adviser, 1,000 pasts. 300 illustrations, mailed for 1.50. """ TTTH A.' . I 1 TJf 11 TOT IB'J DO IlfP J I pkif- Karlletit VcKeULbluH t-tls 1-. i.. R,-H,tintli wi.fM FkBh kutiMti tit for Uiw in It dawn and cur S Em (.uhts nh.Ki in l,:,i i.jS lle,t C.i.kIi t)r: u. Ilim laood, Cm I n ti'tin r-.i'il hr criH'KiBi.. I -ririACTi3i ir-' t a- Cine Is-V :