How Hair Tins are Msde. For years tho EnRlish and French controlled the manufacture of hair juns, mnl it is only within the last twenty yrsrs t tint the gooils have been produced in thin country to liny ex tent. The machinery ned in of a deli cate nnd intricate character, as the rices at which tho pins are sold nccesftitate the cheapest anil most rapid process, which can only be pro cured by unionist io machine. ' Tho wiro is made expressly for the purpose and put tip in lnre coils, which are placed in a clamp, which carries it to the machine while straightening it. From there it rims into another machine, which cuts, bends, and by a delicate and instan taneous process sharpens tho point. IbinninR at full speed, these machinos will turn out 120 hair pins every min ute. To economizo it is necessary to keep them running day and night. Tho difficult part of the work is in Iho enameling, which is dono by dip ping tlia pins in a preparation and bakiug in an oven. Hero is where tho most constant and careful attention is required, as the pins must bo perfect ly smooth and tho enamel have a per fect polish. The slightest particles of dust cause imperfections aud rongh ness, which is objectionable. Pitts burg Dispatch. Nrvrr Too l.nto mr Too 3oon. Thr-ra la mora lost In life from putting oft from to.l'iy till to-morrow what might bo done on tho Instant than from any other cause. Fortune and fame hsvo been thus wrecked, and In minor things It will not do to dolay or trifle. A nmn hobbling on crntohes lot tho rest of his lifo, caused by sprain, would have bwn a well, soun 1 man, oat of misery, If he hail ued 8t. Jncobs Oil when the mis hap occurred. It is never too soon to get It never too Inte to use It. Tho great remedy for pnln never tarries j It will do Its work lr ten minutes If It is allowed to do so. Treat pain as you would a mosquito knock It out as soon as It bites. Basutolnnd, Africn, has 113 schools wllb nu enrollment of 5031 scholars. Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root euros hll Kidney and Bladder troubles. Pamphlet and Consultation freu. Laboratory Hlnghamton. N. Y. There Is one milch cow In this country tt i very four Inhabitants. Catarrh Cannot Bo Curt With local applications, ss they cannot react the seat of the disease. Catarrh is a blood oi const itutinnal disease, and in order to onn tt you munt take internal remedies. Hall'i Catarrh Cure is taken internally, and acts di rectly on the blood and mucous surface. Hall't Catarrh Cure is not a quack medicine. It wm prescribed by one of the best physicians in this country for years, and is a regular prescription. It is coniiKiped of the best tonics known, com bined wiUi the best blood purifiers, acting di rectly on the mucous surfaces. The perfect combination of the two ingredients is what produces such wonderful results la caring ca tarrh. Send for testimonials free. K. J. Cheney & Co., Props., Toledo, 0 Sold by druggists, price "bo. Wuen Piatnre Feeds assistance It may be best to render It promptly,but one should remember to use even the most perfect remedies only when needed. The best and most simple and gentle remedy U the Syrup of Figs manufactured by the Cali fornia Fig Syrup Co. facers In Lite depends on the little thines. A Ripans Tabul is a little tUtnir, but taking one occasionally irives (((kmI digestion, nnd that means kooo blood, ami that means (rood brain and brawn, and tliut means success. Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup for children teething, poi tens the cums, reduces iutiammiv tion, allay- nin. cure wind colic. Ac. a bottle Tnit Public Awards the Palm to Hale's Honey of llorchound and Tar for coughs. Pike's TootUaclio llropj Cure in one minute. Karl's Clover Hoot, the great blood purifier, irives freshness mid clearness to the complex ion aud cures constipation. cts.. 5U cU., SI. If afflicted with sore eyes use Dr. Isaac Thomp son's hye-water. Drmigistssell at aic per bottle Pure Blood Gives Perfect Health-Hood's Sar saparilla Makes Pure Blood. I became troubled with a or em which broke out on me from the lower part of my body down to my ankles, dark, flat and Very Painful. fah'f'ttN Hood'B arsaparilla my system healed the soree hurt time. It iso Improved my Appetite and benefited my gen eral health. I recom mend HiMid's Sarsaparilla to oil.' L. P. TUUU.U. i'ostmaUT, burton's Creek, Va. Hood's3 Cures Hood's 11 II ar-f th best. 25 cut per box. It a l way a Itenriy Hrlipf U safe, :eltar.ieand eflt'-i-iuui b"aiia.t ot ilie MimuljttliiK actio') which It rxfrlfi ov. r iitTvuH ai l . it 1 iwir f (lie Lnxly, aililiiK lout' w (h n.f titi'l iiUMtiiiK tti renewed ami Ju nit vt(nr the hIuiiiIm-i'Iiik vitality of the physi cal ti ut-titri, aud Ihrmili tin healluf ul stluuilai tun ami im-ivate.l i.c-Uou tli- CAi;K of 1'ntu I driven away, an-l h na' url curlti mi restor-l. It U tliut. iliut tiit ltnily .ellcl 1 mo BtlmlroMy al:ipui f.ir i;ie ( tn e of r.ti., anl without the rink of Injury which 1 mrf to rv-ult from tint use of litany of the ao-fulled ,utiu reme41u of the day. It is Highly Important that Every Family Keep a Supply of RADWAY'S READY RELIEF Always In tii hom Its ue will prove beneficial uu all ore a -..on of imlri or utekii-ni. There Ik Doihintt lu ihew..rUl that will stop p.tiuor arret th fi'MKii ii iiiBfae ii s i,ul k a the ht'j-tly Kelief. STOPS PAIN 50 els. a bottle. Sold by druKiai.. II AIIU AY iV CO., Nrw York. WALTER BAKER & CO. 'ibe Ivr.st Mauulai Lureri of !1 iUiuMiiui run ruuu EXPOSITIONS i ". . ' In Cnrnnn Ininnnd I ' - III LUlUIJCillliJ AIIIDIIia. f f 1'n')k tha Dulrh I'roefH, BO A Ilia Their ahe,u,t MKhA k i A T ('(II OA U tbtaluuij tu.J aiid wi wliis, Atstl C4MU Jcm than mm hI a OLD 1 OROCkK CVtNYWHRC WALTER BAKER 4 CO.TcirtlW ER, MASS. 0 TfoTk it liw PURE, HIGH CRADC rinnnio tun niinnni itto . av wound Aitu uvjuuLftita Xf&r3 HIGHEST AWARDS Inilnptiinl I WLcmNO. Mulching of strawberrici to rctarJ tliom Is dono iy placing mannro orer tbo Rround when it is frozen, and thpn scaUering straw over it. Care must le taken that tho manure docs nut cover the crowns of the ilan(a. Leave the covering of straw on finite lato in the spring. The manure can remain permanently. New Vork World. CRKAV THAT WTLL !OT MARK BlTtm. It is often tho enso that tho cream of the milk of a cow duo to calve in two or three months will not niako butter, but foams in the churn and rapidly becomes very sour. The milk of a cow undergoes a chftnge about this time, nnd some cows aro so af fected that the cream will not yield any butter. Every cow should be dried off, if the milk does not stop naturally, two months before the calf is due. At any rate, good butter enn not be made from the milk so near calving. This condition of the milk, of course, is at once evident in a sin glo cow, but doubtless there are cows in herds in the same condition, but are not dctcctod. It shows how need ful it is that a strict watch should bo kept on each of tho cows in a herd. New York Times. SLOW OB FAST DRYTJfCJ. It makes a great difference in the value of corn fodder whether it is cut during warm, dry weather, when it will cure rapidly, or Inter, when rains and cold make it dry out more slowly. AU tho time it is moist some waste is going on in the nutritive value ot tho stalk. When the drying is hastened the waste is small ; when it is pro tracted by rains, especially with warm weather, the waste is much greater. It is not stopped entirely by cold weather. As the moisture freezes out of the stalks it is found that the woody fibre is increased and tho nutritive value has decreased in like proportion. Every farmer knows that cornstalks after repeated freezing and thawing become of little value for feeding. They are dry, tasteless, and tho stock will not eat tbem readily, as they do the partly-dried stalk at the begin ning of winter. Much is said about tho waste of nutrition by fermentation in the silo. There is such waste, but it is trivial compared with the watCe of cornstalks by slow drying. The silo makes the nutrition more available by partly cooking tho food. Boston Cultivator. COLIC IN HORSES. Irregular footling in vho matter of hours, long fasts and too great quan tity given at long intervals are fre quent causes of colic, says tho New York World. Irregular work is not without its influence -a twenty-mile journey once a week is likely to be productive of more mischief than the some distance every day. A horse put to hard work at intervals cannot be kept in condition. Horses ought to be fed late at night and early in the morning; they should have at least two hours to consume and digest the morning feed before being takon out to work, and if nat retnrncd to tho stable when the next feed is due, should be provided with nose bags. Changes of food should be intro duced gradually. Horses may bo fed with impunity on what will make tbem seriously ill if care is not taken to make the change gradually. Thus, Bitcu iuuii, wuen 11 nrst comes in, and is young and succalont, often causts gripes, because fed too largely to tho exclusion of the accustomed dry material. If a small quantity is cut with the hay chaff to begin with, xno norse is less grcocly about it when a larger quantity is allowed, and tho digestive organs as gradually become accustomed to tho change. Attention to the prevention of colio is much bet ter than tho possession of a recipe for jib cure, ior some aay tue reciue misses fire, and death w us tho match. Apart from this, an attack successfully dealt with fctill moani loss of service for some time very often at a busy period. FEEDINO APPLES TO COWS. Kiere has long been a practical opinion among farmers that while sweet apples might be fed to cows with satisfactory results, sour apples wero very injurious for them; but this opinion has been founded upon very slight actual knowledge ot the real foeding value of apples. At the Vermont station applo pomivce, en silaged, aud nsed supplementary to and in part as a substitute for corn ensiloge, was found to bo relished by cows, and the results of four tests found ft to bo about equivalent in feeding valuo to corn eusilago. At the Massachusetts station Dr. Uoessmunn found apples to contain about eighty per cent, of moisture, the apples hav ing been gathered October (ith. The farther advanced apples are towards maturity tho more sugar is found in them, and their value depends lurgely upon the amount of dry matter which they oontain. Laboratory testBshow that the feeding value of applos is some what higher than that of an equal weight of turnips. Applo pomace it said to be equul to suar beets, it be ing a somewhat singular chemical fuet thut tho pomace is richer in nitrogen ous matter than the apple from which it has been produced, and the feed ing value of pomace is assumed to be, pound for pound, one-third high er than that of the wholo apple, bull apples are deficient in nitrogen, und ought on this account to bo literally supplemented for dairy cows with wheat shorts, bran, oil cakes, clover aud good hay. To obtaiu the best re sults fioin feeding them to cows, the early sort should bo fed by itaelf, sour ones in less quantity thuu sweet ones, fed when fully ripe, after the night's milking. Tho quantity should not exoeod four to six quui ts to a feed. American Agriculturist. nvs AS A PAW IT HE CHOP. I hovbelioved for tweuty-llve years that most of us, in what is called "tho West," did not sufficiently appreciate tho Valuo of rye as a late fall nnd early spring pasture crop, writes E. 1). Coburn in tho Now York Tribune. Where conditions are at all favorablo it furnishes an axtoniHhing quantity of rich, succulent grazing just at a time of year when it is most relished and most needed by all kinds of farm ani mnls, even including poultry. It pieces out to great advantage other feed that may bo scant or poor, and while especially agreeable to all tho stock, it will mako poorly nourished cows practically donblo their milk in quantity and quality. In fact, I have never 8ecn a Kansas farmer so well fixed that a good piece of rye posture wasn't a genuine bonanza to him. There has never been a season in all tho central West when somothing of that sort was more of a comfort to its possessor than it will likely be within tho next nine months. Hence I would say to every farmer who reads this, do not fail to sow, nnd sow early (in fact just as soon as tho ground can be put in proper condition), a goodly area of rye for pasture. Don't sow it for grain, but for pasturage; make tho most of it for grazing, and if eventually it also yields some grain worth harvesting, well and good. If you can't secure the seed readily, sow wheat just as you would rye ; if it is not a plump, high grade article, that will cut but a small figure if sound. If of small or shrunken berry I would not sow less than five pecks to the acre; if plump a bushel and a half would be none too much ; at all evonts, uso plenty, and don't bo afraid of having too many acres. I haven't discovered anything that was a better regulntor for the pigs, the colts, tho calves, the cows or the old blind mare than a good bite of green rye or wheat. It is excellent in years of greatest abundance ; in years whon other food is scarce or poor, it is simply indis pensable really a benefaction. Sow it with a drill or broadcast as you think best, but do a good job, as it you desired success aud meant to do servo it. FARM AND GARDES KOTEP. A little vaseline and carbolic acid applied to parts of the horse that ho cannot touch with tail or head will give him much relief by keeping flios away. Producers who have formerly do pended on ensilage may be obliged to at least partially substitute grain to make their winter dairying for 1891 and 1895 profitable. Professor Roberts, of Cornoll, says the great difficulty with farming is too much or too little moisture, and too littlo cultivation, thus indicating tho necessity of drainage. Before storing articles in the cellar take a day for tho purpose, use a peck or more of sulphur, if necessary, and fumigate it two or three times, in order to purify tho walls, floors, ceilings and bins. A. W. Pope, Wollosloy, Mass., says of alfalfa: It goes down further and comes up faster than common clover. The quality of tho hay is good, but it is hard to cure. I get three crops the year following tho planting. Foals should bo taught to eat grain while yet with tho mures, and then tbo weaning process is not so likely to check their growth. Feed any spare milk to tho weanings until they get well started on regular rations of grain and hay. Dairymen should wake up to the fact that it is quite as easy, at a well-managed creamery, to make good buttor in winter as in summer. When they realize this we shall not see so many idle establishments just at the time when they should be running at their fullest capacity. It is not only unprofitable but cruel to let milch cows wander about in grassless fields under a merciless sun. Under such conditions keep them in a small, shady enclosure if you have one, and there feed tbem their forage and see that tbey have plenty of cool. pure water at regular intervals. Select a bull from a good dairy family, and then breed the very best of your cows, feed the resulting young sters well, aud train them so that they can be easily handled when you are ready to put them in the dairy. This feeding and training is a necessary supplement to tho breeding, in order to inuke a perfect dairy animal. Cold weather shuts off the egg sup ply among poultry keepers who do not understand their business, and then they cry thot there is no profit in fowls. But the wise man makes his houses warm and snug, feeds liberally and a good variety of food, compels tho fowls to take exercise and reapoth his reward in a bountiful harvest of eggs which sell at good prices. Perhaps you have your dairy np to a certain staudurd of excellence, but how are you to keep it there? Some of the cows will soon begin to got old. Then they must go to the butcher. Better be ruining and training some good heifors, whose brooding you know, to take their places. Do not wait until you have to use them, and then buy where it comes handy. Do not be scarod out of tho poultry business bocauso people speak of it coutemptnoUHly, calling it a "littlo buHiness." It can be made just as large as your ability aud adaptability will justify. It is more a question of theso elements than of capital. The latter is good in its pluoo, but it is not the only requisite, und too much of it has wrecked this business more than onoe. Duo 111 if tree Lunck. Tourmts who strike Cario, Egypt, after a ruler's deuth are in unusuil luek. For forty days after the Khe dive's death food is aerved with cotfeo and cigarettes to all who visit ttio tomb. Chicago Times. Aligrutious ol tlie more timid spe cies ol birds lake place, atj iiigut. TKMl'UUANCIi A riTT-RAf, CONHFQDKX0! . Tn llio oxirnlmtlnn of an Irish fn for SsniH nti1 bnllrv. onnnnl. on eros-x-smliilng onn of tlm witniww, Bkr-1 hlin irhnt fhov tin I nt tho llrr pnrn tltny Mopnoil. Ho nnwr.vl : "F.nir clnsns of nlo." Wlnt n.'xtV" "Pwi'lvn rI:isos of srliii'." "Whit noTl?" "Om class of rrnnily." "What nnrl?" "A fltfhr, of cou rsn. " PH tslm rir ( 'nl holli'. A lfKtlVK rAKAT.TZltn. Tr. N. S. Tiavls, tho vonorahls fonnilor ot Croat 'Amorloan Modloal Association, nnl I'rosMont of tho American Moilloal Tompor noo Association, In tho Amorlcnn Moiiloal Tcmpcrnnco Quarterly, elves a very Intcrost Inif sorlos of ollnlcol facts, at tho oloso of which ho asks : "Could thoro bo any moro direct orstror.eor ollnloal proof that tho al cohol acto,t neither as a stimulant, a oanllao tonic, nor a conservator of tissue j hut as a norvo paralywr,' an Inhibitor of oxygena tion and docaroonlratlon of tho blood, and a promoter of tissue defeneration and sup puration?" Amonir tho cases rofcrrod to were several of tvphold fever, pneumonia, diphtheria, etc The facts and Illustrations oltod toll slroncly In favor of non-alcoholic, ns compared with the aloohollo, treatment of thoso diseases. i.tQPon and mx vote. Thnl f 'no mo of alcoholic hevoraores Is In tmlcal to tho best phj-slcal condition has boon demonstrate t In many ways. Tho Medical Vlonoor. In n ro?ent Issue, qnotos Madame Pattl In somn remarks npon "How to Ttecomo a Orent Slnser," as saying "Alcihollo stlmnl'ints ot any kind tend to Irrltnto tho throit. nnd should bo entirely abstain ml from. F.yon llirht wines are noex. ceptlon to this rule." She adds : "Most pooplo a.-o familiar with tho hoarse volco of tho hard drinker, nnd It Is often said of such sn Individual that ho ha burnt his thront with drink. Even a moderate use of alcohol may, therefore, tend to maks tho voloo husky." This testimony from such a source has prent value, nnd exceptional slffnlllcanco for all who have musical asnlrntlons nnd rl o would preserve tho voloo la Its best con dition. nonnoos or social nmxxixa. Ono feature of Intemporanoo for which women aro wholly responsible is their social drinking together nnd woman's drunken ness. liurlnt! the past few years boor drink ing bns Increased to such an extent ninoug the women ol respectable circles in our lnrr cities that tho quustiou of doing awny with the habit has become a very serious oue. Iu many cities saloons hsvo a side ontrnnco for women ; nnd while tlie women of America do not drink so univorstilly as the women of the old world, tho habit of drink is frightfully on tho Increase, and the souial customs of society are In many ways fostering it. Kurly In the morning iu any largo cities you may seo creatures dragged nloug by the police man's baud, or hiiulod on a dniy to tho police statiou creatures who once rejoiced iu the Innocence of childhood nud '.no purity ot girlhood. Those are tho women who llguro iu our polioe reports ; maddened by the misery and degradation of their own lost lost womanhood they hnD sought a briol forgotfulni'ss In intoxicatiou. For such t hero Is nothing left but Ood's pity. A drunken man Ib a degraded sight, oue that no sober man or woman can Iook upon without re pugunnco nnd horror ; but nt sight of a drunken woman methinks the nngols ot mercy would fold their wings before their faoes to shut out so pltiuble and revolting a spectacle. Demorcsr. OK THK BAltSOAD. Channeey Sr. Depew is not merely an after. dinner speaker and story-teller. He Is Presi dent of the groat Now York Central Railroad Compmy. nnd a very shrowd and successful business mm who has mads his own way. He says : "An incompetent engineer, or an engineer who is fuddled can in ono week, la merely starting nnd stopping his train, losetho road three times his salary. He breaks couplers, pulls ont drawbolts, disarranges tho Una machinery of a new locomotive, and does damage that cannot be fastened on, but finds Itself when the report comes from tho repair shop. 8ee thoso tremcudous engines which nre now going over our roads, nil na lor the intelligent control of a very few men I Look tit one of our freight trains, with the thirty ton car nnl the hundred-ton locomotive' See the torrltle, force as It Is bound together by the modern couplers, nnd Is practically n trip-hammer I See tho terrific foroo with which it bounds over the rail nnd on the Lrid.ge ! Theae torritlo machines, having be hind them untold values and precious lives, must be controlled by men of thought, men of conscience, men of clean lives. You must have in the tower men who understand their business, nnd who are men of educated eon soienoe conscicnoo which say: 'Upon mi performance of my duty depend the lives on those flying trains.' You must have in tin! man who holds tho switch tho same quali ties, the same conscleuco, the same sense ol responsibility ; nnd you only get it when that conscience is educated in tho midst of such surroundings as foster, eduoatonnd develop.' this nam k oi, nrviu Alcohol is, in enemy, whether in dial Mind, nd fermented 1'qii-tr.-, root licer, wine, bter. .Tiimali-n nar.'er, c ilogne, or lemon xlrac'. Sir Wilfrid T.iw-ion snvs it Is "iho Jevil In solution." Tho Buffalo Commercial ivs : "At Welistor City, Iowa," n well-lrossed innn nirlvo.l, and, llnding all the sa'oonM rlosod, went to n number of grocery stores ml hill Iu a supply of common, bottled lemon extract, lie illlute.l mm with pop aim maim 1111 inrnxicnung iirinic. tor tiiron days lie was in a state of beastly inloxiea Hon nnd wound up in delirium tremens. His room was searched mil forty-eight lemon-extract bottles found that hat boon drr'no l of I heir contents. A chemical nn iilysis of the extract was mu le as sold by L-roeerymen in nil t !) grocers' stores, and It disclosed the fact that nlnety-ihree per oenr. of the contents of the bottles wai alcohol. This Is a general dispatch trom that oily. but It is entirely reasonable. Most extracts consist princip-illv ol alcohol. The number of Jainaica-guigi'r drunkards in respectnble families, some of whom lire Prohftjttiotiists theoretically, is large. It has been tound In constant uso in the homes of ministers ol our church, who were nmaze 1 to bo told its exact proportion. Tho Into Horace Oroeley HtatUilthitt ono of his editorial writers, who was In the lmhlt of nerioJiunt ilrunkeiin's. crime to the oMc Intoxicated all t was shut up in his (Mr. Cireelcy's) private room lo bo- come sober. A-ler a while a person con- necte I with the ofTloo came to Mr. Greeley linn Sam, "Hint man 19 morn ilrunw tlinu lie was wheu he was put In here." Investiga tion showed that he had suilTod out a large boltlo of cologne that sumo admirer hail given the editor. Ou hearing this a In W stated 1 1 nit sliu could readily believe it, for it gentleman of her iii'ituatulance 1 itipso- maniac crossed the Ailnulio with his fami ly, means having been taken lo prevent any Ixiuor being sold or given libn ou the ship, anil drank the contents of the cologne bot tles belonging lo the lu lies of his party, bo- coming grossly inioxicateu. TKMPEBAXCK NEWS AND MOTES. There are now 1930 broworios und 4731 dls. tlllurlos In tho United titutes. Ban Francisco has a Ll nnl Or lor League, au outgrowth of tho Teuiporanci uuugrus. Between the ages ol twenty-live anil thir ty, whon ten total abstainers dlo, thirty-oue uioucraie urinaer uie. w it hlu ton yean there have been in this country lit, SKI deaths from yellow lover un I C50,UO0 dual ha from hUioUoI. Yet we licuuso ulcoliolaud quarantine yellow fever. A coffee house Is about to be opened near tho Union l'auillo railway shops, lu Uiuaha, where two cups of good colleo aro to bu sold fur n ulckle lu opposition to the free luuch ana Door, In the early stages of intemperance, refor mation is practicable, rue uaiuinily is, thut ln.einperauoe is a slu so deoltlul thut uiost men go ou to irretrievable ruiu, warno I in deed by many indications, but unavailing because mcy uuaorsiauu not tiiutr voice. Whoever llnda himself toumto 1 ou moot Ing his ooiupouiou or frioud to say, "Ooiuj, let us go and take something, or to uiako It his llrst business to set out his decanter und glasses, ought lo uudurstau I licit lie discloses his owu tuordinute nliachiicuit lo ardcut spirits au-l acuuses hit ii-cmd ot in temperance. A Itussiuu correspondent of the tit. James tiuxotte says that, with a viuw to repressing uruuKuuucss, me uauio ot uu persons, with out exception, who are fouud drunk iu tho streets ol bt. Jclursburg, are now published legman- y m oiliciai I OI1CC- lil.i-tl wnuresoiue rattier uteiuigulslicd uiiuius o uuiu wuuiun iiuu meu utivo, lu com, uujuce, Cold That Bnros, Burning is usually associated with heat, and it seems a misnomer to speak of cold burns. Chemists tell ns that thoro is really no snch thing as oold, which is relative heat, and that tho lowest temperature yet registered is some degrees above absolute oold. At tho last meeting of the Hwlag so ciety of. Natnrnl Sciences at Lausanne, M. Kaonl Tiotet gavo some particulars oonoerning cold burns experienced by himself and assistants during his in vestigations of the lowest temperature attainable. There are two degrees of burns. In one case the skin reddens at first and turns blue tho following day, and subsequently tho area of tho spot expands until it becomes nearly doublo its original dimensions. The "bnrn," which is usually not healod until five or six weoks after its ooenr iewtin accompanied by a very pain ful itching on the affeotod spot and the surrounding tissues. Whon the burning is more serious, produced by longer contact with the oold body, a burning of the second degree is ex perienced. Iu this case the skin is rapidly detached, and all parts reached by tho cold behave like foreign bod ies. A long and stubborn suppura tion sots in, which does not soetn to accelerate the reoonstitution of tho tissues. The wounds are malignant, and Bear very slowly in a mauner en tirely different from burns prodnood by fire. On ono occasion, wiien m. 1 10101 was suffering from a severe burn duo to a drop of liquid air, he accidental ly scorched tne same nana very se riously. The scorched portion was healed in ten or twelve days, Dtu mo wound produced by tho oold bnrn was open for upward of six months. In order to try the effeot of radiation in dry cold air, M. Fictet held bit bare arm up to tho elbow in a reirigerat ing vessel maintained at 105 degrees, when a sousatiou of a peculiarly (lis tmct character was felt over the wholo skin and throughout the muscles. At first this sensation was not very disa greeable, but gradually it became do- cidcdlr so, aud after three or four minutes the skin turned blue and the pain become more intense and doep seated. On withdrawing the arm from tho refricerator at the cud of ten minutes a strong reaction was exper ienced, accompanied by a superlieial inflammation of tbo skin. Newcastle Chroniole. Making Hatches ot Taper. Matches made from paper are novelties, but Brunswick, Go., has a factory in full operation that is daily turning out Humbert of them. At present the factory is conducted on a limited plan, and was oommenced merely as an experiment to see what demand could be created for the new product, but tho success that has greeted the experiment justifies its continuance on a large scab, and it is expected that paper matches will soon be turned out in mammoth propor tions. Kosenda Torras is tho owner of the new factory, and Senor Antonio Frat is manager, Mr. Torras being coun sel for a number of foreign countries, a large lumber exporter, and a direc tor in the Rational bank, is sufficient guarantee that the backing of the concern is not limited, and if the suo cess with which the industry Btarted is continued, it will not lack for capi tal to push it. Atlanta Journal. Professor Chamberlain, an English man, is the I rotessor ol the Japanese alienage aud literature in the Univer- lity of Jap in. flOTHERS and those about to become mothers, should know that Dr. Pierce's Fa vorite Prescription robs childbirth of its torture, terrors and dangers to both mother and child, by aiding Nature in preparing the system for parturition. Thereby "labor" and also the period of confinement are greatly shortened. It also promotes an abundant secretion of nourishment for the child. During pregnancy, it pre vents "morning sickness" aud those distressing nervous symptoms from which so many suller. 7iaj. Cottle Co., Texttt, D- R- V. Pierck, Buffalo, N. Y. : War iir-i took your "lavonte Pre scription " previous to connnemcnt and never did so well in my life. It is only two weeks since my confinement aud I am able to do my work. I feel stronfer than I ever did in six weeks before. Yours truly. A MOTHER'S EXPERIENCE. South Bend, Pacific Co., Walk. Da. R. V. Piekcb, Buffalo, N. Y.: Dear Sir I began taking vour "Favor ite Prescription" tlie first month of preg- nancy, and nave con tinued taltiue it since .te confinement. I did not experience the nausea or any ot tne ailments due to pregnancy, alter I began taking your "Prescription." I waa only in labor a short time, sua tne puysician saiu 1 got along un usually well. We think it saved me Mas. Bakbb. a rreat deal of sufferinfr. I was troubled a great deal with leucorrhra also, and it has UUHC WUI1U Ul S Uilil IUI IUC. X ours truly, Mrs. W. C. BAKER. t-s Consumption yr&a formerly pronounced incurable. Now it is not In all of the early stages of the disease . Scott's TUIt MAM. Send for pamphlet in Soott lownt, N. V. All The BbiVrcinf poWcler made Is, as shown by analysis, the Royal. Cow'r of Both Viaj Across the United States. The greatest length of the United States from east to west is on the parallel of forty-five dogroos north latitudo; that is to say, from East port, Me., on tho Atlantic Coast, to a point on tho Taoifio exactly fifty-two and ono-half miles due west of Halom, Oregon, Ou the above parallel it is exactly 2708 miles long. Its greatest width, from north to south, is on the ninety-seventh . degree of longitude, which extends throngh the Unitoil States in an almost direct line from rembina, North Dakota, to Point Isabel, Texas. Tho greatest width is 1611 1 miles. St. Louis llopublio. Cold Cures. Many bad colds oome from bad di gestion. Whon the stomach is out of order the body is liable to eatou any thing that is epidemic Cold cures and complexion remedies are twins in therapeutics. One old prescription still holds good : Get into bed and stay there twenty-four hours; est and drink nothing, not even water ; the noxt day take an alcohol bath and rub every part of the body red with a coarse towel ; swallow a mild laxative and drink a bowl of hot milk or thin gruel. This Will cure a bad oold and a bad face, if the patient takes no more food for the day than is absolutely necessary. Home and farm. BEECHAM'S PILLS (Vegetable) What They Are For Biliousness dyspepsia sick headache , bilious headache indigestion bad taste in the mouth foul breath loss of appetite when these conditions are caused by constipation ; and con stipation is the most frequent cause of all of them. One of the most important things for everybody to 'learn is that constipation causes more than half the sick mess in the world; and it can all be prevented. Go by i the book. Write to B. F. Allen Company, 365 Canal street, New ' York, for the little book on Constipation (its causes con- j. sequences and correction); reach of a druggist, the pills" YOUNG MEN.B0YS1YOUNG LADIES Trslnwl for aSms-wwfnt Start In Bnilama I.ttV, Uuxht knw to grt u Uilni?. Mok? Money snd bfrom Kn. IrrprlnlDg. I -ful Clllirm ! Kasthas Collbue, I'm uHikinil, N V., on 1 hi- liu.liou. lh- tnlj- (ii-h.Hil la Amrrl. dntulrd to 101, (iKrliltr. situations prooKW for omuirnl .lu.l.-ul.. Itpfrr. to l'lr, la t.wjr Slate and Oradualnla nearly rrery ellr and low. Tolal -Siior prn.-rilwd coure iioi tnlMl No rUu .jritm. no vacMlnai. Appllrama enter any day. AdilrcKs forcniK-ue. elvipit full luformaUoa, fl.KUBNT V. tlAISh-. Pre. Meal. 8 Wa.klurlan Mlrert. I'uuiihkrm.le. N. V. Sear in Kind That "Ths Gads Help Those Whs HsIpThem selves." Self Kelp I with I had not eaten that salad." ' "Why? 1 tliousht, it eioellent." M So It was. hut it has given rue IndU gestion. It distresses tne tearfully." 'Oh, that's nonaenae. Swallow this. You'll be. all rlgutlu tn minute." - What is it f " . "A Ripans Tabule!" MDo yon carry them around with yon?1 "I do, indeed I Ever since I heard bout tbeia I keepome ot the little v litis lu my vet pocket." Emulsion will effect a cure quicker than any other known specific Scott's Emulsion pro motes the making of healthy lung-tissue, relieves inflammation, overcomes the excess, ive waste of the disease and gives vital strength. For Coughs, Golds, Weak Longs, ficrs Throat, Bronchitis, Consumption, Scrofula, Anmia, Loss of Flesh and Wasting Diseases of Children. Buy only the genuine with our trade mark on fulmon-colortd wrapper. Scott' t Emulsion. FREE. Druffclata. 00 cants an 4 t. v. Health, New- York City. Corn 255 llusliels to tlie Acre. The largest crop of corn ever pro duced on one acre, according to tho Charleston News and Courier, was that raised by a farmer in Marlboro County, South Carolina, in 18U2. t prize "of 81000 wsb offered for tho largest yield on au acre, nnd this farmer chose a piece of wornout piney woods, sandy land, to which ho ap plied more than a thousand dollars' worth of fertilizers. The season was favorablo nud tho cultivator wsb kept going abnost constantly. The stand became so thick and heavily burdened with ears that fences had to be built to sustain it. When the crop was gathered it measured within a peck of 255 bushels, and carried off tho prizo, which tho fanner richly desorvod, for it takes a vailant man to spend moro than a thousand dollars to enrich a tingle acre. Ko Moro I'ronklnir. A society among merchants and trad era out West has beeu formed, in which the members agree that they will not hold conversation about hard tinieB, dull trade, small orders, slow collections, low prices ot wheat, eta The idea is an excellent oue. Hard ware. ' Hnsuto Land, iu South Africa, pro duces aud exports wool, wheat aud hides. .x sallow skin pimples ' ' J torpid liver depression of spirits sent free. If you are not within will be sent by mail. 25 cents. ' Should Teach You fa Uso W. L. Douglas S3 SHOE IS THC I ST. NO SSUCAHlNA 5. CORDOVAN. rntnnptc.vw'itLLX.u wr. H.to FlNECALF&rANSAfSI 3.1P POLICE, .3 Soles. oy.2.W0RKINGMFN fcXTRA FINE. 2.l.7.? BOYSSCTOOLSKOf-S. LADIES Bestdonoou V y '-SttiOfOR CATALOGUE W.-DOUOLASf Jt BROCKTON. Vift cii money by wearing Ik W, I Deuilna 93.00 fthee, Beemwee, we are the largest m an ur art were o this graueof shoe 1b the world, ami ftuarai.ua thoii value by tamping tba name and price o itte bottom, wlilci protect yon acai&t HUcb vrlci aud the mldillema&'a profit. Our ahoar equai euituai work In atria, eaajr fitting and wearing quantise. WbTathra fold every where at lower irsj for the value f 1J than any other make. Tax a no sun eUtute. if jroux dealer aauuot suppij you, we oao. i If Y N ENGINES AND BOILERS For all purines requiring I jtmwr. Automutiu, L'orlihs I V VJniiipuuml fciitfiiip. ilor- I inonuil tfe Vertical Hoi 1 era. B.W.PAYNE&SONS, I HJLMSgEEChjnGiiii L'uxu. ana graven!. KUeuiuuU.tn, ia.iiK'U"U, 4 D;.iu.la, Heartburn, Cuutrrn aul A.lhma. M V 1Aurul la U-vlarmauil Kever. cloautt lu. V A ruulli antl from.iU, Ilia AupatUt. awiHittmg A f ItieUrtMith.l-'urerttlitiTolat-co 11 iljil. Emloie-l V by 111. MeUluui l-'uciiity. heiKl for 111, 1j or .. n-nl p.u-ki..-. Ailior. Umnn or ivlal Au. A f Ufc.O. H. HALM, 14u Wi-hi vtiili Ml., Jsw York r tw u. :":. .. ... .-S " J I I BH4 Couk 8rua. TtaLc, UooO. V Y I II lu tliu. bold , dr.iKl.l. f t ,f appeared