... , - Tasmania export bops, fruit In grout quantities, and iron, tin and galena, I Fdlik Carta!. Th very oonflilent poopls are strangalf solf-witlsflcd until danger to life looms lip, aa whn the chronic pnlns of man; year enduranre attnek the heart, llketthenmatlem very often does, then they turn to a bettoi faith. This better faith held to by many thouMimle Is simple and certain. It is faith founded on experience that Ht. Jaeo!s Oil will pure, because It has cured all these painful ailments permanently. It Is a faith founded on reason. We know whnt can be done by whnt has been done a thousand tlmee. Every physician knows that thoso wno have bellet In trontmant are the more easily cured those who havo not set up resistance to the progress of cure. It costs 12,000 to dock and scrape the cruiser Chleaeo. Dr. Kilmer's K w i-Root cures all Kiilsny nn l Illndder troubles. Tamphlet and Consultation fmo. Labomtory lllnirhnmton, N. Y. Russia's army numbers 974,000 on a peace footing. 100 Reward. VI 00. The readers of this paper will be pleased' ta learn that there is et lrat one dreaded disease that science bss been able to cure in all it etAjrefL and that, is catarrh. Hall's Catarrh Vura Is the only positive cure now known to the medical fraternity. Catarrh beinfc aeon, vtttutional dlcnse, requires a constitutional treetmeut. Hall's Catarrh Cure Is taken in ternally, acting directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of tlio system, thereby de. etroyintt the foundation of the disease, and giving the patient strength by bulldinu up th constitntion and assisting nature in doing Its wrirk. The proprietors have so much faith In Its curative powers tbnt they offer Onc.Hnn. dred Dollars for any case that it falls tocur bend tor list of testimonials. Address , ' F. .t. CiiFKiiv Co., Toledo, (X '- F Bold by lrtweist, 7.V. Karl Clover Hoot, the (treat blood pnrlfler, f rives Crash nes rdi) clearness to the complex on nd enrcs constipation, !5 eta., fiOctf,, fl. A LOW WATER LEVEL- In Divers, Tonds, Wells, and other aonrses of drinking water threatens danorer from malarial germs. This condition la usually found in the Fall, and it points to Hood's Borsaparllla as a snfoRunrd against attacks of disease. Hood's Snranpnrilln makes pure blood, and thus guards the system from all these perils. It creates an appetite and Rives sound and robust health. "I bare Hood' Sarsa- L partita been using Hood's Sar- . . snparllla oocasionally f 11 for the last three years, ft J - I have suffered from - malaria fever for five yenrs, and have tried many kinds of modiclne, but found no relief till I commenced to take Hood s Siirsaparll la. I have all confidence in It, and believe It to be far superior to any other tonic." P. J. Fitzgerald, 121 Ninth St., So. Itoston, Mass. Get Ilooi's and only Hood's. Heed's rills cure all liver Ills. 25 cents. WALTER BAKER & CO. The Largest Manufacturers of PURE, HIGH CRADE COCOAS AND CHOCOLATES On tkla Con Until, hro nctfTrt HIGHEST AWARDS from tbefreat ial and Food EXPOSITIONS Europe and America. Tn1ikt tht Dutr h Proem, no Alka- '"M nwd tn tn of thtir prr pars Hons, Tferirddieloua RRKAKFiHT mm tm iIimIuu Mn or other Chtmtctla or Dytt tra pun ui aoluitla, tuid cost Uu than mm ctmt cf, OLD Y GROCERS EVERYWHERE. WALTER BAKER & CO. DORCHESTER, MASS. 'ti Ipi-V .-SADWAY'8 ; PILLS, , Always Reliable, Parely Vegetable. Perfectly taxtcteec, elecnntly coated, pur, reirn lAte, purify, cIpAnaa ana Binmthen. HAD WAY'S PILLS for the cure of nil disorders of the Stomach, Bowels, Klrineyi, HlaMtr, Nervoui lllawwea. DUil eesa, Vertigo, CosUveut-!, Piles, SICK HEADACHE, FEMALE COMPLAINTS, ,-, BILIOUSNESS. KHHT INDIGESTION, , DYSPEPSIA, ' CONSTIPATION AND All Disorders of the LIVER. Observe the following ymptomi, resulting from dtaeaaeiof the digestive urKaiut. Constipation, to ward pi lee, f ullnetvs of bloutt In the head, acidity of the fltoinach, nausea, heartburn, disgust of food, full net of weight of the utomach, aour eructations, Unking or fluttering of the heart, choking or auffo eaUnR aenaationa when In a lylntr posture, dim new Qt vltlon, dot or woua before the stRht, lever and out! pain In the head, defleleucv of ei uplratlon, yel lowneat of the skiu and eyes, pain In the side, chest, limbs, and sudden nuahes oi heat, burning In the flesh. A fewdoeeiof RADW AY'S PILLS will free the fystem of ail the above named disorders. Price 25c. a Bos. Mold hj Droggiats, sir ent by mall. Send to DR. RADWAY ft CO., Lock Box S63. New York, for Book of Advice. For Breakfast To-morrow Buckwheat. MAKES Delicious, Wholesome cakes, at a moment's notice. No Salt, Yeast or Baking powder required- Nothing but Water. ENGINES AMD BOILERS For all purMieea requirina power. AutoniKtiL, Corlift JoinpouiHl Im mi lift Mor. lKiMital A: riual Ittiilfra. Complett! Sifitui l'luiitr-. B.W.PAYNE&SONS. .V.0-r. lrnlr N-Y' 41 !) fct. 0 4 i i' UU IIPAntl Rhmmatic pAVl JAuti-L'nlall hm ChewingGum llill and iTcveu d biHSLia, lltMU'itouxu, t surru aud Ai f I'miui la si alarm qU fc.vtrn CltMtuui A TswtU aud WtuiotM tUe AppatltA SWt) W the bratb, f urtss Ht Tobacuu Hblt. Kud ty lbs- Madic! Faculty, iwud fur in, 1. A f nackiMr. llr. Stitmut or ioitill - t Urn ix V Oku. ta. UALH, 140 Wi iu Ht., kw Vork. A HT!Af,Tirr COW BARN. On t tic rnnnotbe kept in an nnlirftltliy burn or stable without sorlous injury nnd dctorioration of tbo milk. A healthy cow barn should bo dry. airy, clean, well littered and with Ktifticient room for the eao of tho nni innlfl ; well lighted, and, in general hnTe all the character of a comfortable dwelling house. If all these requisites are seenred, the stylo or manner of building tho barn is immaterial. Moldy hay is not wholosomo food, and is qnito apt to injure, tho milk, es pecially for making cheese, as in this caso the impurity in the milk is left in the cheeee, while butter may not bo so much hurt by it. But even butter may bo injured in quality by moldy fodder given to cows. There will be bnt little frost in a well-constructed cow stable if tho cows havo 400 cubic feet of air each. Bat with this size there should be provision made for ventilation in warm weather. A good stable will be warm enough to prevent the manure from freezing any time in tho winter. New York Times. FEEDING FOWTA It may be thought to be a matter of very little importance whether the flock is fed at a certain hour or not, bnt it is really necessary for the good health of tho flock that they be fed at regular hours as nearly as possible. If they are fed at stated periods each day they will soon learn to look for their feed at that time, and the remaindar of the time they will forage If fed just when it happens to bo most con venient, the most indolont of the flock will linger aronnd waiting to be fed while the active ones will wander away, very often so far that by the time they get back those who have stayed at home will have eaten all the feed that was intended for the whole flock. Fowls should cot be fed more at one time than they will eat np clean and look for more. One who pays any attention to the matter will soon learn about how much the flock will eat and not be hungry. This may bo told by paying some attention to the condi tion of the fowls as to flesh. They should not feed fat when picked np, bnt Bhould be just nicely plump and round, and if they begin to gain in flesh or fall off, as the case may be, the amount of feed given them should be regulated accordingly. Feeding on the free and easy plan is poor econ omy, and will in the end ruin the lay ing qualities of any flock, for it will induce disease, and the very first Bymptoms of disease in any flock is the decrease in egg production ; that always comes with the lowering of the health of laying hens. Feed plenty, bnt not too much. This is a matter that is very laigely neglected by farm ers and all who do not pay particular attention to their poultry. American Farmer and Farm News. EFFECT OF FEED ON THE GROWTH OF WOOL. Many observing sheep raisers have long since noticed the difference in the character of wool as influenced by the feed of the Bheep. One such far mer, more than twenty years ago, made an interesting statement to the writer of some experiments he had been trying with sheep by giving or withholding certain provender rations for a period of four weeks each, and he stated that the periods of giving and leaving off the grain ration could. be detected in the size of the wool fibers they were large and strong during the growth of the month when grain was fed, and weak and small for tho period when grain was not fed thiB difference being plainly notice able to the naked eye. The lute Dr. Henry S. Randall mentions this pecul iarity in one of his works on sheep husbandry. He says that change in feed or conditions "correspondingly changes the diameter of the Baino liber during different stages of its growth the difference being sometimes visible to the naked eye." He further states when the change in food has been marked, or when a change takes place from a low to a healthy condition of the animal, it generally occasions a joint in the wool, or in other words the point in tho fibers where the change began is so weak that a slight pull will detach the two parts, and in fact, they often separate on the back of the animal, the whole outer part being shed off an occurrence not infrequent in sheep that recover from illness or low oondition. Ex periments made at tbo Wisconsin ex periment station add much to our knowledge upon this"interefiting fact. Three lots of lambs were fed a grain ration both before and after weaning, in comparison with those fed no grain, or fed only for limited periods. Lambs that were fed grain from birth sheared an average of 10.1 pounds, while those not receiving a grain ra tion nntil the period of fall futWuing sheared an average of seven pounds per head. Taking the average of three trials, the lambs receiving grain from birth averaged nine pounds of wool ; thoie receiving it from the period of weaning averaged 7.1 pounds, and those not receiving any until winter fattening commenced averaged 6.8 pounds per head. The average of the three trials showed that the length of the wool fiber from lambs fed grain continuously was 4.5 inches, whilo that from the lambs which did not re ceive grain previous to shed feeding in the winter was but 6.7 inches. At every stuge of the experiment it was uu easy matter to select by the eye the lambs thut received grain before and after weaning. The fleeces of thobe fed grain were dense andsmootti in uppearuuee, while those of the lambs having had no grain were al ways open and rough, lucking in fin ihli. This smooth aud uniform ap pearance of the fleece of the grnin-fed luuibb was due to the greater density , of the wool ub well as to tho greater I amount of oil or yolk that was pretteut in me neuce. American Agriculturist, WHEAT rt.lt TO HOOS. A farmer who has fed quite a little wheut to hogs, Rave me the following facts about feeding seventeen head of high grade rolatid-Chinns the laRt two weeks of August and first of Septem ber : Tho seventeen head weighed just 3000 pounds tho middlo of 'August, and wero fed fourteen bushels of soaked wheat with tho addition of threo bnshels of whole corn. At tlio closo of the first week, the gain in weight was 155 pounds. Tho hogs sold Inter at 5 J cents per pound, which allowed him only fifty cents for tho wheat and corn jnst tho market prico hero. The second week with a weight of 3155 pounds, fourteen bushels of wheat were ground and fod in slop, making a gain of 315 pounds. At cents per pound this would bo $17.32. With wheat at fifty cents this made a gain of $0.62, putting np tho price of tho wheat to a littlo over $1.18 per bushel after deducting seventy cents for grinding. This was rather an abnormal gain of 2 J pounds daily against 11 pound tho first week. The third week began with the herd of seventeen hogs weighing 34G5 ponnds,and they wero again fed four teen bushels of ground wheat fod in slop, resulting in a gain of 135 pounds. At 6J cents this made $7.42. Wheat at fifty cents, with seventy cents for grinding mnde the wheat or feed worth S7.70,making a loss of twenty eight esnts sustained for the third week's feed. No other reason was ad vanced for this loss except tho extreme hot and dry weather, with no water to wallow in, as all other circumstances were the same as during the other weeks. . A summary in recapitulation for tho three weeks results in a gain of 605 pounds at 5 cents, or $33.27 ; deduct $23.90, tho price of the grain and grinding, and there remains a balanco of $9.37, as tho gain for twonty-one days' feeding, and 70 4-5 cents per bushel for the grain fed after deduct ing the cost of grinding, $1.40, and a gain of 1 7-10 pounds per day for tho feeding period. Fractions have not been closely counted in tho above calculation, which may make a slight variation, but on the whole this ex periment, like many others recently published, proves that wheat at fifty cents is an economical feed for hogs np to at least a certain age and weight. It has been a question with me, both from experience and observation, whether the ground or soaked wheat can be fed at a profit after the hog has arrived at a point where growth ceases and the animal takes on nothing bnt fat. It might have been that the rea son given here was a good one for the loss sustained the third week, but I believe that some corn added daring that period would have made a reason able gain in weight. Farmers are find ing out more about wheat as a feed than ever before, simply because it oonld not be grown for fifty cenis per bushel and leave a profit, and they have begun testing its feeding value. We have always looked npon it as food for family consumption only, putting it after the fashion of an old German hereabouts, that "it was made for man to eat, and 'twas wicked to feed it to stock." We are leaving behind many relios of fogyisra and the scruples of dipping "into tho Hour barrel for pig feed" as a moral sin is one of them. When the farmer can head off the bulls and bears of the Chicago grain mar kets, get twenty-five cents in premium over the ruling prices for wheat, and still have the manuriul residuum loft to enrich the soil, we are doing tho greatest work of oar generation.- ltural New Yorker. FARM AND GARDEN NOTES. A drone lives a brief cxistenco, and dies when tho workers decide that he shall. It is well to remember that it is muscle rather than fat that is needed by breeding stock, as fat leads to loss of energy, if not of health and vigor. Fill your hot-beds with litter in the fall bo that the ground will not freeze. Replace this with manure in the spring ana tue planting cau proceed without delay. In the North no tree is so valuable, for honey as the linden. It is also called basswood, aud makes a beauti ful shade troe. Beekeepers should encourage the planting of them. When the comb gets black and old it should be renewed, they say, and yot one beekeeper announces that some of bis are twenty-five years old, aud that his bees prefer them to new ones. If not already doue.it is now time to cut out all the old stalks among the raspberries and blackberries. Leave but threo or four of the strongest of the new canes aud treat the rest as weeds. When the weather is warm combs should be guarded from the wax moth. A cool cellar is a good plaoe to keep them, but on the hive where tho bees may care for them is the best plaoe of all. Cut off decayed and diseased branches, and rub off superfluous buds when they appear. This is more ad visable than cutting away large, vig orous brunches, which often causes decay and destruction. Has anyone tried Japanese plums? There is un impression thut they are all tender, but the liurbaak, Abund ance, Willurd, Ogen, Satsuma, Ber ger and Chabot are quito hardy in the plum region of ftew lork State. One reason why a short course in a dairy school will never be suffioieut for the purpose is that it will uot drill the students with enough thorough ness in the absolute necessity of clean liness. This is the first and last thing in butter and cheese making. The Concord grape is still a leader among the rarer varieties. Moore's Karly is larger, but not so productive. It is two weeks earlier aud of better quality, and for table use is perhaps tho best early grown. The Worden is much like the Concord, though earlier. California boasts of a seven and one- half pound onion. TEMPERANCE. A r ATRETIC ArPRAL. A pnthotle appeal hn bonn mads toMniwa phnsntt. hy Trlni'o Momnlu MsMaqnal, tha future Klnof Vol, I.lt'Prln, to not snnrt any more mm to his country. "n mart tha lorn journpy for thin purpon ; and, bo It 8nM to the illiKrno of the Viiltiv! Htnte, ho rot urn fooling his object has fulled, for tho ram tmuViV powr nt Ilnton provod strongor thnn tho plillnnthroplt. Tho rrosliytorlan. n OMLT TRP HSFIXITIOH. Tho dictionary tolls ns that temperance Is total abstinence, from all bad thlnirs and mo lorntlon In all (rood think. Kxprrlonoe, science, and common sonsn toll Us that alco holic drinks are bad without one rodeemlng q-iallty. And tho mighty army of total b stnlnors of all tho pront temporanoo organ Ifitiona and churches havo accepted the definition nn the only true one to adopt. National Temperance Advocate. "TFMrmAT" nmsEitm. Temperate drinkers claim grout merit for (heir practice great merit In It to sorve the tnnw of temperance. Nevertheless, nt tho hazard ot ruffling their self-complacency, I mnst tell them that they are room Injurious than drunkard thems MTiis to the cause of temperance. Why, our half million of drunkards are our half million strongest ar guments for tho necessity of total ahstl onnee I It is bocauso so many who drink in toxicating liquor pscapo drunkenness that o many are emboldened to drink It. Gcr rltt Smith. inrnit for two tkahs. A terrible story was told on Tuesday wook at nn Inquest on a Hackney stoker named James. His wife is Innnasylum. Tlielnnd ladysnld ho would get up enrly In tho morn ing and wait for the public houses to open. Honnarlv always went to work drunk. For two years he h:id hardly ben sober for a single day. Medical evidence showed that death was due to delirium tromens.followlng a dislocation of the ankle, caused by a fall. A verdict ot accidental denth wis returned, the foreman declaring that the man had ev idently killed himself with drink. Scottish Itetormer. A CHAXOID TniOBT. The Mlsaionirv Herald ftommentlnir nnon the effect of total nbstlnonoe upon English soldiers in India says : It was formerly supposoa tliat Europeans could not enituro the climate and surroundings ot India with out using alcoholic stimulants. Ho con vinced were they of this that thirty years sgo there was nn nrmy order prohibiting the formation of total abstinenee societies among the soldiers. Bat the theory Is now alto gether changed. Of English soldiers in In dia 20,003 are now total abstainers, nnd the army reports shows that of these thousands only II ft von wore brought bofore court-martini tho past year, while of tho non-nbstalnors there were -504 who wore placed on trial, yon toono athletes. At a recent meeting In Montreal, Miss Francis E. Willard said : "I was reading in the pnper about a young man of twenty-. wo who oould go a mile on his bicycle in one minute and fifty-six seconds, and I read an interview with him. The newspaper man said to him, 'Whnt suggestion have you for young men for training!1' The answer was 'Tell them never to touch Intoxicating liquors, never to touch tobacco, to take eight hours sleep in every twenty-four hours, to live simply.' It I had given the sanio an swer to this question, they would have Said, 'Much she knows about it.' I am glad the young bicyclist answered as he did ; the splendid advance In athletics is due to total abstinence on the part of many, and this well known fact has won more victories lor us than nil the teetotallers ever assemble 1 uu a plutfoim." " A LITTLE BISTORT. In 1734 gin drinking began to affect tha masses, and Mr. Lecky, in his "History of the Eighteenth Century," draws a terrible picture of the way in which "tho fatal passion for drink was at once and Irre vocably planted in the nation." On that account he Axes on that year as one oi tha blackest and most fatal epochs In English history. And are we now to be told that drink in those days did not cause crime? One may suppose that the Grand Jury ot Middlesex were under no such utter de lusion, for soon after 1724 they sent In a powerful presentment In which they declnre that "much of the greatest part of the overt y, the robberies and the murders ot ondon might be attributed to drink." In 1750 the London physiclnus also drew up a memorial, saying there were then 14,000 cases of fatal illness due to gin alone. At the same time Bishop ISjdsod. of Glou cester, one of the best bishops on the bench, said s "Our people have become what they never were before cruel and Inhuman. These accursed liquors which to the shame of our Government, are so easily to be had, have changed their very nnture." At the same time the whole bench of Eng lish bishops interposed the unsullied purity of their lawn between tho nntlon and the curse of the drink traffic, as in these days our Judges have interposed "the stainless sanctity of their ermine." They protested against the Gin act ns "founded on the In dulgence of debauchery, the encouragement of crime and the destruction of the human race." Lastly, John Wesley was tar from thinklng'of those days that "It would have been a palpable absurdity to speak of a re lationship of cause and effect between drink and crime." He said: "But all who sell dram ot spirituous liquors In the common way to any that will buy are poisoners general. They drive men to hell like sheep. A curse Is in the midst ot tuein." TEMPERANCE NEWS AND NOTES. A rittsburg dispenser of alcoholic bever ages advertises bis establishment as 'Thirst Parlors." "The Hell Gate" Is the name over the door of an un-town saloon on Third avenue, New York City. The Lewlston (Me.) Journal says; "We are lenrnlng that when the devil takes a nap oe leaves one ot his imps at a decanter. Neither the Norwegian nor Gothenburg systeins Include beer in their regulations. Iheoffort to do so would result la failure. By drink, and the disease caused by drink, more persons die in one year than die from railway disasters ana snipping calamine in fifty years. Arohdoacon V. W. Farrar. At thf German Catholic Congress at Lou isville, Ky., resolutions were adopted de nouncing "treating" as conducive to intem perance, saying the custom la almost un known In Germany. The boatmen, porters and water-cirrlers in Constantinople are famous for being tha strongest und finest sat of men, physically. in un r-urope. Taey never drink any kiua of intoxicating liquor. Any one found in the streets ot Russia in an inebriate state is Imprisoned, and when sober Is ordered to sweep the streets lor a day. Well dressed men may be seen some times fulllllng this meulal office. Home of the domestic evils of drunkenness are houses without windows, garden with out fences, nobis without tillage, bums Without roofs, children without clothing. principles, morals or manners. Benjamin trunkiia. General Mel 11 not. of the French Army. who lately died nt the age of alnety-flve yenrs, had throughout uls mo abstained from stimulants ot all kinds, and did not know even the taste ot wine. To the last he wks healthy and vigorous. Aooordlng to the report of Internal Reve nue Commissioner Miller for the year 1H92, the patrons of saloons in the United Ktutea paid 4009,000,000 for whisky and tU7,254,. iuu tor beer, a total ol 1.226,23a.4tiu : tne Interest ol which for one minute at six pur cent, per annum I vSsla.uS. The Northwest Indian Conference of tha M. E. Church declarel "unoomprotnUiug hostility to the liquor power in any and every form," and unreservedly eondmnnod the club bouse system In which liquors are used or sold, as the Unit gilded step of many a youug mun to a lite ot suatne. A real apostle ot temperance, whose ef. forts have done much to advance the good cause, Is ht. Uuv. Jeremiah O'bullivan, isishop ot Mobile, as a curate aud u pastor liishop O'bullivun was not el for hi i-.il and ardor In lighting this grant evil, und as a bishop he mukoa UU iuQuenoe felt in every part ol his oiooese. Great Indignation prevailed among the women wueu it was toun 1 that the exiiitm ot a brewiug company hud buua placed In the Woman iiullillug utthe laliuu:t state ruir. A petition for its reuiovul signed by num ber ot tne w. v. l. u. and otner women was urvsented to the tsiir itourd. who or dered Its removal, but u Injunction us obliiined by the brewing uoupuuy and tlio v&uiuu reuiuuieu. ROYAL, Baking Powder Absolutely pure. 3t 4 v A Valuable Suhttiliito lor ;iue. Collnloso has just been obtained by tome JLomlon chemists in a dense form, having tho apcnrauoe of ebo nite, and capable of taking a high polish. Tho material contaius carbon bisultld and sodio hydrate, which are gradually given np when it is dis- tolved tn water, celltiioso being pro upitatod. ITsome of the solution is ipread on glass, a transparent film of jollnloso can bo obtained. Cellulose jan also be depositod from the same lolution on woven materials or paper, producing a permanent stiffening, or tizing. The solution forms a substi- nte for gluo, of great strength, aud insoluble in wntcr when sot. The ma terial can also bo obtained in oontin- loussheets or films. Literary Digest. Utilizing Spiders' Webs, Cobwebs at e still valueless as a raw material for manufacturing purposes, sud, like many another article, await tho ingenuity of man to turn thorn to better account in tho servioo of man. No thoughtful observer of the wonder ful elastic web of the common garden spider, for example, can resist tho temptation to speculate on the possi bilities of tho spider and its web. In deed, considering the rate of progress in arts and sciences, wo ought not to be quite so far, contends our con temporary, from the day when tho cobwebs in the cellar will be carefully collected and converted into silk dresses for the bull room. Draper's Record. Ia Olden Time People overlooked the Importance ot peJma nently benellclnl effects and were satisfied with transient action, but now that tt is gen erally known that Syrup ot Figs will perma nently cure babltnal constipation, well-in formed people will not buy other laxatives, which act for a time, but finally Injure the system. It la Ol No I'se tnsnvthat there is "Something Just us Good as Hipans Tahules for diAurduntof the stpmueli and liver.' It is not so. Tills standard reui rdy will relieve aud cure you. One tnbule gives relief .wr. v msiow s o!mng nyrupior rniuiren teething, pollens ihe gums reduces inflamma tion, allay 'mill, eure- wind enlle. S."ic. a buttle AcroKR. Voraiisu. Public Sneakers nralse Hale's Honey of iinreliotind and Tar. l'ike lomhaeiie nnuwi'ure in nne minute. If afflicted with sure even use Or. Nhac Thnimw ton's Eye-water. Druggists sell atc per boulc 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 ness in the world; and it can all be prevented. Go by the book. Write to B. F. Allen Company, 365 Canal street, New York, for the little book on Constipation (its causes con sequences and correction); sent free. If you are not within reach of a druggist, the pills' will be sent by mail, 25 cents! " Forbid a Fool a Thing Don't SAPOLIO- C oughs and Colds, Sore Throat, Bronchitia, Weak Lungs, General Debility and all forma of Emaciation are speedily cured by Scott's Emulsion Consumptives always find great relief by taking it, and consumption is often cured. No other nourishment restores strength so quickly and effectively. Weak Babies and Thin Children are made strong and robust by Scott's Emulsion when other forms of food seem to do them no good whatever. The only genuine Scott's Emulsion is put up in talmon colored wrapptr. Refuse cheap substitutes! Send or famfhld ,n Salt's Emulsion. FKEE. 800M . Bowne, N.Y. All Druggists. 60 cents and I. K3r . kV m r f'C CTr' cubic inches of leaven- ing gas per ounce of pow- gST i tier, which was greatly in excess of all others and more than 40 per cent, above the average. Hence Royal Baking Powder makes the lightest, sweetest and most wholesome food. IIOVAL lAKINt toWOtft CO., 1M WALL ST., NIW - Found $-20,000 In tho Woods. Last week Ira Wade, Charlos Ward and Joe Tyra were working in the woods near Boattyville, where they were cutting props for miners, and they fonnd a half a pair of saddle pockets. In the sido was fonnd a roll or bnndlo of paper. Upon investiga tion they fonnd it to be a roll or pack age of greenbacks. The money was entirely rotten, and it crumbled to dust whon they triod to separate the sheets. One of the theories to aooount for the find is this: It will bo romem bered that some fifteen years ago J. I1. Sniallwood, Ibzan MoOnire, Hiram Patrick, J. C. Lovolace, Stovo Jones and others captnred a young man, who turned out to be an express agent who had fled from Cincinnati with some $21,000 of the express company's money. Sniallwood arrested him in the court house during the Democratic Convention that instructed for Thomas Turner. The agent said ho had nsed $150, and $250 was fnnnd on him. It is a probability that the bnndlo Wade tore up with a stick was worth nearly f'20,000. This, of course, is on tho theory that Oilmore hid tho money in this section. Tradition says he did. It has always been understood that he hid his money somewhere on tho Upper Creek or toward Fox Shoal. Mount Sterling (Ky.) Gazette. Mutton ti. Tinned Meat. Of the total 125 pounds of animal food annually consumed by each nnit of the population of Great Britain, one-third is imported. The consign ments of frozen Australian mutton are steadily inoreasing. The abundance of cheap mutton has largely displaced the American tinned meats, which were formerly largely need by British work people for their forenoon meal in mills and factories. Now York World. A Hunting Terrapin. A Maryland man has a hunting ter rapin, the only ono of which there is any record. It has been taught to luro its fellows out of tho soft mnd of the oreeks, and last year the "catch" of terrapins through the aid ef the "hunter"yielded a sum exoeeding $0, 000. Chicago Herald. sallow skin pimples torpid liver depression of spirits and that he will do." Use w SV The O official re- port, snows Powder chcmical- VORK. Tlio Largest I'low In tlio World. The largest plow in tho world, per- haps,is owned by llichard Oird, of San UernardiuoCouiity.Cal. This immense sod turner stands eighteen feet high aud weighs Hb.OOO pounds. It rnns by Bteatn, i:t provided wth twelve twolvo-inch plow Rhnros, nnd ia capa ble of plowing fifty acres oflsndpor day, and usually travels at tho rate of four miles nn hour. Chicago Ilerald. Hypocliondrical, lespondent, nerv ous, ' tired out " men -those who suffer from backache, weariness, loss of en ergy, im paired mem ory, dizzi ness, melan choly and the re sult of ex hausting dis eases, or drains upon the system, excesses, or abuses, bad habits, or early vices, are treated through cor respondence at their homes, with uniform success, by the Specialists of the Invalids' Hotel and Surgical Institute, of Buffalo, N. Y. A book- of 136 large pages, devoted to the consideration of the maladies above hinted nt, may be had, mailed se curely sealed from obsewation, in a plain envelope, by .sending 10 cents m one-cent stamps (for postage oil Book), to the World's Dispensary . Medical Association, nt the above mentioned Hotel, l'or more than a quarter of a century, physicians connected with this widely cele brated Institution, have made the treatment of the delicate diseases above referred to, their sole study and practice. Thousands, have con sulted them. This vast experience has naturally resulted in improved methods and means of cure. GUCLAS' i M 0 EI no BQur.MNb.'w 5. CORDOVAN, FRENCH&EMAMElifDCALf! S.yRNlCAlr&KANSAIlOl '. ta.ypoucE.ssous. 1 2.l.yBOYS'SCH00l5HQES.' LADIES SEND fOa CATALOGUE 14 WLDUGLAS; 1 BRCCKTON, MASS. Xmm emu tare mouey by irrariuor III V V, L. DouiLn t?J.OO Hhae Itetame, w r tha lsrpctt man uf acta rera of this gradeof iUopi la tho world, aoil guaraatea tbrlr alu by Umitiff t!.o name aud prlca od tha bottom, wulcli protect you RKadnt liifth price aul tha m I did lent an iri.itc Our abort equal custom work ta ityle, ear tit tins and wearing qualltlra. Wa bar them altl Ynrywboro at lower prlceafot tha value Rlren than auy otl.pr make. Taae no aub Ututa. If your uaVr cannot tou. we cat. will cure vour Headaohe? or your Dyspepsia ? or your Biliousness t Theso Tabules arc Eura to relieve. Tell your Drug dalrwlth8 Ripans Chemical Co.'s remedy j put "IB T&bulos Or Send 50 Cents for one Box, Ripans Chemical Co., 10 Spruce St., New York. Katlonal Business Col lege and Shorthand M'HOOli affords the betit pruparntluu or !HlfclUT ilfo. rraotti-ttl work Both mic Posltlo ttl rut-writ. furulaiicd Iriir. VQiAiJilili) km. IIhU aul MoUt-rn Jjui- f for ( ami igue, adtlruiiM CLEMENT i OAlN ti. PiwMt-ut. UuWuh. Uifc-lun bt., l'oiitcbkuupvle, h, Y, ASTHAN I T N V4H tm n i ii mm m , TiU I ! ..- ...... ! 1 tul.K, KtetHI ALL 1 1 St- UllK. , Befcl Loiita fc.rup. Tju,u-, Gi .id. Cm In III. it,. K.M liy UrlH'. :r-;. 'TTrTv-'r irc,e.-. r-.- UaJL 'J i II 'mm W. L. $3 EASTMAN AM lU.lr.V.n'! s.r. in uii." A In ami Hii.i,... x v yur s. - ' ' i-