l.lecirlr Wlrra. Pomn writer rorr nptly llkons tho nflrvos to nlootrlo wires, nna thsRnnoral working of thsir system to that of elootrio oars. A man who "flips Ms trolloy" like Mr. Joremlah F.nr-y, 1MJ W. Lombard St., nnltimoro, M.I., will nui'ii mmothlnn bettor than even a iral vnnln buttery to t him all right. Mr. Enny found that onmnthlnR la tho following way : "I milTnroil," ha says, "a Ion? tlma wltn npnrnlgla In tho hntid. I pave St. Jnoobs Oil a tnlr trial and am ontlroly cure. I." Iu this way tho groat remndy acts as a motorman to retoro broken wiros, and son the systom to Iiortoot notion. Jnno ami Its sevoral combinations la tho fominlno ot John. Dr. Kilmer's 8wAr-RooT enrol nil Kidney and Illsdder troubles. 1'amphli't end Consultation froa. Laboratory Wnglmmton, N. V. Th world In Ihso had 210mllos of railroad the ailionpe In 1SKS was 354,310. State of Ohio, City or Toutoo, t Ll'OAS t'ol'STY. f Fa nic .1. i'hubv mnkoB oath that hp Is th fnlor nnrtnf-r of t lie tlrmot K. J. t'nPNKV A l o., dtiina Jmino In ttip t'lty of Tnledn, Countvnnd State afnrald, and that said firm will pay tl sum of ON K lll'MlKKI) IHb XvAHs for eftfh and every rase of IHtarrh that nmiot bo cured by tho Use of Halt.'M'atahhu t'unp. Fhank .T. Ciikmkt. tvornti before me and aubscribpd in my jroenco, this BtU day of Ueremtu r, A. D. lbSO, ) -, A. W. Olbasow, sfalJ v' A iMn Piin'tr. Hall's Catarrh Cure Istaken Internally and acts directly en ths blond and mucous surfacos of tho system. Send fr testimonial, free. K. J. Chenfy & Co., Toledo. O. HSold by Ilr.iiraisis. 7.". Cnssandra Is from tho Greek find means a Reformer ol Men. Tliere fti-e over ten million ruptured people in this country alone! To those of our readers tho.- unl'nrtunatelv afllirted we call attention to the advertisement of (). V. House Mfit. Co., 'H Hrnndnny, New York. This old n'linhlo firm mukeaveryconiTtirtMble truss which can Ih worn nitrht and d:iy with ease, and is war ranted to retain the rupture under nil rirrum btnuccb. SendforiW'at:iiirttenri(o to see them. Disorder. That is the state of your stomach. You know It, you feci it, you show It. Tho remedy you need i ItipauH Tubules. JSafu, fciuro uud fcflou tive. T)onY Wheexe and connh when Hale's Honey of Horehouml snd Tar will cure. 1 'ike's T'thache Prop Cure in one minute. Mrs. Vlnslow's f oothlng Syrup for children teething, softens the gums, reduces inflamma tion, allays pain, cures wind colic. 3.o,B,ljottlo Karl's Clover Hoot, the irreat blood niirlfier. fc ives freshness and clearness to th rnmnliT. ,on uud cures outipation. gi ets.. flu cts., li. I have found rise's Cure for Consumption on unfailing medicine F. R. Lotz, l.'Wj Scott fctruet, Covington, Ky., October 1, Mr. James It, Aumervtlle. HOOD'S BUILT IKE UP I was attacked by rh on in it ism very sud denly and was confined to the hou-e fur eU mnnihs. I did imt do any work for a year Hood's SarKipurilla put ne on my feet epnin and gave mo fatrciiKth to work. Nervous pros Hood's Sarsa yy parilla tration and trouhla S with my kidneys hava fl UJl also been cured by SbjtoJ Hood's Sarsuparilla. I Is'iieve this medicine sa-ed mv life," J. B Si'mkhvii.i.k, Waitsiield, Vermont. Hood's Pills aro tho best nfter-dlnnoi Viils. asnist digestion, prevent constipation. W. L. Douglas f B.Ifl ' IS THI BEST. MllUbriT TOH AKINOfc far COEDOVANV rRCNCH&KNAMEatO CALF. 43? Fine CaltMOwcarou MA ... . J2.7 BOYS'SCKuSLSHCUL LADIES' -S02 (ITS i. SEND TOR CATALOCUE Ovr On Mlllloa Peoplo wear tha VT. L. Douglas $3 & $4 Shoes All our shoes are equally satisfactory They aiv the best value for the money, They equal custom hoea In style and fit. Thrir wearing qualities are unturpasaed. The prices are uniform, -stamped on sulW from $i to $3 saved over other makes. li your dealw cannot supply you we can rMIECursi POSITI M,Y Worn nk'ht and fluv. Hn an Adjuaiuhicpua witiul cau m mutie larKT or smaller to mtt changing coiia.llnn of Hl'PTUJOi. I l r. -s r r. U. (II, Will Brurfiy scaled hyo. V. IlouMMfg.Co.inroadway.N.y.Ciiy E'OTELARAGOPJ Atlanta, Georgia. THE PALACE HOTEL CF THE SOUTH. Kvery modern Improvement knovrn to acleno?. Per 'f.'t't ctilniue and Krvtce. Moiit UQlforln clinuite til VN1TKII KT.ITKS. KKND Hl HOOK and HATK8. WORLD'S-FAIR I HIGH EST AWAHD t , "SUPCRIGR N'Jtn,Tigj-THt LIFE:' . FOOD Has us!ly acquired the reputation of being The Salvator for Invalids he-Aged. An Incomparable Aliment (or the Growth and Protection of INFANTS and ?I-I I LDREN A superior nutritive in continued Fevers, And a reliable remedial agent in all gastric and enteric diseases ; often in instances of consultation over patients whose ditesiive organs were re u ik e J to such a low and sensitive condition that the IMPERIAL CiRANUAl was the only nourishment the stomach would tolerate v. hen LIFE seemed depending on its retention; And as a I 'ODD it would be diilicuU to conceive ut anything more ral uaMe. uM by DRIKKJISTS. Shipping Depot, . .JOHN CAKI U & SONS, New York. l,mi)tmMHfttHtMlltllMHttlllll)ttlt,tl .a OOOT) BAttN CATS. The cats tlint roinniu nil tho time nronuii tlio Loiiro poou become lnzv BnJ gooj for iiothinjf ns mottscrs. This is not trno'of tho barn ent. Keeping close to the Arc, as moat houso c.tts do, they fooii bocotua bo worthloss that inioo tuny be nil over the honso without thoir noticing ono of the'tn. The cnt win nindo fur notivity, nnd its thick fur cont, nlnsys wtirmont in win tor, in its best proU'cHon against cold. liostou Citltivutnr. EMOMI im prAvns.i, In gninll frnit growing a change ot crops should tnko place without wait ing a yosr or two for tho plants to grow. When my strawberry bod has but one more year to grow I set in tho rows raspberries. The raspber ries aro ready to bear as soon as the etrawberrios aro given tip. No year is lost. So in my raspberry gardens I plant pear trees, and expect them to be in good bearing by the timo the berries are worn out. A red raspberry plantation should be good for twelve years or more if properly cared for and manured. The pears will by that timo bo giving heavy crops. There is such a thing ns alternation of crops for fruit as well as grains and vegeta bles. Apples planted again in old opplo orchards do not thrivb as well aa on fresh ground. American Agri culturist. IIOW TO HANDLE AND KEET POTATOES. Potatoes Buonld be handled very carefully, as they oasily peel their skins and bruise, when rot is certain to ensue. Potatoes should be kept at a temperaturo of from forty-five to fifty degrees in a moderately dry, wcU-vontilatod apartment, from which light must be carefully excluded, elso the potatoes will develop a strong, rank taste. They are a bulky crop, and every time they are handled unnecessarily involves a cost which materially re duces tho profit. The earlier farmers can sell the better, as keepmg in win ter involves further work and loss from rot. while later on the weight and valuo of the potatoes will be greatly reduced by the growth of the eyes. Judging by the present outlook, it will pay ever v grower who" iiai po tatoes to take the best cart of them. New York World. TrtELLTSINO GRAPES. Grapes trollisiug according to the jMunson system has proved so success ful at the Oklahoma Experiment Station this year, thot Professor Waugh unhesitatingly recommends it for adoption in general vineyariing. Ac cording to this system, posts ttand six leet out of the ground. At the top a crosspieoe two teet long is nailed, and at each end of this a wire is run. A third wire is run through the middles of the posts eight inches below those two, so that the throe wires set in a sort of V shape nearly six foot from the ground. This great height is an es sential feature of the system, and should not be modified. On this trel lis the grapo vines sproad out as they do where they grow wild in the woods. This furnishes a shade for the fruit. At the same time the fruit is so far above ground as to be safe from the intense reflected rays of tho sun, which caused more damage in Oklahoma vineyards the past season than all other causes combinod. - The trellis also hag many other advantages and only a few disadvantages. Farm, Field and Fireside. Rrnrnso cattle. The golden rule in shipping all kinds of cuttle is to got them as fast as possible from rauge, ranch, farm or feed-yard to market. It has been proved time and again that a range bullock shrinks every hour after he leaves his native h&uuts. It stands to reason that all cattle wili do so, but natives do not fret, aor are they lia ble Jo get so buised as the former. Hinee'the invention of patent cars, such as Street's and other varieties, parties a long distance from market have been greatly benefited, says an exchange. One only needs to go down to the stockyards and see the cattle rolling in every day from points 1000 to 1500 miles west without unloading to find out how much better cattle shipped in this way look than those that have been knocked about at the local feeding points, aud have had to be unloaded and loaded probably a couple of times betwixt their point of shipment and their destination. The outward appearance is nothing to the inward look when the hide is off and the bruises show up. We be lieve that all cattle, whether natives or rangers, should be sent to market without unloading. We have cattlo reaching us every day from a distance of 1'200 miles that stay in the cars all this distance. They ere fed iu the oars and watered also. The old-fashioned railroad fcodiug-yard is a thing of the pant bo far as it usefulness is concerned. Just as we believe it is better to kill cattlo as near the feed yard or range as possible, so is is bet ter to run them to the coutral mar kets with as little shrinkage and bruis ing as possible. New York World. A NEW CAUOAOE MOTH. A new cabbage moth made her first appearance here about, three years ago. lbu tirct warm uights iu early tuuiuier she comes iu through the open window uud hovers around the lights. She is a night worker, as she is not to be seon o:j the wing by day light ; but I find her in sileut blutu btr between tha leaves of tho cab bages. Her body is half un iuuh in ljugth, very bliiu, aud faohioued like the common cabbage moth in stru t are. She curries a small bha tly head and long slim logs. Hrrcukr, a light green, wings transparent. She is a pretty moth uud covers each e,g, lifter depositing it ou tho under bide of tho oubbagu leaves, with u white filmy covering. After tho eggs uie hutched, the tiny worius live for svv trul days under their filiuy bluuket, nnd then they creep out into tho warm sunshine and begin their life's work of devouring the cabbngos. They do not become as lartjo as tho common cab bage worm. Fires kindled around and among the cabbages will not only de stroy the new moth, but also the com mon moth. The common moth is not a night worker, but as sho works only when tho sun shines, she is attracted by the light and tho warmth of theso fires the same aa by tho sunlight. In sects destroyed by lights and fires at night, savo tho fruit and the vegeta bles, aud much hard labor, as woll as valuablo time. Torch lights among tho fruit trees, in the evenings, de stroy insects that you fail to boo by daylight. New York Tribune. FARM AND GARDEN NOTES. Sheen are delicate feeders and will reject anything thot is not perfectly sweec It is hopeless to expect sheen to eat the butts of corn stalks as a cow will when they como from the silo. It makes little difference how rockv land is for grapes. They have been known to flourish where it was nooes- sary to carry soil to cover tho roots when planting. A farmer said before tho Iowa Insti tute : "It has been proved that clover sod is as good to produce corn es the virgin soil. Farmers are just awaken ing to tho importance of sowing all small grain fiolds to olover. It is tho only wholesale fertilizer we have dis covered." Keep the back barnyard as neat as tho front ; have the manure pilo, tho old board pilo, the rubbish pile, al ways under cover. Make the neatness of your place uotiooable, aud teach not ouly your own boys, but tho whole neighborhood, lessons of beauty and thrift. Sheep and hogs aro good in orohards hogs preferable to sheep, becauso they root the ground over and pre pare it for an application of fertilizer.' Neithor class of stock is sufficient for the full amelioration of tho soil to bring the orohard to its best produc tive capacity. Excepting tho golden rod, milk weed and ragweed, all the rest of our weeds have been imported. These, foreign weeds are the most trouble some and persistent. If it was some one's duty to keep them from tho highways, these pests would not travel so fast. Italian bees are now eonoeded to be the best bees for this country. New varieties come up every season, aro given a short-lived boom and drop below the horizon, to again appear briefly in a few years. The Italian has been tried and has not been found wanting. They are the best. When your cream foams and swells in the churn don't pour hot water into it, but warm it up to seventy de grees, if need be, by warm water to the outside, aud mature it more be fore yon attempt agaia to churn. Ma turity and warmth within certain safe' limits will generally knock the obsti-' nacy out of winter cream that does' not want to yield up its butter. j Vines have been frequently known to do well where their roots were be-! neath buildings and the vines brought' out at the foundation. They never' fail in such places for want of moisture, the natural dampnoss of the soil being sullioient. Very often such vines will come through the winter uninjured, when those in the garden or vineyard are seriously damaged. The clover hay harvest should be gin as soon as the field is well in bloom, and every care possible exercised in curing aud harvesting the crop, and while all undertakings are uncertain in whioh tho weather takes such an im portant part, much may bo done to offset the uncertainties by extremo watchfulness and care, and no dairy man can afford to withhold those iu such a case. Tho peach may be budded on the plum, but there is less advantage iu this than is commonly supposed. The peach tree is usually hardy enough to. live, and if the crop suffers it is from freezing the buds when too far ad vanced. ThiR, of course, the plum stock canuot remedy. It is a mistake also to suppose that peach trees will not do well on heavy soils. They only require soil that is well drained and from stagnant water at any season. Many mistakes are made in setting out shade trees. Evergreens ought never to be set near the house. They are useful as windbreaks in the North and West, at some distanoe from the house, where they may be set in clumps or hedges, but never on a lawn. Grass does not do so well under them as under deciduous trees, and so many of them drop cones almost the entire year that they are unsightly and interfere with the mower. Ti:o Greater Sew York. Some of the larger cities that are to be distauced by Greater New York are content to boast of their acreage. Chi cago has tho biggest municipal acre age in the country, covering over 100 square miles, while Now York covers ouly about forty. Soma idea of tho eardiuo civilization of New York cau be had by reflecting thut it covers but little moru ground thau liostou. What is still more astonishing is that when tho Greater New York comes to cover 313 square, miles it will still be more densely settled than Chicago. We fancy Uostou to be a very crowded city, witli lS.o persons to tin aore. Nuw York has over 58 persons to the acre, and Chicago, with all her boast ing, lias but 10. 7 to tho acre. If wo uro to estituuto population by the uere it greatly disturbs all previous c uloulittions. When the greater me tropolis is completed it will fat ill havo more people to mo acre than .Loudon, liostou Gazette. There is a miniature Indian coru rowu iu lim.il. The ears are not larger than u little Uuger, and the I grains are the size ot milliard seeds, TEMPERANCE. IT HKtnHBOB. Kves Just ovr tlio lino tn tho valley of "no'er-cto-well." lis clothm. on po flnt, have n slekly tTdna, I. to moonbeams Iu Irorcn doll. Ii locks nrn faded nnd tliln, Ills hnvo A hmittry stnro Tlio "iniulit Imvo Iwou" ho fallnd to win Heoins moolJng him evorywliore, tin poor old utiotiMem nro bont Tney carry a grlnvnua loml Ot itrane ills lilent through long yoan I prut Ou a darksome ilownlilll road. Unsteady Ids step and Blow, ii ue nrui journeyeu lur, An l tho snn wero low, witli never a glon Ktotu hope's lair lien in log star. My nelyhlior hns untight Iu storo For time or iternltv's ihhi!h. Tl om;li Mnilglit brforo to tl vermor Ills piteous pathway leads. His record' Nny let It piss Pat link to his soul's unrest Tho soemi data! Alas, alas I lor a llfotlmt lias muwmt ll best I Ilanna A. Fuster, Iu the Voice. A rr.sT. Thn man who first browed hoer was n nest or Germany. I hnve nurvlved the end of renulno bier, for it has now bocomo small Jeer In every soiish ( and 1 have prayed to 3od that Ho illicit destroy tun wf'.olo beer Jrewlnn bimlnefw. Thero Is enough bnrley lestroyed In tho breweries to feud all Clci iiauy. Martin I.ulhor. WITnOVT KNOWINO IT. Medical men nr b.-comlujt nioro and mow alivo to tho Important fnct that many men nro dow ilylnr of drink who we.ro oovoi drunkards and iosUdy were never one drunk. Tho nioderatii es of nlcohollct proiucis uudiio stimulation aud Irritation ol tho br.ilu, tho slomncu aud other orirnns, nnd thus brings about dtsenss nnd death. Many a "visitation of 1'rovldcnee" is brought niout hv a constant and qulto moderate us of lapiers. raoM MTnr.n to citn.nnr.s. Ol tho 4000 c-.lmlnals who have nass-Hl ihroURh the Elmlrn llolormntory 83.7 per lent, wero tho children of drunken parents, frith ibe probability fatly mtnbllKhed of 11.1 per cent, to ba vided, m.'tkinit 49.8 par sent, or ins criminals who bad beou prtton r there the victims ol herudltary alcohol bin. Marro found that forty-one per oonr. of srlmlnals which be studied wora children ot ilcotiollKOd parents, and liossl, out ol aeven-:y-ono, found tairiy-ou per c?nt. of tho lame horoditnry taint. This luolu los thoAe who were criminals froai dlroct Intompcr unco ouly In o far as they were chlldrou of drunken hi rod it y INTEMPrilAXCB AND rOSTEllITT. Tho Superintendent of a hospital for ohll drou nt lierno, Switzerland, ban found by careful observation that ouly forty-live per cont. o( thoso whose parents used Intoxicat ing liquors bnbltuilly bad koo I conalltu tlous, while eighty-two per cent, of the chil dren of t era per at o parents bal found todies. Of the children of Inebrlntrs oaly nx per oeni. wcro neaitny, mis is startnun na suouid us sumcient to make "the Jolly ood follow" call a halt. Just tmatrlno "visiting votir sins udou the third and fourth generations." , Tho drinker ii not only ruining IduisuHf out no is paving ine way oi aiseaso lor nis posterity. It la absolutely criminal and the lawB are not stringent enough so far as re gards the drunkard . t Some words of Beecher are very appropri ate here t "It seems bard that when a man does WronR bis children should be put under ftn almost Irresistible Inclination to do wrong it seems bard that whnn a man flrlnka spirituous liquors bis children and Children's children should find themselves Vrged by a burning thirst, which they can 'hardly withstand, toward Indulgence lu In toxicating drinks i It seems hard that dis eases should be transmitted, and thut be cause a man has violated the laws of health his children should be sickly and short-lived y-these things look hard ns long na we look at thorn only on one aide ; but what a power 6f restraint economy bas when every ninu foels, 'I stfind not for myself alone, but for the wh6le line of my posterity, to the third And fourth geuerntlons.'" lllohmond Times. WHAT THE BENEFIT SUCIETIE8 SiY. Can wo afford to take In nv-mb rs whos habits w Ih rejjarl to stroe druik nrj ut slrletlyl temperate' This quxMloa Is 4iol uowruiBeuas a moral one, tiut Ms pr.iollo il. scientific and financial. That even tho mo . erato use of ardent spirits and malt l.quors Is detrimental to health nn 1 liiu is very generally admitted. Alcohol is potsou, an I poison in small doses o ten rep into! must produoo sooner or later s-rious rfj ults. Htroiitf driuk. directly produos some forms of disease. It acts lulurlouilv unon everyorKim la the body. It lutl.iiiies the mam, uartieus uiu liver, iiuraiiKos tnu heart, disorders the dlireotion and Injures the kid neys. Bight uud hearing, uniieio un I na vo are all affected by it. Its general elToet be ing to weaken tliebolv, I: renders It lens nuie io mrow on aiseasos than may lie lu duood by other causes. Hence uiauv di. iroin pneutnonin, fevers, etc., who would recover were they not poisoned through uud through by strong driuk. Even it a moJer.ito drinker did not re. calve Injury from his course there Istlie con stant p.-rd of his becoming udrunktrd. This a a real, not a fuuuied d auger. W'olle every modernto drinker does not beco ne a drunkard, every ilrunkard was nt onetlmu moderate drinker. E m ladpule iv ' rt beeomo a froir. but evorv frog w.u I tadpole. Now, as the Knights of Hon 0f. ynj uuuiisoiiio nu'u wueuever a n jtyr dies, it Is certainly just and proper th t we alioulj conserve our iuterests bv not insur ing those wuose blood Is nolsouod bv mrnair drink. This la ouly simple Justlou to those who are in the order, an I especially to thost whose habits are strictly temperate. Tho percentage of the duith rate is muuh greater among tipplers than iiaioag total abstain ers, and those wIkj do not use strong drink feci that they should have the beueflt of their temperate batilla. Even moderate driukivs are poor risks. Eulgbts of Honor iieponer... rEMFEHANCI KEW8 AND votes. Two hundred barrels of whisky ar await ing shipment lu New York for the Hawalin Islands. If the churches were kept open as much as the saloons, the devil would soon be on tho run. It Is estimated that about (10,000,000 bas been Invested iu coffee houses as aa antldota ot tho saloon iu Euglund. The thirl bleunual convention ot tho Wo men's Christian Tompersnos Union will bo held In London June 14 to 21. Drinking is like a dreadful plague, bring ing misery aud ruin to whole nations uud destroying countless men and women lu body aud soul. Canon Wllborforoe, the eloquent Canon of Westmluster, wears u pleou of blue ribbon lu his buttouhole bs is a stauoli aud enthusi astic temperanoe advooate. "Moral suasion for the man who drinks I Mental suuslon for the muu who thinks Legal suasion for tho druuknrd maker ; ' l'rlson suuslon for the statute brouker." It Is pretty well settlod as a fact that chil dren ot drinking parents will sulfur from their parents' bublts. They wlll.be drinkers themselves, or they will bo oervoua hyst-r- luiti, i-uuBuuipiiYO or leeuie. i O mi poor man begins to sell llqhor anions umers wen iu uo, nuu iu a snort time no by coin as wealthy aud the rtst poor. The wives, of the drinkers wear rags, the wife of the lullor of liquor wears silks. Every Uian who Invites another Into a saloon to take a driuk and every drinker does that is a drummer for tho house of his lavorlto saloonkeepor lu particular, and, in ei.leutally, for all others lu town. The best drunken workman I ever knew beuume a drunkard through the system of treating which prevails. Men will driuk and treat others uud say that It Is not tbelr iHuit mat ot tiers unnk. T. v. 1'owderly. Last year 6,000,000,000 glasses of whisky Were oousutned lu the l ulled Htstes, which st ten cents a glass amounts to I00,000,0e0, uud averages 101 drinks a yeur a piece fur svery man, woman and child hi the United Status. But there are. some people who get a wood deal more thau their share. 1 Improving tlio Ilrcotl. "President Soott, of tho Cincin nati Southern, was a vory clover Eng lishman, nnd much wittier than Eng lishmen usually are," said n Kentuok ian the other duy to a I'hiladolphia Record writer : "When ho first took hold of tho Cincinnati Kotithorn he was greatly annoyed by tho claims for horses aud cattlo killed by trains of tho road on their way through Ken tucky. It pocmcd as though it wero not possible for a train to run north or Houth through Kontuoky without killing oithcr a horse or a cow. And every animal killod, however scrawny, scrubby or miserable it may have been boforo accident, always in tho claims subsequently presented was the best blood in Kentucky. 'Well,' said Scott finally, ono day, wheu tho 0'J'Jtli claim had just been presented, 'X don't know anything that improves stock in Kentucky like crossing it with a locomotive. KNOWLEDGE Brings comfort and improvement nrj tends to personal enjoyment when rightly usea. Tho many, who live bet tcr than others and enjoy life more, with less expenditure, by more promptly adapting the world's best products to the needs of physical being, will attest the value to health of the pure liquid' laxativo principles embraced in the remedy, Syrup of Figs. Its excellence is due to its presenting ia the form most acceptable aud pleas ant to the taste, the refroiihing aud truly beneficial properties of a perfect lax' ative ; effectually cleansing the system, dixnelling colds, headaches and fevers and permanently curing constipation. It has given satisfaction to millions and met with the approval of the medical profession, because it acts on the Kid neys, Liver and Dowels without weak ening them and it is perfectly free from every objectionable substance. Syrup of Fics ia for sale by all dnifj. gists in 60c and $1 bottles, but it if man ufactured by the California Fig fcyrtio Co. only, whose name is printed on every package, also the name, Syrup of Figs, and being well informed, you will Hot accept any substitute if ottered. Tho "I.INF.NE" aratha Bent nd Mot Economi cal Collars and Cunt worn: they ar ikuIb of tins rloth, both aidi nntatitni allia, and bmif rrer blts one collur laetiual to two of any otlr kiu.l. Tlu tit veil, u'Ptir we.lt and limit welt. A Ui of Ten CoLutra or 1'ivo l'aira ol (Julia for lweuty-f io Ccnt. A hampta Collar and Pair of CnfTn bv maQ for 6is CwiU. Kama aiylu wnj alee. Athlreae BEVERSIBLB COLLAR COM T ANY, H Frantltn St., Daw York. 17 KIUt St., Boeton. WAII CT NFWH I.KTTKKof value b it HLL 0 I ! HICK to roaUuraof IM puii r. liurlea A. liuldivin A: i .. 40 Wall St., N. v. Kl;ift'l, AUKtJ. UniK-i),, I with it, too. Pearline makes another woman of her. It washes and cleans in half the time, with hnlf the work. kNothing can be hurjt by it, and r-cariinc aoes away witn the does more than soap ; soap gives you more to do. "T Peddlers and some unscrupt HPWl Vf r,,,is is as as" or-tl, -V VV CLi. V- r'AI.SK l'curhnois never p ifou an imitation, be honest send it tact u A Good TaSti Will Bear Tclim Twici." Use ipzh l'S3 The Rise of the Buckwheat Cake The leaven of yesterday ruins the cake of to-day Don't spoil good buckwheat with dying raising batter fresh cakes want Royal Baking Powder.' Grandma used to raise to-day's buckwheats with the souring left over of yesterday 1 Dear old lady, she was up to the good old times. But these are days of Royal Baking Powder fresh ness into freshness raises freshness. And this is the way the buckwheat cake of to-day is made : Two cups of Buckwheat, one cup of wheat flour, two tablespoons of Royal Baking Powder, one half teaspoonful of salt, all sifted well together. Mix with milk into a thin batter and bake at once on a hot griddle. Do not forget that no baking powder can be sub stituted for the Royal " In making pure, sweet, delicious, wholesome food. ROYAL BAKING POWDER CO., 108 WALL ST., NEW-YORK - p Tlio (nper Order n Woman tiovp. "Of all tho qnoer persons of this qneer world, tho undertaker, I be lieve, meets hU full quota," so a Ko publio reporter wos told by a man wearing a fuueral oxpressiou on his face and black gloves on his hands, who enmo from a small town in a Westorn Stato to attend the meeting of the Association of Undertakers. "Ono of tho qnoer persons is a wealthy woman who lives in my town. One day sho camo into my rooms, and, as the tears coursed down her sad faco, she ruauagod to tell mo, between sobs, that she wanted a colllu that was covered with royal purplo velvet. I knew that her husband had beeu ill for some timo and was not expected to live, so I began to offer a word of con dolence on nocount of his death, as she and her husband were lutimato friends of mine. " 'Oh, he is not dead yet, eobbod the woman, 'but I waut yon to call at the house and steal his measure whilo he is asleep. I waut n royal purple velvet coflin, and it may take you sev eral days to fill tho order.' "I assured the tearful woman that it would perhaps bo impossible to till the order, as I had never heard of a colli u of any such description ever having been on tho market. She went back home, and whilo tho order was hang ing liro her husband begau to grow better, and in a few days was eutirely out of danger. He afterward recov ered, arid to-day ho is a strong, health ful man. "But that woman still insists that I shall fill the order for a royal purplo velvet coflin for her husband, aud, furthermore, she has givoume another order for a royal purplo velvet coflin for herself. On my present trip to St. Louis, I called at a laigo oofliu fac tory here, and surprised the proprie tors by leaving the special and unique orders to bo tilled. When the orders have been filled I cuu't say whether or not my queer customers will uso tho two royal purple velvet coffins as orna ments to match the decorations in their parlor at home." St. Louis Bo publio. Easy Hunting. .Bangor bas becomes clearing house for hunters who don't wish to huut. A Connecticut man came there a lew days ago, loafed around tho sunny cor ners until ho got tunned, bought au old rusty gnn and equipments, went to the market aud bought threo tine i looking deer, hired a guide to post him ou scenery, distances, locations, trails, etc, and thou returned to the Nutmeg Stato to rehearse his thrilling experiences iu the depths of tho wild forests of Maine, Kouuobeo (Me.) Journa'. Furnace" as a Town Name. "Furnaoo" is a geographical namo not unusual iu the Atlantic coast re crion ju-st below Mason and 'Dixon's line. In many iuNtauces tho actual furunco is a mere tradition, bnt sixty I or seventy years ago many such fur naces wero built to smelt tho bog iron ' ore usual iu all that region. It was once profitable to smelt this ore, but the murvelous abundance and cheap ness of iron deposits elsewhere have I made it impossible to carry on the old I furnaces. New York Sun. Tied uown the woman who doesn't use v Pearline. Shr'5 tifil to ht-r work nnrl tiri-il every thing is saved with it. Kub. Kub, Kub. Pearline mloes orncers will trfl vou. ic same ua K-arline." IT'S peddled, if ymu vntvet slmuIs Anna nt.6. fscw luit. If . Si it A Llghlulng Talker. It is said that a singular inoidont occurred recently in the stenographer's gallory of tho Hungarian Honso of llepresontativoH. Tlio now member, Deputy Antunovies, belonging to the Clerical purty. made his maiden speech with such remarkable volubility that one after another ot the stenographers put dowu their pencils in utter de spair nt tho impossibility of following him in his well-memorized effort. His colleagues listened to him in amazement and amid grent hilarity. It in tho first case of its kiud that has occurred iu thirty-four years. This offers achauoo for ICdisou to invont a phonograph that c n bo run at great speed by electricity, warranted to catch tho fastest talker without ap parent noeossity for winding up. flow Orleans l'icnyuue. LEAVES ITS MARK everv one of the painful irregularities nd weaknesses that prry upon woinrn. They fade the face, waste the fiptirt, ruin the temper, wither you up, make you old before your time. Get well : That's the wsy to look well. Cure the disorders and ailments that beset ?ou, with Dr. Pietce's I'avorlte l'rcacrip ion. . It rrgiilatea and promotes all the proper furtctions, Jmprovra dipritioii, enriches the blood, dispels arurs and pain, mrlancuoiy dd iiervousiiras, bringa refreauing sleep, and restores health and atreiigtli. It's a powerful freueral, well as uterine, tonic and nervine, imparting vigor and strength to the entire system. tin. Ann uuucb, of rim Crt't. Buffalo V. nro., wniee ; i enjoy food health thank to r. pierce'a Pavorite Pre. aenntiou anil 'Golden Medical Diacorery.' I waa under doctors' care for two yeara with womb diaraae, and gradually wasting in attrnfrth alt the lime. I waa ao weak Hint I could til up in bed only a few nionieuta, for twoveara. iroinnieuced taking Dr. I'ierce'a Fa vorite I'reacription and hia'Gohten Mr.lk-al Dia covery. nnd by the tints I hud takeu one-balf doa eti bottle 1 waa up aud goinu whererer I pleaaed, and hure had tcood health and beeu vetv imn Ms. Ui.mcn. ever aiuce that waa two yeara aud a half ago." A book of 168 pngea ou " Woman and Her Diseases " mailed sealed, on receipt of ia eenta in stamps for pnatage. Address, World's Dim'ensary Mi nicAL Associa tion, ofjj Main birect, butlulo, W. V. N v N U-3 DON' I' in: I OOLLU. . e 'VJf a p ut ':.."' .- -..1 You WMiit MMito Jl.TANS TAIU'LKS. Your druiiKiM't nij-iily ilinitxL le Uah buuiftliiun jut as t;uod." Vhy 1o-8 lio Fny tliU lie tlxiitks you a blinilutuii. lie htx a Hlit to his opinion, Hut torxpictb iu So Wriinly la brub. If N rttiuion may be rigUt, lint his htrtlouieut Is nut true, T U liiin fo! Out wlmt you ak f.T, Or uoiliiuB 1 Q t'tiii uutl It vt.118 L;.iu iniiiud, 1 i.lLi-.tJou, O . Uvteti-pfin, Ilt:n tlir,; C -. i u ul A .'.ll T J U-t-lut lu Mi uilu ;in I k' Y,ir-. t'ti-.i'Lv lb i 'IVu U ntitl l'r.mi i Ii i Ap t nw g the Mr Hl i, ( inv die T m v k(:ui. Ku l-.ri-a A f liy Mm M -..leal KhmU v. K-ii i Mir H'. IA or Si Y J r-'tit vnt'k-tf. Mtivt'. Strt n-ti or J in uf uf. M V UVt. M. IIA'.H. UiV ! .hi ti I , hv V.trK. f 1 1, -v-. -v av-- 4 ji nat -i ilHi.i caLa lOH.Jt mill UaiGsfr um WiHr AIL ii t aits. IK" - r,.'Ut. .-)jrup. Ti:n Uxm".. lt la ii ii. r '.n It nrtttmu. ;5l
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers