FITS Mopped free bv On. Kr.iier'f Ohfat jr.v HrsToimn. No fits after flr"t dny use. f M-velnus curc. Treatise nnd JS.im Irint bot tle frc. Ir, Kline. Kll Arch St., Phils.. Pa. I can recommend Piso's Cure for Cnnnmri. lion to sufferers from Asthma. K. 1). Tuww SKRn. Ft. Howard. Wis., May 4. 1W4. Mrs. Window's Soothing Syrup for children teefhlntr. softens the trains, reduces Inftnmlun lion, allsys pwln, cure wind colic. k a bottle If afflicted wlthsnreevrs use Dr. Isnsr Thorn--, ten's Eye-water, lirmriilst spell at 2.V- per bottle. FaS! W& e d i c i n e Is fully as Important nnd n beneficial ns 9 ring Modieine, for nl this season therj is great danger to health in tho varying tem perature, cold storms, malaria! perms, prev alence of fevers and oth"r dis?nos. All those may lie avoided if tho blood is kept pure, tho digestion good, and bodily health vigorous by taking loocFs Sarsaparilla The One True Blood Purifier. UftArl' Dills cure all liver Ills, bilious- IIUVM 9 I 1119 ness. headjehc. Your Poor Tired J Husband. He has worked hard all week. Let him sleep late Sunday morning, then treat him to a breakfast of Buckwheat J Cakes. ft Y N C-l-i Intrant)? stops the mtst ec 'limiting print, attY InfUininatlo i nni cure cngjuim, whether of tli) Luniks, Stomal, BoweU, or oilier jfUala or muc mi mnubraues. RADWAY'S READY RELIEF Cl'BKS AM) fUEVEM.4 Colds, Coughs, Sare Throat, Influenza, Bron chitis, Pnsumjnia, Rheumatism, Neuralgia, Headache, Tooth ache, Asthma, Difficult Breathing. j ittq i nr. t,iiii r.t. i in ru.u uue 1 i iw.-niy tnlnutes. Not oue bmir art-r r arlluc mu adv.rUa. nieutufed anyouo Willi l'iS. ACHES AND PAINS. Forhpa Ucie(wi)pih?rftl(k ornsrrou ), tombac1!. Deura'ffta, rbetimaitm, ItimlDg , pains and wenk n cm lu ih biofc. i ac or kuiue., iiitu around tna llvrr, pleurisy, atvt-IMug of (he jrnat and palasof 11 kltula, the applkMll iu ot Ki (way's Uaadj K w. II afford lmmdiati ea3, a-id .in oailaufd iuj lor a few dnv effect a pannaae it cure. TAKES INWAKULY A lialf to a te.wprtDafill In half a tumbler of water for tuomach iroub'e , CoHs, wind In ihe how.-, Oil 1 Chills Ferer an! Aiu( Dlarrhrea, sick Ii- aaacl.e, and a. I iuieraal nttu . rrlreSOc. prr Hottlr. Sold by all lrtigvlt The Greatest nedlcal Discovery N of the Age, KENNEDY'S Medical Discovery, DONALD KENNEDY, OF ROXBURY, MASS., Bat dUoovered In ons of onr common pasture weeds a remedy that cure every kind ol Humor, from the worst Scrofula down to a common pimple. 1 Be bu tried it in over eleven hundred eases, and never failed except in two oases ' (both thundor humor). Be bas bow la bis possession over two hundred certifi cates ol Its value, all wltbln twentv miles cl Boston. Bend postal card for book. A. benefit is always experienced from the first bottle, and a perfeot our Is warranted when the right quantity is taken. When the lungs are afteoted It cause hooting pains, like needles passing through them i the same wltb the I.iver or Bowels. This is caused by the ducts being stopped, and always disappears in a week after taking it. Bead the label, i If the stomach Is foul or bilious It will vbusv sijucaujiau mciius ai urou i Mo change of diet ever necessary. Eat the best you can get, and enough of it. Dose, one tablespoonful in water at bed- time. Sold by all Druggists. PROFITABLE DAIRY WORK t'sn only be accomplished wltb the very best of tools and i i appliances. Wltb a Davis TW Cream Sepa rator on the fjpjjS farm you ire sure of mors "L, I and bette. butter, while mi.J theskiinmed uillklsaval- uable feel. Farmers will make no mis take to get a Wavis. Neat, Illustrated gjj? catalogue mailed free i-" Agents wanted DAVIS & EANKIN ELDG. ft KFQ. CO. Ct. Randolph 4 Desfbsm Sts.. Chicsn.. C OKSEB V ATIV ERE SPOSSTbTE. Have you niourjr lu Lank earumt: but r reu.l m. HUUD STOCKS .T, u nitty nuke muuy lime, that uuiou'it t lutilvi,! I M'Mt.m Uiv 10 B,a tt tuui-kvt to tritilv lu ai,U a vautw,.. l tliuuld enable me to ma te a Bivut leal ul mouytoi n.y oul jim-r. luriD llje u xt .'llJt'r "'ereu.va n'l.l full luforiiiatlon. HOWARD SL APE. ' bioadwsy. N Y. ( liy. a nivsimr. w "in mow you Lum 0 !'! k'.?1 V- "' "'I ' ui-r, we lur HL..I uiot.tik and ifsu-u tn Ti.ti .,w A ai't-'- a i L-ar i.r..ik ol ft; , T D T Km' a. aX ,k' '"l''t0 ' nrlt, at .at. fVr POPHAM'S ASTHMA SPECIFIC V Give, irnef in HS minutes. Brod 1 Ifr a S'l. r-C: trial i.iicktf Bulu by .'X -r. Urui.tB. C'na B.i Kriit poMt.aluI V,. . on pr. ri.i in .i.uu. an ku, at.ao. . ' . Aduir.s 'iHua. ruruiu, ruiLa., f. j Increase Your Income )-arK' pront maiieuomuaii ime.liiu-nii'. bt-nil for ou. ire book. 1-i.iii.i.h w. Invite, a i 'o. hroad wav. N V M I.- J- -I- -M . .- - f f ftntrfc A't ti it UnS. .Jj W LA.ku 6,,. la.ie Ouod. I'hH 11 ' .! u .rw,, r- Seen conx pon GRowtN-a aximal1?. Corn is not a wbolosomo fooil for yonng, growing aoiinnls, especially colte. It should not bo feil excluRivo to calves or jiigB nl tho time when they are ninltirig bono or muscle, or to work horse". New York WorlJ. BrCKWriEAT TO rt.RAX TjANP, There are several reasons why the bnckwhont crop is a good ouo to ilo atroy weeds. It requires plowing nml fitting the land at midsummer, when weeds are most easily killed by plow ing. It grows so rapidly that it very quickly covers tho snrfaco soil, shad ing it so that few weeds can start un der its broad haves. It is equally pood to rid land of insect enemies. Wire and cut worms find its roots dis tasteful to them, and for land that is filled with tho wire worm two crops of buckwheat will rid it of most of them. Yet for all this buckwheat is not a popular crop with neat farmer?. Its habit of seeding the ground with buckwheat, which will appear in the next grain crop, makes it a troublo eome weed, though as it is only an an nual one year suffices to get rid of it. American Cultivator, CAUSE AND CTRE OF BLOODY MILK. This disease is duo either to de rangement of the action of tho liver, or in some cows is the result of ab normal action of the milk glands. Some cowg suffer from it in conse quence of overfeeding, by which an inflammatory condition of the udder is produced, thus exciting the action of the milk glands, which, on account of the ndder being overcharged with blood, secrete some of this blood, which mixes with tho milk. This blood would otherwise bo milk, for milk is a direct product of the blood, and if the ndder were in a normal condition the blood would be changed into nlilk by the healthful action of theglacds. (Some times tho liver is so disordered by overfeeding of rich food that tho blood is not sufficiently purified and in this case tho jmpnrity of the blood escapes through the milk, instead of, as at other timec, through the kid neys, when the disease would appear as red WAtpr. At times, tliia fault, in the secretory function is constitution al, and a heifer may always give bloody milk, and may continue to do 10, thus being nselcss in the dairy. That this kind of milk is wholly ab normal is Ehown by the fact that calves will not drink it. The treat ment should be by laxative and cool ing medicine, snchas epsom salts, giv en in half-pound doses daily for a few days, after which the system will prob ably be relieved of the undue strain on the secretory organs, and the milk be all right. New York Times. IHE FARMHOUSE A3 A BOARDING HOUSE. I was reading an article not long since, said Mrs. II. A. Whitman before the Androscoggin. (Me.) Pomona Grange, upon "Farmers should pro vido separate cottages for their hired men," which, I think, deserves more than a passing thought. The writer said : "Do merchants generally board their clerks? Do manufacturers usu ally impose npon their wives and daughters the necessity of furnishing meals and beds for their begrimed and sweaty laborers from forge and loom, of serving them at table with their food and sharing their company at the fireside ! Why should the wives and daughters of farmers bo expected to do this? And so- long as such a burden is laid upon them, is it strange that farmers' sons rebel against their lot and seek the city, and farmers' daugh ters set their caps for clerks, mechan ics, tailors, speculators anybody but their schoolmates? "The introduction of hired men into the household destroys tho family relation. The farmhouse becomes a boarding honse, in which the husband is steward, the wife cook and the workmen boarders. The employed bo comes the served, and the employers servants. No well-bred woman can tolerate such a condition of things un less her ambition is crushed." There is many a woman in the land who bas cooked tons of food for "the hired men," who, whilo her husband has grown well-to-do and been elected Justice of the Peace and gone to the Legislature, has become thin and fur rowed with drudgery, bent to a furi ous nud never-ending rotation of scrubbing, baking, stowing for the hired men. This wretched community system bas prevailod long enough in America. to the amazement of foreigners and the disgust of our own people. It is high timo that every farmer with a particle of personal sensibility or in dependence, or with any respect for the rights of his companion, bhould j adopt a better way. THE VALUE OF STRAW. The abundance and cheapness of straw do not justify its waste, for some good, protitablo use may be found for all of it, writes J. M. btahl. If fed in connection with cottonseed or linseed meal, malt sprouts, bran, etc., which are rich in the elements in which it is deficient, it has a fair feed ing value. Tho potential feeding velue of ont straw equals that of sixty five per cent, and wheut straw iifty five per cent, of its weight of average meadow hay. liut to make the poten tial feeding value of straw near actual it mubt bo cut, moistened and mixed with tuck fiedf, rick in protein, asaro enumerated above. Cuttlo fed on htraw alone, or nearly bo, cannot pay utiything for the straw, for it is so de ficient in tho uiuscle formers that an animal cannot digest enough tlruw alone to grow any, or even to hold it.i own. However, if fed as juit fctated with fcucb feeds as will make a well balunced ration, straw bus an actual feeding valuo fur too great to justify the waste of any of it. If it is not potable to feed all the fetraw to good advantage, it has a value for bedding and for thclters that makes it unjuttitiuble to waste it. As ttraw is a very poor conductor of heat, it is well adapted for theso pur poses. As litter it has tho additional good quality of being an excellent ab sorbent. Uy using straw liberally for bedding one may ruduce tho discom fort of animals in poor shelters and avoid the wakto of liquid excrement, w hilo giving the nuimals a comfortable bed upon which to rest. Warm, com fortablo shelters on bo made out of straw ; and, while they nro not so dur able and handsome ns thoso niiulo of wood, they aro within the financial reach of many thnt cannot woll build expensive shelters. Likely the most profitable uso to which straw can be put is to form a comfortable shelter for farm animals that otuerwiso would bo exposed to tho severities of the winter. Finally, rottod straw has a fertilizer valuo that makes it highly profitable to savo it carefully. Ameri can Agriculturist. SCIENCE IN FARMtm Frank W. Iluwley, ono of tho gen tlemen interested in tho Niagara Elec tric Power Company, and a sciontifio former, lias a model place near Roches ter, N, Y. Writing on tho subject of tho farmer of tho future, ho says: The new era for the former has just begun. In no domain of human ac tivity lies greater uoopo for-genius than in agriculture. No other calling is so conducive to health, longevity, and happiness. Soicnco lays discov eries at tho farmer's feet and implores their use. For him the chemist toils in his laboratory. For him the bot anist' gleans the fields. For him the inventor has simplified labor and en lightened toil. For him scholars and experts employed by tho Government are ever at work at State and National experiment stations to solvo tho prob lerus of tho soil. The broad-minded agriculturist who avails himself of theso researches and discoveries is a man to bo envied. Wo may yot attain the art of making malleable glass, and nnder such protection acres may be devoted to tho growth of vegetables and semi-tropical fruits for our local markets. Rapid transit and improved refrigerator cars will enlarge the ter ritory to bo supplied. The broad belts of the temperato zones extend ing round the world will be explored in search of now varieties of grain, trees, flowers, and shrubs for our use. The laws of animal breeding and her edity will be better understood and our domestio stock be greatly im proved. America will possess the finest cattle in the world, and the States fitted for cattle raising and dairying will vie with one another for the leadership. The electric age will materially im prove tho condition of the agricul turist. I look for the day when each farmer will own an electric equipment to furnish power for his creamery, for grinding food, for pumping water, for lighting his house, and for heating his greenhouse and other buildings. Electric roads will pass his door, af fording quick transit for himself and his produce to the nearest market town. His horses will labor on the farm while he journeys on the high way in a wagon propelled by a storage battery. The subtle energy can be made to serve him in a thousand ways and perform innumerable tasks. By its kindly aid the hitherto overworked farmer may become largely a gentle man of leisure. Then we shall expect much of him. Then '.will he have lib erty to assume that political import ance to which he is justly entitled. The successful farmer should be the coming man, and future legislation must look closely to his interests. It is a notable fact that many of our best and ablest men have exhibited a strong predilection for rural life. Webster delighted to retiro to Marshfield ; the the name of Jefferson recalls Monti cello; Jackson reminds us of Hermit age ; Clay is assooiatod with bis be loved Ashland ; Mount Vernon has been rendered classio ground as the abode of the Father of his Country. With the advance of this new era, from our rural homes, beautified by nature and adorned by art, saving in fluences will come in the future to guide and guard the future of the Re public. . FARM AND GARDEN NOTES, Boiled turnips are exoelleut for the hens. To keep moths out of tho h:es make the entrance as small as possible. The average farm horse suffers more from poor caro than he docs from hard work. Cut out and burn the dead canes from among tho raspberries and black berries. Save the ears from the largest and earliest maturing corn plants for next year's 6eed. The farmers who have held on to their breeding cattle aro about to reap their reward. A good crop of strawberries next year depends largely on stirring the boil now and keeping the weeds down. The balky horse cau often be oured of this trick by any simple device which may distract his attention for tho moment, thereby causing him to forget his whim. No lare trees should be near the apiary. Have some small, smooth trees near-by for tho bees to cluster on, but they thould not bo allowed to get over twelve feet high. Once in the morningisofteu enough to wuter house plants, and let the water bo about the temperaturo of the room. Setting pots in dishes of water is not a good plan, as the roots be come saturated and have a tendency to rot. All water should be applied at the surface. Buckwheat can come after another crop very well without extra fertiliz ing. It is an excellent crop to sow ou laud where oats, barley or corn have been destroyed by bad weather. Such lurid seeded to buckwheat right away will help the owner out of his diffi culty and save him from the entire loos of his crop. TEMPERANCE. takk tora rnotrt. A prnln ot eorn a handful Rrew; -A rIiisk of rum the hnndftil brewed; A bolnfl In Ood' linmie ilrnnk It. For nM'Hnir steps lie hud to thank it. In rn,r he tottere 1 to his hornet The ehlldren shrieked to see him eomn The wife with pu'.e fneo ope'd the door, lie strnek her, felled her to tho floor, A Mon, in a cell he lay. And eitrsed himself, his natnl liny. His children to the almshouse went, When he by crime to death was sent. Another prnln a handful liore, The fiiruinr in his eorn-erlh stored! Jletween tlie two stones of Ihe mill 'Twns turned to food his mouth to fill. Ho fed his children, served the land, To find, the Oivor, stretehel his han.l. Tts poodly son. to honor prew, Ills comely dnnirhters virtue knew. And thus tin hVssintr God 1m l given. When used aright, tnnde earth a heaven, lint when to poison drink 'twas turned, It lighted fires of bell to burn, Youth's Temperance Bannor, rnr.r. i.vxch im salooxs. "Free lunches!" exclaimed Chauneey M, Depew to a New York Nun reporter. "Well, t did savsomnthlngabniit free Inuohe?. didn't IV Aud If I'm not mistaken. I referred to them ns ingenious preparations too. Well, they are. Now, seriously, nlthough those poot people have twisted my remarks Into all soils of shapes, I meant' all that I said About young men becoming slaves to drink. It's a terrible thlug, and I think tho free liineh is largely responsible for it. It'" a most ingenious contrivance, nnd do you know that it's simply put in a plnee to make A. mtin thirsty? ye,"s.r, I tell you that tho free lunch is composed of food of such n character Hint It keeps a man thirsty, nnd forces him to buy liitiorto keep himself com fortable. It is made up of pieklel herring, cornet! beef, fish cakes, salted potatoes, pretzels, cheese, smoked beef, potato salad, and dozens ot other dis-hes the main ingred ient of which is salt. And as sure n" a mnn ents free ltineh, just so sure will he be a drinking man, unless he is pos9"ss" l of rare solf-conlrol. Why, I tell you the freo lunch Is more to blame for thenumberof drunkards around than anything elt-e. A man takes a drink and a bite. The bile makes him thirsty, and the drink makes him hungry, and many a mnn who would leave a saloon after hav ing Imbibed one drink will stiek nil day as long as the free lunch Is thor. It isn't the drink that keeps him. but tho ingenious make-up of the free lunch, and that's why I say it's a blotch ou civilization and should be Wiped out. 'Perhaps yon wonder how I know nil this. I'll tell you. I travel n great deal, nnd Wherever I go I always make it n point tq talk with thu man next to me. I it$k him hiu business and make him tell me nil about It, Now, among others, I have talked with man hotel meu and liquor dealers, keepers of fash ionable cafes as well as German saloon keep ers, nnd as the tree lunch Is a sort of hobby of mine, I always make them tell me about what they spread cut for their customers lu the eating line. I used to wonder how they could afford to spread n free lunch, but all liquor dealers tell me that It's tho most pay ing investment they make, and I bclievo it Is." WHAT THE riOCTOItB SAT. The National Temperance Hospital bits Issued a leaflet, entitled "Alcohol lu Medi cine; What rhyslelnns Say," which contains some interesting information. During the summer ot 1894, a claim was made that nlcohol wasnecossary nsnsolvent for medleineg and to "prepare the Held of operations in capital surgical cases," A letter was authorized by the Board of Trus tees of the National Temperance Hospital, nnd nddrcs-ed to a number of surgeons nn i physicians of high repute iu the city of Chi- ecgo, asking whether they go considered it necessary, and what they used as anti septics. The following are culled from re plies received: Dr. 8. Prepares medicine without alco hol; does not uso it as a preserving agent, having found it unnecessary. Dr. E. Is unalterably opposed to the use of alcohol; can cover tho Held pretty Well without it. Dr. B. Sees no great nooj of nlcohol in Surgery. Dr. M. '"I never use any of the prepara tions of alcohol as an antiseptic; rarely ever prescribe a tincture; tho tablet form la much more valuable and certain." Dr. 8. Does not consider it indispensable. Has found it pos-ible to have medicine properly compounded without it. Dr. W. (Pharmacist) "Should a phy sician choose to practice medielno without alcoholic preparations, I do i.ot think the task so verv great if the question U given a little study." Dr. T. Does not use alcohol. "The patient cannot possibly get any toxio or medicinal effect from nlcohol." Dr. Harnh Hackott Stevenson, President of the hospital staff, says: "I do not think it necessary to use alcohol. Tablet triturates are better than tinctures." THE PF.BT OF TESTIMONY. Judge Noah Davis says that his experi ence fur a score of years on the bench Is that eighty per centum of all Ihe crimes that came before him would not have come had it not been for the traffla in alcoholic liquor. Doctor Wlllard Parker, one of the ablest physicians New York has ever had, in his preface to the lectures of Doctor B, W, Kioh ardson, said that thu liquor trufflo is re sponsible for thirty-five pereentuinof idiocy, forty-live per centum of lunacy, eighty per centum of crime, ninety per centum of pauperism, and ten pur centum of all deaths. Apply tbnt to New York City and it means that last year the liquor traillo is responsible for the birth of scores of Idiots, 40J lunatics, the sending of 70,000 men and women to jail, the pauperizing of 10,000 families, and lor 4000 doathe. Hsv. Dr. I. K. Funk. TEVE IN ALL COMMUNITIES. TVueu temperance advocates want fasts and figures to u3 in their war.'are they do not need to go far to Hud thoui. The argil nieutsai!tttui,t the many-sided triifflo are only too abundant. The Ohio State Board n( Pardons has lately r 'com tieuded that absti uuuee from the uso of intoxicating liquors bo a couditiou of pardon. The Board bas learned that "in ucurly every ease ol crimu agiinst the person the offender was oithnr uudortha influence of liquor, or became in volved in nu iift'iiir by reason of b.'lug in a place where intoxicating liquor was sold." What is true of criminals tu Ohio is true of criminals in all liquor communities. SCNDAY IX TWO CITIES. According to the New York Evening World Brooklyn saloon side-doors are open on Sun days, aud its jail is overcrowded. New York's saloons are closed on Sundavs, aud the New York Daily News says: "The number ol prisoners at Jefferson Market has boon re duc.il from 120, the average, to eighteen with no woman prisoners in the penitentiary. Belb vue Hospital prisou ward for the first time in its history has buen two days' vacant." the wav to rnE roonnorsE. John Iti eve, tho er ncdian, was once ae coMed in the Keusington road by nu elderlj female, with a s nail bottle of gin in hei hand. "Pray, sir, 1 beg your pardon, iuthte the way to the pooihouseV" John gave hei n look of clerical dignity, nnd poiutingto the bottle, gravely uid: "No, nm'nui; but that la. Cuarlcstou .Messenger. TEMFF.BANCE NEWS AND NOTES. A W. C. T. U. pump iu Blenh aim, Ont., is sat 1 to be tho mo.it appreciated iutttution iu that live'y town. When drinking leals n man to commit crime it is u serious que.itiou whether driuk- jug itseli bo not a crime. The saloou dcslroys thj happiness of tha individual, the &icreJuo..j.s of tho home and tho pL-ito ol fie community. A carloa 1 of wiii.-ky gut ou fire tho other day' at P.:oi-la. and when they turew water on It a territlc explosiuu fu lowe. .1. The authorities at Atlanta have refused to grunt the saloou kejpers tho privilege of keeping their satoous open altor teu u clock at uignr. The Government of Canada ha) pruhibitel ; the ale of intoxicants among the ludlaus of Hudson Bay territory, and puuiaht-s severely uuy violation oi tins luw. "If it were not for drutikcnuosg there would bu ii ) crime in lrelaud nt all. As it is tiiere Is no crime which does not arlsj out of that evil," says ArchbMio'i (Jroke ot that couutrv. The bayonet was invcnlod by a wo man, in 1323. Women letter-carriers may be soon in parts of Franco, Queen Williclmiua, of Holland, has a large collection of dolls. Books on social ctiquctto oontinuo to multiply year by year. Women net ns stntionmnstcrs on some of tho Austrian railways. Many society womon nro quoted as suffering from tea intomperauec. Governesses able to cyclo will soon bo in demand in Paris, such is t her ago for cyoling among girls. Several of tho New York hospitals have been presented with nrubnlanccs by Mrs. Froderick Vanderbilt. At the ago of fourteen years Anna Dickinson, tho lecturer, was a con tributor to leading periodicals. Mrs. Temple, wifo of tho Bishop of London, acts as his private secretary. She is an expert shorthand writer. - A Vermont man cured his wifo of the new woman fad by clothing every on tho promises with a pair of bloom ers. Americans are the only women in tho world who do not by their dross indicato whether they are married or single. Yachting is tho only form of ath letics in whiob. the Trinoess of Walej indulges. She disproves of bicycling for women. Mrs. Richard King, one of tho larg est land owners in this country, holds title to an entire Congressional Dis trict in Texas. Mrs. Cleveland rarely fails to attend the regular church services and is scrupulously exact in being present on all special day?. Ono result of tho Tory victory in the British elections is the loss of strength in the Commons by the advo cates of woman's suffrage. Queen Victoria saves her dining room carpet at Balmoral by covering tho space around the table with strips of drugget that will wash. Queen Victoria is a great tea drink er, and is so partioular about her fav orito beverage thnt, when away froai home, sho always makes it herself. Mrs. Thomas C. Piatt, wife of tho political leader, and owner of a sno cessful orange grovo in Florida, is tho invontor of an improved packing caso for oranges. ,. Tulare, Ctil., boasts of a woman en gineer who bas charge ot the great en gine in one of thu largest lumber mills near there. She is not obliged to call npon a man when the machine is out of order, as she is fully ablo to ropair it herself. FASIIION NOTES. Mohair and alpaca aro regaining their former popularity. Dull jet in spauglcs and boada is nsed with crape trimmings. It is announced that the headgear of the New York girl will bo enormous this winter. Moreen is finding increasing favor with fashionable dressmakers aud tail ors as a skirt lining. Nearly all tho hats aro overladen with trimming, giving their wearers a topheavy appearance. Little stools and tables are mndo of highly finished wood, tho tops and legs painted in landscapes or floral pattern. Numbers of little narrow ruffles set over tho tops of the sleeves and over the shoulders of t hiu dresses are pretty and becoming. Persian effects promise to be popu lar in high-grado goods. In order to obtain the proper rough appearance the figures are raised in combinations ot blue and brown, black and red, light and dirk shades of any -color, the figures having the silken sheen so noticeable in crepons. Yokes are becoming a feature of the fashion. Sometimes they are of vel vet or guipure with a bodice of silk shirred to them, nnd quit as often they are of fino linen or mull and lace. This is of quality nd variety suited to the occasion on which tho bedico is intended to be worn. A tilant't Trouble. Ho was a giant in size, the picture of health and strength, with iron muscles, a famous athlete. He pursued histratnlng excessively to hold his fume, and doubtless trained too much. With all his exerclso the mnn was nervous, restless nud sleepless, aud thou racking pains took hold upon him. He could not understand his condition, for neuralgia had set in when hethoiighthlmself lu perfect health. So in all conditions!! will take hold of the nerves. They had been en feebled in bis case, and they aro enfeebled iu n thousaud eases iu as many different ways. He was well advised nnd followed directions of experienced people. Soon his nerves began to be toned and quieted nud in a short timethe paiuseeiutedaltogether. Ho had used St. Jacobs Oil freely and a cure followed, and so will It follow In all caw itid conditions. One-sixth of the postal department bul aess in Loudon is conducted by women. Dr. Kilmer's Bw amp-Boot euro all Kidney nnd Bladder trouble Pamphlet and Consultation free. Laboratory Biughamton. N. Y. Tho savings of the working classes of Great Britulu amount to 41,'i()0,000,00 Deafness Cannot be Cared by local application", as they cannot reach tha uiheascd imi-tioQ of the ear. '1 here is only one way to cure Deaf ness, and that U by couatilu tional remedied. iJcafuers is cauard by an in flamed condii inn of the mucous lining ,h Lui-tachiau Tube. When Ibis tube gelt in. flamed you have a rumbling bound or Imper fect beaiiui-. aud when it is entirely rled Deafness is llio result, and unices the inflaiu iimtion can bj taken out and this tube re stored to Its minimi condition, bearing will be destroyed forever; nine caes out ten are caused by catarrh, which is nothing but an in named condition of the mucous surfaces. We will uivo One Hundred Dollars for any case of II. af ness (caused by catarrh) that run. nut bo cure I by Uail's (JaUrru Cure. Scud fur circuiuis, free. m-c , J' r""" Co.. Toledo, O. fSTSold by Druk-gum, lie. W lieu Natura Needs assistance it may ba best to render it promptly, but one should remember to use even the most perfect remedies only when needed. Tho best and most simple and gentle remedy le the Syrup of Fig manufactured bytUefali tirnls Fig j iup Co. BrothorlT Fcellin ol An!. A naturalist who has studied the ways of ants, writes Olive Thorno Miller, found thnt somo of them feel friendship and pity for suffering, nnd he tells it thus: "One day, watching a small column of these nnts, I placed a small stono. on ono of them to securo it. Tho next thnt approached, ns snon as it discovered its situation, ran backward iu an agitated manner, mil soon communicated tho intolligonco to tho others. They rnshod to tho rescue. Homo bit nt tho stone nnd tried to move it. Others seized tho prisoner by tho legs, and tugged with Ftich foroo that I thought tho logs would bo pulled off; but they per severed until they got tho captive free. I next coverod one op with n pieco of clny, leaving only the ends of its antennae projecting. It was soon discovered by its follows, which set to work immediately, and by bit ing off pieces of tho clay soon liber ated it. The excitement and ardor with which they oarriod on thoir un flagging exertions for the rescue of thoir comrado oould not have been greater if they had boon human boiuge." Moths. Moths aro not generally valued. Yet there are a few pooplo who really spend time and money to collect thorn. The moth hunter goes out with net and bottlo of chloroform. Moths nro very fond of sugar, and nro sometimes caught by what tho professionals call "sugaring." Sugar is dissolved in beer and ap pliad to the truuks of trees, and whon a light is thrown on tho tree tho moth will drop iuto the not beneath. Tho eggs of tho moth are gathered by many and carefully guarded through all stages until the moth isdovolopod. Some moths lay only ono egg, otlios two or three on tho plant they love best. Some moths lay hundreds ot eggs on one loaf. New York Mercury. Wedding and Funeral Together. John A. Chittenden, of Ashley, Mich., on his death bed, requested that his sister, Louise, and her be trothed, Charles A. llolaidon, be married over his coffin. Tho wodding originally was to have taken place some weeks henoe, but the date was ohangod to comply with tho wish of the dying man, and whilo he lay in his coffin his sister and her sweetheart joined hands over the coffin while tho Roy. John Glnse performed the mar riage ceremony. Then ho delivered the funeral oration, and tho newly married couple oceupiod tho first car riage behind the hearse. Cloveluud Leader. Highest of all in Leavening Tower. ABSOLfUTElLV PURE Timely Warning. Th great success of the chocolate preparations of the house of Walter Baker & Co. (established in 1780) has led many misleading mm of their name, labels, and wrappers, waiter Baker 8c Co. are the oldest and largest manu facturers of pure and high-grade Cocoas and Chocolates on this continent. No chemicals are used in their manufactures. Consumers should ask for, and be sure that they get, the genuine Walter Baker &, Co.'s goods. WALTER BAKER & CO., Limited, DORCHESTER, MASS. Seasonable Bargains " sounds like overcoats or household goods, but this time 'tis Guns, Pistols, Revolvers, Bicycles, &c. Johnny gets his gun about this time of year, and to know just what to get and WHERE TO GET IT. is why the Lovell Arms Co. put out their New Mammoth Catalogue. It will tell you lots of things you knew before lots that you didn't know. It's a sure money saver for a bargain hunter. It says nothing about a few Second-hand Bicycles, but they are bargains too and should be applied for at once. JOHN P. LOVELL ARMS CO., Ta4' Sols l). S. Agent for "STAR" AUTOMATIC PAPCK PASTENtiR and WILLIAMS TVPE WRITER. Agents wanted in every city and town for the Lovell Diamond and Excel Una of bicycles. " A Good Tab Will Bear Tcliin Use SAPOLJO germ 1 if e The doctors tell 1 -n-ua ) o, UMl U list, MS C arc everywhere: in the air. in ihn wntnr ; . clothes, rnnnev! tint there, thrive and grow, if they find anything to thrive on Consumption is the doeri-i f !... i... ...1 l - . KAAis wiiweineuing is - " ; -' ""'-s1-11 viuu iorce. 5cots Emulsion, with hypophosphites. means the rT"'",1".1 Ul ,1U11S fcirengtli to overcome germ me fct-i-m Ihese tiny little drops 1ULU 1MI KVCTPIYI r-iV-. wwi "" Ac-iicsn unci re-invigorate it. Whether you succeed with it or not depends on how trOOdastart t iPO-ermcld 11 'r ii r- . , b-.'-oiuui.uim uuw caieiuuy you can live, the shnt-tpst wo,, i i.i. .i . Ti . ------- Ihe gain is often slow. h ct, Min.es SCOTT & A NEW LEASE OF LIFE. in norm iik.ai.tii at HvrrcrTuj TIIKKK YK.AIH OF A (IK. Miss Cornwall's Wonderful Recovery ol Health ltcennie Well In Two Months Alter nn Illness of lx Years. Front Ihr Jliginlii; A'cio Haven, Conn, In this rapid ngi of ours when so many men nnd women am old at fifty, one wh has lived throe-tpinrlors of a century, and llien, after debility and suffering, regains health and vigor, must ho regarded with a feeling akin to wonder. A New England lady has been found who has had this ro markablo experience. In tho family of Clarence Williams, a Che shire, larmer ou tho Meriden road, Cheshire, Ct., lives Miss Cornelia Cornwall, a lady seventy-three years of nge. For several years JIIss Cornwall's health lias been de dining very rapidly, caused by a general de bility. Her friends feared that the respected Indy had not long to live; hut n kind Provi dence directed the aged lady, nnd In n news paper advertisement MIbs Cornwall road about Dr. Williams' Pink rills a few boxes of which she procured at once, and with tha result thnt is best told in her own words. "About six years ago,'' Miss Cornwall be gan, "my health commenced to fall, I suf fered from loss ol appetite and pains In dif ferent parts of my body. My condition gradually grew worse until niv limbs wero apparently unable to bear my weight, nnd I could no longer go up stairs without the as sistance of some one. "I consulted phvsielnus who prescribed medicines for my blood. These I continued to take for several months, but without nny effect. The sense of feeling in my lower llnilis seemed to be leaving me, nnd I begatt to four that it was hopeless to look for a cure. I was still suffering terribly from the palu through my body, when I chanced to rend the story of a cure thnt had been effected with tho use of Dr. Wlllinms' rink Pills for Pn'c People. I discovered that the town druggist hero had noun on sale, so I sent immediately to tho headquarters In Schenec tady, N. Y., nnd secured two of tho boxes of t lie j. Ills. "Last December I commenced using tho pills regular! v, nnd a month after I had been inking them,' I felt greatly benefited by their t se. The feeling in my llmlw enmo hack ngnin, nud in two months I was able to go about the house as I had been accustomed to a year bofore. Now, as yon can see, I am enjoying good health. The pallor in my face was removed by the pills. A numlier ot my friends in tho neighborhood were eom plalulng of symptoms somewhat similar to my own, and I recommended that they tnko Dr. Williams' Pink Pills. They did so, anil they tell mo thnt they havo been very much benefited bv their use. I still coutlnuo tu take tho pills, though there is not so much necessity for them nt present. As n purifier ot the blood, I consider tlu Dr. Wlllinms' Pink Pills n wonderful medicine." Pink Pills nro sold by nil dealers, or will bo sent post pnld ou receipt of price, (50 cents a box or six boxes for t'i.fiO they nro never sold In bulk, or by the 100) hviiddressing Dr. Wlllinms' Medicine Co., Schenectady, N. Y. Nowadays It takes nineteen meu to make a cont, Momarhlc means a m-dlcine th it strengthens the stom ach, or to lie brlof.it roenu ltipatis Tnlmlci. If you nre troubled with a weak atom tch and cannot digest your food use ltlpaus Tubules, One gives rebel. - Latest U. S. Gov't Report no bwdfci0 to the placing on the market and unscrupulous imitations 3 The Catalogue Is sent by mall en receipt of to cents In stamps or money. A Tftics." Use Sapolia I germs iood, . ... i live on. by lUliy-llb&UU too weak to conquer them. -life. wnn tlie odds in our of fat-food make their favor. way 4 K 1 ... .yj ncuiui is uie patient 1 BOWNE. ,.... New one. Yorl?
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers