A TTomrtn Wrer, From Talm Bench, FIa., oomeo the tory of a woman thirtr-eifrht years of go, native of .Tnmaicn, who has for twenty ypara lon cnaRed M inb mariuo diver. Her linnbnml, Iilro Oomee, came from ft Spanish family of ponc;o direr. While at Fanchal, Madeira, in the Canaries, hn become acquainted with an Bullish dier, who Rave him Home ideas a to mibmatine exploration under eientifo auspices, lie went to Central America, and met his love and his bnsinesn partner of tv Uy at Colon, on the iathmns. She fell into his lino of life easily, an I for ten yeai s has done the better part of the hazardous work which he, as a manager, contracts for. She carries less armor than he does, and has in Tented a helmet with n system of air pipes that she and her husband alone hold the secret of. It is claimed that with this helmet, securing her breath ing connection with the upper world, ehe can wander almost at will thiongh a sunken wreck. In ft recent inter Tiew with the editor of ft Jacksonville Dewspaner she sars that in (hn vnnru of 1000 descents to the ocean's bed. within the ten yers that she has been in the biiHines shehas never met a sea monster or any other fish that wonld not fly from the merest wave of her arm. New Orleans rioaynne. Homy TI.'s Miops. When the tomb of Henry VI., of Sicily, who died in 11S7, was opened at Talerrao, forty years ago, it was fonnd that on tha feet of the dead monarch were shoes whoe rippers were of cloth, embroidered with gold nd pearls, while the soles were of cork. St. Louis Republic. I - ?otin1 Sleeper. Pome very hardy, warm blooded peoplo forget that summer is gone and uleop sound ly under lislit covering, even While Jm-k Frost is painting weird pictures on the rnes. But we sit learn hv experience, and they find tnnmselves in the morninir sufW tng with stiffness, soreness, lnmeliarls, stifT neek or rmnr-ulur enmps. Still, experience tfMK-he?. Lii evervlwlv else, thev get n bottle of St. .T.colis Oil, rub well with it and are cured. Warmer clothing, Hnd the frost shut out, thfy snore niruin happily, while from the towers of winter's storm clouds ths eentry cries, ."All's well.'' Ex-rresl.lent Harrison is making 83,000 year out of his law ntctioe. Dr. Kilmer's SwAvr-Koot curoj ail Kiilney ant liladder trouble Pamphlet tn t Consultation frea. Laboratory Binhaimon. X. I. An order for 1090 new freicht cars lias keen pU.oJ by the Erio Railway. Catarrh Caaaet Be Cared Withloral !' iostnns, s tliey cannot reach the seat of the dies-. Catarrh ia a hln-I np runstitntionai disvase, and ia nir to cum It you nmt taa Internal rrmed:pj. Hall's Catarrh I ure Is tnkeii internsilv, and c?s di rectly.m tha ami murotiaVurfaca. Hail's Calarrh Cure ;s no? a qu.-icfc medicine. It w as preacribiHl by one of the best plivsirians In this fonntry for year.- nr.d i a rKulHr prescription, t isconip.ise I of fielirst tonics known, com. blDed wii.'i the best blood lmrifiers, acting di rectly on the mucous surfacs. Tha perfect combination of the. two ingredients is what produces such wonderful results in curing ca tarrh. Send for tetiinoninls free. F. 1. ('HRtr Co., Props., Toledo, 0. . Isold by drmrs.ats, price Too. Hammond. Ial., has closet its public Khools on account of the diphtheria. I When Mature Seeds assistance it maybe best to render it promptly.but one should remember to use even the most perfect remedies only when needed The best and most simple and gentle remedy is theSj-rupof Kins manufactured by the Cali fornia Fin Svrap Co. Keeps Men Poor. The clerk michi be "bos" if he had the head lor it. Ihe brains Hre there, but they don't seem to work. The tmuhle usually begins in the stomach. Indiiretion keeps men poor be cause they don't know they have it. but Imsu Ine snmeth.ni; -le. hip.ng TaVilt-s insure sound clnteMion and a clear hend. Tbey res ulaie the entire system. Ask the druggist for a box. FITS stopped free by Da. K-.iNk's Giifat EHVS Kkstokkh. No tits after first day's use. Marvelous cures. Treatise and Si.uu trial bot tle free. Ir. Klin-.icll Arch St.. Phtia.. pa. Mrs. Window's Soothim; fcvrup for children teethinj;, suftens the turns, reduces inilamnia uon, allays pain, cures wind colic. 25c.a bottle Plsn's Cure for Consumption is an A No. 1 Asthma nirdicine.-W. H. Williams. Antiocb, Ills., April 11, If afflicted with sore eyes use Hr. lsaaoThomr eon t tj e-wotcr. Druggists sell at 'Jic per bottle. Your Happiness Depends upon a healthy body and a contented mind Your Health X &eriuUily in danger ii.iK.u l l i i . rich, red and pure. ood's Sarsaparilla Is the One True Blood Purifier Prominently in the rublic Eye. Hood's Pills :;:Tttbsiimu- To forget the name, just ask for the best Self-Raisins' Buck. wheat. YOU WILL GET t Of course. WHY I AM AN A. P. A. A !' k. 1 lime-, I., J .one. hnK,.i, , 1IT Ill.l10.li,'. Km. ,i, , V Y All c,U 1IUU U.Wrre . J'd.f, t.Uli. V) mt U.J.; 41U .T 10', Mialu.e ul'l t a h lull 1 M. Jlnpauy a. I .r .er oni ' . ..... J ..;u lj U'U. UM f"- If I You I Happen J is 't lj.ij rf .'r' tiM lAiti I I Hatioxs roi; uiLB nonsRs. JTorees tbnt are not worked ia the winter may be kept in excellent con dition on good clover ha,T alone. This bay u-s more proteine jn'it than wheat, urn! more fat, and these two elements of the food ure most needed by animals that are not in active nse. If timothy liay is used, two quarts flailr given at noon of coarsely chopped corn, with bran, or of oats nnsronnd, would bo ample. Exercise is indispensable however, to health, and this will be afforded by the nse of a yard for a few hours at midday. New York Times. SMALL POTATOES. fcave the small potatoes for the hens. After they arc cooked they w ill require no prepnra'ioD, as tho hen cau rasiiy pick them io pieces. In the winter Een?ou they will serve greatly to assist in keeping the hens in good condition, and as such potatoes are Unsalable, they can be mado just as Valuable as the large ones if converted into eggs and sent to market. Potatoes will bo cheap this wiutor, and the best use the smaller oues cau bo put to is in the kettle, to be fed where they can take theplaceof something more expensive. Maine Farmer. rrtnso Tcnxips roii cattlr. Unless there are too many animals to be fed, the easiest way to" feed any kind of roots safely is to slice them with a fcbnrply ground spade in a shallow box. A bushel of the roots may thus be cut iu thin slices or small fragments in a minute, nn.l as a makes a pood feed, it is a quick war of preparing the roots for feeding. It is not safe to Liv r.iols whole 11. n pieces nre apt to be too large to BWHi.ov. a macnino for pulping roots so that they may be fed with cut hav or str.iw mar h. ,iiir.-h.irt.l fi. tl il or S I or one lu-iy bo ma le by filling the surfact) of a roller a tint in li. nmeter with small chisel shaped pieces o, iron, ground sharp, and twing this in a box havinc s'.otiin? sides. t. tin. bottom, so that the roots are out into small fragments. The box should be made of such a sire that, thn e.-nta .;ll lodge at the m.ic, and not slip to the bottom until they are grated into pulp. A midline of tuts kind need not cost more than two dollars, and w ill do all the work of a mora costly odc. American Farmer. ritrXB GKAPEVLNiiS TO GET GOOD rni'IT. Much of the pruning required bv grapevines cho 1)3 done in the fall and during mild days in winter. It is not liett, however, to finish tho work then. Dead wood aud BtiperHiious old wood can be cut away, aud the weaker canes uot tuited foi bearing next f eason may be shortened to two or three buds. One of these b ids, if properly man aged, will rues'. likely mako "a good cane of bearing sizo tho next season, to produce fruit the year after. The strong canes selected to pro duce fruit may as well be left until March. It will be light work to short en them to half their length or less, when the other pruning is out of the way. In pruning these strong canes be-, fore winter is over, some of the buds moet desired for fruit might receive injury from extreme cold; they are much less likely to be hurt if left un pruned until tho severs weather is mostly over. The necessity of pruning the vines exihts by reason of the great produc tiveness of most of the best varieties. If left unpruned, twice as much fruit will set as the vine can bring to per fection, aud the fruit will not only be inferior, but the vine will be injured permanently in tho case of some kinds. It will be understood that the term "cane" relersto wood of the previous season's growth; the wood which, if strong enough, will bear fruit the suc ceeding year. Pruning is not to be done when the ground is frozen, an I not to be done when the vines bleed. National Stockman. SUGGESTIONS ABOUT BULB. Always procure bulbs as soon as possible in the fall, advises Eben E. Kexford. This because it is important that they should be planted so early that a complete root growth may be made before the coming of the winter. The feticcess of next epring depends largely ou the thoroughness with which the work is done. (JooJ roots mean fine flowers. Have your beds ready for the bulbs, eo that you can pluut them immediate ly alter receiving them. A bulb dries ont rapidly when exposed to tho air, and it is important that it should go into the ground fresh and plump. Have the bu'.b bed well ilruiued. If it is not naturally to, provide artiticiul drainage. Have the foil very fine and mellc w. You cannot work it over too much. If rather heavy with clay, add sand or loam to lighten it. Mnke it rich with old decomposed manure from tho cow yard. Nothing elee iu the rhape of a fertilizer suits a bulb to well. On no acconut ute fresh manure. Iu buying bulbs alwaysget the best. The bit is the cheupt-ht iu tho cud. J J ' imt eouliuo your puruhuhe to epriog-rlowering sorts. He sure to plant tome summer uud full blooming lilies. t'e Mire to plant some bulbs, if you have none at present. If those who have never p,rovu bulbs could fully uu.lt rtunl the amount of pleahure to be derived from them I hiu quite sure teu would bu planted where one ia planted now. Hy making a judicious helec-liou it ii an easy matter to buvtt llowers Irom the melting of rpriug mow through April and M ly to the coming of the curly summer (lowers. i'riuiio Farmer. sruu.E 'i'i! uitr is u.vrtcn. Warm htablch and proper feed are eeM'Uti.il in Keeping caitlo in a thrii jug cuu J t ion during winter, but lew iiv up to their kuowlgdge of these facts because of carelessness and neg lect, save Allen Morse. To do this ia tho easiest and cheapest way, if th stock are tot. provided with warm, comfortable stables, provide them at once. It can be done as cheaply now as at any season of the year. Nail boards over cracks and ceil the inside1 with matched boards. I stuffed mind between the walls and ceiling with swamp bay with good results. An in side and outside door should be pro vided, and the former should be shut tight. The cost of suoh nu outlay on a stable firty feet long will be about $15 ; it will savo that value in fodder tho first winter. If water freeKes in the stable provide a heater At a cost of 85 to $10 1 you will willingly give thfl wood and labor to see tho cows drink. If both a warm barn and warm water cannot bo provided) warm the stables, even though the stock has to drink ice water. It is far more comfortable, too, milking without an overcoat and grasping icicles. The dairyman With a silo need not be told Whit to feed his stock. Those without one should not compel tha stock to cat straw, as it is poor econ omy. Good Clover hay( or at least that Which is part clover, and small ration of grain will keep stock iu good condition. Heavy grain feeding will not pay in bntter makiag notwith standing good authorities say it will, but the stock will be in hotter condi tion, the manure richer, and it will be a plcasiire to see stock sleek and fat. Keep the animals well bedded. This will pay in the added comfort both to yourself and stock, and also in tho value of the manure, and that ia by far the best nse a farmer can make of bis straw. If owuiug more than can be used in such a way, sell it and put the value of it in meal. It ia an un disputed fact that it pays in dollars and cents to mako stock comfortable and conteutcl. American Agricultur ist. TALKS ABOUT PLANTS. The tirao to prepare a wild e&rJon in a shady nook of the yard is in tho fall. Wild flowers carefully trans planted now will start in tho spring, and the collection can be added to from year to year, Une of the peculiarities of tha floral world is the evening primrose, which opens about 6 o'clock, p. m.. with an explosion, not very loud nor formida ble, but still quite perceptible to any ono who is watching the bud. It re- mains open all night. Objectionable trees are killed in tho best way by strippiug tha bark from them for a few feet from the ground just when the foilage is fully expanded in the sprius. L?ave the tree stand. as it will then continue to draw on the storehouse of tho roots for sup plies, without adding anything to it. w li-'n fall comes the roots aro ex hausted, and if the treo ba cut down then no sprouts are likely to succeed it. Wild hollies please so muchbv their bright berries in winter that many are tempted to plant them on this account. Cut it must not be forgotten that these shrubs are not all berry bearing. Some have male flowers only, and these nave no berries. The only safe plan is to see berries on a bush before planting it Hollies need close prun ing to make them live when trans planted. M. Zicharewiez, professor of agri culture at Vaucluse, has found by ex periment witn ainerent colored glasses that fruit is the finest and earliest when crown under clear glass. Orange glass produces an increase of vegeta tion, but at the cost of the amount of fruit, of the size and of its forward ness, v iolet glass causes the number of fruit to increase, at the expense of the quality. Red, blue and greeu aro hurtful to all kinds of vegetation. Garden and Forest says that B. F. Bush, of Independence, Mo., has reprinted from the State horticultural report of Missouri his list of the trees, shrubs and vines of that State. Two hundred and ninety-four species are described, a number which can proba bly be slight'y reduced. Betula popu lifolia, for example, which is admit ted doubtfully, probably does not grow anywhere west of the Mississippi Kiver. This list, too,' is enlarged by two hybrid oaks and by our chestnut, which is not an inhabitant of the region west of the Mississippi. Chi cago Times-Herald. FABM AND GARDEN NOTES. A cow can never be spoiled by too. much petting. Land plaster is the best disinfectant and absorbent for barn use. Have you provided a range of clover or rye for your hogs this winter? They need it Why buy a pig in a poke, or a cow, without knowing of tho value of her milk? Test it carefully before buy ing. Next to cleauliness, which is nex to godliness, nothing equals light and biiuKhine in tho way of sanitation in a stable. A ciean cauvas cover over the cream vut is sufficient. Great care should be taken to purify the canvas fre quently. When putting away tools for the winter see that care is taken that they do uot rust. Care is cheaper than new tools. If a cow's nose is hot and dry, or if she "loses her cu.l," it indicates a sick uuimul. The appetite is gone aud a tomo is needed. Feed the calves from pails kept scrupulously clean by scalding. The nulls should be fed at a temperature of ninety-eight degrees. F.very farm should have its hog lot, well stocked with good aniinalti. Good big dollars are throwu away everv j mouth on the farm where there are no liOgf. There is every iudioation that hogs will ooiumaud a higher pnoe in Octo ber than tucy mil get a mouth or two late. Get your hogs iu the best pos till khapv Hi soon. you cau. TEMPERANCE. A TB.rLF ALLtASCU. There Is Monrt Intlie ."troot. Oh.' whence 1IJ It flow? Tretul It utnlcr your feel; ni onrt bothers tfl know. But stop! Thi.j is Wo.vl that wa drawti from mnn's voln. Ami It cries unto (1o 1! A brother wa slnlu. If human, hi?'s hrother to you ami to me. Hut whore Is the uuilt' What black hand ill.! tho doeil? No ona ham! hns cause 1 this brother '.- to hlee.1. A triple allian.' , ro:n ir li an 1 iHit.p Hath murdered a brother; hath douo it for gold. The runis-ller first, for the rutmeilorV gain Was willing his brother by rum should be slain. Tho counell that gavo him the llconc to sell. rtn share 1 In tho pelt, an I is guilty a w.ul. Hut nut on these only the ours " 'of blo.iJ rests The eoun.'ll but a.'te.t th" pr"iple's holiest' Th" i nsellersold, but by lloense yon note; The t'.uineil was only a coimell by vote. This triple alliance, all sharing tlio guilt. Mic"t answer at last for tho blool thtw;i spilt. Ham's 11 tu. eosT or a quart or beep.. Niit long ago two train la l"ii with pil crim were on their way to thi-shriuo of "La Bonne Rte. Anne" ttho O wt St. Anu.) in the Province of Quebec. While the Ib-st was staying at the station of l'raii?'s Pon 1, the second dashed into It. The enzine drirer of tho latter, one Mol.oo.l. not a total abstainer, only a "moderate" drinker, a liiart of beer at Artha'askn, a station outhj way. I lie price ol it Is as follows: 1. Pamage to engine an I cars. Add tin jost to the prlco of mat quart of beer. 2. The rallwnv eompanv has already paid In settlement of rlalns fur da'naites. No doubt it will have more to sittle. That makes the prlco of that quart of bturso much tho greater. Should It end In a law.uit, tho cost to tho loser must bo addo 1 1 the pried of that rpinrt of beor. s. sutTcrings or the wounded, in nianv instances awful. Add tho money value oi these to the price of that quart of boor if you can. a. 4. Cost or attendance on inJ wounded. Add that to tho price of that quart of beer, fi. Several passengers killed. Add the money vain of their lives to tha prlco of that quart of beer tf you can. fl. f uneral expcu.s. Add tn.vii to til) price of that quart of heor. I. sorrow tor tno toss ot lovo i onesKino i. Add tho money value of that to the price of that quart of beer if you ean. a. lostol tho iniiiMt. Al t thai to mo price of that quart of be-r. y. Tho engine driver. Md. od, was anion'; tho killed. He solemnly promise I tu com ply with tho rules of thj cjinpauv. One of thoso forbids persons in Us einplovnent Irinklng Intoxicating Honor while on duty. M.-Leod broke his promise when he got that luart of beer. H" has. therefore lert n Mot .m his name. Add the m n y vaiiif ot that blot to the price of that quart of be?r !f you can. One wav nnd another, that quart o; bier has proved to bj a fearfully easily one. tlain s Horn. ALCOHOL ASP HHtUlTISU. Ono item iu lr. KIciinrdsons report of his practice in the Loudon Temperance Hos pital refers to the treatment of rheumatism without nleoho'. He savs: Out of seventv-jnn cases ot a'utc or sub acute rheumatism, the Inro majority acute anil attcn-ie t with temperatures moving up to 104 degrees Fahrenheit, sixty-nine recov ered, nud two, although they were dis charged without b 'in,- put on tho recovery list, were si far relieve. I that a few days' change In the country air n'emnl all that was required to induce full r.Hrorntion. Comparing tho experience of the treatment oi acuto rheumatic dise.aso without ale hoi with that which I have previously olsrvod with alcohol, I can have no hesitation in de claring that it is of the greatest a tv.tnta ;e lo follow total abttneuao absolutely in this disease. The pain an 1 sw -Ming of joints is more quickly relieved under a'j-tlne'iee, tho fever falls more rapidly, there is less fre quent relapse, and there is quicker recov ery. In brief, experience of treatment of rheumatic fever miuus alcohol presents to me as much novelty as it doss pleasure, and I am convinced that if any caudid member of tho profession could have wi nessed what I havo witnessed in this mat ter, he would agree with me that nlcohol In rheumatic fever, however acute. Is altogether out of place. I am als i under tho conviction, though I express it with great reserve, that in acute rheumatism, trented without alcohol, tho cardia l compli cation, endocardial and pericardial, are much less frequently developel than when alcohol is used." Champion of Progress. TOE AWFUI. HESCLT. A gentleman relates th following; A min ister ot the gospel pointe 1 out to me a young girl in the lunatic asylum. A more beauti ful girl I think I never saw, but she was r iving mad, and her hands were confined to keep her from doing herself Injury, Tho minister said: "That girl was a tnembar of my church, and 1 believe she was a Christian. Her father was a duiukar I. 8'ao would come to me and ask: 'What shall I do? What can I do? I will do anything to save my father, but Iain hopeless. Why, sir, ho abuses my mother so brutally that I shall go mad. I will not leave her. and she will not leave my father.' "Ono day that man oamo homo raving mad with drink. Ho soizod his wife and dashed her to the floor, and with his fist be gan to beat her upturned face till bis hand was bloody to tho wrist, Tho girl was there. What did tho do? What could she do? It was her mother wbomshosnw thus abused. Her brain reeled. 8ho rushed into a woodhouse, seized an nxo and struck her father with it several times. As her father fell dead, she weut mad, nnd not a siuglo ray of light has penetrated tho ilarkucss of her mind from that time to this." DBINXINO IN KKASL't. Dr. Max Nordau, in n recent book on the drinking habits of tho French people, says that while one rarely sees a French laborer intoxicated, they are constantly under the Influence of alcohol, and ho gives tho fol lowing sketch of tho daily drinking of a Par isian laborer. Early iu tho morning ho takes a glass of liquor, oil hur a bitter or a strong kind, which ho calls 'brulegoster" (throat-burner), or "eassepoitrino" (chest breaker). Iu connection with it ho gener erally eats a piece of bread an 1 a bowl of soup. About 11 o'clock be takes his break fast, consisting of a ragout or some otiier dish containing meat, but iu insufficient iuautiti.'.-. with an enormous iuas ot bread aud one or two pints of wine. H-) invaria bly llnishes breakfast with coffee, followed tiy a gloss of cognac, whi.'h is calle I -Ma goutte" (the drop), or "la riuce guide" (tho throat rinser). At or 7 o'clock dinner is taken, consisting of n.V",'.Maili soup, a lil liputian quantity of meat, a salad, bread, two pints of wine, a cup of coffee, and "la goulta" (the drop). A PIUESl S LXI'EBlEScE. Iu a recent letter lo tho New York Tri bune, the Itcv. Sylvester Moloue, tho vet eran rn'lor of St. Peter uud Paul's Church, Brooklyn, said: "When, on account on poor health, 1 revisited my native laud, in llil. f gavo us a constant advice, and preached nublicly, that no ono should b-aro Iroluud for America who believed tnat alcohol was a necessity. I told them that iu America It was a poison; that our climate forbade its usa, that it sunt thousnndsof Irish people to an tiutimely grave. My experience bore of nearly sixty years, with my reading ou tho subject, has lei mu to such conclusions." IT hHOUltkS LIFt. Thero is uo doubt that intemperance shortens life. In a recent medical work on tho digestive organs and faculties, a noted physician suys: "1 no duration of human life tuny bo ascertained by the puisatiou ot tho body. Say, u mau lives seventy y.iars, hia h-art beating sixty to the. minute, the. pulsa tions in that time, loot up to two and a quar ter billions. If, by intemperance or uny other causo, ho raises pulsations to seventy tlvo a minute, the samu number ut pulsa tions would bo finished in llity-six years." TfcMl'EUANl'E NEWS ASII NuTKS. Wlieu ruin was iuvente I tho dovil full that he could tuku a little rest. The girls' seminary Iu Honolulu, luu Y, W, C, T. U. of uvssr sixty msmberti j ' Scotland's Singular Industry. Tho drop in the production of pe trolottm in this conntry has bad tho ef fect of stimulating an almost extinct industry n Scotland, the distillation of Oil from shale, Fifty years ago it Was of groat importance And was even worked under royalties in thfl United States, where there were between fifty and sixty coal and shale distilleries. While the producers were at the height of their prosperity, the natural oil fields were opened and the old busi ness went to pieces, so that only two Scotoh companies were left in tho field. Like most manufacturing en terprises in Sootlnnd, it was tho waste products which turniBhcd the profits of the industry. The mineral distilled is a bituminous shale or hard clay, and the product of the distillition, of Which 67,000,000 gallons wer mado last year, bears little resomblanoe to coal oil. The waste "products which have contributed to tho continued ex istence ot the industry are parafllno wax and sulphate of ammonia. The value of tho former has been affected seriously by the output of the distiller ies in this country, but the ammonia is produced only from shale, and the fluctuations in its price have decided very largely the profits of tho business. The crude shale oil lias to bo distilled like petroleum and the lamp oil refined from it has a higher flash point and density than that mado from pe- trolenm. As the prico of oil has fallen, the shale distilleries have improved the retorts and stills to an extent which has resulted in the reduction of the cost of the finished oil to a little over four cents a gallon, about one sixth of the oost thirty years ago. It is impoosible not to admire the dog ged determination and enterprise! which, year after year, has caused the acconnta of the Scotch companies still working to show a saving in working1 expenses that has practically neutral- ized the loss from falling prices. New York Telegram. A Iluire rtiinpkln. A single pumpkin vine ou Mrs. M. A. Lee's lot, in Freehold, Kan., covers one-fourthof an acre, nourishes seventy-four large pumpkins and has TV) blossoms that will do business uutil frost PRESIDENT OF TWO BANKS. P. . WEITINO, MtKSIDKNT OF TIIK HANK OK WOULKSTKH, N. V., A.M OK TOI.KIIO, I.., TM.LS HOW II K SrFFKKKll. Thought nt Times lie Would Ilava to lve up the Fight, but rrsver anc 'and Prlent-e Conquer Ills Trouble. From ihe Hrpu'ilican, Cooptrttova, X. . The people of the present are traveling a pace that would surprise the good old wives and knlckerbockered grandfathers of a hun dred years ago. Things aro not done by de grees or stages In these days, but with a rush aud hurry and says "no" to every setback. In fact, this Is tho great loading trait of tho American people, and It nover falls to at tract the attention ot other nations. This constant hurry and ever present busi ness pressure has not been without its effort upon the nerves of tho race, and every year witnesses the incmaso of nervous disease, Me.ljcul science, however, has been kecidng abreast with the time, and from the very de mands mauo upon it mere nave sprung new departures nnd discoveries. A reporter recently met Mr. PhllipO. Weit Ing, who Is President of the Bank ol Worces ter, and of the Toledo City Hank, of 'i'ololo, Ia., In the handsome little lowu ol Worcester among the hills of Otsego County, N. Y., anil conversation drifted to the present topic. Mr. Welting had been a sufferer from locomotor ataxia for twenty-live years, something which none but those who havo themselves been afflicted by tho disease can appreciate. Knowing that he had travele 1 far aud wide in search of somo bcnelleial treatment for his affliction, tho reporter asked tho President to give some facts tu hiiowu case. Ho re sponded willingly. Yes. '-I suffered twenty rive years from locomotor ataxia, " Mr. Welt lug said, "and during all that tune I was seeking some relief. Well, I found It iu Dr. Williams' Pink Pills. Of course I havo it yet, to some extent, but I'm feeling better and uiy legs are stronger thau ever before. I never did havo much faith In either doctors or medicines, and my long siege of suneriug helped alung this distrust in Ihom. Why, I could scarcely walk any distance at all, and could not stand long without my knees yield ing beneath my own weight. A person can not coueeive of the buffering such astute brings upou thb sufferer. "I would go to Florida every year, and visited almost every health resort In tho country. I went to the Sanitarium ut Iowa Falls, Iowa, and also tho very best In Micht f ,n, but they didn't do me any good. 1 took no lull course ot their baths and massage pud rubbiug, without receiving the least jonollt. I thought I would havo to give up all hope of ever curing myself. Fiunlly I heard a good deal abuut Pink Pills through common report; and although, as I said, I had no faith iu medicines ot any liind, I was induced to try tlieai. Well, I "took several boxes without deriving any apparent benefit, but was advised to keep it up. Mo, when I weut to Florida that year three years ago tins summer I took a large quautity with me. After some months I stopping taking them; but my legs had lieeome so much stronger aud my ataxia bad been so moder ated that 1 could staud and walk better than I had done for years. Pink i'ills did It, aud you can well linagiue how I fuel toward them. They did what nothing else could do." During tha entire interview Mr. Welting remained standing and evidently did uot ex perience tiie slightest discomfort, in spite of tiio protracted eriod of bis nttlictiou. Al though well along iu years, ho is still ac tively eugagoj iu llnauciul enterprises that nuceasitato a vit-t amount of mental aud ner vous energy. KuSluo it to suy he lacks neither, but makes bis influence felt where ever ho is known. Hcbles being l'r. sldeul of the Worcester Dank, Mr. Wcitiug is also President of thoToledo City Ii ink. of Toledo. Iowa, whore his advice und souud business policies are a eontroling element. His commendation of Pink I'ills ciuno un solicited, and witli tho siuccr.ty of ono who .fells what ho say. Dr. Williams' Pink Pills contain, in a con densed form, ull the elements necessary to give new life aud richness to tho blood aud restore shattered nerves. They aro also a sMjcillo for troubles peculiar to females, such as suppressions, irregularities ami all forms of weakness. They bull I up tha blood, ,m, restore tho glow of health to pale and sallow cheeks, iu men they t -fleet a radical cure iu ull cases arising froiu niuutal worry, over work or exce.-,es of whatever nature. Pink Pills are sold iu buxi-s (never iu loo.-o bulk) ut 60 cents a box, or six boxes (,,r .fs), m, muy bo had oi all druggist , or direct by Ullll Iron Dr. Williams' ilciiciun CoUipc.nv, b'.'lioUo'.'UJy, S. X, WW Highest of all in Leavening rower. Latest U. S. Gov't Report I 1 VVCyy VJ7V A SoTt'l Hrailaclio Cure. A Boston apostlo of physical culture says that an excellent and never-fau ing cure for nervous headache is the simple act of walking backward. Ton minutes are as long as is usually neces sary to promcnado. It sometimes, however, requires more than ten min utes to walk at all if one is very "ner vous." But it is not understood that it is necessary to walk a chalk line. And kind of walking will do, provided it is backward. It ia well to get in a long, narrow room, where the windows are high, and walk very slowly, plao ing tho ball of the foot on the floor aud then the heel, lies ides curing headache, this exercise promotes a graceful carriage. A half-hour's walk backward every day will do wonders towards producing a graceful gait. This is something like faith cure, which will not bo attempted by the advanced woman, who will tako no steps back ward. New Orleans ricavune. ADVAY'S Cure Sick Headache, Biliousness, Constipation, Piles AM). All Liver Disorders. RanWAY'4 I'll. I. S ri nurHr Trurtaliti.. mll.l nml rvllnble. i'niue ee.fei-t Pivestloo, c Jill plrtt slixirptlon ami tn-a thfiil rkulrllj. - ct. a no r. At r-rng-iUI i, or by mail. "Book ot Advice' free by nil I. ItADWA V Jk CO.. I'. O. ltoi SSV Xtw Yohk. N Y N V-4 I k-jiiiw wnrrt vnu wu l iu wu9r .Utiw and wo will explain llir biiiitu-M fully; rtruomtw wo guar .tl" a flear i'rtrt: nt $a trvrrv ia' ft. T. (Vital, "lUM-ii ruir; inif ai aatr, IU Lf, t fHIIlT, Mil HIM t ARE YOU A DEMOCRAT? Prealtlentl! Year. You will find Mil and comfort in THE CHICAGO CH P.DN H'LE. tlit jrrv:it ilt'trutcrnilo uwp!iitr of tha went. Dally vilttum 3 prytr. KoauU Mt'riptlon for iuh- thmi iii yiar Ht linn r:tw. N:itnplff copies five. THK I'HUuMtLE, lbt-lG'J Wti":ilncttu ml . i.'. ratfi. 111. 3 iJjnd w wilt show ton how to m . n. $ a dri t-ohnriy nrvi we iur ntiti Itt- work aud learh rit fr Timely Warning. The great success of the chocolate preparations of the house of Walter Baker & Co. (established in 1780) has led Smany misleading of their name, labels, and wrappers. Walter Baker & 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. 1 1 I 1 a I I .1 ,. M I . I . consumers snouiu as tor, ana do sure max they get, the genuine Walter Baker & Co.'s goods. WALTER BAKER & CO., Limited, DORCHESTER, MASS. COL. BEN J. 8. LOVELi.. Tnr u.John r'. I.ovku. ahui Co. VOL. LOVELlFs urccg.Jnl lijht for th Cuunriih-r nomination in the Sr'nmd Ma8irhnrttH District was thr. suhjert uf editorial com ment in thr Uitt'tn Journal ax futlotc: " Tha( animatt'tl and tttnhfmrn cuntest in th Second 'tnnriff-n' District end in th ltr.tioii of an admirable candidate, kd. Jienjamin l.uvetl of Weymouth. Col. I,c ell i one of the brSt-knoirn and hestdtked men in the Stnte, A nallant tddiert an eneryetir vian of bu.iinrt.i, a ttaiirart Jie publican . he ite.rri'rs i"etl of his party, tchich Ac hnhomt him trith more thttn one conspirtto mar!: of its confidence, aad has itttol" nn uiittke in 'jitumj him thit present not ti nation C"!. Laved has an urmy of irai'M jiersonal friends. lie xhttuld be carried inl i the Eserutirv Council by a recorddireak hi'i mninrit.' Is Like a Gosd Temper, O p f KJ Evervwhers. A HEALTH a perfect health, comfort, good-nature, baby-beauty. Scott's Emulsioj is the best fat-food baby can ?iave, in the easiest form. It supplies what he cannot get in his ordinary food, and helps him over the weak places to perfect growth, For the growing child it t's growth. For the full grown, new life. St itt r'u ft Sttll'i Bmultten uh,n jt It J . a ,Ki,,f mhli'tnlt. Scott & bowne, New York, au Drw&iiits. SoC, and ii. A Trr-h Nlnrlc Ceinntery. Upon upper Stone Lick Creek, near Milford, Ohio, MeOowon, a surveyor, while engaged in laying off farm prop erty, found a prehistorio cemetery of great extent, containing thousands of graves. V. K. Moorehuad, curator of the Slate Museum, opened some of thorn and found pipes, cipher ordin ate, brads, pearls, spear heads ami other trinkets. New ork Advertiser. A Noted Mm rod. Jeremiah Greening, a noted hunter, died recently at Milford, l'euu. Jie in believed to have killed more bears anil deer than any other mau in the State. Mr. (Ireening waa never sick until two weeks bofure his death. lie was seventy-five ytars old. New York World. Sir William Veruon Harcourt, tho English statesman, drives a pair of mules to his phaeton. TheOrentest Medical Dlicovery of the Age. KENNEDY'S Medical Discovery, DGXM.D KENNEDY, OF ROIBURT, MASS., Has discovered la one of our common pasture weeds a remedy that eurea every kind of Humor, Irom the worst Scrofula down to a oommou pimple. Be has tried It In over elerun hundred ' eases, and never failed except In two eases (both thunder humor). He has now la bis possession over two hundred cert I IV eates ot its Talue, all within twenty mile of Boston. Bend postal card for book. A benefit Is always experienced from tha Brst bottle, and a perfect onre Is warranted when tha right quautity Is taken. When the lunirs are affected It eansea shooting pains, Ilk needles passing through them i the same with the Liver or Howe's. Thin Is cause I by the dnota being stopped, and always disappears In a week after taking It. Uead tiie label. If the stomach Is foul or bilious It will ause squenmlxh feelings at first. No ohangn of diet ever neoeesary. Rat the best yon can get, aud enough ot It. Dose, one tabbwpnonful In water at bed time. Sold by all Druggists. SPECULATE das upward can i o rofl tab y ltivra.ru lu S BY KAIL FOMK I'll (KITS ofTrn trnlt. Vr; tor uartl-tUfir ant rt-rrmM. HOW A It D I.AIK. Hmrk Hrabcr, Nl llruntl ?ii'ri. N ink ftr 4ASTHW!A Vr-. PCPHAM S ASTHMA SPECIFIC ii.-i.T,"'i'!l'' le lira mlniiK. S.nil I 'Jt' ;ta.;vT '"r ritKcii ii . sniu 1 t . -..1 1 llrcffM u tfl. Hn B.. irnl puflpnlil I on rrfii't of to the placing on the market and unscrupulous imitations 1-he LOVELL DIAMOND and EXCEL LINE 0F BICYCLES Will lead the World In 1603 -The IQVFt.L DIAMOND easily takes this po sition through Its past glorious record, but with IMPROVED CONSTRUCTION Insuring light ness, durability and finish it will stand out alone without a rival. The 'FXPFL line Is designed to meet a popular notion that calls for a lower priced wheel. It Is durable, nicely finished and good value. Our BICYCLE CAT ALOGUE sent free ou appli cation will quote prices. The nt-w I.OVKf.L I'ATAI.OGl'Eof Guu, Unit-, Kc v.ilvri, llli-yolrs ami 4 purling O.toiis ot evry dnM.-riitiuu. ! imtiK-.l fur lOci'Uts in tiini4 or il vor. JOnN P. LOVELL ARMS CO., BOSTON, MASS. Al.KNTM W ANTl ll In nil ( ilira unit Tntll itbrrr limi nunc WRITE FOR PARTICULARS. iasoaa 1 El " It Sheds a BriEhir.ess health signal. The baby's mission, its work in life, is growth. To that little bundle of love, half trick, half dream, every added ounce of flesh means added happiness and com fort. Fat is the sicnal of
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers