L. fains With ft TonKcnnro, AMiiu it rniiiR in Anntrnlia, it cnn !o to with a verjornncp. North (Jure nulnnil f ntToreA from ft briof tor tndo (ho other lnr, nnil no frwer thnn iwt ul.r-six inrhrs of rnin fell dnrinpt tlip Morni. Townmlle bore the brnnt of the trouble, not ft liotiFO cvenping poiup !nmngp. Iron roofs flow throngh flip nir like nlicrta of jmper, cottagon collnrirril nnd phipe wont nnhore in fnet, $150,000 will hardly cover tho dnninpe done to this ono plnco, to pny nothing of loss of life. New York Vrmr. ' "" "'-JS P froi-itlpnt Isnno Lewis of Snbiniv, Ohio, is highly respected nil through that ppction. Me lifts lived in Clinton Co. 75 yenrf1, nnd 1ms boon president of tho Snbina r.nuk 20 years. Ho gladly ton titles to the mprit of Hood's Snrna parilln, nnd what he says is worthy Bttention. All brain workers find Mood's Snrsnpnrillft peculiarly adapted to their needs. It makes pure, rich, red blood, nnd from this comes nerve, mental, bodily and digestive strength. "I a n glad to say that Hood's Sarsapa rllla Is a very goo.l mojlclnn, ospoelally as a blood purifier. It ha? done na good miny tlms. For spvoral years I sufloroj greatly with pains of euralgia in ono cyo and nbout my temples, es pecially at night wiien I had boea having a hard day ot physicul aad mental labor. I took many romodios, but fouud help only ia Hood's Sarsuparilla which cure! me of rlte)umatim, nuuralgia nod headache. Hood's Sarsoparllla has prove! Itself a true friend. I also take Hood's Tills to keep my bowels regular, And like the pills very much." Isaao Lewis, Sabinn, Ohio. FU1 IrtJ Sarsaparilla Ts the OneTrus Blood Turlner. All Druffirlsts. tl I'reparcd only by C. L Hood ft Co., Lowell, Maia. Unnrl'e D!!! TO prempt, efficient nnd liOuU 5 I 1115 easy In etlict. Scents. Why Ho Was Affected. J A tongb. looking individual recently on trial in this city was defended by one of the most noted criminal law yers of the metropolis. The lawyer, in a voice hnsky with emotion, plead' cd with the jury that his client was e poor man driven by hanger to take email sum of money. All he wanted, said the lawyer, was enough money to . bpy bread, proof of which lay in the fact that ho did not take ft pocketbook ,..ancaining $300 that lay in the same bureau drawer. At this point the elo quence, of the attorney wns interrupt ed by the convulsive sobs of the pris oner, "What are yon crying for?" nsked the judge, "decors I didn't see der pocketbook in do drawer." And tho attorney was the only person io court who didn't senm to enjoy the re ply. New York Witness. THE STUDIOUS GIRL. AN INTERESTING LETTER FROM A YOUNG LADIES' COLLEGE. Bare IVtwecn the Sexes for Education, Ilcaltn Impaired by Incessant Study. The race between the sexes for edu cation is to-day very close. Ambitious girls work incessantly over their studies, and are often i i i . . i . jffK urougiit a nun, through having sacrificed the phy. sical to the mental. Then begin those ailments that must be . removed at once, or they will produce con- stnnt suffering. Head ache, dizziness, faint- slight vertigo, pains in the back and loins, Irregularity, loss of sleep and appetite, nerv ousness and blues, with lack of confidence; these are positive signs that wo men's arch enemy is at hand. The following letter was ' received by Mrs. I'inkhamin May, one month after the young lady had first written, giving symptoms, and Bbkinf advice. She was ill and in great distress of mind, feeling she would not hold out till graduation, and the doctor had advised her to go home. College, Mass. You dear Woman: I should have written to you before, but you said wait a month. We are taught that the days of miracles are past. I'ray what is my case ? I have taken the Vegetable Compound faith fully, and obeyed you implicitly and, am free from all my ills, I was a very, very sick girl. Am keeping well up in my class, aud hope to do you and myself credit at graduation. My gratitude cannot find expression in words. Your sincere friend, Mahv 1. S. Some r.t M.o nil.... o.2? girls are now c j using the Com-c pound. It ben- ft ehts them all. Lydia E. l'ink- 2J ham s Vegetable Compound is the only biife, sure and effectual remedy in such cases, as it removes the cause, purifies and invigorates the system, aud giver energy uu "UalHy. WALL PAPER FREE Would b darcr than A It AtoTI R, whtcli di nut require tu be taken oil to renew, uoe nut harbor icrnut but destroy! them and n tine can bt uh it on. S-.tJ by all paint dealers. Write lur card uilit famplci. LAflASTlHE CO., Grand Rapids, Mich. Cf3 frUM Ml V3 tsi . Our.ti h,n..t .L fLit tAikS. fl Ki Lai I o.itli Bjruii. lliittduKL VhN MATixu sTH.vwmcnnr tlants. When planting strawberries in tho spring it in important, if tho pestilato varieties are used, that tho stamiuato varieties, which will bo needed to fer tilize them, should blossom at the samo time. Thrro is a difference of two or three weeks in tho timo whon strawberry plnuts blossoms, nnd if an early pestilato an.l late hcrmaphrodito variety Aro planted sido by sido it may result in a great many of the stamens obortiug nnd producing no fruit, FEF.nrxa maiikft GARnr.ys. Tho old idea that fertilizers wcro not Adapted to market gardening, was long ago exrdodod by tho practical experience1 of tho big market gardeners nenr onr large cities aud by the truck farmers in tho South. Cabbage, celery, spinach nnd similar le.fy vegetables depend for quality upon quick growth, audit results only from plenty of soluble plant food in the foil. "A slow growth is usually tough, dull nnd rusty, while a quick growih is tender, bright and critp." Only by filling tho soil with de composed (tablo ninnni'o in excess of what tho crops need, can tho needed f apply of available plant food bo ob tained from mannre. Usually it is cheaper and more satisfactory to feed there market gordeu crops with fertilizers than to buy horse manure at high prices and haul or thip it long distauocs. rew Lngland Homestead. BHTlUnB AS A VEGETABLE, After the rhnbarb has served its puipoo by giving us its leaf stalks in early spring, it often throws up nn immense bunch of flowers. An Eug lixh writer status that if this head of flowers is cut off, And treated like cauliflower, it is just as good and do sirable. One would suppose that thoro whs something of tho acid taste of tho stalks in this flower head; but this writer says not. Many plants have a greai difference between the elements in their flowers or frnit and the loaves. We can, for instance, cat a tomato, nnd find it both healthful and ngrceable ; but if wo wero to venture to eat a handful of tomato leaves, they would probably be tho end of us. Those who nro on the lookout for new vegetables might, however, make a trial of the rhubarb flowers. It may bo noted that tho tomato is very closely related to the tobacco, nnd equally poisonous with that celebrated plant. Moehan's Monthly. KirenriKa of tiie eatr. The shedding of the hair is a natural function of all domestie animals ex cept tho sheep, which will retain its fleece ior two years if it is not shorn, after which it, too, sheds its coat. The molting of birds is an analogous process, and there is no difference ex cept in form iu tho character of tho Lair and feathers. This shodding procoss goes on naturally when tho animal is in good health, otherwise it is either wholly or partly stopped, and the old hair is retained while tho skin becomes hard and dryandcovered with eruptions of small itching vehicles. Tho skin in the spring is in a very active condition bv reason of a greatly increased circulation of the blood, doubtless to supply the growth of hair, and also of tho new skin, the old skin peeling off in small dry scales. Thus it is very necessary to keep the animal in the beat of health by giving sort laxative food at the season when the shedding of the coat is expectod. New York Times. THU VALUE OP THE ARTICHOKE. The plant going by tho common name of the artichoke is not the Teal artichoke, a garden vegetable, having large, thick, fleshy heads, that are cooked and eaten much in the same way as the cauliflower is. The arti choke referred to is a speoies of the sunflower family, and has a flower like a small sunflower growing at the top ot a tall, tmok stem. lhe root is tuberous and grows deeply in the soil. It is eaten as the potato is and resem bles that tuber quito closely. It ie, however, of much less value than the potato, as the tubers grow too deeply to be gathered, except by digging with a spade. Many attempts are con stantly made by dishonest persons to mislead the publio that is not aware of the facta into spending inoncy for seod nndcr grossly inaccurate titate lnents of its value. It is worthless for all practical purposes, and, worse, for once planted it occupies the ground permanently as a pernicious weed, tho tubers lying too deeply iu the ground to bo got out, making tho plant grow year after year in spite of efforts to eradicate it. It is iu no sense of tho word a substitute for the potato. New York Tinios. TIMOTHY HAT. Timothy hay needs much less car ing than clover, and can bo put in eately in good weather the day it is cut. Waldo F. Brown writes to tho Ohio Farmer : "I prefer, however, a cut in tho afternoon, when it is free from all ex ternal moisture, turu it just before noon the next day and at one o'clock turn a second time, aud in half an bour start the teams to taking it in. I learned by a losing experience that it is necessary to have ventilution un der the floor of a hay bay. I built a bay barn Ave or six years ago and laid a floor on mud bills, only a few inches above the ground, and fouud nearly a ton of musty hay in tho bottom of a buy 24x11 feet in sizo. I then raised my mud sum and placed tueui on stones, so as to allow a space cf a foot under them. I do not use sills at ml in a hay bum, but stand tho posts ou the fouudutiou aud spike a 2kH joint to thein to hold thum iu place, mid then place timbers on stoiio to support the floor joibtd, so tluit the weight of tho bay rests ou ; the ground and not on the frame of the burn. For our own use we prefer mixed hay, clover and timothy, aud the mammoth clover is bout, us it ripens with the timothy; but not over two pounds of soed to tho acre should bo sown, or tho timothy is likoiy to be smothered out entirely the next season. Another Advantago of this thin seeding iu that tho tim othy keeps tho clover from falling down nud helps it to cure better. 1 have never found mamuoth clover satisfactory for hay when sown by it Felf, but with timothy it largely in creases tho yield of hay and cures oat so as to bo eaten by all stock as woll as the medium clover." MAJiAOKMEVT OP COWa. It will not do to determine nny vexed question in tho management of cons or other farm nnimals without 1 ong nnd repeated trial and experience. Tho greates. mistakes Are mado by this imperfect testing of the effect of foods, for instance, on tho milk pro duct. A month is not at all sufficient time to dotcrraine any question of the kind. And yet there aro Alleged scientific experimenters who Are satis fled with a terra of threo days' feeding to decide most important questions, involving millious of dollars in thoir results on tho profits of tho dairy. Foods for an animal are very much aunlogous to fuel for fires. We cstimato the valua of foods by the boat equivalent, ns wo term the effects of the nutriment on the eystom, whether for support of tho animal or the product of it. Those who follow the reports of the trials of new war ships must have remarked how impor tant a matter it is to tho success of the speed tests to have very best f nol. How experts nro employed to- Boleot the coal, piece by piece, so that every pound of it may generate the greatest possiblo heat to niako the steam to move tho engines that forco the hugo vessel through tho water. Just in the same way, at that nota ble test of dairy cows held at the great exposition in Chicago, over two years Rgo, the first And most trusted expert was employed to soleot tho food for the cows there contesting the palm of su periority in their special fitness for the dairy. This was reasonable, and it goes to show how important it is that every one interested in the feed ing of cows for profit should do ns much ot the samo for himsolf in deoid ing just what foods should be chosen. It is not as it was . but a few years ago, when food was food, and there was no choice between the kinds of it. It is true that the old kinds, tho stand ards, such as bran, corntneal, oats, middlings, linsoed oil meal, made by the old process by mere pressure, then varied very little in feeding value, and it wns not worth the timo spent to examino them further than to note the results of the feeding iu the quan tity and quality of the products. Hut now we have long lists of waste pro ducts which are of use for foeding, all varying in value as to their feeding qualities, and all of them need an exact analysis to dotermino tho value. Thus, the feeder must be vory careful to ascertain what the actual valuo of what he buys is before ho pays Lis money for it. to improve Easa. To improve tho rich yellow of the egg Mr. Wheeler, of the Agricultural Experiment Station of New York, says : "The color of the yolk of the egg seems often to be affected very notice-, ably by a change in the food. It is frequently the case that from fowls closely confined in winter or summer having little variety of food, end espe cially a ration deficient in green food, show pale colored yolks. A change in the amount of meat or fresh bouos does not always seem to have much in fluence. I have known hens that had the run ot the barn and barnyard to lay eggs with much darker colored yolks than did neighboring hens con fined, but fed better in most respects. In ono instanoe a much deeper orange color in the'yolk followed a change is feeding to green clover and alfalfa. One lot, where pale colored yolks were the rule, laid eggs with orange colored yolks after they had been given the run of a barn floor covered with dry clover, chaff and leaves. A change in color of butter is often noticeable in the same way when cows are turned to pasture after dry feed. Clover, hay nnd corn or alfalfa hay is good to feed hens when the fresh fodder cannot bo had, and may help to bring about the change desired." The color of ft chicken lias little to do with the laying qualities, although there are some who will say that white fowls lny more eggs than colored, and vice versa. I am inclined to believe that if there is any great difference it would bo in favor of oolored fowls. In Cochins, Whito, Black and Partridge are considered better layers than Butt. In tho Leghorn class the Buff seems to lead both the White and Brown : but we doubt whether this has been thor oughly tested. Borne of the finest egg producers I ever saw were White faced Black Spanish and also Uoudaus, both of which are extensively kept for egg production as well as their gonerul good points as fancy fowls. Even the beautiful Light Brahma fowls have wonderful records. One can soon (lis cover, by actual comparison, what breed ho prefers. New York I ado pendent. Charlotte Corday's Skull. Charlotte Corday's skull is believed to bo in tho possession of l'rince Kolaud Bonapaito, who obtained it from M. Duruy, the person who cstab' lished the authenticity of Richolieu't skull, which soma time ago was re placed iu tho tomb in tho tiorbonne, from which it was stolen during the revolution. Tho Corday skull wut probably procured from Suusou, the executioner; it was sold with docu ments establishing its authenticity. (raves Iu London. When a grave is to bo mado in St. Paul's a bed of solid coucruto six feot in depth, on which tho cathedral rests, has first to be bore. I through. Be neath this is a bod of Loudou clay, oi "pot earth," bcloV which aguiu is subsoil 9! yellow er).' TEMPERANCE. rANIIFS IN Tns OI,AS, There's danger In th glass. Pnwam, lest It rnslnviw. They who hnvt ilr'alni'd it llml, alas! 'foci often onrly graven. It sparkles to alluro, With. Its rteti, nily llrht! There- Is no nntldoto or earn. Only Its oourso to fluid. It chanifes men to limtesj Makes women how their heailst Fills homi-s Willi anguish, want, dis putes, and takes from children broad. Then uash the iila-w nway, And from the serpent llee Drink pure cold water day hy dnv. And Walk con's foots roor, fhee! lUllXKIHn OS T11K DKeMKR. Never In the history of tho'world tins so much pressure been brought to bear against Intemperane as now. In tills e.mntry an I In Great llrltatn tho temperance organir.i tions liav becomo very powerful. Even Knipnror William has a lvoeatod a movn against Intemperance In Germany. Tim French Assembly has Instituted temperance legislation, nnd the agitation has almost reached the- rum an i tea bosottod boors of llussia. Seeing this, many people take It for granted that intoiiperniioo was never so rife in the world as now.saysthcHaturday Even ing Ga?itte. This notion is quite false, how ever, for statistics and a perusal ot tho social memoirs of a century an 1 more ago nbrond plainly show that, especially In lhe brir.nl phases of drinking, there has been almost a transformation. It was a proud bonst In the (lavs of Ulbbou that an Lngllsh gentleman could consume a pint or brandy at n single sitting, and In the days of Sheridan the man who could not dispose of bis four pints of port In an evening was hardly regarded as n 'man of spirit." At the famoiw literary gatherings ot the lost century in London the regular duty ot the night porter at the clubs was to go tho rounds in the early hours ot the morning and "loosen the gentlemen's neckties" for those who wcrj fouud snoring In tho various plnoes in the apartments. Henry Buckle, the historian of English civ ilisation, draws A frightful picture of the drunkenness of the masses in I ho last and previous oentury, such oecasions as execu tions on the public squares being attended by disgusting carnivals of Intoxication. Statistics evidence that intemperance has diminished In England nenry fortv per cent, as compared with earlb r periods, Ono of tho court cronies of tho Great Elector ot Prussia, ns related by Carlyle, chose to be buried publicly In a gin puncheon, as a mark of his devotion to ardent spirit, nnd the cere mony wns not in the lenit shocking to pub lio sentiment. An excessive drinker like those of other days Is now decidedly a marked man in more senses than one, and the amount of toleration aecordod him In so ciety is at a low notch. Whatever suppres sion mtiyhave done to docreasodrunkeuness, the chief instrumentality hns boon general rellnement and a higher moral sense in tho community, silent forces that bello the fore bodings ot the pessimist. r-ARKKT OP CBIMK. Strong drink la not only the devil's vrav Into a man, but mnu's way to tho devil. Dr. Adam Clark, Judges are weary with calling attention to drink ns the principal cause of crime, but I cannot refrain from saving that if they could make England sober, they would shut up nine-tenths of the prisons. Lord Chief Jus- tieo Coleridge, of England. ut au tne causes oi siu ana mipery. or pau perism and wretchedness, intoxicating liquor stands forth the unapproachable chief. oan uavis, tutuei justice oi the now Horn Supreme Court. Two-thirds of the crimes which come be fore the courts of law of this country nro occasioned chlcily by lutemperance. Lord Chief ltaron Kelly, of England. Eighty per cent, of the crime of our coun try is tho result of iutemp' rance. and ninety- live percent, ot mo uepruveu youtn are the children of drunken and depraved house holds. General Eaton, United Status Com missioner of Education. I can keep no terms with n vlco that Mils our Jails, that destroys the comfort of homes and the pence of families, and debases and brutalizes tho people of these islands. Lord Chief Justice Coleridge, of Engluud. AN IMPORTANT QUESTION. Ono of the greatest evils of our timo and land is intern jerance. A Inrge part of the misery nud crime iu our community comes directly from this source. Every day we hear of some poor woman beaten to death by a dranken husband, some mmi made insane by poisonous liquor sold to him by those whom we license. For the sake of a few dollars men spend their lives iu makiug nud selling these dreadful poisons. Suit-protection re quires that society shall put au end to the evil. How this shall bo done is ouo of the most difficult ns well as one of the most im portant questions ot the time. Jauios Free man Clarke, WEALTHY WINE BIMlKne. Some Idea of what the wealthier elasses drink, when they indulge in intoxicants at all, may be gained from the custom house records, which show that tho total of lui- fiorts of champagne Into the United Slates or the year 18U5 was i39,845 casus. But Just how many casus of intoxication, of sad blight of prospectBand helpless ruin of hope result ed therefrom la not staled, nol statable. TEUPEBANCE NEWS AND NOTES. There never was a cow that gave milk puuoli. What a world of misery and crime will vanish with the saloon. It was Cardinal Manning who said: "Tem perance is good; total abstinenou Is better." Somethore nro who say that a drink gives them an appetite. And so it dous an appe tite for driuk. The Temperance Cause expresses It In tills way: "The victim rollB In the gutter, aud thesMoou keeper iu wealth." Tompornto people do not S"ek to do tne inloon man harm. Their struggle Is to pre vent him from doing others harm. Human slavery, to destroy which meu rushed to arms in CI, has its counterpart to day lutho slavery of the w.ll to tho drink evil. William E. Gladstone remnrko 1 the other day that he was proud of the tact that he had never been addicted to the use of wine, to bacco or any other stimulant. Women are forbidden to enter saloons at Astoria, Oicgou, by a city ordinance passe 1 a few days ago, which also provides for the punishment of women who violate the ordi nance. Dr. Ilnncook, of Lodonla, Texas, pre scribed whisky for some men, and "tweuty highly respected women" capture! him, gave him 500 lashes with cowhides and rau hUn out of towu. CHIM; IN SWITZERLAND. Agitation Io Favor or Beatorlag tba Deat l'eiulty. The nlarming Increase in the nurnber o! murders in Switzerland has given rise to au of 'icr n'iiiition in f:ivor of the restoration o! enpi.ui punislimeni throughout the Confed eration, aud it is not impossible that thi question will soon be put to a popular vote Iu 1S74 the Federal Constitution abolished the death penalty, but the Cantons retained iii'ti vitUril libertv to restore it, and one o the lht t ) t.mo, advantage ot this option wai Lueorr.e, where, fwever, there has siuoi been only two exaltations, each for a pecu linrly atrocious erliue, of which the viotlmi fteio women. Yean ago lhe murderers ii Lueeruc used to be beiieadud with ft swort iu tho market place, I ut now a guillotine 1; u-fl nud CAixuliuiis take place within prlso wills. Alabama Oo:il and Coke. According to tho figures compiled by tho State Mine Inspector, the total output of coal in Alabama In lS'Ja was 5,b4U,40i tons, compared with 4.a0l.SU tons ior WJi, an in- crease of 1.8l7, 149 tons. The total number of miners employed was Tho State's total ooke production was 1.3s4,hlC tons, as compared to tul.002 tons lor 1UU4, au in crease of 400,844 tons. American Kails for Japan. The Illinois Kte:d Company has fust sold 10,000 tons of steel rails 1) tho Jupautse Didn't hcci Mnoh. Tho late Puke of Loimter, on ft cor lAin ocPAiwion, met one of his lAborers vnd said to him : "I roRrot, owing to a report made by any steward, At hav ing to dispense with your scrvioos, as there in not, I boliovo, sufficient work for All." Upon hearing this the mAn innocently remarked: "FAith, yonr grace, thero is no necessity to dismiss mopn neconnt of scarcity of work, ns very little would keep me busy." His ready roply amused tlioDuko, who gave orders for his retention. A Fortune for a Talm. Miss Helen M. OouM hns recently nddud to hor magnificent collection of rare palms nt Tnrrytown, N. Y., a species of that plant called tho Ilaven nla Madngarvoin. This palm is a lit tlo over thirty-two feet in height And nearly threo times ai mAny years old. Tho price paid for it is said to be $;15, 000. Miss Oonld'o conservatories and green houses nt Irvington present A bountiful apponrnnco. Hho IiasHOOO; orchids in full bloom, tho total valuo. of which is estimated nt 811.1,000. Four of the most valuablo orohid plants nre named Frank, F.dwin, Howard and Uden flonld, respectively. Superintendent Mangold has been experiment ng for several years with flowering chrysanthemums. They nre grown nil winter in ft very high tem perature, ftnd fod liberally. So far this spring they have proved a sno cess. Thero nro in tho ropo house ft couplo of dozen of tho Lillian llus sell variety iu fiao bloom. The large collootion of fanny-leaved caladiiims used for deooratin? tho conservatories during tho summer Iia Just boon started. Tho display of thousands of lillics, byanoiuths, tulips, jonquils And Amor ican Boanty roses nt present writing mako a most beautiful sight. Miss Gould is a groftt lover of flowers And daily wanders through her conserva tories. Lyndhnrsf, the old Jay Gonld cha teau, which she occupies, is decorated from day to day with choioe exotios, selected by tho mistress of the house and twico a week largo consignment! of flowers aro sent to New York for distribution among the institutions in which Miss Gould is interested. St. Louis Republic. Mining Tunnels Under a City. There is considerable exoitomont nl Butte, Montana, over the discovery that work has been begun on an oft proposod and largely opposed project for driving mining tnnnels in all di rections nndcr the city in order to take ont the rioh copper and silver ores known to exi3t there. - It is said that the richest coppor and silver oros in the Ilocky Mountain oonntry lie nn dcr the city. The principal vein dis covered, kuown ns tho Smokehouse lode, rnns nnder the heart of the city from southeast to northwest, nnd over it are the City Hall, tho County Conrt House, s big hotel, and several of the largest office buildings in the city. The pnrchoscrs of surveyed land in Bntte hnvo no title to tho mineral under neath, tho surface title only extending to a depth of thirty feot. When the vein nnder tho city was first discov ered, a wealthy mining man of Butte looated almost tho wholo city as min ing claims and fought his case in the courts to a successful conclnsion. Now ho baa formed a company, and already a shaft is being sunk near the heart of the city, from which tunnels will bo driven in every direction. Bos ideuts of Butto nre greatly ooncerned About the probablo effect of the min ing operations on the big buildings situated over the proposed workings. The ore body is said to be largor and richer than that of tho famous Ana conda mines. New York Sun. Turkish Theory of Tractlcc. A Turkish physioian once called in to attend an upholsterer vory ill with typhus fever gave him up for lost, but passing the house next day found him etill alive and on the mend. On in quiry, he found that tho pationt, in his consuming thirst, had Bwallowed a pailful of tho juice of pickled oubbago. Called in subsequently to attond ft dealer in embroidered handkerchiefs ill of the samo disease, he prescribed at once the juice ot pioklod cabbage. The next day the man was dead, whereupon the dootor entered in his notebook tho following memorandum : "While pickled cabbage jnico is a very effloient remedy in cases of typhus, it is not to be used unless tho patient bo, by profession, an uphols terer. 1 lttsunrg uispatcn, A Tittsbiirg man is suing for an in junction to restrain the street oar com panies from using tuoir cars ior adver tising purposes. lleautltul TIioukH l'alnfut. We sing "Come, Gentle Spring," and are often very sorry that we did anything of the kind, for Spring, though beautiful, Is some times very painful. The very luxury we en joy tn the return of the balmy air is the latent source of a great many pains and aches. It Is because the nerves are relaxed in this way thai they become weak aud au easy nruy to sudUcu uttacks 01 neuralgia; u touio of oold, healthful air braces them up and makes them strong against any such at tack, but the suibleu change to warmin makes them liable to be preyed upon by this ilisease. f or tins simple rcuson 1110 great nerve disorder has many victims ut this tunc, but we have in St. Jacobs Oil something that restores tho tone, vigor an 1 strength of tho nerves to what they hud been. The prompt use of it iu these neuralgic ullucks 01 spring time Is sure to be followed by a perfect cure. Hop growers In Washington aud Oregon are greatly uiscournguu over tue ouiiook. EverTona who onc tries Dobblni Floating- Borax Buap coutinuea to use it, fur it U ru!ij inriultely superior to even tU beat of otbei Boating waiv, and coats yon no more. Uade vt borax, float, 1U0 per cent. pure. Try It, Thft new commercial treaty between Go: muny and Japan has been sigued. A Cood Doic la Worth Looking After, If vmi own a dot; mid think iinvt himr of him you bhould be able to treat him iiUellittenlly U lit, 11 ill Ritd unaiThtiti.tl ki in fculiii-it-mly in detect hymiJtoms ut iilms. The titjf Utxjtur Lunk writ leu by ii. tiny Ulover, i. . IS., t- cutlii-t in canine aist'iiMi'i to me print'ipm kuu uel chibw, will turnlsli thin ititoriuuttoiL Jt in a cloth Itound, huinUtmit'ly illut ritUni Itook, nud will btibt nt iMibiimiit by the lii-ok imlilieh 11.4 lloiir-e, 1H Ltoimrtl tel., N. V. City. Oil rccoiia ut 40 ctr. iu itoftUie biamptj. There are Dfutioimviea ftnd Dictionaries, but tho iiubkbt ii til nn u of them all tueinn tu be Webtiier. It U btill easily iu I ho Jetul iu Oil great race for jKipulm ivy. I'iao'd Cure h a wonderful Cough medicine Mrs. W. 1'icKKUT, Vhu SIcIhii and blaUw Avc. llrooklj u, N.JY.. Oct. lhJi, J t aftl Icted wi t h sore eyca utje Dr. Isaac Thorn p wu'etKyv-w&lur, lJi'uisUiL-ilal -oc pat bo ill- AMD HoAHBKflKHs, use "Hrmrn'M jlrrmcM,! 2 mcne, r"ii only in noxes. a vom imitations. The Insnna of London now number 1.1.047. and the County Council expects to have to provide for 600 more patients every year. Catarrh Cannot Be Carrel With local applications, M thoy cannot reach the seat of the disease. Catarrh fa a blood or constitutional disease, and In order to cum It you mint take internal remedies. IlaU'i Catarrh t'ure Is taken internally, and arts di rectly on the blood ami mucous nurfaoe. Hall's Cniarrh Curo la not a quark medicine. It wna prescrllwd by one of tl best physicians In this country for years, and Is a rcaular prescript Ion, It is roinM)sed of the best tonics known, com bined wIMi the best blood pul'lllers. artlDK ill. rertlv on the mucous surfaces, 'lhe perfect snmblnntlon of the two Inuredlonla Is what pi-educes such wonderful results in curlngi ra larrh. Hrnd for testimonial free. r , J. t'liKNKY 00 in. Trope,, lolouo, u. Sold by drtiKtflst, prlco 7&o. When Traveling, Whether on pleasure bent, or business, akc n every trip ft bottle of Syrup ot Flu. It cts most pleasantly and effcrtunlly on tho kidneys, llvor and bowels, preventing fevers. Headache and other forms of sickness. For ale In M cent nnd II bottles by all leadlmi Jrufffftst. Manufactured by tho California fig Syrup Company only. f write to let veil know ' hnw nlensed I am with r vmir sarsiiiiarll a. I F felt vorv wealc nnd tired last meiith, and went, as (Musi to get' ara- Ivirllla. anil did net knew nut I li,1 'a until I got heme, when I found I had fliat I v.,r- I,, II m-iln yours. Aim ineaseu I am nie rinmed and strung sooner ' thnn 's. nnd m strong that I set to work, alone. tu turn A lloiKe round. I moved this lieue it full lenutti. aud then ' l feet bark. Unite an under- 1 taking for one man. Hut Itwiis I your ars:inrllli tbnl gave me 1 strenetli to do it T Imll always bike It In future "TIIII4 VAUI. Hill St., Ollphaut, Ii., Deo. ' WEIGHTY WORDS FOR Ayer's Sarsaparilla. 00000000000008000000000000 IA D g o o Try Walter Baker & Co.'s Cocoa and Chocolate and you will understand why their business established in 1780 has flour- ished ever since. Look out for imitations. Walter Baker & Co., Ltd., Dorchester, Mass. f OOOOOOOOOOOOOSOOOOOOOOOOQ( IIADWAY'S 1 PILLS Cure Sick Headache. Biliousness, Constipation, Piles -A MO AN Liver Disorders. TIADWAV I'll.l.H are purelr vegetable, mild and rellahle. Cuuui nerfeet llltrestlua, olll pkte ebacrpiiun aud Uea Uicul regularity. ts cu. a no r. At DrugglaU, or hj mult "Book of Advice' free by mall. HAD WAV dc CO.. P. o. Box sn.1, Nrw Tnag. Webster's International Di$lionarv The On Great Standard Authority. ! So wniot lion. D.J. lirtwrr, ' eJluUca l. ft. ft m r in rotirt. ; W'tond a PotaJ lor Specimen Pmf, tc. ., m -A Succ$$or of th V'n "VnabridgodS .U- -V U Standard of ttiMV 9 .oYt Print. lug office, th U 8. Hu trin Court, all tit a PirtW Buptein Court., ; nmt of iifjiiljr ail Hit ' DCHVUlUWUi Warmly Couiiucuded i by Alula 8npiintcn(l THE BEST FOR EVERYBODY KCAuac i ft U aasy to find th word wanted, i It It easy to ascertain tho pronunciation, i It la Oemcy to traco the growth of m word, i It la aaey to learn what a word meant. THI BK8T WORK OP ITS KIND. Tho jttoaroii Herald mayBt Nil dirt Winter Can It Anal lint f nr thai natv-t tiMft. 7 n.Tt fenrt Uitt IiiUm hAlluiiAl .mint 1 accopttM iu ( t Miej UVSk nulkS U IU KIUU 111 UIO ..lglU laiitfUAtfe. C. C. MFKHIAM CO., Fiihliahex; itpriuttaeitt, mums., u.a.Ji. ft Ft I ' f V Morphine lfaliit Cured In 10 IE HI Ii I 1 to tO Any: No Jiajr till i-urecl. Ul I W III DR. J. STEPHENS, Lebanon, Ohio. It Was Before the Day of APOLIO Thov Used fa Sav "Wrnnn's Work ia Hever Cone." ffON'T YOU 2L l.-ij papurs aud books which you doa't fully uulurst.tul, anl wlileU yo HW B papers aud books which you like to look up If you hi I so ni oo-npi'5t baj'c w'jIuU wjiiII glvj tha lu formatlou In a few Hues? not be o'jllgdi to una II a twjnty-paual encyclopailla coning tii or 1X mm In stamps sent to BOOK PUB LISHINC HOUSE 1 34 Loon- I I ard Street. N. Y. City will furnish you, postpaid, with Just suoa Vr . a book, containing 820 pages, well lllustrttteJ, with complete bim ly la lex. l you know wUo C rosin w.ts, as I where ha lived' Who built the Pyramids, nnd when? That sound travels 1123 feet per seooulV What Is the longest river in the world? That Mural Polo Invents 1 the oo npm in 120), nnd who Marco I'olo was? What the Gordiau Knot wcia.' The book contains thousands 50 c. of t'xplunntlons of just nbout. 11 uy it at hulf a dollar and TM of Travel tn Mnnntatns of Wretem North C'arfillnak. Th t'de of travel is headed fir the. (rlorloTis mnuntalns of Wmlrrn North Carolina (Ashe vllle and lint HprliiipO, the "Sarntnea of lhe r'niith." Thousand are visiting these attrac tive resorta for pleasure and health. He famous hns this iTirltm lieronie among the tourlste end pleasure seekers that at thi ennn of the year the Vrallbuled Limited train of the Southern HhIIwbv. " Piedmont Air Line." are going crowded with those going to region where every breath Is one of health and Joy. The scenery around Ashevllle la moat charming. The moat magnificent panorama of mountain view In snrrad liefore the vision. The eoenen change with the hour! for the rosy lights of morning, the gin re of noonday and toe deepen ing shadow of the evening, glvoe eneh In tnelr turn a hew and varied rbnrm to view. A visit to Abbeville I a 'brnre p." Thi I not gen erally understood. It Is the Influence of alti tude nn vitality. The Southern 1 tall way rnwhe these resort wit h matrnillocnt equlp lcd trains, leaving New York dally at 4:.'1 p. in., with through l'nlininn Car Service, and a the trip I innde within IE! hours. 1 In easy areeaa to those ho deirc logo and iend a few days of ret and recreation. New York Office South ern llnilwny, 271 itroadwny. FITS stopped free by Dn. KtiKr OnrAT Nrhv HaxToimt. Nn lit after flrt dat'p ne. Marvelou cure. Treatise nnd f-lf.nn trial Iwt tlefree. l"r. Kline. Kll Arrh St., I'hlla.. Ta. Mr. Wlnlow Poothlng Hrmp for children Irethlng, soften the gum, reduces Inflamma tion, allny pain, cures wind pnllc. 2Ac. a bottle 7 AW 1780. Mr. William T. Cllnio, a grocer duluit tiustniw.1 at Norrln St., rhtlmlolihiii, nvtwitly mmlo tba following Httiitnut ooncortiliiK llipitna Talniloe: "I ImJ whut th ilixuora oftllixl NurTiius IndlKmtlon, from whloli I nufforml day ami nlghf. I tried euvornl doctors, took oltvtrto trontmont, pntcut mi'dtclno,, and,' In foot, everything thnt I Could hear of, but nothing done me any good nnd I made up my mind there was no hiilp fur mi), only to grin aud bear It, but one day I win passing a drug store and etoppni to look at the dis play In the window nud I happened to see a card with 'Itlpnns Tabulus' on it and I thought, woll, horo's nnothur straw for a drowning man, 83 I'll throw some more money away, so I went In and bought a box, and, soemsto me, tho first dofo took ofTix't. I have been taking them ever bIuom and they have surely worked wonders with me. When I look back on the past and then ou my present . condition, seems to me I am a new man. I am enjoying elegant health now, and I feel that I owe many thauks to Rlpnm, Tubulin. I have recommended them to several of my frluuds who suy they are wonderful, and I must nay thuy urn a Ood send to any one suffering from a disorder of this nature." Illpena Tabulea nre eoM br drinirlata, or by malt If 111 in Iim l.'Mi outll. a uoa) I. aent Io TUo Klpine (. lietiili-at CttiiiiLiy, No. W Sprue at., Nuw iota. Suuiil vlul. lutviil. KIN V-tU A WELL DRILLER ol ihlriy year' ituriruc U tut lviteueru HiaicH, autl who lit well kuuwu (rum Mama to PUirttU, wrUM u In ru ereuoa to ouo oC our na clilui'H lie bought : "It In tut tie. rent MrloU'Ju 1 tiuvtf yet iwn, it 1 want auotbur iiiai'i.Loe fir bly work I aJiuuM ouve auotm-r or ytum!' Clrularj frcw. I,00 I1H A N Y HASt TI(Bn, Otalu. rVfT if I IBfi f,INU rAr-KKa, MaaW., r 1 IMIrO K1NKH, Klc. louiciiU i Vi tiiMlAiillv ftniiivattilo. MiHPIJ Mill. 7-.n tintiamiy leniuvabip. HimriM bus, rU 11 tcu ot 11x9 1 v"g "' iUr uf i 2 fcy niill (roe wlih prU lint, fue ImAjI t.if. i Ul KKS JO uHbLH. II. II. iiinny BJ r Knd Or. for itamiJes of WhI MAnnl Itl C til.. iiivltHiiutiH. wt nimiHb I4MI VIiIIiin InvliuiiuuMt HM) Wrditlua r u rltiifa. lift) MHlltiitf Ku.fl., KM) TImnuu MHim fr Vl7d. i-'inttrtt qui Illy, latent it yl; ttlao Anui vtriary luvitntintiti. buK b llrtm.a Wat, Utica, X.Y. nDIIIU 11,1(1 WHISKY babliacured. Book atnl Ul lUiel tutu, ttr, a. a. woou.ui, ATiartA, ua. rCALCAHPURE MAPLE SYRUP Z&Zri Wflpl uf (f I .IK). Ja. A. Fl'l.u, Hnllaiiil, Vt. H Bl H in ejpresslonj XtjeW W nnd references In I lie news doa't fully uulurst.tul, anl wlileU you woul I suuh matters as you wonder the very low prlve of IMPitOVE lOVUSEH. 50 c. s Uovorumout ut S27.30 per t j
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers