Jobn Winter, of Boll County, Ken tucky, last week, vfliilo Oipring n cel lar at his home, on Kikwoll Creek, ox cftTnted a Rinnt mummy. The mummy was tlint of a mm eigbi feet high, ft nil wrapped iu a winding cloth of skins. It was placed in a csaoo-liko colli n, and crnmlileii awny upon bcirtR ex posed to the Air. At the hend of the giant were a stoue hatchet nnd a few cooking utensils nml a largo hollow stone, which presumably contained food. At his foot was a skin shield, which liAd also crumblod to dust. Cincinnati Tribune. PoODtn' Ftotln-Bort Bonn In 100 pr wnt. Jmra. M? nf Hornx. It Boats. .1s yon ni s roonr fiovlnv sonp. Worth inor. If all tfltrn yon nw) tt. Or.lar one cak of your STocr, you'll want ft bci nxt. Some exolleinont has lwn occasioned hy the action of t tin lrufeo o( (he S,itou Li brary In illsoliarifinR ton o( the oldest om ployec. Oiib hai been In the library thirty seven years, nil 1 Iho rest twenty or mort'. Beware of OUitinr-nt tor Catarrh That Contain Mercury, as mercury will enirly dotr.iy tho senw of smell and cotnjilr toly derango tli ? tv hole system fl-hpn An taring it III roll iii tha inucaue surfaces Hurh article-! should luver b ) itsd except or Srescrintioo,, f rum reputable- physicians, a tin amatfethy will do is ten fold to the tiood oi: can poiuly dHi-tvef rmu them. Hall'it U.-itarrl' Onns manufactured by K J. Clieney A Co.. 'lo'.elo, O., contains no mercury mid Is taker internally, acting direct iy upon tho blood and mucous surfaeei vl 1 bet pystem. In bujlnt ll&U'aOatnrrh Cure be pure toiret tbeiretnilne It te t'iken lnternallv. and is md In Toledo. Ohio, by F. J. Cheney & Co. Test mnnlals tree bold by Druggists, pi Ice T'e. it bottis. 1111' Vwroiiv I'iltanra tiio best. Don't Tobacco Spit anil Fmaht Tonr I.tr Away. If yon want to quit tobacco usin'j easily anil forever, retrain lost manhood. lie mnde well, trong, mniinctie, fnll of new life and viuor. take No-lo-llar, the wonder-worker that makes weak men etrong. Mnnv pnln ten round In ten day. Over cured. Hiiy No-To-Bnn from your own drnin?it. Under nlisolute Briinrantee to cure. Hook and sample free. Address sterling Hemedy Co., Chicago or New York. FITSstopped freeondpermanentlvcnred. Nc fits after flrst day's use of Int. Ki.im's Uuut JiERVsResronnn. Free J'! trial hot tleand treat ise. Send to Dr. Kline. Ittl Arch St.. Phi)a.,Pa. Mrs. Wlnslow's Soothlmj Svmp for children teethlna, softens the gums, reduces tnflamma.' tlon, allays pain, cores wind colic. 25c.a bottls Wnas billons or costive, eat a CaCRret, candy cathnrtic, cure guaranteed. 10c.. SSe. Noises in the ears, sometimes a roaring, buzzing sound, or snapping like the re port of a pistol, are. caused by catarrh, that exceedingly dlsngreeablo and very common disease. Loss of smell or hear lnft also results from catarrh. Hood's Barsapariila, the frreai blood purifier, ts a peculiarly successful remedy for this disease, which it cures .by purifying the blood. If you suffer from catarrh, try Sarsaparilla The best in net the One True Blood Purifier. Ilrtftrl's D!lle are the best after-dinner llgOU S rlllS pills, enre headache, fflic The Typical American Nose. Ton rarely see a Etnb cose in the United State;. The American organ ts partly Roman and partly Bed In dian. The noble savage has a fine aquiline nose, and you will see Ameri cans of no particular note with noses that suggest the Last of the Mohicans, and also the bridge that was defended by Horatius. Englishmen, on the other hand, are quite insignificant about the nose. As a rule, it is no in dex of character, and in lator lite it is merely something to snore with. Hero and there you meet a man whose nose is a sign-post that points to glory, and it is a National characterUtio to use the nose as a musical instrument in a manner which, in America, would be considered ill-bred, lint I fear that in the presence of the transatlantic proboscis we must hide our diminished .noses and get what comfort we may out of the prominence of the Anglo ;Saion bald head. London Sketch, THE BLUES. A GRAPHIC DESCRIPTION OF THE DREADFUL FEELING. What It Meant by This Form of Acnte Misery Where Doctors Make Mistakes. When a cheerful, brave, light-hearted woman is suddenly plunged Into that perfection of misery, the blues, it is a ead picture. It is usually this way : 'She has been feeling " out of sorts " fur some time; head has ached, and back also; has slept poorly; been quite nervous, and iV nearly fainted JVV once or fyT twice; head J ! J neari nas beat very fast; then that bearing-down feeling. Her doctor says, "cheer up, you have dyspepsia; you'll be all right soon." But she doesn't get " all right." bhe grows worse day by day, till all at onee she realizes that a distressing female complaint is established. Her doctor has made a mistake. bhe has lost faith iu him ; hope van ishes; then comes the brooding, mor bid, melancholy, everlasting 111 i'es. Her doctor, if he Unew, bhould have told her and cured her, but he did not, and she was allowed to suffer. Uy chance tho came across one of Mrs. I'inkhani's books, and in it she found her very symptoms described and au explanation of what they meant. Then bhe wrote to Mrs. I'itikhain, at Lynn, Mass., for advice, feeling that she was telling her troubles to a woman Hpeedy relief followed, and vigorous health returned. Lydia, E. Piukham's Vegetable Com pouud instantly asserts its curative powers in all those peculiar ailments of women. It bus been the htandby of intelligent Ameiicau women for twenty years, and the btory recited ulMjve is the true experience of hun dreds of women, whoso letters of frratitudd are to be found on tile in Mrs. I'inkhaui s library. N Y K U-4I OPIUM::: WHISKY latnirnri1. Kuoknuu, K. lit", it. II. IIOUI I f t AII.1M4, t. U:US fcrtL Ad (ut UilS. I uutf Li ff TUp. J urltMl In In tin, n. Ki .Id hi (ii-1'..'tM IHloocfs 0 IiESTMOT LAST DROOP OF Arms. As soon as fruit has been gathered from applo trees which are infested with the green aphis, the lico can be destroyed with a solution of quassia and soap or with the kerosene emul sion. Destroy the last brood of these pests in tho fall and the trees will gut a clean start in the spring. Young trees which Are infested should also be similarly treated. coxvALKsriNO noas. flogs recovering from cholera may tako a relapse if exposed to a rain or a sudden change. Hogs are then in ft condition to become affected with puenmonia, but would escape if given a little attention. Any shed which will keep off tho rain and break the wind is sufficient. The floor should be dry, but little bedding is needed and that tnnst be renewed frequently. Burn all litter and bedding onee a week. Keep tho herd divided so that crowding is impossible, A straw stack is tho ruott unfavorable place that can be provided for sick hogs. The essen tials in prevention are good food, pure water and clean, dry quarters. New England Ilotueetead. THB COLT'S TEETH. The teeth of a boree form tho sub ject of a bulletin issued by the Agri cultural Experiment Station of Vir ginia. It concludes with the follow ing practioal suggestion: "When young colts are troubled with indiges tion, or refuse to snckle, look into the oondition ot their teeth and gnms. If the gums are inflamed, swollen and painful to the touch, have them prop erly lanced. If at the ago of from two to five years the colt refuses to eat, wads his hay and lets it drop, or oats with difficulty, have bis teeth ex amined and properly treated by a com petent veterinary surgeon. If the eyes become weak and inflamed during dentition, the teeth need the attention of a veterinary surgeon. "If tho jaws become enlarged, in uine cafes out of ten the teeth need attention. "If the horse turns his head to one side while eating aud attempts to chew his food on one sidei his teeth need attention. Wadding the hay and dropping it are symptoms of a long tooth, which needs the attention of a Veterinary dentist. If the horse gradually loses flesh without any ap parent cause, although well cared for, the tooth tre probably at fault. "If the horse slobbers while driving. and pulls viciously on the bit, look to the teeth ; many "pullers" Are made so for the want of proper dental atten tion. Carrying the head to one side while being driven is frequently symp toms of a faulty condition of the teeth, which is relieved by a few min utes' work of the veterinary surgeon." TIME TO MAKE C'DTTINOS. During the winter months is the ime to make cuttings of such trees and shrubs a it is desirable to in crease. Quinces, currants, goose berries and .grapes are readily in creased by .cuttings. In the case of shade trees, willows and poplars are easily grown from cuttings, but the great majority of trees need to be raised from seeds, layers or by bud ding or grafting. But when it comes to the flowering shrubs which adorn our lawns, cuttings aro the chief re liance of propagators. The time to make them is while vegetation is dormant, and it is better done at least a month or more before spring oomes. The beautiful Golden Bel), Woigela, Mock Urange, ftpirea, Deutzia and Althaea among many others are easily raised in this way. Ihe best shoots for the purpose are those of last year's growth. The exact length is not particular, so that two or three joints are included in each one. About nine inches is a good length for mcit sorts, though grapes having the joints far apart may be a foot in length. It is believed that when the lower part is cut just below n eye, tuut rooting is easier accom plished, so cuttings are usually made u that way. -It is not so essential at the upper end where the cut is made, but as the buds push from the joints all wodhbove the highest one is use- ten.'-. 'Alter me cuttings are maJe place them iu a cellar, buried np in sund or earth, with but the tops pro jecting, thete to remain until the time arrives for setting them out in the spring. When the work is done about February, it will be found that the cuttings are nicely healed over by the time spring comes, which is in favor of the success of the operation. ben the winter is over and the soil is in good oondition for working the planting mav be done, setting them so that two-thirds of their length are iu thu ground and one-third out, Iu ordinary seasons most of them will be well rooted by fall. Practical runner. VilDi: Tir.ENJ FOR WACION. The introduction of broad tires upon all farm waguus nnd carts adapted for heavy draught purposes alone would do much to improve roads, says Im plement A;.'e, binoe bait the trouble teems to arise from heavy loads cutt ing over country roads at seasons of the your when the ground is soft. At 'J'uxedr, where all draught wagons are prohibited au entry unless furnished with, broad-tired wheels, the tremend ous advantage over tho ordinary tires has been pro.ed, for there, even when the roads uic softest uud at their Moist, they never flit np through the constant curtiujj if heavy loads of brick, stoue or lumber over theiu ; for the tires, by beiu to broad that they Ciiiiunt cut in, and hence track iu ihe Mime place, net totuewhat like rollers in keeping thu roads hard and smooth. f-!o lunch might l iieeomplishe l iu this way if i veryotio living in the: country, when buying u bum wagon j or curt, would not only make u point ; tt-ttiug i n.- with broad the--, but Uni'l i ut tho siiiue lime rtiri his lul'u- iM-e to that i tleet with bis trie-mis and ttjbhoiH. lVr could j'J merit of these tiros as rond improvers onoo be come known throughout the country, public spirit alone would cause their use to become general, and much ot the prcEcnt trouble Arising from the deep, rutty condition of tho roads would ceAse as if by magio. Farmers have more roason to agitate for good roads than any other class, not even excepting bioyclista. Oood roAda to the farmer means economy in reach ing markets, because they could be reached at the right time; advantages of social lifo in the winter and early spring ; saving in time aud iu the wear and breakage of wheeled vehicles and a general advance in all that pertains to a higher state of civilization. Bicvcles Are doing much to promote good roads. Now is the time for our farmers to make a positive move in co-operation with them. One improvement must go along with that of better construction And drainage of tho roads. The wheels of all vehicles should have wider tires. In France tho width of tiro is from three to ten inches, with the bulk of four-wheelers six inches. In Germany every wagon for heavy loads must have at least a four-inch tire ; Austria re quires a tire i inches wide; Switzer land requires all draft wagons to have a six-inch tire. If we were to build good roads onr wagons, as now con structed, would sp.eedily destroy them. They are roAd destroyers as certainly as if built for the purpose. Go on and build the roads, and begin at once to reform the wagon wheols. HOVSISO APPLES FOR WINTER. The Experiment Station at Lafayette, lnd., has issued the following bulletin regarding the care ot winter apples : "In many localities in Indiana there are often more Apples grown than can be disposed of profitably at the time of gathering, and so serious loss to tho growers is the result ; much ot this los could be prevented by a proper handling ot tho fruit and by providing a suitable place for storing until the congested state of the mar ket is relieved. "In order to keep well apples must be pioked at the proper time. Care must be excroised in handling to pro vent bruises, oarefully assorting the ripe from the unripe, the perfeot from the imperfect, and storing in a oool, dry place, with plenty of pure air free from all odors of decaying vegetables or other substances. "The average fruit grower does not exercise enough caution in handling and assorting his fruit, "Ihe degree of maturity will have much to do with the keeping quali ties. 'A late fall or winter apple should bo mature but not ripe when picked, if it is expected to be kept for any considerable time. The pro cess of ripening is only the first stage of decay, and if this is allowed to oon tinne before picking till the apple is ripe or mellow this breaking-down process has prooecded so far that it is a diflioult matter to arrest it. As soon, therefore, as the stem will sep arate freely from its union with- tae branch the apple is sufficiently mature for storing. "The proper temperature for keep ing apples is as nearly thirty-live de grees Fahrenheit as it is possible to keep it, and in order to maintain this it will often be necessary in this climate to provide a separate place for storing tuo frnit, as the average cellar under the dwelling house is wholly unfit for this purpose. If the cellar consists ot several compart ments so that one can be shut off com pletely from the others, and the tem perature in this kept below forty de grees, it will answer the purpose very well. If this oannot be done a cheap storage bouse may be built in connec tion with the ice house by building a room underneath, having it sur rounded with ice on the sides and overhead, with facilities for drainage nnderueath, keeping the air dry by means of chloride of calcium plnoed on the floor iu au open water-tight vessel, suoh as a large milk crook or pan. In this way the temperature may be kept very near the freezing point the year round, and apples may be kept almost indefinitely. FAUM AND GARDEN NOTES. For selling the farm a thrifty young orchard will be found as good as areul estate aent. Save parings, cablage leaves and potato scraps tor the hens. They ought to have green food all winter. Have you provided a dust-bath for the hens this winter? It will help you greatly in keeping yon Hook free ot vermiu. It will pay yon to try steamed cul clover for an occasional feed when the days get cold and the ground is snow covered. In preparing the nests for winter put them in as seoluded a spot as pos sible. A hen likes quiet before the egg is laid. A coat of whitewash will make the hen house more cheery and very likely sweeter, uo matter how clean you have kept it thu past summer aud full. Don't neglect to provide plenty of grit the sharper the better for the hens. Broken chiua aud earthenware auswer the pin pose very well, as does broken oyster ehell. One dosen't have to become a fanci er in order to have good fowls. A flock of thoroughbreds cost uo more io hatch and keep than do a lot of tomb hens, aud the income trow them ts double or more. It is a mistake to sell off all the adult fowls every fall, keeping only the pullets, uultbs you intend to buy e;.'gs iu tho spring for hutching pur potef. A two 3 ear-old heu gives bet ter egis for hutching. ' 1 The Great ltuilway, ot Kngland, cluims to make thj longest daily run in the world without atoppiusr. The , rnu is l'.U toilet-', uud is Iroiu l'udding 1 ton to J x t . r , uud is made lit uu aver age speed of 51, V miles aud hour. TEMPERANCE. TH TOUCH Or TKVTKRAMCC TV'nllo we lt at home roJolclnR Safo from evnry storm that blows, On the at root our errliiR hrothor Down th drunkard's pathway Roes. Lot us reach our hand to save lit m, Lot us be his guide and Htayi -Boraly now he nwds our friendship On his dark and dreary way. Keep the torch of temporance burning, Klnsh lis light upon our foej Tfe may nve our tailing brother From tho drunkard's llnal woe. Whom the brilliant lights are flashing, In the gay saloon mul grand Blnnds a brother, husband, father, Nooding now our helping hand. Beo, the tnmptor now hnm-ta him With his demon's glaas of rum. IJaton oh, I pray you bastMi Lost he fa I bolero we come. Kcop Ihe torch of temperance burning. Flash its light npnn onr foa; Wn may save our tailing brother From the drunkard's final woo, SHUN THIS ROWINO. It is nulte common to bearmensay: "Bovs will be boys. Thy must sow their wild oats." Tnat there is dangnr to be dreadod from hay ing this old proverb repeated without protest Is attested by the many human wrecks that line the pathway of life, says the Church News. A man might as reasonably sow the s?ei of weeds la his field nnd expect a crop of corn as for a boy to "sow wild oats" for a dosen or more yoars and hope some day to wake up a good, trusted aud honorable man. Hoys should bo taught that it Is a siu to "sow wild onts." And that for each seed sown a tearful account must be rendered, if not here, at least horenfter. Iho soul is like a snow-white cloth, aud is soiled by sin Just as cloth is disfigured by dirt. No sensiblo man or boy would throw a fine eont on the ground and expect that it would wwape per manent injury. Yot thousands "sow wild oats" without realizing what they are doing. Aside from the blemishes which sin Im- Erlnts upon the soul the boy should consider is worldly prospects, and remember that every grain ot "wild oats" he sows dot rants from his character, nnd tends to lessen his ohancea in the business and professional world. A boy without experience may be persuad ed that it is an easy thing for him to give up tho bad habits ho acquires by "sowing wild oats," but the man of mature years can give testimony of tho struggle necessary to get rid of a single bad habit acquired early iu life, and which has been nourished for years. Our passions will run away with us ualess, 11 ko good horsemen, we hold a tight rein on them. When they have the mastery we be come slaves ot tho meatiest kind. If men would but remember this fact they would never say a slnglo word whk h might be con strued into au encouragemeut to the boy to "sow wild oats." The sowing may be pleas ant, but tbo reaping will be anything else, either to the boy or to his parents. Boys should never forget that before they can "sow wild oats" they must cease to love their parents, and that while they are cast ing the seed into the ground they nre har rowing tho uoarts ot mothers that bore them and of fathers who havii lauoroi to feed, olothe ana educnto them. THE TKHtFERAMCE CALL. The call Just sent out from tho interna tional oftlces oi the World's Women's Chris tian Tempernnco Union to the 10,000 looal unions in tho United States Is as follows: My Comrades: The cup of wrath Is full. Iu these two terrible years when the massa cre of the Innocent baa gone on under the eyes of our paialyzed rulers la Christian lands, we have thought that man alone oould holp. But it is women who aro dying two deaths in the bloody East, nnd we, their sisters, cannot longer watt. You have nobly responded to my earlier appeal, and In the name of Christ aud humanity, of ihe home against the harem, I earnestly and tenderly call upon you to organize meetings in every locality, urging our Government to oo-oper-ato with England lu puttlug a stop to the massacres nnd giving protection heucoforth to Armenian homes. Let these meetings be addressed by the pastors, the business men and the most capable women, L'it money be raised by systematto visitation as well as by eolleetion, and forwarded to our National Treasurer, Mrs. Ilulen 11 . Barker, the Wo men's Temple, Chicago, Aud may God deal wlih us at lust as we dual with our Armenian brothers and sisters and their little ones In this hour ot overwhelming oalnmlty. Fbancbs E. W'il.HBD. . AOAINST CI.UD DBINK1NO. ' One of the perils of young men, especially at the present time, is elub drinking. Many young men who would be ashamed to be seen drinking in the ordinary saloon are tempted to this indulgonoe in the more se leot and aesthetic environment ot the club. AA okl New York olub mnn is quoted as say ing: "The Barroom makes drunkards. I wish I could say that the purpose ol the elub was to make men sober, but as I cannot do sd with truth, ! mtght as well oonfess, among other things, that the tendeucy of the modern olub is to intensify the drink babit till It degen erates, particularly with youug men, into the disease of Inebriety. I know of scores ot promising lives and so does every club man of experience that have beeu wrecked by the opportunities for conviviality afforded by olut-s. If the stewards of the leading oiuus in any oi our cities would eonress to the number of members tbey know to Da habitual drinkers, or rather habitual drunk ards.t he report woul d st art lu t he uninitiated. " Friends of temperance, while laboring for the legal BUDtiresion of the saloon, should also exert all posslblo moral power for the restraint and abolition of club drinking, a doctor's testimony. Doctor Forel, of Zurich, teaches that alco bollo intoxication, as atfeoting the nervous system, is conspicuous from the first, often alter small doses. The excitement following the first class Is the effect ;of a parnlycation of the complicated chocking apparatus which usually controls instinols. Impulses and thought. Mentally alcohol painlyzes, in Ihe first Hue, tin highest, most complicated and finest conceptions of reason aud dictates of conscience. He status that ohi "nlo alcohol poisoning produces mental para pets. I'sy uhopaths, or nervous peoplu, nre extremely susceptible to the narootio action of alcohol iu disease as well as in health, even when the disuaso is not ot nlcobolio origin. Very small doses of aloohol will, iu such persons, give rise to considerable phenomena of alcoholio poisoning. He hns seen severe delirium tremens niter such comparatively small quantities as one uud one-hall to two quarts of elder daily. A rooa BULK. Many people outside the total abstinence ranks (aud good people, too) are apt to con demn hastily those who are striving to curb and control the powur of the liquor element by legislation. Vet It Is a poor rule that does not work both ways; un i if it Is well to remove the drinking man from the saloon, why not also remove the saloon, from the drinking man? BUM S WOBK IN TWO STATIS. The report of the Connecticut State Prison for the year ending bepteinbur 80, 1HD5, shows that of 3j5 prisoner 20'J, or 52.9 per cent., confess to the use of drink as the cause of their crimes, and fifty-three mre. or 13.4 percent., lunke the cause to be bad ooiupauy, which iironnbly means drluk. Oregon State l'eulti ntmry report tor 18'JS states that "about eighty pur eeut. ackuowl-' edge to have been more or loss addicted to the use of iutoxlcauts," aud that "about sixty per cent, attribute their downtall to the use of intoxicants." Thu averagu number ot oon riots was 31)0. "L10.DOB TUB BOOT or ALL EVIL." James t'unutiiKUain, a sailor, was before Mauistrate Kudlleh yesterday ubargtd with having been iutoxicatej. He pleudud to be discharged, as lie was anxious to Joiu his ship. "I would rather discharge a man accused of larceny tuau a man brought here (or iu toxieutiou, replied the Magistrate. "Liquor is the root of all evil, aud be lluu i Cunning ham 83. New York World. TLM1EB1NCB NfcS AND NOTES. Even Mohamet is on record as saying that "alcohol is the motnur oi sin. No man has a right to destroy his reason tiv drink, to become dlsimsuu uydrluk. to d stroy bis moral sense and conception of right aud wrong. Tho ii'ca of copper-food shoes was patented January 6, 1S58, by a Maine gonins, who made $100,000 out of it. Another similar invention which made a Rreat deal of raonoy was the tnotnl fastener for shoes, invented and in troduced by Heaton, of Frovidonoo, It. I. At the time it was considored a fine invention, for the old sowed but ton was continually coming off. It hns gradually grown in popularity since its introduction in 16G9, until now Yery few shoes with buttons on aro manufactured without the lleatou im provements aud appliances, A Student's Joke. J. E. Dodson is an Englishman. "When I was at school at Harrow," he said to a reporter, "Oampanini, then in tho height of hie fa re as a tenor, sang for the first time in the oity in Italian opera. If I mistake not, it was I'Trovatore." At tho end of Campan ini's great aria in the third act there was a storm of applause. All tho front scats in the balcony were occupied by students, and it was notioed that an almost invisible wire was strung from the middle point in the gallery Lorso shoo to the top of the prompter's box at the middlo of the stage. What caused moBt people to notice tho wire was tbo sudden appearance on it ot a floral car of huge dimoneious, over whioh hovered on spirals several stuffed doves. This oar rode gradually down along tho wire until it 'was iu full view of evorybody. Camponini's face was wont hod in t-miles. lie bowed now with his right, and again with his left hand on his chest. As the car ap proached the prompter's box the sing er movedjorward to remove it from the trolley. . Then was the koon zest of the ocoasion. Not only was there one wire, there were two. The second was attached to the oar and also to the hand of a particularly stalwart under graduate. With marvelous rapidity the car shot back to the balcony. The smiles, I may add, did not tarry on Campanini's face." Boston Trans cript. GRANT AND WASHING TON. two Wonderful Serials Whlrh "The Cen. tavy Magaitne" lias Secnred for 1807. One or the best frlen is that General Grant over had was Horae.8 Torter. Their ilrst meeting wis at Chattauooga In tho autumn of 1863,andsoon after General (then Captain) Porter became a memberot Grant's stall anil served with him constantly until Lee's sur render. When Oraut became President Horace Porter was made his private secre tary, and until General' Grunt breathed his last at Mt. McOiegor tho two men werealoso friends. Nor did General Porter's love for his chief cense with death, lor to him is due the success of the movement to ra se the half million ot dollars which the Grant monument iu Klveralde Pnrk will oost, Tho Inauguration ot tho tomb will take placo next spring, on General Grant's birthday, aud General Porter will be the orator ot the ocoasion. Duiing these years of Intimacy with Graut General Porter kept a diary and in his mo ments of leisure he has arranged his unique stores of anecdote nnd memoranda into a serlesof twelve nrtielcs entitled, "Campaign ing wttb Grant," and The Century Mngaziue lias secured all rights in tho series aud will print tt during the coming year. Klnce the famous "Oettiiry War Scries," for which General Grant himself wrote four articles (the beginning of his "Memoirs"), no ningn Elue baa bad such a treat to lay before its renders. Another great serial In Tho Century Is a novel of Ihe American Revolution, writtun by the well-known Philadelphia physician, Dr. H. Weir Mitchell, whose literary reputation Is as high as his standing In his own profes sion. The story Is supposed to be the auto biography of the hero, "Hugh Wynne, Freo Quaker," who becomes au olllcer on General Washington's staff. Social lifo iu the capi tal, Philadelphia, is most interestingly de picted, nnd the characters In the story In clude Washington, Franklin aud I. all yette. The readers of "Hugh Wynne, Free Quak er," will obtain a clearer idea of the Revolu tionary War thau can be had from any other single source. It is bilioved- that Dr. Mitchell has written ."the great American novel" for which we have been waiting so many years. . These nre only two ot the features of The Century for the coming year the magazine that lea Is the world of periodical literature. Very few of our renders will be without it in 1897. It tost s 94.00 a year not too high a price for what The Century gives but many people are niraugiug to club together In groups of four, paying one dollar each, and scouring the reading of the magazine oue week in the month. The publishers ad vise the making up of clubs early. Hend 14.00 to The Century Co., Union Square, New York, with the name ot the person to whom tho magazine is to be sent, it you begin your subscription with the December (Christmas) number, the publishers will sund you a copy of the November number iroe, in which the two great serials here described begin. An Iinportaut Difference. To make it apparent to thousands who think (hemselves ill, that they are not afflicted with any disease, but that the system simply nemli cleansing, is to brin? comfort noma to lh?lr hearts, as a costive coidition It easily cared by using Syrup of Figs. Manufactured by ths California Fig Syrup Company only, and sold by all druggists. Jcst try a 10c. box of Csscarets, the finest iver and bowel regulator ever made. Pipo's Cure for Consumption baa no equal as a Cough medicine. F. M. Abbott, &3 &eu- ica St., Butfiilo, N. V., May V, 1H4. if afflicted with sore eyes use Or. Isaac Thoinn. iou's Eye-water. I.ruh.riritsbel!atg6c per bottle Casc ahkts stimulate liver, kidneys and bow els. Never sicken, weaken or Kripc. 10c. M. Averoff, tho Alexandria mer chant, who gave a million drachmae, $200,000, to have the Sladion at Athens put into condition to bo used for the Olympiun games last spring, has now given 3,000,000 more to have it completely restored in l'entelio marble. Take baby out walking; in the afternoon ; tbere'i time enough even on wiuliday, If yon use Sunlight i . V FT JUtlP which K-nahei clothe! io ouieklv. aud ri-A oeuiljr that you're through c&il. uFj hna't ii-mh all rfw r"" Try ihe Sunlight way ler tor am., Ltd., New York. ,f. ly ANTED liEi. KNTrt in yry county, lib ivruis. "rue uuLuruiiri v l l.Wf. r J ry i Ayer's Argument, If there is nny reason why you should use any sarsnparill.i, there is every reason why you should use Ayer's. When you take sarsaparilla you take it to cure disease; you want to be cured ns quickly as possible and os cheaply as possible. That is why you should use Ayer's: it cures quickly and cheaply and it cures to Stay. Many people write us : "I would sooner have one bottle of Ayer's Sarsaparilla than three of nny other kind." A druggist writes that "one bottle of Ayer's will give more benefit than six of any other kind." If one bottle of Ayer's will do the work of three it must have the strength of three at the cost of one. There's the point iu a nutshell. It pays every way to use Ayer's Sarsaparilla. ( ) (.") m m Oncrrits, who is now the first bnl fighter in Spain, baa appeared in fifty eight fights this season, and is engaged for ninoteen more. He rcoeivod 81200 for each appearance, and, as his ex penses average $100 a performance, his clear income amounts to over &50.000, besides tho presents mado to him. Fnntet Pemnnnllv Cndoctil Tourist E cnrslona to California Without Chang- of Cars. Leavlna Washington, I). C. every Saturrtav. the Honthern Hallway "Piedmont Air Una'' ana 8unet Itnute will erwrato Personally Ckm. ilucto l Tourist Kxcurxlnns to Pan Franolnco, ("a!,, without rhanqo of oan, conductors or lmrters. The route is throus-h Atlanht. Mont gomery, New Orleans, lloanton, San Antonio, Now Meilco, ArUiona and Southern California. Toe cars afetbe very latent pattern of Pullman Tourist Weepers, beds equal to auy Mandanl sleeper, lunch, lavatory (private apartment -fnr iadtes), and toilet facilities nf tho most ap proved style. Three and one-half days lo Mexico and Alisona. four days to lio Angeles nnd Southern California, and Ave days to San Franclioo. Portland, Oregon. thromrh theieml troptcal gardens of the 8outh, and via pictur esque Mt. Shasta in seven days with onH one ehanite nf oar. Taooma ana Seattle, Wash ington, the afternoon of the seventh day. Such nervlce and faoilltlea for Traua-Continental travel have never bofore been offered. The tourist car fare leas than any nther route, and rnllrnad fara the name, MTcrtlnif a aavtitfr of ta.ni to I.O0. For further Information anil reservation, enquire at telephone Southern Hallway, Ueneiai Knstern Office, 1(7 1 Broadway. C) dCjr are the Don f pomp wateru. L JT W.P. na cut teed l)liHnUitwtn-. If 4At.T ttr,cr!aTaninnot,oiia Slk 4XV Sold in 14 sal cam l tail, ti i'j,Vtl-l,'rnrbnouri.Ooe JFJ S(?rariott. atm.nO. 08. Important Notice! The only genuine "Baker's Chocolate," celebrated for more than a century as a de licious, nutritious, and flesh-forming bever age, is put up in Blue Wrappers and Yel low Labels. Be sure that the Yellow Label and our Trade-Mark are on every package. WALTER BAKER & CO. Ltd., Dorchester, Mass. VaAM-HAM. Mrs. Burton Harri-on. oni 00 tm ropgiAA wurrcfifl ron NT. A delightful supply of fascinating Stories, Adventures, Serial Stories, Humorous aud Travel Sketches, etc., are announced lor the Volume for 1897. 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And One Bundled Others. iV Mm EMGYGLOPcDIA I T tl luitflit wul. be the oatno ot h I W AM-f.l0 UUUft SWPill VXB v 1 m iu lur la Rib Wo- ,u "i" ,,w book U Jr PUBLISHINQ HOUSE 50 vt w w St sty w VI