Plgi Drive Off m rython. Ernest Hose communicates to the Sarawak Gazette some observations on an encounter between a python and wild pigs in the juugle at Tambak. A young pig bad been seized by a large python, and the cries of distress sum moned about twenty of the herd to an attack. They gored the python eavagely with their tusks, and so harassed and lacerated it an to force it to relinquish its prey. The python was ultimately killed by Mr. Hose. Nature. No-To-Bm for Fifty Onto. Guaranteed tobacco habit cure, makes weak awn strong, blood pure. 60c. l. All druggist. The average marrying ate of a French- man is thirty years. You Can Get Tired By working hnr.l, nnd then you cau got rested again. But if you are tired all the time It means tunt your blood is poor. You need to take Hood's Siirsnpitrllla. the great cure for that tired Joi-ling because it is the great eurlohor and vltnlizor of the Mood. You will tlu it appetite, nerve, mental and digestive strength in Hood's Sarsaparilla America's Greatest Medicine. Hood's PHIS cure Oausca. iudiitestion. Se ine Adjatani-Ueneral. The latest authority on military mat tars declares that the "adjutant-general is the principal orgnu of the com mander of au army iu publishing orders. The same organ of the com mander of a division, brigade, geo graphical division or department is styled assistant adjutant-general. The laws of the United States, however, provide for but one adjutant-general, with the rank of brigadier-general, made by regulations chief of a bureau of the War Department, and charged, under the general, with details affect ing army discipline, with the recruit ing service, records, returns, etc., two assistant adjutant-generals, with the rank of colonel; four with the rank of lieutenant-colonel, and ten with the rank of major. The bureau duties of adjutant-generals and assistants are: Publishing orders in writing; making up written instructions and transmit ting them; reception of reports and returns; disposing of them, forming tables, showing the state and position of corps ;"regulating details ol service; corresponding with the administrative departments relative to the wants of troops; corresponding with the corps, detachments, or individual officers serving under the orders of the same commander; and the methodical ar rangement and care of the records and papers of his office. The active duties of the adjutant-general consists iu establishing camps, visiting guards and outposts, mustering and inspect ing troops; inspecting guards and de tachments, forming parades and lines of battle; the conduct and control of deserters and prisoners; making re oounoisances; and in general discharg ing such other active duties as may be assigned them." St. Loujs Globe Democrat. What Locusts Will Not Eat. It is said that the castor-oil plant is abhorred by nearly all members of the animal world; that moles may be driven from a lawn by plauting a few castor-beans in it, and that neither the terrible "army worm," nor the all-destroying locust will eat it. JVEEVOTT DEPRESSION. A TALK WITH W..IS. PINKIIAM.) A woman with the blues is a very un comfortable person. She is illogical, unhappy and frequently hysterical. The condition of the mind known as " the blues," nearly always, with wo men, results from diseased organs of generation. It is a source of wonder that in this age of advanced medical science, any person should still believe that mere force of will and determination will overcome depressed spirits and nerv ousncss in women. These troubles are indications of disease. Every woman who doesn't under stand her condition should vrite to Lynn, Mass., to Mrs. Pinkham for hei advice. Her advice is thorough com mon sense, and is the counsel of a learned woman of great experience Read the story of Mrs. F. S. IJenxetT Westphalia, Kansas, as told in the fol lowing letter: " Dead Mrs. Fi'khaii: I have suf fered for over two years with falling-, enlargement and ulceration of ths womb, and this spring, being in such a weakened condition, caused me tc flow for nearly six months. Some time ago, urged by friends, I wrote to you for advice. After using the treatment which you advised for a short time that terrRde flow stopped. "I am now gaining strength and flesh, and have better health than I have had for the past ten years. 1 wish to say to all distressed, suffer ing women, do not suffer longer, whet there is one so kind and willing t( aid you. Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com pound is a woman's remedy for wo man's ills. More than a million wo men have been benefited by it. FALL DRESS GOODS Aiintrnlinn l li-rre-The liihte-.l, wannest i i tic known for dresses, wrapi-Tn, nhirt-wslKtn, etc. J7 inches wMi-; 12H ct. uer y.rd. Ei.reiai;i prepaid. Hend U cent. In Mampn to tli. Textile Mavrll? C ., 1H Um ft., ewYark lor aaiui leaoflluir entire line. If you are, nn.nli to find thee Kootla in your retail .tore we wlli upi'ly yn from our n. ill dire. i. MMf wife bad ptroplea on her rare, but he his been taking L'AMJAKKTS sod the? Save all disappeared. I hud been troubled with constipation fur Home time, but after tak ing the first Caacan;t I hare bad no trouble with tbla ailment. Wo cannot speak too high ly Of Cabarets." Fmo Wahtman. 7l Germaotowo Ave.. Philadelphia, Pa f4p$l CANOV N 4 CATHARTIC TRAD MAN WtaitTtRIO Pl..Dt. Palatable. I'utent. Tail Good. l)g Quod, Merer sicken. Weaken, or Grioe. Wu, ZJc.iUc. ... CURE CONSTIPATION. ... eaMy tmr, tatoe lr.l. .. iwt. i Kfl.Tn.Rlf! Bold and guaranteed by all drag. Judicious Poultry Feeding- All who raise poultry recognize the fact that it is impossible to give any definite rule for feeding, either as to quantity or variety, and that the con ditions surrounding each individual flock must be taken into consideration in supplying a ration. It is also gen erally recognized that different breeds require different courses of treatment and feeding for the best results. There are, however, few general rules which apply to feeding all breeds. In feeding for egg produc tion, only sweet feed generally will produce the proper flavor in an egg, and consumers of late are quite as par ticular about the flavor of the eggs as of other things they consume. The active Leghorn can staud much more corn thau the heavy Brahma or the medium weight Plymouth Rock. In grain foods all poultrymen should recognize the value of wheat, oats, corn, barley and split peas fed in a mixture over any of them fed separ ately, for egg production. It will be plainly seen that the question of judi cious feeding is one that must be reg ulate 1 to suit tke requirements of ones hock. if the best results come from a ration that is not gen erally accepted by poultrymen as the best, never mind, stick to it until you have good reasons gained from your own experience to change. Atlanta Journal. What a Garden is Worth. The value of a good garden is more thun is appreciated. It is a satisfaction to all the fainily.especiqjly to the mother, who is enubled to get supplies from it for the meals she has to prepare. The man who plauts it, too, is proud of first-class garden. In this section where the soil is quick to respond to the influence of heat, moisture, fertil izer and cultivation, gardening should be a pleasure. In laying off the little plot arrange your rows so as to permit the use of the cultivator; have long, straight rows of vegetables. If you plan to do all the cultivation with a hoe your garden will be full of weeds. Some of our readers may have seen gardens with weeds higher than a man a head digging potatoes there was not easy nor were the tubers large. Not half of our farmers have enough sorts in their gardens. Think what value there would bo in having an abundance of pio plant, lettuce, radishes, peas, beans, beets, turnips, cabbages, onions, potatoes, sweet corn, squash, cucum bers and all the small fruits, tomatoes, a few apples, peaches and pears. If some one who hSa such a garden, one sore in extent, will keep an accurate account of the value of the produce consumed on the farm and sold in one season, it will be found that a good garden goes a long way toward the support of the family. The South west. Cleaullne.f In the Dairy. There ore a few points that seem to be overlooked when you count the requisite necessities -of cleanliness in regard to milk and butter. It is usu ally said that the milk pails and crooks must be scrupulously clean, but there is another important item. A man or woman who milks should have their hands and nails faultlessly clean also their clothes should be as neat as possible for bacteria and disease germs multiply where there is the least chance. If thero is a place about a form where cleanliness should be observed, it is the dairy. Borax kills the germs which cause the milk to sour and it is an excellent purifier and cleaner where the mijk crocks and vessels are concerned. The pails and crocks should be rinsed onoe a day in borax water to Ucep them pure and sweet. The hands of the milker should be washed in borax water every day, and especially before milking. This sim ple practice will keep away mountains o! trouble and health and hygiene will prevail. It is cheap and cleanly, and the churns and tin cans in which milk is deliverod to town customers should be rinsed out with borax water. It disinfects, and microbes are said to linger about the stables by myriads, bonce every precaution to purify and make clean is a virtue. This thought of washing the hands clean is a worthy one, for I have seen men attempt to milk without ever thinking of washing their hands, and tho pure stream of milk sent through grimy fingers gave you a diatate to the u.i'.k.aud of all things we eat ordiiuk that wo want dainty, it is milk and butter. Farm, Field and Fireside. recline Flea In Summer. Summer is the timo to make pork. Making it in winter requires too much food to keep up the animal heat. If hogs have plenty of grass in summer and about half the corn they will eat, they will fatten rapidly and my belief is that threo pounds can be made on less grain than one pound in cold weather with a hog iu a close pen. Tho grans is cooling and loosening aud counteracts tho feverish properties of the corn. Hogs will never melt in summer, however fat, if they can have access to water and mud to lie in. Mud is very bad for hogs in cool weather. It absorbs too much animal heat. Milk is cooliug as a drink aud blmost indiuponsnblo in raising pigs. But very little corn and no com mesl should be fed to young pigs be fore they aro fonr months old. Com and taw com meal cnuso young pig to become costive. Then they will soon scour. They will bogiu to rub figainst everything they cau get at. Their hkin will havo a icd nud dry nppcaruncc. A dry, bl.tck scurf will begin to form nu 1 the more com nud nical thoy cat the pooler tbey will be come. The best thing to do for r. pig in this condition is to give him a thor onh washiiif; in varui water or r.our milk, tho latter being tho best. Coerce flour or middlings from rjo or wheat. when made into a thin drinking slop with milk, is tke best feed for young pigs, except bread and milk, r ood has to be fermented before it will di gest, aud if fed to youag pijs before it is fermented it will overtask their stomach and spoil -them. Lettuce is good for young pigs. It will Btop the scours. The middliugs should be put with milk at night after feeding- has been done, and allowed to reaiain in the milk until morning. Never allow tho swill tub to get quite empty. Always leave a little at the bottom to act as yeast The swill should nfver be allowed to get Btale. Slop feed should be. given often and never more at a time thau will be eaten up. Slops will make larger hogs thau dry feed. After the hogs get to be three or four months old, their food cau.be made stronger, but a pi will not bear much strong food uutu it begins to change from a pig to a hog. Mauy of our farmers do not know tho value of grass as a feed for hogs. At least oua would not think so, when their hogs of all ages may be Been during the whole summer iu email yards or at best on very scanty pasture. Farm ers who know the real value of such feed wonld as soon think of raising cattle and making milk and butter by feeding their stock grain alone during tue whole summer as to raise hogs aud make tho business profitable without a good supply of grass. Some men make pork with little or no grass, but it costs much more and the hogs are not so healthy. New England Homestead. Farm and Garden Motel. a. ngut, weu drained soil is neces sary to successfully grow muskjuelons. Once a month at least every chicken. old and young, should be thoroughly powaereu. T . a ... .every pound or manure that can possibly be made should be collected and spread on the land. Throopa is a trouble prevalent with young pigs and is due to feeding too much grain bud giving too little exer cise. , Keep the hoe bright by constant work among the bedded-out plants, as cultivation is to them what food is to the body. do careiui to grub out all weeds in the corners before they go to seed and thus make you plenty of extra work next season. If a spell of dry weather comes, help out the little moisture the plants ob tain from the dew by the frequent use ol a watering-can. The round silo is best, as the great est capacity is secured with the least side exposure. A round silo is thus the most economical. It is hardly necessary to urge the flower-grower to keep the weeds down. Weeds and plants, while often close neighbors, are not fast friends. A knapsack Bprayer is a necessity on every fruit aud vegetable farm, and its use will save much time and labor in combatting disease and insects. use considerable care in pruning shrubs during the snmnier, for while the operation in many cases is success ful, in others it results disastrously. In many sections the rust is often on strawberry plants. This disease may be controlled to some extent by mowing off the tops of the plants after fruiting. Hogs do better if they can set in the shade (Turing the heated days of sum mer. They cannot be harmed by the chance to get there if they are so in clined. If you want a good garden you must give it cleau culture. Oood seed and care in planting may have given you a good stand, but neglect now will re sult in a poor crop. Green cabbage worms succumb to a powder made of Pyrethrum powder, one pound, cayenne pepper half pound, nour one and a half pounds. Apply with a powder gun when the dew is on. . WISE WORDS. Look before you leap; see before yon go. Tusser. Burdens become light when cheer fully borne. Ovid. Children have more need of models than of critics. Joubcrt. Constancy is the complement of other human virtues. Mazzini. Censure is the tax a man pays to the publio for being eminent. Swift. The truly generons is truly wise. and he who loves not others, lives un blest Home. The more any one speaks of himself the less he likes to hear another talked of. Lavater. To dispense with ceremony is the most delicate mode of conferring g compliment. Bulwer. Provideuce has given ns hone and sleep as a compensation for the many cares of life. Yoltaire. Wherever you flndpatienoe.fldolity, honor, kindness, trath, there you find respectability, however obscure and lonely men may be. H. W. Beecher. Indian Canale. Probably the largest canal in the world is the Chenab Irrigation Canal in the northwest provinces of India. Its breadth is 200 feet, with a inaiu channel some 450 miles long, while the principal branches have an aggre gate length of 2000 miles, and the vil lage branches will extend, whon com pleted, s;me 4000 miles additional. But, apart from irrigation, the longest canal iu the world is that which ex tends from the frontier of China to St. Petersburg, nud is 4472 miles in length. The Bengal Canal, connect ing with the river Ganges, is J00 miles long, and in all India there are 11,000 miles of canals, irrigating 8,. 000.000 acres. A TEMPERANCE COLUMN. THE DRINK IN EVIL MADE MANIFEST MANY WAYS. Learn to Say No Balancing Account Only an Allegory, But It Shows How n Drmkard Stand. With Old Alcohol Promlaed to Make a Gentleman, Itat Tnrned Oat a Tramp. Learn to speak this little word In Its proper place, Let no timid doubt be hoard Clothed with skeptio grace; Lt thy lips without disguise Tour it boldly out. Though a thousand dulcet lies Keep hovering about. To be sure our Uvea would lose Future years ot woe If our couragooould refuso The present hour with "No." Balancing Account. A thickset . usrly-looklnjr follow was seated on a bench In the publio park, and seemed to be reading some writing on a sheet ot paper whiolt he held in his band. "You seem to be luterosted Iu your writ ing," I said. "IV. I-.. , n...i.. . .i 1 . K"r"K my accounts with Old Alcohol tosoe how we stand." "And be comes out ahead, I suppose?" "Kvery time; and he has lied like sixty." "How did vou come to haveilnallnir.m-trh him in the first place?" "That's what I've been writing. Yon soe he promised to make a man of me, but he made me a beast. Then he said be would brace me up, but he has made me no tna. Bering round and then throw me into the ditch. He said I must drlnlr t n lia .rwlnl Then he made me quarrel with my best menus, ana to oe tne laughing-stock of my enemios He gave mo a black eve and a oronen nose, men I drank for the irnr.i of my health. He ruined the little I had. uu icu uio biuk as a uog. " ui course." Ho said he would warm me uo. and I was soon nearly frozen to death . He said he would steady my nerves, but Instead ho gave me delirium tremens. He said u would give me strength, and he made me neipioas.- "l o be sure." "He promised me ccurage." "Then what followed?". "inen be made me a oownrd. fur T hei my sick wife and kicked mv little nhil.l it. said be would brighten my wits, but in stead he made me act like a fool and talk iiko au Knot., lie proulsed to make a gen- tieman ot me, put ho has made me tramp." One Itea.on Why Cerrera Lost. From the news columns of the New York World: With the command to advanct cam the order, "Open the stores of wine ana uraniiy." omcera and meu drank freely therofrom. The Spanish officers urew tneir pistols and threatened Instant death to the first man who flinched or hen!. taieu in ms work. In the stokehole, 120 degrees or neat, half-drunken officers stood near nan-drunken stokers, and tho first man who gave way to fatigueand heat and the effects of tho coenas was shnt In hit tracks. On the gun-decks the sun beamed aown on men whose stomachs were flllod with the fiery llould and mads them hnli mad. They tore their clothing from oil their backs, eurslns and shrieking hiin nf tho strain and liquor. Thus nerved with liquor, the Spaniards prepared for the uesperaio struggle The Americans went rrora their prayers to battle. From the news columns nf the M. Vnri- journal: rne Spanish gunners were drunk. This is freely admitted by the prisoners. Indeed, some of them still show the olTects oi tne uuDHtieu that gave them the des perate courage for the adventure. The wine ana spirits on board were handed out to them without stint. On board nearly every ship it was tho same an orglo with ueatn lor Its end, for none ot them ex- pee ten to live to see tho end nf lr Th. men drank as thay served the guns. Thos nuu reiuemoer aescriue tne sennn nn the doomed ships as a saturnalia of the aamneu. Inebriety of Young Men. Dr. George H. McMlchaol. of nnffuln contributes a suggestive naner to tht wuaneriv Journal of Inetir etv In v ilnh he states that there Is some evidence that ineuriety amongst American young men li luereusiug, partly attriuutabie, he thinks' ' ' emu ins now iasiilonaiiln amnno .uo nruuuy classes, ho Dolleves that tht desire for alcoholio drinks is milnh mnr. easily acquired between the airea nf seven. teen and twonty-flve than in latar life, and imuM mm it ineuriety uas, up to now been comparatively uncommon in vnnihi jt has been because the customs of society have mado Indulgence comparatively difficult;" but he adds that "these are rap idly disappearing if they have not already disappeared, aud druukenness among young men soems to be Increasing." Sure ly there is an urgent call Id thin for n m vival ot the old-time method of pledg signing and a total abstinence orusado among in young. no Moral Fest-Houies For Oar f'.mna we uo well to honor our soldier to . r vide them with good camps, good food good clothing, and all other actual nea.l. it is right that they should be paid for theli inestimable service, and when disabled or paruy uisaDied thev are entit ed tn nen. oiuua, i ii isiiui teas important that then moral wolfare should be upon the heartl ol atnna. K,. I. I. . I . . m uunon. Aoousu tne canteen, rescind the special privilege of offleers. and let our camps be freed from the presence ol that which breeds Incalculable moral and physical evils. Let tho count ni us vast resources uamtles, comforts, need ful luxuries for our nrmv. and let thai SOOUrgO Of Civilization, the Kftlnnn th. moral pest-house of our sin TT1H It A hn rrckA uui ui uvery camp, it is a shame to us tc be eDgaged in debauching thoso wuc hould be oar stanch defenders, or to allow - . ' union m uu u.-sew xorit Independent, Whisky Killed the Ilest of the Tribe. The last of the Lake Tlnlnn Tmlinna m joun unesuisnou and Madeline, his wlfo. They live, tho solo survivors of their trilm on the shore of Lake Union, which now lies wholly within the town of Seattle wasn. John is over seventy vearn nl,l nnri wife is not much younger. They state without any false orido of "whisky killed the rest of them." They themselves have avoided the destroying beverage. They have never been at odds with the whites, bv whom thev nrA nnn "" eurruunuou. xvn xork Journal. Beat Weapon n Temperate Life. "History tells of mnnv a nrnml irmi going forth tooonquer, but returning con quered Itself by the enervating effects ot its own excesses." says the Detroit Free Press. "Intemperance and debauchery nru more to be dreaded than any human foe wiiu guua unu swords. Tbe best weupon which the young soldier can take with him to tuua is a temperate life." Notes ot the Crusade. The majority of the clergy are abstainers auu uuu-smoaers. Drunkenness always debases a com munity. A man or woman reeling lu pub- 110 piaoes onsets the sight of a thousand who aro goner. An unhappy childhood means, very often, a blighted aftor life. Drinking parents are uiiuio iur a groat part or the unhappi ness of childhood. Who can blame the children of drunken parents, if, when they grow up, and often long before that time, they hasten to leave surroundings that havo been a torture to them for years? The Srst drink Is the first link in a chain of spiritual bondage. Don't forge the tlrst mere is need for temperance. There is " r totai ausunence. This is 6elf- uu neeus 110 Ptool, and yet the difficulty of Impressing people with the .mm ui 11 is very great. People who Insist on others drinking in toxicants are d lug the devil's work, and the sooner thev realize it the liettee v.,., tlculurly is this so when they force liquor "i "" uo uaro never titstod it before. Surround your children with good Influ ences if you would have them grow up a credit to their race and faith. Above all keep out of your home that most Insidious form of temptation, Intoxicating liquors of all kinds. The OrTe of Colnmbnt; A native of Syracuse, N. Y., who visited Cuba took a number of photo graphs during his stay there of which he is decidedly proud. One of the best is a picture of the Columbus Monument and chapel iu Havana. This spot is of special interest to tour ists, because it is claimed that the body of the great discoverer is buried there. It is the first place shown to visitors, aud the guides take great de light in telling of the great deeds of their adored hero. Boy Verana ioaf. They tell a good one on Adjutant rump lateman, of the f ourth Vir- ...it, . ginia, and now ue parted witn a crisp 3J bill ou payday recently. Ouo of the mascots of Camp Cuba Libre a gout this time prowled into the vicinity where Adjutant Yateman was comfortably seated entertaining his friends with some rich anecdotes. w hile goats, geuerally speaking,' are repellent, this oue was attractive, aud became the topic of the conversation, Speaking of tho goat's eccentricities, it was concluded by all, just as the Btable-boy approached, uo one could hold down a goat's head to the ground, and rub the goat s nose iu the sand. ao, sir," said the adjutant, "I'll bot $5 it can't be done." The stable- boy Stood, and asked: "Do you meau that, captain?" "I do," was the reply. "Aud you will give mo $5 if I do it?" "Certaiuly," with a reassuring smile on his lips. Then the stable-boy, with rol!ed-up sieeves, approacued tuogoat. lie bad him by the horns, and then they A 1 ... tussied. uown, down, came his head, lower and lower, but the ground seemed a good way off yet; and then, in the miniature, there was enacted the scono of the fight of the Lygian witn tue bull, as described in "Ouo vadis. livery one was intensely in terested aud excited, and the goat and mo boy lurnisiiod lots of sport. With the muscles of his little arms standing out like whipcords, the boy brought mat goat s nose down to the sand and rubbed it good and well, until the dust now as fast aud furiously under his nose as it did from his pawing feet Adjutaut Yateman had added to his list a brand new $5 anecdote. Honda Times-Union aud Citizen. A Curious Flower Wreath. Miss Elizabeth Taylor, writmsr iu I'opular Science ews of the elauts and flowers of Iceland, describes a curious sight which she witnessed in the lava fields near Reykjahlid. Notic ing wreaths of steam issuing from tho summit of a small volcano, she climbed np there, and found a band about two feet wide, of beautiful plauts, bearing large flowers, encir cling the interior hue of tho orator. I lie steam warmed the flowers and the rim of rocks protected them from the cold winds without. Where the Statue or Liberty Is. x ne oiaiue oi liberty stauda on Bedloe or Eodlow's Island, which is geographically within the State of New Jersey, but legally within tho State of jow Xork. Beauty la Blood Deep. dean blood means a clean akin, toi beauty without it. Cascarcts, Candy Cathar tic clean your blood and kceo it :lean. bv stirring up tue lazy liver ana driving an im purities I rem tne Douy. licgin to-day to banish pimples, boi s. b btches. blackheads. and that sickly bilious complexion by taking va3vaici.--ueiiuiY lor ten cents, ah nruir- guta, auuftiucuun guuraniceu, 1UC, iOC, Ovc. For calling a central telephone girl a slllv goose and threatening to come and box her ears, a man was condemned la Vienna to fourteen days in Jail. , lllcrcll.t. and Dog.. It fremipntlv hitniiemi that. a. llrv,llf like to drive oft an annoyltiK doit, but doesn't am tun oenxi, run toe ria of a tin I let uiiunga uysiitnuor, nor attract tne atteutlnu which a cartridge ei plosion Is certain to do. j m uuk m L-uuMi-queuiiy encoiiraKtvi lotry his trick on tlin litxt rulitr A miitiill...a fi...i shootliiK water, ammonia or other liquid, it now mulled postpaid fur 50 cts. la stituira by tne union f-um uppiyi o.. i; Leonard it.. N. Y. City. One of these will drive off the mnr. n. .iici uiene win anve on tne most vicious kuIiumI. and mill not. iy-hIIv Inlimii A few drops of Ammonia in the even. tioaA or mouth of any animal (five it somotliluif vo loin 01 uuier man onttierinK a cyclist. Jt m uuuu vo wuut-iiuen auu wneel women. A perfectly formed face one-tlilrd fnra. head, one-third nose and one-third upper nuu lower l-uiu. Fire Cents. tverybodr knows that Dobbins' F.loctrle. soap is tne best In tho world, and for 33 year it has sold at the highest price. Its price U uow 5 cents, samo as common brown soap. Bars full sire and quail ty. Order of grocer. Adt The raisins of mushrooms fcr ParlHlnn. gives employment to 1200 persous, thesulea nmuuuuuK 10 i,oou,uuu year. Boat Tokacce Spit aad Batok year Life Ait.t. To quit tobacoo easily and forever lie nn. notlc. full of life, nerve and vione tntv vt-iv. IJao, the wonder-worker, that makes weak men o.ruiig. au orugRista. sue or II. Cureeuarun- weu. iioouiet una sample free. Address on-iiiug itemeuy co, Chicago or New York. The beat has been so irrenr in Moihiumn Australia, recently that the usphalt streett have been melted and completely ruined. Fits permanently onred. Koiiilnrf,.n... ness after ttrstdny'guse of Dr. Kline's Grcal Nerve Restorer. $2 trial bottle and treatise fret DB. B. U. Klink, Ltd., 31 Arch Kt.Phila..Pa A Chicago doctor claims to hava cured consumption by compressing thelungs with uttrogon, permitting self-healing. Educate Your Bowels With Cuscareta. ' Candv Cathnrtie. enm .nnD.i-..i.. . .. 10c, !!5c. If C. C. C. full, druggists refund mnnev The Inhabitants of Arran, where th plentifully, einploj niuidenbuir forn Krows .1 as a substitute for tea. To Cure A Cold In Oue Day. Takn Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. A l. "uib.. iciuuu uiuuey 11 11, tana to cure, u, One firm In Austria uses ten tons nf nlin.. phorus a year, and turns out '25,000,000,000 mutches. -Mrs. Winslow'. Soolhlno- Heron foei-Mlilr.,, teething, suf tens the Bums, reduced In limn in.. tiou, allays pain, cures wiud colic, liic.a bottle. The engine of an express train ntninmw twelve gallons of water for each mile traveled. After six veant fniffoHnir f wA.rtin.,1 hv TM. so's Cure. Makv Thomson, Six Ohio Ave-Alk-Khauy, Pa.. March 19. ltW. In Itussia it is the custom for duelists Iu breakfast together before going out to light. To Cure Constipation ronme. Take nAftmreLi r!nniW r-athtl, in e- If C. C. C fail to cure, druggists refund money Taking all the year round, the coldeat hour of the twenty-four is live o'clock in tne morning. W. H. Griffin. .Wkunn W,.,l,. ..!!.... "Suffered with Catarrh for fifteen ri.nr. Hull's Catarrh Cure cured lne." Bold bv IJruvl gists,-1 JC. Chocolate Is used In the Interior of Month America for a currency, as are nuts and eggs. Where Coa.uinptloa Thrives. More cases of consumption appear tmong needlemakers and fllemakers than among any other class of laborers. " Doctor, what Is free alkali?" " The alkali used In the manufacture of soap Is a strong chemical and Is destructive of animal and vegetable tissue. " Pure soap is harmless, but when the soap Is carelessly or dis honestly made, alkali Is left In It and It is then said to be ' free.' Soap containing free alkali should not be used where It may do damage. " In the medical profession, in sickness, In surgery and In the hospitals we use Ivory Soap because it Is pure and contains no free alkali. ' ' Ivory Soap Is a powerful antiseptic, it Is healing to a diseased surface and stimulating to a healthy skin." IVORY SOAP IS 99 PER CENT. PURE. ' ' fWlt.ll 1M m - a IU.tl. A. - ULSLgJL-LOjUULa. gXSULILiUlJLOJLO.JLOJlg g.MJL7JULjLgJLg-a0 m in For knilai-liii (whether .Irkor ncrvoun). tooth. .-he, ueurali;!., rheiiiuti.,n, himo.10, r.in .ml Vu.bn. I.. .l. l.u..b ...1... ... iTl....... ....... iroiiml the liver. pleurUy, .Wfllinij nf ilia ..int. ind twin, of .11 klu.!-. the i'll. il,,n of Hxlnr.y'. iraily Hrllef will afford tiulne.ll.te eane, .ml In tomiuued iw for . few day. rfftx't. a iwrm.ueiit tur. A CURE FOR ALL Summer Complaints, . DYSENTERY, DIARRHEA, CHOLERA MORBUS. A tl.lf to . tpftsocnnflll of lleblv Hellef in a lialf mmliler of w.ier. rem-.tnl ort.n iI,m ,ll- i-li.rue ronll.nix, .ml . ftuinel uturatvd with llt-.tily llellef il.c-cl oter the atomarh or bowele, will .flora IniimilMt. relief .ml uiu i-ffn-l a en. InTKHNALLl A llrlll to a tt-UIIOOUflll 111 half . tiimlilsr of water will In a few mlnutm run I'rainiM. H-niB. Hour Stoma, h. N.nse.. Vomiting, lloartVilrn, Nervoneliewi, hleril.iiiea, Hti'k Heed cue. Flatulency and all Internal paiuii. Malaria la lis Varinu. Karma t'nrad aud Prevented. There I. not a remedial airent Ui the world that will cure fever anil aiie ami all other malarious, Mil. urn ml other level h. aiileO by HADWAi'H MLLM. 10 quickly a. 11 ADTi AY'S IIKADY KKI.1EK. i-nce mi cent. i er twtlle. Bold l r all iltuiixtsta. H ADU AY A t O., Si Kim Ht., New York. rlENSION f Successfully Prosecutes Claims. Lat!rlnclal Examiner U.S. r-en.ion Hur.au. Jji.lulaat war, IbaujudicaUugeiaiui., attjr tuwa, FillNT r WALLS GESLINGS CALCIMO FRESCO TINTS FOB DECORATING WALLS AND CEILINGS Ca Id m o paint ilealer ami do Totir own kalwinilnlm?. This material la mad-, on a.-iiitlflo yriurlplei! br machinery ami 1111lle.Hu twenty-four tlu in and la .uwrlor to aur concoction of Olue aud Whit ing that cau po.nll.ly be made bjr baud. Te be niUed with I aid H at. r. irsEXII I'Olt H4TIPI.P i ni nu i .uv wwn iu iiivv iuu we wui illli Jll UAM CO "iii.au 1 ji in 1 hi mu, ... i IE BICYCLISTS NEED A 'f-e'S.tt Is. AGAINST DOCS OR MEN. WITHOUT KILLING OR MAIMING. LOTS OF FUN TO BE HAD l.l. rfl ic Zr IT ? Pr",'cU mlaUH. make, fun, laughter and J .iL. 1 !?."uo,,,, P" once, but m.ny time, without nkiaillug; and will protect hy it. anpearanc. Iu tin., of danger, although loaded only with Uanid L.X"'" ?'T P l.an.l..,i.e, .ad n"kel p l.ed. e In Sc. Poe'aga Wtaiup., roat-ofUce Money order, or Eipren Money Order A. u. our relUMMy. r....r to H. u. !. 7or Bnd.tre.lTmet.il? SZZZJiJ MEW VORK UXIOX SIPPLY CO., 135 Leonard StM ew York. "Forbid a Fool a Thing and that he will Do." Don't Use SAPOLIO JUST THE BOOK CONDENSED ENCYCLOPEDIA OF UNIVERSAL KNOWLEDGE, as II IreaU upon aliout every subject aoder th tan. It contains 630 pava. profusely illustrated, and will be Bent, postpaid, for 60c, In .tamps, postal Bote or silver. When readlnif van doubU less run across ref- m mm Miija.... ,,... m manv AN ENGYGLOPEDIA matter, and thlnp FJ i.EJIVl!l IlQClBDfl .Meh roa do not aaderstand and will clear tip for plat Index, so that it may be la a rich mine of valuable Interesting manner, and is FOR 50c. Umaa Ue small sum of FIFTY CENTS which we ask for IL Aatudyof this book will prove of Incalculable benefit to thoM whoa education haa beaa neglected, while the volutin will also be fo(i of ureat valoe to thoae who cannot readily command tho knowledge tui karc acquired. BOOK PUBLISHING HOUSE. 134 Leonard St.. N. Y. City. 'An Old Shipyard. - A shipyard at Omiuato, Japan, stft in operation, was established over 1900 years ago. BetMl-Oear Chainless ir- Bicycles MAKE HILL CLIMBING EASY. Columbia , Chain Wheels, $75 mfi $401! Hertford, . . 50 1.Vvla.J. Vedettes, $40 & 33 ) POPE MFG. CO., TTfN-. HarltorJ, HiiX- Conn. MrMTTn'M"1'""' pahkk wiikn kktly I.Ujjli llUll INllTOAUVT!. NYNU-80 innu .n.i n .......... imnham this material ;aluluu It. put jrou in tue way of . tS KNiKl AU list IAILS. ta -1Kb (Syrup. Tauee Good. Las r W Ime. 80M hT (Imirirl.ta. fH KEW UUH.HTOV, S. I.. V YOKIL ' - "-'-,":siB' STOL Pi SHOOTS WATER, AMMONIA, OR OTHER LIQUID. CTS. WITH IT. ei YOU WANT: to refer 16 constantly. ! nfie hnnH. which thla book you. It baa a co in referred to easily. This I Oik Information, presented lo aa well worth to any oua nut