f I Lancet, comuieutiuK ou tne ui oi Urassi to have preceded Bignani in the discovery of the uialarial-bearinR mosquito, suggests that it would "be of interest to know the distinguishing marks of his 'special mosquitoes, so as, inter alia, to understand how it is that in Rome, where there are no mos qnitoes properly so called, malaria is preTalent, while in Florence, where mosquitoes (properly so called) abound, there is no malaria at all." Medical Record. To Florida Kroorf. The Plant System reaches the finest re sorts in Florida, Cuba, Jamaica and Porto lilco. Tickets by both rail anil water from the East. Tri-weekly steamship service be tween Tort Tampa, Key West and Havana. Beautifully Illustrated literature, maps, rates, etc., upon application to J. J. Farns wortli. Eastern rnss. Agent, riant System, 261 Broadway, New York. Spanish books will be admitted to Cuba free of duty for ten years. Lane's Innilly Medicine. Moves the bowels each day. In order to be healthy this is necessary. Acts gently on the liver and kidneys. Cures siok head ache. Prloe 25 and 60c. Senator Wolcott speaks In a high-pitched voice and with few vestures. Warm Blood Coursing through the veins, feeds, nour ishes and sustains all the organs, nerves, muscles and tissues of the body. 1 Hood's Sarsaparllla makes warm, rich, pure blood. It Is the best medleino you can take in winter. It tones, invigorates, strengthens and fortifies the whole body, preventing colds, fevers, pneumonia and the grip. Hood's Sarsa parilla Is America's Greatest Medicine. Trice $1. Prepared by C. I. Hood & Co, Lowell. Mass, Hood's PillS cure Sick Headache. 25c. The World's Population Increasing. Even in uncivilized parts of the world there is conclusive evidence that population is increasing. The black races of Africa are the most prolific of human beings. A district may be wasted and most of its inhabitants killed, but in ten or fifteen years the devastated region is as thickly popu lated as ever. Some of the most de structive native wars in this century have been waged in the region behind Lagos, on the Upper Guinea coast, bnt this district, as large as New York State, is now more densely peopled than any other part of Africa except the lower Nile Valley. The Chinese have demonstrated how vast a popula tion, mainly agricultural, may be sup ported in a comparatively small area; and in China, as in some other densely peopled regions, the population has increased with perhaps peculiar rapid ity, because of its enjoyment, of com parative immunity from epidemics of disease. New York Sun. A LIVING WITNESS. Mrs. Hoffman Describes How Sht Wrote to Mrs. Pinkham for Advice, and Is Now WelL Deab Mrs. Pixkiiam: Before using your Vegetable Compound I was a great sufferer. I have been sick for months, was troubled with severe pain in both sides of abdomen, sore feeling in lower part of bow els, also suffered with dizziness, headache, and could not sleep. I wrote you a letter describ ing my case and asking your advice. You replied tell ing me just what to do. I followed your direc tions, and cannot praise your medicine enough for what it has done for me. Many thanks to you for your advice. Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com pound has cured me, and I will recom mend it to my friends. Mrs. Florence E. Hoffmas, 513 Roland St., Canton, 0. The condition described by Mrs. Hoff man will appeal to many women, yet lots of sick women struggle on with their daily tasks disregarding the urgent warnings until overtaken by actual collapse. ' The present Mrs. Pinkham's experi ence in treating female ills is unparal leled, for years she worked side by side with Mrs. Lydia E. Pinkham, and for sometimes past has had sole charge of the correspondence department of her great business, treating by letter as many as a hundred thousand ailing women during a single year. I have been n-ln CASCABETI and at ft mild and effective laiatiTe they are imply won derful. Mr daughter and 1 were bothered with alcfc itomacb aod our breath was Terr bad. After taking a few dose of Cawaret we bare Improved wonderfully. The are a great help In ine family." Wii.uki.mina Na;kl. 1171 Hluenbou&e St., Cincinnati, Ohio. Pleasant. Palatable. Potent. Taste Good. Do Good, Never Sicken. Weaken, or Gripe. 10c. 2jc. We. ... CURE CONSTIPATION. ... UrHag .r.y Cmaoaaj, Cfcltat, iHlml, R.w Tar. 811 Kfl-Tfl Pl( Sold nd pnarantml b; all dmc HU' I U'DAto .1st to CI KU Tobacco UabtU Go to your grocer to-day and get a 15c. package of Grain0 It takes the place of cof fee at i the cost. Made from pure grains ii is nourishing and health ful. fn tint tYiAt vnnr rroear i!tm you GR A.CI O Accept nu UBitavM-u f&Xi CANDY JJ CATHARTIC TWA 01 MAR MOirttKCO '1 i'XUUd iilt-U Uj-Litu L .Combinations In Poultry Keeping. I have a neighbor whose poultry yards cover about one-fourth of an cre. In these yards he keeps fifty to sixty hives of bees. I think he usually keeps 200 hens, and the income from these, his bees and a small garden is sufficient for his small family. He has been very successful in bee-keeping in connection with poultry. lie is up-to-date in his management of them, using the late improvements in bee-hives ami other supplies for his bees, and he knows how to care for poultry to make them pay a good profit. This instance shows what can be done on a small lot by a man who will study to learn all about his busi ness and then will be thorough and painstaking in doing his work. On my own little farm in the village I have four large poultry yards. My plan is to utilize all the space in a way to obtain some profit from it, and for several years I have been planting those trees, vines, etc., in these yards, which I can protect from injury by the fowls. I first begau planting apples, pears, plums aud cherries five years ago, aud now I have a row of trees standing through the middle of each yard, from which we are getting some good fruit. The wire netting which incloses the yards is sis feet high. My plan was to utilize the netting as a trellis for grape vines. When feeding meat to the poultry I had buried the bones and refuse along these fences with a view of planting thegrapo vines over them. Three years ago I planted a few vines along the netting, and now they have grown so as to almost cover it. I have used one of the fences as a support for blackberries and raspberries, letting the canes grow to the top of the netting so the berries will be out of reach of tho hens. This plan has worked well, but I prefer to grow black caps in this way, as the canes can be more conveniently pulled through the meshes of the netting. In this way they will completely cover it and give it the appearance of an ornaineutal hedge. My experience in planting grapevines along the division fences, as far as I can now judge, will be a success, and I shall continue to plant until these fences are covered with vines. The first two years after planting I protect the young vines by placing pieces of netting around and far enough from them so the hens will not reach them. Yards with fences tovered with vines in this way present a very ornamental appearance, besides being a source of profit. The end which I have in view is to use all the fences inclosing the poultry yards for growing vines it is better to have yards with the length four or five times the width then through the middle of each yard, if they are fifteen or tweuty feet wide, plant small fruit trees, and in the line of trees and be tween them set a few hives of bees, Then frequently plow and harrow the space between the trees and vines, and sow small grain in tliem to make a scratching ground for the hens. The hens will pick up the worms and in sects, cultivate the ground for you around the vines and trees, and their droppings will enrich the ground. lour readers will not understand that I have this plan of utilizing poul try yards yet complete in my own practice as I describe it, but that in a part of my yard the trees and vines are new being successfully grown, and that my neighbor has proved by a trial that bees and poultry can be kept in the same yards, and that they are a profitable combination. We sometimes read about making a iving by some intensive system of growing fruit or vegetables in connec tion with poultry keeping, and we want to know if in actual practice it is often done. Success in an enterprise f this kind perhaps more than in any other depends on the man, whether he has a taste for the business and is unable of giving close attention to all the details of the work. For the right person I believe that an acre stocked with poultry and bees in the way I have described will yield a larger income than many dairy farms of 100 acres. The work is light bnt the man who makes it pay must be as constantly at work as the man on the farm, and more than this he must study and think as well as use bis hands, for a little neglect, may reduco his margin of profit below the cost of pro duction. V. II. Jenkins, in the Na tional Stockman. New Light on Milk Secretion. A careful study of officially authen ticated tests of Holstein-Friesian cows has been made by H. H. Wing and Leroy Anderson at Cornell (Bulletin 102) with the following results: The largest total yield of fut among two, three, four -year old, or full aged cows is, under every age, accompaniod by the highest per cent, of fat found among cows of that age. The smallest yield of fat for each age of auimnl is accompanied in only one case ly tue lowest per cent, ot fat, and that among the two-year olds, The largest yields of milk do not contain the lowest per cents, of fat nor do the smallest yields of milk con tain the highest per cents, oi fat. The stall fed cows average higher in total yield of milk and fat and in per cent, of fat than tho cows at pas ture. Equal quantities of the same kinds of food or similar quantities of differ ent kinds of food produce widely vary ing amounts of milk and butter in dif ferent animals. To produce the same or similar amounts of milk and butter different animals require widely vary ing amounts of food. Cows, although of the same breed and raised in the same herd, vary greatly in their power to mako an economic use of food. The cost of production is greatest among two-year olds and decreases gradually as the age increases up to four years, after which there is littlo if any varia tion. Within a period of ninety days from calving there is but little average variation in the per cent, of fat among the different ages, except that th average of all tho tests made at thirty one to sixty days from calving is lower than for any other period. There is slight variation in the average per cent, of fat between two, three and four-vear olds, and full aged cows, The highest per cents, of fats usu .11 v follow the shortest verwd between ui ki Cvj-ji luUrvikio lutt high est per cent, occurs most often at or near the noon hour, and the low est per cent. ' about equally often at morning and night with a much largoi number at midnight than at noon. The average range of variation dur ing seven days between the highest and lowest per cents, of fat for indi vidual animals is greater among four year olds and full aged cows than among the younger animals. Neither the cows which show very great variation during seven days in the per cent, of fat nor those which show slight variation are abnormal animals, since their total product of milk and fat is near the average foi their class. Cows which have been once tested and forced to their greatest capacity for a week rarely reach the same hight of production again dnriug the same period of lactation, even though the circumstances be otherwise most favorable, but frequently have made increased records in succeeding periods of lactation. There is an inoreaso of only 7.5 per cent of milk and 7.7 per cent, in fat of full aged cows over four-year olds, which show that, on an average, cows have very nearly reached their largest production between the ages of foui and five. Training Colt. The first lesson given the coll should begin when the colt is a month old. It should be haltor-hroken aud taught to lead, and when time comet to educate it will not bo necessary to teach the colt to lead. The second lesson should begin when the colt is two years old. Go into tho stall and lay the harness on the manger oi floor, and let the colt look and smell till he knows it will not injure him, and then pick the harness np and loj on his back as quietly as possible, and buokle on and bridle, and pnt the lines through the holes where the shafts go, and try to drive him. II he does not go right, just tap lightlj with whip around the legs to let him know that yon want him to go. Dc not lick him hard, for remember th colt has no reasoning faculties beyond the limits of his experience; hence, hf can reascn with acts alone. "With a horse acts speak louder thac words, and hence the absolute im portance of commencing every move with the horse right, tor by our actt he learns. After he gets so that you can drive him, hitch to a cart of buggy by first pulling the cart behind him, so that he will get acquainted with the noise, and then bitch up and get in as quietly as possibly, and da not excite or get him nervous. Try to start him. He may not go, bnt speak to him in a cool and easy way, and when he knows that yon are not excited he will think that everything is all right, and will undoubtedly start. When driving on tho road and the colt scares, do not lick him, but gel out and lead him up to the object, and let him smell it, and try to calm his fear by speaking to him, for by speaking to him he will get to trust in you. Treat him kiudly, and he will think you are his friend. Deal honestly with him; never lio to him, for he judges you by your aots. Nevei ask him to do a thing nnless you are in a position to compel obedience, and . e when lie obeys reward mm, ana ne will be your friend. A. F. Shelen berger, in National Stockman. Are Wild Cherry Leave Foiaonons? It is believed in many neighbor hoods that livo stock, especially cattle, aro occasionally poisoned by eating leaves of wild cherry trees or shrubs. In woods pastures these cherry trees are sometimes cut off, then from the stumps grow innumerable sprouts. Cattle being pastured in these locali ties eat the leaves with what is thought to be fatal results. To obtain some definite knowledge along this line the New Hampshire experiment station conducted eomt tests during the past two summers. The wild black cherry, choke cherry, wild red cherry, the wild yellow oi 'horse" plum and the dwarf cherry were used, investigations snowed that the leaves of the last two varieties were perfectly harmless. The test then proceeded with the three first named. Of these three it was found that tho leaves of the wild black cherry aro the most poisonous, though all are dangerous. There is a popular opinion that tue cherry leaves are poisonous only when cut and later eaten in a wilted condi tion. Some hold that cattle may safe ly nibble at them when growing with out danger. They are also considered quite harmless when dried. The in. vestigation proved, however, that both the wilted and fresh leaves are poison ous, while the dried are always to be regarded with suspicion. Vigorous young leaves from fresh shoots are most liable to be eaten by cattio ana are far more poisonous than the leaves from the mature tree or the stunted shrub. Leaves wilted in bright sun light to about seventy per cent, of the original weight or until they begin to appear slightly limp yield the greatest amount of prussio acid, tue poisonoui clement. Excavation In China. Information received here from the most remote corner of Shensi, north em China, within the'sphere, I be lieve, of the important British conces sion in that region, leaves no room for doubting that systematic excavations, conducted on a scientific principle, would yield valuable and important obiects of antiauarian interest. The verv urimitive and Iragmentary at' tompts in this way already made have revealed many pieces of antique bronzes and pottery, several of which have now arrived in ljondon. experts who have seen them state, 1 am in formed, that they are at least two thousand vears old. iteports nave also reached certain quarters in Lon don of the discovery near l oungsain Fou of cold obiects. supposed to be long to coats of mail, and an inlaid casque; all of which news makes it evident that a rich harvest for the an tiquarian is in store when the time is opportune to carry on the worn oi ex ploration in those regions. Birming ham (England) Tost. The number of women in the van ous departments of the University of Michigan for 1807, according to Tresi .dent Anzell'fl recent report.v was C73, DHINX - IN SVIL MADE MANIFEST MANY WAYS. Take a DrlnkT-What Alcohol Doe to the Iter It la Foolish to Buy an Ounce ot Pivecut measure With a Pound of Future Pain Abatlnenre la Sale. Take a drink? No, not It Keason'i taught ma better Than to biul ray very soul With a gulling tetter. Water, sweet and cool and tree, Has no cruel chains tor me. Mi I loth Like Serpent." Few tilings are so much dreaded as ser pents. They are so stealthy, and, except the rattlesnake, so silout, and some ot tbem, at Iea9t, are so deadly. There is no cure known tor the bite ot some snakes; the only chance is to out out the piece ot flesh which has been bitten or to burn it out with n red-hot iron, and even this will be ot no use unle. It is done directly after the bite Is received. Now, this Is very like what alcohol does to tbe drinker, who has only a very faint chance ot getting rid ot his thirst (or drluk when that thirst has once been formed In him. His only chaneo la to get the drink out, and keep it out ot his body. He cannot cut it out or burn It out; he has patiently to abstain from it until he has ceased to long tor it. Some times It is many years before this can be done, and sometimes the thirst comes back time after time for the whole ot a man's life, and keeps him la danger and anxiety. What good reason we have to avoid being bitten by this serpont ot strong drink. The mischief comes at last like many other bad things, the drink comes to us with a smiling face; It is pretty to look at as It sparkles in the glass; we gee some ot our friends taking It; we kuow that many good people not only take It, but even praise It. If we were to take some, very likely nt ilrst it would seem to be doing us good, and we might think it a useful thing to take. But it would all be a mistake; every kind ot strong drink is "a mocker," and soon after we bad got Into tbe habit ot taking it we should flud that we had mote or less diffi culty In leaving it off. Tbe first prick ot tbe serpont's tooth would be felt, and if we had wisdom enough left we should cast the habit away from us In (ear and horror. It we did not the tooth would enter more deeply and tbe poison would flow through our veins; we should become the prey of tbe serpent. Wise men look well ahead, and so do wise boys and girts; they do not ask whether a thing is pleasant or unpleas ant Just now; they want to know how It will be in the end. They know better than to buy an ouuee of present pleasure with a pound ot future patu. It is because the worst of drink comes at the last lustead ot at tbe flrst that we so hate and feat it. It must be terrible to (eel the poison spread ing through one's body after the btte of a snake. In some eases lu about a quar ter of an hour It is all over, and death has come. But It is worse still to live the liv ing death of a drunkard, to (eel one good thin: after another going out of you, that you love those about you less and have less ot their love: that your good name Is go ing, that you are in every way getting worse and worse, further and further from God and goodness and everything that Is beautiful and pleasant, that you are surely dying not only In your body, but your soul us well. Better by far be killed by a ser pent than endure such a fate as tbis. But if you neglect the warning ot the motto, It you break your pledge, such a fate may be yours. ta:uer .uatuew tluraiu. Beer and Wine and Intemperance. It should not be forgotten that the use o! malt liquors and light wines has not been found In Europe to be a means of checking lntemperauce. Tbe Frenah (or generations bare used light wines In large quantities, and within tbe last two or three decades have been considerable consumers ot malt liquors: but lu spite of this, since 1870 they have developecVa taste for distilled spirits which threatens'. If continued, to convert those woo were formerly consld ered, In tbe absence of Intoxication, a tem perate people, into a nation of drunkards. The same statement holds true of Switzer land, where the, people have (or a long time past used both beer and light wines, but are now finding the inducement to re sort to distilled spirits almost Irresistible. Even in Germany, tbe borne ot beer and also light wines, the official reports an nounce that there is a material growth in the average consumption of distilled liquors a statement which we believe also holds true ot the kingdom of Belgium. Felt He Was Strong. A brilliant young man, thirty years ago, was beginning to form the habit ot Indul gence in the wine cup. He knew that other men were drunkards, but he felt that be himself was strong, aud would never be anything but clear-eyed and strong of nerve and firm ot flesh. Tbe years went by. He bas had honor and position. He has become a drunkard, with It all, and bis honors bave been (or nothing. Whisky and wine have done (or bim what they have done (or all thereat, and what they will do (or nil who are (oollsh enough to be deceived by them. It he could be would doter young men irom following in nis footsteps, but be will not Influence tbem. They will think of him simply as an old drunkard, and say that ne was a loot noc to ave controlled himself a little. And they, will follow him on to death. Herald and rresbyter. A Toast That Touched Their Hearts. Colonel Thomas W. Hlgglnson said that nt a dinner nt Beaufort, 8. C, where wine flowed freely and ribald jests were bandied, 1T. Miner, a slight, boyish fellow, who did oot drink, was told that he could not go until he had drunk a toast, told a story or; sung a song. He replied: "I cannot sing, bnt I will give you a toast, although I must drink It In water. It is, 'Our Mothers.' " The men were so affected and ashamed that some took him by the hand and thanked him for displaying courage greater than that required to walk up to the mouth of a caunon. This, Colonel Higgluson says, was the bravest act he witnessoa during me oivu war. Bismarck Denounced I'.eer. Those people who have been looking with favor upon the increased consump tion of beer in this country as an lndlca tlon that t int dr nk is dHiilaolng wuisxy will hardly be comforted by a remark of Prince Bismarck, related by his pnysician, Dr. Busoh, In bis recently published book, "B Utnarek: Home socret rages or ms His tory." Dr. Busch tolls how some one at) table once lamented the absence ot peer, und the Iron Chancellor replied: 'That is no loss! The excessive con iimntion of beer is deplorable. It makes 1 1 i . ,i . ..i a Notes of the Crusade. There were 19,000 arrests (or lntoxioa Hon in New York City last year. Eradicate every dive to-doy and the saloon will create new dives, ine uive viu alwnva exist a long as its cause, ine liquor traffic, exists. Ttminltnnnosi darkens the homes of the people, and Is one of the greatest enemies' ot "peace on earth. Mnrrutratn Honrv Bristow. of Brooklyn recently said: "We have in the police, courts every grade of wrongdoing, from1 tha nnrAAI-V SOU nbble uo to murder, but ninety per cent, of all the cases are the ontorowth of intoxication. Bum is re' sponsible (or all this crime." Unnr-drinking is the principal entrance intn thn mammoth cave o( drunkenness, through which the majority of the youth of pRch iron eration Dass. While some go but a short distance, a very large number go more or less rapidly toward the river Htyx, the way getting darker and darker us they go. A movement, headed by the Bishop of TTrnrorrt. has been started In England to secure the prohibition ot the rum business in the Soudan, recently opened up by Lord Kitchener's army. The Parliament of New South Wales is ittinu iin iilirhts to devise some amend ments to their present excise law that will check drunkenness. The old restrictive law has been a conspicuous (allure as temporance measure. A teacher In a New York school recently mrln(.omnlaint to the Society (or the Prevention o( Cruoltv to Children that ., nt her Duolls. a little bov. only six vain nlil freoueutlv came to school drunk. An investigation shows that his mother bad been giving bim whisky, under the delusion that it would "maki him strong." - . THI podes. A uieiuijr ui i- .v.i.--ui.. parliament, who was born in the vicin ity of Cheapside, suddenly woke up iu the niwi.lle of a debate aud inquired, "What's before the "Ouse?" "The letter V " was the sweet reply of a wittT barrister close by. Loudon Chronicle. Greater New York has a working police force of more than 7000 men to protect the life aud property oi its citizeus. THE EXCEUNCE OF SYRUP OF FIGS is due not only to the originality and simplicity of the combination, but also to tho care and skill with which it Is manufactured by scientific processes known to the California lio Syrup Co. only, and we wish to Impress upon all the importance of purchasing the true and original remedy. As the genuine Syrup of Figs is manufactured by the California Fio ' Svkcp Co, only, a knowledge of that fact will assist one in avoiding the worthless imitations manufactured by other par ties. The high standing of the Cali fornia Fio Svkup Co. with the medi cal profession, and the satisfaction which the genuine Syrup of Figs has given to millions of families, makes the name of the Company a guaranty of the excellence of its remedy. It is far in advance of all other laxatives, as it acts on the kidneys, liver and bowels without irritating or weaken ing them, and it does not gripe nor nauseate. In order to get its beneficial effects, please remember the name of the Company CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO. AN FBAKCISCO, CL LOr VILLI. Ky. II AW TORK.X.T. How a Ship Can Tell It rosltlon. At a recent meeting of the Acadeniie des Sciences, Paris, 3d. Mascart, the well-known French eleotriciau.brought forward a method of enabliug a ship to tell its position off a coast iu thick weather or darkuess. The plan wa? invented by a French electrician in Turkish employment. It consists of connecting two shore stations at some distance apart by a telegraph wire or cable, permitting nn clectvio current to control the aooustio fog or night signals of the stations, and make them simultaneous. Suppose one station emits the note "Do" and the othor "Me;" a person on board the ship will readily distinguish them, and whether they areteard by him simul taneously or one after the other will depend on the position of the ship with respect to the stations. The interval of time between the sounds multiplied by the known velocity of sound in air will give bim. the uitier- ence in bis distances irom me iwo stations. Publio Opinion. Lady Manager of a Uaggafe Company, The election of Miss Josie Kates as general manager of the Kates Baggage Company, of Atlanta, is a compliment worthily bestowed. She is a young woman of sterling worth and is thor oughly familiar with all the details of the business. She has a host of friends throughout the city who will be glad to hear of her promotion in this special field. Atlanta (Go.) Constitution. From Head to Foot. For all aches, from head to toot, St. Jacobs Oil has curative qualities to reach tbe pains and aches of tho human family, and to relieve and euro thorn promptly. The Teruvlan government has decreed the re-establlsbment of the habeas corpus aot. FLORIDA AND THE, SOUTH. Opening of Social Season. The onenintr of the Florida season was sig nalized thin vear as usual by the placing iu service between rew one and nr. Migustine of the "New York and Honda Limited, a train that is acknowhdged to be tho finest In the world in Its appointments, luxury and di-tnll of finish. It is comnosed of I'ullman compartment cars, each room a work ot art and supplied wnn private lavatory aim toilet; Pullman drawing-room sleeping cars ot the latest uesiKn a royal ciuo ear ior gen tlemen: an observation car: a library car. and a dining car whone service and cuisine mnk with those of the swell New iork ho- tvU. This nuriiatmlni; tram's schedule calls for a dally service leaving New York at 11.05 a. U). via the Pennsylvania Kail roan, the Southern Railway, t lortda Central and Pen insula Kailroad, and the Last Coast Hallway. St. Augnstlne is reached at 2.30 p. m. the fol lowing n!av. the nlc.tnresque trip, which ex- coeds IKIU miles, bt-inir made in but little more than U hours. At Columbia, .. ., one car is letAched for Aiken, while at t.verett. ia ncrtect connections are nmde for Brunswick and Jei'Kyi jeiaitd. 1 lie r lonna ?uon i.nio a! mi nnemteH two other fine trains between New York and Honda, tue asliliigton and Southwestern Vestibule Limited." leaving New York at 4.2 n. m. dally, and the l in ted States Fast Mail" leaving New York at l-.0Ti midnight, and it affords tue most direct, most delightful and tue quickest service to Nas sau, Havana and Key ent. or alt informa tion, reservations,etc apply to A. H.Thwealt, K. V. A., southern ity, Zii U'wny, rew l or. This country Is now a creditor ot Eu- rope. A Itemed jr For the Grippe. A remedy recommonded for patients af flicted with the erlppe Is Kemp's Dnlsam, which is especially adopted to diseases of the throat and lungs. Do not wait for tho first symptom! of tbe disease, but Ret a bottle to-day and keep It on band for us the momout it Is needed. It neglected tho crrinne hna a tpnttonf v to hrintr on pneu monia. The Balsam prevents this by Keep ing tne cough loose. All druggists sen it. Heat holidays have been estnbllshod by law In the public BCbools-oI Hwltzeriund. Easily Gotten Over. A cripple from a sprain is one who neg lects to use Bt. Jacobs Oil to cure it. Frompt use of it brings prompt cure, and the trouble is gotten over easily. The national debt ot Japan does not ex ceed t25O,OOO,O0O. Educate Your Bowels With Cascaret. Candy Cathartic, cure constipation forever ivo.axj. ii u.u.u.iaii.arucaisisreiunumooeT One-half of the Confederate pensioners in Mississippi are widows. it afflicted with ore eyei, uas i Thompson's Eye Water t:lVt-JiiTllitl.j.?iii tUHIS KHtrifc ALL ILSt (AILS. Best Cough Syrup, Tutes Good. in timo. coin ot oniciri.t.. ,. acu'ui Oil, Which y a ure relief, but a prompt cure. It soothes, subdues and ends the Buffering. Tho Inventory ot tbe effects of the Ute John W. Keely, ot motor fame, fixed the valuation at Branty la Blood Deep. m 1,1...,. I maana rlenn skin. NO beauty without it. Case rcti Candy Uathav tie clean your blood and keen it clean, by stirring the lazy liver and driving all lm puritiee ftom the body. Uegin tony to banish pimples, boils, blotches, blackhead, and that sickly bilious complexion by taking La sea rets, beauty lor ten cents, au uiuy gists, satisfaction guaranteed, 10c, 25c, 50c The national debt of France Is over 6,000,000,000, being about 116 per capita. f'atarrh Cannot be Cure With local AiHiltcatlona, as they cannot reach the neat of the disease. Catarrh is a blood or constitutional disease, and in order to cure it you must take Internal remedies, nan 1 Catarrh Cure is taken lnU-rnally, and act di rectly on the blood aud uiucona surface. Hall's Catarrh Cure is not a quack medicine. It was prescribed liv one or the imsi pnysicians in tills country' for years, and Is a regular pro scrliitlon. It Is composed of the best tonics lrmiu-n pnm l,lnl with thehesLblood tmrlllers. acting directly nn the mucous surfaces. The perfect combination oi tun iwo lunmuniiui m what produces such wonderful results lu cur ing catarrh. Send for testimonials, free. r . J. cnKNFY v ., I nips., luicuu, Sold by Iinitigtsts, price, lac Ilall'i i' r amlly l'llls aro the best Hats and rabbits aro becoming a plague in the Asores. Cough Lead to Consumption. Kemp's Balsam will stop the eough at onoe. uoto your druggist to-uny a sample bottle free. Hold la ana ou oent bottles, lio at onoe; delay are dan gerous. The Indian population ot the United States is 248,310. , Boat Tobtxo Salt d Smokt loir Lift iwsj. To autt tobacco easily and forever, be mag netic lull of life, nerve and vigor, lake No-To- Oae, the wonderworker, that makes weak men trong. All druggist. Wo or II. Cure guaran teed. Booklet and sample free. Addres Sterling itemed? Co., Chicago or New Yor F.vsrv continent on the globe, with the exoeptlonof Australia, produoes wild roses. Hen and Women Vtio Work Need not give up when attacked with a severe congestive cold, If Hoxsle's Disks nrousod. They clie-k any com. xa cent. riionogrnphlo clocks and watches are In use In Switzerland. vit. nj,pmnent.lvflnred. No fits or nervous ness after first day's use of lip. hllne tlreat Nerve Restorer, ti trial bottle and treatise fret Dr. R. U. Ki-iw. Ltd.. mi ArchSt,.llhllaMr. Tlurlnir tha nresent century about 30,. 000,000 men have lost their lives lu war. Found Immediate relief In on bottle of Pr. Seth Arnolds Coiik-h Killer Mil. ,g. Hatch. llox tuO.Wollaston. aiass..AUg. ii. iow. A flsh has been found In Hudson Bay which absolutely builds a nest. No-To-Bae for Fifty Cent. Guaranteed tobacco habit cure, make weak men strong, blood pure. 600. II. All druggist When a man Is bis own worst enemy It Is generally a rather one-sided tight. To Cure a Cold In One Day. Take Laxative Hromo Uulnlne Tablets. All Druggist refund money if it tails to our. 33o. In 1879 the first electric railway wts operated in Berlin, Germany, by Siemens. Mrs. Wlnslnir'aSoothlntf Srrun forehlldren lenthlnir. softens the sums, reduces Inflamma tion, allays pain, enres wind collo. 2io.a bottU The screw alono ot an Atlantic liner costs about (20,000. We think Plso's Cure for Consumption Is theonly medicine for Cnuuhs. J ksniic PlNCK Altl, Springfield, Ills.. Oct. I. IWt Silk 1 nearly always dyed before It Is woven. Cough away If yon want to, but If not, use Hale's Honey ot Horehound and Tar. 1'lke Toothache urops cureinune .uinute. A Tresbyterian church has been built In Juneau, Alaska. To Cure Constipation Forevert TnkeCascarcta Candv Cathartic, lOe or Bo II C C. C. fall to cure, drupvisl refund money There Is a twulve-acre Sold of carnations la Iledondo, Cal. k Heroes of the iai'iI U C rl Q thousand of them, fcxe luf- miing r torn nngeTing aiv cases induced by life in poisonous southern co.mo. jx tne Tesun ot cn&nge of y climixte. ot of imptTfect pi nutrition Co.ued by inv V proper &nd badly cooKed (( food. Sleeping onthe jjTound 2 has doubtless developed rheumatism in hundreds C who were predisposed to j7 the disease. In such to.ses L th.e BoY 0' '93 m&V lake X. & lesson from the expert V ence of the Heroes of the k Civil Wivr, i Hundreds of the ys of '63 ha.ve testified to the U'J efficacy of DT.VilUamV . PinK Pills for Pale People in driving out malaTia.; rheumatism &nd other diseases contracted during and privation in the ATmy, tonic in the woTld. Asa Robinson, ef Mt. Stirling, III., I a veteran of the Civil war, baring; served in the 8trd Pennsylvania Volunteer. He went to the war a vigor ous farmer's boy and came back broken In health, a victim of sciatic rheu- . r . , . : i 1 i. . . ........ I I ., f ..... l-iA mutism, mosi oi ine nine ne warn uuuucu iui luauua. ,nln., any .i.m. nnd his sufferings were at all times Intense. He says: "Nothing seemed to give mc permanent relief until three years ago, when my attention wa culled to ome of the wonderful cures effected by Dr. Williams' Pink Tills for Pale People. I had not taken imnrnvement in mv condition, and I owe my restoration to health. They arc a grand remedy." Hi. Stiriinf DiMocral-Mtuagt. At o.tl drufltfiit; or Stnt,poitp,ld-,on receipt of price, 50ct. Off' box, by th Dt. YiiUifcmMaic.ir Co., B V, Schr,cXdy..Y. The Pot Called the the Housewife Didn't Use SAPOLIO JUST THE BOOK YOU WANT, treat nnoo about every subject mnder th ....mf unrrt rUVPI nDCniA and will be sent, postpaid, for 60c. In stamps, , . rh Ml Er.GYGLUPtUl 'ItXs.thltltmayb rntl rich mln. of valuabl. " U II tnursting manner, and U - - time tbe small um of FIFTY CENTS proT.of Incalculabl. benefit to those who will also b focad of groat value to tho. tawculr.d. BOOK PUBLISHING y MM far When the children set their f feet wet and take cold give tbem not lout Dam. uuwi oi not drink, a dose of Ayer't Cherrv Pectoral, and put them to bed. The chances are they will bo all right in the morning. Con tinue the Cherry Pectoral a few days, until all cough has dis appeared Old coughs are ilto cured; we mean the coug'.j of bron chitis, weak throats and irritable lungs. Even the hard coughs of consumption are always made easv and freauentlv cured B by the continued use of : flip's peeler! Every doctor knows that wild cherry bark is the best remedy known to medical science for soothing and healing Inflamed throats and lungs. Put one ot Dr. Ayer's Cherry Pectoral Plasters over your iutiffa W row hT ton of th most ml- nant itliTllrlfclll In th T'nlTtd BUtM. Tjnutuftl opportunities anil lung xierl. no emlnsntlr St ,hm ter sl"I audio! advlr. Writ truly ail Ui MiUoulari In tour est. Addrm, Dr. J. C. ATM. LAWOI1, ASM. HE SOUTH. FHIIDI. CI15I, . MEXICO and CILIFORNII. Southern Railway. SHORTEST AND QUICKEST ROUTE. Par laffcr-natlM fly m GEO. C. DANIELS, Trav. Pass. Agent, ttS Waahlncton Ml., Itoslan. ALEX. S. THWEATT, East. Pass. Agent, til IlroaUway, New York. M Bol Postal for Premlnm List t th Pr. 8Mb Arnold Mistical Coriurttion, Wovnsockot, K. I. nnnD CVI DISCOVERY; J X KJ I O 1 elknlif u tana won mm. Bn4 lor book of twtimooiaJi sod 10 dors' ttuimaot Froo. Br 1 I saiiM I so. ttuu. v RHEUMATISM riii" Alsxindii Rkmkit HEI-Ono bottlo-PooltlT relief luMhotin. Pontnalil f l.ou UO. , IMS tt reen wlc h Ml . . N . 1 . W ANTED- o.of bail hr&llli that K-I-P-A-N-H will not hem-tit. Henil cts.tn llinana chemical Co, New York, for lOMiuplea and liwu tfwtlraonlal.. KmVrWn'tTTI!W PAPER WHEN HEl'LY- INUTOAUVTd. NYNU-3. their days of hardship These pills are the best more than half a box wien I noticed an I keen on improving steadily. To them Kettle Black Because to refer t constantly. Isonr handy ran. It contain. 620 pages, profusely ,llultrt'd; IF UMIfcHSAL SnUITLCUUbi " poatai aow or wiver. v nou reau.u. ,,. m M M M H H gnut-n w which you do not which tnl book CAa referred to .sllr.ThU book M 1 . r"Z: w ."rV" 7Z Zl,7Zn T 1 mm ti' V3 wnion we - duotlon ha be neglected, whll lh voliim who cannot readily command tb knowleCg thoy HOUSE 134 Leonard St.. H. V. City. ii
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers