work is carried on iu U mijr-ti,,.,. .... ferent languages by more than 15,000 officers, with a weekly circulation of one million copies of literature. Theatre-going Tarisians find great difficulty in reaching home at night, and bare been agitating for a late ser vice of omnibuses. At present these only ran till midnight, and cabmen seem to object to long journeys in the small hours. Taken Hold Wscan wake up from sleep and find thnt soreness and stiffness have tnttea hold of us. We can use St. Je obs Oil and go to sleep and wake up and find ourselves com pletely cured. ' An advance of 92 per ton tor wire and wire nails was anuouncel at Cleveland, Ohio. Beaaty I Blooa dee. Clean blood means a clean skin. So beauty without it. Cascaret, Candy Cathaf tic clean your blood and keep it clean, by stirring up the lazy liver and driving all im purities from the body, liegin to-day to banish pimples, boils, blotches, blackheads, and that sickly bilious complexion by taking Cascarets, beauty for ten cents. All drug gists, satisfaction guaranteed, 10c, 25c, 50c. The last Arkansas cotton crop Is th largest ever raised in the State. How's Thlil WeoflferOne Hundred Dollar Reward for any cae of Catarrh that cannot be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. F. J. Chunky & Co., Prop.. Toledo, O. We, the undersigned, have known K.J.Che ney lor the lat. 15 years, and believe him per fectly honornble in all business transactions and financially able to carry out any' obliga tion crude by their firm. Wpst A TlU'AX.Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, Oh o. Waldinq, Kisnaw Marvin, AVbolesale Druggists, Toledo, Ohio. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken Infernally, set tng directly upon the blood and mucous sur faces of the system. Price, 7Sc. per bottle. Sold by all Druggists. Testimonials free. Hall'i Family Pills are the best. There are said to be more Presbyterians In Pennsylvania than in any other State, Laiie'i Family Medicine. Moves the bowels eaoh day, In order to be healthy this is necessary. Acts gently on the liver and kidneys. Cures sick'bead ache. Trice 25 and 50c. By a recent judicial decision the Chinese can be barred from Hawaii. That Pimple On Your Face. Is There to Warn You of Impuro Blood. Painful consequences may follow a neg lect of this warning. Take Hood's Sarsa partlla and it will purity your blood, cure all humors and eruptions, and make you feel better In every way. It will warm, nourish, strengthen and invigorate your whole body and prevent serious illness. Hood's Sarsaparilla Is America's Greatest Medicine. Price, $!. Hood's Pills cure all Liver Ills. 25 cent t. Fore of Habit. A trick of habit to be noticed in many returned volunteer soldiers was publicly observed at the horse show the other day. An exhibitor, who was an officer and did 'good work in Cuba, was approached by his groom to receive orders. The orders given, np flew the hand of the groom to his hat. Bat, to the astonishment of very one around, np also flew the hand of the ex-soldier to his hat, and the groom's gesture was responded to with a military salute. In a moment the smile of the ex-officer showed that he realized what a victim of habit he had become, but the first impulse ap peared to be irrosistible. "The fact is," commented another ex-soldier, "it will be some time before any of us get over the habit of returning a salute. Thanks to those long months of practice, it has become a kind of second nature." New York Evening Sun. RELIEF FROM PAIN. Women Everywhere Express their Gratitude to Mrs. Pinkham. nra. T. A. WALDEN, Olbaon. Oa., writes: " Dear Mrs. PiNKn am: Before tak ing your medicine, life was a burden to me. I never saw a well day. At my monthly period I suffered untold misery, and a great deal of the time I was troubled with a severe pain in my aide. Before finishing the first bottle of your Vegetable Compound I could tell it was doing me good. I continued its use, also used the Liver Pills and Sanative Wash, and have been greatly helped. I would like to have you use my letter for the benefit of others." ' rir. FLORENCE A. WOLFE, 513 riulberry St., Lancaster, Obio, writes 1 "Dear Mrs. Pixkham: For two years I was troubled with what the local physicians told me was inflamma tion of the womb. Every month I suf fered terribly. I had taken enough medicine from the doctors to cure any one, but obtained relief for a short time only. A t last I concluded to write to you in regard to my case, and can say that by following your advice I am low pefectly well." ' firs. W. R. BATES, rtansfleld, La., writes t " Before writing to you I suffered dreadfully from painful menstrua tion, leucorrhoca and sore feeling in the lower part of the bowels. K ow my friends want to know what makes me look so well. I do not hesitate one min ute in telling them what has brought about this great change. I cannot praise Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound enough. It is the greatest remedy of the age." "I bare been using CASCARETS for Insomnia, with which I have been afflicted for over twen ty years, and I can aay that Cascarets nave riven me more re net than any other reme dy I have ever tried. 1 shall certainly recom mend them to my friends aa being all they are represented." Thus. Giixabd, tig in, I1L Fleajant. Palatable. Potent. Taste Good. Do 'wo. nsr Bicien. weaken, or Uripe. Hie. Xtc. boo. ... CURE CONSTIPATION. Borilaf S..Jy f. rtlric Hnlml, In Tw. Ill V0.T0.R1R S!din rjursnteee by all drat mm I W' CATHARTIC jk V tkaoi mask asawrfaio the two muni i.-i'v. . 1 - food and warmth; not artificial heat, but warmth that is produced by natural conditions, and in this condi tion we should remember that food produces warmth. .The hungry chicken will puff its feathers out in a loose, shaky sort of a way, and show very plainly by its looks and actions that it suffers from its condition. But on the other hand, the bird that has a crop full of feed, draws its feathers down closely about it, mores and pecks about in a satisfied, happy con dition, indicating by its actions that its system is in a natural, healthy condition. Provide for the hens a place to roost, where the wind cannot strike them, nor the rain or snow reaoli them, and fortify them with a crop full of grain beforo they go to roost, and they will be warm and happy, even iu a freezing temperature. Food offsets cold, hence we shordd feed very liberally in cold weather, and never permit onr fowls to go to roost at night with an empty crop; for if we do they will lose vitality during tho night, and will certainly not be in a condition to lay the next day. Thoroughbred Fowl. "Where is the value of thorough bred poultry?" said a farmer to me the other day. "I do not seo why common poultry sells at eight cents a pound and thoroughbred at from $2 to f?3 a head." Now, why thorough breds should be worth more than the common stock found with many of our farmers is easily explained. Mauy a farmer to-day is keeping from fifty to 100 fowls of the old common varieties or mongrels, inbred and iubred for years. He does not take the interest in them that the man would who has used his hard cash, time and brains to produce pure, profitable, thorough bred stock; in fact, he takes no in terest in them at all, for the sight of them gives him no pleasure. Eggs are few and far between, and he fiuds no profit in them. But let that same farmer invest in a few thoroughbreds and his mind changes. He smiles when he looks at his flock, and cares for them properly. He takes pride iu showing them to his friends, and they yield for him a good supply of eggs, that are uniform in color, and, instead of there being a loss in keeping poul try, he finds that they are paying him better than his mixed-np varieties, or better even than many of his other branches of farming. A small flock of fowls can be kept with very Hub expense by utilizing the scraps and waste from the pantry, which makes the very best feed for the production of eggs. And I believe that a great many of our farmers would find it more profitable to keep only a small flock of from fifteen to twenty-five fowls than to keep seventy-five 01 100, as many of them are doing; or to keep only a few until they know better how to handle them profitably. A few hens will supply the family with an abundance of eggs at a very small ex pense if they are well kept, and will give their owner mnch more pleasure in looking after them than if they were threej times what he conld care for. V. M. Couch, in Indiana Farmer. Caring Pes Hay. One great trouble in making pea hay ;ia getting it cured up nicely. Where the crop of vines is very heavy, even when tho weather is clear and dry, it has to be turned and stirred; but when once nicely cured it makes the best of hay for all kind of stock, and especially young growing stock and milch cows. Pea vines should be cut, after the morning dew has gone and let lay in tho sun long enongh to wilt, then hauled in and spread out so they will not lay over six inches to one foot thick over tho loft. After these get well dried out fork up in one corner and haul in another lot aud treat likewise. By beginning on the crop as soon as it will do to make hay, cutting and curing a load or so at a time, one can boon have a lot of fine feed. Or where there is a large hay shed it can be stacked in a foot or so deep, then cross laid with rails or poles, leaving a space of six inches or so. Then stack in another layer of hay aud so on till the shed is full, having the shed so constructed that every eighteen inches you can put in a rail or pole floor or loft that can be readily removed. Begin at the bot tom, putting in a layer of hay, then a floor, then hay, then another floor, and so on, till the shed is full, leaving an air space between each layer of hay. Do not put the vines over one foot thick. Where there is neither barn nor shed, pea vines can be enred in hollow stacks. The way to construct a hollow stack is: first lay down two or three big rails or poles, cross lay with rails so as to have the vines six inches- to one foot from the ground. Qet several small poles and set them up so they will stand out at the base and come together at the top, cone shaped; tie the tops together. Stack the pea vines round the poles about two feet thick, leaving the center open, so you have air space nnderand through the center of the stack. Do not make the stack too thick around the poles else it may heat. The vines should be cut and cured in the sun until they are well wilted before stacking. If it should turn wet cover the stack with canvas. Let stand in the stack nntil well cured, when it should be hauled into shelter. Pea hay will not keep standing out iu the weather. - The hollow stack is only intended to cure, not to keep stand ing out. Pea hay can be baled and sold at a fair price, and is fast coming to the front as a first-class feed for horses. The Epitomist. Long Life and Loss of Llinba. A manufacturer of artificial limbs is credited with the statement that amputations tend to enhance vitality, those who have lost an arm or a leg frequently having their lives pro longed and their health improved as a result of the loss. Even the mental forces are repiesented as being strengthened in cases of amputation. The alleged explanation is that the removal of an important part of the body decreases the demand on the vital forces, and enables them to con centrate more effectually upon what remains. It is not likely, however. that anybody will ever voluntarily sacrifice a leg or an arm for the sake of brightening the wit, or adding a year or two to tne lengtn 01 life, The Drunkard to Hie Bottle What Enc- land Thinks of Our Governmental la1 .airy Into tho Kara Trafflo and I to Terrible and Fatal Coneoquencei. (An Imaginary Foem ot Robert Burus by John Q. Whittior.) Hoot! dour ye shnw ye're face airala Ye auld black thief o' purse an' brain? For (oul disgrace, for dool an' pain An' shame I ban ye; Wae's me, that e'er my Hps have ta'en Your kiss uncanny! Kae matr, auld knave, without a sblllla To keep a starvtn' wlfflit frae stealln', Ye ll sen' me hamewnrd, blln and reellu Frae nightly swascjisr, By wall and post my pathway feella' WT mony a stagger. Kae more 0' fights that bruise an' mangle Kae malr 0' nets my feet to tangle, Nae malr 0' senseless brawl an' wrangle Wi' fren' and wife too, Kae malr o' deavlng' din an' Jungle My feckless lite through. Ye thlevln', oheatin' auld Cboap Jack, Feddlln' your poison brose, I oracle. . Your banes against my ingle back, Wi' mlokle pleasure, Dell mend ye 1' his workshop black, E'en at his leisure. I'll brak yo're neck, ye foul auld sinner, I'll pull ye'er blutd, ye vile beginner O' a the ills an' aohes that winna Quat saul an' body! Gle me bale breeks an' weol-spread dinner-Dell tnk ye're toddyt Nae malr wl witches' broo gnne gyte, Oles me ance malr the auld delight O' clttln' wl' my bairns in sight, The gade wife near, The weel spend day, the peaoefu' night, The morning cheer. Cook a' ye'er heads, my bairns fu' gleg, My winsome Robin, Jean and Meg, For food an' clase ye shall na beg A doited daddle. Danoe, auld wife, on your awl-day leg, Ye've foun' your laddie. The Liquor Trade la America. Though there are doubtless many em ployers of labor on this side, says the Lon don (England) Hospital, who are affected in their choice ot workmen by the fact that these are or are not abstainers, we do not think that the question has ever been made the subject of a Uovernment inquiry Here. Not so in the United States, where the commission appointed by the Governmont schedules the replies made by no less than C'JOl establishments, detailing their prac tice In regard to the taking on of the 1,745, 923 employes In their service. The em ployers Include Individuals or companies engaged In agriculture, manufactures, mining and quarrying, transportation and retail trade. The habits and opinions ot these different employers are naturally varied. With 1613 the report Is that the habits of the prospective employes regard ing drinking are not taken into considera tion, but the large majority, viz., 6363, takes means to discover what a man's habits are. Besides those who object to their employes taking Intoxicants at any time, whether on or off duty, there are a number of employers who Insist merely that while actually at work they should abstain from liquor, and also those who, while they do 'jot lay restraint ou the ma jority ot their employes, Insist on those In responsible positions refraining from drink. Thus la all departments of Industry there are a good many firms who demand abstlnenoe from engineers, managers and watchmen. In agriculture stress Is laid on teamsters being non-drinkers, for fear of oarelessness and cruelty In the handling ot cattle on the part of Intoxloated men. In mining and quarrying the restriction Is np. plied ohiefly to handlers ot explosives and to electricians and the like, any blunder on whose part might lead to groat injury to their fellow workers, not to speak ot damage to property. In transportation almost all branohes of tho service are, la some companies, forbidden to have any thing to do with alcohol; trainmen, motor men, conductors, telegraph operators, electricians, switchmen aud pilots. What Drunkards Coat Boston. Last year the city ot Boston expended the sum of 1115,802 for the support ol drunkards in the House of Correction In Suffolk County, according to figures fur nished by renal Institutions Commlsslonet Marshall. While all of 8uiIolk County which Includes besides Boston the city ol Chelsea and the towns of Bevere and win- thrnn tn.nlih.i Inmilu rn.tli.it.mil In. stltutions, the entire cost of maintaining the Institutions Is borne by the city of Boston, This is because the control of the Institutions is left wholly to Boston. commissioner Marshall says 01 ueer isl- land: "There were 8417 committals to this Institution for drunkenness, and the ag gregate of the time served by those com mitted was equivalent to 1313 years, tv ltn a per capita cost of maintenance of (64.70, the cost of the maintenance was $111,212." At the 8outh Boston House ot Correction "there were 107 committals for drunken ness, and the nggregate ot the time served by those committed was 13,460 days. With a per capita cost of maintenance of (124.47, the cost of maintenance of the above num ber was (4590." A Champion's Testimony. A champion cyclist was asked: "Do you ever take spirits of any kind? I moan whisky or brandy." "Mo: they cnt tne breath short, ion can't race and take brandy. It may help a little, bnt It leaves you worse. 1 believe that If Ave or six men were together In a raoe, say two miles from the tape, and one was nanaea a arms 01 oranay, it might let him break away and win easily; but if he had ten miles, or had a long race before him, he would find great difficulty la riding, His breath would be cut short. The mat who drinks brandy or whisky will soon be broken-winded." "80 you don't believe In brandy?" "No: It may help for a short spurt, but It Is no good for a long run. Only a tem perate maa can be a good racer. An Authority on Alcohol and Longevity. "Life Is considerably shortened by the use of alcohol in large quantities. But a moderate consumption of the same also shortens life by an average ot Ave to six years. This Is consistently and unequivo cally seen in the Btnttstlo kept for thirty years by English insurance companies, with speolnl sections for abstainers. They give a large discount, and still make more prof it, as not nearly so many deaths occur as might be expected under the usual calcula tions. According to federal statistics In the fifteon largest towns of Switzerland, over ten per cent, ot the men over twenty years of age die solely or partly of alcohol ism." Dr. A. Forel, late Professor of Psy chiatric in the University of Zurich. Notes of the Crasade. A saloon Is the devil's recruiting station. It Is true that every Instance of excess began with moderate use, and that it Is im possible to predict which person will stay within "moderate" limits and which one will go on to "excess." It Is also true that what is generally termed "moderate use" Is Itself excess. At the National Vegetarian Congress, held In London last month, the Importance of total abstluenoe in dietetic reform was discussed. It was generally claimed In the papers presented that the absence of meat diet materially assisted thedrlnkertoover oome his appetite tor alcohol. There are 7,000,003 total abstainers in Oreat Britain. "Watch and Be Sober," Is the motto of the Army Temperance Association, which has a membership of over 23,000 men in the service in India. The temporanet women ot Lexlngten Kr.. are prosecuting not only law-breaking llquor-setlers, but as well faithless public officers who have been conniving with the violators of the law. The Mayor and Police Commissioners, together witn iui saloon keepers, are under Indictment. The Roumanian Minister ot Education has sent a circular to the police authorities of Jassy and Bucharest, Instructing them o arrest and Dunlsh all students and pupils of universities, colleges and schools who frequent cafes, Inns or other public places where intoxicating liquors are soia, u.id !uei,giu to the muscles, and cures. Aa Iowa Judge has decided that the Ufa Insurance ot a voluntary bankrupt Is aa asset. To Florida Iteaorte. The riant System reaches the finest re sorts In Florida, Cuba, Jamaica and Porto Rico. Tickets by both rail and water from the East. Trl-weekly stenmshlp service be tween Tort Tampa, Key West and Havana. Beautifully illustrated literature, maps, rates, etc., upon application to J. J. Farns worth. Eastern Pans. Agent, Plant System, 261 Broadway, New York. Kenosha, Wis., Is to have a new library building, being the gift ot the Mayor. Boat Tobacrs Spit aid Saiok tear Ufa Away. To quit tobacco easily and forever, be maf netlo. full of life, nerve and vigor, take No-To-Bao, the wonder-worker, that makes weak men strong. All druggists, 6O0 or II. Cure guaran teed. Booklet aud sample free. Address Sterling Remedy Co, Chicago or New York A street in New York City, now in course of construction, will be named Dewey ave nue. What Do tho C hildren Drink I Don't give them tea or coffee. Have you tried the new food drink called C.RAtN-O? It is delielou and nourishing, and takes the place ot coffee. The more Gbmn-0 you give the children the mora health you distribute through their sys tems. Ubain-0 Is made ot pure grains, and when properly prepared tastes like the choice grades ot coffee, but costs about i as much. All grocers sell It. 15c. and 25c. The Lincoln monument at Sprlugfleld, 111., is decaying and is in need of repairs. H. H. GiikeVs Sons, of Atlanta Ga ar the only aurrossful Dropsy peoisllsts In the world. See their liberal otferin advertisement in another column of this paper. Spain has been notified not to send any more criminals to Cuba. The Thing to Do. Whon the Solatia nerve gives its worst torment in the shape of Sciatica, the one thing to do is to use St. Jaoobs Oil promptly and fool sure of a cure. Auto-trucks can be run twenty-five miles on one charge of air. Congha Lead to Consumption. Kemp's Balsam will stop the oougb at once. Go to your druggist to-day and get a sample bottle free. Sold In 25 and 50 cent bottles. Oo at once; delays are dan gerous. An order was recently placed with a com pany for 250 auto-trucks. No-To-Bae for Fifty Centa. Guaranteed tobacco habit cure, makes weak men strong, blood pure. Wo. II. All drufgisu. There were two banks in New York City In 1800. Iloxeic' Croup Cure Acts directly on the delicate tissues ot tho throat and prevents the formation ot tho whits membrane as iu diphtheria. 50 cents. Chicago has 641 churches, and Philadel phia has more than 600. To Care a Cold In One Day. Take Laxative Hromo Quinine Tablet All Druggist refund money if it falls to cure. 2jc. A great exhibit of American automobiles will be seen at the Paris Exposition. To Car Constipation Forever. Take Cascarets Candy Cathartic. 10c or 25a If C C. C fall to cure ririicrists refund money Pure running water Is met with every where in Porto Rloo. Dr. Seth Arnold's Cough Killer knocks' Cold.. John Daiioanklu 444 Fargo Ave., Buffalo, N. Y., Aug. 17. im. 25o. a bottle. The 29,000 German Baptists la the United States gave last year (62,000 to missions. I believe Plso's Cure for Consumption saved my boy's life lat summer. -Mr. Alli g Doug lass, Le Koy, Mich., Oct. 30, 1X114. . There was no postofflce in New York City until 1775. Mrs. Winalow's Soothing Srrup forchtldren teething, softens the gums, reduces Inflamma tion, allays pain, cures wind colic, s-ic.a ootue There are 125 Bishops ot -the Church ot England distributed over the world. Educate Your Bowels With Cuacarata. Candy Cathartic, eurS constipation forever. 10c, 24c. If C. C.C. fall, dnuraisrs refund mouey. Calhoun County, Illinois, has not had a bnukfor over bail a century. Rellections of a Bachelor. The dreariest thing is wasted love. A man doesn't begin to love till his passion becomes of age. The more a woman studies finance the surer she is that nothing makes a thing so clear as a pattern. Probably Cnpid s success is due to the fact that he has only one string to his bow. If there were no such thing as love. there would be no such thing as music in the world. Whenever you see a self-made man you can be pretty sure it's more than half some woman s fault. No man achieves success as long as he is a contradiction to himself, or as long as he is not a contradiction to a woman. There are two women in the average man a life tne woman lie wants to marry and the woman he wishes he wanted to marry. hen a woman resolves to spread sunshine and happiness around her she begins by carrying a sad, wistful look in her eyes and talking iu a low, mournful voice. New York Press, Great Author, But Poor Speller. It is interesting to perceive how lively a power of observation and ex pression, what a degree of maturity, alike in intelligence, character ana reading, Robert Louis Stevenson at eighteen or nineteen already pos sessed. In one particular, it must be confessed, namely, in spelling, he shows himself remarkably boyish. But Stevenson in truth never learnt to spell quite in a grown-np manner; and for this master of English letters a catarrh was apt to be a "cattarrh," and a neighbor a "nieghbor," and literature "litterature" to the end. To reproduce all these trips and slips in print would be mere pedantry; and the normal orthography has been adopted in his letters, except where he himself is aware of his difficulties and laughs over them. Scribner'a Magazine. Ireland's telegraph department re cently proved that it could manage Gaelie, by taking the speeches de livered at an Irish festival at Letter kenny. County Donegal, in the native tongue and receiving them at Dublin, so that they conld be printed in Gaelic characters in the Freeman's Journal. A German tourist visiting Naples, Italy, after an absenco of a few years, writes that he hardly knew the place, ao great are the inroads made by the wide modern streets into the dirty but picturesque quarters of "old Naples. b.il kviaiu ti:..ui i- ..... w:u; bad literally been 120 years in the harness. It was made by James Watt and Boulton in Birmingham in 1777 for the Birmingham Canal Navigation Company. It had a thirty-two-incu cylinder and an eight-foot stroke aud was by no means small, but a low pressure of steam was nsed. The en gine has been pumping water ever siuoe, bnt is now "released and will go into a museum. The Motea In a 81' beam. Counting the dauoing motes in a bat of sunlight sounds like one ot those hopeless, never ending tasks with which malignant fairies delight tc break the spirits of little heroines in the German folk stories. Something more than this, however, has been achieved by modern soience, which is now able to count the particles float ing in any given portion of the atmos' phere, and determine what portion ol these are dangerous germs and what are mere dust. Dr. Frankland's experiments havt shown ns how to count the micro organisms, and now a Scotch scien tist, by a totally different method, has been euabled to take stock of the more harmless, but hardly less interesting, dust motes. Thirty thousand snob particles have been doteoted by him iu the thousandth of a oubio inch of the air of a room. In the outside atmos phere in dry weather the same ineas' nrement of air yielded 2119, wherea? after a heavy rainfall the number was only 521. That this power of prying into at mospherio secrets will eventually yield very important results must be ob vious to all. Among the most ourious discoveries already made is the direct and oonstant relation which exists be tween dust particles and fcja, mist and rain. Pearson's. Tho Mental Eyo. Thousands upon thousands of per sons handle our silver dollar, but few happen to observe the lion's head whioh lies concealed in the represent ation of the familiar head of Liberty; frequently even a careful examination fails to deteot this hidden emblem of British rule; but, as before, when once found it is quite obvious. For similar reasons it is a great aid iu looking for an object to know what to look for; to be readily found, the ob ject, though lost to sight, should be to memory clear. Searchii's mental process similar to the matching of a piece of fabrio in texture or color, when one has forgotten the sample and must rely upon the remembrance of its appearance. If the recollection is clear and distinct, recognition takes place when the judgment decides that what the physical eye sees corresponds to the image in the mind's eyes; with an indistinct mental image the recog nition becomes doubtful or faulty. For correct and accurate vision it is necessary to acquire an alert mental eye that observes all thatisobjeotirely visible, but does not permit the sub jective to add to or modify what is really present. Professor Joseph Jastrow, in Appleton's Popular Science Monthly. Bright Men Who An Vegetarian a. " The Vegetarian Sooiety now has hundreds of members and associates. The full members pledge themselves to abstain from the use of flesh, fish and fowl as food, though the vege table diet may be supplemented by such animal products as eggs, cheese, butter and milk. Among the members aud associates of the society are many of the bright est men in London. The late Dr. Spurgeon was a vegetarian, as also Sir Isaao Pitman. They also point with pride to the name of George Bernard Shaw, the journalist and playwright. Shaw said, in giving his reasons for being a vegetarian and a teetotaler, that, in his opinion, "a man could not do the best work there was in him on a diet of dead animals and whisky." What does It do? It causes the oil glands in the skin to become more active, making the hair soft and glossy, precisely as nature intended. It cleanses the scalp from dandruff and thus removes one of the great causes of baldness. It makes a better circu lation in the scalp and stops the hair from coming out. It Prevents end It Cures Boldness Ayer's Hair Vigor will surely make hair grow on bald heads, provided only there is any life remain ing in the hair bulbs. It restores color to gray or white hair. It does not do this in a moment, as will a hair dye; but in a short time the gray color of age gradually disap pears and the darker color of youth takes its place. Would you like a copy of our book on the Hair and Scalp? It is free. It yo do not obtain all tta atn.lta yo (laMMa tram to na at ka Vigai writ M vcor u 1 m. ArM, Da. . o. 1yr.1t. Lowell. Mitt. Mr 0 wapr 1 . vi-iojes, w..u...a v u servants, who ire engaged in looking after the twen-.y-two royal palaces and castles that elong to the crown. Their wages ire small. The womeu receive not uore than $12 a month and the meu lervants from $15 to $25 month. IVORY SOAP PASTE. In fifteen minutes' time, with only a cake of Ivory Soap and water, you can make in your own kitchen, a better cleansing paste than you can buy. Ivory Soap Paste will take spots from clothing; and will clean carpets, rugs, kid gloves, slippers, patent, enamel, russet leather and canvas shoes, leather belts, painted wood-work and furniture. The special value cf Ivory Soap in this form arises from the fact that it can be used with a damp sponge or cloth to cleanse many articles that cannot be washed because they will not stand the free application of water. DIRECTIONS FOR MAKING. To one pint of boilina water add one and one-half ounces of Ivory Soap cut into shavings, boil five minutes after the Soap ia thoroughly diasolved. Remore from the fire, and coot la con y venient dishes (not tin.) It win Keep 0rM. u, I, n. rmk RHEUMATISM . New Orlianr, April 10, 1097. Da. IUdway A Co.: I have boen a sufferer from Rheumatism for more than six mouth. I could not raise my hands to my bead or put my hands behind me, or oven take oft my own shirt. Before I hail flnialiud three-fourths ot a bottle of liadway's lteady Relief I could use my arms as well as ever. Von can sea why I have such grent faith In your Relief. Yours truly, W. C. BAKER, Engineer at A. Mooteloue's boot and Shoe Factory, 39 Julia Street. Radway's Ready Relief Is a sure cure for every Tain, Sprains, iiruises, I'alns la the Baok, Chest and Limbs. Taken Inwardly thero It, not a remedial ntreat Iu the world that will eurs Fever and Akub and all other malarious, Mlio-.ia and other fevers, aided by HAD WAV'S TILLS, so quickly as RADYYAY'd READY RELIEF. Mold by Drug glata. RADWAY & CO., 55 Elm St., N. Y. The greatest (remedy for . 1 MALARIA,' CHILLS ot FEVER, Crippet Liver Diseases.- 'KNOWN all ORVooma. 35C. nDOD C Vxwdiscovekt: mJ IT J I O I i.kNll.l aa nw um, an1 lar book af l.ti.aial. aod 10 fare lra.f.al Kr. Dr. a I IIH Htm, AUaala, Oai DHEUMAIISM 'l KKI-MamM bottle, t.layn I'ALaxAiinca RfmkutCo iiineni, no.tn.Ki, (i rent.. :o.,14Om.nwtrh Ht..N.Y. r ANTED aof had h.allh that R-I-P-A-K-8 v will not hen. bt . H.nrt i rt. to Kip.n. Ch.nili .l Co., Nf w York, for lunatnple. aud low tmilinonlal.. An?JTrFTfi'NrTH18 PAPER WHRN RKl'LT- 1.11 Ult XXV XI IN INUTOAUVT8. MVNU-4. .ad Pootal for Pramlnm Llat to tha Dr. Bath Arnold Madicai Coriwratmn. Woonauckat, K. 1. oa ok w Tftuaicnanc a. am uunnjuit a -Maii lTi Tia A, . THE GLORY OF MAN! Strength. Vitality. Manhood. THE SCIENCE OF LIFE ; A Great Msdical Treatise on BapPy Marriages, the cause and cure of Ex hausted Vitality. Nerrous and rhysical Debility, Atropliy (wasting), and Vari cocele, also on AM DISEASES AND WEAKNESSES OK MAN from what ever causa writing. True Principles of TVnntmniit 70 nn. 12mn. with En- 1 It A 1 1I VIIU.PI P MUff mstLr. saving. It Contain! 125 Inraluahle Prescriptions for acute and chronic dlaeaae. Emboaard, full gilt, FRICE ONLY $1 BY MAIL (waled . (Nrwedltlon. with latent obaer.atlona of the author.) Read this CHEAT WoHK now and KNOW THYSELF, for knowledge la power. Address The Peauody Medical Institute, No. 4 Bulflncb Bt., Boston, Mans. (Katabliphedin 1M0. Chief Consulting Physician and Auth ir, Graduate of Harvard Medical Colic?. Class 1N-4. Hurcrou Fifth Massachusetts Regiment Vol. Tha ot Kaila.at KMClaiiat la Amerlra. whe Cam Where Others Fall. Consultation In person or by letter. 8 to ( ; Sunday 10 to I. Confidential. The National Medical Association awarded the Gold Medal for this Grand Pais Treatise, which b truly A BOOK FOR EVERY MAN, Young-. Midrile-aired. or Old. Married or Hinirl. The Diagnostician, or Know Thyself Manual, a 94-pare pamphlet with testimonials and endorse ments of the press. Price, 60cot. but mailed FREE for Wl days. Bend now. It Is a perfect VAl)B MECUM and of great alue for WEAK and FAILING ii F.S by a Humanitarian and CelebraU-d Medical Author, distinguished throughout this country and Europe. Address as above. The press everywhere highly endorse the Peabody Medical Institute. Read the following. The Peabody Medical Institute baa been eetabliahed In Boston 37 years, ant the fame which It has attained has subjected it to a test which only a meritorious institution could undergo -Bortos o.rnsi. The Ptabody Medical Institute ha many imitators, but no equals. "-Jotfim UnUL " Well Bred, Soon Wed." Girls Who Use SAPOLIO Are Quickly Married. JUST THE BOOK CONDENSED ENCYCLOPEDIA treats upon abont every subject ander tbe aad will be sent, postpaid, fer (Oo. In stamps, postal aot or atlrer. When reading yon doubt. S3S AN ENCYCLOPEDIA ET-rE will clear ap for .." T' 11 rom. late tode. ae that It may be f f T tZ ft df r,,eTrd t0 T'1 b01 la a rlca aula of Talnable PIJIl DlJUa Information, presented to aa tatereatinf nancer, and la WWwat w,u worth to aay fae saaay tims U ea&U sum ot FIFTY CENTS which we ask tec It A study of this book will prove of incalculable beaeflt to tho wbeee ednMtloa has beea aetlecttd. while the volum. will alae be faaad of treat vain to thoee who caaaot readily eomuiand the knowledge the kanaoaulred. BOOK PUBLISHING HOUSE. IS4 Leonard St.. N. Y. Cltvw -ctts is the only State in v. uiou in which the judges are ap pointed to hold their office during good behavior. There are seveu States in which the judges are appointed by the Governor, by aud with the advice and eonseut of the Senate or of the Coun cil; five in which they are eleoted bjr the Legislature, and thirty-throe iu whioh they are eleoted by the people. i wen in an air-ugni gian jar,. a aaoUi 0a, 9 T HE SOUTH. v FLORID., CUBA, rf MEXICO and C&LlFORKIi. Soulhern Railway, SHORTEST AND QUICKEST ROUTE. fr Ufbra.llM tpJ U GEO. C. DANIELS, Trav. Pass. Agtn, 98S V.Muisa St., Rextsn. ALEX. S. THWEATT, East. Pass. Agent, tit Braadwaj, New York. FOR 14 CENTS ; wtwiaotu ax at i a 11 1 ivei m n w uitrmrit. and btDM oil if 1 Vkg 11 ! Kadiih, loe Pkf. tLirlr Kip t 'AliUi?. loo kavrliot Hod Bt, Do " I aid b Li c U t d 1 I'ucambrT Ifo " Bil Lrtiocr. ) I'ftlifomift Hf Tumftlu, x ! Krly Dinner Onion. Ju Hrihunt HowrrBped. 10 I Wmrik ... for 14 . fl.ud I AboTolOpkirft, tturt.i fl.UO, wo will mail fou fr, togfejlhor with our I fri riant ana ntm imaiufita i npm receipt at this nolle at 1 4fi i oatait. V invit rur tridaand know whn ym one try Nnlv.rr'w , oatthfiu. OniaMrrffINr.an(l 1 I . agfarffWaVw Itbl. Catalog alunf be. No. C JO HI A. fftlJRRH MBR IV.. I tH, W I. Boys Learn to Uaki Tojsl The youth's work shop will toll you bow to make wooden and tia toys, wavona, band aleiaiia, sail boats, picture framea, tin armour, tin toy. maglo lantern picture c. Sent by mall on receipt of .0 - ii . crnwiHvnrur.uiii"r, Tha Teatk'i Pab. Co., 2 U Win. St, N.Y.CIty. STOPPED FREE ' Ptrmusntly Cirifl lataaitji rretaate y HLINa I f SEAT IERVE RESTORER I e.ave atarra fka all Mi syifaai wmd M. rtMf Di . kkiirltiTtvwBMa Crvi Uf atw. Trtatiaa tantl M trial rottl fraa fit Mltaau. tart aakyLa. .xprtw ebarfta ar yifi. v 'v. .ua-, "- asUtt- or NfaUli,, Ml Arrti It., rMUd.lp-ta, fa. II E N S ! O N " ii ii tl n"",1 t Successfully Pro sec Laat HrlnotDtal ExAmlnar U 8. jjraluu.vtl war, lAaUjutlUwtiiij utes claims. , Ponaloa Ruroao. g rLaima.fttty alue OWNERS'.,': wfor Mini by ad tr nf n)t Wault(i,wnrthifW rail ma, I Block aim twin I ran find a market roMMnii A. W., p. O. Ux 678. N. V. Hfml rtwMT.pt.on of whai you havo. OR. SELF-PRESERVATION. .-.AMewall ' I HEAL THYSELF. YOU WANT to rater w constantly, Is oar bandy OF UNIVERSAL KNOWLEDCE. aa it eon. It oontain MO (. profusely illustrated. tit II II ii ii r i u u w tyti esriri if "laW til T tUHtS WHWfc ALL US IAIIS. Tj u Beat Couh ttyrup. Taauatioud. Ca r Px In tlma. Sold or dnitrgtBta. pi