t FACTS FORFARMERS. ACaiCTXTCRAI- NOTES AND HINTS FOB TILE HOISEHOLD. flow to Make Tarm "Wori Eaiis? sad Eoms Brighter. ' Mhen a man 6ays there Is no use In planting shubbery in the school house yard, because the boys will destroy it, some parents need spanking more than their boys seed it. The powdered hellebore used for destroying the currant worm is a less virulent poison than Paris green. In the small amounts needed to efftct a clearing of these pests there is less dan ger from careless handling than there is from any mineral poison. Xo effective method of fighting rose bugs has been found except hand-picking. Arsenical poisons, kerosene emul sions, pyrethnim powder, and all the usual insecticides have proved power lens against this sturdy pest, which de fies everything exce.pt actual capture by hand. It requres good, practical judgment to forecast probable work to be done and adapt it to the help that is cm ployed to do it. Trying to do too much is the besetting sin of Ameri can farmers. They have been led into tliis through the cheapness of land, and of late years by the increusu of labor saving machinery. Land that has grown much clovci seed Is not good for a strawberry patch. It Is good for almost any other furm crop for which clover is either harmlct-s or a valuable manure. But among strawberries clover is one of the worst of weeds, and for this reason It Is not best to sow gypsum or land planter on the strawberry patch lest it causo too great au intrusion of J clover. A college-bred man of twenty-eight, falling iu health from office work, pur chased a farm of sixty acres at Xorth- Eort, Long Island. The second year e tried a few acres In vegetables and email fruits, which he found sale for in the village of Xorthport at most sat isfactory prices. I wa on his farm in the summer of 1883, and 1 must say that for a man who had got his knowl edge almost wholly from books, his venture looked as If it would be a com plete success. Ifr. Tcfer ITendergon tolls of an a pnragus grower near Atlanta whoso crop gave for three successive yours a net profit of f 1,500 per acre and as instancing departures from old meth ods, cites the case of a farmer residing near Rochester, "who half a dozen years ago, timidly made the attempt of growing 4 half acre of his fifty-acre farm in vegetables for a village mar ket. His venture was so satisfactory that he gradually increased his area, so that lie now uses thirty of his fifty acres mostly for the Rochester market. The net profit from the cabbage garden last year was 56,500, or a little over 200 per acre, and it was not a very good year for cahbages at that." A few months ago ft big ensilage convention was held at Cleveland, OMo, to talk over the best way to make and preserve the fodder and compare notes on silo building. The wooden silo in some of Its forms, was Votod the favorite. The evidence seemed conolusive that the woodun silo ras nearest frost proof, kept iu con tents in the best state of preservation and if properly built and painted, Iwhen built by itself with gome good wood preservative, it would last for tears. The silo, with lathed and plas tered Interior, was also largely en- Eorsed, while those who had the double oarded silos painted were good fenough. Not a man voted for stone or concrete sllo9, although Several who had 6uch were present. The committee appointed at the last Annual meeting of the Ayrshire Breed ers' Association, iu Maine recommend the adoption of a set of rules to govern cow tests at all fairs, dairy shows and experiment stations, that the awards toay be given to the breeds or single animals wlilch show their superiority as profitable dairy cows. These rules In brief are, that all cows entered for trial shall be seouroly locked up, shall be fed, watered, inilkod, etc., uniform ly, under the charge of a superinten dent, the cow to be charged with all food consumed. A statement of the cow's previous condition and treat ment must be made under oath. The cows must be milked regularly, and samples of each milking must be analyzed, and only the dry fat be cal culated. The cow or herd giving the greatest quantity of marketable pro ducts, at least cost, to be awarded tho prizes. ' TBo catcrplllrtrt, widen are making their tents earlier this year tlwn usual, owing to the warm spring weather, should be looked after at once. The simplest and porbaos, on the whole, ilio best wav of getting rid of them Is lo brush otf" the nest from the trees as fast as thrr appear, with a long-han-Hlod, conical-shaped brash. Early piomlng or ovening is the time when the entire family may be found at kome, so dial la the best time to de stroy the nest. Tho codling worm, which infesU fruit trees throughout the land, should be looked after at onoe. There are many ways of get ting rid of the pests, but none is be lieved to be better than spraying the trees frequently with a solution of Taris green. Of the fly species, the eoimtry Gentleman says the horse-fly the most cruel and bloodthirsty of the entire f uinllyv It is armed w ith a most formidable weapon, which con sists of four lancets, so sharp and strong that they will ienetrate leather. ilVhen not In use ther are nicely folded away in a sucker, lie makes his ap pearauce in June, and may often be seen in the vicinitv of small streams of Water. Jleissuiil to subsist in part Upon an airy diet, and to pass his life harmlessly. Not so the female, for he is armed with six lancets, with which she bleeds both cattle and horses, and even human beings. She lays her eggs in moist places, and, after they are hatched into footless maggots, they make all necessary Journeys by stretching and closing the segment of their bodies, their heads being supplied by two hookF, by which they get their food. In process of time this maggot goes down into moist earth, where it reposes for some weeks, after which it bursts the pupa ease, and comes forth a large black fly, armed and equipped like it predecessors. - f ARM KOtES. There is mucn written about being lover like to your wife, and the idea is a good one. But more than one wife would like to trade kisses for stove wood. Better supply her with, both. can be put on in three minutes by the driver, and saves time and possible in jury, while it is as servicable as the old way was. -r- " Prof. Cook, of the Michigan Agtt- cultural College, says : It is my prac-; tice to barrow my corn ground before the corn is up, and until it gets five or six inches high. I use a very broad fine tooth harrow, with the teeth slant ing back. This does no damage to the corn even when the latter is well up. There is something peculiar In the small tract of land in Holland on which are raised the celebrated Dutch bulbs. There is only 148 acres of it, and there is annually shipped to Eng land, France, Germany and the United States over $300,000 worth of bulbs from this less than a quarter section of land. The production of wool in India, Central Asia and China is estimated at 300,000,000 pounds, Australia and New Zealand possess 75,000,000 sheep, producing 200,000,000 pounds of wool worth $1 14,160,000. La Plata posses ses 100,000,000 sheep, producing 50, 000 tons of wool, worth $4,840,000, Europe possesses 200,000,000 sheep, yielding 400,000,000 pounds of wool. There is no root that is better for milch cows than the parsnip. It is largely grown in the islands of Jersey, and feeding with it for successive gen erations has probably had much to do with developing the butter-making ualities of the Jersev breed of cows. The parsnip is less difficult to keep clear of weeds than the carrot, and is fully as good, if not hotter, cropper on deep, rich soil. The population of the United States is only one-fifteenth of that of the globe ; yet our agriculture amounts in volume to one-sixth of the world's to tal. We are becoming- more and more a nation of manufacturers, and miners and producers In various lines, and yet our agricultural supremacy is so far maintained that there is no question that It can be held against any change that may take place In any other part of the world. Of late years, mainly by large impor tations from South America, nitrate of soda and nitrate of potash are much cheaper than they used to be. Still they are too costly to bo used in large amounts. A little concentrated nitrate goes a long way as a fertilizer. As they are very soluble they should only be sown in the spring, that crops may at once use them. If sown In fall niOHt of their value will be washed away and wasted. Take three pounds each of flowers of sulphur and quick-lime. Slack the lime and boil with tho sulphur in six gallons of water until reduced to two gallons. Allow this to settle, then pour on tho clear liquid and bottle it for use. An old Iron pot will answer to boil it in. A gill of this liquid, mixed with five gallons of water, is an excellent prevention and cure for mil' dew upon plants showered upon them as soon as the mildew" appears. As soon as the buds open, a little caterpillar will be found to have drawn tho leaves together by its nest, thus protecting it from liquid applications. Hand-picking is the most effective remedy. "W hen the grape is in flower the rose-bug sometimes attacks the tlowers in great numbers. This insect passes for an "iron clad," so far as in secticides are concerned. They readily lot go their hold if the vine is jarred or shaken. They may thus be caught in a vessel containing a little Water and then destroyed. ITOCSEIIOI.D KOTES. ' ' - Use a penny to remove paint spots from glass. If the cover Is removed from soap dishes the soap will not get soft. Rub your lamp chimney with salt to increase tho brilliancy of the light. Sandpaper applied to the yellow cays of tho piano will restore the color. "When cream cannot he procured for jo;.ee, the yelk of a soft-boiled egg is a very good substitute. Hot water, as hot as can be borne, is very warmly recommended for re lief from the poison of ivy. Coffee-beans placed upon a hot plate or over hot coals throw off" an aroma which is healthful and agreeable. A very nourishing drink for an in valid is made of whipped cream, sweet ened and mixed witli highly flavored wine. If you wake mornings with head ache and lassitudo, try whether ven tilating your bedrooms will not reme dy the trouble. For a boil, take the skin of a boiled egg, moisten it and apply. It will draw off the matter and relieve the soreness in a few hours. Matting can be washed with strong salt water and a clean cloth, and do it, if possible, at midday, to iusure quick drying, which prevents discoloration. A good way to cook potaioes for breakfast is to cut the medium-sized ones In quarters, drop them into hot lard, and fry till brown, the same as doughnuts. When the rubber rollers of a wringer become sticky, as they very often do after wringing flannel, rub with kero sone and wipe dry, and they will be nice and smooth. To preveut the juice of pies soaking Into the under-crust, beat the white of an egg and brush the crust with it. To give a rich brown to the upper crust, brush that with it also. An economical and really delicious way to flavor a cake which is to have icing over the top is to grate part of the peel of an orange or lemon over the cake before putting the icing on. A good wash to prevent the hair from falling out is mule of one ounoe of powdered borax, half an ounce of powdered camphor, one quart of boil ing water, and a gill of alcohol. iies cool, pour into a bottle for use, and oleau the head with it, applying with s flannel or sponge once a week. It is said that if a teaspoonful ol mustard be mixed with water and molasses, which is usually poured ovei baked beans, there is no danger of tin stomach being distressed after eating them. Bone dishes are among the regulai accessories; they are curved so as t fit the edge of the plate, and should b placed close to it to receive the bonei that would otherwise cumber the plat to the disadvantage of the diner. Flaster of Paris scattered in cracki and crevices and rubbed on shelves in cupboards, closets, etc., will drivs. away and prevent the depredations ol the little red ants, cockroaches, and tends to keep away flies and other in sects. "When a patient is suffering front fever, and the skin is hot and dry, i saleratus bath is often found to give aj least temporary relief. This bath cai be given to the patient in the bed, without removiug the bedclothes, oi his own clothing. Ink stains are entirely removed by the immediate application of dry sail before the Ink has dried. When the salt becomes discolored by absorbing the ink, brush it off and apply more; wet slightly. Continue this till thi ak is aU romoved. - ! The complexion is improved by giv mg tne race a not. own ram uui Wash it thoroughly and dry with soft towel. A rough towel is nevei commended for the face, which reallj requires soft, fine napery, if one wishei the skin to be smooth. Dishes for scalloped oysters have separate baking dish, that is set info the china receptacle, the oyften not being removed from the dish ii which they are cooked, before serving Pudding dishes have baking dishes alst and are set in a decorated outside dish To clean lace fill a bettle with colt water; draw a stocking tightly over it securing both ends firmly. Place th lace smoothly over the stocking anc tack closely. Put the bottle in a kettli of cold water containing a few shav ings of soap, and place over the fire U boil. Rinse in several waters jh then drain and dry. "When dry re move and place smoothly in a largt book and press .with weights. Ver) nice lace can be made to look like nov 'ly this process. BF.CIPES.' Strawberry jam. Allow equa weights of strawberries; mash them ir the preserving-kettle, and mix tin sugar well with It; stir, carefully re move the scum, and boil it for twenty minutes. To keep pudding sauce warm if pre pared too long before dinner is served, set the basin containing it in a pan ot pail of boiling water; do not let th water boil after the saueo-dish is set ii It, but keep it hot. Canned strawberries. Take half I fiound of sugar to one pound of straw erries ; let the sugar stand Upon tin errles for half an hour; then placs: on the fire, and let them boil up hard once ; take off, and put in glass cans, which should be immediately screwod up. Asparagus is delicious if a piece oi juicy and tender lamb is cooked with it Or it may be boiled in stock made ol the bones and remains of a chicken Serve with thin slices of toast. Af ten you arc tired of having it plain, it wil! appear almost like a new dish, and l eaten with relish if cooked iu this way. Strawberry tapioca. Tako one tea cupful of tapioca, and wash It; pout nver It one teacupf ul of water, and let it soak all night. Next morning put it on the fire with one quart of water, and let it boil until olear; after hulling the strawberries, mash them, and add si teacupf ul of sugar; stir into th tapioca when finished, and set on is antil cold. -Eat with cream. A light and puffy Icing for the toj snly of a cake is made by beating tin white of one egg to a stiff froth; beat In gradually then a quarter of a pound f powdered sugar with not quite s '.easpoonf ul of baking powder mixed with it. Flavor to suit the taste, riiis is nice for the top of almost any rind of a baked pudding, whether it s to be served in the dish in which it it laked or in saucers. An entree specially designed to ao jompany roast pork is made in this way ; Peel as many potatoes as will covet Jie bottom of a deep pie-dish. Sprin cle half a teaspooniful of dried sage ver them. Cut a small onion in thin ilices, and spread them over this. Add talt and pepper, and little lumps oi juttcr, according to your taste. Covet .ho bottom of the dish with water, and ake in a moderate oven. Celery that Is not so crisp as it shonld e, may be eaten prepared like this : f ter washing tho celery and reniov- tig the green leaves, cut in pieces ibout as you do asparagus, then cut it nto boiling water that is salted; when t is tender, drain it, lay it on slices of mttered toast, whioh you have Just lippea in tne water in which you looked the celery ; and butter, pepper; md salt, to your taste; serve hot. Strawberry Jelly. This, when roada vith flue, full-flavored, scarlet straw )erries, it is a very delicious preserve. ind is by many preferred to guava jJ y, wmcn it greaiy resembles. Stalk he fruit, bruise it very slightly, and tir it for a few minutes over a gentle ire ; strain It without pressure. Take qual weight of the juiue and suirar: et it boil from fifteen to tweu- v-five minutes after It commences. ro test when the jelly is thick enough i small portion should be taken out roin time totimo, and allowed to cool. tfhen tho consistency will bo disoovor- d. Preserved strawberries. Take two zounds of flue large strawberries and wo pounds of powdered sugar; put hem in a preserving kettle, over a low fire, until the sugar is melted; hen boil them precisely twenty min ites, as fast as possible; having ready number of jars, and put the fruit in foiling hot. Cork and seal the jars mmediately, and keep through the ummer in a cool, dry cellar. The irs must be heated before the fruit is oured in, otherwise they will break. p is better to preserve strawberries n small quantities, as they are less lahle to break. A factory for making: lvorv out ol tk'm milk has bean successfully estab- ltnea la lcnana. Pli-tro, ore of the army of becrgars Id Rome, tias just died and left 170,000 t inouier nouian Degear. The Cincinnati Enquirer estimate.' hat In the last fifty years over J 100, X'0,i KX) in cash has been ra sed to teact ;he Afi leans to love bis neighbor ai liuiself. "German 99 ypup ForThroat and Lungs i nave Deen ul lot Hemorrhage " about five years, Five Years, "medical orivi "and Itnnlr th firs! "dose in somedonht. TVii rtH. "edin a few hours easy sleep. There " ' uS: uuilCAl day, when I had a slight attack wmcn sioppea almost immediate ly. Bv the third dav nil trin. rt " blood had disappeared and I had "recovered much strength. Th "fourth day I sat up in bed and ate my uinner, me nrst soiia tood foi two months. Since that time I have gradually gotten better and am now able to mov oKnut tVi "house. My death was daily ex- peciea ana my recovery has been a great surprise to my irtends and the doctor. There ran h tin HmiKi "about the effect of German Syrop, "as I had an attack iuatnrrvinn t "its use. The only relief was aftej me nrsi aose. J . 1,oug8SA, Adeh ''e, Australia. 4 What is lacking is truth and confidence. If there were absolute truth on the one hand and absolute confidence on the other, it wouldn't be necessary for the makers of Dr. Sage's Catarrh Remedy to back up a plain statement of fact by a $500 guarantee. They say "If we can't cure you (make it personal, !)lease,) of catarrh in the head, n any form or stage, well pay you $500 for your trouble in making the trial." "An advertising fake," you say. Funny, isn't it, how some people prefer ' sickness to health when the remedy is positive and the guarantee absolute. . Wise men don't put money back of " fakes." And "faking" doesn't pay. , Magical little granules those tiny, sugar-coated Pel lets of Dr. Pierce scarcely larger than mustard seeds, yet powerful to cure active yet mild in operation. The best Liver Pill ever invented. Cure sick headache, dizziness, constipation. One a dose. A Rich and Clever Woman. Lady Rolle (who died recently at tht age ot 91) was married in 1823. Ilei husband was forty years her senior and he survived his marriage twentj years. She had lived since his deatt at Blcton for the greater part of eacl year, an exercised a enevolent des potism over the whole district. Shi was a most Imperious woman, and ha all the old-fashioned aristocratic no tlona of the last century. She main tained a great establishment, including a chaplain, and exercised a magnificent hospitality, lady Rolle's charities a every kind were munificent, and to tin Church of England she has given up wards of 100,000. It was entirely through her liberality that the sea ot Truro was founded, as she gave 40. iaai u the endowment fund. She wil be sorely missed by the poor people ol the neighborhood. Lady Uolle was a very clever woman, wonderful to the last in her capacity for business and foi W strong, shrewd common sense, and Uways resolute to have her own way In everything. Like her husband, she Was a Tory of the Eldon type, and in the old days she subscribed largely to ward the expenses of the county elec tions. She took a great and in tell 1- E;ent Interest In politics, and she could t ell many good stories both of political ud social celebrities of the hut bun flred years. Her memory was extraor dinary, and she always spoke with fcharacteristic bluntness. Bishop Phlll potts once remarked that there had been no suoh woman In England since the famous Duchess of Uarlboroueh. Character In Gait. It is well to beware of the man who carries his left foot in toward his right iu walking, giving the Impression that his right foot turns out and his left foot turr.stn. This man Is a petty larcenist He way perhaps have never stolen In bis life, but that was because of fear, or lack of opportunity, but all the same he is liable at any time to sequester un considered trifles for pure wantonness. He is of a kleptomaniac nature, but he Is not nearly so dangerous as the man v bo deliberately lifts his legs up from the thigh as though ha was going up stairs. That man is a natural and edu cated villain. In England, where the tread-mill Is nsed In prisons, many con victs acquire that peculiar step, but It is the natural, careful, cat-like tread of the criminal. The girl who walks with a flat foot planted squarely on the ground as thoush she wanted it to grow there may not be as attractive as the girl with the arched Instep, but she is a good deal better natured. 6he Is sure to be a good nurse, kind-hearted, sym pathetic, an ious to bear the burdens of others, while the girl with the arch ed foot Is nearly sure to be selfish, and certain to be a coquette if she walks on her toes. The man of short, nervous steps to always a business roan of energy, but If the stride is from the knee only, he Is cold and selfish, caring for no one but himself. The man whose stride is long and at the same time energetic, Is gen erally bright, always erratic and ill balanced, often conceited, always care Jess, fond of admiration, generally wiilin? to sacrifice much for praise and eclat, and, while often a good fellow generally unreliable. The diplomat and the financier have a smooth, glid ing walk, bard to describe but easy to recognize. There Is nothing sneaking about It, but it betokens careful delib pratlon, as though every step were duly considered before being made. Ureat statesmen and great philan thropists always have a loose, shambling gait, which comes ot thinking about others more than about themselves. The strut of the vain man, the teetering Irlp of the "dude," the lounging gait of the unemployed club man, are all loo familiar to require description. To say that a person walks like a lady or like a gentleman Is high praise. The pait can never be picked up in after life it must be born in a man or woman, and cultivated in early youth. It is lost to a man when he falls Into bad ways, Tor so surely as he loses his con sciousness of rectitude and pride of honor, so surely will be pick np the gait of the loafer. An honest man lentle or simple, never walks like a thief, and a thief can never counter feit the gait of an honest man, but. In attempting to apply these rules to men, one knows it must be remembered that all thieves are not caught, and all sus pected persons are not bad. Disinfecting Veeala. All sorts of vessels and utensils ma Ae purified from long retained smells of svery kind tn the easiest and most per. feet manner by rinsing them out well with charooaj powder after the grosser mpurities have been scoured off with and and wattr- Makes the Weak Strong Tk. -n .hii-ti tTfwwl'a SAi-Mtimri builds np peesls la run dowa or weakened ut ot w..it. aini'.niiT nrATaa tha claim thai this MM;iMiikei the weak strong." It doM not act like a stimulant, Impartint Bctittous strength from whioh there must follow a re action of sreater weakness than before, but In the inst natural way tiooa siraipuu comes tht tired teelUig, creates an app'tlte, ...iuii..hinui md in short, elves errat H4lftB .MV . - . bodily, nerve, mental and dlgeetWe strength. Hoods Sarsaparilla Sold by all dnmelstt. $1 ; six tor V. Prepared only by C. I. HOOD & CO., Lowell, Mass. 10O loes One Iollr. ONLY ONE THING LEFT TO DO. "How do you stand the ordeal of listening to "Doctor Prosy's lecture?" "Stand it? Why. man. I couldn't even alt it. I skppied it In about five minutes." The name Meagher Is pronounced Mar. It is a Gaelic name, and the spell- 1 g is modern English; Kins Bottle Made Him Bound. DBXTEB, ARK., March 21, 1800. nil, fuittt nf rioranlfimn has cared me sound Soil well. A -oreness of tne head, slow night ferer, after which I was visited bj cold clilily feelinjjs. lea vim soreness In all my Joints and ektu. These were my complaint. 1 am glad to oav tney are an gone oy using one Dot tle of Floraploxion. It did all you recommend art it tA ami more. Mav Oori bless the wonder ful diseiivrv of this medlolne. I recommend It to all my friends, and I am trying to Induce 3 . D. liush. the postmaster, to seuu and set a dozen liottles. as he Is dealing In medicines of various kinds, but none like yours by any means. ytnmrlrrlon fs the sneedv and permanent cure for hick Headache, Indigestion, Dyspep sia, Biliousness, Liver Complaint. Nervous De bility and Consumption. It U the only sure cure for these eoiupUiits. Ask your druggist for It. and get well. Bonus $1 pieces are plentiful In "Wash ington. A man who has nractleed medicine for 40 years, ought to know salt from sugars read wlutt lis sayn lOLIDO. Jan. 1R17. Messrs. P. J. Chenev Si Co. Gentlemen: I have been In theitenera! practice of medicl ne for umst 4(i years, and would say that In all my pructioe and experience have never seen a prep aration that I could prescribe with as niucii confidence of sueeess as I can Hall's Catarrh Cure, iiianufaiitured by you. Have prescribed ii a great many nines ami lis eneei is wonuer ful, and would say in conclusion that I have yet to nail a ease of Catarrh tint It would not cure, it tly would take It according to directions. lours truiy. L. L. (iOIISTJCH. M. D- Ofhce, Ul.-i summit St. We will live S100 for any case of Catarrh that cannot be cured with Hall s Catarrh Cure. Taken Intemallv. F. J CHENEY ft CO., rrops., Toledo, O. -Sold by Druggists, 1m. A pr.ATH Tact iVifa 'Wlinr. a terrible thing it is to be burled alive." Husband "Yes, and it isn't such a deliriously nleasaut thinir to be buried dead, either." The popularity which Hood's Sarsaparilla has gained aa a spring medicine is wonderful. It possesses Just those elements ot hea'th giving, blood-pm If ylng and appetite-restoring which everybody seems to need at this season. Be sure to get Hood's Sarsaparilla. San Dieeo reaned a winter crou of $150,000 from visitors. ("uiiii'ft KMney Cure for Dropsy, Gravel, Diabetes, Brighl's, Heart, Lrinary or Liver Diseases, Nerv ousness, &e. Cure guaranteed. 831 Arch Street, Fhllad'a. $1 a bottle, 6 for 15. or druezisL 1000 rertlflcates of cures. Try iu About 200 acres of sugar beets have been planted near Ontario, Cal. Rupture cure trust ran feed by Dr. J. B. Mayer, 831 Arch SC., 1'hil'a, Pa. Ease at once, no operation or de lay from business, attested by thou sands of cures after others tail, advice free, send for circular Portland shippers say there will be no cut in rates in flour to Japan and China. Tf yea arefouMI as to the use of Dobbins' Electric SoaD. and cannot accent the einerl. ence of mUltun who use it, after the 24 years It has been on the market, one trial will convince you. Ask your grocer for it. lake no Imitation Salt Lake has voted to issue $300,000 In bonds for school sites and school houses. HTSt An Fits stopped rreeny Dr. Kline's Great K-re heaiorer. No Kiuafior nrst dav's use. Mar- te.ouscore. Treaiwesuut?.uuiriaiOouie free to ri canes, ctnuudr. niine.wi Arcaoc 1'ln'si'a The Indians at the Carlisle School have $11,100 on deposit in bauk. Ifafillctad with roreeyse use Dr. IsaaoThomp. ton 'aKy e-wator. Druggists sell at 23a. per Dolus Fort Town?end Is to have a telegraph fire-alarm service. A Superior Not PoMible. TheSt. Bernard Vegetable Pill stimulates torpid livers, kUtnevs. luugn and bowels, re moves congestion, purifies the blood and pro motes hoai'hy digestion, nuiriiluu, secretion and excretion and Is therefore able to counter act the causes of disease end cure nearly all the Ills that flesh is heir to, winch cannot be said of any slucle preparation In existence. A free sample of the Ht. Bt rn.ir.l Vegetable rills wlil be sent to all applicants.- Address St Bernard. Box 2116 New lirk. Inconsistency. PoetTon said the oiher day in your paper that poverty Is not a crime." Elitor "WelL" I'uet "And yet you decline my ver ses simply because you say they are poor." Under suspicion .-"Somebody has picked my picket," cried the Fat Woman. "Whom do you suspect," asked the Midget. "That sneaking Armless "Wonder over there has a conscious look on his face. I believe It's him." FTMBOLIC SATELLlTES,-SllP-"What a fitting token of married love is the weddme ring!'' lie "It is, A ring has no end; and H also has no beginning. It Is absolute, ly without variety; and it much easl. r put on than taken off." Had a holiday then, anyiigw. "Are you leally sick, Sonny?" asked the family doctor, one day. "Dr. HcCNrmey, I'm perfectly sur prised at your asking such a question. I suppose jou lor get that it's b..turday " was the reply. ' wblcome contkibut'Ons.-"! write for the Century Magazine now sa d Scribulns. "Abl" replied Pennlbs, admirir tjly. "Regularly?" "Yes, eveiy six months. Xou seel only srbecribe for a half-year at a time." Questionable conop.atui.ations. Ma "Wby didn't yon coiigralulate him Jiibt now? lle'sging to be nuti ried " He "W1I, yon see I coul-ln't con scientiously congrain'ate Haines on marry ng any girl that would have him." wmm v.. it. .a. 1 mud External 17m. Stem hU, Crminp. InBimmMKm ta WT Bni m Morbui, WuTh.i, fth.um.C-m, f..orl. CO- Boaua. 1U HTJMOBOTJS. Why are colls like rich men's sons? Because they won't work until they are broke. Kever judge an insnraocecompany by e quality ot the blotting paper ltgirea away. You can't tell how valuable a girl's affections are until you are sued for blighting them. Student "Did Stanley discover the African Pygmies, do you gather? ITofessor dl Gamma " es; he and Herodotus." A boss of street laborers Is looking around for that "fine Italian hand" that he has read about, and offers to make him a foreman. Slangy Artist-Would-Be-"I see by vour smile that you're stuck on my tiultor "iw, A vroum - -w - ed it. Good day. Grin "See a dog fight?" -..--i. .4V-.. ... Antw atrkftrt ntr and yelped at each other." WU1 AD, a ua.. mm k "--a-"- say." Cumso "They say Brown has a very poor memory for faces." Tt.,rk "Anri heha-i Whv. the oth er day he looked Into the mirror and asked his wife whose renecuon it was he saw." Djn't you ever go to see comedies?" nquired Miss Laura. "Nn ."said Miss frene. "Laughter produces wrinkles." And Miss Irene went on reacua- me "Editor's Drawer" In Itarper'i. Toung lady (to young man who kissed her) That 'svery singular, sir. Young Mun-Ab, well, allow me to make it plural. "Wiiw An sFAii nhlfff-t to German opera? It Is full of vigor; it braces me right tip. "That's my objection to it; u is iue- tonic "Anvthlna- new on foot?" asked one politician of another. "Yes," was the reply. "What is It?" Our baby. He has just learned to walk. There Is constant complaint of the lack of morals in politics. There is no place yet discovered, even out or pol itics, where there is an oversnpply. Somehow a handsome diamond never looks quite so deslratle to a woman at any other time as it does when she sees it in another woman's ring. Canvasser Can I see the good man of the house, madame? Mrs. Naggers io, you can't; There Isn 't any good man in the house. There's only my husband. Tramp I don't hardly know what to do with this piece o' steak now I've got it. landlady For goodness savel why don't you eat It. Tramp I've tried that. Mitioated orief. Rounds "I've seen people laugh till they cried; but I never knew of a fellow crying till he laughed." 2sephew "Guess yon never lost a rich uncle." Faithful under advetsities, Teachtr "Johnny, why, is George Brown absent?" Johnny "Wy, George Brown says his sister's got a cold; but dat ain't nothln', oneo my sister's Is got de small pox, and tother one de measles, but I come all the same," Good - Professor to one of his pupils "When Alexander was as old as you, he had already conquered the world." "But you said he had Aristotle for his teacberl" . --aV A-V-VJ VJXRt Both the method and results when 6yrup of Figs is taken ; it is pleasant nd refreshing to the taste, and acta fently yet promptly on the Kidneys, Liver and Bowels, cleanses the sys tem effectually, dispels colds, head, aches and fevers and cures habitual constipation. 8vmp of Figs is the nly remedy ef its kind ever pro duced, pleasing to the taste and so. eeptable to the stomach, prompt ia it action and truly beneficial in itf effects, prepared only from the most healthy and atrreeable subsUncee, Its many excellent qualities; oom ttend it to all and have made it the most popular remedy known. Svynp of Fig k for sale in 50) tJtdll bottles by all leadinrdnie. fiita. Any reliable drugpst who may not have it oa hand will nro enre it promptly for any one wh wishes to try it Do not accept any substitute. j CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO. 8AN FRANCISSCO, CAL. LOUISVILLE, KT. NEW YORK. N. Y. FOR FIFTY YEARS i MRS. WINSLOW'S SOOTHING SYRUP h the e- in. ".n. th "tnmllM-. ri)-oft lent si nortle. BEECH AIM'S PILLS ON A WEAK STOMACH. 25 Cents a Box. w ALL DRUCCIST8, PATENTS 4 S-ice I FltxceraM. Br lea. n. f ' CMe beak free. S3 siwr Vw.Kssi lenbt, tTUUdtjBiua. Pa. h. . . . . -irAIf mm mi.w. a. - ' i"( 'or Mnimlvi to o . tD. F n In the Nature should be assisted, when the system is changing from the full habit of the winter months, to the lighter diet of the warm season. Swift's Specific (S. S. S.,) stimu lates the sluggish blood and rid you of that feeling ol heaviness and languor. : S S. S. teautlfles the skin and makes the complexion rosy e4 healthy. s! sl rfve elsstlolry to the step and buoyant spirits. a a it makes the feeble and delicate strong- and robust flu S. B ' Is a toalo to the whole body and Increases vitality. 8. 8. & l U a simple vegetable mediolD-. If then Is poison In the blood. It generally shews itaclf In the spring, and this is the seasea to hlj nature to shirs It out and be cured. Xothlag does this as well as 8. 8. S. It is harmless te the most delicate, yet so powerful as to clean the system of all impurities. Your health i a citadel. The winter's storms tiic i mi ... . coming enemy. You know that this enemy will sit down for five long months outside this citadel, and do its best to break in and destroy. Is this citadel garrisoned and provisioned? The garrison is your constitution Is it vio-orous or depleted? How long can it fight without help"? Have you made provision for the garrison by fur nishing a supply of SCOTT'S EMULSION of pure Norwegian Cod Liver Oil and Hypophosphites of Lime and Soda? It restores the flagging energies in creases the resisting powers against disease ; cures Lon sumption,ScrofuU, General Debility, and allAnamic and Wasting Diseases especially in Children), keeps coughs and colds out, and so enables the constitution to hold the fort of health. Palatable as Milk. spur?!. -Scott's Emulsion Is non-secrst, and is prescribed by the Msdical Pro fessfoE ov.r Sworldrbc-UM it. ingrednu ar. soicnuncall sou,. .n surf, a manner as to greatly increase their remedial value. -ATTTTrM Scotfs Emulsion Is put up m snimon-coiorea itra... fhnneeparedonly by sLit&Wn.. Manufacture (Jh.mists. K.w V ork. U Uy OVli UlUB(UHa -Str&nge Indeed ttiea-e- like SAPOLJO should inaeevewl"hin so bridhhbut "A needle cidthes others, ajid is iisel: n tvked '.Try i H n y ou r n ex r h o us e cf etvni "What folly it would be to cut grasa vrith a pair ef seissore! Tet peo ple do equallv silly things every day. Modern progress bos grown np from the booked sickle to the swinging scythe and thence to the lawn mower. So don't use scissors! Cut do you use SATOLIO ? Tf you don't you are as much feebind tha t?e as if you cut grass with a dinner knife. One there were no soaps. Then one soap served all purposes. Now the sensrble folks use one soap in the toilet, another tn the tub, one soap in the stables, and SAPOLIO for all scouring and house-cleaning. P ISO'S REMEDY F03 CATAJtRH. Bs. Ka-Jejt to Use. Chcaprst. Krlit-f Is Immediate. A cure is orrtaJj. A.or Cold in tlie Head it Das uo qual. 't ' Ointment, ol wMcb. nostras. Frice, 60c. "J 9c. e .Id ddra. In view of the almost incredible progress ef the last two generations it is not the best judgment which pro nounces the post electric system of transportation the dream of an inven tive maniac. There is a freshness about the proposition that we shall yet send letters across the continent between the dawns of successive days that takes the average breath away, and the suggestion that passengers are to be rushed through space at the rate of 200 miles per. hour is apt to alarm the appreheusive. The truth is that we live in a phenomenal age. All the ancient faiths concerning the develop ment of material things are being rudely jostled by the nushing shoulders of science. It is no longer the dream of a visionary that we shall converse with persons a thousand miles away. Marked progress has been made toward solving the problem of rial naviga tion, and although it is yet impossible to predict the ultimate outcome it is not insauity to believe that air ships may yet run counter to the winds. The turning of a key illuminates a populous city and new explosives shat ter in an instant obstacles which were deemed immovable. There are im provements to the telegraph .which would have astounded House had he lived to sco them. Nor is this true only in the world of mechanics. On the turf all expected records have bocn lowered and men have walked more miles on tho tanbark track in s week than horses could travel. Tht Eiffel tower in Paris looks down in scorn on the tradition that no edifice s thousand feet high could be made to support iU own weight. Tho pessim irts may growl as much as they please, but the fact remains that this is th grandest ago in tho history of tin world. Gels Lots of Fun. A farmer at Saco, Me., says he has found aa occupation which combines amusement with toil. II. i uyZ etumpsoutof a field with dynam te nd the fun of seeing the .IdtTS m " do"'t 6e why they are Ulkina so ri.ih.KaJ3f"S2 A Kans s far'i e Spring. roFiiiiea c i&slVS V? .53aJ 'rn a sm-.ii rirnc: is s!!e by d-weists f t-nt by aTI. K T. Hi' ,.-. V. Wn a smll partic: Is s!ted to sue A klo or Beauty Is a .Tor Forever. 1IK.T. TELUAllCall n-a Orirnfa! Crtaa, r Magical Brautifler Snres Tan, t-lmp-ls. Fre. k !(', Mm a Pat he s. PR's; ana Skin dis anr, and every ble-9il.-a oa Scanty .and duties de sertion. It hits stood the test ot III years; uootherh.is, and Is so . i . . we taste It to be tun. is properly Thi Acct'ft .no eoiiBtorfelt of similar name. ia,i J'.'R'"'""!d Dr- !r, said to a i? ,y i fi."'e Hp"o.i (a patient) I - "As V',Mt,u i'-Tr.'" ,u,. """). 1 recommend tC i1 l,Cr"a"V the least harmful of all lit! Preparations." Als-. 1'ondr S.il.lile sion "'Perlluoiis kalr wnaoul injury to lbs l,!'K??,;Tv'!vPKi- Proprietor, JT Great Joik-s street. New York. T,."ir.?al.tlya,JlruKL,un(1 fancy Goods lDenlers throughout Ui S.Sm Canada and PAINT"1. I?r GMIIr InaiTlAuAs fui !.fVl,lAftTFOIl.M OC ;Mjsi6 csrsidi.$l Zo Wbfrt wm Ii o warn aA a m with any active Merchant.-L. & M. N. T. "STOPPED FREE r 9 Jns7ifi resets Restored. VPr. KLINE'S UREAT M IT G v n fcTi o c o r.rnr 4MB Ba tlrivl Dl.sa.it itmlm. assTst - fmr Km Am- t-.r -. ... fr outre its?. TimiIu ..d h...i. t Dr. Bowsted's FEMMYI SAFE, SURE ano RELIABLE. iM nj mail, s-rnr.lT lrd. rrlw, J1.JS. AddrMS, I'hiUdoli.Ul. . flftir 1 ' KntTem, Wancirm mortals p ntliH "" sad tm wefi 7" - " tells he SOcas. a year. Sample P mil. p" o. ii. ijik, evmr, Boirale, N. if. Fant Ktren-hrr. Amhmt. and other J- (Kr.I.y, 715 Watkmgtoa Slrret. B.tiB. 9mf Mllff a peTfTW SlL SUIWFll US. rlestkw a. Mm. If yee are sick spead year ruraaer 'a to Boc" i viirajasene resale yeiuaeaitu ser UTtfrraii I S'rlle ..ll(iimp t r.r.KieT..g..lj.rm1 kT' Site sepssieesseara ) ""J tsJ.asstat1ieiss,a.j ISuocia-wfuJ'y Prosecutes Claim. mm J SB 1-131 K'9 BAGGY KNEES S!2& . .. kio. ir t. nr... I. i i V r sti mji ISSTelaJMsjM, Ua4e4twiiace ,atfi SPII'i