; Horticulture at the World's Fair. Chief Samuels values plants at present on hand at the World's Fair grounds in Chicago at 1200,000, and ha is credited with declaring that the collection of large decorative plants has not its equal in the United States. The giant ferns from Japan and Australia, grouped in the center of the rotunda, have devel oped their fronds, increasing rapidly in circumference. The rotunda contains also a number of Japanese maples, a pine 200 years old, cinnamon trees, etc. This exhibit is rapidly increased by new con signments arriving almost daily. In the greenhouse are nearly four thou sand primroses grown from seed sent from Italy, Germany, France, Great Britain and the United States. Of pan sies Germany and Franco have made special exhibits, also Belgium and Hol land. Another greenhouse division con tains thousands of Persian violets and South American orchids - among the lat ter are rare cow's horn from Costa Rica. In connection with the horticultural ex hibit 40,000 hardy roses have been planted on the wooded island and 40,- 000 more of tender varieties are prom ised for next summer.—New York World. What a Cop or Chocolate Caa Do. An enthuriastic lover of chocolate af firms that for those who wish to keep the imagination fresh and vigorous choc olate is the beverage of beverages. How ever copiously you have lunched a cup of chocolate immediately afterwards will produce digestion three hours after and prepare the way for a good dinner. It is recommended to every one who devotes to brain-work the hours he could pass in bed; to every wit who finds he has become suddenly dull; to all who ind the air damp, the time long and the at mosphere insupportable; and, above all, to those who, tormented with a fixed idea, have lost their freedom of thought. —New York World. Why They Are Speckled. Charley Wilcox was in the burg the other day exercising hiß team of speckled colts. The way the animals happened to be speckled happened ia this way: While their mother was at Hat Creek drinking, one day, she was seized by the lip by a trout weighing at least twenty pounds. The fish had to be killed with an ax before it would release its hold and when the twin coifs were born they were speckled like trout. They, are an extra fine team and are peculiarly fend of water.—Burney Valley (Cal.) Bulletin. An Expert'* Opinion. Our renders have doubtless noticed tbs numerous discussions by the scientists and hygienists as to the relative value of the various baking powders. A careful sifting of the evidence leaves no doubt as to the superiority of the Royal Baking Powder in purity, wholesomeuess and strength, from a scientific standpoint. An opinion, how ever, that will have perhaps greater influ ence with our practical housekeepers, is that given by Marion Harland, the well known and popular writer, up->n matters pertain ing to the science of domestic economy, of housekeeping, and of home cooking. In a letter published in the Philadelphia Ladies' Home Journal, this writer says: "I regard the Royal Baking Powder as the best manufactured and in the market to far as I have any experience in the use of such compound*. 'Sinoe the introduction of it into my kitchen 1 have used no other in making biscuits, cakes, etc., and hare en tirely discarded for such purposes tbe home made combination of one-third soda, two thirds cream of tartar. "Every box haa been in perfect condition when it came into my hands, and the con tents have given complete satisfaction. It Js an act of simple justice, and also a pleas ure, to recommend it unqualifiedly to Amer ican housewives. MARIOS HARLAND." Horseflesh For Food. In Europe, where the horse is every year more used as human food, the ani mals are not allowed to become a mats of •kin and jagged bones, as old horses of ten do heTe. They are fattened, and sven an old horse can be made quite fat if given succulent food mixed with ground grain. It is no more difficult to fatten an old horse than it is to fatten an eld cow.—Boston Cultivator. tlra. Ogden Snyder Albany, N. V. " I Owe May Life to Hood's Sarsaparilla " •' Words are powerless to express the grati tude I feel toward Hood's Sarsaparilla, for un der God, I feel and know that to this medicine I mtte if if/ life. Twelve years ago I began to bloat, followed by nausea at the stomach, and later with atretlinum of the litnbm, accom panied by severe pain. This gradually grew worse until three years ago. Physicians told me the trouble was Caused by a Tumor Fj"several months I had been unable to retain arbr food of a solid nature. 1 was greatly emaciated, had frequent hemorrhages, and was satisfied the doctors were right in say ing my lift »«•«« nenrlu over. One days friend suggested that I try Hood's Sarsaparilla I did so, and for 3 or 4 days I was sicker that ever, but I kept on and gradually began to feel better. I Began to Feel Hungry Could, after a time, retain solid food, increased in weight, the saffron hue left my skin, tb« bloating subsided, and I felt better all over For the past two years my health has beer HOOCI'S par?Ua C U X G 8 quite good, ami I have been able all the time to do the houaevrork for my family." MRS. OG D*N SWYDBN, No. 10 Judson St., Albany, N. Y Hood's Fills are the bent after-dinner Pills, ss ■tot dlgofltlon, ours hssdsche. Try a box. A remedy which, /V* if used by Wires KyT}J' n about to experience FTwrl 4w fflßk ,he painful ordeal i J attendant upon / t Child-birth, proves fl an Infallible specl k JMpKLNv —* fto for, and obviates the tortures of con \i \ »-Jnf lessening II 1 Ts/il tlle dangers thereof MM I l\ /JI to both mother and /rll ft Vvi 't Ail child. Sold by all U-ifl E druggists. Sent by _ of price, $1.60 per • pottle. charges P m- BHADFIELD REGULATOR CO.. ATLANTA, QA. LAKD PLASTER FOR STABLES. Professor Dean, of the Ontario Agri cultural College, says on the subject of land plaster in stables: "We use con stantly on our floors a liberal quantity of land plaster or gypsum, which has three effects: (1) It fixes the ammonia and makes the manure inere valuable. (2) It sweetens the stable, absorbing baa odors. (3) It gives the stable a better appearance and looks neat and tidy. In fact, an hour after our cows are turned out you would scarcely know that a cow had been in. This is accomplished by a liberal use of plaster acd whitewash. Both are cheap." 800T TBA FOR PLANTS. One of the best fertilizers for pot plants is soot. It not only nourishes the plant, but keeps the soil sweet, will destroy all worms and insects, and even rout the green fly. It is best used in a liquid form. One tablespoon ful of soot to two quarts of warm water is a simple way of making the tea. If one desires to make it in larger quantities, put into a vessel holding fifteen gallons of water a half peck of soot, and stir twice a day for a week. Probably the better way is to tie the soot securely in a coarse bag, which is large enough to let the soot swell and move about inside it. Throw the bag into the water and allow it to soak, moving it about occasionally, or pressing it with a stick to extract the strength. As the water is used out fresh can be added as long as any soot remains. Give the plants light doses of the tea once or twice a week. Dilute if too strong, because if used in too thick a state it will make the surface soil too hard and dry. Soot mixed with twice its bulk of dry earth may be used for a top dressing in the garden with good results.—New York World. BLASTING STUMPS. The reasonable prejudice against the common use of dynamite for any kind of work on a farm, or by inexperienced per sons, makes it desirable to use the com mon blAck powder for such purposes. This is not really so safe as the dynamite when in the hands of experts, but safer otherwise, and persons generally under stand it better. To break up stumps with blasting powder proceed as follows: Bore a hole inches wide into the centre of the stump in such a direction as to reach the middle of it near the root; charge it in the usual manner, using plenty of powder, oue foot in depth at least for a large stump; pro cure a screw with a hole through it for the fuse, and a square head by which it may be screwed down onto the powder. Fire the fuse, and the stump will be shattered so that it can easily be taken out in pieces. A lookout for the screw should be made when the explosion takes place, and it may be picked up and used again. It may be well to put some dry sand on the powder under the screw. It is most often the case that the screw le mains in the wood and can be split out of it.—New York Times. HO ~rr TO CHEAPEN FEEDS. The prices of feed bid fair to be high the coming winter, and such will con tinue to be the case every winter, as long as there is such a tremendous demand for all sorts of millstuffs, on the part of dairy farmers, all over this broad land. The dairymen are all right in their ideas of feeding well, but they are all wrong in not growing more of their own feed. Wheat is way down to the lowest notch we have seen in thirty years, and bran climbing up in price every day. We are not certain but those farmers who are well situated to do it had better buy the wheat by the car load and get it ground at the custom mill, and feed the bran and middlings, selling the flour for what they can realize. If we were in Northern Dakota or Minnesota we would not sell wheat at fifty cents a bushel, if we had good cows to feed it to, and butter thirty-one cents a pound in Chicago. We believe there are four pounds of butter in a bushel of wheat fed to a good cow, with good roughage in addition. Bnt whether in the Dakotas or New York, everywhere the dairy farmer is at the mercy of the feed vender. This would not be so if the majority set seriously to work to produce their own feed, in some form or other. The mischief is, the most of far mers stop feed when prices of feed go high, no matter what the price of butter is. What a lot of education we all do need on this feed question. There is so little real figuring—so little really studied out by the dairy farmers by which they can figure. The way to bring down the price of feed stuft is for more farmers to go at growing peas and silage corn. Not one man in a thousand knows what he could do if he should try.—Hoard's Dairyman. TO KEEP BUTTER. To keep batter several months it Is necessary that the butter be perfectly well made and be completely freed from all traces of the buttermilk, or this will quickly spoil it. It must then be packed without delay in air-proof packages; a glazed crock or jar is a good package, or a new, clean white oak or spruce tub, with a tight-fitting cover. This is first soaked with water and a little soda to remove any acid of the wood. It is then well scalded and soaked with salt brine. Then it is rinsed with pure cold water and sprinkled with fine salt on the in side . The butter is then packed in sol idly, each layer of four inches being well packed, to leave no ail spaces, and sprinkled with fine salt. Then another layer is packed in the same way, and so on until the tub is full. A clean cover of cotton cloth is laid over the top of the butter; this is covered with fine dry salt, and the cover is fastened down. Care is to be taken to exclude air by covering and packing under the cover. The tub is then kept in a clean, dry, airy place where no disagreeable smells may affect it. Good butter thus packed may be kept foi six or eight months without the least deterioration. The Jersey cows make good butter, which has a high color, and some of them make a good deal of it, but the best are too costly for common use. A good, well fed Ayrshire oow is as good for butter as a Jersey for a working dairy. Some Durham or short-horn cows are good butter makers, and a good judge of cows might get a dairy of the common stock that would be very good if well selected. The best common cow is a half-bred Jersey having a good common daqj and a pure sire. Some of these are as good as the pure bred. PARK AND GARDEN NOTES. Dead dogs kill no sheep. Quack grass loves a poor farmer It's a poor "brace" that breaks a trace. A drained acre of land is equal to re moving one hundred miles south. Two beeves can never be made fat on a pasture that has only grass enough for one. Keep studying and experimenting if you do not want to be left behiud the times. Many men in the dairying business are ignorant on many of the most important points. Store carrots in pits or cellars, and cover the roots with sand to prevent them from wilting. If it is possible have the heifer calf come into the dairy at twenty-six or twenty-eight months old. Mow the weeds in your pasture land four or five times a year and you will be free from them in a few years. In fattening rapidly, close quarters, cleanliness, a small amount of light, and plenty of fat farming foods will soon tell the story. At this time it is safe to keep a few more fowls than are actually needed for breeding in order to be secure against ordinary accidents. If celery is putin the cellar some earth should be left on the roots. The rooti should be kept moist, and the tops dry and free from frost. Start beds of mushrooms under green house benches. Cover spinach lightly with litter, and kale in exposed loca tions should also be covered. When the weather is mild in winter, lettuce in frames need all the air you can give them, othctwise they will be so ten der that the least frost will kill them. The principal difSculty in keeping late chickens growing is lack of warmth. If they can be kept comfortable it is com paratively easy to keep them gaining. Ducks, young or old, do not thrive well on a grain diet. They need more bulky food. Bran, grass, middlings and food of this kiud are better than grain. While as a general rule old hens are unprofitable, it is sometimes advisable to keep them, especially when they have proved themselves to be good mothers. All business men take note of the con stant changes in the taste of their cus tomers and in the demand for certain kinds of goods. Farmers should do the same. To grow an orchard successfully have the ground in a good state of cultivation for several years. Before planting plow deep, and if a subsoil be used all the better. E. D. Eastman, of Rochester, N. Y., feeds 120 cows for nine and a half cents each day by means of tho silo. He con siders silage and cotton-seed meal a per fect ration. No man need think of succeeding in keeping cows unless he is willing to give his attention to it, and care at least for the comfort of his cows as he does for his own comfort. While kerosene is an irritant, crude petroleum makes a good liniment. It will kill every louse it touches. Use kerosene on the roots and in nests and petroleum on the chicks. Cabbages in cold frames should be aired freely and kept cool. Heads for winter and spring use must now. be pro tected!, but not covered too deeply, nor stored in too warm a place. Because occasionally a crossbred fowl presents a flue appearance one is tempted to think it a good plan to breed them, but this is a mistake. The best results are secured by keeping the breeds pure. In the management of fattening it is much better to have fowls eager and hungry for their food, so that they will hunt and scratch for something to eat, rather than to have them lazy and list less. In most cases, even when tho poultry is given a good range, it will be found advisable to have a close yard where, at any time it may be considered advisable, more or less of the poultry can be con fined. It takes time to increase a cow's capacity for milk when feeding for that purpose. A cow giving 150 pounds of milk a year cannot be made to give 300 pounds immediately. The change is gradually made. Some of the larger breeds of poultry are best in small towns or villages where it is desirable to allow them the range of your own premises, but not to bother the neighbors. The larger breeds are easier to restrain. A few carrots given daily to the horses and cows will be considered a luxury by them, and the carrots will greatly benefit them. One of the best modes of pro viding a natural butter color for the butter is to use carrots for the cows. To get milk—to get the most and the best milk—the bodily comfort of the cow must be considered and ministered to. The comfort, the ease, the perfect rest of the cow must be studied if she be expected to yield to the extent of her powers. Mixing pyrethrum with four or five parts of flour makes a good insecticide to dust over the foliage of plants, and a cure recommended for the green fly, cabbage maggot, and all belonging to this class is one ounce muriate of potash in one pint of water. Au old farmer says that rose bugs "will uot go upon a plant they cannot see through." lo prove it he shows vines and bushes trained against walls or buildings, left unharmed, while those standing in an open field had theu buds completely devoured. HOUSEHOLD AFFAIRS. LEMON JUICE VS. VINEGAR. Lemon juice is far more refreshing and healthful than vinegar in preparing cold* slaw; and it is the same with sliced toma toes. The tomatoes npe and sliced, with salt between and fairly drenched iu lemon juice, make a most delicious rel ish. Very hot water—about half a cup —with the juice of a lemon and a trifle of salt added will prove a new and agree able substitute for cold and sweetened lemonade when winter is fairly with us. The glass cone-like "squeezers," made to fit a tumbler, now in use, aid in mak ing these lemonades.—New York World. A MICK WAT TO COOK 8008. Egg cutlets make a delightful dish for lunch or supper. To make them season half a pint of good white sauce with salt and cayenne, add" io'it the yolks of two raw eggs, and stir it all over the fire till it thickens, but without boiling; then tammy it, or run it through a hair sieve. Boil four eggs hard and cut them into dice with a wet knife; add to them a teaspoonful of ham or tongue, a couple of mushrooms cut up and a teaspoonful of washed, dried and finely minced parsley; mix all these together into the thickened sauce and let it all get cold. Now flour a board or a large flat dish and put on it little lumps of the mixture; roll these in a ball with your floured hands, then flatten them into cutlet shape with a broad or palette knife, dip them in egg and bread crumbs and fry in plenty of bailing fat for three or four minutes till of a pretty golden color, drain them well, dish ea couronne, g&rniihed with fried parsley and pile up the centre with broiled or fried mushrooms.—New York Journal. AN OLD FASHIONED DAINTT AGAIN. The old crystalized •range-pool, a home-made confection in which our grandmothers delighted, is now to be found at some of there tail shops. The best oranges for this purpose are the Mediterranean and sweet-rinded Valen cias. It would be a waste of time and material to attempt to crystalize the flavorless Florida orange-peel. As only the rind is used in this candy, the pulp and juice may be utilized for some other purpose. Put the peel in cold water and set it away for at least nine days. Then scald it up in the water in which it has been soaking. It must be kept while it is soaking in a cold place, but not where it will freeze. When it has been thor oughly soaked boil it till it is tender, drain it out of this water, dry it with cloths and cut it into long strips of uni form size. Make a thick syrup, in the proportion of a pint of sugar to a pint of water. When this syrup has boiled ten minutes put the peel in it and let in boil down slowly until it begins to shrivel and tno syrup is reduced to a rather soft candy. This can be ascer tained by testing the syrup. When il forms a soft, creamy ball between the fingers it has cooked enough. Drain th< peel out, spread it on greased papers, taking care that the strips do not touch each other. When they are thoroughly dried make them into little sheaves, tying them around the centre with a narrow ribbon of white satin or pale orange color. They look very pretty piled on a low bonbon dish.—New York Tribune. HOUSEHOLD HINTS. Use a small, soft sponge to apply the blacking to a store. Tannin mixed with mutton tallow it good for chapped haad9. To clean a brown porcelain kettle, boil peeled potatoes in it. Put a toaspoonful of salt into a kero sene lamp once in a while. Remove iron rust from marbles by rubbing with lemon juice. To purify a room of unpleasant odors) burn vinegar, rosin or sugar. In using hard water for washing dishes put into it a little milk. A good-sized sponge is nice for clean ing paint and washing windows. A paste made of equal parts of lard and powdered chalk will cure corns. A large, soft sponge, either dry or slightly dampened, makes a good duster. If an artery is cut, compress it be tween the wound and the heart; if a vein is cut, compress beyond. To cure cholera in chickens, put assa foetida in the water they drink and allow them to pick at coal ashes. The round point of a lead pencil is a good thing with which to remove a speck of any kind from the eye. Throw a quantity of salt in the stove if the chimney is on tire and there is danger from sparks; it not, let it burn. Nitre is excellent for a cold, especially a feverish one. Use ten drops to a tea spoonful, according to age, once in four honrs. A bottle of flexible collodion is very useful for cracks in the hands, scratches, cuts, etc. Care must be taken to keep it well protected from the air. Newspapers wet thoroughly and crum pled up are excellent to sweep • carpet with, making it look bright and with far lesi trouble than it is to wipe it with a damp cloth. To clean paint, add to two quarts of hot water two tablespoonfuls of turpen tine and one of skimmed milk, and only soap enough to make suds, and it will clean and give a luster. Tar or paint may be removed by first applying oil of some kind or lard; then, after scraping off the loosened sub stances, apply a mixture of turpentine and benzine, and at the last use benzine alone. A coat of gum copal varnish applied to the soles of boots and shoes, and re peated until the pores are filled and the surface shines like polished mahogany will render them water proof, and they will last three times a 9 long. Tall Men. Turner, the naturalist, declared that he once saw upon the coast of Brazil a race of gigantic savages, one of whom was twelve feet in height. M. Thevet, of France, in his description of America, published at Paris in 1675, asserted that he saw and measured the skeleton of a South American which was eleven feet five inches in length. The Chinese are said to (jlaim that in the last century there wese men in their country who measured fifteen f«et in height. Josephus mentioned the case of a Hebrew who was ten feet two inches in height.—Siftinga, Repulsive ilvku Cnton "The natives of Southeastern Alaska," ■aid ex-Governor A. P. Swinford, of Alsska, to the Star representative, "are rapidly falling into the customs of Americans, particularly as to their 'dreaa, some of the better class of natives dress ing even better than the American resi dents. It was formerly the custom in Southeastern Alaska for the women to wear a 'labret' or short piece of bone or steel in their lower lip by way of orna ment. Now one observes it only among the old women. Along the Bering Sea the men thus puncture their lips. They begin with a small piece of steel or bone no larger than a needle and gradually increase the size until it measures nearly an inch in diameter. The bigger the 'labret' the more pleased and important feels the native. Men and women alike plaster their faces with a thick coating of black paste obtained from grinding a iOrt 9t-soft rock. They say it keeps the features warm in 'winter S&d protects thein in summer from the attacks 01 in sects and troublesome flies. As a race the people arc under size and not per sonally attractive, though at Sitka one may see some splendid specimens of muscular development among the men, while some of the young women are good looking. There are now four newspapers published in the Territory and it is progressing satisfactorily. My stay there was very pleasant and I made many warm friends."—Washington Star. How a Snake Swallows a Frog. The method of swallowing is a very simple one, although, if the frog be large, more than half an hour may be consumed in the process, two bones of the lower jaw are separate and capable of independent movement; so the reptile loosens it hold upon one side of its jaw, and, pushing that side for ward as far as possible, it drives the teeth in again, and then draws the jaw back to its original position. The re sult is that the prey is drawn down by the movement. The process is then re peated by the other half of the jaw, thus inevitably forcing the victim inward. The make's skla stretches enormously, and the jaw is, of course, dislocated, but the extensiblo ligaments hold the bones together. The disproportion be tween the diameter of the frog and the serpent's slender neck is indeed marvel ous, and snakes have been observed to split themselves open by attempting too ambitious a mouthful. After perhaps half an hour of laborious contortions, all that isteen of the poor frog is a great swelling that the contracting muscles are rapidly forcing down the reptile's neck. If one liberates the captured frog before it is too late, the wretched animal often seems so overcome by fear, or per haps stupefied by the serpent's suliva, that it will not leap, b'U crawls in a painful manner. We must not allow ourselves to be duped into a mistaken sympathy, however, for such is the poetic justice of the case. Large frogs esteem small snakes a particular dclicaCy. —Popular Science Monthly. Catarrh Can't Be Cared With local applications as they cannot reach the seat of the disease. Catarrh Is a blood or constitutional disease, and in order to cure it you have to take internal remedies. Hull's Catarrh (Jure is taken internally, and acts di rectly on the blood and raucous surface. Hall's Catarrh Cure is no quack medicine. It was prescribed by one of the best physicians in this country for years, and is a regular prescription, It is composed of the best tonics known, com bined with the best blood purifiers, acting di rectly on the mucous surfaces. The perfoct combination of the two ingredients is what produces such wonderful results in curing ca tarrh. Send for testimonials free. F. J. CHENEY & Co., Props., Toledo, O. Sold by druggists, price 75c. Cleanliness, exercise and diet are the cardi nal virtues of good health. Take care of the flrst t*o and it yuu know what and how to eat you need never tie ill. It is claimed that tiar tleld Tea, a simple Uerb remedy, overcomes the results of wrong living. A COCOH, COLD OH SOKE THROAT should not be neglected. BROWN'S BRONCHIAL TROCHES are a simple remedy and give prompt relief. 25 cents a DOX. ONE ENJOYS Both the method and results 'when Sjrup of Figs is taken; it is pleasant and refreshing to the taste, and acta gently yet promptly on the Kidneys, Liver and Bowels, cleanses the sys tem effectually, dispels colds, head aches and fevers and cures habitual constipation. Syrup of Figs is the only remedy of its kind ever pro duced, pleasing to the taste and ac ceptable to the stomach, prompt in its action and truly beneficial in its effects, prepared only from the most healthy ana agreeable substances, its many excellent qualities commend it to all and have made it the most popular remedy known. Syrup of Figs is for sale in 50c and $1 bottles by all leading drug gists. Any reliable druggist who may not have it on band will pro cure it promptly for any one who wishes to try it. L>o not accept any substitute. CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO. SAN FRANCISCO, CAL. loviaviut. Iff. N£ W.VODK. ». r. Core#Consumption, Coughs, Croup, Sore Throat. Sold by all Drunim on a Guarantee. FRUIT TKKEH. Largest and BEST Stock In United state*. Planters and Dealers should get OUR PRICKS before placing OR I) kRS. E. MOODY <4 SONS, LOCKroRT, N. /. Bfik Sample free u»ariau> Ta* 6o ,31» Vv. 14th Bt.,SCT. Cures Sick Headache The Deadly Cancer. The hope is entertained that science may yet be able to subdue tbe " flaming and deadly cancer." Recent study of cancer may not only indicate that it is an organic growth, but almost certainly proves that it is liable to the attack of another parasite. Better acquaintance with the relations of these parasites may possibly bring the long sought method of arresting cancer.—Detroit Free Press. In Downing's "Fruits aud Fruit Trees of America," there are 983 varieties ef pears in his catalogue, eleventh edition, 1851. Since that time nearly 500 have been added. None But Royal BAKING POWDER is absolutely pure. No other equals it, or~ approaches it in leavening strength, purity, or wholesomenessT ~-(See U. S. Govt Reports.) No other is made from cream of tartsr-specially refined for it and chemically pure. No other makes such- light, sweet, finely-flavored, and wholesome food. No other will maintain its strength without loss until used, or will make bread or cake that will keep fresh so long, or that can be eaten hot with impunity, even by dyspeptics. No other is so economical. The Baking Powders now being offered in this vicinity, with the statement that they are "as good as Royal," have been shown by the official analyses to be composed of alum and detrimental to health. The official chemists of the United States and Can ada, State analysts, municipal boards of health, and physicians indorse the great qualities of the Royal Baking Powder. RTrnvf READY RELIEF. CUBES AND PREVENTS Colds, Coughs, Sore Throat, Influenza, Bronchitis, Pneumonia, Swelling of the Joints, Lumbago, Inflammations, Rheumatism, Neuralgia, frostbites, Chilblains, Headache, Toothache, Asthma, DIFFICULT BREATHING. CURES THE WORST PAINS in from on* to twe.ntj minutes. NOT ONE HOUR after reading; this adver tlsement need any one SUFFER WITH PAIN. Kadway'i Heady Relief inn Sure Cure tor Every Pain, Sprain*. Br., lac, Pain* in the Back, Cheat or Limbs. It wsi the First and l« the Only PAIS REMEDY fhat Instantly stops the most excruciating pain*, at. lays inflammation, and cures Congestions, whether of the Lungs, Stomach, Bowels or other glands or or gans, by one application. A half to a teaspoonful in half a tumbler of water will in a few minutes cure Cramps, Spasms, Sour Stomach, Heartburn, Nervousness, Sleeplessness, Sick Headache, Dlarrhrea, Dysentery, Colic, Flatu lency and all internal pains. There Is not a remedial agent In the world that will cure Fever and Ague and all other Malarious. Bilious and other fevers, aided by RADWAY'H JILIig, «> Quick as RAD WAY'S READY RELIEF. Fifty rents per bottle. Hold by Druggist*. ♦% BE 81'RE TO GKT RAD WAY'S. N Y N U—3 Unlike the Dutch Process (T» No Alkalies Ag-V Other Chemicals preparation of Mpf W. MAKER & CO.'S filfireakfastCocoa H trhich is absolutely Hi if j.Vl] pure and soluble, flfl | juT rlj It has more than three times MM -fl ' E N the strength of Cocoa mixed with Starch, Arrowroot of Sugar, and is far more eco nomical, eating lets than one cent a cup. It U delicious, nourishing, and easily DIGESTED. Sold by Ororers .terjwh.r.. W. BAKER &. CO., Dorcheater, Mass, Do ! r ot Be Deceived HHHHoI with Pastes, Enamels and Paints which stain the hands. Injure the Irou and bum ml. The Rising Sun Stove Polish is Brilliant, Odor less, Durable, and the consumer pavs for no tin I or glass package wltia every purchase. tBIIVP 1 Illustrated Publications, "ULLwiTH MAPS, dcsarihlng r Minnssota,North Dakota. Montana, I lb[ldaho, Washington and Oregon, the PRC! OOVERNMEHV I AND LOW FRICtS |||ll|l «a. LANDS M-The beat A*rlpage Hot k tree. EpMl I 111 ■ll MB M Ceaftumptlves and people ■ who nave weak .unßcor Asth- B na. should use Plso's Cure Cor M Consumption. It has eared Hi thou»undn. It ha? not injur- BH est ono it.? not had to take. Lt «h tb3 best couiih syrup. jjfl Sold evervwhern. Sfte. liWEasw— H 'M.M If anyone doubts that we can cure BLOOD POISON I i-ii.-M* In 20 to KOdajTß A & PEC [ALT/. \V. H vestlgate our r«lf uMllly. Our nuiun uillmi kiiig i* m.l«ii,ooo. Wheo werrury,iodide iM»irtK.s(um.sar«n|iarlllaor Hot springs tall.iv('guarantee a curt—ami our Magic Cyphliene la n.H. O.\ 1.1 THISU THAT WILL CURE IKRMA SESII.Y. lusmvh I Hoot SKALED, KICKS. COOK ItKMEHY < OMI'VX V,< hi. imn. 111.