HOUSEHOLD AFFAIRS. HONEY VINEGAR. Honey may be used for making vin egar as well as syrups or other sweets. To make five gallons of honey vinegar, put five pounds of strained honey into the empty cask; then pour in five gal lons of warm, pure rain water and a pint of good yeast, or a few sheets of mother of Tinogar if they can be had. Set the cask in a warm place, coveiing the bunghole with mosquito netting to keep out flies and other insects, until fermen tation has ceased and the vinegar is in the proper condition for use. New York Sun. HOW TO BOIL RICK. Wash one cup of rice. Put three quarts of boiling water into a kettle; add a teaspoouful of salt and let it boil rapidly; sprinkle in the rice so grad ually that you will not stop the boiling; when you have it all in, give the water a twirl with a fork, cover the kettle and boil rapidly twenty minutes. Then pour into a colander to drain. Place the colander on a tin dish; stand it in the oven for five minutes to dry, leaving the door wide open; then turn it carefully into a heated dish; serve without a cover. Points to bo remembered" Boil rap idly from the time you cover the kettle till you take it off. The rapid boiling ailows each grain to swell three times its normal size, and the motion prevents the grains from sticking together. Do not stir it, as this will cause it to fall to the bottom of the kottle and burn. Tne drying in the oven with the door open evaporates the moisture, leaving the rice soft, snowy white and perfectly dry. Boiled rice is delicious when served with shrimp, oyster, chicken or okra guinbo. —New Orleans Picayune. FRYING FOODS. Foods like oysters, chicken and fish need to be covered with a grease-proof coating before putting into the fat. Tais coating is made by adding to oue egg a table3pocnful of water and beating. If used for such foods as oysters that one wishes to brown quickly, use milk or cream in place of the water. Forch:c'sen or fish use water. When the batter is made, if you wish to fry chicken, sprinkle the pieces with salt aud pepper, dip them in the batter aud then roll then in fine cracker crumb 3 and drop them into the fat. If this preparation of chicken is to be given to a parson with a very delicate stomach, the skin and fried crust may be stripped off before eating. Most kinds of fish are treated in the same way before frying. Oysters, however, need what is called a ''double breading," and are delicious if thor oughly drained, and dipped first into Feasoned bread crumbs, then into the egg batter, then into cracker dust or flour. The object of using bread crumbs for the first coating is to make the sur face slightly rough so that a greater quantity of the egg will cling. The oys ters are also more delicate and less dry than when crackers are used for both coatings. A plattcrful of white cornmeal mush, if properly fried in deep fat, is a tempt ing breakfast or luncieon dish. Cool the mush in a shallow dish, and when cold cut it into pieces, wbic l should be about inches thick and a finger long. Fry a rich brown and serve in a folds I napkin. Hominy is very nice fried in the some way.—St. Louis Republic. AIASKA'S resources anci commercial possibilities arc perhaps less under stood than Ihose of any other section of the Union. Nevertheless they are tdowly being developed. The scenic and other natural attractions of this far northern country draw a consid erable and ever increasing stream of travel to it every summer. Under these conditions the possibilities of the Territory cannot long remain hidden. Already a line of side-wheel steamers has been planned for service on the Yukon. The first vessel is now building. It will connect with Norton Sound steamers and run 2,200 miles up this great Alaskan River. Mr. Sim ran Staples Four Physicians FailoJ A Running Sore Five Yftrt ilood'H Sarnapa rtlla I'er/ccllii Curea "Taunton. Mass., Jan. fl, 18911. " C. 1. Hood & Co., Lowell, Mm. " I was troubled with a running sore on mj inkle, Ihe doctors pronouncing it salt-rheum For 5 years (during which time I employed lifferent physicians), I received very litlle, i *ny, benefit, and it continued to increuso ir «ize. 1 then commenced taking Hood's Sarsa HOOD'S Sarsaparilla CURES par 11a, and using Hood's Olive Ointment, and it the end of 2 years I was completely cure 1 »nd h/»ve had no trouble with it since.' **l MEON STAPI.FH, Ea-t Taunton, Mass. Iloo<l'» Villa cure liver Ills, sick he&daotetdnijo lice, Indigestion. Try a box, i'x-ent*. CURES RISING •. BREAST .. "MOTHER'S FRIEND" bV*XgT™J offered child-bearing woman. 1 have been a mid-wife for many years, and In each caae where "Mother's Friend" hadbeennsed Ithas accomplished wonders and relieved much suffering. It Is the best remedy for rising of the breast known, and worth the price for that alone. Mas. M. M. BRCSTER, Montgomery, Ala. Sent by express, charges prepaid, on receipt of price, $1.50 |>er bottle. BRADFIELD REGULATOR CO., Sold by ail druggist*. ATLANTA, «}*. A BUSHEt. OF ONIONS. The weight of a bushel of onions varies as they may be dry or damp and fresh. Green onions will weigh fifty six pounds to the bushel, but in the spring the same onions will weigh no more than forty-eight pounds. The largest onions weigh the most; the small seed onions when dry weigh only twentv-fuur pounds to the bushel. The legal weight of market onions, where there is any standard, is fifty-two pounds a bushel.—New York Tribune. SETTING AXLES. In setting axles for carts and carriages ihe wheels should be a trifle widsr apart at the top than at the bottom; also gather a little in the front to prevent pressing on the linchpin or nut holding the wheel on the axle. In the carriage trade these variations from a straight line are called the "swing" and "gather." The latter is the forward inclination of the spindle relatively to the general line of direction of the axletree. The swing is the outward in clination of the top of the wheel, and is to meet the requirements of the conical axle, so that the bottom edge of the spindle stiall ride about horizontally. —New York Sun. LARGE AND SMALL FARMS. Many persons could better their finan cial condition aud relieve themselves from much worry and vexation if they would put the brains, labor and mauure on five acres that thry now distribute over forty. It is not true, however, that every farmer can do better on a small farm than on a large one. It re quires a different order of intellect, acd in some ways a larger intellect, to suc ceed with the small farm. Any success ful gardener knows that it requires more brains to market his crops profitably than it does to raise them. In other words, the small farmer, if he expects profitable returns for his work, must have the qualities of a successful merchant and a skillful farmer.—Chicago Times. HORSE POINTS. Un'ess a horse has brains he is not teachable. A horse that has breadth and fullness between the cars and eyes will not act mean or hurt any one. The eye should be full and a hazal color, the ears small and thin and point forward, the face straight with square muzzle and large nostrils. The under side of the head should be well cut under the jaw with jawbone broad, and wide apart un der the throttle. The back short and straight and square rump, high withers, shoulders well set back, and broad but not deep into the chest, fore feet short, hind legs pretty straight, fetlocks low down, pastern joint short with a round mulish foot. ' There are all kinds of horses, but the animal that has all these points is almost sure to be slightly grace ful, good natured and serviceable.—Ten nessee Farmer. MANAGEMENT OF WORN OCT LIND. There is a natural fascination abnit the attempts to take what is seemingly •worthless and give it value. Either it is this, or the face that poor land can al ways be bought cheaply aud usually on the easiest terms makes poor laud sale able when property that was certain not to pay in years of any other character could not find a purchaser on any terms. But in most c.ises, cheap as the poor farm may seem, that in a high state of cultivation will be really cheaper, what ever the price asked for it. The co3t of bringing up poor land to the point where it will begin to pay is always greater than is expected. The land that is now pay ing can generally be depended onto pay under good management as well as it has done. It has a recognized value that can l>e determined. If the poor land is bought it has to be experimented with, and possibly money lias to be sunk before it can be made to pay. Tin old saying, to him that hath shall be given, and from him that hath not shall be taken away what he seemeth to have, is quite as true of land as it is of people. Fertility tends to make fertility even more surely than docs money make money.—Boston Cultivator. TO DRESS A BEEF. A slaughtered beef may oe dressed in this way: As soon as it is dead the car cass Is turned on its back and the hide is slit up the belly, without cutting through into the interiors. Tho knife is passed from the brisket up the forelegs to the knee, and this joint is separated and left in the bide for the present. The hind legs are treated in the same way. The skin is then stripped off as far as possible to the back and round the neck. The carcass is then raised partly so as to remove the skin from the rump and down the back, and, as is necessary, it is raised more until the head is free of the ground, when the hide is completely re moved, and the head is cut off. When the carcass is half raised it is opened and the intestines removed. It is theu hoisted up, and washed down with cold water and left to hang until cool. It may be desirable to split the backbone at the Bhouldcrs and open the carcass to hasten the cooling. When well cooled and quite stiff the meat is cut up, first into halves down the backbone and then into quarters. It is then ready to hang up, and may be further divided as may be convenient. Meat that is to be salted should l>e hung a few days before it is cut up, it keeps better for it, and any bloody parts, as about the neck, should be well cleaned before the meat is putin the pickle, as any blood in it will make the pickle sour in the warm weather. Pickled meat should be opened in the spring, before the weather is worm, aud the pickle drawn off and boiled; by this the albumen which makes the pickle tour will be removed by straining, as it will be become solid. More pickle may be added. FORMATION OF LAWS. The gospel of the i>erfect lawn includes deep soil, the proper grasses and frequent mowing. In making a lawn too little importance is usually placed on thorough trenching or subsoiling and onriching the landi The surface should be har rowed and hand raked until it is in the finest condition. As to choice of seed, this must vary somewhat with locality and special conditions. Every seedsman has his own special mixture, and a very general one consists in red top and Ken tucky blue grass, in equal proportions, with four or five pounds of white clover to the bushel. The seed is sown broad cast, when there is no wind, and lightly rolled in. This in brief is the usual plan. A method brought to notice by J. B. Olcott, of the Connecticut Experiment Station, and described and discussed at the last annual session of the New Jersey State Horticultural Society, is as follows* Prepare the ground the same as described for seeding down. Then a selected sod of a line variety of Rhode Island Bent grass is taken and divided into single plants of one or two spears and these are in rows nine inches apart and also nine inches between the rows, thus requiring sixteen plants to the square yard. These plants are pressed firmly into the soil and afterwards the whole surface rolled with a hard roller. The after care consists in keeping out every weed and plants of white clover, etc. In three or four months, it is claimed, the ground will be entirely covered with a short, thick moss of grass. During the summer an application of from 200 to 400 pounds of nitrate of soda to the acre, applied in from three to four sowings, will give the plants a fresh start and cause them to assume a bright green hue. If these directions are carefully carried out there will be no need of weedy lawns and the general complaint that grass cannot be made to grow under shade trees according to the advocates for this method. It must be explained that i Rhode Island Bent grass as usually seen | has long runners with the plants far I apart, somewhat like the strawberry run ! uors, while in the peculiar variety in question the plants cover the entiro rui -1 ners and show no naked stems. The sea son lor planting by this method may bo either from September to November, or from the last of March to the first of Jane.—New York Warld. FARM AND GARDEN NOTES. Unless the hen leaves her nest over | night the eggs will usually hatch. For foliage effect, the tulip and the plane trees are among the finest. Wheat and oats with milk and bran mash are good egg-producing foods. When you begiu to fatten poultry, do it as rapidly and systematically as pos sible. The Hubbard squash is one of the very best lor fall and winter market or home use. The Bordeaux mixture is still preferrcl by many for prevention of parasitic dis eases of plants. Potatoes, milk, chopped clover or any thing that the hens will eat can be used to make up a variety. ID Median's Monthly it is advised not to cut an osage orange hedge until tbreo years after it is planted. Have a good place for the goslings anil keep them away from the water uu til they are well feathered. J. S. Woodward, the Western New York shee^-jfrower, is an earnest advo cate .if sheep in the orchard. Scientific experiments made by the New Jersey Station emphasize the im portance of muriate of potash for peach trees. Capons grow nearly one-third larger than cockerels, hence are profitable, as they always bring a good prico in market. Coal ashes sprinkled in the poultry house makes a good disinfectant, keep ing away the odors and making it easy to clean. There are three prime causes of chicken choleta—overcrowding, especially in warm weather; filthy quarters and un wholesome food. Those who have tried it say that Li rett's blackberry is an excellent, all-roun 1 berry, being hardy, early, prolific and of good quality. What can indicate a poor man, a poor farmer, more certainly than poor fences, j poor pastures, and a poor, starved, neg- I lected flack of sheep? Capons are nearly always in demand, whether large or small, an I can nearly always be sold at profitable prices; but the larger ones sell best. Mr. McMillan, authority in such mat ters, does not think much of ash and beech trees for street planting, except the white and European species. In selecting breeding stock aim to strike the "happy medium," neither too large nor too ligut boned. The one is coarse and the other is played out. Some people do not know that oggs that have been chilled are spoiled for hatching. If intending to set some hens very early, keep this in mind. Some farmers declare fowls a nuisance, aud say they don't pay. This is where they are left to shift for themselves. Would the dairy pay the same way? It doesn't mitter which way you put' it - clover and sheep; or, sheep and clover. They always go together, and both meau prosperity for the farmer. Hen manure should always be kept In a dry shed or box, and well mixed with road dust. Handled in this way it is the best fertilizer the farmer producos. One of the advantages of sheep raantlre over all other barnyard manures is in its freedom from weel seeds. No seed will grow after going through a sheep. A correspondent in the Farm Journal suggests that BorJeaux mixture will prove an excelleut disinfectant if ap plied to the cellar walls aud kitchen sink. The size of an egg is not of BO much importance to the average buyer as its appearance. Pure white eggs, with clean shells, always sell well, even if small. There are a good many ways of tell ing who is a good fanner, but none can be seen and read of by all men, more surely by a stranger, than the cleau fence corners. The Mofora Lock. As respects modern locks this country bears off the palm, whether as regards security, convenience, facility of manipu lation or workmanship. Like other arti cles for common us<{ confined within the domain of ordinary mechanics, our locks arc the best in the world. Ihe lock of the present day in European countries is t clumsy piece of mechanism, and the key a cumberome piece of iron that is inconvenient to carry in the pocket and dangerous to the clothing. The task of the Europe burglar is easy, a twisted piece of iron being an "opeu sesame" for all the rooms of a private dwelling or hotel. On the continent it is even more essential than with us that the locksmith should be a man of greater probity than the workmen of other trades. Fortu nately, in France the honesty of the craft has become a tradition. Comparatively few of the burglaries that are of nightly occurrence in and and about Paris are committed by locksmiths. From time immemorial the French locksmiths have taken the dog as an emblem of the fidelity to its interests that the public expects of them. It habitually appeareil upon their signs, which were varied sometimes by the figure of a lion guard ing a safe, the key of which was held by a hare. Of the relative honesty of locksmiths in other countries where the lock has been less a specialty of manu factures as an adjunct of art we know little on account of the lack of statistics, but we may say in a general way of tois country that it would bo very unfortu nate for society if our locksmiths should take as kindly to burglary as some of our engravers have to counterfeiting.— San Francisco Chronicle. Fruits of Xiiilagascnr. Madagascar is well supplied with fruit, some indigenous to the country, other kinds introduced. Among the former, the banana holds first place. It is very plentiful, of roauy varieties, and all good. The lemon and liinc, the rose apple and guava, also abound. The orange, one ol the introduced fruits, has become an article of commerce at Taiiiatave, while the vine, when properly cared for, furnishes splendid crops of grapes, which are hcrvested during the months of December and January. Be sides these are the citron, melon, pine apple, loquat, alligator pear, custard apple, mango, peach, mulberry, pome granate and quince. Figs, in great quantities, but of poor quality, grow wild in many parts of the forest.— American Agriculturist. Wanted.—#ooo Pale People to buy !iOc. Bot tl«'s of Korestine Hloo I Hitters of all dealer? for 25c. <i;ves you Strength and Vigor w.tli the Freshness of Youth. Hatch's Universal Cough Syrup, most prompt, pleasant and effectual. Scents Beecliam's Pills are better than mineral ters. Uee< ham's- no others. 25 cents a box. KNOWLEDGE Brings comfort and improvement and tends to personal enjoyment when rightly used. The many, who live bet ter than others and enjoy life more, with less expenditure, by more promptly adapting the world's best products to the needs of physical being, will attest the value to health of the pure liquid laxative principles embraced in tho remedy, Svrup of Figs. Its excellence is due to its presenting in the form most acceptable and pleas ant to the taste, the refreshing and truly beneficial properties of a jierfect lax ative; effectually cleansing the system, dispelling colds, headaches and fevers ana permanently curing constipation. It has given satisfaction to millions and met with the approval of the medical profession, because it acts on the Kid neys, Liver and Bowels without weak ening them and it is perfectly free from every objectionable substance. Syrup of Figs is for sale by all drug gists in 50c and $1 bottles, but it is man ufactured by the California Fig Syrup Co. only, whose name is printed on every package, also the name, Syrup of Figs, and being well informed, you will not accept any substitute if offered. ITHE KIND I I PHELPS 8. WELLS, _ Ft. Jackwn, N Y. ■ I "Scrofula and Salt Rheumß Of 25 Years Standing, 1 A BLOOD PURIFIER THAT CURES.! DANA SARSAPARILLA Co., GENTLEMEN I hereby certify that I hive been 255 • sufferer for over *£ years with Wrrnf.M M Rheum. Have employed ag many Physicians and expended many dollar* in =2 proprietary medicinea, blood purifiers, alterntiv«-a,H| etc., etc., aach aa have been on the market for the32 last 2iywa, all of no avail orbenefll.B ana had fH*en up hope that there waa any help forH| me. Wffl. rery little faith I purrhaaNl a bottle ofga your BARSAPARILLA of mv Uruigiit, which iSSj made blip guarantee if I waa not benefited heH ahould refund the money. I left the atore think-» ing 1 ahould call and get my mony later. No hopefl| of any benefit aa no medicine or treatment eecimdlß to reach my case. I had not tak«*n more thancS one-half of one bottle when to my surprise found It was helping me. nave taken twoS bottle, and am CURED. The ftcroflS ula Mores are all healed and I feel like a| ■aw man. I recommend DANA'S ■ BARSAPARILLA 1 to >ll who vlih ■ nioud Pnrli«r thala Cures. Yours very truly, fl _ _ PffELPB 8. WELLS. W Ft Jackson, St. Lawrence Co., N- Y. « OENTS.— Mr Wella is well-known lion and hla statement la true. J| iraa 8 ». I Din* Sarttpirllla C*.. Rellad, Main*, g Paneltj of Direct Royal Heirs. The Emperors and Kings of Europe number seventeen, and if the heads of the families of Bourbon and Bonaparte be added to the mate nineteen only nine of these illustrious personages (Qreat Britain, France, Russia, Prussia, Italy, Portugal, Denmark, Sweden and Greece) hare heirs in the diroct line, and of these direct heirs only those of Great Britain and the three last named States are married. The heirs of Portugal and Prussia are still children. Of the other States the Sovereigns of Austria, Belgium and Houmania will ap parently be succeeds I by nephews, the The Argument Used BY the makers of the second-class baking powders to induce the dealer to push | them off on Royal consumers is that they cost less than Royal and afford the dealer much more profit. But you, madam, are charged the same price for them as for the absolutely pure Royal, which is perfectly combined from the most highly refined and expensive materials. The lower cost of the others is caused by the cheap, impure materials used in them, and the haphazard way in which they are thrown together. Do you wish to pay the price of the Royal for an inferior baking powder, made from im pure goods, of 27 per cent, less strength? If you buy the other powders, insist upon having a corresponding reduction in price. CuresConnnmptlon. Cough*. Cronp, Rare Throat. Sold bv all DruevisU on a Guarantee. Unlike the Dutch Process (Th No Alkalies Ag-V Other Chemicals KK' are used in the preparation of W. ItAKER & CO.'S | ftßreakfastCocoa fll which is absolutely ufl 'tV VI P ur * nnd soluble. Il| | / 1 111 It. ha* morethan three times Cid ' r f\the strenjt/ i of Cocoa mixed with Starch, Arrowroot or Siifcar, and is far more eco hoznical, costing less than one cent a cup. It is delicious, nourishing, and EASILY DIGESTED. Sold by (Jrore rn * terjnhera. W BAKER & CO., Dorchester, Mass. I EARN SHoßT"wu'l"' s. iui st.nnj. W !iit«-Mi• K;iy.S\ ra«• ust•.N.Y. OniTDC PIIDCn riucri.Aß. null nc vllnCvJ. N Klein, Belleville, N. J. HALL'S Frank J. Cheney makes oath that he is the senior partner of the firm of F. J. Cheney & Co., doing business in the City of Toledo, County and State aforesaid, and that said firm will pay the sum of ONE HUNDRED DOLLARS for each and every case of Catarrh that cannot be cured by the use of HALL'S CATARRH CURE. P'^ £/xAju y' Sworn to before me, and subscribed in my presence, this 6th day of December, A. D. 1889. NC M7CAsco SE a L i A. W. GLEASON, NOTARY PUBLIC. piTannu ijO I unnn the ■■■■■■ mucous surfaces. ™ ~ ■ ■ ■ ■ w ■ WHi ■ ———- ! TBBTIMONIAXIB : E. n. WAI,THAU fi.CO , DruKßists, Horse UKV. H. P. CARSON, Scotland, Dak., Rats. ' ."v. rO ; S Calarrh Cure VUTes " Two bottles of Hull's Catarrh Cure complete ! -ver> out mat takes it. ly cured ujy little jrJrl." CONDUCTOR E. D. LOOMIS, Detroit, Mich., ,7 c. SIMPSON, Mnrouess W Va na«« "onderfuJ"" 8 Write 1 him" bout £ atarrh Cure is £ a^ ar r r h h ., Curc cured ® e of * * ad Sail's Catarrh Cure Is Sold by all Dealers in Patent Medicines PRICE 75 CENTS A BOTTLE. I I ■■ THE ONLY GENUINE HALL S CATARRH CURE IS ■ 'lllll MANUFACTURED BY ulint F.J. CHENEY & CO., W W I 111 TOLEDO, O. Testimonials sent free on application. • «'• * BEWARE OF IMITATIONS. IT lllfllUT fill fir fit8 ' bnt wIU prevent them, aa your naljrh- I I UV I Inl I I . 11K b bor'a cow will be unable to reat on your flower I I II Wll I WW Ills bed if you protect your lawn with a HART MAN STEEL PICKET FENCE. JBT We sell more Lawn Fencinfc than all othor |K\ . manufacturers combined, because it is the BESTFENCE BESTFENCE MADE Jcost.t less th ui barbed wire, anil'ls Humane, -g — PW —. ——j- k HlStriiii't, Visible ar.d Ornamental. Mi p. Ou r l'icket Uatos^Treo^and^Flower nnequaled, A illustrated catalogue of mailed free on application. Mention this paper. Bearer Falls. Branches: 10J Chamb«r St., New Tork. UIDTmM IIAHIICI ATllDllln AA DOS State Street, Chicago. 01-43 HWIWHI HHUrWb I U Willi Vila »outh Forsyth 8t„ Atlanta. It Was Before the Day of SAPOLIO They Used to Say 11 *tfork is Never rc.ie." King of Saxony and the head of the Bonapartes by brothers, the Kin;; of Spain by a sister, and the King of Ba varia by an uncle. The heir of the King of Wurtemburg is a »ery remote bache lor cousin, now sizty-flvo years old. The Qrand Duchess of Saxe-Weimar, who is sixty-nine, is heiress of her niece, the Queen of the Netherlands, and the poor King of Servia seems to have no heir at all, unless his father will accept the position.—Chicago Herald. The pearl is only carbonate of lime, is readily affected by acids, and burns into lime. I Do Not Be Deceived with i'aites, Enamels and faint* which stain the I band., injure the Iron and hnrn red. Hi* IXUIn* Sun Stove Polish la Brilliant, Odor less. Durable, and thp ron»nmer pays for no tin | or glass package with every purchase. A GRAND ENTERTAINMENT, Consisting of Dramatic and Humorous Recitations, Plays, Ac., can easily be given by homo talent, with a copy of Uarrett's famous •» 100 Choice Selec lloiiN,*' costing only 30c. Suitable for Lyceums, Schools, Church Societies and Home Theatricals, ."old by book k sellers. No. .'W. the lnt«-st, Is a Rem, 240 pagesof pathos, dlal»M-t ami fun, including two bright new Comedies; all for.'lOc.. postpaid; or, the two I'l ion. 10c. t'ataloirue KHF.K. P. (*A K RETT& t'O., Philadelphia, Pa. (Established 1865). F|ENSION¥^TnfS^ *Successfully Prosecutes Claims. Late Principal Examiner U.S."Pension Bureau 3yrsiu last war, 15adjudicatingclaims, atty since. Garfield Teas™ Curt** Constipation, Kestore* Complexion. Save# Doctors' Bills. Maniple frte. UAHI 'ELDTXA C 0.,319 W.isthSt.,N.T. Cures SickHeadacne ADIIIII Morphine Habit Cured in lO IIPIIIHi to 30 days. No pay till cured. VI ■Mlfipw. J STEPHENS, Lebanon, Ohio. ♦ ★ * City of Toledo, i Lucas Co., S. S. State of Ohio. "August Flower" " I am happy to state to you and 1 to suffering humanity, that my wife has used your wonderful remedy, August Flower, for sick headache and palpitation of the heart, with satisfactory results. For several years she has been a great sufferer, has been under the treatment of eminent physicians in this city and Boston, and found little relief. She was in duced to try August Flower, which gave immedaite relief. We cannot say to much for it." L. C. Frost, Springfield, Mass. # we of- The Ik*t Cough Syrup.|Q Tastes Good. Use In time. VSI frit* ir/Vll Sold by Hung hill C] 1 JWII n-K'H.imi-1%,, ready made medicine for Coughs, Bronchitis and other dis eases of the Throat and Lungs. Like other so called Patent Medicines, it is well advertised, and having merit it lias attain ed a wide sale under the name of Fiso's Cure for Consumption. It Is now a "Nostrum," tlioTi&h nt flrst it wu compounded after a prescription by a regular physician, with no idea that It would ever go on the market as a proprietary medicine. But after compounding that prescription over a thousand times In one year,we named it "Pfso's Cure for Consumption,* 1 and began advertising it in a small way. A medicine known all over the world is the result. j Why is It not Just ns good as though costing fifty cents to a dollar for a prescription and aa j equal sum to have it put up »t a drug store? JUMBO* the Alexandra Improved Cream Sep- I arator; capacity 250t» to4'K>o pounds per hour : two i horse power will run it. Also rew model HAND fc'EPABATOR lor the pale of which AOEiTd an- WANTED in every fiction. Manufacturers ! of everything in line of machinery and supplies for ; butter and cheese factories. Send lor catalogue. , i DAVIS A RANKIX WILDING AND MFG. CO., j 240 TO 254 WK-T LAKE STKEET. CHICAGO, ILLINOIS. IiOOK FOR I | Two Beautiful Ladies | H COMPANION PICTURES *: You will find one on a box of > ) i HOME TACKS j ; with several apartments, jlj and all different sized ® , J TACKS, adapted to all the jg W various Home uses jg j w the other on a box of >[ HOMflNAII&l " containing several differ- * Kent sized NAILS, just what W are needed for every day Jg! | use $ J) Made sclely by tho Atlas Tack Corp'n, Boston ® tWirt houw.-Boston, Jfew Yoik. l'hi'arielphla, & <.'hicago, Baltimore. Sail Fr.it citeo, Lynn. A •) Factories—Taunton. Maw. Falrhnven, Mass. (5) I $ Whitman. Ma-s. Dnxtxny, Mans, Plymouth, MM*. 0 * Every home needs them. w • Every dealer sells them. '2 I <o>v* <*X»X*XgX¥ MEND YOUR OWN HARNESS fWITH THOMSON'S gfiiff SLOTTED CLINCH RIVETS. No tools required. Only a hammer needed to drive and clinch them easily and quickly, leaving the cllnah absolutely smooth. Requiring no ho e to be roads In the leather nor burr for tlis Rlvcta. They are Blraaff, toutch and durable. Millions now in use. Ail tenjrth*. uniform or assorted, put np in boxss. Ask yonr dealer Tor (Item, or send 40o» IB stamps for a ho* of 100. anorted sizes. Mau'fd by JUDSON L. THOMSON MFG. CO., WALTIIA.II. MA* St. ana-r Illustrated Publication*, ■•■■■■WlTH d.v.riN«« K Ncrtn DMOM. 1t0.t..., ■ Wcshiagio. tud Oregon. (k. PHI OOVERNMKNT a «ND LOW PRICE I A line* \am LANDS L U. LASSOUX, Lu4 Coar., *• »t. Fael, MXmm. IIHAT UA yt Afesti AT ONCI. sample MUS I nA V C SashhK-ktrat *93) free by mall for 2c. stamp. Immense. I it rivalled. Only good one ever Invented. Bents weigh ta. Saies uunarallele $1 *2 a «tay. I t'rite quirk. BaoaxaD. Pkila., Pa any one double thai oan cure the most ob- BLOOD poison I A• DC I*l4l TY H particulars and Invest!- A VrKtIALI 112. U r ata our reliab llty. Oor financial backing Is S'-CO.OCO. When meicury. lodide potassium, s&rsap irltln or Hot Spring* fail, we guirantee a rare—and our M**rlo i yphilono Is the only thinar that will cure permanently Pusltlro proof seat sealed, free. Coo* Uxxidy Co., Chloago, 18. ■ rise's Remedy for Catarrh la the ■■ Best. Kaslest to Fae, and Cheapest ■ Sold by diuggists or sent by 60c. Jt T. Hate I ties, Warn, Pa. ■
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers