Indian Hoiisos sit the World's Fair. Near'tho Anthropological Isuil ling are several outdoor displays of nioro limn usual interest. file party sent out by Professor Putnam to the ruins of Yucatan and Copaii secured at Uxrnal, Chiehen-Itza, and Labnah "squeezes" of some doorways, cor net's, arches, etc., showing every de tail of ornament and symbolical carv ing. From these molds casts have been made exactly reproducing the structures. A group of livo of these lies north from the Anthropological liuilding. North from this is an in ten sting series of homes of various American Indians. The palm-thatched hut of the Arawaks of Guiana; the long house of the Iroquois, construct ed of bark, and divided into six spaces within, one for each of the Six Na tions; the bireli-bark tent of the Pen obscot Indians of Maine; the skiu eovered tepee of the plains tribe ; the dome-shaped framework of poles, cov ered with rush matting, of the Algon kins; the plank-covered houses of the Kwakiool of Vancouver Island, and tlie llaidah of Queen Charlotte Islands with their symbolical paintings and totem posts; these range along the edge of the lagoon on whose waters iloat various canoes and boats of the natives. These houses have been liuilt from proper materials by the Indians themselves, and most of them are in habited by families of Indians, some of whom carry on their native arts and industries. Very interesting in this connection will be the series of dances of the lvwakiools, for which Doctor lions lias arranged, which will take place at intervals through the season. —Popular Science Monthly. Deafness Cannot bo Cured by local applications as t hey can not reach tho diseased portion of I lie ear. There isonly ono wiiy t.i euro Deafness, and that is by constltu tionul remville*. Dmfue-s is caused by an in flame 1 e mdiiion of the mucotia lining ot the Knstnehian Tube. When this tube gets in flamed you luivo aruin'dinK sound or imper fect bearing, nnil ivtion it is entirely closed Deiilrt , ; is the result, and unless tho intiam iinfnnutan bo taken out and this tube re stored to lis normal conilition, hearing will be destroyed forever; nine eases out ten are cause I by catarrh, which is nothing but an in ibimrd comiition of tho mucous surfaces. We will give Ono Hundred Dollars for any can uf l> afness(causod by catarrh) that can not bo cure 1 by Hall's Cat arrh Cure. Scud for circulars, free. P. J. CntWEY <& Co., Toledo, 0. I!d by Druggists, 75c. 'l'lii* True l.nxnlive Principle onhe'piants used in manufacturing the pleas mi remedy. Syrup of Figs, lias a permanently en licial offect on the human system, while lie cheap vegetablo extracts and mineral -olu lions, usually sold as medicines, are jierma neilt ly injurious. Heing well informed, you will use the true remedy only. Manufactured by the California Fig Syrup Co. Mornings -Heeeham's i'ills with a drink of water, lietchain's no others. 25 coats q box. Hatch's Universal Cough Syrup costs no more than others and henetits more. It afflicted with sore eyes use Dr. Isaac Thomp son's Eye-wutur. Druggists sell nt -.V per bottle. No Pen Can Describe Tho Buffering I endured ten years from #Jj/a . 'wi tu ftsin. I tried almost I'Very medicine and al . most nave up hope of ever lieim* any bettrr. / j \ Hut HoodV Sarsaparilla //. J / :inil nmv Inm <'ntir<>- vl * I'l/ dyspepsia, Yv /'and advise- every one to 't Hood's Sarsaparilln. , „ . Mrs. .John Fknton, 07 Mrs. J. lenton. l»ride St., l'ittsbuiy, Pa. Hood's s °;> Cures Rretd'n Pill* act eaiUj jret promptly. jj>< SO. FOR A CASE IT WILL-NOT CURE. M Au agreeable lAxativo end Nkbvk Tonhj. Gold liv Druggists or lent by mail. and SI.OO {>er package. Samples free. UA The Favorite TOOTS POWBH &W Hv fortbe Teeth and Brcatf»,36o. ■THE KIND i M THAT CURES " n 8 ■ llltfi, KKIN I»A 11 I • TV S V "A Victory Over Disease !■ I'fci utile Pain in Hoaii and ® H Stomach I" ■ ■ My I 'act? wciii one Maws of IU upturn* 1 H M W.ukut the riooi Nifclit ■ _ Attoi Night!' ■Pi , . tram Mr. <4»iu» Hv| lb. Wuhl'iuyUli fOWKII 'f iUNA «I9 ■ , ... ... „ | 8 U ' mil I 9 %« % ri-» «i« . 11 it M i fg 111 I •• %I \ I % Nl 111 %jl < B • ■»*«# l'» uwlil' ■7~* ■■[•HIM- |»#«t«*. 11 Mt 112.«. 112 ... >IU< ••«.!•* I• ■ MUIIUUI 1 ■ t Ml I rrti «itN»w«i fMIM • l| ■ * m m l> W VS ISAItSAI'AICILLA ■ - Mil Ull 112 I 4« T. m fi'.'.tw.;. •" i '» ■ . > •• • """I a i , ... • 1.000 UOU IT*'* IKPI. IiOSS OP YOUNG TT'KKEYS. Young turkeys are difficult to rear without every convenient provision for safety from damp and wet. It is best to house them at night in a long, low shed, divided into apartments, one for each brood. Hero they should be fed ill the morning before they are let out and iu the evening when driven in be fore the dews fall. The coops may be five feet high at the rear and three feet in the front, with one glazed sash, hinged, for the door. Entrance will then be easy to clean the coops and take in the food. The llocks should be driven up early and then shut in tho vard in which the coops are made. Exposure to ono cold rain will kill every one of a brood until tho red of the head and neck, which is a sigu of full puberty, appears. After that they are not so tender, but will yet need care.—New York Times. PEA VINES AS MANURE. When a fall crop is taken after pick ing green peas for market it is a usual practice to gather the pea vines and cart them out of the field. They are often worth more as a fertilizer to be plowed under just as they are. If a few seed peas are left ripe enough to grow, it will be uone the worse for the future crop. The pea vine is strongly nitrogenous, and makes a fertilizer richer than much strawy and fire fanged stable manure. It has tho fur ther advantage of being somewhat wet, as the moisture has not had time to dry out. We have seen the best crops of late turnips grown thus, and they were seemingly not at all injured by the few pea vines that came up among them. The pea root gathers nitrogen from air in the soil, as the clover root does, and growing it as green manure adds more to tho fertility of soil than does any other crop excepting clover. —Boston Cultivator. HOW TO MII'K. It is very important to free the udder entirely from milk for two rea sons. The first is that these "strip pings" will dry up the cow in a very short time. The other is the fact that one pint of the milk last drawn con tains as much butter fat as one quart of that obtained at the beginning of the milking. In addition to these there is the actual loss in the amount of milk at the time. To show how considerable this loss is the following test was recently made: Five cows were milked for a period of four weeks by two different persons, both being competent parties, one of them doing his average milking and not aware that an experiment was under way, the other fully informed as to the nature of the experiment and ex pected to contribute his best skill for the purpose in view. In the case of the one unaware of the experiment the yield of milk for the two weeks from the five cows was B tie price of wheat, while the vine-* and (Midi- are fully equal to has for feeding purpoM .1 A poor »oil may raist a fair crop of I beans, or a tuir crop may be raised I with bill little \tork ll|| the other hand no crop u ill better respond to , good tfcituit ut tiiiin Mill Iteun*, and the better Iho Mill the bitter will be tie lieiin.v In lei tli.it will. 114 * good 1 M:S«OU, raise (ell litiidiels of wheat per ' acre, a ill raini tin of lie litis, and laud I that Mrown tweiit v wheat, Will yield I as many of I . m - Foruu rl\ 111 ef"p required a good ! deal ot la I tor, for it «u» all done by hand. >«l He i.it **• a |w>lli t crop , now that we have impiovt >1 luaelini, iy fot plant in * and h .ivi»tiut- , iheprollU O. I uMi d 1 *lll cull rid* In nut ttitfOM lite K| i|. I Michigan and i ou *lm«»i • .its tar from ten lu forty »ii.M. tt, plant the rows thirty, thirty-two or thirty-four inchea apart, ami from twelve to thirty inches apart iu the row, planting ill hills of from three to ten beans in a hill. With a riding two-liorse cultivator we cultivate from two to four times, and by September Ist pull with tho puller, which, when properly handled, will not shell a peck of beans ou ton acres, no matter how ripo they may be; this allows plenty of time to follow with wheat if wautod to seed down, or with rye to pasture or plow under. The bean crop here is threshed entirely by machinery, and is destined soon to become the leading crop in Michigan.—American Agriculturist. FARM AND HARDEN NOTES. Clematis likes water. Mulch the sweet peas. Chilled buttermilk makes a refresh ing drink. Tho successful dairyman feeds and milks the cows regularly. The temperature of the milk is an item of first importance. If you have not started a compost heap for next year's use, do it now. The shorter tho silage is cut tho bet ter. Half an inch or less gives tho best results. To got tho most good from bran it should be fed along with corn and sim ilar food stuffs. In raising tomatoes employ those fertilizers which give up their food ma terials quickly. If rains wash off tho insecticide or fungicide, renew it as quickly as pos sible after rain ceases. Top dressing of good manure upon the timothy field will bo quickly pro ductive of good results. If the clover pasture lias dried up feed the shouts fresh cut corn and keep pushing them right along. Don't wait till the grass is wood be fore you cut it. There is more milk and butter in early cut grass. Fairly strong walnut water is re commended as an excellent wash for horses troubled with insect pests. The best animals for the farmer are those which keep in a good and thrifty condition with very little difficulty. Provide slnule, water and succulent food for the milch cows during a dry spell, if you would have them do well. Do not feed tho horses ou an ex clusively rough ration at this time of the year, but give a supply of grain feed. These scorching days a fresh, fragrant bouquet is doubly grateful to tho sick and tho aged; do not neglect or forget them. Don't force any more new growth on plants that are to winter out, but allow the growth already formed to ripen. The man who works with well laid plans is seldom crowded with work ; he is in u position to do tho crowding himself. Lime greatly stimulates and makes active the inert elements of the soil, and makes them available in plant growth. All milk utensils are better cleaned if rinsed with cold or lukewarm water before scalding water or steam is ap plied to them. A perfect Cheddar cheese is one that luis a clear skin, that is white in color, solid and lirni in texture, ami that has a slightly nutty llavor. A kind master is one who has tho horse's good will, ami such a man can get more work out of them than one who treats them harshly. Young orchards are very apt to be injured if not ruined by overbearing. Young trees need growth. The heavy crop should come afterwards. At this time of the year extra teams are in demand for fat-m work. It is poor policy to buy them if you cannot keep them in good condition. It does not hurt the horse now if he is allowed to work without shoes. Unless there is an abundance of rocks, it is not necessary to have them shod. l)o not wait too long before cutting up the corn if you wish the fodder to be "the best." The sumo warniug is to be heeded il'you are going to silo it. WISH WOKDN. Justice is frozen mercy. Ambition is a loaded gun. A sharp tongue cuts off friends. A kiss is affection's ginger-snap. The laborer i not always worthy of his lure. Short absence ipuckeus love ; loug absence kills It. Uuexprt "ted thoughts are sued dor mant in th> ground Villi rieit IN the hoiuts of till home less all over tin world, W lien a man hasn't i money togo to law In is in luck. Home null ure MO Mingy that they refuse to liw I silt a It. n they lUh Adu r»lty Is the dilution I dust I'fOV tdellee |iolls||i Ita jewels With. Never say you kiem a man till you have divided nil iiile riUlluv with htm. Haviug money requires much giiiilut an aritiug put try, Mild it is uf a it- ap In I tor sort An able until nitoa* his »|uril by »u| Is illltl 11 otihlli tti'l loll*. ||k| i» n< ith* t hut nor tinnd. I lliti la Hot lit ttttlur< at It lit th it makes until tut lb tt.raii I, «i beiiiitly, as doth lliti iit|ll -h> - • >h* lalt lu r mirror 4i«' «*»al In'i I* any tit aorati birih i* eoli i I i. ||< tl It ItuilM m -t». h as |t* |tt, In it. but Ititu, tu ttjii.i. iiim lf ai> ul it- HOUSEHOLD AFFAIRS. NEW FRITIT PRESERVATIVE. A man who has been working ten years at a now process for preserving fruits and vegetables now offers to housewives the fruit of his labor. It is in the form of a powder which, added to water, preserves the fruits by destroying the germ which causes ferment. By its use it is claimed that certain fruits, notably peaches, pre serve their natural flavor so perfectly that they may bo served as fresh fruits. This mysterious powder has the fantastic power to turn black ber ries white, while it deepens the hues of some of the light-colored fruits. When ready to use a jar of the fruit in the winter, if preserves are wished, a syrup is prepared and turned over the fruit. One hundred and twenty-eight quarts of fruit may be prepared from a pound of the powder. New York Post. WHEN NOT TO USE EGGS. Not in rice pudding, which you do not want to have turned into a cus tard. The genuine rice pudding is made rich and creamy by constantly stirring into it the top skin of tho milk, as it forms in the baking pan, as soon as it begins to turn yellow with the heat. Continue to stir in this top until the rice is well softened and tho pudding nearly done. Then you may let the top brown, and you will have a perfect pudding when cold-—as good as ice cream. It needs 110 fla voring except a little cinnamon, al though some people like to grate lemon peal into it. Eggs are not noeded either in a muffin. Good English muf fins are made of broad dough softened to a batter with milk. One egg to a quart of milk, ilour to make a batter and a spoonful of baking powder makes perfect English muffins. Two eggs upoil it and make it quite another article.—St. Louis Republic. EIGHT WAYS OF PREPARING CABBAGE. The simplest way to prepare cabbage, writes Clara S. Everts, in Farm, Field and Fireside, is to make cold-slaw by shredding it aud adding a little salt, pepper aud enough sharp vinegar to almost cover it in wlrtch sugar has been dissolved in the proportion of a heaping tablespoonful to a cup of vin egar. A more elaborate cold-slaw is made by using a dressing of half a cup of rich cream, tablespoonful sugar and half cup of vinegar. Many prefer sour cream to sweet, but it will require nearly as much again sugar if sour cream bo used instead of sweet. Cabbage Salad—Cut tho cabbage Hue. Make a dressing by stirring into a cup of vinegar a well-beaten ogg, a heaping teaspoonful of small lump of butter, salt and pepper. When it boils add a scant tablespoonful of flour in a third of a cup of milk. Cook well aud pour over the cabbage. Mix thoroughly aud set aside until cold. In winter it will keep nicely for three or four days. In hot weather if water is used instead of milk it w ill keep for two days. Many complain that un cooked cabbage is hard to digest. In that case it should be fiuely chopped, thoroughly salted and allowed to stand for two or three hours. Then if all the water arising is carefully squeezed out before the dressing ia added it will be as digestible as the cooked. Creamed Cabbage—Chop, add boil ing water till it shows through the cabbage, but is not quite covered, salt, pepper and cover closely. Cook till tender, stirring now aud then. Add more water if necessary and when done add a small lump of butter aud half a cup of milk in which a tablespoonful of flour has been smoothed. Cook two or three minutes longer and serve hot. Fried Cabbage—Chop moderately fine and putin a frying pan in which is a tablespoonful of hot butter and one of meat drippings. Salt, pepper and cover closely, stirring often to prevent scorching. When delicately browned add a little water audsimuier until done. Boilod Cabbage—Soft or coarse heads of cabbage that seem hardly tit for use may bo boiled and prove very nice. Cut iu quarters, remove the heart aud boil with a meat bone, or add to the water enough soup stock to give the desired richness. It should be almost covered with water when be ginning to cook aud ought to boil from an hour to an hour and a half. Serve iu side dishes, iu which it is cut up and vinegar added to suit the taste. linked Cabbage Take a small firm head aud with a sharp knife cut out the heart, without otherwise cutting the cabbage. Crumble u sufficient amount of bread, add salt, pepper aud butter and moisten with boiling water and fill the cavity with this. Place iu a baking dish with a piut of well halted boiling water and a good sized lump of butter. Cover and bake for an hour or two. Just before serving remove the cover and brown a little. With the aid of a saucer carefully re move, without breaking, to a hot dixh, and to the water in the baking dish uld 11 little flour xmoothed ill cold water allil poured Mroitlld the cabbage; ir the bread may bt inoiHteiied with rich soup xtoek and this used instead if water 111 tile baking pall. It xliollld In thickcued an I uxetl ax u gra\y with the the HMllie ax the water wax lined. If the flavor oi pork IN liked it In very nice to iihlioxt cover the cab liiui with very thin slice* of salt pork. When the cover i» ri moved from the pan thest will brown nicely. Hot Slat* Chop tlii eabbage mod erately line, almost cover with bolllug water, and cook until killer but not "uitlshy. I'o a eiip of viuegar add a heaplUK teaxpooiilnl of nllgMl', a Well Ix ateu 1 ■ v',; and a tub!, pooiiful of flour •Mouthed in a little eo|i| water. I'oltr all idowly into tho couklllK cabbage, •til rm. i'"ic Wvui-I HMfttin Florence Nightingale is n confirmed invalid. A lady's foot should equal in length one-seventh of her height. A soft, unerushable silk called re gence is very popular in Paris. Pet dogs are now dyed to liarmouize with the prevailing tint of their mis tress' boudoir. Ijarge perforated silver bowls, with panier-like curves, have been intro duced for dessert. The Sultan of Turkey has determ ined to establish a normal school for girls in Constantinople. Recently imported silks linve raised designs in chrysanthemums, lilies and butterflies on a white ground. In ancient days nearly all Grecian maidens dressed in white. Any other color was considered immodest. Gilt wire forms many table novel ties. Bonbon dishes especially fanci ful are made from its twisted coils. The "literary lady" thrives in Paris, where there are 2133 of her, of whom 1214 are professional novel writers. A sleeve which is stamped witli the approval of Felix is made of frills of three-inch lace from the shoulder to the waist. The wives of Siamese noblemen cut their hair so that it sticks straight up from their heads. The average length of it is about an inch and a half. Miss Charlotte Robinson, decorator to the Queen of England, has been deoorated by the latter, who is, there fore, decorator to Miss Robinson. The romantic and supposedly boau tiftil Mary "Queen of Scot 6" was cross eyed and had other physical blemishes that are not accounted attributes of beauty. The head dresses of 1770 were so largo that ladies going to entertain ments were forced, to save their head gear, to kneel on tl*o floors of their carriages. Black, it is said, both here and abroad, will bo more popular than ever before, and the colorings of a costume will como from the trimmings and accessories. Miss Edith J. Claypool, of Akron, Ohio, was the only woman to receive the degree of Master of Science from Cornell University this year, and she took it "with the highest distinction." Queen Victoria receives every year, by way of tribute from the Maharajah of Cashmere, a case of magnificent cashmere shawls. These she disposes of largely as wedding gifts to brides of the nobility. The Princess Nicholas Bibesco, who has just died at her beautiful castle of Mogosea, was a granddaughter of the famous Marechal Ney, and previous to her marriage bore the titlo Princess Ney Elchingan. Mrs. Albert Barker, an English elo cutionist, is said to know as many pieces as there are days in the year. She imitates many voices of nature, from the trill of the canary to"the awe-inspiring howl of the hurricane." One of the few English women who claim the distinction of holding a seat in the directorate board of a public company is the Dowager Duchess of Sutherland. She is also credited with disphiying great ability in the man agement of a coal mine. Miss Edith Carrington has written a book called "Workers Without Wage," dealing with all kinds of animals, in eluding the earwig. She has been asked by the English Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals to write another book, which the society will publish officially. Mrs. George Gould is quite inter ested in the summer kindergartens, and from her summer home is sending many pretty toys and delicacies for the poor city children who cannot en joy the luxuries of the rich. Mrs. Gould is also planning to aid the ice fund for the sick children. Mrs. Crook, the widow of the In dian lighting general, has attracted more attention in Chicago recently than moat other feminine visitors to the World's Fair. She is a very lino looking woman, with snowy white hair that is in striking contrast to her youthful and vivacious spirits. Mrs. Frances R. Lybrand, of Ohio, has been on the examiner'?, corps in the Civil Engineering Department of the t'atent Office at Washington for about ten years. Railways are her specialty, and she has the auuilal task of passing upon about HIM Ml alleged iu veutious, of which a dozen may per haps be practicable. Mary W. Lee, who was kuown throughout the Secolld Corps of the Army of the I'otomae mm "Mother Lee," died in Philadelphia the other day. During the war "lie wax a volun teer Held nurse, serving ut the front without pay, audit was there that she was affectionately nicknamed l>\ the soldiers "Mother Lee. Perhaps the uioxt curious occupa tion conceived by a woiuuu in that of dinner tuxter. Sill ix a product of t'ariMMU felilieUH ut, ax yet unknown in this eouutry. She api-udx apart of each day 111 Vlsltlllg houses aud taxtll||f the dialled intended for dinner. She suxK' st* improvements, mid shows the cook new ways of prepuriug dishes, Au Eiitfltidi woman in Ltiidou ch»xed h thief who had stolen her poe kt 11 look, caught htiu and In Id hiui liy 1 the collar until help came and lu> won j urrcxtcd V yoUiiK woman at ('open • hutfen "howed similar pluck ; m a r. w rd she was presented with a diamond brooch by tin chief o( police, and a ; uow»pa|ter iiimu offered to marry lui out of admiration for her exploit. \ PIkM a I.im iiuioihc, til • tliaor-lin.it> fight took placi between the itrivcr an I «t.Mi u„'ei engine, alt li th train they j w«t, eoudiieiiiig was traveling at a > high rale of •Inol tatweiU Venire and liriKMiitUo tie Uu Is tl |o <|tiitr*t I, su l pl.t sM. il. »> ill* til. I ill -I ill "I the) wit «. keil cat |> ollti I 4 itii ktiivvu j lln U llk In* el die* 4 I - 1 1 • i mi I 1 ft*. I«t IU. .|okit M tefilt w ml* llM« i 1,U.1 Ibi Utui t|owi«.| IK. II I in 1114 lli> tfalu In l i< al»> »• «i d> Ml m I'll! lid li.tb lie II W< |i mft ; vU*t) inpilv I Ni.» llk itivgtatu, j Highest of all in Leavening Power.—Latest U. S Gov't Report Re&lfSSdS ABSOLUTELY PURE . Alaska Fisli. In this modern tiny of Government schools, rendy-mado clothing, and two-dollars-a-day wages, almost the only picturesqueness left to native lift" is during the salmon runs. Families and tribes betake themselves to their hereditary fishing grounds to catch and dry their salmon for winter use, and isolated summer camps break the forested shore-line with fine effect, A row of black canoes on the beach, a cluster of bark or matted tents, with frames of drying salmon overhanging the camp-fires, are set between some clear still green water foreground and an abrupt screen of greenest men/.ie or mcrton spruces. The racks of fish give touches of high color to the scene, as the further north they are caught the redder the Pacific salmon are; and in Lynu Canal some of these camps look as if decorated with red bunting. All is salmon that comes to the Tingit, and he makes no distinc tion between king, red, silver, hump back, or dog salmon, rather preferring, on the whole, the coarse, rank of the last, which 110 white man wants; hence he rages at the cannery's waste and the destruction of his chief food supply. Since the corrupting touch of trade hascven reached their salmon streams, the natives now make per manent summer villages beside the canneries. The men work for the company, and the women and children do a little independent fishing, but more regularly follow the cannery scows and fill their canoes with re jected salmon, as canners use only about a third of all tisli seized. Thus, in midsummer, Alaska villages are as empty of their first families as any Eastern city, and the tourists see closed houses, and not a third of the regular inhabitants. Census enumer ators work zealously, but vainly, in attempting to count the natives when they are scattered in remotest nooks all over the archipelago, half of them paddling their canoes from one place to another, and as likrly to be counted twice as not at all during the summer. The white man's fisheries are more prosaic, less fragrant, and never picturesque in themselves. One finds the canneries in the furthest nooks and niches of the archipelago, each with a finer landseajx' setting than the last. There is always a mountain background and a clear brawling stream coming from the dense forest. —Harper's Weekly. The Vision a! lUrtls, Birds have very acute vision, per haps the most acute of any creature, and the sense is also more widely dif fused over the retina than is the ease with man; consequently a bird can see sideways as well as objects in front of it. A bird sees—showing great un easiness in consequent'! a hawk long before it is visible toman. So. too, fowls and pigeons find minute scraps of food, distinguishing t item from what appear to us exactly similar pieces of earth or gravel. Young cliie'.teus are also able to find their own food —knowing its position and how distant it is .is soon as they are hatched, whereas a child ouly very gradually learns either to see or to un derstand the distance of objects. Sev eral birds—apparently the young of all those that nest oil the ground can see quite well directly they come out of the shell, but the young of birds that nest in trees or on rocks are born liliml and have to be fed.—Chambers's Journal. "German Syrup" Justice of the Peace, George Wil kitison, of Lowville, Murray Co.. Minn., makes a deposition concern iuga severe cold. Listen to it."lt the Spring of 1888, through ex posure I contracted 11 very seven cohl that settled on ray lungs. Tlii v was accompanied by excessive nigh', sweats. One bottle of lloschee'> German Syrup broke up the cold night sweats, and all and left nu in a good, healthy condition. I can give (lenuan Svrup my most earnest ivuniuendntt >' R. Ri R. DADWAY'S Si READY RELIEF t'HK* I*!!* V*»in || .U, .»».<.»» •» utiiuio* II u .o'i-v o *im« ihu ■*(* tiiM-iu* i»t it* »1 imh l< H «l««H > » M««4t H•InII*«MW j*M »* •«» L %«•»-» I'UIIT, LLMUR*. in•«*«!•• liuiti* tu lit* ll* !*• I Ill'M HI I Mllllv ll lH»- „»*,! 1* 111- «»\| \ %I N Kl Ml IM Iha 1 ltt«l*iiill» *U»p» tb !»**«•» w % » u'lMitlttg |MtK* > * lift) » mrt.4lnlli.lt It'll 4l« 1 »!#*'• I •Iktfl »H •«!» HhvS I4 I MIS tl l>\ ft > I. . .1.4, % I | Ml Ml* II I SUMMFK COMPLAINTS, ll * >«» s rkM \ . IIIIMMIHI », • lltlt I.li I HUM Ul ». t'l i, • 1U 1 ttwtiU ■»»M ht "DON'T BORROW TROUBLE." BUY SAPOLIO 'TIS CHEAPEN IN THE END. Sew Jersey's Kitrieil Forests* A piece of contemporary geology is being worked in New Jersey. The whole coast line has been long sink ing, and the process is still going on. A curious industry is carried on in the southern part of the State- -the mining for cetlar. Some of these noble trees exhumed from their swainpv burial exceed three feet in diameter, with tho timber perfectly sound. The "lay" of these uprooted trees indicates the devastation, probably, of extraor dinary cyclones, occurring at immenso intervals of time, thus leveling one forest upon another that had been thrown down long before. The cedars growing there to-day send their roots among their long-buried ancestors. The rings upon tho exhumed trees show a growth of 15',1d, or possibly *2OOO years, and tlui existence of at least two buried forests below tho present, growth is indisputable.— American Nat 11 rali^t. DSC. KILMEB>« SWAMP-ROOT CURED ME. La Grippe ! Grippe ! Grippe ! After Effects Cured. Mr. TMlger writes:-"! hnottlo I felt letter, ami to-ilay lum just aawrlluscvor. A year lias passed and not a trace of tho (.ripi* is left. Swamp-Red S?vedMy Life. I>. Tt. UILOKi:, ItilltiievUle, I'll., Jan. loth, 1880, At DrttKglMH 50 c« tu* nml SI.OO *!#«<. "Inv»li.lii' liutilv to H.nlUt" fr, . (fiw. l)r. Kilmer & Co., - KlniThntelon, N. Y. "57. Kilmer's rftRILLA LIVER 112 ILLS Arc th® B«lt 4!i Pill*, 2S rculK, All llrncetata. Unlike the Dutch Process Q7\ No Alkalies Other Chemicals ait» nwil in tho wjM |>re|>aratiou o( tffßK W. liAKEII St CO.'S Bre.ikfastCocoa [a 11l trhirh fa «feaofwtrly m - \ jmor <1 ml tofubfr. (]fi . ,J, l It has more (Ami ft m#a |';|j \ M the strength of INh-oi muoit '||\vith Stsrv» \rrowriKit or and 1* far mora ee«>« iiomical, cost in j let* il i.m one cent a It t* tlelicious, aud DK.K3TL'A Soh! by Wr«« oi . riorywhtrf. W BAKER & CO.. IK>rchester, Mau. J with 1 .vitvvtt, I I [ I 1 »r ,'la.v* |mokdia.i nlf It. »« ry M \ \ MEND YOUR OWN HARNESS WITH J THOMSON'S IJ SLOTTED CLINCH RIVETS. Ka i « « r«.. 1 »%•%!, On > *tu v? i .m.iv'-i t nu mi . th iu i.uUy « » *.A », t». , ,o!i Ut*ly Nu » ilu K «;u; • « tv» U Ul ho leAitrtf UtH bUTf htf Iv I; I«» irv «ltuii|, <4«1«k1% Ihvl «ltiri4l>l«< V - »■>» 1 k«V tiiiir Mm iIk'HII » I ' W Ul •Imu,* tut * '•».«! l.». *.».•« . iu.» M«u M!t» JUOSON L. THOMSON MFQ. Ca, n u.Tiiii, im AM l"t> K A I." rA M I "* MIOICIN 112 I 1 v»r la.ltCVt'lKU IlillMUVMt |lV*«lm> » I .t»t«»l|»«U»'», |t»*v| vUa, OlfV».%!<> | I %|U| A>l a - r4» l» v4 U4V Mv 444.4. U A TA.UtM. • WIVTnV i ii 1 \IU VI. ia, >•« FRAZER AXLE Best inthe World!n|%r A OF Get the G9nulne jiM| l l|\r Sold FvtrvwHere! Vfc lILOOO POISOII ; a mcuuv 1 . . u- % « *. I*' 4 ' t t * •■ >4 » ~• . 112 - >n u i4i »*4 I I'!*«»««. I!IM 1 » ■ 14 V %44sA . 4(4W a%«« H 3 wo# u m is** *«4 . ->« a 4. >»t-»