The Camel in War. , The camel is H good sohlicr.v II tuny lie stupidity and it nifty be bravery, but a camel is as steady under < tire as a tower. Tho Persians mounted small cannon on the backs of tlieir camels, and called them zamb-wahs or "little wasps." This fashion was adopted in India, and after tho battle of Hobroaon 2000 of these artillery camels were captured. In the Indian mutiny the British had a camel corps of 150 beasts and on tho back of each camel sat a Scotch Highlander in his kilt, lu 1845 Sir Charles Napier had a camel corps in Hindi), and in one day lui. mavch«d seventy-fivo miles, de feated a brigand chief and marched home again, lu 1878 the British used camels against the Afghans and the Government paid for 50,000 camels that died in those campaigns. Many of these were driven to death by their owners in order that they might claim the Government bounty.—Milwaukee Wisconsin. Kciiiitrkahlc l>cnl in Dentistry. A most remarkable story of a deal in dentistry is going the rounds. A banker's firm in London the other day made an investment in teeth which was highly satisfactory, and in which the money flowed the other way. It seejiis that an ancient swindler, who had cheated them out of some money, was caught, convicted and sentenced. While in prison ho wanted a new set of teeth, those he was wearing not be ing all that could be desired in dealing with prison fare. The governor of the jail told him that the Government did Hot provide false teeth for the prison ers. Accordingly ho wrote to the bankers and told'them that if they would provide him with false teeth ho would give them some valuable infor mation. They sent him $25, ho got his teeth, and in return he sent them information that led to the finding of &7500. All in all, it was a good in vestment. —Detroit Free Press. Somebody's Hood. To make our own troubles tho means of helping the troubles of others is a noble ef fort for good. A well illustrated instance of this kindly sympathy is shown in a letter from Mr. Enoch L. llanscom, School Agent, Marsh Held, Me., an old Union soldier. He says:"lt may do somebody some good to state, I am a man of sixty and when forty had a bad knee and rheumatism sot in. I was lame throe years and very bad most of the time. I got St. Jacobs Oil and put it on three times and it made a cure. lam now in good health." STATE OF O;no, CITY OF TOLEDO, \ LUCAS COUNTY. F * FRANK J. CHENEY makes oath that ho is the senior partner of the firm of F. J. CHRNKY & CO., doing business In the City of Toledo, County and State aforesaid,and that said firm will pay the sum of ONK HUNDRKI) DOL LARS for each and every ease of Catarrh that worn to before me and subscribed in iny presence, this 6th day of December, A. D. 1886. j . A. W. GLFASON, ' » Notary Pub'.lc. Hall's Catarrh Cure istaken internally and acta directly on the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. Send for testimonials, free. F. .T. CHEN KY Co., Toledo. O. Pfr"Sold by Druggists, I'.c. FOR THROAT DISEASES AND COUGHS use BROWN'S BRONCHIAL TROCHES. Like all really tood things,they are imitated. The genuine ure sold only in bores. ' l>r. llo\«ie*N Certain Crony Cure Should be in every medicine closet. It cures the worst of coughs and colds, and does not cause naus3a. no ets. For Pneumonia, no other cough syrup equals Hatch's Universal. 2-> cent sat druggists. Becchain's Pills are better than mineral wa ters. Beecham's—no others. 25 cents a box. ISii 1 " Two years ajaro 1 was taken sick with ca tarrhal ncura a and a complication of easos, includi . nervous prostration. I had four doctors .ere ahd then went to Boston, where 1 was treated by two physicians. They all said there wns no help for me. I wan run down so low there was nothing to build o • They said l had catarrh of the blad der* When I begun taking HOOirs SAKSAIMU ILI, \ 1 weighed 98 pounds; now I weigh 13!) pounds. I could not stand on my feet long enough to wash my dishes; now I can do all my work, washing included, for live in the family. MRS. IS. K. BROWN, Easton, N. il. ifood*• Pills con :ii i Uver lllsj blUoutooas. N Y N U—.3 "August Flower" " I am Post Master here and keep a Store. I have kept August Flower for sale forsome time. I think it is a splendid medicine." E. A. Bond, P. M., Pavilion Centre, N. Y. The 'stomach is the reservoir. If it fails, everything fails. The liver, the kidneys, the lungs, the heart, the head, the blood, the nerves all go wrong. If you feel wrong, look to the stomach first. Put that right at once by using August Flower, It assures a good appetite and a good digestion. 9 Young Mothers! OffCT You a Remedy whieh Insures Suf. ty to Life of Mother and Child. "MOTHER'S FRIEND" Robt Confinement of ((« jpaln, Horror an&Bitk. Affmslnsnn-bottleof " Mother'* Friend" I •uftorod hut little pain, and dM urn experience that afterward usual lu tuoii rim.-Mn, Asms (Jicir, Lamar, Mo., Jau. 15th, 13S1. Bf„°' b ,X "Pres.", charsres prepaid, on receipt of price, bonle. Hook to Motliem mailed Free. KUiDI'IELD BEGt'LATVU CO., ATLANTA, GA. BOLD IIV ALL DRUGGISTS. Bfinmij iiuji.i.sfli CIIIiES WHtRF ALL ELSE FAILS. E2 Pest ronyh Syrup. 'l'lutea Itood. Uw YOUNO CALVES MUST BE PROTECTED. Tho first year of a calf's life deter mines to a great degree its value as an animal for profit. If it is permitted to run with the cows, steers and older cattle, where it will be jostled about and made to stand back from the feed until such a time as it can get to take up the refuse left after the stronger have their choice, an un profitable, stunted calf will be the re sult.—Western Plowman, IRRIGATION AND TREE CUJ/TURE. The necessity for tree culture is equally imperative with irrigation, and the arid lands question will never be satisfactorily settled without the recognition of this principle in its solution. America can ill afford to ignore the experience of other Nations in this respect, and forestry should receive equal consideration with irri gation. It has been estimated that within historic times some seven millions of square miles along the shores of the Mediterranean, once highly fertile, have been changed into worthless deserts, and for nearly two thousand years the inhabitable portion of the earth has decreased at the average rate of 3500 square miles. This has been produced by the direct agency of man, the evil being chiefly due to river Hoods caused almost exclusively by the destruction of land protecting forests. It is right that America should set the example of reclaiming desert lands, and thus increase the earth's capacity for supporting the human race. Irrigation and tree culture must go hand and hand in this work. —Colman's Bural World. FRUIT GROWING FOR PROFIT. The best land for fruit growing is a loam with some gravel in it, but good drainage is indispensable for success. Plums and pears will do better on heavier soils than other fruits. There is no doubt of the profit of either of these two fruits, but both are difficult of culture, and skill and extreme care are necessary to succeed. Both are liable to diseases and attacks of injuri ous enemies that must be most care fully guarded against. Then either fruit may pay several times as much profit as any other common kinds. The spring is the best time to plant these fruits, but apples may be plantedlin the fall quite as well as in the Spring. In choosing varieties it is well to cou sult the nurserymen from whom the trees are purchased, as they will know the best kinds for the locality and soil. Otherwise any experienced fruit grower of the neighborhood may be consulted. As a rule, it is best to procure the trees from the nearest nursery, and thus avoid the risks of delay in transportation. Pears are set twenty feet apart, and plums need about the same space. It has been found profitable to set out dwarf pears between the rows of the standard trees, as they will begin to bear the third year, and by the time the others be gin to bear they will have repaid all the cost of planting, and, under favorable circumstances, a respecta ble profit. When the planter has the experience and skill needed, there is no more profitable agricultural enter prise than fruit growing.—New York Times, ESSENTIALS IN STRAWBERRY GROWING. Professor Lazenby, before the Co lumbus Horticulture Society gave the following summary of essential points to be kept in mind: The most profitable varieties for the commercial grower are those not eas ily influenced by differences ill soil and climate. Those which succeed well on wide areas are usually better than those which have a more local reputation. Pistillate varieties, when properly fertilized, are mere productive than the sorts with perfect flowers. The value of a variety for fertiliz ing pistillate flowers does not depend so much upon the amount as upon the potency of its pollen. The flowers of pistillate varieties are less liable to be injured by frost than the flowers of perfect varieties. Varieties that tire neither very early nor very late in point of maturity, arc the most productive and have the longest fruiting season. As a rule, varieties that have the most vigorous and healthy foilage are the least productive, while those with a weaker growth of foliage and a greater susceptibility 4b leaf blight are usually the more prolific. Winter protection may be dispensed with upon well drained soils, but ap pears to be a necessity upon heavier ones. The leaf blight may be checked by using the Bordeaux mixture, beginning just as soon as the leaves appear, and continuing the application every few weeks throughout the season.—Col man's Rural AVorld. WINTER CUTTINGS. Tn the winter lime cuttings from shrubs and small fruits should be made for early spring planting. Tn this way trees and shrubs can tie greatly increased in numbers, and new, large orchards can be given an early start without any expense other than the laiior required to make the cuttings and plant them. Currants, gooseberries and ornamental shrubs should be grow n upon nearly all farms. The various methods adopted by florists to increase thenumber of their shrubs and trees are all simple, such as the soft wood cuttings in the green house in the winter and layering in the summer, but the hardwood propa gation in fail or spring is the method that should bo considered at this time «>f the year. If the cuttings are to tie planted out in the spring they may lie made any time this winter. Where winters are severe the planting shoul 1 never take place until spring, but where the weather is not very cold it does not matter much whether the plantings are wade in the fall, winter or spring. The cuttings that are gathered in the winter should be tied in loose bundles, and bo set in damp sand in a frost proof cellar where they will keep until needed in tho spring. As soon as the soil dries out in the spring they should be planted. The young shoots of last soason should bo selected for these cuttings, and they should be cleft from the main bushes so that they will be about one foot long. These are nearly all buried in the spring in deep, rich soil, leaving only four inches of the tips above the ground. The soil must be trampled down firmly around them. They will begin to start almost im mediately, and a young orchard of trees or shrubs will soon provo a great blessing. Not only fruit bearing trees will succeed in this way, but nearly all shade trees. It is probably the easiest way of starting young trees that can be devised. Quince orchards should be started every few years if a good crop is ex pected annually, and there is no easier, quicker and surer way than selecting the cuttings in the winter months, when there is plenty of time, and then starting them out early in the spring. Meanwhile, tho land on which they have been started can be planted the same as usual for a season or two af terward.—American Cultivator. HIGHEST PROFITS IN HIGHEST FEEDING. Ten cows were fed a ration begin ning with eight pounds of grain and twelve pounds of hay, and gradually increasing up to as high as nineteen pounds of grain anil twenty-seven pounds of hay per day and head, and then gradually decreasing to the or iginal amount. Throughout this test at the Pennsylvania Experiment Sta tion accurate notes were taken of the amount and cost of the food, the amount of milk, produced by each animal and its butter value as determ ined by t he Babcock test. Perhaps the most striking lesson is the demonstration given of the profit there is in liberal feeding. The cheap est ration used cost 18.8 cents per day and produced butter valued at 26. C cents, making a net profit of 7.7 cents per day per cow. An increase of 2.9 • ants pel' day per cow in the cost of this ration made the daily value of the butter 31 cents, and the net profit 9.3 cents per day, or a difference of 1.6 cents per day per cow in favor of the more costly ration. In other words, the farmer who attempted to econo mize by feeding the cheaper ration, would, with a herd of twenty-five cows, save $217 per year on his feed bills, but would lose $337 worth of butter that he might have produced with the more costly ration, so that his ill-judged attempt at economy would result in a net loss of SI 20. The cheaper ration, moreover, is what would ordinarily be considered a good ration, and the majority of dairy men would be likely to feel less, rather than more, yet the results show con clusively that with such cows as these the more expensive ration was really the more economical. A further increase of the cost of the ration, however, to 25.1 cent per day gave no further increase in the butter product, and the net profit was thereby cut down to 4.9 cent per day, or 1.8 cent less than with the cheapest ration of the three. In other words, the ex periments indicate that there is certain medium ration for each cow which will give the greatest net profit, and that any attempt to economize by feeding less than this will result in a loss, while, on the other hand, it is possible to feed a cow too much as well as too little. Generally, however, there is much more danger of feeding too lit tle than too much.—New England Homestead. FARM AND GARDEN NOTES. Fatten your sheep before selling. Turkeys fret if confined to a coop. It will never pay to feed poor cows. Have the colts thoroughly broken to harness when young. Give the young pigs all the skim milk they will drink. Cleanliness is as necessary to the sheep as food and shelter. The less water there is iu butter the fewer odors it will absorb. Quality rather thau quantity should be the motto of all breeders. Narrow door and gate ways are frequent causes of capped hips. Milk set to cool where smells exist absorb such odors very readily. A small flock of sheep, well cared for, is a source of continual profit. Clean stables will add much to the health and comfort of your horses. The usual time for weaning is when the foals are four or five months old. Too much corn is the source of manv of the disorders to which hogs ire sub ject. The winter dairy brings in an in come at the time when the farmer is receiving very little from any other source. A little wheat chaff scattered on the floor of the poultry-house will keep it dry and warm, besides forming an ex cellent litter for the poultry to scratch iu for the grain which should be scat tered about daily. It is just as necessary to give proper development of bone in the hog as in the horse. When the hog is being made ready for market he has an amount of flesh to carry that cannot lie well distributed upon a weak frame. Give such food and exercises as will build bone before the fattening period begins. The Rhode Tsland State Experiment Station bulletin on fertilizing says that the av. rage of all the fertil izers sold in the State during the sea son could have been made by the farmers themselves, after allowing 51.50 per ton for mixing, $8 per ton cheaper than they were bought. In many cases they could have been made f<>r from Sl2 to $lO per ton less than what the burnetii paid lor them. HOUSEHOLD AFFAIRS. A BOSTON DISH. Clean ft fish and put it into boiling water with a tablespoonful each of salt and vinegar ; boil nntil the fish will sep arate from the bone ; remove skin, bones and flake; season highly with salt and pepper. Spread it on a platter and pour over it hot cream and sauce made with one quart of milk, three table spoons of flour, one-fourth cup of but ter. Season sauce with salt, pepper, onion juice and a tablespoonfnl of finely-chopped parsley. Spread over it one cup of bread crumbs moistened in ono-fourth cup of melted butter, and brown in oven. HOW TO MAKE AN OMELET. "If it were my privilege to examine all the cooks in the city," says Mrs. Rorer, "1 should first put them to making omelets, as nothing would be tray more quickly the skill or ignor ance of a cook than the handling of the breakfast omelet." And then she explains how it should be made. Have an omelet pan about eight in ches in diameter—one made from sheet iron preferable. The bottom should be as smooth as glass. If not, put into it a teaspoonful of salt, aud then with a piece of brown paper scour it thor oughly. Do not wash it after, simply turn the salt out aud putin a piece of butter the size of a walnut. Break four to six eggs into a bowl, and with a fork give twelve to fifteen vigorous beats, not enough to make the mixture light, but to thoroughly mix the white and the yolks of the eggs. Belting either together or separately robs eggs of their flavor, and also makes small air cells, which expand as the pail is heated and cool as the omelet is turned over for the table, thus making a heavy rather than a light aud tender one. Do not add salt or pepper to the ome let until it is nearly done. Salt toughens the eggs. Add one teaspoon fill of boiling water to each egg as soon as they are beaten. Putin a piece of butter the size of a hickory nut. Now put the frying pan over the fire, hav ing already placed in it a piece of but ter the size of a walnut, and as soon as it is melted, not brown, pour in the eggs. Place over a quick fire, shake as soon as the omelet begins to have a set appearance; with a limber knife lift the eggs, allowing the more liquid part togo underneath, thus forming layers, as it were, being very careful not to tear the omelet, or it will have the appearance of scrambled eggs. Now sprinkle the omelet with salt and pepper, and continue lifting until the whole has been putin a jellylike con dition. If the pan is perfectly smooth the omelet will not stick. When done aud set, not hard, slip a knife under the omelet—that part next the handle of the pan—roll it over, then turn gently onto a heated dish ; serve at once. It is better that you should wait five minutes for your omelet than that your omelet should wait one min ute for you. You will notice I have used water in preference to milk. Milk contains a small amount of cheese, toughens in cooking and spoils the omelet. Neither should you use thickening of any kind —cornstarch or flour. Simply take the egg and water and yon will have a tender, delicious omelet. One more caution, the omelet should not be a dark brown, as it destroys the flavor of the egg. HOUSEHOLD HINTS. A cup of cocoa makes a very refresh ing drink after one has been shopping all the afternoon. If, after brushing the coat or gown, it is sprinkled with spirits of camphor and aired a few hours, it will be tidy and graceful. Garments and belong ings that smell of nothing are the cleanest and most agreeable. One can test a cake's baking by drawing it to the edge of the oven and listening for the faint, sputtering sound which will continue until it is ready to take out. This is a better trial than the broom splinter thrust into the dough. There is a false economy, which costs more than it returns, such as saving old modioine bottles, partially used prescriptions, the taeks taken from the carpet, or working days to save or make that which can bo bought for a few cents. Here is the correct way to stone raisins: Free the raisins from the stems, and then put them in a bowl. Cover them with boiling water, and let them stand for two minutes. Pour off the water, open the raisins, and the seeds can be removed quickly and easily without the usual stickiness. It is rumored that glossy hair is to become the prevailing style, and to produce the effect many things are re sorted to. Brushing the hair at night will make it shiny, and it is said that a soft silk cap worn at night will do the same. First of all, however, the hair must be kept perfectly clean and free from oil or "dressings." Kitchen dado of linoleum is super ior to wood, because it does not crack or have spaces for the harboring of bugs, and to tilings, because it is cheaper and even ,-nore durable. It should be glued close to the wall and finished with a plain moulding. It may be oiled or varnished or left in its natural condition. In natural wood color it looks well with a wall colored light blue above. Table fruit will keep twice as long if kept in separate lots. Contact hastens decay. One bad apple will spoil a barrel. It will pay the house wife to have the peaches, plums, oranges, lemons and other small fruit wrapped in paper when it comes from the market and to separate the bunch es of grapes. Street venders preserve them by hanging them up in a cool place. The next best plan is to lay thorn on a large platter or in kitchen, saucers, with space between. Healing Power of Egg Oil. Extraordinary stories are told or the healing properties of a new oil which is easily made from the yolk of lions' eggs. The eggs are first boiled hard and the yolks are then removed, crushed and placed over a fire, where they are carefully stirred until the substance is on the point of catching fire, when the oil separates and may be poured off. One yolk, will yield nearly two teaspoonfuls of oil. It is in general use among the colonists of, south Russia as a means of curing ruts, bruises, etc. —St. Louis Globe- Democrat. Anna Dickinson is fifty-one years old. Women of rank go bareheaded in Mexico. Alexandrite, which is green by day and red by night, is a woman's stone. A novelty for vests for the front of dresses is of white cloth embroidered with jet. Silver and gold caps on the ivory handles of umbrellas are less obtru sive than last year, being much smaller. Evening cloaks of black brocade are trimmed with an ermine collarette and lined with white moire or brocaded satin. The Infanta Eulalie, who has been spending much of her time in London, is going to live in Paris during tho winter. Evening cloaks of black brocade are trimmed with an ermine collarette and lined with white moire or brocaded satin. The Princess of Wales always sends word to those who wish to present her with bouquets as to the size and weight of the presentation. The rose is her favorite flower. To prevent the hair from coming out take a pint of bay rum and half an ounce of quinine. Mix and apply to the scalp twice a day with a woolen cloth, rubbing it in well. The horseshoe is introduced into various styles of dress. The horse shoe crown is one of the newest forms for bonnets, generally supplemented by Mercury wings in front. Chrysoprase, a charming light green tinted stone, is in particular favor this winter. Double hearts of it, surrounded by diamonds, are the prettiest thing to be imagined. "Miss Smith, of England," is de scribed as the projector of "inexpen sive homes for gentlewomen." Among these desirable places are some small furnished cottages as low as $1.25 a week. Mrs. Ellen C. .Tohuson, Superinten dent of an English prison for women, finds she can control and stimulate her charges to higher effort by offering them prettier clothes as a reward for improved behavior. Double-breasted etlects appeav upon many of tho bodices of winter costumes, and this mode is often carried out in stylish house-dresses, the bodice pointed or in basque form, and cut down low, over a guimpe of some pretty contrasting color and material. A woman mail carrier, Rose Shel ley, carries the mails regularly be tween Dexter and Goshen, an eight een-mile stretch of lonesome road in Lane County, Oregon. Early or late, snow or shine, she makes the trip, and no stress of weather or fear of road agents has yet interfered with her performance of her duty. A curious fashion has found some favor in England. Tho hostess at an afternoon at home is supposed to feel sufficiently odd, as the only lady in the room without a bonnet, that she had adopted the custom of wearing some head covering herself. As a lookeron observes, it is rather a queer spectacle to see the lady of the house in a hat receiving her friends under her own roof. One of the latest ideas is to keep a scrap book containing all the refer ences to one's self that appear in print. Women of fashion aud society belles keep them and wherever they go, sea side or mountains, at home or visiting in other cities, cut out the references made to them in the society columns ol' newspapers and preserve them care fully in a scrap book, which is some times beautifully bound. Gray-white wool, looking as though it had jr.Rt come oil' the sheep's back, is flecked with rose and green or other colors, and trimmed with matching ribbons in children's cloaks. This ia the same materia! of which women's wrappers were offered last seaso... Another new material used for chil dren is in hillock weaving, the tiny hills that dot the surface being in a different color from the ground. Lit tle wraps cf this are finished with rib bons of two colors. '"lie standard f-s --eortment of soft, warm, figured im ported cloths is shown. Fashionable '"hairdressers say that hair brushed to a satin finish will be worn in the near future, although the fringe of short curls about the faca will be retained, as they make a wo man look more youthful. The skirt of the day is no longer lined stiff stuff, but is wadded up to the waist with very thin wadding, and, of couase, covered with silk or sutiu, the softer the better, for it is no longer good form to have the gown rustle. Silk and wool mixtures will be largely used in the making of street and church costumes for the spring. In its weaving the silk threads are thrown almost wholly on the surface of the goods, and a rich lustrous effect produced. Mrs. Casey Tincher, ninety years old, went to Carlisle, Ky., the other day to draw her pension. She walked twelve miles and seemed no more ex hausted than a woman of thirty would have been. She walks to town at least once a week. Artificial flowers are worn on even ing dresses, placed as if they were growiug at the side of the skirt, but nearly always mixed with ribbons. Large bunches and large trails are used, and only the most natural look ing flowers are worn. Imagine a household numbering 0000 persons and no woman allowed any part in the management. Such is the case at Dolma Bagtohe palace of the Sultan. His Majesty never uses a plate and seldom a knifo or fork, but the dinner services are of gold and silver. Everything that is waved is fash ionable. Worsted braids waved come in ill colors, and a design in waved velvet with a jet edge has jet stars worked all over the velvet. Some of the braids have a waved edge crocheted in silk, which makes them very hai J some. Highest of all in Leavening Power.—Latest U. S. Gov't Report. Rtifol Baking Powder ABSOLUTELY PSJRg Broad Making Machines. In the manufacture of the bread making machines of the Inst few years the great object haw been to obviate, as far as possible, the handling of the dough. The materials themselves, having a sort of life imparted to them in the process of fermentation, require entirely different treatment from that to which other materials are subjected, while necessitating machinery of powerful construction to obtain thorough and rapid mixing and the stretching and folding motions essen tial to the increase in elasticity of the dough and the development of the j gluten in the flour. An improved machine possessing all these features lias been constructed. Its various movements are controlled by the turn of a hand wheel. In the working of the mixers the materials are brought from each of the four corners of the receiving trough to the centre of the machine, incorporating the flour and liquor thoroughly by evenly intermix ing them, but without rubbing them against the side of the trough. The* machine has two speeds one for breaking the sponge and for quickly mixing the materials, and the other for the kneading operation. The gear ing for producing these speeds is actu ated by means of a hand-wlieel, which acts quite independently, without stopping the machine. The arms of the machine upon one side are made to act in the opposite direction to ' those upon tho other side, or to work j in the same direction by the simple movement of a hand lever. The trough can bo tilted while the beaters are either in motion or at rest. All the shafts revolve in split gun-metal bear ings, and the kneading arms are pro vided with cone bearings of special construction. The gearing and work ing parts are carefully covered so as to prevent any danger of accident while working the machine.—Chicago Rec ord. 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 ol' physical being, will attest the value to health of the pure liquid laxative principles embraced in the remedy, Syrup 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 perfect 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. Fiensson^kv^ "Successfully Prosecutes Claims. Late Principal Ex&mtnor U.S. Pension Bureau. 3 VTHIU LITTIT win . 16 adjudicating atty since " ? liii li> it, <>: Barley. Coru, Clover Timothy, Grasses. Potatoes, etc., In enormous quantities. 1,000.1 oou Kuses and Plant.*. 35 pkgs. earliest Vegetable seed*, enough for a garden, port I P*M for Sl-W. 1H pkgs. late Vegetableneeds.soc. Say. our Great Northern Oats- HiflWpr^r. ll,l yielded 818 bush, from one bu«l». sown t Did you evor hear t be nice! Pktf. of i bifOii'B j Wp: J" 'l;' *'"' catalogue free upon receipt <>f Kc in stamp*. 1') Farm eel ►ample*. 10,*. w Itb | WW'JPSPM catalogue. lftc. Our creat entaloirue. 130 ratft-c. for fie poet nice. Write to-dry.. WmmhammMmmmrnmm TO SPECULATE IN ||^V4 STOCKS, I ■ it# O Thoroughly post vourself AS to the general outlook, and probable course of the nKJ W • market, by .-ailing or writing here, and HO avail yourself of all \>o»slbls means of information and enlightenment, which we freely place at your dispi sal—then ACT A- judgment die- WHEN? .Vow; it Is the onlv lime YOU are sure of—life is fleeting. WHERE? Well, that " goes without saying "—of course with I's. Our uniform courtesy and liberality will do everything possible to help you. If not conve. nlenl to visit us, ten" te, and get our book, fully instructing you " How to Speculate." and to succeed withal. Therein we impart all the wisdom on this subject that is vouchsafed to mortals. Tlfen you can advise us of your wishes by letter or wire, and your orders will be as faithfully executed us if personally present. COLUMBIAN COMMISSION CO.. ;> Twelve bottles for one dollar, ) mai ' hies®®'®'® 1 > Ripans Tabules are the most effective rec- S J ipe ever prescribed by a physician for any 5 ? disorder of the stomach, liver or bowels. 5 i Buy of any druggist anywhere, or send price to J C THE RIPANS CHEMICAL COMPANY, io Smuca Sr.. Ni w YORK. It Was Before the Day of SAPOLIO They Used to Sav M Wennn's Work is Never Done," New Solution ol the Tramp Problem. Salem lias originated a novel scheme. With the citizens of the capital city the tramp problem is on a fair road toward being solved. A huge rock pile has been formed on Ave years. It was written by amau who put all his mind, and time, and money to making a suc cess of Chicken raising—not as a pastime, but as a business—and if you will profit bv his twenty-five years'work, you can save many Chicks annually. an