■\ l<esson In Savitisr. Mrs. Mar.v Hallen, of Portland, Me., libs in her savings bank book nu inter esting proof of the value of putting money in bank and leaving it there. In 18til she receive! $-100, for which she had no immediate use, so alio de posited it and has not since disturbed the account. It now stands at almost &1300.—St. Louis Republic. William Smith, of Concord, X. H., claims to have fired tho shot that sunk the Alabama. He was boatswain on the Kearsarge and has many relics of his old ship. A llou«e In a Fret. f,ct the mother beconira sick an 1 helpless, nut tho house ts all in disorder. When both father and mother are down, you ma) - as well close tho shutters. Order is brought out of eliaos often very easily, and Mrs. John Matin, of South Butte, Mont., Fob. 17, 1K93, found an easy way out of her difficulties, as she writes thus: ".My husband and I took very bad rheumatism from severe eoKls, and my arms were so lame I could not raisethem to help myself. I sent at onee for a bottle of St. Jacobs Oil, and before the bottle was half empty, I could go about my work. My hus band became so lame he could not pet out of bed. Two and a half bottles completely cured him. I will always praise St. Jacobs Oil an I you may use this as you sea fit." This is a clear case of what is best at the right mo ment. and how every household cau be made happy whero pain abounds. \ #SOO fellowship in painting has been es tablished at Syracuse (N. Y.) University. Ilr. Kilmer's Swamp-Hoot cures all Kidney and Bladder troubles. Pamphlet and Consultation free. Laboratory Binghamtou, N. ¥. Tiik first line of railroad In Norway was opened in 1855. «t(i It II-. S libs. Oal* From One Una. Seed. This remarkable, almost unheard-of, yiel I was reported to tho John A. Salzer Seed Co., LaCrosse, Wis., by Frank Winter, of Mon tana, who planted one bushel of Great. North ern Oats, carefully tilled and irrigated same, and believes that in 189t he can urow irom one bushel of Great Northern Oats throi hundred bushels. It's a wonderful oat. Ik voir wu.r. CJT this out axii SEND it with 8c postage ti) the above lirm you will receive sample package of above oats and their mammoth farm seed catalogue. A There Is more Catarrh in this section of the country than all other diseases put together, and until tile la.-t few years was supposed tube incurable. For a great many years doctors pro nounced it a local disease, and prescribed loenl remedies, and by constantly failing to cure with local treatment, pronounced it incurable. Science has proven caiarrh to be a constitu tional disease and therefore requires constitu tional treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cure, man ufactured by F. .1. Cheney tV Co., Toledo, Ohio, is the only constitutional cure on the market. It is taken internally in doses from l idropstn a tenspoonful. ft acts directly on the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. They offer one hundred dollars 112 -r any case it fails to cure. Send for circulars and testimonials free. Address F. J. Chenky & Co., Toledo, O. old by Druggists, 75c. Smile and save money. Mail your order.* for anything in drug line to E. A. Hall, Charles ton, S. C. Free catalogues. \\Yxt\s Nerve and Brain Treatment, *'»7c.; Liver Pills, 12c.; Hat Dye, 10c.; "2m," Best Worm Powders, 12c.; Porous Plasters, 12c. A Slight Cold, it' neglected, often attacks the lungs. "liroini'f* Dtimvhial TrwUm " give sure and immediate relict. Sohl <mln in boxes. Price 25 cent*. I>r. iioxsie'M Certain Croup Cure Will cheek an ugly cough at once and prevent a cold from going tot lie lungs. frtKts. A. P. Hoxsie, Buffalo. X. V.. M'Pr. • JnpancHe Tootli Powder, Ceiniiiie. A large box mailed for cents. Lapp Drug I 0.. Philadelphia. Pa. Hatch's I'niversal Cough Syrup takes right hold. Sold every where. 25 cents. Beecham's Pills are better than mineral wa ters. Beecham's no others. 25 cents a box. Savannah, New York. Scrofulous Bunches Neck Lanced Without Relief Hood's Sarsaparilla Purifies the Blood and Conquers. "C. I. Hood «V Co.. Lowell, Mass.: "(▼entlcmen:—l had large scrofulous bunches on my neck for 7 vears. 1 treated with differ ent physicians and tried many remedies but Did Not Get Any Help for them. 1 went to Home, N. V., and had them opened.but this vravt' me only temporary relief. Aly physician tlien urged me to take lloo.ls Sarsaparilla, and before I had used one bottle the bunches began to grow better. To-day I Am O. K, t and tin 4 trouble has not returned since I took Hood's Sarsaparilla, only t he scars being left. Hood's Ss ;> Cures Upon my recommendation and the effects of Hood's Sarsaparilla in my case the druggist has sold a great deal of Hood's Sarsaparilla in this place." J.W. (loss. Savannah, New York. II»<»<!'N Pill* are prompt an t efficient, yet easy In notion. Sold by all druggists. 25 cents. "COLCHESTER" SPADING BOOT -<•!» cxtciKt* tin whole leimt i of the note itiiwn to Hip heet. . prntfclinx I In* -ttiniU in «liu- Him A Tit r»mtent* PENSION^Mrg-V": Successfully Prosecutes Claims. utiPriuripnl Fxirr.inw t H Panntm< Hurttnu. IIIIIIJWl*.! kU, SUIVO FEEDING WHEAT TO SHEEP. Moderate feeding of wtieat. to any aniinnl ig not necessarily unwholesome. Wheat in a rich food, oil account of the large quantity of gluten it con tains, and when fed in excess to any animal this causes the masticated grain to gather in masses in the stom ach, and thus interfere with the di gestion of it. Then, of course, trouble follows, and sheep are more easily hurt in this way than any other animal. If wheat is to be fed, and its present low price makes this desirable, it is safest to grind it coarsely and mix it with some cut hay, and thus avoid the usual result of feeding it alone.—New York Times. CARE OF TREES. There is no better time than the present to examine groves and groups of trees in order to determine whether they are becoming overcrowded, and to designate those which should be re moved to make room for the rest. Tho axe is the only remedy for crowding among trees, and when this heroic treatment is necessary 110 considera tions of sentiment should be allowed to interfere with its use. At this sea son, too, it is easier to find where branches are growing too thickly on a tree, and where they are rubbing each other, than it is when they are in full foliage, and iu the warm dnys of mid winter pruning can be dene to advan tage. When it is necessary to remove large branches they should be sawed close to the trunk and the edges cut smooth with a sharp knife. Coal tar applied to the wound will keep out moisture and fungi and thus prevent decay. Any kind of ochreous paint will answer almost as good a purpose, and it can be easily applied with an 1 ordinary brush. All sprouts should ] be cut from the trunk and all suckers from its base, but the dead twigs in | the heads of trees can be more easily j detected in the summer.—Garden and | Forest. APPLE SPRAYING. One-half pound Parisgreen to a fifty gallon barrel of water is the dose. One pound will kill and wither the leaves I and harm the young apple formation. Place two empty fifty gallon barrels in an open spray wagon, back up to j your pump and fill the barrels and then tie a bag over the top to prevent spill ing. When at the orchard fasten a common carriage pump with a wire to the rim or chine of one of the barrels i and then putin the Paris green, stir , with a broomstick and drive up 011 out- i side row of orchard—one stir and one pump. Spray one-half a tree at u time, come down next row, spray one-lialf a tree till the orchard is done. When one barrel is emptied as low as pump will reach pour into tho empty from j the full barrel and when the water j gets less green than it was in the first I place when you putin the first half ! pound add the other half pound. My ! pump is an old carriage washer and j rinsing kind. If the tree is tall throw j up over the tree and a spray will come I down. It is an easy, quick job and i should be done just after the blossom I has fallen and the apple formed. It ; won't prevent mowing and feeding the j grass to cattle especially if you wait till a rainfall and then the first cleat day mow and barn as usual.—New England Farmer. OATS FOR CALVES. No supplemental food is better than ground oats ft* a help in developing the heifer calf. As soon as she begins to eat hay she should have a little night ami morning, fed dry. Begin with a half pint of feed, or even less, and gradually increase the quantity until she will take a pint at ft feeding. See that you keep her thrifty and growing. A calf which is once stunted by insufficient or or improper food will never make so good a cow as she would otherwise have been, no matter how much pains you may take subse quently to make nmends for the early neglect. But the feeding is not the only thing with the calf which you expect to develop into a dairy cow. The training is almost equally im portant. She should be taught to lead by a halter, to stand quietly and to bear handling long before the time when, as a cow, she will be forced to submit to these restraints. No forci ble breaking in will be necessary if you are willing to take a little pains about these matters during early calf hood, and it pays much better to do it then and in this way than later and more forcibly. With such treatment you can easily develop a kind and gen tle disposition, which is of decided money value when you come to put ting her in the dairy. —Philadelphia Inquirer. FEEDING WORK HORSES. The system used in t'eediug horses by large establishments keeping, as in some cases, several hundred head at constant work, may bo of interest to managers of farm horses, writes C. F. Cnrtiss. The horses at work in Swift & Co. 's establishment, of Chicago, are uniformly in excellent condition for service. The teams entered in the re cent cart-horse competition were taken from their regular work, and their general good appearance was a matter of extended comment. Air. Shaw. Superintendent of Swift A- Co. V horse department, in explaining the man agement of (hose horses, stated that they feed nothing during the week but the licsl timothy hay and No. 2 white oats, and bran mash and hay on Sunday. No fix 1 rules are followed as to quantity, the amount being reg ulated by tlie requirements of th< horse, which generally ranged from two to eight quarts p« i feed. The bran mash on Sunday, lie stated, is n neeessity to prevent what i* known as Monday morning disease, <>r spinal iiii'iimgitis, whieli is due to overfeed ing during enforced confinement fol lowing h |>eriod of netivi work. Ii as stated that u full gra'li feed was given on Sunday a large percentage of their horbo would lie uutit fof fcei- 1 vice at the beginning of the week's work. The disease in nu aggravating one and quite difficult to cure. This is a common experience with nil managers of horses doing heavy city work, but it is seldom thought of in the treatment of horses doing farm | work, although it is altogether likely | t hat many disorders of farm teams aro traceable to this same trouble. The | horse that is subjected to rigid work, requiring heavy feeding, cannot be 1 safely taken off from that work ! abruptly without exercise and con tinued on full feed; and even for ; Sunday's rest the plan of reducing the feed and making it of a laxative na ture is highly recommended by the best authorities. Failure to observe this precaution may not result in a I well-developed ease of this disease, but ' it has a tendency to lead to disea.se or disturbance of the functious in vari ous ways hardly less injurious even if less apparent to the eye.—Rural Home. now TO HAVE 0001l FIU'IT. Under natural conditions a tre« must attain a certain agebeforo it will bear fruit. This varies greatly with different kinds of fruit, some coming into bearing much earlier than others. Whenever we allow or force a tree to bear fruit before it is reasonably well established, the vitality of the tree is injured. Nature's way is to let the tree reach maturity before it sets to work to effect its reproduction by seed. We may by dwarfing the tree obtain fruit earlier. In some cases and un der some conditions the same varieties of trees will bear earlier than at others, and in testiug new varieties dwarfing is often allowed in order to get at re sults earlier, but when this is done extra care must be given or the vital ity of the tree will be injured. In the ordinary orchard it is best to let the tree bear in its own good time rather than attempt any forcing. Cultivate and fertilize so as to give a healthy, vigorous growth. Get the tree well-established and ordinarily it will bear good crops of fruit. Most trees, if thrifty and vigorous, are inclined to overbear, to set more fruit than they can properly mature without a too severe draft on the vital ity. One reasou why so many trees bear fruit only in alternate years is that they are allowed to overbear to such an extent one season that the tree is so exhausted that it requires the next season's growth to recuper ate. For this reason proper pruning in season and careful thinning after the fruit has formed well is necessary in order to prevent the tree from over bearing and at the same time secure a better quality of fruit. The formation of fruit buds de pends not so much upon changes which occur during the present season's growth as upon those which preceded it. Bark and young wood in autumn and winter are laden with stores man ufactured in the leaves the year be fore and stored up for use when re quired. Generally speaking, the fruit buds, too, are formed the year before, and the management should be such as will promote the development of fruit buds at the expense of the leaf buds. The fruit grower, so far as he is able, must cheek the growth of one and develop the other for fruit forma tion. Hut after the fruit is fully formed it is essential that too much be not allowed to remain on the tree, •especially if a fine quality of fruit is desired. Thinning so that 110 two specimens touch each other will aid in improving the size, color and flavor of the fruit. It is the fruit grown under these conditions that pays the best profit, as it sells readily for good prices. —St. Louis Republic. FARM AND GARDEN NOTES. Do not manure against the roots in planting. Never prune grapes when the ground is frozen. The best crops of strawberries are grown with clean culture. Lime and wood ashes make a good fertilizer for old orchards. The peach tree is a very rapid grower if planted in a verv rich soil. It is better not to breed at nil than to breed to a common stallion. Without sound, well-balanced feet there is 110 excellence in a horse. Well-mulched trees will not start to grow quite so early in the spring. Newly planted grape vines should be allowed to grow only one shoot. The man who injures his horse by overwork is blind to his own interests. Manure from the hog pen is one of the best that can be used on peach trees. At the present low prices of feeding stuffs it does not pay to starve the colts. If currants are given decent treat ment iu the way of maintaining and cultivating properly, 110 plants are satisfactory croppers. One mistake often made in the garden is planting in too close and in too short rows so that all the work must lie done by hand rather than with the cultivator. In pruuing trees of all kinds it is bei.er tu have one strong branch or lituli than two or three weak ones. Keep the heads low and let the sun's rays all through tin' trees. All superfluous shoots 011 stalks that have been grafted or budded should lie removed as soon as they start. If neglected, a more or less serious check would follow to the graft. More trees die from neglect than iioni any other one cause. One thing that is often overlooked is mulching or kpepinj; tin- soil stirred so as to retain moisture near the surface. When a tree iirst leans it is easilv righted up, and mav be held iu its place In a stake or a prop, or. if small, iiv earth or HI.ILS weighted with stones. \ sini r way of Keeping it straight is to carefully stake uud tic when it is Bfct l>Ut, LANK OF"HE TINNEES. CIVILIZED INDINS OF THE FAR NORTHWEST. They Subscribe tor a I*i»per l'rlnlnl In Their OwnljanKiiage ami Have » Postal Systfn. 7\ WAY to the Northwest of / \ America in the mysterious corner o British Columbia, bordered by "unexplored territory" and haimed in by mighty mountains, dwelha race of red men who daily grow jore numerous, who have made themtlves proficient in many of the art>of peace, nnd who, as they become kmvu in their customs and conditions, n»st excite the won der and attentic* of the civilized world. The peojfe are known to the few travelers wh. have found their way among them is the Tinnees, and they have their ie'requent communi cation with "cvilization" chiefly through the Hueon Bay Company posts at Fort Oeogo and Fort Fraser. Their morals are nore strictly guarded than are those of ny whito Nation of to-dav ; they estem cleanliness both of person and HTroundings as they do courage; andthey have a saying that "to desert a riend is worse than to slay him." The last white visitors to the home of the Tinnees wee the men compos ing the Governmut survey party sent north last summc under A. IJ. POU drier, which lias recently returned. The appended n.tes of the chief of the expedition gre soruo interesting facts concerning tie Tinnees and the land they live in. "The immense iountry north of the fifty-fourth pnrnlel, generally de scribed as the 'laic region,' is hardly known to the Resent generation. Years ago, gold excitement in Omineca, a grat deal of trade and travel was taken bat way, and nearly all the old pioners are familiar with the wonderful scoery of the section. "Since the god boom the only in habitants of thi extensive country have been Indiais and a few Htidsou Bay Company enployes. The natives are known as tilt Tinnees, this name including the wlole race, some of the representatives jf which inhabit the country east of lie Rocky Mountains, others peopling the lake region proper and still otliert living as far to the south as the River. The race is divided ,nto many families: First, the Cliilcotins, living on the plain of that name; then the 'Car riers,' or 'porte'.ifs,' around Fort Fraser, and, again,l the Siecanies and the Nahanies, occupying the country north and east of tie Nechaco River. "In language the Tinnees Lave no relationship with tho other tribes of the North, but, curiously, Indians liv ing as far souta as California (the Navajoes, for example), or in Okla homa, the Chilcotees, speak a tongue very similar to tint of the Tinnees. "Of late years a youug and ener getic missionary, Father Morriee, of Stuart Lake, has |>een giviug his time and talents to llie upbuilding of a Tinnees Nation vhich shall compare not unfavorably in many ways with that of tho whtea The mother tongue of the Tiinces, which is ex ceedingly rich in expression, has been through his efforts reduced to a sys tem of phonetic writing, the charac ters being remaikable for the simplic ity and from tlu fact that they rest rather than wiary the eye of the reader. The written language is so simple and so systematic that ft child or a man may with equal facility learn to read or write it to perfection. Not one of the tribe, from a child of six to the old men and women of three score and ten, is unable to-day to either read or write. "The phouetii Tinnees is employed by the Indians in their correspond ence—for they have risen to the dig nity of a postal system of their own— in the marking of signs for the guid ance of travelers and explorers, and in the hundred aid one other ways fa miliar to civilizid Nations. "To further ikvelop the theory and render its success more complete Father Morrice, with the aid of the In dians, had speciul types cast from his own designs, boight. a printing press and three year* igo printed and pub lished several elementary works on the language and history of the Nation. For the past two years he has been is suing a monthly newspaper, to which every Indian in the vast district is a willing subscriber. It is called the News. Its first page is devoted ex clusively to local affairs, such as hunt ing and trapping and all else which may practically interest the commun in which it circulates. Another portion is devotel to religious sub jects, and tho remainder of its sixteen pages of space treats of the world in general, a great deal of attention be ing paid to science, the enstoins and manners of foreign countries, useful inventions, etc. "There is," says Mr. Poudrier, "no other part of the province where the Indians are so highly civilized, so truthful and so honest —rare qualities indeed for an Indian race. One great advantage traceable to the publication of the News is the development of a taste for and a knowledge of agricul ture. The liuuting ami trapping are nearing an end in the lake region, and the natives see that llie resource which they must in future look to is farming. The new generation is fast becoming a community of scientific tillers of the soil. Were all the Indiansof America in so advanced a state they would at no time be a cause of anxiety ; the Government would never be called upon to supply their wants, and the white brother could learn not a little from them that he does not now know." The Talismani<* Moonstone. The 'remarkable peculiarity of the moonstone is, that while in all other gems internal seams are called tlaws, and detract from their value, in the moonstone they are called "magic mirrors" because those favored mortals who are gifted with the illumination of the astral can, by its aid, read en those surfaces of milky white re jections of the pa.-t and the promise | of the future. —Detroit Free I'ress. 1 For thirteen years Ferdinand Halt zenland, s German veteran, living in Heading, I'elm., ha - not tasted water. Wounds received in battle compel to tal abstinence from drink of all kinds | except milk and eollee. SCIENTIFIC AMI! INDUSTRIAL. Birds with long legs have short tails. The pitcher plant snares insects and swallows them, but does not digest them. Snakeproof Aluminum boots have been tried in Florida swamps and are a success. A French surgeon removed a bullet from the eye of a child without de stroying the sight of the optic. If a well could be dug to a depth of forty-six miles the air at the bottom would Vie as dense as quicksilver. In the northwestern part of Colorado there is a region several hundred square miles in extent which is a vast deposit of petrified fish. The "tartar" on human teeth is filled with animalcules, which are de stroyed by vinegar. Vinegar itself contains eel-like insects. A writer on elephants declares that when very hot the elephaut will insert his trunk into his throat, draw up water and sprinkle it over his back. The cause of the superstition con cerning the opal is found in the fact that this gem is very liable to split, and consequently to become worth less. There have been more remains of mastodons and other extinct mam moths found in Ichtucknee River, Florida, than any other stream in the world. A. H. Savage Landor, grandson of the poet Laudor, has recently returned from a prolonged sojourn among the hairy Ainus of Yezo, Japan. The aver age "height of tlieae people is 621 inches for men and 58 J inches for women. The arts of collecting provisions, storing and preserving food, domesti cating aud managing flocks and cap turing slaves are quite as well under stood by auimals and insects as by man in the earlier stages of his civilization. The California woodpecker is an in sect eater. Yet in view of the ap proach of winter, it prepares a store of food of a wholly different character and arranges this with as much care as an epicure might devote to the storage of his witie in a cellar. A grower of pineapples claims valua ble medicinal properties for the juice of that fruit, confidently asserting that it will cure indigestion, no matter how severe, and has proven itself to contain wonderful tonic Rnd restora tive qualities for a weak stomach. It, relieves, and, so to speak, warms and nurses the distressed organ. A red-hot wire of platinum has for many years past been used for cutting various organic substautauces, but it is stated in the London Chemical News that Mr. Warren has discovered a new use for this method and employs a wire heated by an electric current to saw the hardest kinds of wood. At firstthe wire would break,but he remedied this by using a steel core platinum-plated by a solution of platinic chloride ia either. Dwarfing Trees in Japan. The art of dwarfing plants is so lit tle known in other lauds that a short description of its process is given by Garden and Forest. The pines may truly be considered the most import ant of all trees in .Japau, and great care is taken in their cultivation and preservation. They are generally grown from seed, and great care is taken to select ths choicest quality of seed. In the spring of the second year, when the eosulillgs are about eight inches in Loight, they are staked with bamboo canes and tied with rice straw, the plants being bent in differ ent desirable shapes. In the next fall tliev are transplanted to richer soil and are well fertilised. In the follow ing spring the plants are restaked and twisted and tied in fanciful forms. This mode of treatment is given until the seventh year, when the tree will have assumed fairly large proportions, the branches being trained in graceful forms and the foliage like small crowds of dense green. The plants are now taken up and placed in pots one and a half feet in diameter, and are kept well watered every succeeding year; great care must be taken to keep new shoot pinched back. After another three years of this treatment the trees are virtually dwarfed, there being no growth thereafter. The dwarfing of bamboo is another important braneh of Japanese nursery business. A tew weeks after the shoots begin to grow, and when the trunks measure about three inches in circumference and tivo feet in height the bark is removed, piece by piece, from the joint. After five weeks, when the plants get some what stout, the stem is bent and tied 111. After three months, when the side shoots grow strong enough, they are all cut oft' tivo or six inches from the main trunk, they are then dug up and potted in sand. Care should be taken not to use any fertilizer, but plenty of water should be given. Cut oft' the large shoots every year in May or June, and after three years the twigs and leaves will present admirable yel low and green tints. Coronets. English noblemen are the only ones m Europe who ever wear coronets on their heads, and the sole occasion when they do so is at the coronation of the sovereign. They hold them in their hands through the ceremony, and at the moment when the Arch bishop of Canterbury places the crown upon the monarch's head every peer and peeress present dons his or her coronet. Inasmuch as nearly half of the House of Lords is composed of peers created by Queen Victoria, it is probable that none of them lias taken the trouble to provide himself with the silver coronet, lined with crimson velvet, of his rank, and were the Queen to die and the Prince of Wales to ascend the throne, there would doubtless be a run on the court silversmiths for baubles of this character. The baron's coronet, worn by the poet. Lord Byron, at the coronation of George IV., and which was manu factured for the occasion, and is now in this country and was in the posses sion of the late proprietor of the Phils delpliia Ledger, who converted it into a chatiug dish for the humble vege table known as tile potat >, having re moved the velvet cap from the inside and turned it upside down, so that the four silver IHIIIS constitute the sup port of thi chatiug dish. Vogue. Highest of all in leavening strength.— Latest U.S. Gov. Food Report. RpyaJiwS ABSOLUTELY PURE Economy requires that in every receipt calling for baking powder the Royal shall be used. It will go further and make the food lighter, sweeter, of finer flavor, more digestible and wholesome. ROYAL BAKING POWDER CO., 106 WALL ST., NEW YORK. The Elephant a t'owanl. "Hie elephant is an arrant cow aril," said John L. Terkins, as he re counted his experiences in a circus to a group of friends. "I had charge of an elephant once that had a vicious disposition, but ho would do anything that I wanted him to. I used to prod him with sharp steel and otherwise impress upon him that I was master and intended to remain so. An un derkeeper weut on the kindness the ory and treated the big animal as well as if he was a member of his own family. ■'After we had been together about a year I was awakened one night in a littlo Nebraska town by human shrieks in the elephant's quarters. Rushing to the place, I found the linderkeeper being crushed to death. As soon as the cowardly pachyderm saw me he trembled in every muscle, dropped the man and tried to run, but I gave him a lesson with my steel prod that he never forgot. Then 1 picked up the man, who, I supposed, of course, was dead, and I found that he had re ceived ouly a broken arm and a broken rib as a result of his kindness to the elephant. He got well in a few weeks, went to the elephant and punc tured him with a steel prod until the fellow bellowed for mercy. After that we were all together four years, but the elephant never again attempted to injure either of us."—St. Louis Globe- Democrat. Strange Avenue ot Tree*. A strange avenue of trees is owned by the Duke of Argyll, and it is year by year growing longer. Each of the trees has been planted by some nota ble person, and a brass plate is fast ened to the iron fencing surrounding the tree, signifying by whom it was planted.—St. Louis Republic. The houses of Rome are valued all SWSo per inhabitant. 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 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; effectualiy 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 llowels without weak ening them and it is perfectly free from every objectionable substance. Syrup of Figs is for sale by all drug gists in oOe 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. .In ii u ii ry per ri-nl. 15 1# " Frbriin rv 1 11 15 15 " Mnrck 1 « TOT A l„ 57 per mil. Wc liavt' pniil ii> our <-u»t»iiier» in BO Hay*. Profits i«ht twice each mouth; money can lie withdrawn any time; |'-K) toslO'X)c:»n be invested: write for information. I ISIItK A C 0., Ilniili<>r» iiiml lliokei*. IS and -U !lron<tvvn\. Neu York. £2 A. M. LEBB & CO. UjZZ in*ton. I>. C., ATTORNEYS FOR IX YEN TO It*. Procure botn American anl Foreiuii Patents. Buy and j»ell Patents in all I classes of Inventions. Employ agents every where an I pay BI<? SALARIES. t'orreHpon- CUmm deuce from luvntorsand live agents solicitcd. HtiMS^^ChewinEfitiin •• Cures aud Prevents Kueumatisin, lndi<? *st«on, •• A Dvspepsia, Heurtlmru, C ttarra and Astunuu A r Useful in Malaria and Fevers. Cleanses th« 112 A Teeth and Promotes the Appetite. Sweetens A T the Breath, < 'ures the Tobacco Habit. Endorsed 112 •• by the Medical Faculty. Send for 10, 15 or 2'» •• A cent package. Silver, Stamp* or Ibatal Note. A 112 (»KO. k. HALM. 14" West 21>th St., Sew York, 112 DROPSY H many thou, sand cases pro nounced hopeless. "From first dose svmproms rapidly disappear. and m t*r. .lavs at least two-thirds of all symptoms arc removed. BOOK ( testimonial* of miraculous » ur*-s fent FRtE. lummmiixsmwL-si We *** tn*» largest grower* of farm and vegetable seeds in the world, wneat. Oatso Barley, Corn. Clover Timothy, Gmsse*, Potatoes. etc., in enormoat quantities. 1.000. 000 Hoses ana Plants. S5 pkgs. earliest Vegetable seed;*, enough for a garden, poet paid for §IOO. 1* pk&s. late Vegetablese*tls,soc. Say. our Great Northern Oats yielded 218 bush from one bush, sown! Did you ever hear the like? Pkg of thieOatj *' P opne T p "l >cn j'f In tamps, lo Farm Seed "Hethai Sorko Easily Works Successfully." 'Tit Easy to Cloao House With SAPOLIO Kiisiuesslike Hoof blacks. Probably the smartest young busi ness men in New York arc the Italian bootblacks about Broadway and Canal street. They accost the passerby with the usual "Shine, shine, sir?" When one refuses to recognize their solicitations, they become confiden tial, and following their victim ex plain : "Nice-a shine, boss, nice-a shine—only three cents" (holding up three fingers). If this appeal does not produce the proper effects the anxious bootblack makes a "coup." Plucking the man's sleeve he cries out: "Two centa, boss! Only two centa, first-a class-a shine, boss, only two centa!" The bootblack has learned that the average man's heart is not large enough to resist such a plea, and he succeeds, in nine cases out of ten, in inveigling the passerby to stand up against a wall and have his shoes blacked for "only two centa, boss!"— New York Recorder. "SLEEPLESSNESS, V »v * _ yNervous De- 'X Nf . bility, Nerv -1 ous Exhaust -1 tion, Neural gia ' p « ra 'y s7V\: J' sis . liocomo- S tor Ataxia, s Melancholia, and kindred ailments, whether resulting from over anxiety, overwork or study, or from unnatural habits or excesses, arc treated as a specialty, with great success, by the Staff of Specialists attached to th» Invalids' Hotel and Surgical Institute at Buffalo, N. Y. Personal examinations not Always necessary. Many cases are success fully treated at a distance. AOm IT Iff A A. new and wonderfully AD 1 nIA, successful treatment has been discovered for Asthna and Hay Fever, which can be sent by Mail or Express. It is not simply a palliative but a radical aire. For pamphlets, question blanks, refer-; ences and particulars, in relation to any ef the above mentioned disea-ses, address, with ten cents in 6tamps, World's Disjiens arv Medical Association, 663 Main Street, Buffalo, N. Y, Refuse of ttie high speed at which Circular Saws are run more power is watted in friction than is used in sawing, where tli* bearings of the t-haky, wooden saw frame get out of line. In the A«*nuotor Saw Frame, the only Steel Saw Frame evor made, this difficulty is absolutely anil wholly prevented Ik* a use TIIK ItKAICIX.S KOIt THE NllAfT Ah'K M*l>K HYU.4U- ItITTISH IT Iy THK rf*l>S OKA PIfCE OK ftTEFI. TlltlVG. The steel tubing and babbitt ar»* then slitted to as to take up wear with a bolt the fram- la nil uteel, rl*ld, »nd rWeted together »u that nothiue ran get loi.ae or ont or plaee. The guard fa emirclta thenf an to i».oAe it impossible for o.tetoa.t hint, a point of the greitftat or porta nee in u saw to be used by unskilled hands. The swing frnine which carries the wood to l>e sawed and which automatically returns to its place has also a puard to keep a pole off from the flywheel and yet does not cause it to present very in uch of an angle to the paw The use of a 1001b. 20inch fly wheel and 26 imh saw makes this easily possible. It. is therefore, a very desirable Pole Saw, nuking it easy to cut up any long material quickly and safety. Another featuieof Since we offer this rcry superior saw frame with a 26 inch superior saw at a much lrss price than any cheap imperfect wooden frame can b«» for, we are sure that the friends of the Aermotor will appreciate the fact that we have been doing the public a great service and distinguished ourselves in redesigning an old article and putting it into an infinitely imDroved shape. For a saw of similar sire and quality ordinary wooden frame, you would le charged |V-0. 11V make thin all-stfl frame and tin* su, trior sau at s4o, ANI> tJIVE MM A fllAXt K TO CRT IT AT $!.», f>.> the b,-nrjit of our Ceuretl Atrmotor. We have sold an enormous number of Power Aermotor ■mtflts with which saws are used, and a poor saw that runs hard detracts from their usefulness and their reputation. If we fur nish a very superior saw at a very low price, many geared out fits wiil b« bought to drive them Wherever one Ueared Aer motor goes, others are sure to follow When we take a well known article, redesign it.and put it in a shapo very superior to anything that has appeared liefore, it widens and enlarges our reputation for doing well everything .ii which we put our hands, and this is the thing that has in the past brought so much business to our factory, and which m -he future, we have no doubt, will bring, practically, all the Misiness o**t line. It is this reputation that we are daily We believe that this Aermotor Steel Saw Fram* and Saw will confirm and enhance the fame which we have gained hi the manufacture of Steel Windmills and Steel Tower*-, hence, for the purpose of scattering them so that evcryb««dv mav know that a B ood thing can he had for a small price. V fc O* FKK THIS STfcF.I. SAW AND FRAME F'OK flit CASH AM* FSVF roPIKM OF 40VF.rtTlSF.MKXT No. 1 of this series as per conditions stated in No 2. In our neat advertisement. No. 4. we shall talk of galvanising, and make an offer that will bo universal interest Thin u udv. So. S.. A hHMOTOH CO> mWORLD'S * t tnh. •«». TWO MEDALS mSMKSSM and one Diploma for Beauty, ;\M \fW strenglAi -.nd Clie»pne««.Over of these vehicles have been sold dire t to the people. 112 Send at once for our complete Mvrv/ catalogue of every kind of »ehu le >t harne a,als hook A' ttrads #!••. of testimoniHlß, they ar. free. MXIANCE CARRIAGE CO., CINCINNATI. O* W. Tje DOUGLAS S3 SHOE reyll:t 1 custom work, costing from $4 t»» so, best value lor the money T MtnUlnC j n the world. Name and price 112 /WFTT on the bottom. Every I \« V» pair warranted. Take no fiubstl / k lines for ladies and tlcnien or send for //- fc W'L UOU6 strated Catalogue I WmMjil- dor bv mail. Postage free. You can get the best bargains of dealers who push our shoes. IS Best Cough Byrup. Tantos Good. UmH Ivl in time. Sold by druggists. pf
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers