Hearty-Made Forests. Machinery has become so perfected that establishments now offer to re move trees from six to twenty feet io diameter and reset. Such trees are now lifted, together with from one to four tons of soil, and rtst't before one's door. Tree-moving began in the West and records its greatest success there, but quite large undertakings of this kind have lately been successfully carried out in New England.—Boston Globe. The Czar and Ihe Poet. An utterly unknown British poet recently sent some verses to the Czar congratulating liim on his recovery. Apparently so surprised and pleased at getting a good word from England, ho sent the poet, much to his aston ishment, a magnificent fur coat. —New York Journal. II linn t'omp. Will Ii Be CSenlle? fieutle spring witli tho flowers of May may woo us into a careless indilTereuco of s-un til r> laws. It is tho old story, a thrice told talo of being rash and taking the conse quences. There is no timo in tho wholeround of .'he year when results aro more serious from an ordinary want of care than now. What with a changeful temperature and in fectious dampness, rheumatism is most prev alent and in the most aggravated forms. Even in tho pursuit of the season's pleasures, its pastimes and sports, there will be a pro digious crop of sprains and bruises, of lame backs and stiffened limbs, of neuralgic affec tions and sciatic troubles. Men and women wili suffer intensely, and only because they fail to be provided with what is known to be the remedy for them all. When it is saidthat St. Jacobs Oil is that remedy, it is only say ing what thousands know and thousands have pronounced it tho best. ITALY has twenty-one universities, with 300 professors and 0000 students. Hr. Kilmer's KWAMI'-ROOT cures all Kidney and Bladder troubles. Pamphlet and Consultation free. Laboratory Binghamton, N. Y. THE Uniou Pacific Itnilroad owns or con trols 7081 miles of line. H Onlw From One llns. Semi. This remarkable, almost unheard-of, yield was reported to the John A. Salzer Seed Co., La Crosse, Wis., by Frank Winter, of Mon tana, who planted ono bu3'iel of Great North ern Oats, carefully tilled an 1 irrigated same, and believes that in 1894 ho can grow irom one bushel of Great Northern Oats three hundred hu-hels. It's a wonderful oat. IK YOU WTR.t. C4IT THIS our AND SEND IT with 8c DOstllKe to theabove llrin you wili receive sample package of nb tvc oats and their mammoth farm seed catalogue. A Miilnh's Cure Issnlfl on n cuarantee. It cures Incipient Con sumption; it is t he Best Cough ('lire; in'., 50c., $1 A wonderful stomach corrector—Beecham's Pills. Beecham's—no others. 25 cents a box. I Cdpt.T/jomas Cnave i V y Reach Haven, N. J. EICHTEEN YEARS A Seafaring Man Sußers From Impure Blood I'oinoiiou* Tainl K\pi llfil and llrnliti Ita lia iit.il by IIIHHI'M. "C. I. Hood A- Co., Ijowell. Mass.; "I wish to let you know what Hood'sSarsapa rilla ha* done for me. 1 have been troubled witb A Scrofulon* Sore for a 1 Mint < iuht» fn year-. Kor the l-ast year the pni>4»nouM impurities have Kprt-ad tlinmuh my wyatcm, and sore* have broke out all over my bod>. 1 tried many kinds of inediciuo and Hood secures nothing did in* any ijood until 1 began to try a Uitlliof |tond'- Sar-aparilla. I continued with it regularly and have taken four bottle*, i am Now Perfectly Well and ound, Iwiiitf \< ur* ol Several erf mi friend* noting Ihe benefit lli**lNareana rilla ha* bt*n to me are now taking it with null.. I -hull wholly retoinmeud Hood* >ai-.ai»anlla *1 e\»«r> o|)|M»rtitnity." Captain THOMAH CM. INK. licadi llaven. New .leraey. Hood'* Pill* .m- Ilii• »*-*! family cathartic. Kt-n tie atai . r?e» iiv, li y a U»K. 'is n- n tv N Y N P— |S Tfcr t»« tor su«i Ti •b •< I ip- »n4* a ha* 10 in«h WltM-l «»h i u.-H Uc* II.IN t»f lit »a th* H . 112 Ihl Mlwrn I fi« i* l «Ol |y IBcluHk ft w lh« >«■-*, ei-*» •, It n« . 1 y tt« ' '» <» '£» ifu (»•% «.<!• UWI Mi » I * I .11 »r-*l I »»»,!, in !(>• W t « - 1 If »•«»«. ,*| .•-lb. rut Ol _ ■ » »l Wi i. W ' **• • «'•»» -'i •* «■"""» nit K ftf • ' ,*• 7 V ' H4LMS < ChswingGtim i i • 0 • 112 a *r. • • • II 11. , • , • . I I •« l| h 112, , , , M M " lit « « . » % *• turn H « lioi* |oi4 u oot « *•*#*»» •• in 4e» • I-II l M 4I •• H .mIM* «m.I Mi «*• »•. i <• «M4 J«# Mi it w I inii «ii II eiiun y*iM»t Y' FERTILITY UNDER WATER. POSSIBILITIES OF THE BOTTOM OF CHESAPEAKE BAT. It Is Ono of tile Richest Agricultural Keglous In tlm World—Adapted Only Kor One Crop. HESAI'EAKE BAY, b»yn the ( / Washington Star, is ono of the V ' y richest agricultural regions of the earth. The fertility of its bottom he compared only with that of the valley of the Nile ami the (ranges aud other great rivers. But it is adapted for producing only one crop —the oyster. This mollusk, it must 1)0 remembered, lives on vege table food, us do nil animals directly or indirectly. If there were no plants, all animals would starve at once. All human food is vegetable in its origin, whether eaten in the shape of plants or as beef, mutton and eggs. In the sea the blue fish preys ou smaller fishes; many of these on smaller ones; these, in turn, upon minute crusta ceaus ; tliese an still smaller creatures ; j aud these last pasture on the micro scopic plants which swarm at the sitr ! face of the ocean. All auimals on land j and water depend for their existence ! ou vegetable food. To the superficial observer the vege tation of the sea appears to be very ' scauty, and, except for the fringe of 1 sea weeds along the shore, the ocean I seems, so far as plant life is concerned, to be a barren desert. But the micro i scope shows that the surface swarms I with minute plants, most of them of stmuge forms, having nothing in com mon with the trees aud herbs and | grasses of the land except the power j to change mineral matter into food ' that is fit for animals. Most of these plants are so small as | to be invisible to the unaided eye, i and, even when they are gathered to | gether inn mass, it looks like slimy, ! discolored water. They seem too in \ significant to play any important part in the economy of natur-', but the ! great monsters of the deep, beside ! which the elephant and the ox and the [ elk are small animals, owe their exist - ! once to these microscopic plants. Their vegetative power is wonderful past all expression. Amoug land plants j corn, which yields seed about a hun dredfold in a single season, is the em blem of fertility, but it can be shown S that a single marine plant very much smaller than a grain of mustard seed i would till the whole ocean solid in less i than a week, if all of its descendants | were to live. As countless minute auimals are constantly pasturing upon them the multiplication of these plants is kept in check, but in calm weather it is no | rare thing to find great tracts of watei j many miles in extent packed so full ol ! them that the whole surface is con j verted into a slimy mass, which breakf i the waves and smooths the surface like oil. The so-called "back water" of the Arctic and Antartic Oceans con sists of a mass of these plants crowded together until the seas are discolored by them. Through these so,is of "black water" j roam the right whales, the largest ani mals on earth, gulpiug at each mouth ful hundreds of gallons of the little mollusks and crustaceans which feed on the plants. In tropical seas ships sometimes sail for days through great floating islands of this surface vege tation, ami the Bed Sea owes its liamo to the coloration of its water by swarms of microscopic plants which | are of a reddish tinge. It has been surmised that man may at some future 1 time assert his dominion over the 1 fishes of the sea, sending out (locks and herds of domesticated marine auimals to pasture and fatten upon I the vegetable lite of the ocean and to make its vast wealth of food available. Chesapeake Hav receives the drain - age of mor. than -40,0 1 >'>,ooo acres of fertile Inn I, th- most valuable part of the soil from which is received eventu ally in the bosom of itH quiet waters. There it is deposited all over the bottom in the form of fine black sedi ni lit, known us oyster mini. This is just as valuable to mnii and as tit to nourish plauts as the mil l which set ties everv year on the wheat fields ami rice fields of I'jifypt. it is a iiiitnr.il fertilizer and it is so rich in organic matter that it putritlea in a few hours when expoM-d to the sun. In the shallow waters of the bay, under the influence of warm r, this mud produces u most ItiMiriont vegotatiou, but with few exception* tin' plants which <jrow from it are mi croscopic and invisible. They are not confined like laid plants to the sur face of the soil, their food Ileitis dif fused in solution throughout the whole liody of the water As they are bathed on all sides liv nourishment, they do not have togo through tin slow process of hucloiih it through roots an I stems, itul they au I multiply at a rat. which has u<> p»i ailel 111 the lull.l plants. In fact, they would ipnckly choke up the whole bav if they were liot held lU cheek by countless minute animal» which f««nt Upon them I'he oyaUr is an animal especially adapted for living in sii'h waters and for gathering Up thene micruin'opic plants mid turning them into food for mau Microscopic animals ulso contribut.i t<> its iln-t Chr** are rather alniudalit in all water, though not m> uiuch m> a» most people nut KtUe When a professional exhibitor allows you, miiU-r the utu-ro»cop(>, what he call* a drop u| |.ure water, it is UolUlliK ot th> sort It taeltbcr a col lection iuad> by lill. i IIIK at y t ral bar rel* ot Watty, or else |t is a drop wptee/e.| from a pleee of i|iH'«lr<l luius or ffoiu aoiilu olln r atilwtsiife in a lileli ■llch an.lt. I organism have lived au<l Multiplied I.Mik Ihi Hlal. Ibtffr WM* » ItoAb t$ '4f loWH WU fill U>l WuUii* WH*» ¥ >1 lb b« f|**ll «!•»'< i» to Ifii lit* « >.(>! u »• Hul b- «nv IM* 11%#4 M>ii Vl' i (ft. I*II.«< 4 ' I "4» l I#*?, lit «1 i •«« I Ul# 4|' » 4* U4* i** fj. * J ii'llr lit Will It*. "4 l*»'l <I*«M lit# I' 4l* llil * V ! -4<4tfcb<'« 14* i*#-#ii •!»* htut Mi lii | *tfc iL Ih -f | »l«* li« lil Uiu t # )«4«* U#** «« «}*}'•"»• 1 44* I«U|| Im# * if I *1 I If u > I «||* X lit i l|i §*#4i 111 ll i| t • <-t»»i % I# A <i | t*itii» Ai i ilai • iii I mil I*. IkH '* it 10 lt« Mtifjilli* «« 4 JtwrtMMw* !«••* * HOUSEHOLD AFFAIRS. rilll-KEN WITH TOMATO. Fry the chicken a little brown. Then put it into a hot dish. Pour into the pan in which the chicken was fried one pint of boiling water, half an onion chopped fine with a sprig of parsley, two tomatoes, half a table spoonful of butter and half a table spoonful of flour. Let it stew for fif teen minutes. Turn it upon the chicken and serve.—New York Herald. SWEET POTATO CROQTTETTES. For sixteen croquettes take the fol lowing ingredients: One cup (medi um size) hot milk, four lorge tablo spoonfuls butter, one level table spoonful salt, four eggs, two to bo used for glazing; one quart of mashed aud sieved potatoes aud one pint bread crumbs. Add the buter and hot milk to the potatoes. When cool add the eggs, the whites and yolks beaten separately. Bi at until the mixture is light and smooth. Then shape os de sired, glaze with egg, crumb, and im merse in deep bath of smoking hoi drippings. Use the fryiug basket. When richly browned drain on brown paper, then arrange on platter with a garnish of greeu.—New York Tele gram. RRMPKIN PIE. Pare and cut the pumpkin in pieces about one inch square, put them into a stewpan with just enough water to keep them from burning; stew slowly till tender (about half an hour), thee, press through a colander. To every half-pint of pumpkin add a piece of butter the size of r. walnut aud a quar ter teaspoonful of salt; mix and let it stand till cold. When cold put one pint of this pumpkin into a large bowl, add to it one pint of milk, half a teaspoonful of ground cinnamon and one teaspoonful of ground ginger; mix all well togeth er aud sweeten to taste. Beat four eggs until light, then add them to the mixture. Line four deep pie dishes with good, plain paste, till them with this mixture .aud bake in a quick oven for about thirty minutes.—New Yoik Journal. A CHOICE IIKAN SOUP. One of the best of the puree soups is ma le from black tourtle beaus and stock. It is choice enough for any dinner, though, as it is quite nutri tions, it would not be as suitable as a clear soup for a diuner of many courses. Pick over apint of the beans and souk them twelve hours in cold water. The next morning drain and cover with three pints of boiling water. Cook slowly until the beans are ten der. Drain the beans, press them through a fine wire sieve. Heat three pints of beef stock, add the beans, aud stir thoroughly. Heat to a boiling point, season to taste with salt and pepper. Garnish the soup with slices of lemon. Hard-boiled eggs are also excellent in this soup. Cut them in thin slices aud use with the sliced lemon. Have your soup plates hot.— New York Advertiser. HOI'SEHOIiD HINTS. Keep a dish of water on the liack of ft tight stove to purify the iiir. A clean apron worn while hanging the clothes helps to keep them clean. A teaspoon 112 til of ammonia to ono tenoupful if water for cleaning jew elry. l'lace a strip of wood back of the door where the knob hits the paper m opening. Before laying a carpet wash the floor with turpentine to prevent buf falo bugs. Powdered pipe clay, mixed with water, will remove oil stains from wail paper. In bottling pickles or catsup boil the corks, and while hot you can press them in the bottles, and when cold they are sealed tightly. Kid gloves for ordinary wear art painted ; only the bright opera tints, such as fashionable ladies wear to match their colored dresses, are dyed. Vinegar and salt will clean tht black crust off sheet irou frying pans, but they should lie thoroughly scoured afterward with sand sokp or any good scouring soap. If shelves an I lloors of closets are wiped with hot wat r with cayenne pepper and afterward sprinkled with liora\ and alum, roaches and other vermin are kept at bay. When the fat's in the lire it is never wise to throw water upon it. If fut in it kettle boils over and there ar« itslles convenient to throw on the blaze, it is the surest, safest way to put it out. \ simple plan of disinfecting ro mis consist* in putting a saucer fill of salt in the middle of th«- room aud pour iiik oil it a dram or two of sulphuric acid. I'he fumes that arise do the work of dlsiuftH'timi. Silver cracker jars with separate re eeptseles for different kinds of bis cults and cracker* are u novelty. An othei new effect in t »ble silver are th wooden bread platter* set in broa I riuia of worked silver. A silver br< a I knife goes with tin-111, I'lln chummy of s lamp should never In- touched with water A lew drops of slcuhol, or even parafUnc oil, will re lunve the diuitue I, smoky effect, and make the chimney ss bright a. po»M Ide wtieu It Is |Hi||»hrit with a *oft flannel or eliaiuois skiu I'll clean hair brushes ipuekly an I i-aMlv, lake a dessert spmiuful of hartshorn to a ipisrl ttf cold water IU a »a»lt hand basin l>lp m the hair ot the brushes, and rub tin m t>i|<i tin I until clcau lln n niiM well aith cold aster rub dry with a towel an I slattd upriMht at an o|*M window, t vicul) tonl UrtinN, Iht t.iaaiM<**auma, a tyiitnl ut which llv* t lu nits ol thi) Ist «l of th>. S»"l"rii'sl tyw, IdHiiMUlli slisimd a |i:|i|fth of seven! > lot ll* dill fltt II seel 4* In haV« bexu th' shallow SM>> thai lulimlh Is hr-1 llti II W4*i • ~| Iht plaint* I Nilii«<li«, keiwa ant Indian l«rm.iij I «kt 1.1 .n of 01. uf lit. . lettim. * lonnd in a n •It i<M)uN a It a 11 i|t *|f*' prttVtw inal I lull * ft . | .if lit 11 1 tti M< k It rt utaiw ltf l"'U. UiJ *n l Hi,,, i tat I ui K. ( Mi .t. I hi » li. u t.i I H l.it M«t»* lot till,, t U*t.« m Ulfti m| a »t4m, w| Wiii nafflMEN Ruffles are etit circular. Coxcomb red and tan are extensively worn. Mrs. Mary Anderson Navarro is said to be an accomplished banjo player. Katherine E. Kelsey is Probate Register of Sliiawaasee County, Michi gan. Although the parents of Mine. Eames-Story aro Americans, the prima donna was born in China. A woman in lowa who boxed a man's ears will have to pay $">00 damages because she injured his ear-drum. Miss Emma K. Henry, an evangelist, is meeting with great success among the Congregational churches of South Dakota. In the beginning two women were appointed members of the British Royal Academy. None has since been elected. There are twenty-two woman physi cians in the foreign field who are sent and sustained by the Presbyterian Church, North. The First National Bank, of Lexing ton, Neb., lias for its President Mrs. R. H. Temple, and for Vice-President Miss E. A. Temple. Mrs. Ellen Spencer Massy succeeded to the law practice of her late hus band, General Massy, and is one of the most successful lawyers in Wash ington. The richest young womau in her own right in Washington is Helen Carroll. She inherited SIO,OOO a year from her grandfather, Royal Phelps, of New York. One of the vivid reds is geranium, which is of almost dazzliug brightness. None but a brunette with a pale olive complexion should be reckless enough to wear this shade. The influence of the Columbian Ex position is apparent, for there are a lot of new and strange fabrics shown that have never been worn before in a general manner. Pet do;»s across the Atlantic are now dyed to harmonize with the prevailing tint of their mistress's boudoir. Two shades of violet form the most popular coloring for white dogs. Ex-Empress Eugenie, who was not long ago a guest at dinner with Queen Victoria, lias now only careworn lines and a sad, dullish expression on the face that was once Ibe admiration of Europe. There aro women who keep their silver in woolen bags and wonder why it tarnishes. It is supposed that the sulphur in the cloth causes the metal to blacken. Chamois bags are best for silver. Airs. Laura M. Johns, President of the Woman's Suffrage Association of Kansas, gives her entire time to the interest of the cause she represents. She is <>u the road all the time travel ing through Kansas. The Princess of Bulgaria has won the hearts of her people l>v her simplicity. She attends the weekly market on foot, going from stall to stall to make her purchases, escorted only by a re spectful crowd of peasants. Lady Battersea spoke before the Woman's Christian Temperance Union of Brecon, Wales, some time since, and women acted as stewards, attend ing to all the details of the meeting for the first time in history. Some of the new coats are one-sided affairs. Thev have one side rath< r full; on the other is u single wide rever, edged with braid or Htit/hni; Straight or slender person< eim weiir thi'fc basques to great effect. The new fad now in Paris is for young girls to appear us old us jiosssi hie, ingenues being out of the mode, i Young girls are Been unite often, par ticularly debutante*, with powdered luur and make-up as elderly as can be i assumed. In the faee of the absolutely stu , peudous number of pictures which I represent (jiiriMi Victoria or any and ! every domcatic occasion with hor erown ou it is rather curious to learn ' that she has not, as a matter of fact, worn it more than twenty times due ing her whole reign. The finishing push to the animal i craze has come in the bow cravats of lace, pinned into position with dainty sticker pins, jeweled »>r uot, as the re sources of the wearer may permit. N > woman now considers her street Milt complete, without cravat, which is su per i .liUtf both feather* and fur neck i boas. In a ballot taken among its women j readers to asc r.ain their favorite au thors. Figaro ll'arim found lioiirg«tl to . o.icupy tlr«t au I I'ierri Loti second I place. Many of the wo uen who »■* pressed au opinion wrote gratuitously and with much energy, pitching int. 1 Zola, denouncing him and all tin works. The novelist Ouila is decidedly plain looking, about tifty years old, ml "overdresses shockingly. " Sh ' drives ou the fashionable thorough far->s 111 Florence every brinht day, a «a. picture a galliot the lliri|i|<ilu Rstin ot her smart nroiighanii in au orange colored batiste, much triuiuic I Willi lace, all I a black KUipiiri in >n t il In. Mr». lEoU rt l.otils Hievtn*«*U po* •eMHia beauty of lace, figure aud mm I, an I her big, ntifl eves eau, if tie- om<a ■lon Icuisud*, Iwsi in an I >ti | Hhe is a blue st. <ek 1114 who disowns ; bluest •ckiiiiidoui Win u sha waul> ulu pin iii"B«-» she knocks off w«rk in h«-r Ham an liowef Harden uii I dstlna . It atories an I articles for which ; tinn is alwav* a (Market. Ihe hi 10-SK ot Hulk ilsul is tti 'iih I nit* lad) * ntilled 1 > b» call | Vuiilirat. IM «i|.-sl Hl.laiii Wit, u . • tidd I »H It VI• 111 111 Hi I'll < *i|« III# u iu>lAU H *-*. MlI ~ 11. it . I , < lit pi 1 itt.il alt alt- » k'• MMM | u|i li 1 II 111 It ptiltlt li I a tolnim tti j tia»» b || » I Wul Moait I |,„ W ill 111 V|t ft. M |i, lit * • 1 !•»•*« a•SI • I»i • •»«*!• «• .. I The (Jaueho's Dietary. The dietary of the South American gaucho (cowboy) is simple, so his cooking is elementary in its charac ter. As a rule, ho eats only once in tho day, toward sunset; when, jour neys or toil being ended, supper, con sisting of a thin piece of meat, is roasted upon a spit of iron or wood stuck slantingly over a quick fire. If this should be in winter, allsitaround on the skeletons of horses' heads, and with their longknivesor facons (falch ions) cut lumps from the haunch. This, being held in the left hand by one end, is seized with tho teeth at the other, and a tempting tit-bit is skill fully cut off TSe hard, dry meat, de ficient in fatty constituents, is washed down by copious draughts of mate, made from the favorite yerba. The hut, dimly lighted by a lamp in which bullock's tallow is burned, bears some resemblance to a stable, from the bridles, snddles, spurs, bolas, and lassos which decorate the roughly daubed walls. If the Gauclio happens to be a family man, fat, black-eyed, good-natured, nearly naked children indulge in nntics during the meal, while the poultry wink drowsily from their perches. No wayfarer is tin njd from the door, for the hand and heart of tho child of the pampas is ever open to the stranger, and the arrival of such is made a convenient excuse for bringing out the cana, a coarse spirit, which has perhaps been provo cative of more evil than anything else which he can call his own. Water melons are sparingly partaken of in their season, but these are almost the only vegetables the wild horseman cares for.—Temple Bar. A Meat-Eating Nation. The recent dinner of tho Vegetarian Society in this city has attracted con siderable attention. A gentleman from Germany who has recently made a tour of observation in this country, commenting on this vegetarian move ment, said it was just what tho United States needed. Ho added, "Ameri cans eat too much meat. I have ob served that fact wherever I have gone. You have meat for breakfast, for luncheon and dinner. In Germany our breakfast is a cup of coffee and a boiled egg or two. Then come our mid-day dinner in courses, a simple supper and a snack before we goto bed." My German friend was com pelled to admit, however, that ho was not as frugal in his diet as he pre tended to be, for he said that tho Ger man people always felt free to tako a sandwich and a cup of coffee or a glass of beer between their meals aud as a rule managed to eat at least five or six times a day. Englishmen aro great meat eaters. Perhaps we iuherit our appetite and our taste from them.— New York Mail aud Express. The Saml-in-Sngar Fiction. Nearly everybody entertains opinion that a dishonest merchant will mix sand with his sugar for the purpose of gain. This is indeed a popular error, for sugar is but rarely adulterated, from the fact that unless ■scientifically done, and then only with a certain kind of clay, the fraud would iHinie to light without the consumer Applying any test. If sand is mixed with sugar it would be discovered by the sugar eater, or the sand would be found as a deposit at the bottom of the coffee cup, or it would betray it self by the grit in tho cake.—Hume anil Farm. How'* 'rill* i \VH nfTt r ONE HUNDRED Hollars Reword for «nv r.\ e <,f Catarrh that cannot be cured by Hall's Cat arm Cure. K. .1. ('IIKNKV A: Co., Toledo, O. W», tho undersigned, have known K. .1. Che ney fin- ilv last IS year-, anil believe him I'lT f-iilv h'inorilile in nil business transactions an t tlnanc nllv abl • to carry out any obliga t ion mule by t her tlnn. WKST A. Titl*AX, Wli es-ile DruituUts, Toledo, Ohio, WIWIMI, Kivv IN it MAIIVIS, Wholesale 1 is! v, do, Ohio. Ha l's Catarrh Cure is taken lnternalH, art ln ; directly ujion the blood and mueou • mir laoesof t lie system. TeatlinoniaU sent free. Price, 7V. per bottle. Sol I hy all l>rnKi,'isls. Your wife can leu several articles tor #|; you nee I wort h of mailable articles in the ilrnu line; you mail the ortle; to!■ V llal'. Charleston, > C., ar I -..\e ftl. Your wife i. happy. MKir are. and «■> nill ll.li l>. . Free catalogue. Kotl THMOAT DISI: \si:s. COL oils. ('NR.lis. etc., effectual relict i- I'miiid in the it eof "/lioicir* •tlrimrHM /#..•*».," I'ric- . ,-iils .JIIII/ m buret. Japanese Tooltl I'm*ilcr. tieimiiip. A larife liox mailed for tleenls. l.ult;i llrief Co., I'hTl.. j.-j|iliii. I'.i. Hi. Il»\.ic-. < elti.lli | ,„,l|. < me Is a • luapa- i is *ur- line hundred d .-f* for Dels, t tires the family ml Is tor a whole J ear. No lm en. llati It's I hivci s.il I 'omrii S> rit|i Is II I os tivt. fur* t r Croup. . t ills nt ilrunifi-l KNOWLEDGE H iii! o;i 112«! '■ ''i.l iinii. 'Vi riifiil vul l*n>U to >4l" I tn, »■ iii*nl wlu-ii lightly iim il. 'J H many. vho liv«» ln-i- Wr tinniutlit r»;.> •! • tuny lit men-, with n«» Jiiiia', iy iimiij |H<'iii|>lly i;-i «..rl 1-l» »t |irix|ucU tu tile Hit <U u( I'll* i' 111 1 »iiiv, Will ulU»l th» Vsltto l<» i.> .'lU'if lln* |Wr» Itijiiui luvilivi- • i wui.ui-il lit the rniK.ly, h«n«|> »l I-i(f --11. ix i - |in rutin* ill tin (tilin uu»t iui-i |>|.it If aiui •lit tlu' fci t«'. tli« win liK'rf ami Uuly l«-i« li< it pr>i)» rtii nt m(« ifci t 111' •iitr• lli tii..ll > i li*..i I'm tin* »v >«*• lit, till- 11114 toitU. lu.l.lll! Mini tr*l'l» mitt |MfMMM*titly miiHfc »i,ii«ii|i»iiuu It ha* nlk •ii MitMiw ti.w 11 luillUiM* »ii«i Nwl Willi tile IMiHit*! 11l tbi Hit ilii 4I IMuli'u.iiH, Im 1111 It via >ll lltr K el- Urya. l.llfr mil Bi-WvU willful W« ah miiig tin m ait'l 11 U |m rlwli|l (in fi' in «*«»jf uliji iti 'iiatilf »iil«»t4i« • >»»ru|i of 11, ui n *nli i'* iN 'liMg* glut* ill "Wl» alvl 91 Imlili », lull it I* 11. ill- Ilia. till. I !•> II" • • I'■ ■ I- I'll ulll), wl.i>'« Il4nt< M IHMlmii'M • »' If |**»k»,,t. *1 1 jlw l»" " >t"i * ■ 44i> I tit tug Will ill I l ' ■ lljlil, mil Ulil >il/l |H)[ ll lxtllilk ti » 111 !>- L ()£NtMON«:U.V I* ■ '* ■ I Take no Substitute for I I Royal Baking Powder. I I It is Absolutely Pure. I I All others contain alum or ammonia. ■ Wood Drinkers. The Zoothermic Institute in Rome in a "cure" place, where people goto drink fresh blood for the cure of gout, rheumatism and the great prostration and aniemia caused by the malarial fevers of the Tontine Marshes. The blood to be imbibed is first rapidly freed from fibrine, by a carefully aseptie method, the animals from which it is derived having previously undergone inspection by a veterinary surgeon. Some patients bathe cither a part or the whole of the body in the warm blood, and the Italian doctors think with great benefit, in spite of which, it seems a barbaric survival. The poor are treated gratis, but the highest fee is equivalent to fifty cents of our money. —New York Indepen dent. The total area of land and water in the united kingdom is 77,799,703 acres. After reading th-? following letters can any one longer doubt that a trustworthy remedy for that terribly fatal malady, consumption, has at last been found I If these letters had been writtou bv your best known and most esteemed neighbors they could be no more worthy of your confidence than they now are, coming, as they do, from well known, Intelligent nt d trustworthy citizens, who, in their several neighborhoods, enjoy tho fullest confidence and respect of ail who know them. K. C. McLin, Eso., of Kempsvillo, Princess Anne Co., Va., whoso portrait heads this article, writes : " When X commenced tak ing Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery I was very low with a cough and at tirin s spit up much blood. I was not able to do the least work, but most of the time was in bed. I was all run-down, very weak, my bead was dizzy and I was extremely despon dent. Tho first bottle I took did not seem to do me much good, but I had faith in it and continued using it until I had taken fifteen bottles and now I do not look nor feel like the same man I was one year ago. People are astonished and say, 'well, last year this time I would not have thought that you would be living now.' I can thank fully say I am entirely cured of a disease which, but for your wonderful 'Discovery' would have resulted in my death." Kveu when the predisposition to consump tion is inherited, it may lie cured, as verified bv the following frotn a most truthful and niuch respected Canadian lady, Mrs. Thomas Vansicklin, of Brighton, Ont. Bhe writes : " 1 have long felt it my duty to acknowledge to you what Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery and his 'Pleasant Pellets' have done for me. Thoy almost raised mo from the grave. I had three brothers and one Bister die of consumption and 1 was speedily following after them. 1 had severe cough, pain, copious exjiectoration and other alarming symotoms and my friends all thought" I had but a few months to live. At tiiat time 1 was persuaded to try the 'Golden Medical Discovery' and tho first bottle acted like magi-v Of course, 1 continued on with the medicine and as a result I gained rapidly in strength. My frieuds were ustou Ff • 1 «tt#w«| 1011, h.H.|, KXIU V U I tJI UMI'V I ••f \Ot N M*"»« Hi-nrrri ir> «t»U U • !••• |Uh| l»»«*v »»•» »•**• A»K N KOH IIIMI Mi *•• • •» »;»« * n«-< * r * ff t> j.» H V Sikl I « / jB ■nan A jgijM m Ml 1 & v j " IP AT FIRST YOU DON'T SUC CEED." TRY SAPOLIO g r : Layers of Petrifaction in the West. North Colorado and parts of Wyom ing ami Montana are genuine mines of petrifactions. There are petrifactions of every kind, including many varie ties of wood, ferns and plants, fish, toads, snails, frogs, serpents, shell fish and objects which cannot be classified. The deposits often occur in layers as though some great natural convulsion had destroyed the animal life of a whole district at once. The scientists make very few and tolerably weak at tempts to explain the singular phenom enon, and the fact is evident that they know no more about the matter than do the men who pick out the best specimens and sell them to tourists.— Chicago Herald. The New England Historical Society is the proud possessor of a pipe used by General Jackson when he was President. ished. When I commenced the usetof youi medicines, six years ago, I weighed hut li.'< pounds and was sinking rapidly. I now weigh los,and my health continues perfect." " Golden Medical Discovery" cures con. sumption (which is scrofula of the lungs), bv its wonderful blood-purifying, in vigor at itig and nutritive properties. For wea!i lungs, spitting of blood, chortnessof breath; nasal catarrh, bronchitis, severe coughs, asthma, and kindred affections, it is a sov l ereign remedy. While it promptly cures tho severest coughs, it strengthens the system and purifies the blood. "liolden Medical Discovery" does not maka fat people more corpulent, but for thin, |>ale, puny children, as well as for adults reduced in tl.sh, from any cause, it is tho greatest flesh-builder known to medical science. Nasty cod liver oil aiifl its " emulsions,•' are not to l>e compared with it in efficacy. It rapidlv builds up the system, and increases the so'liil J'esh and weight of those reduced Ivlow the usual standard of health by " wasting diseases." To trace tip the entire system after tho grip, pneumonia, fevers, and other prostrat ing acute diseases ; to build up needed fiesh and strength, ami to restore health and v igor when you feel " run-down" and " used up" the liest thing in the world is Dr. Pierce's Golden Mutual Discovery. It promotes all the l>odily functions, rouse® every organ into healthful action, in:riti.-s and enriches th« blood, and through it cleanses, repairs, and invigorate the entire ill. A Treatise on Consumption, giving numer ous testimonials with phototype, or half tone, portraits of those cured, numerous r«f«r eucvs, alio containing successful Home Treat n at for chronic Hml catarrh, bronchitis, asthma, and kindred diseases, will be mailed by the World's Dispensary Medical Associa tion of Buffalo, N V , on receipt of six eeuU 111 stamps, to pav postage Or The Psoplst Common Sen** Meaical Adviser, 1,000 pagM, iiuO iUuatraticus, mailed tor <1 50. n * vi u i.ii ■ * « wM warn
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers