The Kansas Woll Industry. Tn ISM!) the Kansas Legislature passed a law authorizing connties to pay bounties for wolf scalps. Nearly every founty in the State thereupon offered n reward of or #4 for such evidence that h wolf hail been killed. Some counties are paying out as much ns s4oo') a year iu this way, the total in the State amounting to SIiO.OOO. The coyote supply continues to l>e surprisingly large. A correspondent of the St. Louis i*. lluvxie'B ('e II ain ('roup Cure Js the only remedy in the world that cures croup in half an hour. No n;iiuni. A. I\ llox »:c, Hullalo. V. V.. MTr. Karl's Clnver Koot, t n ■ ;i'e-i! bio ►I puri ier. dives Ii " lines-an I lo the complex ion and cures eoiistiiHithiu. '!•"> els., ."Jl cts.. ¥l. lfafTlictod with sore eyes Use Dr. Isaac Tlioinr- Eon's K e-watcr. Urn _ rists sell hi ue.r I oil le <' or .-o.ito by the heat »r cxtraor Unary ex ir tion, liie physical system, lik■ • a tuaehine, i 'mN to bo renovate I au 1 repaired. Th ; t lo.) Inc 'ils to bo puriflj lon i in\in irato I I ood' s Sarsa - _ Ja. ii par ilia C ures It. wft.eh er-:,to. appetite, r-moves tnat tired (eellusj and u'tvM RWi' -t. sunlit. r.»frt slmiK Wood'i pill* Vou «mi innki it I run lit 9n 'ill i'l'nln 4 nil ft#n I,n « .• Jl.\ . i,« . 112 nut! , » ... i - •i . to.i Nil I mhi It If* ii* in tiiiliM-i ii ic. «.« I' \ | \ J ||| 111 IM I • • i ■ • i I 1..4 U- . |'.\ ! S V • . 1.. s , lt '' • h »• \ I \ I ' I »» ■ .. ihi • vt r «• t I * M'M I% i • 'I \ t>.. , i , h, 'ihin'r \\tVi !M M'.l . v. HALT FOR ANIMALS. Salt is necessary for all vegeterian animals, und aids in the digestion of the food. The belief that it is a pre ventive of intestinal worms is well founded, for these parasites are found mostly iu animals of imperfect diges tion. The undigested food encourages these pests, as they feed upon it, or upon tho copious mucus secreted in the bowels of animals suffering from indigestion. Salt should be given regularly with every feed, if cut food is used, otherwise in the form of a lump of rock salt kept in the manger, where it may always be reached.— New York World. DISEASE IN FOWIiS. Overcrowding of fowls is sure to causo disease. The most frequent troubles thus produced are the two most fatal disorders of poultry, roup and cholera. These are both encour aged by bad air, dampness and filth. Cholera is a disorder of the liver by which the gall is secreted too copiously and overflows into the intestines, giv ing the yellow and green color to the excrement. Tho comb and wattles and cheek lopes are also yellow, and a pro fuse diarrhea soon kills tho bird. This is due to overfeeding, although it is a contagious disease, and it is much encouraged by excess of food, especially of corn. There is no effec tive remedy. Sometimes the fowls will recover if kept from food ami given only water in which some hypo sulphite of soda has been dissolved. But they mostly die iu a few days after the first attack. The roup con sists of inflammation of the head and throat, the eyes discharge a thick, sticky matter, anil if neglected are soon destroyed. The treatment for this disease is to bathe the head in warm vinegar and give the bird a pinch of powdered clilorateof potash dropped in the throat twice a day. Some warm soft food may be given as soon as the bird will eat. This disease also is con tagious.—New York Times. HARDY ROSES. Geo. S. Conover, of Geneva, N. Y., gives in Gardening his experience in growing hardy roses for fifteen years i past. His liet now composes twenty- I one varieties, beginning with such good old sorts as Hermosa, Souv. Mal maison, General Jacqueminot, Co- i quette des Alps and Pierre Notting, and ending with Vick's Caprice, Mrs. ! John Laing and Lady Helen Stewart. \ All have proved hardy without pro tection. His soil is a stiff clay loam, constantly enriched with stable ma nure, which is put on spring and fall, the coarse litter being left on during the summer as mulcb, to secure mois \ turo and even temperature at the 1 roots. Mr. Couovor finds that he can not make his rose beds too rich, j Commercial fertilizers have been tried with indifferent success. He prunes j lightly in early spring; severely just as the buds start. Early pruning, j followed by frost, is very injurious. For insects he uses a whale-oil soap solution, two pounds dissolved in tif- . teen gallons of water, put on with a syringe at night, and in the morning j followed by a syringing with clear 1 water. This is the original formula for "which the Massachusetts Horticul tural Society awarded u premium of SIOO in 18-11. A neighbor showers his rose beds daily with the hose, and keeps all insects in subjection. To bacco dust and steins and good Per sian insect powder have been found of j great value. WASTE IN FARM UTENSILS. It is painful to ride through the country and note the waste that is go ing on in farm tools, writes E. L. Yin cent. Valuable mowers, binders and reapers stand in the field all the year j round. Plows are left in the furrow the whole winter long. Wagons are housed under the eaves of the barn or out in more open places. Cultivat ors, drills, rakes, all kinds of utensils are exposed to the weather summer and winter. Every man knows that a piece of wood left out of doors for auy of time will decay. Ho knows also full well that iron will rust. Paint is short-lived. Unless renewed it soon washes off and leaves the bare metal exposed. Frost and heat, dew and sunshine, rain and wind, are most powerful agents in the destruction of farm im plements. One of these tools if well made originally anil cared for proper ly should last a lifetime. The careful farmer never leaves his utensilri thus exposed; when he is done with his plow he wipes the dirt all off and puts it under cover, the same way with the drill, the harrow, the cultivator and even the hoe. I know a man who, if lie happens to forget and leaves his wheelbarrow out will get up in the middle of the if he remembers his neglect, and put it under cover. He cannot sleep if ho knows that the ladder or the ax has been left out. Were every man as careful as this man, the output of the manufactories would be materially lessened and tho pocketbook of our farmers would bo thicker than it now is. Why not try it? —New England Farmer. A NEWI.V DISCOVERED INSECTICIDE. A new and important discovery in the domain of pomology has been made by F. Moulton, of the Gypsy Moth Commission. Maiden, Mu-s. Ar H natc of lend was the substance use.l, which was prepared by dissolving eleven ounces of acetate of lead and four ounces of arsenate of soda m I •"ill gallons of water. These substances quickly dissolve and form arsenate of lead, a line white powder which is lighter than I'arisgi . en, and while be lug fully itM cltertivc m its operation in dextroying iust et lite is far prefer* bh* for i-*vi ral reasons 11 by any means the mixture happi lis tn be use I strou|/i i than neei ,ury to di strny in sect life, even three or foil I' lull' III' Ht>c«»HN|'y uti'eliKtli, || tn uo>*intj in- I jttres the foliage of the plants upon I which it is sprayed. This is a great ! thing- in its favor, for frequently iu I using I'aris green for potato beetle lar , vaj and for the codlin worms, as much ' injury results from tho poison burning I the foliage as would result from tho in | sect if let alone. This is a better insecticide thau Paris | green under all circumstances and for all insects, savs Professor Fernalil. It has the advantage of being readily seen on tho leaves, so that one can tell at a glance which and have not been sprayod, which is often of great convenience. Being lighter than Paris green, it does not settle so quickly, and as a result can be distributed more evenly over the foliage. A great ob jection to the use of Paris green is the | liability of using an overdose, and thereby injuring the foliage of the plants sprayed. With tho arsenate of | lead it can be used if necessary in the proportion of twenty-five pounds to 150 gallons of water without injury to the foliage. Professor Fernalil advises j the addition of two quarts of glucose, | or if that can not be obtained two | quarts of molasses to each 150 gallons of water, used for the purpose of caus ing tho insecticide to adhere to the j leaves. He says the experiments last 1 season show that the insecticido will remain on the trees for a long time, I even after quite heavy rains, and we infer, prove effective. The cost of j these chemicals is given as eight cents I per pound for arsenate of 6oda and i fourteen cents for acetate of lead, at I wholesale. It should be borne in mind ' that these substances are all poisonous, ' and should be used with as great care ] as Paris green. —Orange Judd Farmer. FARM AND GARDEN NOTES. Pigs anil dairying naturally goto ! getlicr. The United States produce annually | forty-six million tons of hay. i A practical beekeeper does not ex pect any great results from flower I fields three miles away. The more docile the calf the better milker is the cow or the better feeder is the steer. There is little danger of 1 handling the calf too early or too I much. In Australia the treo aphis is con trolled by a tea made from tomato leaves. The tea is sprayed in the usual way and a week later an aphis cannot i be found. The best test of the health of the cow is the condition of her milk. Whenever this shows an unusual amount of fat the temperature of the cow should be at once taken. The hog business can bo made to piy if carried on properly. Like all other animals the hog requires change of feed and in summer plenty of room, j grass and other succulent foods. A well-bred animal of any sort is a j machine for utilizing raw products to the best possible advantage. It does this with less waste, and consequently more profit than a scrub can. It is like using good machinery instead of I poor to harvest your crops. Those that have bred to the best I sires have no trouble to sell their ! horses at a fair price, while the small | horses do not bring enough to pay for their feed. The scrub and grade stallions must go; it is only the best i kind of stock that pays now. Whether fattening an animal for market or feeding a horse lor work i regularity is a prime factor in success. ! A good young steer's meat can bo very , rapidly toughened by neglecting to feed him at the right hour a few times I or letting him go without water. The farm that does not support a flock of poultry is not managed to the best purpose. On the contrary, the farm on which too much poultry is j kept will be the lo:>er to the extent t that it is overburdened, for where poultry is crowded into a liousa it 1 ceases to be profitable. Does not freezing butter damage it, and if so why is freezing advocated? asks a Mississippi subscriber of the Farmers' Voice, and the Voice answers as follows: Yes, it hurts it some, but ; it can be kept for months without do ing it any more harm than would re , suit from freezing it a week. The more you can induce the lambs ! to eat the faster they will grow and ! the sooner they will reach the market. Ground oats make the best grain food. ; Place it where they can eat all they desire. Feed the ewes liberally also in order to provide the verj young lambs plenty of milk. There are many things that should ; be carefully observed in the education ■ of horses that are now entirely omitted, j Too much dependence is placed in the bits, the lines, the strength of the harness, the use of the whip, and the , ability of the driver to control the horse by sheer brute force. Hence there are so many fatal accidents. A correspondent of the Field and Farm says that when a team is dis ; j posed to pull unevenly the trouble may be remedied by uuhitching the inside traces and crossing them, so as i to have the same horse attached to the ■ same end of each singletree. He says he has pulled many a heavy load out of a bad place by adopting this expedi ent. The merchant makes an inventory of his goods at least once or twice a year. , Why should not the farmer do the ! same thing and sell oil his culls. The merchant gets rid of unsalable articles by olt'eriug them at a low figure, re placing them with goods that are iu demand. The farmer can do the same, I and In' will find that it will pay, for i It"' will then lie improving every year. An Australian farmer after several ini Iteetual efforts to get rid of hoar < lloiutil, which is a pernicious and rapid spi.'iidill. Weed there, iticUistid a por i I ion of tin land ami put on about '2IHI low I, feedilit' them mi corn night and morning for a few day*, then ren'ov I ill. them to a Hew location, Itv this means ill* n,'*'il- which had defied other tp nt|i|"iit were speedily »lo - KtroyvU. HOUSEHOLD AFFAIRS. PAI.ATA3LE I CRD TEA. Mrs. Rorer says: Iced tea may bo palatable, but. it is certainly not wholesome. The better way to tnako it is to till the glasses partly full of cracked ice ; then make the tea double strength and pour it boiling hot over the ice. Theu, if you like, add your lemon and sugar. You get less tannio acid in this way than when the tea is allowed to stand and cool before using.—New York Post. TO IMPROVE POTATOES. Potatoes may be soaked in cold water for twelve or more hours before being cooked, aud will be improved rather than injured, but if they stand in a little moisture even for ten minues after they are cookod, they are spoiled. The potato is composed largely of starch. The uncooked starch does not unite with moisture like a sponge. A good potato will bo light aud mealy as soon as it is baked or boiled, but if the cooking is con tinued it will become dark, heavy and strong flavored.—St. Louis Star-Say ings. FOR PICKMNO DAY. Iu petting vinegar for pickles, al ways try to get apple vinegar, as the other kinds frequently eat up the pickles entirely or cause them to turn soft. Too strong vinegar should be partly diluted with water. All pickles should be tightly sealed, to prevent air reaching the vinegar, as this kills it. It should always be poured on hot, as it comes to the iirst scald—never allow it to boil. Never put up pickles in anything that has held auy kind of grease, and never let them freeze. If picklos aro put into brine, it should always be strong enough to bear an egg. Use coarse salt, in pro portion of a heaping pint of salt to a gallon of water. The nicest way to put up pickle 3 is to put them in bottles and seal while hot, —New York Journal. DELICIOUS SANDWICHES. Tho bread for sandwiches should al waysbe one day old at least, and must bo sliced very thin. The butter 6liould be soft enough to spread with out crumbling the loaf, and the slice should be spread before it is cut from tho loaf. Slices of rye bread buttered, spread thinly with mustard and then with cottage cheese are very palata ble. For egg sandwiches beat your eggs to a paste after they have been hard-boiled. There should be a little cream added to them to make the mixture smooth, and it must be sea soned to taste. Fish sandwiches may be made from any kind of fish. Whatever it is— after removing bones and skin—pound it to a smooth paste, mix with it a very littlo chopped pickle and season. If .it bo a dry tish. mix with it also 11 little melted butter or salad dressing. The thinly-sliced bread spread with salad dressing, on which are laid water-cresses or a crisp leaf of lettuce, is a most welcome addition to a sum mer luuch. Then for sweets there are sandwiches made with jellies and jams. These may be spread on slices of cake, wheat, graham or even brown bread.—Detroit Free Press. "RECIPES. How to Make Jelly—Miking quince and pear jelly be careful to abstract all the seeds anil cores of both fruits before cooking, as there is a mucilage in them that will make the jelly milky looking and impair the flavor. Veal Salad—Bits of meal cut lino make a delicious salad, and a very good way to use up small scraps of cold beef is to cut them line or thin and make a layer salad, alternating with cold boiled potatoes, salt and pepper, and cover all with a French dressing. Kidney Toast- Chop tine four veal kidneys with half u pound of calf's liver; season with pepper and salt. Make a little butter hot in a frying pan and toss them about until cooked, but not overdone. Remove from the fire and stir in the beaten yolk of one egg and half a teaspoonful of lemon juice. Spread on toast and serve at once. Stewed or boiled potatoes and hot Indian meal muffins go nicely with this excellent dish. Cocoanut Sponge—Thicken one pint of milk in which is dissolved three quarters of a cup of sugar, with four tablespoonfuls of cornstarch. Cook thoroughly in a double boiler. When cooked and boiling hot, beat this into the whites of three eggs beaten stiff. After standing a few moments, add one cup of grated cocoanut. Flavor with vanilla, and turn into mold, with grated cocoanut on top. Steamed Cabbage—Cabbage, as usu ally cooked, is too heavy for an ordin ary stomach to digest. Try steaming it until soft, and then serve by pour ing around it a white sauce. Make the sauce by melting a spoonful of butter, stirring smoothly into this the same measure of flour. Pour into the mixture one pint of milk and boil un til thick. Season with salt. This is almost as dainty a dish as cauliflower. Lemon Dumplings—One pint flour, one heaping teaspoonful baking powder and salt sifted together. Mix with a cupful of milk or water. Make a syrup of one-half cupful molasses, one and one-half cupfuls sugar, two cupfuls water and two lemons sliced fine. Bring to a boil and drop in dumplings and cook fifteen minutes. Turn them once while cooking. When the dumplings are taken out add a little butter to the syrup and pour over tlieiu. Humiiiiiii? Bird Killed l»y a Bee, A humming bird was killed by the sting of a bee in Wisconsin not long I ago. A bee keeper noticed n pan- ot i ruby-throated humming birds flying I around the entrance <>f one of the hives. Soon a bee made its appear ance from within. One of the birdt sei/.ed it ton it apurt and seemed to be feeding on something found in the bee. .Tust then another bee came out, j flew ami alighted on the ba 'k of the | bird. The latter gave a kind of spas modic shudder, liew a few feel side | wise, landed at tin- foot of a currant I bush, and was dead, apparently ki 1 l<-«l ! by the sting of tin- Itfi*. New York Sun. I'huMiieiau* invented tin* first alpha bet about 15tMJ B, C. TOKEN Accordion plaitings are ntill the vogue. Red vests are much worn, and make the girls look very gorgeous. Many women cyclist* are joining the League of American Wheelmen. The Empress of China has her own private silk looms within the royal palace. Newly married girls in Hungary of fer their kisses for saloon St. .Joseph's Day, March 19. The management of Australian fe male prisons is in the hands of female religious orders. Fashionable young ladies in Japan when they desire to look very attrac tive, gild their lips. In Persia the women of fashion or nament their faces by painting upon them figures of bugs and small ani mals. Fashionable girls are wearing belts of suede leather as narrow as a harness rein and clasped by a dead-gold buckle. Isigny is a sort of fresh butter color and it is not "the thing" to say you want a thing a pale yellow now, but of an "insigny" shade. The newest conceit in garniture is a beautifully shaded galloon made of diagonal cords and heavy silk lace and worked with jet or iridescent beads. Miss Alioe Moore, of Cleveland, Ohio, is one of the few women who have made a century run on the bi cycle. A century run means to ride 100 miles a day. Miss Lucy M. Booth, daughter of General Booth, the head of the Salva tion Army, has been appointed com mander of the Salvation Army in In dia, with her headquarters at Bombay. To Queen Natalie of Servia belongs the distinction of owning the finest head of hair among the royalties of Europe. She usually wears it hang ing in two long plaits down her back. Costumes of pure white, ' from the tip of the shoes to the crepon parasol, are the prevailing summer dress, and tliey are worn morning, noon and night in all the varying grades of ele gance. Mme. Casimir Perier, wife of the French President, is an accomplished and charming woman, devoted to her children, of whom she has two—a daughter of fourteen and a boy some what younger. One of the fastest stenographers iu the country is Miss R. Matide Wolfe, of Boston. Sho writes fluently in three languages, and her notes are so plainly written that they are readily deciphered by her assistants. Miss Marietta Hollev, or, as she is better known, "Josiali Allen's Wife," talks into a phonograph and her words are then copied by her typewriter, who prepares her copy for the humorous books and articles which are the de light of womankind. MissSamantha Kiuy, a pretty school teacher of Inland, Ohio, owns proper ty in her own name. She was joking ly dared to work out the poll tax. The next day sho appeared with a wagon and team and putin a full day's work on the roads. Afternoon dresses of ecru grass linen iu a dark shade of tan are made up into very dressy yet simple gowns, trimmed with bands of lace insertion and ribbou bows, and with hat, gloves, parasol and canvas shoes to match the lace the effect is very pretty. I)r. Julia H. Smith, a well-known physician, of Chicago, formerly Miss Julia Holmes, of New Orleans, has been nominated by the Democratic party as a member of the State Uni versity Board, an office that has never hitherto been held by a woman. A sister of the late Mr. Spurgeon preached twice recently to crowded congregations at the haudsomo church in Hampstead road, in connection with the service. Her manner is im pressive and she bears a personal re semblance to her eminent brother. It is a suggestion of the army of bright young women that a band of mauve velvet ribbon around neck and wrists is an admirablo set-off against the red or brown, as the case may be, of the adjoining skin, after too faith ful boating, tennis, or golf in the sun and wind. The Russian newspapers recently spread the report that the ministries of agriculture and imperial lands in tended to employ women in the work of their departments. The result was a mass of petitions from women, and it took a denial in one of the official papers to convince the ladies that they had disturbed themselves uselessly. Miss Clara Barton, President of the Bed Cross Association, and known far and wide for her many deeds of mercy, now lives in Washington, and has for her headquarters a large, old colonial mansion reple'e with history of the olden times. Miss Barton is a gray liaired, gentle woman, quiet, and pleasing to meet. When the act was passed relieving the Queen of the gruesome necessity of signing death warrants by a curious oversight no mention was made of the Isle of Man, and the execution of a criminal who committed murder in that part of Her Majesty's dominion is the only one which the Queen has sanctioned with her own hand since the beginning of her reign. Miss Helen Gould sets a noble ex ample to all rich women. Her chari ties are large and marked by excellent judgment. Just uow she is entertain ing at her home, Woody Crest, at Tarrytown, N. Y., thirty homeless girls from Five Points Mission. The children are at liberty to wander over the broad acres of close-cropped lawns and enjoy themselves to their hearts' content. Whittier House, on the general plan of College Women's Settlements, has lately been established in Jersey City, by Miss Cornell i Bradford. A day nursery and sewing-class has been '»r gauizad, and a kiudergartou and other olasMM for study will sonu be opuned. One pleasant feature already lu op eratiou, is a series of afternoon recep t ioiis w here poor women and girls ineel till. -I who Hie interested ill the ill slid in the ulKKtn/stloli, THERE ' arc * any house- fjj| sS I J—* keepers not using ROYAL §3 I * {BAKING POWDER, its igj jsj M great qualities' warrant them in p! making a trial of it £3 g The ROY AI? BAKING POWDER & lakes the place of soda and cream of {S| ;artar, is more convenient, more eco jt- aomical, and makes the biscuit, cake, |Sk m pudding and dumpling lighter, sweeter, za iJS more delicious and wholesome. J® Eg Those who take pride in making the -fj finest food say that it is quite indispen- T- Ks sable therefor. |S § H £»§ ROYAL BAKING POWDER CO., 105 WALL ST., NEW-YORK. esssifSissssssaßaHaßa How tli» Mink Stents Fish and Uame. Probably the most cunning of all animals is the mink. Two gentlemen were fishing on one of the rivers of Maine. The fish were quite plenty and as soon as one was caught it was thrown behind on the grass. After some time one of the gentlemen thought he would take a rest and at the same time examine his capture. But he conld not find a single fish. He charged his friend with having played him a trick, but the friend was as sur prised as he. They now determined to watch their next fish, and their astonishment was unbounded when they saw a mink run from a hole near by, snatch up a fish and carry it off to the hole, where they afterward found their entire cap ture cunningly hid under some dead leaves. In the same manner the mink steals game which the sportsmen slioot. On one occasion a gentleman shot a wild duck but before the dogs could get to it a mink had stolen it, carried it off to a hole in the frozen snow, which one mink had prepared while the other was watching for the opportunity to steal the sportsman's game. Notwith standing this particular characteristic the mink is a brave as well as a fero cious little fellow, and he is excelled in these qualities only by the ermine. —Lewiston (Me.) Journal. BEECHAM'S PILLS (Vegetable) What They Are For Biliousness indigestion sallow skin dyspepsia bad taste in the mouth pimples sick headache foul breath torpid liver bilious headache loss of appetite depression of spirits when these conditions are caused by constipation ; and con stipation is the most frequent cause of all of them. One of the most important things for everybody to learn is that constipation causes more than haif the sick ness in tlve world; and it can all be prevented. Go by the book. Write to B. I ; . Allen Company, 365 Canal street, New York, for the little book on CONSTIPATION (its causes con sequences and correction); sent free. If you are not within reach of a druggist, the pills will be sent by mail, 25 cents. "Good Wives Crow Fair in xhe Light of Their Works," Especially if They Use SAPOLIO RRR For headache (whether sick or nervous), toothashc. neuralk'tn. rheumatism, lunnaja. palm an 1 weak ness lu tho ha 'k, splue or kiduey<4, pal is at* »un I the liver, pleurisy, swalllnf of the Joints and pains of all kind-, the appll *atloi of Ha lway*s Hotly H He.' will alTord tmme Hate ease, ant Its cmtlnuoi u«o for a lew days effects a permanent cure. A CURE FOR ALL Summer Complaints, DYSENTERY, DIARRHEA. CHOLERA MORBUS, A half to a teas.xnaful of He ily He'.let in a h i'i tumbler of water, repeated as often as the discharge* contiuue, an«l a flannel saturate 1 with Heady Helljf placed over tho stomach or b twels will afford Imme diate relief and soon ofTeot a cure. Internally—A half to a teanp > mftil In half a tum bler of wat *r will, in a few minutes, cure Cramp*, Spasms, Sour stomach. Nausea, Vomiting, Heart burn. Nervousness, Sleeplessness, Slcfc Headach", Flatulency ami all Internal pa us. Malaria In If* Various Form** Cured and I'i'evented. There is uoi a remedial uxent in tho world tha will cure fever aiul a?uo an l all other malarious, bilious and other fevers, aided by HAD WAY'S FILLS, soqulcklv as KAIiWAY'S KKADY HKLIKF. Price V)cents i»er bottle. Sol Iby all dm <.2.WORKINGMEN« j EXTRA FINE:. j%fci ♦2.^BOYSS *»t. 112 # * •* 'ures mi 1 Prevents Kheumatlsm. Indigestion, •• A I>\ spepsla. Heartburn < alarm and Asthma. M V I seftif in.M tiMi'ia au w.c Kedfcal I m nitj - ■ ... ft.. 4 ■1 ' ;.!»••* .i„ • M/r. sf.. ../» r /,.»/„/ .V, A 112 t*i M H\\ >1 MWI New York, r \v' »l. —»H»I> «1* I - M.> H hi I«.