Sullivan republican. (Laporte, Pa.) 1883-1896, November 09, 1894, Image 4

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    He Lrt His Reputation do.
' It inn't oftou that ono finds nmnnj
(he mountaineer* of tbo Southwest r
hero of the hißhont typo, but thoy do
exist, and a year or no ngo I met ouo. 1
had boon in his neighborhood for throe
months and I know that ho had killod
• man or two and hail tho reputation
of being the gamest man in tho moun
tains. Ho wax extremely handy with
• gun, too, and everybody gave him a
wide berth whenever thero was a pros- ■
peet of a row. One day, however, li«
got into a difficulty with a man from
an adjoining county, mid when tht <
■hooting began he cut and ruti like n \
white head, leaving the field in pos- i
session of the other party. Two days I
afterward I met him on tho road and |
wo talked about tho Into disturbance. i
"I was rather surprised at tho way i
you acted," I said, as mildly as I '
could, for even theu 1 had no wish tor
•tir him np. I
"I reckon most folks wuz," he re
plied briefly.
"I know they were, and they don't
understand it; neither do I." ,
"Well," he said, half apologetically,
"I reckon I jist run, and that wuz all |
thar wuz to hit." j
"Thero was moro than that; you ,
lost your reputation by it." (
"Mebbe I did, colonel," and ho ,
■wallowed a lump in his throat; "but ,
that thar feller had seven little chil- ,
dren dependin' on him, an' I kinder j
had an idea jist afore I pulled trigger \
that raebbe 1 could git along bettor j
without my reputation than they could
without ther daddy, so I run."
He stopped as if uncertain what to
say next, and I took him by tho hand
and shook it with a vigor that I knew '
he appreciated by the look that camo 1
into his eyes.—Detroit Free Press.
In certain districts of Sicily tho in
dustry of gathering tho thread-like
substance secreted by mussels is car
ried on. Tho liber thus obtained i«
used in the manufacture of silk.
Never liile.
"A million peoplo out of work," snys a
newspaper writing of thoso hard times.
Added to this ralsfortuno are tho physical
Infirmities with which thousands have to
bear. But thero is one tlilus that is never
Idle ; always at work, unceasingly in search
of those thus deterred, it seeks to euro such
and help them to grasp a chanco when it 1
comes. This Is tho mission of St. Jacobs
Oil. Anions the millions thero aro thousands
suffering with neuralgia. For this it is a
positive cure. Use it ami thero will bo a
thousand sufferers less anl a thousand
chances more to get work and hold it. Bet
ter times may come soon, and thero is noth
ing like tho groat remedy for pain to help
you out of painful troubles and into placo
again.
The French levy a tax on coffee to tho
amount of S3OO a ton.
Dr. Kilmer's SWAMP-BOOT cures
ull Kidney and Bladder troubles.
Pamphlet and Consultation free.
Laboratory Binghamton, N. Y.
Now York Stato appropriates *403,030 an
nually to its militia.
STATE or OHIO, CITV OF TOLEDO, I
LUCAS COUNTY. F •
FRANK J. CHENEY makes oath that he is thn
■enior partner of the flrmof F. J. CHKNEY &
Co., doing business In the City of Toledo,
County and State aforesaid, and that said lira
will pay the sum of ONE HUNDUKI) DOL
LARS for each and every esse of Citarrh that
cannot be cured by tho use of H AI.T.'SC'ATAIATU
CURE. FRANK J. CQCNEV.
fcwornto before mo and subscribed in my
presence, thia Bth day of Decembnr, A. D. ISSO.
> A. W, GLEASON,
4 SEAL F
•—y—» Notary PuhUe.
Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally and acts
directly on tho blood and mucous surfaces of
the system. Send for testimonials, free.
F. J. CHENEY & Co., Toledo. O.
by Druggists, Wo.
Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup for children
teething, softens the gums, reduces inflamma
tion, allays pain, cures wind colic. 2.1 c. a bottle
LIKE Oil Upon Troubled Waters is Halo's
Honey of Horeliound and Tar upon a cold.
Pike's Toothache Drops Cure In one minute.
Karl's Clover Root, the great blood purifier,
fives freshness and clearness to the complex
ion and cures constipation, 25 cts., SOcts.. SI.
Whole Family Helped
§" My husband was
troubled with Itheu
matlHtn so that he
could hardly lift his
hand to his head, and
also had severe pains
in his stomach after
eating. Four bottles of
Hood's Sarsaparilla
completely cured
hi in. Our son was all
run down and Hood's
Sarsaparilla built him
up, and he gained 15
lbs. Our little boy Leon has also been given
appetite,weight and strength by the medicine.
Hood's Sarsaparilla cured me of liruntue
ln«, which iliave had for 15 years and which
Is now entirely driven out of my system. Since
Hood's s ?®" Cures
taTcincr Hood's I am better in every way."
MRS. H. K. JOIINSON, Lyme Centre, N. H.
llood'w Pill* are a mIM cathartic. 23eeuts.
N Y N U—j 3
"TWORLD'S-FATR '
! IIIGII EST AWARD I
. "SUPERIOR NUTRITION-THE LIFE:" «
'HI"
THE GRBATT
/AEDICINAL^
F^OOH>
Has justly acquired the reputation of being
The Salvator for
INVALIDS
T he-Aged.
AN INCOMPARABLE ALIMENT for the
GROWTH and PROTECTION of INFANTS and
CHI LDREN
A superior nutritive in continued Fevers,
And a reliable remedial agent
in all gastric and enteric diseases;
often in instances of consultation over
patients whose digestive organs were re
duced to such a low and sensitive condition
that the IMPERIAL GRANUM was
the only nourishment the stomach
would tolerate when LIFE seemed
depending on its retention; —
And as a FOOD it would be difficult to
conceive of anything more palatable.
Said by DRUGGISTS. Shipping Depot,
JOHN CARLE & SONS, New York.
Bj In tim*. Sold by druggist*. KV
J lr|«| ft| j if Bffil
CALUT OR THE MEADOWS.
It will pay well to run tho mower
over the meadows and cut down the
weeds before they seed. There are
daisies, ragweed, goldenrod, and other
flowers that are not in their proper
place among tho grass, and all now
maturing seed for seven years' weed
ing in the future, as tho proverb goes.
These should be destroyed at once,
and it will be a small job to do it.—
American Farmer.
FEED, IF YOU WANT EGOS.
Do not bo afraid of the feed if you
want eggs. A poor feeder is ncvor a
good layer. Again, not what is eaten,
but what is digested and assimilated
is what tells in the egg basket, so that
everything which tends to better diges
tion tends toward better roturns in
eggs, and indicates that plonty of
shells and grit should be furnished,
and if possible charcoal, which absorbs
the gases, sweetens the crop, and many
times prevents an attack of indiges
tion.—Amerioan Agriculturist.
SHOEING NONSES.
The greatest care i3 necessary to so
shoo tho horso that tho relative posi
tion of the leg to the foot in the nor
mal stato should be maintained, says
an English veterinarian. Tho bearing
of the shoe should be level all around.
If heel or toe, the inside or the out
side of the foot, wero too high or low,
the relationship of the limb or leg was
disturbed—in fact, the whole mechan
ism of the limb was thrown out of
gear. Unequal however
slightly occasioned, would surely end
in serious damage to the limb, and
among tho froqugnt results of such
treatment is permnnent injury to the
coffin bone. Contraction of tho heel,
ho maintained, was not an active dis
ease, but a passive condition jlne to
the horse easing his feet so as to mini
mize the pain felt at his heels from
bad shooiDg. Ho had little faitli in
mechanical arrangements for widening
contracted heels. "Shoo tho horse,"
ho remarked, "so that tho bearing
stirfaco is properly maintained at the
heel, and expansion will follow as a
natural consequence."—Now York
World.
CELEKY CULTIVATION.
Celery planted in beds or rows will
need frequent cultivation. Tho culti
vator run between the rows and the
uso of tbo pronged boa between tbe
plants will be all tbo cultivation
needed. Tbis work should be done
once a week. Do not allow the ground
to crust over. When the weather is
hot and dry it will form a thick, bard
crust, which will stop all growth.
Celery planted in beds will require
still greater caro. Tho narrow steel
boo or tbo narrow celery rako will do
rapid and first-class work in tbo hands
of a competent man. Celery requires
a largo amount of moisture, and one
way to get it is by frequent cultiva
tion ; tho nest is by giving tho beds
a generous watering. When tbe plants
need water give an abundance. Water
in the cool of tho evening. A hose
attached to a barrel drawn by a horse
will quickly put it on without much
loss of water. When the small beds
are to be watered, a watering can will
bo all that is needed. In tho editor's
experience watering once a week is
enough.
Tho long, green celery-worm that
feeds on the leaves shcfnld bo cut in
two with a pair of clippers. In the
dry seasons they become very numer
ous, and will eeriously injure the
plants if not taken in time. Tho cel
ery should not bo earthed up during
hot weather, J£eep the soil looso and
the plants growing. The middlo of
September is plenty early enough to
give the first earthing up. Tho self
blanching celery will need tho earth
drawn up to the plants about the 10th
of September. This celery comes
into market in the early tall. It is
quite delicate, and is hard to keep af
tor it is once blanched.—Baltimore
American.
WINTER DAIRYING.
The chief aim in winter dairying,
writes John Gould, of Ohio, in the
American Agriculturist, is to get all
the milk possible between the last of
October and the first of the following
June, and for that purpose the cows
calve as nearly as may be in Septem
ber and up to the first of November.
I have unusual opportunities for
selecting choico cows from tho
"springer" droves that are centered
here for shipment to New York and
Philadelphia, so if a cow goes wrong
her place is supplied at onco with a
promising cow selected from hun
dreds. Tho aim is to have tho dairy
of somewhat uniform size, and all
must answer in full to tho dairy form
and type.
When tho cows come into the dairy
thoy aro given a little grain with soil
ing crops, like sweet corn and millet,
or oats and peas. I begin to stable
tho cows early, by the tenth of Oc
tober certainly, and if there is cold
and disagreeable weather, such as is
frequent "right off from tho lake,"
they are kept in for two days, or un
til the weather is warm. A cow must
not bo allowed to shrink in tho fall,
from either lack of feed or chilling
rains. By the tenth of November the
cows are practically in winter quarters.
A.bout the twentieth the silos are
opened, and, as a rule, from Thanks
giving Day tho cows are left in the
stalls until Easter Sunday, often
three or four weeks later, according
to tho weather. The stable is light,
very dry, well ventilated, never
freezes, and tho cows aro tied in pairs
with halters in half box stalls, and in
every way made as comfortable as
possible.
As soon as the habit of eating in
tho fields can be changed to stable
life, the oows are put upon two foede
a day, all that they will eat up clean,
and the re6t of the day or night ie
given to food digestion and assimila
tion. This is found by far the ben(
I method. Milking is the first thing iu
tbo morning, then feeding. The food
for the cows consists of twenty-Ave
pounds of good silage, two pounds of
wheat "seconds," and usually a pound
of oat dnst; if not tho latter some
other grain to tho amount, making a
total of threo pounds for eooh of the
best milkors, and a little less to the
others. As soon as the silage is eaten,
a lock of hay, two or three pounds for
eaeb, is put into the mangers, and
needed time given to eat it. About two
hours after the morning feed, tho cows
are watered. Tho water is in their
mangers, and the troughs are fitted
with covers, so that they cannot lift
them up at will, as it is not well for
the cows to take seventy-five pounds
of water into their systoms immedi
ately after eating, as they would do.
The cows immediately after eating lie
down and chew their cuds for an hour
or more. Then they are watered and
the troughs left open for the day, so
that any cow can drink as she may like
after tho "first drink." The stables
aro cleaned in the morning, and the
trenches sprinkled with road dust and
thon partially filled with tho fresh,
long manure from tho horse stalls.
This combination makes a good ab
sorbent and deodorizer. At night af
ter milking, the feeding is repeated,
and wheil the cows are looked after
towards bedtime, tho water troughs
are again opened for the night, some
dry sawdust is thrown along tfio heel
planks, and tho 6tables aro shut up for
tho night.
In building tho stable, whilo very
economical in cost, tho idea was to
givo each cow plenty of space, and so
eaoh oow has 640 cubic feet of stable.
Another thing was the avoidanco of
what might be termed "hothouse"
conditions, and so sunshine was
sought. It comes in on tlireo sides of
the stable duriug the day. The tem
perature of the stable is maintained as
nearly ns possible at forty-live degrees.
Tho water is not warmed, but is kept
in a closo iron tank in tho stable and
pumpod every day from a deep rook
well, and so does not vary much as it
runs into tho troughs from fifty de
grees. Of course tho cows have good
beds of straw and aro carded now and
then, but they are given enough free
dom so that tliey can perform .their
own toilets fairly well. I am not a
believer in tho high feeding of con
centrated grains. Tho individuality
of the cow is a thing that is born with
her to do a certain performance, and
feeding to croate a production beyond
born individual capacity has nover
been accomplished except in a limited
way, and then has cost moro than the
returns from it wero worth. The
great horse Directum eats no moro
oats than a "plug," and no amount of
oats will get speed out of the latter.
It is the same way with cows.
FABM AND GARDEN' NOTES.
Nothing truer than that hogs like
"roots."
Don't forget to savo the best field
anil garden seeds.
If you have no orchard set out at
least a few fruit trees.
Commercial prosperity has much to
Jo with tho horso market.
Tho sow should be left quiet a day
or two after slio has been servod.
Now get rid of all poor scrub ani
mals before they eat thoir heads off.
A very largo litter of pigs is gener
ally to their detriment in quality or
size.
It is suggested that sweet potntoos
may be dried in tho samo manuer as
fruit.
It is not well to raise colts and mules
together, bccauso tho mules lord it
over the former.
Exerciso will do tho very little pigs
good ; give them range as soon as they
are able to toddle.
As long as sho will prove serviceable
keep the sow which has proved hersolf
to bo a good mother.
Extra fat sows will not breed so
surely as when their systems are in a
less feverish condition.
Darkening tho rooms where nests
are placed tends to prevent tho fowls
from eating their eggs.
A little honsy heated and dropped
on bread is said to restore voice and
strength to sick canaries.
Destroy all poor and worthless fruit
as soon as it falls from the trees, or it
will furnish a harbor for many insect
enemies.
Pick off the faded flowers and dead
leaves from your plants, if for no
other reason than that they injure the
appearance of the plant.
Much soed is wasted by letting it
remain where grown after it is ripe by
falling into the ground. And it is al
ways tho first and best that falls.
When only enough food is given to
support life there can be no profit, as
profit only comes from what is con
sumed anil appropriated above tho lifo
sustaining point.
Do not water newly-potted plants
too freely. It is best to givo a liberal
quantity of water at the time of trans
planting, and then not water again
uatil new growth starts.
Seed of tho nasturtium may bo
sown at intervals throughout the en
tire year, thus giving new plants at all
times. They make a very pretty plant
for tho windows.
Do not allow withered flowers to re
main on tho plants unless you wish
the seed. They should be picked as
soon as they show signs of withering,
as they aro a great drain on the vi
tality of the plant.
Have tho strawberry beds clean,
cultivate well that a good vigorous
growth may be made before the
ground froezes. Then be ready to
cover lightly with marsh hay or other
litter free from weed seeds.
Tho garden plat should be cleared
of all weeds and rubbish and plowod
this fall. If planted in rows it oan be
plowod in strips as the crop is liar
vestod—another factor in favor of
planting in rows rather than beds.
HOUSEHOLD AFFAIRS.
TO ri.BAN BLACK RTBnONM.
Blnok rlbbrm* can Imj cloanod with
coffoo to look fresh and nice. Lay
them on tho bnro tablo or » board;
dip a blnok cloth in dear coffee and
wet tho ribbon thoroughly nntil it will
•tick to the table; prewi every creams
out and lot it dry there.—Now York
Journal.
TO PBBVKNT FLANNEL MIBINKINO.
A good old Scotch housewife says
that her flannels never shrink, and it
is because she washes them in cold
water. She puts them in clenu, cold
soapsuds and washes them directly;
then sbo puts them through a second
suds, and rinses them in cold water
and hangs them out to dry without
wringing them at nil. Sbo never
washes flannels on a rainy or cloudy
day, but always waits for sunshine.—
New York Advertiser.
LEFT-OVER STEWED TOMATOES.
If. as often happens, you haven lit
tle stewed tomatoes left over from din
ner this is a nice way of using them :
Boil two-thirds of a cup of rice in two
oups of water (or steam it in the double
boiler) adding half a teaspoon of salt
at the timo you pour the boiling water
onto the rice. Cook until soft, which
will be in a half or three-quarters of
an hour. Remove tho cover and stir
the rico carefully with a fork to let tho
steam escape and dry off tho rice.
Heat tho tomatoes which were left,
season them quite highly with salt and
pepper, using a little cayenne to
highten the taste, add to the rice a
tablespoonful of butter, stir carefully
in, and when melted pour over the
tomatoes and stir that also into the
rice. Serve at once as a vegetable and
you will be surprised to And it so good.
—New York Advertiser.
COOKING BANANAS.
Cooked bananas make delicions rto3-
serts. As fritters, they aro excellent.
Sliced, fried and sprinkled with pow
dered sugar they are good. Mado
into a pudding by slicing them, plac
ing in a pudding dish with alternato
slices of sponge cake, the whole being
soaked with beaten egg and baked,
they aro not to be despised. Pre
served bananas are also delicious.
Boil togethor a pound of sugar, a half
pint of water and the juice of ono
lemon and one orange. Skim this
and when it is syrup-like putin six
peeled bananas sliced in two. Cook
for about forty minutes and servo
cold.
To bake bananas loosen the skin so
that tho fruit may be slipped out,
but do not take it out until after tho
baking. Bake for half an hour. Then
remove tho loosened 6kins and cover
with a sauce made by boiling half a
cup of sugar and half a cup of water
five minutes and adding a teaspoon cf
butter and tho juico of half a lemon.—
New York World.
THE SERVANT OF SMALL THINO*.
Thoro is a prospect that, boforo wo
are much older, nearly all our house
keeping will be dono by machinery.
Not only by special machines for spe
cial purposes, but by great co-opera
tive machinery for tho whole house
keeping.
But tho faithful housekeeper is
quito sure that there is one servant
who will never be supplanted—tlio
servant of small things. The servant,
paid or unpaid, who picks up tho
trifles every one else drops, and puts
away the articles every one elso for
gets. The servant who carries up and
down stairs odd cups and glasses and
spoons; who finds overshoes and elates
and echoolbooks and hats; who
gathers the scattered playthings and
discovers the misplaced book or sew
ing ; who makes ready the chair and
tho footstool for tha coming occu
pant, and who takes up all the dropped
stitches, moral and material, in tho
family life.
Thero may arise housekeeping ma
chines, big and little, working with
marvelous skill and accuracy. Hut
until a method is discovered of put
ting a heart as well as hands into
them, of giving them a soul as well a*
a body, it is certain that the sphere
of the servant of things c.»u
never bo perfectly filled by such con
trivances.—Harper's Bazar.
nOCSEHOLD HINT 3.
After washing never wring worsted
dress goods. Shake them.
Soak mildewed clothes in butter
milk and spread on tho gra33 in tho
sun.
Acid phosphate will remove ink
stains from the hands when every
thing else fails.
Milk, applied once a week with a
soft cloth, freshens and preserves
boots and shoes.
Canned sardinos carefully browned
on a double-wire gridiron and served
with lemon are appetizing.
One of the easiest ways of "taking
cold" is to drop asleep without an ex
tra wrap over the shoulders. ,
No receptacle for soiled clothing,
even if handsomely deoorated, should
be kept in a sleeping apartment.
These are days when extra cara
should be taken to keep tho feet per
fectly dry. A fresh pair of stocking
should be used every day.
Canned tomatoes are more delicious
baked than stewed. About ten min
utes before removing from the oven
spread buttered bread-crumbs over tho
top.
Whiten yellow linen by boiling half
an hour in one pound of fine soap
meited in one gallon of milk. Then
wash in suds, then in two cold waters
with a little blueing.
Calicoes, ginghams and cliambrays
cannot bo properly washed with the
white clothes. They need a much
quicker process, and the long delays
of an ordinary washday would ruin
them.
Two uses of eggs are not generally
known or appreciated. A fresh egg
beaten and thickened with sugar, free
ly eaten, will relieve hoarseness, and
the skin of a boiled egg, wet and ap
plied to a boil, will draw out soreness.
Tho compiler of the most ourious
statistical tab'.e of thy century shows
that the average life of a physician in
the sixteenth century was 36.5 years;
in the seventeenth century, 45.8; in
the eighteenth oentury, 49.8, and at
the present time is 56.7.
EBBUB
Ex-Empress Eugenie is now sixty
cifjhi years of age and a confirmed in-
Thero are between 300 and 400 edn
catod female pharmacists in the United
States.
Miss Anna F. Chnroli, of Toledo,
Ohio, has lately engaged in the under
taking business.
Mrs. Cleveland's daily mail fre
quently includes 100 lotters, and rare
ly less than sixty.
There's a hospital in Soo Chow,
China, in charge of Dr. Anne Walter,
a Mississippi woman.
Advaneod society women have prac
tically banished all punotnation points
from their letter writin -.
Fifty thousand per annum is the
marrirgo dower of tho young women
of tho Vanderbilt families.
A new fad of society girls is to col
leot the little bows from the hatbands
of their gentlemen friends.
Tho quickest cure for red hands is
looso sleeves and gloves, easy fitting
shoes and good circulation.
It is now declared that short stock
ings injure tho feet by pressing the
knuckles of the toes upward.
A tonrnament of washerwomen is to
be hold at Conway, Wales, for tho
benofit of a Wesloyan bazar.
This question of whether women
shall ride on a bioycle is a question
for women to settle themselves.
Mrs. J. E. B. Stuart, widow of tho
Confederate cavalryman, is now the
Principal of a girl's school in Missouri,
The charge is made that tho Ameri
can woman is more indiscreet in tell
ing secrets than any of her European
sisters.
A Chicago woman carries a business
card, which reads: "General Commis
sion Merchant, Dealer ia Poultry,
Eggs, and Calves."
It is a good plan to make covers for
trunks when they aro exposed to view
in the room. For this purposo dark
blue duck is serviceable and sightly.
Lawn tennis certainly holds first
placo in the hearts of American wo
men, if one may judge from its uni
versality, though it is hard pressed by
riding.
The only known woman trainer of
thoroughbreds is Mrs. Chalmer, of
England, whose fivosons are all either
trainers or jockeys. She trained them
herself.
"Fee-jeo" is "chum" in tho Bryn
Mawr (Pennsylvania) dialect. This
peculiar form of linguistic eccentricity
is not used nt any other collogo so far
as known.
Next to singing Mmo. Alboni liked
nothing so woll as darning woolen
stockings. It was her custom to sup
ply all tho poor of the neighborhood
with them.
Only three of tho twelvo bridos
maids at Queen Victoria's wedding are
alive—the Dowager Duchess of Bod
ford, tho Duchess of Cleveland and
Lady Jane Ellice.
In tho sixteenth century tho faces
of ladies wero covered with a sort of
enamol. It was brittle, and wearers
were obliged to preserve a fixed ex
pression of countenanoe.
If yon don't think wo aro going to
have a rush of color to tho head this
soason, you've only to step into a bon
net shop to be convinced and at onco
set right on tho subject.
Miss Elizabeth Fleming has been
appointed crier of tho United States
Circuit and District Courts at Port
land, Me. Miss Fleming was previ
ously tho court stenographer.
Mrs. Rider Haggard, it is said, ie
tho "congenial inspiration" of tho
noted author. What Mr. Haggard
writes is read and criticised by his
wifo beforo it is sent to tho publisher.
Some Boston clubwomon aro talking
of a ''winter flower mission" which
shall give to the costly and beautiful
flowers of teas, luncheons and balls a
second service, gladdening tho sick
and deprived.
Mrs. Louise Chandler Moulton has
a London home at Weymouth street,
Portland place, and she is accredited
with being one of the half-dozen wo
men in London able to creato and
hold a salon.
Dr. Helen Baldwin, a graduate of
Wcllcsley, obtained first honor at a
recent competitive examination for
the post of Resident Physician in the
Philadelphia Hospital Sho had
eighty-three rivals.
Craoked wheat, with milk, honey or
stewed fruit, is the best kind of break
fast or supper for girls who wish to
grow strong and beautiful. Tho lime
like material in the grain is very
strengthening and healthful.
One objection that has been urged
by those who are unwilling that wo
men should have the right to voto is
that tho greatest political excitement
generally comes each year just about
the time when she is busy putting up
tomatoes.
Miss Annie Reynolds, of North
Haven, Conn., who is to be the first
World's Secretary of tho Young
Women's Christian Association, is a
graduate of Wellesley and has been a
special student at Yale. Her head
quarters will be in London.
Mrs. S. F. Grubb, superintendent
of work among foreigners, keeps a
missionary at the port cf Now York
and distributes monthly to the incom
ing immigrants 20,000 pages of tracts
on topios related to good citizenship.
She has published these tracts in
seventeen different languages.
Mrs. Dunlap Hopkins, founder of
the School of Technical Design in
New York, has been invited by
Princess Christian to a conference
with reference to establishing a sim
ilar school in London. Mrs. Hopkins
has also been invited by the French
Government to give it the beueflt of
her experience.
Mrs. E. B. Lolpnd is the basso
trombonist of the First Baptist Sun
day-3ohool of Baltimoro. Sho bogan
the study of the instrument some time
ago, partially for the benefit of h er
health, and she has not only made a
success of it musically, but has ex
panded her lungs and improved her
health generally.
Highest of all in Leavening Power.— Latest U. S. Gov't Report T
Royal
ABMUITFIV PURE
A*» of Fall*.
ProfcMer .T. W. Spencer nays tli»t
♦ho first conjecture as to tho ape of
Falls was made by Andrew
Ellioott in 1790. Ellioott believed
tbo falls to be 55,000 years old. About
1841 Lycll estimated the ago of the
falls as 35,000 years. All of these esti
mates were pure conjectures, but they
were correct in assuming that the
gorge had been excavated by the
river. Professor Spencer, in out
lining the progress of the falls, says
that a little stream draining the Erie
Basin once fell about 200 feet from
tho brow of the Niagara escarpment.
This stream was not over one-fourth
the volume of the present cataract,
and consequently cxcavatod the gorge
at a much slower rate than at present.
During the early history of the river
the waters of the three upper lakes
omptied through the Huron Basin by
way of the Ottawa River. The height of
the falls has increased several times.
Tho first episode, represented by
a small river falling 200 feet, lasted
11,000 yoars. Then the height of the
falls was increased to 400 feet, and
took the drainage of all tho upper
great lakes. At the same time there
was a series of cascades, three in all,
the lower gaining on the upper until
finally they were all united in one
great cataract, much higher than that
of to-day. Subsequently the waters
were raised at the head of Lake On
tario, and the falls approximated to
the present conditions after a lapse of
1000 years, and another 1000 years
was probably occupied by transitorial
changes of a very gradual character.
It is now 8000 years since Lake Huron
emptied into Lake Erie for the first
time. The land has risen about the
outlet of Lake Erie, And if the present
rate of change continues, in 5000 or
6000 years the waters of the four lakes
will be turned into the Mississippi
River drainage at Chicago.—New Or
leans Picayune.
Restoring Historical Paintings.
The eight great paintings iu tho ro
tunda of the Capitol at Washington,
representing famous events in Ameri
can history, are undergoing treatment
to restoro their colors. The painting
of tho "B»ptism of Pocohontas" has
just been replaced in its niche in the
wall, after being subjectod to a reju
venation, which causes its companion
pieces to appear exceedingly tarnished
by contrast. The other pictures are
to uudergo the same attention. Trum
bull's famous representation of the
signing of the Declaration of Inde
pendence has been removed for re
newal. Architect Clark of the Capi
tol was given ebargo of tho work, and
placed it in the hands of a specialist
in Baltimore. A preparation is used
which removes the dust and varnish and
brings out the original colors in some
thing like their first distinctness, but
no new paint is applied.—New York
Post.
Twenty years ago Sonthern planters
paid men to haul away cotton seed and
burn it.
K^U'D(JE
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 ; effectually cleansing the system,
dispelling colds, headaches and fevers
ana permanently curing constipation.
It has given satisfaction to millions and
met with the approval of the medical
profession, because it acts on the Kid*
neys, Liver and Bowels without weak
ening them and it is perfectly free from
every objectionable substance.
Syrup of Figs is for sale by all drug'
gists in 50c. and $l bottles, but it ie man
ufactured by the California Fig Syrup
Co. only, whose name is prinled on every
package, also the name, Syrup of Figs,
and being well informed.jrcu will not
accept any substitute if offered.
The Best Thing in
112 J/W Milk Pails
I is Pearline. That's the solid truth. You
V V £ et them cleaner, and with less work and
V > —3 fuss, than with anything else you can use.
It saves you so much that it's cheaper than
[ the commonest stuff can be. Proof—the
/ f\ \ largest dairies and dealers use Pearline.
I I J Some women arc afraid of Pearline.
V v They think that where cleaning is made
so easy, there must be some harm to the
thing washed. But Pearline can't hurt
milk pails, anyway. And it can't hurt the finest lace or the
softest hands, any more than it hurts milk pails. *
Not witJl the » mit ations—the fact that \hey arc imita-
So tors or followers proves a lack of something
" Iks Ken You Say the Less Peopls Renumber." Oae
Word With Toil,
SAPOLIO
Mraiitre Home lor Figs.
The editor of this paper was favorod
Monday morning by tho receipt of
samples of Aprs grown by Miss Mamie
Antram on tho farm of her father,
James \V. Antram, who lives three
miles north of this place. The fruit was
delicious, and proves that with tho
proper care almost anything, even
tropical fruit, can be grown in grand
obi Missouri.—Lewis County (Mo.)
Journal.
A naval clergymau gets 552500 a year
when he is at sea and #2OOO upbore.
«TO PUT ON
needed flesh, no mat
ter how you've lost
it, take Dr. Pierce's
Medical Dis
fa covery. It works
" wonders. By restor
< ing the normal ac
' / tion of the deranged
g organs and functions,
; it builds the flesh up
to a safe and healthy
standard—promptly,
pleasantly and nat
urally. The weak,
emaciated, thin, pale
and puny are made
strong, plump, round and rosy. Noth
ing so effective as a strength restorer
and flesh maker is known to medical sci
ence ; this puts on healthy flesh not the fat
of cod liver oil and its filthy compounds.
It rouses every organ of the body to ac
tivity, purifies, enriches and vitalizes
the blood so that the body feels refreshed
and strengthened. If you are too thin, too
weak, too nervous, it may be that the food
assimilation is at fault. A certain amount
of bile is necessary for the reception of the
fat foods in the blood. Too often the liver
holds back this element which would help
digestion. Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical
Discovery stimulates, tones up and invig
orates the liver, nourishes the blood, and
the muscles, stomach and nerves get the
rich blood they require.
Spent Hundred* ol Dollars with no Benefit.
M. J. COLEMAN of JJ Sargent St.. Jtoxbury,
Mass., writes: " Alter
suffering from dyspepsia
i and constipation with un- W
told agony for at least 18 B
months, I am more than m
pleased to say that after _ILM_
using; Dr. Pierce's Golden /LT\ Mr
Medical Discovery and o *BJ>s KM
' Pleasant Pellets' for one I 3 \ KB
month, I was eutirely 1 Bit
cured, and from that day . L7
to this Ido not know, \ - irn JT
thank God, what even a \ Jl
slight headache is. I paid L
a doctor on Treinont St., VV
Boston, in one day ( for ./ J|k
hi- advice only.) the sum ' /LA
of SIO.OO with J;.co for
medicine, and deflved no M - J COLEMAN, ESQ.
benefit. I got more relief in one hour from your
xnediciues, as far as my stomach was concerned,
than from all the other medicine I used.
If any person who reads this is suffering from
dyspepsia or constipation and will use your
meoicine as I have done, he will never regret it."
W. L. DOUCLAS
<4 cunir iSTHEacsT.:
V*) dilvt NOSOUCAKINU
$5. CORDOVAN,
FRtNCHAENAMELtEDCALn *
X *4.*5.%P FINE CALf&KHNIiAROt
Bggp £t£ $ 3.5P P0L1CE,3 SOLES.
S\l 4 05«.*2-WORKINBMEN«
»V- I EXTRA FINE.
BOYSSCHOOLSHQES.
V SEND FOR CATALOGUE
w-i.* DOUCiL AS %
BROCKTON, MASS.
Yon can save money by wearing
XV. L. Douglas 53.00 Shoe.
Because, we are the largest manufacturers o»
this grade of shoes in the world, and guarantee theif
value by stamplug the name and price on ths
bottom, which protect you against high prices and
the middleman's profits. Our shoes equal custom
work in style, easy fitting and wearing qualities.
We have them sold everywhere at lower prices fet
the value gl than any other make. Take no sub*
stftute. If your dealer ?annot supply you, we can. »
Raphael, Angelo, Kubens. Taeso
The "LINENE" are the Best and Moat Economi
cal Collars and Cuffs worn: they are made of fine
cloth, both Hides finished alike, and being reversi
ble. one collar is equal to two or any other kind.
They tit well, t near well and look well. A box of
Ten Collars or Five Pairs of Cuffs for Twenty-Flva
A Sample Collar and Pair of Cuffs by mail for Sift
Ceuts. Name style and size. Address
REVEUSIBLE COLLAR COMPACT.
77 Franklin Bt., New York. tl Kllby St., Bostos,
mm B ani|i fl Ikl t UJJLEGE, Foiamcwcrsi*,
k A V 8 Ml £1 rJ N- Y., offers both sexes ths
bHv I \ est educational advantages
at tho I»wpst co t. Healthful; best Influences;
ntudles. Superior instruction. Deportments of Book
keeping and Jiusini'-ts btudies; Shorthand fliwrt Type"
writing; English end Modern Language*; Penmow
shin and Drawing; Ihe elementary branches, etc
NO VACATIONS. Tuition, obtnlnfa 112««
competent «nnlciH». A for Catnlrpm
CLEMENT C. C.AINES, Prev A ft I I PAP
irtent, 30 Washington Street, I. II ■ ■ P* I* 112
Poughkeepsle, New York. . " V M I mm »
HALMSAnti-uatarrhai Chawing Sum
••Cure."* au«l Freventn Kheumatlsin, ludigestlon, t*
J Dyspepsia, Heartburn, Catarra an 1 Aathma. M
112 Uneful in M nana an 1 Fevers Cleanser the T
k reetli an I Promote* the Appetite. Sweetens A
112 the Breath. Cures the Tobacco Habit. Kudorsed T
••by the Medical Faculty. Send for 10, lSorM**.
A rent paelca* \ Silver, ataman or rostal Note. A
fUKO. K. HALM, 1 1J west L M .«th St., New Yor^T|
EPILEPTIC. PARALYTIC
and NERVINE INSTITUTE,
667 Massachusetts Ave., Best en, Mate*
(Near Washington St.)
For the treatment of epilepsy, paralysis, brain and
nervous disease* in all their tonus The only para*
lytic institute in the Tnited States. Consultation
Iree. l'atients boarded, nursed snd cared for.
Office treatment tf desired. Institute open daily*
Rend for circulars.
l&ll9lUn3 Washington, D.C.
wSuccessfully Prosecutes Claims.
£j»tePrtnoipal Kxaminor U.S. Pcneion Bureau,
last wai* i&adiudicatiugclaiiua. atty amoeb