How HAlr Pins are Made. For .years tho English and French controlled the manufacture of hair piu«, and it is only within the last twenty years that the goods have been produced in this country to any ex tent. The machinery used is of a deli cate and intricate character, as the prices at whioh the pins are sold necessitate the cheapest and most rapid process, which can only be pro cured by automatic machines. The wire is made expressly for the purpose aud put up in largo coils, which aro placed iu a clamp, which carries it to the machine while straightening it. From there it runs into another machine, which cuts, bends, and by a delicate and instan taneous process sharpens the points. Ri'.nning at full speed, those maohines will turn out 120 hair pins ovcry min ute. To economize it is necessary to keep them running day and night. The difficult part of the work is in the enameling, which is done by dip ping the pins in a preparation and baking iu an oven. Here is where the most constant aud careful attention is required, as the pins must be perfect ly smooth nud the enamel have a per fect polish. Tho slightest particles of dust cause imperfections and rough ness, which is objectionable. Pitta burg Dispatch. Never Too lute or TooHoon, Thero is ltioro lost in life from putting oft from to-day till to-morrow what might be tlonooa tho instant than from any other cause. Fortune and fame have been thus wrecked, and in minor things it will not do to dolay or trifle. A man hobbling OQ crutches lot tho rest of his life, caused by sprain, would have bnen a well, sound man, out of misory, if ho hail uaed St. Jacobs Oil whon the mis hap occurred. It is never too soon to get it; novertoo lato to use it. The groat remedy for pain never tarries ;It will do its work lr ten minutes if it is allowed to do so. Treni pain as you would a mosquito—knock it out as soon as it bites. ' Basutoland, Africa, has 113 schools wltb au enrollment of 5932 scholars. Dr. Kilmer's SWAMP-ROOT cures all Kidney and Bladder troubles. Pamphlet and Consultation free. * Laboratory Blnghainton, N. Y. There is one milch cow in this country tc very four inhabitants. Catarrh Cannot Be Cured With local applications, as tliey cannot react the seat of the disease. Catarrh is a blood oi constitutional disease, and in order to curi It you must take internal remedies. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, and acts di rectly on tho blond and mucous surface. Hall's Catarrh Cure is not a quack medicine. It wna prescribed by one of the best physician* in this country for years and is a regular prescription. It Is composed of tho best tunics known, com bined with the best blood purifiers, acting di rectly on the mucous surfaces. Tho perfect combination of the two ingredients is what produces such wonderful results in curing ca tarrh. Send for testimonials free. F. J. C'nr.xEY & Co., Props., Toledo, O, Sold by druggi.its, price 75c. Wlien Nature Needs assistance it maybe best to render It promptly,but one should remember to use oven the most perfect remedies only when needed. The best and most simple and gentle remedy le the Syrup of Figs manufactured by the Cali fornia Fig Syrup Co. (taccca* la l.ifc depends oil the little things. A Ripans Tabult is n little tiling, but taking one occasionally gives good digestion, and that means good blood, and that means good brain and brawn, and that means success. Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup for children teething, softens the gums, reduces inflamma tion, allays t»nln. cure-: wind cnlie. -jr,c. a bottlf Tnr. Public Awards tho Palm to Hale's Iloney of lioreliound and Tar for coughs. Pike's Toothache Drops (Jure in one minute. ' Karl's Clover Root, tho great blood purifier, pives freshness and clearness to the complex ion and cures constipation. cts.. 50 cts., sl. ] 112 afflicted with sore eyes use Dr. Isaac Thomp son s Eye-water. Druggists sell at 25c per bottle Pure Blood Cives Perfect Health-Hood's Sar saparllla Makes Pure Blood. " I became troubled with soreß which broke out, on me from the lower part of my body down to my ankles, dark, flnt and Very Painful. Hood's Sarsaparilla cleared my system and healed the sores in a # short time. It also improved my Appetite and benefited my gen eral health. I recom mend Hood's Sarsapari 11a to all.** L. P. THOMAS, Postmaster, Barton** Creek, Va. HoodV'J> Cures Hood'n I'ill* arc the best. 2."» c*nts per box. Hmhvay'n Rpmlv Relief Is safe, :ellable and eflectual because of the stimulating action which It exerts ovt-rthe nerves and vit il powers of the body, adding tone 10 th • one and inciting to renewed and Increased vigor the slumbering vitality of the physi cal structure, and through this healthful stimulation end Increased action the CAU>E of lhe I'nln Is driven away, and a natural condition restored. It Is thus that the ICendy Iteliel is so admirably adapted for the Curr of I'niu. and without iho risk of injury which is sure to result front the use of many of the so-calied pain remedies of the day. It is Highly Important that Every Family Keep a Supply of BAD WAY'S " READY RELIEF Always in th» hoas\ Its use will prove beneficial on nil occatdons of palu or sl-ku?ss. There is nothing In the world that will stop pain or arrest the progress of disease as quick an the Heady Relief. STOPS PAIN 30 ct «. a bottle. Sold by druggists. K A PWA Y A (/'<>., New York. WALTER BAKER & GO. The Largest Manufacturers o£ 'UfcA pure, high CRADE 2V COCOAS AND CHOCOLATES thle Continent, hart received Jgp sß HIGHEST AWARDB from the great l|i Industrial and Food I 'ft®. EXPOSITIONS i :|JlnEnropeandAmerica. Mm ; | Mi w|!l,Vnlike the Dutch Proreee.no Alke or other Cheraicale or Dyee aro In any of their nreparationa. Tkeir delicious BREAKFAST COCOA la absolutely pure ana soluble, and cottt lets than wne cent a cup. •OLD BY GROCERS EVERYWHERE. WALTER BAKER ft CO. DORCHEBTER, MASS. MTLCHINO. Mulching of strawberries to retard thom is done by placing manure ovet tluj ground when it is frozen, and then scattering straw over it. Care rnusl be taken that the manure does nol cover tho orowns of the plants. Leave the covering of straw on quite late in tho spring. The manure can rcmaii permanently.—New York World. CKEAM THAT WILL NOT MAKE BUTTER. It is often the caso that the cream of the milk of a cow duo to calve it two or three months will not make butter, but foams in tho churn and rapidly becomes very sour. Tho mills of a cow undergoes a change nboul this time, and some cows aro so af fected that the cream will not yield any butter. Every cow should be dried off, if tho milk does not stop naturally, two months beforo tho call is due. At any rate, good butter can pot be made from the milk so neai calving. This condition of tho milk, of course, is at once evident in a sin glo cow, but doubtless there are cows in herds in tho same condition, but aro not detected. It shows how need ful it is that a strict watch should be kept on each of tho cows in a herd.— New York Times. SLOW OR FAST DRYING. It makes a great difference in the value of corn fodder whether it is cut during warm, dry weather, when it will cure rapidly, or later, when raine and cold make it dry out more slowly. All tho time it is moist some waste it going on in tho nutritivo valuo of the stalk. When the drying is hastened tho waste is small; wlieu it is pro tractod by rains, especially with warm weather, tho wnsto is much greater. It is not stopped entirely by cold weather. As the moisture freezes out of the stalks it is found that tho woody fibro is increased and tho nutritive valuo has decreased in liko proportion. Every farmer knows that cornstalks after repeated freezing and thawing become of little value for feeding. They aro dry, tasteless, and tho stock will not eat them readily, as they do tho partly-dried stalk at the begin ning of winter. Much is said about tho woste of nutrition by fermentation in tho silo. There is such waste, but it is trivial compared with the waste of cornstalks by slow drying. The silo makes tho nutrition more available by partly couking the food.—Boston Cultivator. COLIO IN HOUSES. Irregular feeding in iho matter of hours, long fasts and too great quan tity given at long intervals are fre quent causes of colic, says tho Now York World. Irregular work is not without its influence -a twenty-mile journey onco a week is likely to be productivo of more misohief than tho same distance every day. A liorso put to hard work at intervals cannot be kept in condition. Horses ought to bo fed late at night and early in the morning; they should havo at least two hours to consume and digest the morning feed before being taken out to work, and if not returned to tho etable when the next feed is duo, should bo provided with nose bags. Changes of food should be intro duced gradually. Horses may be fed with impunity on what will makothem seriously ill if care is not taken to make tho change gradually. Thus, green food, when it first comes in, and is young and succulent, often causes gripes, because fed too largelv to tho exclusion of tho accustomed dry material. If a small quantity is cut with tho hay chaff to begin with, the horse is less greedv about it when a larger quantity is allowed, and the digestivo organs as gradually becomo accustomed to tho change. Attention to the prevention of colic is much bet ter than tho possession of a recipe for its cure, for some day the recipe misses fire, and death w:us the match. Apart from this, an attack successfully dealt with still means loss of service for some time—very often at a busy period. FEEDING APPLES TO COWS. There has long been a practical opinion among farmers that while sweet apples might be fed to cows with satisfactory results, sour apples were very injurious for them; but this opinion has been founded upon very slight actual knowledge of tho real feeding value of apples. At the Vermont station apple pomace, en silaged, and used supplementary to and in part as a substitute for corn ensilage, was found to be relished by oows, and the results of four tests found it to be about equivalent in feeding value to corn ensilage. At the Massachusetts station Dr. Goessmann found apples to contain about eighty per oent. of moisture, the apples hav ing been gathered Ootober 6th. The farther advanoed apples are towards maturity tlie more sugar is found in them, and their value depends largely upon the amount of dry matter which they contain. Laboratory tests show that the feeding value of apples is some what higher than that of an equal weight of turnips. Apple pomaco it said to be equal to sugar beets, it be ing a somewhat singular chemical fact that tho pomace is rioher in nitrogen ous matter tban the apple from whioh it has been produced, and tho feed ing value of pomace is assumed to be, pound for pound, one-third high er than that of the whole apple. Still apples are deficient in nitrogen, and ought on this account to be literally supplemented for dairy cows with wheat shorts, bran, oil cakes, clover and good hay. To obtain the best re sults fiom feeding them to cows, the early sort should bo fed by itself, sour ones in less quantity than sweet ones, fed when fully ripe, after the night's milking. The quantity should not exoeed four to six quarts to a feed. —American Agriculturist. BYE AS A PASTURE CROP. I have believed for twenty-five years that most of us, in what is oalled "the West," did not sufficiently appreciate tho value of rye as a late fall an&carly spring pasture crop, writes E. D. Coburn in the Now York Tribune. Where conditions are at all favorable it furnishes an astonishing quantity of rich, succulent grazing just at a time of year when it is most relished and most needed by all kinds of farm ani mals, even including poultry. It pieces out to great advantage other feed that may be scant or poor, and while especially agreeable to all the stock, if will make poorly nourished cows practically double their milk in quantity and quality. In fact, I have never seen a Kansas farmer so well fixed that a good piece of rye pasture wasn't a genuine bonanza to him. Thero has never been a season in all the central West when something of that sort was more of a comfort to its possessor than it will likely be within the noxt nino months. Hence I would say to every farmer who reads this, do not fail to sow, and sow early (in fact just as soon as the ground can be putin proper condition), a goodly area of ryo for pasture. Don't sow it for grain, but for pasturage; mako tho most of it for grazing, and if eventually it also yields some grain worth harvesting, well and good. If you can't secure the seed readily, sow wheat just as you would ryo; if It is not a plump, high grado article, that will cut but a small figuro if sound. If of small or shrunken berry I would not sow less than fivo pecks to the acre; if plump a busbel and a half would be none too much; at all events, uso plenty, and don't bo afraid of Laving too many acres. I haven't discovered anything that was a hotter regulator for tho pigs, tho colts, tho calves, the cows or the old blind maro than a good bito of green rye or wheat. It is excellent in years of groatest abundance; in years when other feed is scarce or poor, it is simply indis pensable—really a benefaction. Sow it with a drill or broadcast as you think best, but do a good job, as if you desired success and meant to de serve it. FAITM AND GARDEN* NOTEP. A littlo vaseline and carbolic acid applied to parts of the horse that ho cannot touch with tail or head will give him much relief by keeping flies away. Producers who have formerly de pended on cnsilago may bo obliged to at least partially substituto grain to make their winter dairying for 1894 and 1895 profitable. Professor Roberts, of Cornell, says the great difficulty with farming is too much or too little moisture, and too littlo cultivation, thus indicating the necessity of drainage. Before storing articles in the cellar tako a day for the purpose, use a peck or more of sulphur, if necessary, and fumigato it two or three times, in order to purify the walls, floors, ceilings and bins. A. W. Pope, Wellosley, Mass., says of alfalfa: It goes down further and comes up faster than common clover. Tho quality of the hay is good, but it is hard to cure. I get three crops the year following the planting. Foals should bo taught to eat grain while yet with tho mares, and then tho weaning process is not so likely to check their growth. Feed any spare milk to the weanings until they get woll started on regular rations of grain and hay. Dairymen should wake up to tho fact that it is quite as easy, at a well-man aged creamery, to make good butter in winter as in summer. When they realize this we shall not seo so many idlo establishments just at tho time when they should be running at their fullest capacity. It is not only unprofitable but cruel to let miloh cows wander about in grassless fields under a merciless sun. Under such conditions keop them in a small, shady enclosure if you have one, and there feed them their forago and see that they have plenty of cool, pure water at regular intervals. Select a bull from a good dairy family, and then breed tho very best of your cows, feed the resulting young sters well, and train them so that they can bp easily handled when you aro ready to put thom in the dairy. This feeding and training is a necessary supplement to tho breeding, in order to make a perfeot dairy animal. Cold weather shuts off the egg sup ply among poultry keopers who do not understand their business, and then they cry that there is no profit in fowls. But tho wise man makes his houses warm and snug, feeds liberally and a good variety of food, compels the fowls to take exercise and reapeth his reward in a bountiful harvest of eggs whioh sell at good prices. Perhaps you have your dairy up to a certain standard of excellence, but how aro you to keop it there? Some of tho cows will soon bogin to get old. Then they must goto tho butcher. Better be raising and training some good heifers, whose breeding you know, to take their places. Do not wait until you have to use them, and then buy where it comes handy. Do not be soared out of the poultry business because people speak of it contemptuously, calling it a "little business." It cau be mado just as large as your ability and adaptability will justify. It iB more a question of these elements than of capital. Tho latter is good in its place, but it is not the only requisite, and too much of it has wrecked this business more than onoe. One Big Free Lunch. Tourists who strike Cario, Egypt, aftor a ruler's death are in untisuil luck. For forty days after tho Khe dive's death food is served with coffee and cigarettes to all who visit ttoe tomb.—Chicago Times. Migrations of the more timid spe cies of birds take place at] night. HOUSEHOLD ATTAIN. COOKING map (HUMAN trm% Many who liavo married German gentlemen would like to »t ofore their husbands occasionally ft gonuine Ger man dish if they knew how to prepare it. The reoipes given here (or good German cookery were obtainod during a residence in Germany in tho family of a notable haasfrau. They will prove agreeable additions to the general American menu. For a favorite Teutonio dish take three pottnds of the best beef, or, for a large company, four or six pounds. Wash the meat and place it in a largo jar or crook. Insert half a dozen cloves. Lay on top a bay leaf and one largo onion, thinly sliood. Pour over the meat enough mild, boiling vinegar to nearly cover it, and close the jar with a plate. Should the vinegar be very sharp, water it, as tho taste of vinegar should not be too strong. Tho boiling of tho vinegar is necessary, tho albuminous coating thus formed retaining the meat juices. In two days boil the vinogar again, and again pour it over tho meat aud cover, this timo turning the beef. In from throe to five days it is ready for use, aud should bo quite tender. Though three days aro a long enough time, five aro no injury. Remove tho meat from tho jar and wash it free of the onions. Then cut pickled pork into very fine strips, as thick as a lead penoil and about three inches in length. With a sharp knife make deep incisions thickly over tho top of tho beef and thrust in tho bits of pork. Turn and treat the other side similarly. Tie into shapo with a strong cord. Place in a deep kettle a piece of butter the sizo of an ogg, and when hot putin the meat. In a moment's time turn it and add enough boiling woter to nearly cover it. Close tho kettle tightly. Baste frequently with its own liquors and cook with a good firo three hours and not a moment loss; an extra half hour is preferable. Tho gravy is made by a flour thick ening, and a cup or half a cup of sour cream added. After having gono through this pro coss onco sauer braten will be found to bo an easy dish and one that will repay all trouble. It is excellent sliced cold. To keep it moist and tender turn over it tho remaining gravy, cover aud set iu u cool place.— New York Press. ITOCSEIIOfcD HINTS. Milk applied ouce a week with ft soft cloth freshens aud preserves boots ami shoes. Acid phosphate will remove ink stains from tho hands when everything elso fails. Ono of tho easiest ways of taking cold is to drop asleep without an extra wrap over the shoulders. Cannod sardines carefully browned on a double wire gridiron and served with lemon are appetizing. These aro the days when extra care should be taken to keep the feet per fectly dry. A fresh pair of stockings should be used every day. Canned tomatoes aro more delicious baked than stowed. About ten min utes before removing from tho oven spread buttered bread crumbs over the top. When an eiderdown comfortable has got hard and lost nil its elasticity, hang it in tho cool, balmy sun for a few hours, and all the life will como back to it. Calicoes, ginghams and chambrnys cannot be properly washed along with the white clothes. They need a much quicker process, and the long delays of an ordinary wash day would ruin them. Tho physician in charge of tho Woman's Hospital in Soo Chow, China, is Dr. Anne Walter, a Mississippi woman. There is no country on earth now where tho plucky American woman is not doing missionary work of somo kind. Every good housekeepor browns and rolls or grates her stale bread, thus having it in readiness for scallops or frying meats, fish, croquettes. If, af ter boing rolled, it is put through tho flour sieve the additional fineness will amply repay the trouble. Wall paper samples are decoptive. Never select from them. They will make your room look smaller, quite often, though they had not that effect in the sample. Helect from tho roll and have several strung out at once, so that you may get the full effect. When you havo strained your plain boiled potatoes, take them at once to tho open door or window and give them a vigorous shaking in tho draught. Thoy will become white and mealy. Try it once, and you will do it always, so great is tho improve ment. If you have many short stemmod flowers to arrango it is well to till a low dish with damp moss, then with a sharp stick dibblo holes in the moss and insert tho stems. When the flow ers have faded tho moss may be dried and used again. Pansies show to bet ter advantago in this way than in any other. Do you wish to make gruel for a sick friend? Take corn meal and sift it into a quart of boiling water, stir ring it until it is of the consistency of cream. Add salt to flavor, and let it simmer for halt an hour or longer; then run it through a fine sieve. Have in a bowl a little cream or rich milk. Pour your boiling gruel into it, and you have a drink a siok porson ought to relish. White suede glovos may be cleaned by using dry pipe clay and an old tooth brush. White cloth such as is worn on military uniforms can be cleaned in the same way. Wet the clay and tub it vigorously. It will make nn awful looking mess at first, and you think that you have ruined the cloth, but just rinse out the brnsh and scour the cloth with fresh water, and it will come ont looking all right. Coat-of-arms were first employed in England during the reign of Richard 1., and Became hereditary in families in the following century. They origi nated from tho painted banners car ried by knights and nobles. The largost bell in America in said to be in the cathedral of Montreal, Canada, anil weighs 28,000 pounds. Cold That Ban*. Burning ia usually aMociated with heat, and it seems a misnomer to speak of cold burn*. Chemists tell us that there is really no such thing as cold, which is relative heat, and that the lowest temperature yet registered is some degrees above absolute cold. At the last meeting of the Swiss So ciety of Natural Sciences at Lausanne, M. Baoul Pictet gave some particulars concerning oold burns experienced by himself and assistants during his in vestigations of the lowest temperature attainable. There are two degrees of burns. In one case tbe skin reddens at first and turns blue the following day, and subsequently the area of the spot expands until it becomes nearly double its original dimensions. The "burn," whioh is usually not healed until five or six weeks after its occur rence, is accompanied by a very pain ful itching on the affected spot and the surrounding tissues. When the burning is more serious, produced by longer contact with the cold body, a burning of the second degree is ex perienced. In this case the skin is rapidly detached, and all parts reached by the oold behave like foreign bod ies. A long and stubborn suppura tion sets in, which does not seem to accelerate th° reconstitution of the tissues. The wounds are malignant, and scar very slowly in a manner en tirely different from burns produced bj fire. On one occasion, when M. Piotet was suffering from a severe burn due to a drop of liquid air, he accidental ly scorched the same hand very se riously. The scorched portion was healed in ten or twelve days, but the wound produced by the cold burn was open for upward of six months. In order to try the effect of radiation in dry cold air, M. Pictet held his bare arm up to the elbow in a refrigerat ing vessel maintained at 105 degrees, when a sensation of a peculiarly dis tinct character was felt over the whole skin and throughout the muscles. At first this sensation was not very disa greeable, but gradually it became de cidedly so, and after three or four minutes the skin turned blue and the paiu bocome more intense and d«op seated. On withdrawing the arm from the refrigerator at the end of ten minutes a strong reaction was exper ienced, accompanied by a superficial inflammation of the skin.—Newcastle Chronicle. Making Matches of Paper. Matches made from paper aro novelties, but Brunswick, Ga., has a factory in full operation that is daily turning out numbers of them. At present the factory is conducted on a limited plan, and was commenced merely as an experiment to see what demand could be created for the new product, but tho success that hag greeted the experiment justifies its continuance on a large seal?, and it is expected that paper matches will soon be turned out in mammoth propor tions. Rosenda Torras is the owner of the new factory, and Senor Antonio Prat is manager, Mr. Torras being conn sel for a number of foreign countries, a large lumber exporter, and a direc tor in tho National bank, is sufficient guarantee that the backing of the concern is not limited, and if tho suc cess with which the industry started is continued, it will not lack for capi tal to push it.—Atlanta Journal. Professor Chamberlain, an English man, is tho Professor of the Japanese language and literature in the Univer sity of Jap in. HOTHERS HOTHERS and those about to SSL- become mothers, should know that vorite Prescription robs childbirth of its torture, terrors aßrffiy and dangers to both mother and child, by aiding Nature in preparing the system for parturition. Thereby "labor" and also tlie period of confinement are greatly shortened. It also promotes an abundant secretion of nourishment for the child. During pregnancy, it pre vents "morning sickness" and those distressing nervous symptoms from which so many suffer. Tanks, Collie Co., Texas. DR. R. V. PIERCE, Buffalo, N. Y. : Dear Sir—l took your "Favorite Pre scription " previous to confinement and never did so well in my life. It is only two weeks since iny confinement and I am able to do my work. I feel stronger than I ever did in six weeks before. Yours truly, da., A MOTHER'S EXPERIENCE. South Bend, Pacific Co., Wash. DR. R. V. PIERCE, Buffalo, N. Y.: Dear Sir—l began taking your "Favor ite Prescription" the first month of preg nancy, and have con tinued taking it since confinement. I did not experience the nausea jGk or any of the ailments T7, m due to pregnancy, after UP JT I began taking your "Prescription." I was only in labor a time, and the physician v ' 1 ('! MbBMv said I got along un- -4H(r usually well. 7T „ We think it saved me MRS a great deal of suffering:. I was troubled a Sreat deal with leucorrhea also, and it has one a world of good for me. Yours truly, MRS. W. C. BAKER. Consumption was formerly pronounced incurable. Nov it is not In all of the early stages of the diseasa Scott's Emulsion jgrMyg—- will effect a core quicker than any other known specific. Scott's Emulsion pro motes the making of healthy lung-tissue, relieves inflammation, overcomes the excess ive waste of the disease and gires vital strength. or Oouglw, Golds, Weak Langs, Sere Throat, aMFMSIM Bronobitis, Consumption, Scrofula, Anaemia, OHM| LOIS of Flesh and Wasting Diseases of Ohildrea. Buy only the genuine with our trade* «... -, nnn mark on talmtn-tolored wrapper. Send for pamphlet on Scott's Emulsion. FREE.* •oott *. lowne, W. Y. All Drunlits. 60 osnts in< Si. I The baking ponder made is, g as shown by analysis, the Royal. § 1 Corn'r of Health, New- York City. Both Ways Across the United States. The greatest length of the United States from east to west is on the parallel of forty-five degrees north latitude; that is to say, from East port, Me., on the Atlantic Coast, to a point on the Pacific exactly fifty-two and one-half miles dne west of Salem, Oregon, On the above parallel it is exactly 2768 miles long. Its greatest width, from north to sonth, is on the ninety-seventh degree of longitude, which extends through the United States in an almost direct line from Pembina, North Dakota, to Point Isabel, Texas. The greatest width is 1611J miles.—St. Louis Republic. Cold Cures. Many bad colds come from bad di gestion. When the stomach is out of order the body is liable to catch any thing that is epidemic. Cold euros and complexion remedies are twins in therapeutics. One old prescription still holds good : Qet into bed aud stay there twenty-four hours; eat and drink nothing, not even water; the next day take an alcohol bath and rub every part of the body red with a coarse towel; swallow a mild laxative and drink a bowl of hot milk or thin gruel. This will cure a bad cold and a bad face, if the patient takes no more food for the day than is absolutely necessary.—Home and Farm. 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 half the sick ness in the world; and it can all be prevented. Go by the book. Write to B. F. 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. v YOUWGMEN.BOTSsTODNIjMDIES' Trained for a Successful Start In Business Life, taught how to get a Living Make Montfr and become En terprising tiscful Citizens at EASTMAN COLLEGE, POUOHKKKPSIB, N Y.. On-Th--Hudson, ihe only School i n America devoted to this specialty. Situations provided for competent students. Refors to Patrons in •▼cry State and Graduates In nearly every city rod town. Total expense of prescribed cotltoe lIW to $l5O. Bear in MM That" The Gads Help These Whe Help Them selves." SeH Help Should Teach Y«u ie Use SAPOLIO "I wish I had not eaten that salad." " Why 1 I thought it excellent." "So it was. but it has given mo indl. (estlon. It distresses me fearfully." " Oh, that's nonsense. Swallow this. You'll oe all right in ten minutes." "What isitf" "Am Ripans • Tabu let" "Do you carry them around with "I do, indeed 1 Ever since 1 heard about them I keep one of the little vials In my vest pocket." Corn 255 Itnshois to the Acre. The largest crop of corn ever pro duced on one acre, according to the Charleston News and Courier, was that raised by a furmer in Marlboro County, South Carolina, in 1892. .A prize of SIOOO waR ottered for the largest yield on an acre, and this farmer chose a piece of wornout piney woods, sandy land, to which he ap plied more than a thousand dollars' worth of fertilizers. The season was favorable and the cultivator was kept going almost constantly. The stand became so thick and heavily burdened with ears that fences had to bo built to sustain it. When the crop was gathered it measured within a peck of 255 bushels, and carried off the prize, which the farmer richly deserved, for it takes a vailant man to spend more than a thousand dollars to enrich a single acre. No More Croaking l . A society among merchants and trad ers out West has been formed, iu which the members agree that they will not hold conversation about hard times, dull trade, small orders, slow collections, low prices of wheat, etc. The idea is an excellent one.—Hard ware. Basuto Land, in South Afriea, pro duces aud exports wool, wheat aud hides. W. L. DOUGLAS (fit CUAP IS THE BEST. OnUk 5. CORDOVAN, FRENCH A ENAMELLEDCALT mm 7" *4-^3s_oFINECALf&KAN6AROI $ 3.5-° POLICE.3 Soles. 4? Si*2.WORKINGMFN^ EXTRA FINE. Ml * W -BOYSSCHOOISHOES. FOR CATALOGUE W«L.*DOUGLAS, BROCKTON/ MASS* itn can lan money by wenrlst tb» W. L< Douglas s3*oo Shoe. Because, we are the largest manufacturers ot this grade of shoos lathe world, and guarantee thcif value by stamping the name and orlet on the bottom, which protect you against .high price; and the middleman's profits. Our ahoez equal custom work In style, easy fitting ana wearing qualities. We hare them sold everywhere ailowez prices for the value than any other make. Take no sut» ■tltute. if your dealer cannot supply you. we can. ) N Y X U—44 I ENGINES \ AND BOILERS t I' For all purposes requiring 0 . | power. Automatic, Corliss U I & Compound Kngines. Hor- w . | izontul & Vertical Boilers. A \ Complete Stenm Plmits. x <| B.W.PAYNEASONS, { i K .Y.OOe.f ,mira N - Y - { 4 41 Day St. 112 HALHS^s^CliewingSuiii •• Cures ana Preveuts Rheumatism, m.ingestion, •• M Dyspepsia, Heartburn, Catarrn and Asthma. A \ Useful tn Malaria ana Fevers. Cleanse* the \ A Teeth and Promoter the Appetite. Sweetens 'A T the Breath, Cures the Totmcco lit bit. Kndorsed T •• by the Medical Faculty. Send for 10, 15 or 2.1 •• A ®«Dt package. Silver, St*mp§ or I\t»tnl Note. A GEO. R. IIALM, Ho West 29th St., New York. H **'*.'??** Use HI
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers