Epicure* contend tliot roast quail ahould uovcr bo "split np tho back," but served whole, on tho inevitable ulico of toast. Tim Bnritrn Bcnrcr. Tlicro Iff a biff Insulated wlro In tologrnphy which transmits tho bulk of dully In telligence j thnro is n Mr Insulated nerve In tho human system which can boar tho bur ilen of moro pain than nil tho rost of tho nerves combined, nnd Is known nsthosciatln nerve. Sometimes tho wire l» out to cut off lis current; sometimes tho surgeon's knlfo Ib used to cut tho nerve to relievo excrueiat- Ing pnln. lint there Is one thing which avoidH this radical treatment; ono euro which penetrates to the pain-spot, nnd sciatica fins been cured almost without fail by tho use ot St. Jacobs Oil. It reuolies misery's sent nnd dothronos It. Thus attackod and routol in its hidden ambuscade, pain seldom returns to aunoy. Tho great romody does its work woll. America is n great (lold for diamond deal ers. Dr. Kilmer's Hwamp-Hoot cures nil Kidney nnd lilndder troubles, l'nmphlet and Consultation free. Laboratory Bliighamton, N. Y. In Corinth, nbout the time of Christ, twenty flgs brought two cents. State of Ohio, Citv or Toledo, T Li-cas Count v. 112 Frank J. Oiiknev makes oath that, ho is tli« senior partner nf tlio ttrraof F. J. Cheney & Co., doing business In tho City of Toledo, Count vand State aforesaid, and that said Hrin will pav tho sum of ONE HUNDRED DOL LARS i'or each and evory esse of Catarrh tlia • onnot be cured by thi use of H ALl.'s Catakku Cuke. Fkan'ic J. Cuknev. 112 worn to before mo nnd subscribed in my presence, this Oth day of December, A. I). lS8t). —. A. W. liLEAHOK, J SEA!, I- I —r— Nutaru Pub'tc. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally and acts directly on the blood and mucous surfaces o: the system. Send for testimonials, free. K. 3. Cheney & Co., Toledo. O. |*>~Si>ld by Druegists. 7;'o. Biminria Jlen In it Hurry eat in restaurants anil often food insufficiently cooked. Riiians Tabules euro dyspepsia and sourstomacn and immediately relieve head' aelie. HAI.E'S Honey of Horehound and Tar re lieves whooping cough. Pike's Toothache I Imps Cure In one minute. Mrs. W'inslow's Soothing Syrup for children teething, softens the gums, reduces inflamma tion, allays nnin. cliri'- wind colic. 2."ic. a bottlu Karl's Clover Itoot. tho great blood purifier, f fives freshness and clearness to tho complex on nnd cures constipation, 3T> cts.. sUcts., Si. Tired, Weak, Nervous "I was troubled with that tiroi and nil gone feeling, bad no appetite, had a cough nnd asthmatic symp -1 112 toms. I have been troublod thus somo W*! 19 thirteen yoaw an J W/ JSRs bad to £">l CiveUp All Work \Bl /.», X '■§. throe years ago. Lust 6/ spring I eotnmoneed 'mki 1 12? tak,n K llood ' s Sawa wM* P ar *^ better from tho lirst. My appetite returned Mr. XVaak Charon and ®y cough left mo. I have used half a dozen bottles and am a well man. I should hnvo written thi3 statement before but wanted to wait until after cold weather had settled with us an I seo if any symptoms of my trouble returned. But not so, lor I am now iu the best of health. lam 64 yours of age, and a full day's work at blacksmitliiug. Hood's Hood's s v> Cures Sarsaparilla cured my complaint and g.ivj me repewed health." FRANK CiiAHON,Claro mont. N. 11. Got only Hood's. Hood's Pills euro nausea, sick headache, indigestion, biliousness, by all druggists, *"*WORLD'S - FA IR I HIGHEST AWARD! ■ "SUPCRIOR NUTRITION-THE LIFE:' j -GREAT A^BPIOIMAT> FOOD Has justly acquired the reputation of being The Salvator for INVALIDS THE-AGED. AN INCOMPARABLE ALIMENT for the GROWTH and PROTECTION of INFANTS and CHILDREN 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. sold by DRUGGISTS. Shipping Depot, JOHN CARLE & SONS. New York. ;! Your Poor |t |[ Tired j! | Husband. |! r He has worked hard <[ ? all week. v ? Let him sleep late € 5 Sunday morning, \ X then treat him to a i J breakfast of ( ) | Buckwheat]! | Cakes. \\ NY X 1-17 mm AT AJ| M M COLLEGE, PoramtKKrtir, Pfl\l MBM N Y • both Mxei tb« ■iHiw I |Vim m best educational ad vantage* at the lowsit coKt. Healthful; best Influences; elective studies. Superior Instruction. Departments of Ho -k keeiiinj and Bunine»s Studies; Shot thand and Type writing; RngHnh and Modern lAinguages; I'enman §hiva».d Iha wing: Ibe elementary branches, etc. NO VACATIONS. Positions obtained fot competent student*. Address. for Catal"inie CI.EMENTC % .GAINES,Pres- fk » | P A Bl Idenf, .10 Washington Street, | a II I I ■> |« p roKMhlcrppsle, New York. . U w lilifti U h Klllir THE TiIVE STOCK IN OOOD ('ONDrTION, Animals should not bo allowed to fall back in flesh or production. It costs considerably moro to replace a pound of flesh or a certain amount of strength, than to retain it. While the animal is losing tho pound of flesh and also wliilo it is regaining it, tho food of support and all the care and sheltering given tho animal arc lost; for when the animal has regained flesh or strength it is just as valuable, and no more, than before. Also, tho food of support is very nearly as great when the animal's production of milk, tor example, is reduced one-half. While the total food consumed is re duced only one-fourth, what is re ceived in payment for that food is re duced one-half; nnd tho cost of cariug for and sheltering the animal is the same. It is plnin that this reduction may wipe out all the profit nnd more. A little carelessness and inattention in autumn may sacrilico all tho gain from tho summer's fcoding and care. —American Agriculturist. TRANSPLANTING TfRMTS. Rutabaga turnips aro excellent to follow a crop of early peas, says tho Massachusetts Ploughman. Wo have had tho best success by transplanting tho turnips. After the peas have all been picked, tho land is plowed and a cultivator is run over the piece to lovel the surface and to scrape off part of tho weeds and rubbish. Tho land is then drilled eighteou inches apart, with a moderate application of phos phate in tho drill. The young plants are set four inches apart in tho row. Tho work of transplanting may be done very rapidly by a skillod work man. Care is taken to bear heavily on tho soil about each plant after pricking out. Tho after work is not very great by this method, tho ground being kept loose with a wheel hoo. For a large field, or where a wheel hoe is not to bo had, wider rows and a line-tooth cultivator would bo pre ferred. Tho transplanting method in sures a regular stand of turnips and quick growth to a good sizo. WHY Illfl TORK IS BEST. Roust pig is geuerullv from young animals that lutvo barely passed the suckling age. It has a sweetness and tenderness that tho animal never can furnish when killed at any later pe riod of its life. But an immense deal depends on tho way tho hog is fed. Contrary to tho general impression, the pig's digestion is not naturally strong. It is almost always, whdo be ing fattened, fed with too concen trated nutrition. This creates fever, and digestion becomes weaker, rather than stronger. The meat from an animal that has been thus stunted in growth is always inferior to that of one that lins had a thrifty growth from the first. AVe have known pork from well-fed, thrifty old hogs to bo more tender and of better flavor than that from young pigs that have been stunted in tlieir growth. Tho great practical point is to keep pigs always thriftily growing until their fattening is completed. We can thus have sweet, well-flavored pork, ami yet have it thick enough to not fry away to strips when cooked. It is com monly objected to pig pork that it cooks away too much. There is rea son in this objection. But thero is 110 reason why, if properly fed, a hog 250 to 300 pounds may not be as sweet and well-flavored as one that is smaller. Its fat may not bo quite so solid, for this solidity is sometimes due to tho fever from over feeding, which makes the meat unhealthful. Boston Cultivator. WHEAT AS A FEEDING OKAIS. The reason why wheat ha 3 not here tofore been the leading feeding grain has been its high market value and the oheapness of corn and oats. But now that it is the cheapest of all grains, in quiries are making into its value both as to its price and the nutriment and digestibility. It is true that all these three points are to be taken into ac count in estimating the feeding value of uny food. Good feeding must neces sarily be that which is conductive to health, for there can be no thrift otherwise. Hitherto no experiments have be(n made in feeding wheat ex cept to a small extent with damaged grain. Lately, however, attention has been turned to this matter, find as might be expected from our scientific knowledgo of wheat, it lias been shown, without exception, that it is now the cheapest grain food on the whole list. Jn feeding poultry, it is especially profitable, and the experience of care ful and intelligent persons goes to 6how that a barrel of wheat, worth about $2.30, will make a barrel of eggs, wortb, at fifteen cents a dozen, not less than SO. This ought to be very satisfactory, seeing that corn is not a healthful food when given to fowls altogether and without a largo addition of other foods. Tho result of feeding wheat to pigs has been pre cisely similar, and with respect to both profit and health. There have been many instances that have proved this grain to be excellent for cows, for tho bran and middlings havo always boen one of the most favored grain foods in the dairy. It has boon found excel lent for sheep, and, as highly-nitro genous food is reasonably propor for a wool bearers, considering tho large quantity of nitrogen in the fleece, this result should reasonably follow. For horses its equal value may bo consid ered as doubtful, except as an addi tion to cut fodder when the grain is coarsely chopped. But as barley dif fers but little from wheat, practically, as a food grain, and as barley is well known to be one of the best foods for this animal, it may be taken as almost certaiu that, when fed judiciously, wheat will be at least better than corn. The writer of this noto has been feed ing rye to hiR horses and mules sinoo harvest, and with every possible sat isfaction to himself as well as to the animals. Thus, if the present low price of wheat continues, tho surplus may be fed, instead of being sacrificed in the lowest markets onreoord.—The York Times. WORK BEFORE MARKETING POULTRY. Ten day6 or two weeks before mar keting fowls confine them in small yards where they will be quiet, contented and oat of sight of other poultry. Seeing other fowls at large will make them fret and lose flesh instead of gaining. Keep the yards scrupulous ly clean. Feed three times a day all that will be eaten at each meal. Give the first meal early and tho last one late in the day. Provide plenty of sharp grit and fresh water. Corn is best for finishing off poultry as it givos a firmer flesh and yellower color than buckwheat or other grains. Pul lets can be fattened best just before commencing to lay and cockerels when the tails begin to turn. It is a mis take to keep males until fully ma tured. As soon as fit for broilers they should be marketed. Cozkerels always meet a ready sale and command high prices. There is much to be learned about dressing poultry. It is useless to sond fowls to market unless fat and neatly dressed. Attraotivencss is an import ant feature in selling and great loss frequently occurs from lack of it. In selling to looal! dealers use the same care in dressing that would be taken if shipping to a distant commission merchant. Fowls look best when dry picked, especially if fat andplump. If they are not in fine condition it is best to scald them before picking. When dry-picked the natural firmness of tho flesh remains, and poultry for Chicago markets should be so prepared if pos sible. Let the fowls go without food for twelve to twenty-four hours bofore killing so that nothing will remain in the crop to sour. Kill by sever ing tho veins of tho neck or in side tho mouth. This can be quick ly and painlessly done with a sharp knife. Hang tho fowls by tho feet to bleed and pick while tho bodies are warm, using great care not to tear tho skin. Leavo tho head and feet on and do not removo the crop or intestines. Wash iu cold water, wipe dry and hang up by the feet in a cool place. For scalding, heat tho water nbout to tho boiling point. Holding tho fowl by the head and feet, dip tho body into tho water three or four times. If tho head touches tho water it will give the eyes a shrunken appearance. Buyers aro naturally suspicious, and if the eyes are shrunken they think the fowl has been sick. When tho feathers and pin feathers have been removed, immerso the fowl in scald ing water for four or five soconds and then dip immediately into ice cold water to give it a plump appearance. If tho head is cut off, turn the skin back a trifle, cut off the bone, and drawing the skin forward tie it neatly. Ducks and geese should go through the same process of dressing as chick ens. For these fowls it requires more time for tho scalding water to pene trate and loosen tho feathers. After scalding wrap them in a thick cloth for two minutes aud tho feathers and down will come off easily. Titrkoys should always be dry picked. Before packing for shipping bo suro tho moat is dry and cold. Pack snugly in clean boxes or barrels after placing a layer of clean hay or straw in the bottom. Boxes or bar rels holding 100 to 150 pounds are conveniently handled.—American Ag riculturist. FARM AND GARDEN NOTES. Plow your gurden in the fall. Less food is required in sun-lighted stables. One specked applo is sure to infect its neighbors. Jerking the horse will ruin tho finest mouth. After a hard drivo tho horso should bo allowed to rest beforo feeding. It is economy to feed a little less hay and some grain to all tho horses. Light, pure air and cleanliness are as necessary in tho stable as in the house. Teach the colt to stand until you are in tho wagon and not to start until you give the word. Swine fever is unknown in Frauoe. Its absence is attributed to the use of green fodder. Tho ammonia from the manure in tho stable is very injurious to the eyes and lungs of the horses. The power and longovity of the liorse are in exnet ratio to tho intelli gent oare and feeding he receives. Whey mixed with whole-ground wheat makes an excellent feed for hogs, either for growth or fattening. A longer time is required to prepare leaf mold or rotted leaves. The leaves must be raked up when they fall in October. It is said that 100 pounds of hay will mako 172 pounds of manure; oats, 201 pounds, while grass will mako but forty-three pounds. In training a colt the safest rule is to teach him one thing at a time, aud bo sure that it is learned thoroughly before attempting something else. A potting soil suitable for most plants is made of four materials— old sods, well-decayed cow manure, rotted leaves or leaf mould, and sand. Some farmers pit their apples as they do potatoes and roots. Care must bo takon to prevent tho so'.l washing through and affcoting tho flavor of the fruit. In the fall is a good time to set out both rhubarb and asparagus plants, and there ought to be a good bed of both on every farm and in every gar den, and well established and given good treatment they will last for years. Tho amount of winter wheat being fod is very much larger than is gen erally supposed. If only one-half the amount is being fed that is reported, there will be no trouble at all to use all the surplus wheat of 1894. Every body is satisflid with its use. HOUSEHOLD AFFAIRS. LACE KMOniKPH IN THE WASH. By putting laco handkerchiefs in warm water in which are a few drops of ammonia, and using oastile soap, thoy are easily washed and made a boautiful, clear white. Then do not iron, but spread the handkerchief out smoothly on marble or glass, gently pulling out or shaping tho lace. Just before it is entirely dry fold evenly and smoothly and place under a heasy weight of some kind and you will find handkerchiefs lasting thrioe as long as before.—New York Journal. niNTS ABOUT UENDIN'O. Nothing keeps flannels and stock ings and other underwear looking so well as darning and mending and re pairing material that matches per fectly. A hole seems almost prefer able to a gray stocking darned with blue, or black undershirt bound with rod, or a brown patch where there should bo a black one. Buttons, all kinds of mending threads, in cotton, linen, silk, and wool, bindings in taf feta ribbons by tho roll, and white cotton tape of all widths, and even webbing by the yard aro to be bought at most reasonable pricos for making old things as good as new, and for keeping the Lew in perfect condition. It also seems to be an economy in the same direction to buy tho same makes and colors in flannels and hose from season to season, so that one may have material to reinforce weak places without buying it.—New York Post. rr WILL BE WISE. To rub spottod lamp chimneys with salt before washing them. To clean steel beads by laying them for several hours in oil; then wipo and polish with chamois. To restoro gilded picture framos by first removing tho dust with a soft brush and washing the gilding in warm water in which an onion has been boiled. Then dry quickly with a cloth. To wear well-fitting shoes about tho housework ; they will be less fatiguing than loose, untidy slippers that are supposed to bo worn for comfort. To remember that the usual methods for removing paint spots from clothing will not be satisfactory if tho paint has becomo hard and dry. In this case use equal parts of ammonia aud turpentine, satnrato tho spot as often as nocessary and wash out in soapsuds. To cut doughnuts out an hour or more before thoy aro fried and allow them timo for rising. They will bo much lighter thau when fried as soon as they are cut. Try cutting them at night and frying them in tho morn ing. To prevent hair from bocoming prematurely gray by takingone ounoo of glycerine, ono ounce of bay rum and ono piut of strong sago tea; mix thoroughly and add a few drops of tho ail of bergamot. To clean carpet by wiping it off with a sponge wet in water, to which a tablespoonful of turpentino has boen added. This should be dono about once a month, ufter tliß carpet has been thoroughly swept; and it will keep it wonderfully bright and fresh looking. To use melted alum for a handy comcnt. It may bo quickly prepared, and may bo used for mending any thing which will not como iu contact with heat and water. To keep the ironing board ftiiil tablo firmly and eveuly covered with a thick blunket and sheet, with a quantity of holders convenient, so that the towels will not bo burned out iu their service. —New York Recorder. CAKES FOR THE CHII.T>nEN. Plain Cup Cake—For two sheets of cake use ouo cupful of sugar, half a cupful of butter, one cupful of milk, two ciipfuls and three-quarters of sifted flour, the rind and juice of one lemon, three eggs, ono teaspoonful of soda and two of cream of tartar. Mix the flour, soda and cream of tartar and sift the mixture. Beat the butter to a cream. Gradually beat in the sugar. Beat the eggs till light and beat them into the butter and sugar. Now add the milk, and lastly the flonr. Beat vigorously for half a minute. Spread tho mixture in two buttered shallow pans. Sprinkle with powdered sugar and cook for twenty-five minutes in a moderate oven. Baisin Cake—Take two and one-half cups of sugar, one-half cup of butter, one-half cup of sour milk, two spoon fuls of cream, one enp of chopped raisins, one teaspoonful of si»da, one half teaspoonful of cinnamon and a bit of nutmeg. Flour enough to knead. 801l out an inch thick. Cut into ob long pieces. Bake quickly. Soft Gingerbread—Stir two tea spoonfuls of soda and one of ginger into one cup of molasses. Add one third of a cup of butter and ouo cup of warm water in which ouo teaspoon ful of cream of tartar has been dis solved. Add three small cups of flour, mix together and bake. Plain Spice Cako—Take one egg, two-thirds of a cupful of sugar, tho same quantity of molasses and of but ter, a cupful of milk, two cupfuls ond a half of flour measured generously, one teaspoonful of soda, one level tea spoonful of cream of tartar, one tea spoonful of vinegar or lemon juice, and one tablespooafnl of mixed spice. Beat the egg well, and after adding to it tho molasses, sugar, spice and but ter—the latter beiug first melted— beat again. Mix the soda with the milk and add to the other mixture the cream of tartar with the flour, and stir into the butter, and finally add the vinegar or lemon jttico. Pour into two shallow paus and bake for twenty min utes in a moderate oven. Cookies—Two cups of sugar and one cup of butter beaten together, two eggs, yolks and whites beaten sepa rately; one-half oup of sweet milk, one-half teaspoonful of soda, nutmeg. Flour to roll.—New York World. A Self-Taught Florist. James Warburton, the "Sage of Cressbrook Cottage," is a self-taught florist, and grows better and rarer roses than anybody in tho Old Bay State. His rosehouses are perfect, and his greenhouses are planted iu a garden which is a paradise of cultured growth. And yst, until ho was fifty years old, "Jimmie" worked in a fac tory as a common spinner. —Chicago Herald. s ., Boston had a Ave cent restaurant for women. Sarah Grand only received 9984 foi her novel, "Heavenly Twins." Ono London woman makes a good living in breaking in new shoes. Queen Marguerite, of Italy, hac yielded to the prevailing cyclomania. All animals enumerated in natural history are utilized for fur trimming. The girl of the period resorts to artificial methods to add to her height. Even small women in sealskin wraps with balloon sleeves will look "im pressive." There is a young society bud of the Gotham Four Hundred who wears a No. 8 shoe. Every ono of England's royal princos wears a facsimile of his bride's wedding ring. In picture frames for the"house beautiful," white and gold have great est popularity. For tho linen closet most house keepers find lavender both pleasant and serviceable. Tho Queon of England has a largo but finely shaped liaud. She wears No. 8 black Buede glove. The Empress of Germany takes a keen interest in hospital work and is a good friend to the nurses. "Occasion" prices at tho Paris shops correspond to tho "special-sale" placards of New York stores. Tho Princess of Wales, who occa sionally tries her band at angling, has a gold inountod rod that cost S2OO. For birthday rings silver has again como into popularity, especially with agate, sardonyx and moonstone sot tings. Miss Helen Gould goes in strong for billiards. It is Baid that she has been known to score as mauy as threo points at a run. Tho daughters of tho Prince of Wales havo taken to cycling and run into each other just as every-day wkoelers do. Tho ladies of Montgomery, Ala., are about to present tho Umtod States cruiser Montgomery with a handsomo silver service. Mrs. Ella W. Poattle, a mombor of tho stntF of the Omahi (Neb.) World- Herald, has been nominated for a po sition on the School Board of that city. Miss Anna F. Grant, who is at tho head of a printing and publishing house in Boston, is preparing a j«ro fcjsional and business woman's direc tory. One of tho Washington hotels has fitted up special sets of honeymoon apartments. Blonde, brunetto and nut-brown brides have rooms to harmonize. Au anti-corset longuo is conducting a campaign against tight lacing in England. Its motto is: "Fashion without folly; elegance without ec centricity." Those who are in tho country now and can secure good specimens of rough bark, will find it an eflfectivo decoration for a special room in thoir winter home. Tho verse of Helen Hunt Jackson was ranked by Emerson abovo that of most American poets. She was born in 1831, and her best prose works are tales of Western life. Worth is said to bo tho only dress maker living who refuses to alter your dress if it does not suit you. If tho fit is not perfection ho makes an en tirely new costume. A committoe of Gorman women has been organized to visit foreign coun tries and study tho woman question under tho leadership of Frau Profes sor von Gisysky, of Berlin. When Mrs. J. W. Mackav, wifo of the bonanza millionaire, wants to im press her European friends with her own importance she invites them to dinner and sets them in front of a §190,000 silver service. London society women li ivo a new fad—tho wearing of an immense ring on tho first linger of tho right hand. Tho ring has to be big and aggressively solid, so that it may contrast with small and delicate hands. On rainy days in China, when a lady comes to a muddy plaoe she beckons to a boy, who will, if ho is in the busi ness, drop down in front of her, mak ing a stepping stoue on which the lady reaches dry land again. Tho cleverest American actresses are taking steps to emancipate this coun try from the tyranny of French fashion. Many of them have very de cided and original ideas which they make their dressmakers carry out. Ono of the few things for which old Queen Mary is to be thanked is tho big sleeve. While it represents the garish taste of tho Tudors, it also iu its present modifications gives a pic tureuqueness to a tall girl's costume that is often queenly. A new cult has been formed which is devoted to the eyebrow and tho eye lash. Its disciples believe that tho charm of beauty lies in broad arched brows and they use all sorts of brushes, tweezers and pomatums to produce the effect seen in ancient statues. Tho most famous jewel in New York socioty belongs to Mrs. John Jacob Astor. It is a superb combination of gems, arranged in the shape of a stomacher, and contains 150 stoues, each the size of a pea. It was Mr. Astor's wedding gift to his bride and cost $500,000. In England thero aro about 3,543,- 000 corset woarors, whose united girth should be 95,661,000 inches, whioh is reduced by compression to 81,489,000 inches, showing, according to the anti-corset league, a deplorable deficit of 2231 miles of waist, all lost by tight laoing. By tho will of Mrs. J. P. Armory, of Braiutree, Mass., that town is to have ''a temporary home for poor wo men and Iheir young children, and for invalid women, both young and old." Mrs. Armory also left bequests to the Women's Hospital and the Skin and Cancer Hospital of New York and to two Massachusetts hospitals. Highest of all in Leavening Power.—Latest U. S. Gov't Report R^SSSS? ABSOLUTELY PURE How to Wa'k. Tho cliiof muscles concerned in walking nro those in the calfand back of tho log, wlrioh, by pulling up tho beel, also pull up the bones of the foot connected with it, and then tho whole body, the weight of which is passed on through tho bones of tho leg. When walking, the trunk is thrown forward so that it would fall down prostrate wero not tho right foot planted in time to support it. Tho calf mnsclcs are helped iu this action by those on tho front of tho trunk and legs, which contract and pull tho body forward, and, the trunk slant ing forward when tho heel is raised by tho calf muscles, the whole body will bo raised und pushed forward and up ward. This advancement of each leg is effected partly by muscular action, the muscles used being (1) thoso on the front of the thigh, bending 'lt for ward on the pelvis; (2) tho hamstring muscles, which slightly bend tho leg on the thigh ; (3) the muscles on the front af the leg, which raise tho front of the foot and toes, preventing the latter, in swinging forward, from hitching in tho ground. When one foot has reached the ground tho ac tion of tho other li"s not ceased. There is another point in walking. The body is constantly supported and balanced on each leg alternately, and, therefore, on only one at oncc. Hence there must bo some means for throw ing the centro of gravity over the line of support formed by tho bones of each leg, as it supports tho weight of the body. This is done in various ways, and hcnca tho difference in tho walk of different people.—New York Telegram. A Ticking Tombstone. There is a tradition that a tomb stone in the graveyard of an old and uncompromising little stone church in Louden, Penn., gives forth a ticking sound, and it has long bcou locally farcous as the ticking tombstone. The noise is not loud enough for tho stono to be located by a stranger, and if the ticking is really ever heard, it comes doubtless from tho trickling of water through tho limestone formation not unusual iu the region. Tho old church dates back to about the middle of the last century, and is surrounded by gravestones, some of them consider ably older.—Detroit Free Press. of all cases of consumption can, if taken iu tlie earlier stages of the disease, be cured. This may seem like a bold assertion to those familiar only with the means gener ally in use for its treatment; as, nasty cod liver oil and its filthy emulsions, extract of malt, whiskey, different preparations of hypophosphites and such lilce palliatives. Although by many believed to be incura ble, there is the evidence of hundreds of living witnesses to the fact that, in all its earlier stages, consumption is a curable disease. Not every case, but a large per. centagc of cases , and we believe, fully 98 per cent, are cured by Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery, even after the disease has progressed so far as to induce repeated bleedings from the lungs, severe lingering cough with copious expectoration (includ ing tubercular matter), great loss of flesh and extreme emaciation and weakness. Do you doubt that hundreds of such cases reported to us as cured by " Golden Med ical Discovery " were genuine cases of that dread and fatal disease ? You need not take our word for it. They have, in nearly every instance, been so pronounced by and most experienced home physicians, who have no interest whatever in mis representing them, and who_ were often strongly prejudiced and advised against a trial of "Golden Medical Discovery," but who have been forced to confess that it surpasses, in curative power over this fatal malady, all other medicines with which they are acquainted. Nasty cod liver oil and its filthy "emulsions" and mixtures, had been tried in nearly all these cases and had either utterly failed to bene fit, or had only seemed to benefit a little for a short time. Extract of malt, whiskey, and various preparations of the hypophos phites had also been faithfully tried In vain. The photographs of a large number of those cured of consumption, bronchitis, lingering coughs, asthma, chronic nasal catarrh and kindred maladies, have been skillfully reproduced in a book of 160 pages which will be mailed to you, on re ceipt of address and six cents in stampr. You can then write those cured and learn their experience. Address for Book, WORLD'S DISPENSARY MEDICAL ASSOCIATION, Buffalo, N. Y. HALMSiiiSizGhßWingGuni •• Cures and Prevents Rheumatism, Indirection, > 4 Dyspepsia, Heartburn, Catarrh and Asthma. A \ Useful iu Malaria an.t Fevers. Cleanse.) the \ A Teeth aud Promote* the Appetite. Sweetens A 112 ihe Breath, Cures the Tobacco Habit. Endorsed t •• by the Medical Faculty. Send for 10,15 or 25 •* > rent package. Silver, stamp* or lostul Sote. A * UKO. K. HALM, 140 West mil St., New York. V <, FICMCIAM J °HNW..iioßnis, IbNdIUN Washington, D.C« l»yrsic last war. U adjudicating claims, atty since> The Key f>C'\ Success > n washing and \ \ cleaning is Pearl [(\\ "'*• y doing U / \ away with the \\ \r \/[w York. " Thoughtless Folks Have the Hardest Work, Bat Quick Wilted People Use SAPOLIO Teoumscb, tho Indian loader, WM revcr even a chief, but acquired his supremacy over the Northwest Indiana solely by his inflammatory oloquence. A designing politician, ho won the ad miration rather than tho lovo of his followers. Hotels in England aro to make a re duction of twenty-flvo per cent, to members of tho Cyclists' Touring Club, which now number 20,000 mem bers. Brings comfort and improvement and tends to personal enjoyment when rightly usea. 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 liealth of the pure liquid laxativo 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 anu 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 andsl bottles, but it is man* ufactured by the California Fig Syrup Co. only, whose name is printed on every package, also the name, Syrup of Figs, and being well informed, you will not accept any substitute if offered. Ti e "LINENF" are the Eest and Most Economi cal Collars and Cuffs worn: they are made of fin# doth, both Hides finished alike, and bein* reversi ble, ono collar is equal ♦ot wo of an y other kind. 'lhtu tit ve!/, wear well ani louKwelLK box ot Ten Collars or Five Pairs of Cuffs for Twenty-rue 1 A* Sam pi® Collar and Pair of Cuffs by mail fw Bi* Cents. Nawe stylo and size. Address KEVKRSIISLE COLLAR COMPACT. 17 Franklin St., New York. ST Kilby St., Bogtom. AN EXAGGERATED CASE. For that full feeling That come' after eating There is a remedy. Simple but effective and Immediate. _« A • Ripans • Tabule. Take one! at tlie lime, Swallow it and A t hero you are. ? One who pets just as full In any other way Is not so uncomfortable fit the time. \ That sensation, to him, Comes later. To prevent it Take a tabule Before goiuu to 6ed. W. L. DOUGLAS $3 SHOE NO «QUEAK*N» §»5. CORDOVAN, FRENCH* ENAMELLED CALT *4.ts£° FINEGAUF&KMMAIK * 3.5P POLICE.3 SOLES. S2 S..*2.WORKINQNEte EXTRA FINE. BIWSSCHOOISHKS. S£ND FOR CATALOGUE SPw*Lo'DOUGLAS, 9 BROCKTON# MASS. Uu can save money by wearing *V. L. Douglas 13.00 Shoe. Itecaaae, we are the largest manufacturers o« 112 his grade of shoes in the world, and guarantee thelf vilue f>y stamping the name and pries on the bottom, which protect you against high prices and the middleman's profits. Our shoef equal custom work in style, easy fitting and wearing Qualities. We hare them sold everywhere at lower prices fof the value givaji than any other make. Take no suth stltute. if yotir dealer ?annot supply you, we can. I