MIOHIGAN'3 BENEFAOIDB. AN OFT RVPKATBD STORY OW TRUE PlfTt/A JSTHttOPY. What Otinn. H. Hackle? HAS Done for Weatern Michigan. (From Orandßapidt, Mich., Evening Preti.) The most beautiful spot ia all this olty Is inseparably associated with the name of Haokley. Ohos. H. Haokley has been la the lumber business here continuously stnae 1860, and In that time has amassed a fortune which gives him a rating among the wealthy men of the nation. But with wealth there did not come that tightening of the purse strings which Is generally a marked charac teristic of wealthy men. It Is no wonder then that the name of Charles H. Hackley is known at home and abroad. Ills munlfloence to Muskegon alone represents an outlay of nearly half a million. For the past twenty years he has been a constant sufferer from neuralgia and rheumatism, also numbness of the lower limbs, so much so that It has seriously Inter fered with his pleasure in life. For some time past bis friends have noticed that he has seemed to grow young again and to have recovered the health which he had in youth To a reporter for the Npws Mr. Hackley explained the secret of this transformation. "I have suffered for over 20 years," he said, "with pains in my lower limbs so severely that the only relief I could get at night was by putting oold water compresses on my limbs, I was bothered more at night than in the day time. The neuralglo and rheu matic pains in my limbs, which had been growing in intensity for years, nnally be came obronio. I made three trips to the Hot Springs with only partial relief, and then fell back to my original state. I couldn't sit still, nnd my sufferings began to make my life look very blue. Two years ago last September I noticed an account of Dr. Williams' rink Pills for Pale People and what they had done for others, and some ensos so nearly resembled mine that I Was interested, so I wrote to one who had given a testimonial, an eminent professor of musio in Canada. The reply I recolved was even stronger than the printed testimonial, and it gave mo faith in the medicine. "1 began taking the pills and found them to bo all that the professor had told me they would be. It was two or three months be fore I experienced any perceptible better ment of my condition. My disease was of such long standing thnt I did not expect speedy recovery and was thankful even to be relieved. I progressed rapidly, however, towards recovery and for the last six months have felt myself a perfectly well man. I hare recommended the pills to many people and am only too glad to assist others to health through the medium of this wonder ful medicine. I cannot say too much for what it has done for me." Dr. Williams' Pink Pills contain all the elements necessary to give new life and rich ness to the blood and restoro shattered nerves. They are for sale by all druggists, or may be had by mall from Dr. Williams' MediolnoCompany,Sohenectady, N.Y., for ilfty cents per box, or six boxes for $2.50. Business Aphorisms. ~ Cnrlyle wasn't a man of business, but be would have made a success of it, bad be tried it. In bis writings one finds tbese lines of solid b""inesa truth: A laugb is worth a hundred groans in any market. J Have a smile' for all, a pleasant word for everybody. To succeed, work bard, earnestly and incessantly. All honest men will bear watching. It is the rascals who cannot stand it. Better have the window empty than filled with unseasonable and unattrac tive goods. When you hang a sign outside your plaoe of business, let it bo original in design and of good quality. Wondrous is the strength of cheer fulness ; altogether past calculation its power of endurance. Efforts to be per manently useful must be unifomly joyous, a spirit of sunshine, graceful from very gladness, beautiful because bright.—Scientific American. ! Gally-gascoynes, commonly cor rupted to gallygaskins, were a com bination breeobes and hose. In a recent article on Coffee and Cocoa, the eminent German Chemist, Professor Stutzer, •peaking of the Dutch process of preparing Cocoa by the addition of potash, and of the process common In Germany in which ammo nia is added, says:"The only result of those processes is to make the liquid appear turbid to the oye of the consumer, without effecting a real solution of the Cocoa substances. This artificial manipulation for the purpose of BO called solubility Is, therefore, more or less in spired by deception, and always takes place at i He cost of purity, pleasant taste, useful action and aromatic flavor. The treatment of Cocoa by such chemical means is entirely objection able. . . . Cocoa treated with potash or ammonia would be entirely unsalable but for the supplementary addition of artificial flavors by which a poor substitute for the aroma driven out into the air is offered to the con sumer." The delicious Breakfast Cocoa made by Walter Baker & Co., of Dorchester, Mass., is absolutely pure and soluble. No chemicals, k or dyes, or artificial flavors are used in it. Had Hip Disease I He was treated at the Children's Hospital, 'Boston, and when he came home had SKV flohn Boyle EN RUNNING SORKS on his leg. Could not step. We have been giving him Hood s Barsnparilla a year, and he o.in walk, run, and ploy as lively as any boy. He haa no sores and is the FICTUBG OF HEALTH. JOHN C. BOYLE, Ware, Mass. Hood's^Cures Hood's Pills do not purge, pain or gripe. WALTER BAKER & CO. Largest Manufacturers of Un PURE, HIGH GRADE COCOAS AND CHOCOLATES Continent, nciln4 JRP* HIGHEST AWARDB AHa from th* gmt § m Industrial and Fool ALL EXPOSITIONS ffij Mjln Europe and America. Hftl n[/ JPlij Unllkathe Dutch Process, no A Ilea* ■lyjallN or other Chemicals or ara ivMi rsssat pun Ini soluble, U(1 cants Inu than on* cent m cyp. •OLD BY GROCERS EVERYWHERE. WALTER BAKER ft CO, 00RCHE8TEH. MAM. DROPSY^ E cured many thou* «and rate* pro «m»n<-ed hopeless. From first dene srmptonu rapidly disappear. Sad in tan days at least t»»©-third* of all symptom* ara removed. ■OOK of testimonials of miraculous cures *ent FItKK. {BmMSWIBKIMIffiaBIiS.'si BOSSES' FONDNESS FOB ROLLING. A very common stable vice among horses is a tendency to roll completely over. In a state of freedom this is not attended with any danger, though sometimes, wlien the ground ia hard, the withers have been injured by con stant attempts to roll over. Horses seem to regard the process as fun. When the attempt is made in the stall the horse is often completely thrown upon his bAck against the wall and is unable to got back again.—New York World. HOW TO WATER PLANTS. One reason why plants facte so soon in ordinary living rooms is because due attention is not paid to them. The mere supplying them with water is not enough ; the leaves should .be kept perfectly clean, for plants breathe by their leaves, and if their surfaces are clogged with dust, respir ation is hindered, or may be alto gether prevented. Plants perspire by their leaves, too, and dirt, of course, impedes this perspiration ; And as they also feed in the same manner, it is evident that there can be no thriving and growth without real cleanliness. Cast the eyes upon the foliage of plants kept in the ordinary sitting room, then draw a white handkerchief over the leaves, and it will be seen that they are far from being as clean as their nature required.—St. Louis Star-Savings. TO KEEP THE NESTS AND EGGS CLEAN. As those eggs which are the cleanest nnd brightest looking usually bring the highest price when marketed, the keeping of the nest clean, so that the eggs may be so, is no doubt one way by which you can make your eggs bring a higher price than those of your neighbors. There is no secret whatever to be found out in order to accomplish this, as all that one will have to do is to bo watchful and see that whatever you may keep in your nest to make it soft is changed when ever it may bo needful. The eggs can never be clean if the nest is dirty; but if the nest is clean you will undoubt edly find the eggs 80, hence it is in the nest the work will liavo to be dene in order that the "hen fruit" may have that clear, bright, and clean ap pearnnce which catches the eye of the consumer. To keep the nest clean is a very easy matter; all that will be needed is to change the hay, straw, or leaven, or whatever may be used, about once a week. When you are cleaning out the nest in this manner a good idea 'nould be to givo it a thick coat of whitewash. This will make it look better and will also drive away from the vicinity of the nest the lice, which aro so troublesomo to the hens when laying.—New York Witness. THE FEEDING VALUE OF HOOTS. There arc runny substances which if chemical analysis bo taken as the sole guide for feeding value, would appear to be ideal rations, yet it is sometimes found that either the animals will re fuse to eat them altogether, or fail to do well when restricted to them, writes H. W. Mumford, of Michigan. It is important, then, that foods should be appetizing, that they should be relished by the stock. Again, one cannot consistently advise the use of articles of food, at least to any con siderable extent, unless it can be profitably produced or purchased at n comparatively reasonable figure in the markets. The chemical analysis of roots has proven satisfactory, they are relished by stock, they can be profitably grown, and when fed out to farm ani mals experience has shown that the results obtained have come up to all reasonable expectations. I find them valuable as a food for all farm stock. Horses soon learn to like them and it has been a custom with me to feed about two good-sized roots to a horse everyday. AU the young cattle get rutabagas, seldom more than sixty pounds of cut roots a day, depending on the age and size of the auimal. I aim to feed the cows 011 what sugar beets thty will eat up clean. The brood sow gets a few roots every day and seems to cat and relish them as well as grain. Poultry are fond of a light feed of finely chopped beets at frequent intervals. While I advocate the feeding of roots to all farm animals, where suc culent food in some other form is not available, yet I believe that roots are pre-eminently a most valuable and an economic food for sheep. At the Michigan experiment station, in an experiment conducted to ascertain the relative value of ensilage and roots for fattening lambs, the roots gave much the most marked result). Not only this, but the economio value c' roots as a factor in the ration of fat tening lambs was conolusivelyproven. It is very expensive to construct a silo and get suitable mnchinery, while in raising and feeding roots no great initial outlay is occasioned and the roots furnish valuable succulent food. —American Agriculturist. IV£ CULTIVATION OF VICLTTS. Violets grown entirely in cold frames will require considerable oare to in sure a supply of flowers during the winter months. If leaves havo not al ready been packed about tho frames for additional protection, this should be done at once. A litter of manure, straw or hay affords fairly good pro tection, but none of these keep out cold as well as leaves, and they are all less tidy-looking. If a frame is prop erly packed with leaves and protected with mots and shutters a temperature of zero or lower can easily be resisted. Instead of straw nuts wo nsu those made of Singapore-fibre. Thoy cost but little mule than the straw mutx, are slightly heavier, and far more durable. Thoy are iin pet 4 >ll h t, moisture, and mice do not gnaw and destroy them. The mats we have iine.l for three winters uro but littlo worse for wo r, hikl cared for properly thou'd aioi.t to tail rams Know AmiM not be allowed to remain over the panes longer than twenty-four hours at a time if it oan possibly be avoided ; the plants need all the light and air they can get during the dark months, and if the frames are covered over for a week or ten days at a time the plants suffer greatly. Mold will quiokly spread among the crowns and the leaves become weak and spindling. The plants ought to be picked over once a week, and any diseased or de caying foliage removed. If any green slime appears on the surface of the beds it should be scratched over. The Lady Hume Campbell Violets are entirely free from spot this sea son, and this variety seems equally clean in other places. It does not, however, bloom as freely as the Marie Louise at this season of the year, and the flowers, while of good size, are somewhat paler in color than those of Marie Louise. Swanley White is also free from spot, but we have had some little trouble with this disease on Marie Louise, and especially on lifted plants. The plants grown in frames during the summer have made the most vigorous and the healthiest plants. As a remedy for spot we have used Fir-tree oil onoe a week with good resnlts. A small handful of salt is mixed in eAch twelve-quart can of the Fir-tree oil mixture, and the ap plication is made about mid-day, while the sun is shining full on the plants. We find that our plants at this sea eon dry out sufficiently to take a mod erate watering onoe a fortnight, but they will need less water from now until the end of January. The water should be tepid, and should not bo poured into the crown. The water ing should be done early enough in the day for the foliage to become quite dry before nightfall, and air should be admitted on every favor ablo opportunity. It is better to von tilate even when the outside tempera ture is several degrees below freezing point, if the sun shines on the frame, than to keep the frame closed, and run up the temperature with au idea of forcing tho blooms.—Forest and Garden. FARM AND GARDEN NOTES. Have the fruit in a cool place. The English farmor buys his phos phoric acid at so much a pound. Land which has had corn and field poas on it will answer very well for Irish potatoes. The man that does not apply all the manure possible every year is liko a miser, injuring himself and benefiting no one. Tho little things on the farm if sold at the right time count up quite rapidly sometimes, as we have found out by experience. The chicken coop will neod cleaning out quite often now. as tho poultry will spend a great deal of their time in it to keep from the wind. Salt is injurious to poultry to givo in too great a qnantity. If fed in moderation in their soft feed it will help to make it more palatable. Every one who plants seeds ought to send to some seedsmen for their catalogues, so that they may be ablo to have tho best tho market affords. Where sheep have an advantage over cattle is in the fact that they can live on ranges where it would be utter ly useless to try to keep other stook. When you receive the catalogues from the different seedsmen, it might be well to pick out one or two novel ties and include them in your annual order. We would rather risk tho loss of fei tility when spread in the field than un der the eaves in the muddy barnyard, no odds what the character of the soil may be. If you have common hens which do not pay, grade them up with thorough bred males; then clean up and feed less corn, and you will soon be on the road to better results. The 400-acre apple orchard of Judgo Wolhouse, in Leavenworth County, Kansas, yielded 47,374 bushels of ap ples this season, whioh were sold at a net profit of about 812,000. It is not difficult to keep hens and sheep from getting sick, but it is not so easy to cure them when they are sick. It is usually cheaper and better to kill them than to try to save them. The Pittsburg Dispatch tells how money may be made by growing po tatoes. One farmer made $7500 out of Ilfty acres of potatoes, and another one got 83000 for 5000 bushels of po tatoes raised on twenty acres of laud. Promptness in marketing is always advisable. A man had better not raise so much and dispose of it to tho best advantage thau to strain every nerve to raise everything possible to be dis posed of in an injudicious way or to goto loss unmarketed. Considering tho amount necessary to purchase a good horse at the pres ent time, there is no excuse for driv ing a poor, broken down, old animal that life is a burden to; besides, it josts less to feed and care for a good IK rse than a poor one. Begonias and callas are both flower ing and foliage plants, and may be kept all winter with a little extra care iu watering. Both like warmth, but they must have a moist atmosphere to do well. For plentiful flowers, they require also direct sunlight. Land that is unproductive is not necessarily exhausted. The elements of fertility may lie in the soil, but in an unavailable form. Leguminous plants will bring it nitrogen from tho air, aud a crop of manure may supply some simple elemeut to make a proper balance iu its constitnnnoy. The successful merchant makes quick sales and small profits, changing his | stook in trade often. Ho does the suc cessful farmer, and manure is just so much of a farmer's stock in trade. It is imt business to pile up the nitrogen, potash, etc., of thirty acres of wheat and let it rttutaiu there four to six A tiorilla Dissected. An autopsy was held upon the body of Gumbo, the gorilla which died re cently at Boston. Professor Franklin Dexter, of the Harvard Medical School, and Professor Councilman, formerly of Johns Hopkins University of Balti more, now professor of pathology at Harvard, conduoted the examination, says the Hartford (Conn.) Times. Con sumption was fonnd to have been the causo of death. The doctors decided that Gumbo was about forty years old, and that he had had the germs of tubercular consumption of the slow variety, which is a disease the simia are particularly subject to in this cli mate. One discovery was that of a sort of pouch or bag in the chest, in front of the lungs and connected by means of an independent valve with the trachea or windpipe. This is undoubtedly the organ employed by the gorillas iu making their peculiar roar. The brain weighed seventeen ounces. In its structure it bears a striking re semblance to the human brain, being, however, broader at the base and nar rower at the top, and exhibiting a far less number of convolutions. Tho brain will be subjected to a variety of delicate tests and a minute microsco pic scrutiny. Professor Dexter and his assistants intend to make an exhaustive compari son between the gorilla and a human being. In life Gumbo measured five feet six inches in height and in health weighed 168 pounds. His arms were four feet in length and his muscles of the texture of wire rope. A Good Kind ot Food. No sort of food is better for the complexion than oatmeal and oranges. The finest complexions in the world are those of the Spanish and Italian ladies, who live largely on coarse grained food and fruit like the orange and banana. It is said that many ladies are living almost entirely on oranges. Half a dozen for breakfast with a cup of coffee, a dozen for lunch with a glass of milk and a sauoer of oatmeal, and a dozen ir ore for supper with a crust of bread and a sip of tea, may not be high living in the proper sense of the word, but such u course of diet will bring a complexion which will drive almost any belle out of her head with envy.—New York Adver tiser. A House in a Fret. Let the mother become sick anil helpless, nnd'the houso Is nil In disorder. When both father and mother are down you may ns well close the shutters. Order Is brought out of chuos often very easily, nnd Mrs. John Malln, of South Butte, Mont., Feb. 17, 1893, found an easy way out of lier diffi culties, ns she writes thus : '"My husband and I took very bad rheumatism from severe colds, and my arms were so luine I could not raise them to help mysolf. 1 sent at ouce for n bottle of St. Jacobs Oil, and before the bottle was half empty I could go about my work. My husband became so lame ho could not get out of bed. Two and half bot tles completely cured him. X will always praise St. Jacobs Oil, and you may use this as you see lit." This is a clo ir case o( what Is'-est at the right moment, and how every household can bo made happy whero pain abounds. • Sheboygan means'"stream that comes from the ground." "A THING OF BEAUTY." Mammoth Edition el lloud's Calendar lor 15.13. Every one who gets Hoo l's Calendar lor 1895 secures ".i thing ot beauty." Tue enl- I'ndnr Is formed In theshipeof n heart an I is ornamented with Iwo beautiful child laces whic'i IIRV.) always been charming lent urea of Hood's Calendars. Ou the rlgnc Is a representation of "Winter,' 1 the sweet little faoe with light browu eyes peeping o 1' from n dainty cap, while the snow II ikes are falling all abou*. The face ou the left is a picture of "Summer," and Is lighted with blue eyes and the head covered with a Hat decorated with bright flowers. Til) shales nre perfectly blended noil the whole picture Is surrounded by a tasty 1 order. The de sign was mnde by Miss Mau le Humphrey, ouo ol the most gUted and e.ile irate l water co'or artists In the country. Tue calendar gives the usual information concerning the lunar chauges, and upon the buck is printe I n table of astronomical events especially cal culated for 0. I. Hood X Co. The calendar is Issued to aivjrtiso the preparations of the llrin, and is regarded ai most difficult to manufacture, Its novel shape being such AS no other couoern had ever undertaken to produce in large quan tities. Durlug the live months when th» cal endars were being made tnere were aclu illy employed every day In this part of the work six printing prosses, one bronzing machine, four eye-letting macnines. seven wire stitch ers, eight large paper cutter* an I Iaper saw a large ele phant engaged in pumping such a trough full of water. He continues: "In passing I notioed that one of the two tree-trunks which suppsrted the trough at either end had rolled from its place, ro that the trough, still elevated at one extremity, would begin to empty itself as soon as the water reached the level of the top at the other and, which lay on the ground. I stopped to see if the ele phant would discover anything wrong. Soon the water began to ruu off at tho end which hail lost its support. The animal showed signs of perplexity when he saw this; but, as the end nearest him lacked milch of being full, he continued to pump. "Finnlly, seeing that the water con tinued to pass off, ho left the pump handle and began to considor the phenomenon. He seemed to find it diffi cult to explain. Three times he re turned to his pumping, and three times ho examined the trough. I was an absorbed looker-on, impatient to see what would be done. Soon a live ly flapping of tho ears indicated the dawning of light. Ho went and smellcd of the tree trunk which had rolled from under the trough. I thought for a moment that ho was going to put it in its placo again. But it was not, as I soon understood, the end which ran over that disturbed his mind, but the end which he found it impossible to fill. Raising the trough, which he then allowed to rest for an instant on ono of his huge feet, ho rolled away tho second supporting log with his trunk, aud then set his trough down so that it rested both ends on the ground. Ho then re turned to the pump and completed his task." Tiie Fare ol a Clock. Wo believo it was George Augustus Saht who once said he would think himself safo in betting a five-pound notes that not more than one person out of a score coukl tell correctly ofl liand, in what way the hour four is represented on a watch or clock-dial. Most people, without looking, would 6ay IV, instead of 1111. And why should it not be IV? Well, here is tho Btory. Tho first clock which kept anything like accurate time was con structed by a certuiu Henry Vick, in 1370. It was made to the order of Charles V., of France, who was called "The Wise." Wise he certainly was iu some respects, but he did not know everything, though'he'liked to pretend that "lie did. When Vick brought him his clock, ho looked closely at its movements for sometime. "Yes," it works very well," ho said at length, but you havo got tho figures on the dial wrong." "Surely not, your Ma jesty," said Vick. "Yes, that four should bo four ones." "You are wrong, your Majesty." "I am never wrong," thundered the King. "Take it away aud correct tho mistake." Vick did as commanded, and so to this day we have 1111, when we really should havo IV. It is not generally known that watchss may be used as compasses, yet such is the case. Point tho hour hand to the sun, and the south is exactly half way between the hour and tho figuro XII on the watch. For instance, supposing that it is four o'clock. Point the hand indicating four to the sun, and II on the watch is exactly south. Suppose that it is eight o'clock : point the hand indicat ing eight to the sun, and the figure X on the watch is due south. —Ladies' Treasury. Diagnosed by llie Hair. A shepherd who can tell from see ing a patient's hair what his disease is, and whose cures are miraculous, attracts hundreds of people daily to the village of Radbruch, near Har burg, in Germany. To protect his own health he refuses to see more than a fixed number daily, who must hold tickets which were distributed by the local constable, till a firm of speculators bought them all aud sold them for high prices. The police authorities are investigating the mat ter.—New York Sun. " A Fair Face Cannot Atana for an Untidy Kouaa." Uaa SAPOLIO I Blood Diseases ; such as Scrofula and Anaemia, Skin Eruptions and Pale or I I Sallow Complexions, are speedily cured by I | Scott's Emulsion || the Cream of Cod-liver Oil. No other rem- 11 .vt edy so quickly and effectively enriches and 11 I I purifies the blood and gives nourishment ' ' I • to the whole system. It is pleasant to take I I I I ***& easy on the stomach. I II Thin, Emaciated Persons «d all I i 11 suffering from Wasting Diseases wo re- I i 0 stored to health by Soott's Emulsion. I I A Be sure you get the bottle with our | | 0 trade-mark on it. Refuse cheap substituteel | | 1 Srnttfor famfklti «m Sail'i Emuhitn, FREE. I | Dulce a Strange Food. Dulce is a seaweed growing on the rooks in the sea, and used as an article of food by the poor on the coasts of Ireland, Scotland and other Northern countries, and of the Crecian Islands. Even some of the wealthier classes in those localities also show a great par tiality for this production, the taste, however, being generally an acquired one. Dulce has a purple, leathery, membranous leaf, with an odor some thing like that of violets mingled with sea Rait. It is eaten raw or roasted, and in Ireland it is sometimes boiled in milk. Among the inhabitants of the latter country it fc considered a most important plant, and after being washed and dried is stored in casks, to be eaten with fish. The Kamtschat kans utilize it in the making a fer mented liquor. The name of duloe is also given in the southwest of Eng land to another seaweed of tbe same family, which is eaten raw or pinched between hot irons. Still another variety called "pepper duloe" has a sharp taste and is used as an appetizer when other seaweeds are oaten. Con siderable quantities of Irish dulce are imported into this country, and may be bought at grocery stores.— -Tew York Dispatch. Dr. PIERCE'S Golden Medical DISCOVERY Cures Ninety-eight per cent, of all cases of Consumption, In all Ita Earlier Stages. Although by many believed to be incura ble, there is the evidence of hundreds of living: witnesses to the fact that, iu all its earlier stages, consumption is a curable disease. Not every case, but a large per centage of cases, and we believe, fully qS 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 the best 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 iu 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 liypophos 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 stamps. Address for Book, World's Dispensary Medical Association. Buffalo, N. Y. 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. The Farquliar » I-II fT* ENGINES. m bozxjbm; IMHL. AU Btjles, 4to DADWAY'S n PILLS, Alvays Reliable, Parely Vegetable. Perfectly lasteles*, elegantly coated, purge, reou late, uurlfy. cleaoso and strengthen. KADwAIPS PILLS for the cure of all disorders of the Stomach, Bowels, Kidneys, Bladder, Nervous Diseases, Dls&l --ness, Vertigo, Costlveness Piles, SICK HEADACHE, FEMALE COMPLAINTS. BILIOUSNESS. INDIGESTION, DYSPEPSIA, CONSTIPATION AND All Disorders of the LIVER. Observe the following symptoms, resulting from diseases of the digestive organs: Constipation, In ward piles, fullness of blood In the bead, acidity of the stomach, nausea, heartburn, disgust of food, fullness of weight of tbe stomach, sour eructations, sinking or fluttering of the heart, choking or suffo cating seusatlons when lu a lying posture, dimness of vision, dots or web* before the sight, fever and dull pain In the head, deficiency of perspiration, yel lowness of the skin and eyes, pain In tbe side, obest, limbs, and sudden flushes of heat, burning In the flesh. A few doses of RAD WAY'S PILLS will free the system of all the above named disorders. Price 25c. a Box. Sold by Druggists, or went by mall. Sena to DR. RADWAY & CO., Lock Box 365, Sew York, for Book of Advice. The Greatest Hedical Discovery of the Age. KENNEDY'S Medical Discovery. DONALD KENNEDY, OF ROXBURY, MASS., Has discovered in one of our com mon pasture weeds a remedy that cures every kind of Humor, from the worst Scrofula down to a com mon Pimple. SEND FOR BOOK. Dumbarton, Ohio, Dec. 24,1804. Donald Kennedy, Dear Sir: I.asl spring La Grip and Bronchitis took me and for weeks I got worse though taking medicine all the time. A friend told me of your Medical Discovery, how it had helped a friend of hers' and I thought J would try it. I have taken two bottles of Discovery and three bottles Prairie Weed and I can't begin to tell you how much belter I feel. When I began to take your medicine I could not sit up much of any; now I sit up all day and walk round the house, but I am still hoarse, —Of course you are—that's tbe Humor about threo "more bottles Discovery will get the last of that out of your system.— and want your adtice about that. I thank you with my whole heart. Yours truly. NAOMI OLIVER. $ Y .N U— 3 t ENGINES \ t AND BOILERS * 9 For all purposes requiring V A power. Automatic. Corliss A Y & Compound Engines, llor- ¥ A izontal &- Vertical Hollers. A T Complete Steam Plants. 112 ' B.W.PAVNE&SONS, * ' ».v. " Y - ' 112 41 Hey W. L. DOUGLAS $3 SHOERI; CORDOVANi A •• Tk FRENCH fcUMMILLIOCAIT. «L , „ i;Ht4.*33P FINE CAIRIKANMMT ♦ 3.V POLICE, S SOLES. tin^SiSSs^ B*OCKTO*CMjS3. Ov«r Om Million PeopU wnar tte W. L. Douglas $3 & $4 Shoes All our hoM In atyla and fit. Thslr mrini qualities art unaurpaMe*. The pricee ara uniform,— etemped an Wh Pram Si to SJ aavad ovar ethar aukea. II your dealer cannot supply you wa can. HOTELARAGON Atlanta, Georgia. TIE PALACE HOTEL Of THE SOOTL Every modern Improvement known lo aotenot. P«r» feci cntMne nnd M «t uniform cllmsfe In UNITED ST\IK> HKND M»R IMK>K and fttm