Minn milled Moii'»ys. In several plaoes in the Cape Colony and Orange Free State of Sonth Africa caves have been explored which yield ed hundreds of mummified remains of a queer species of six-fingered monkey. All of the full-grown specimens of this remarkable species of qaadruma have the tail situated high np on the back from three to five inches farther up than that on the modern monkey— and other distinguishing marks, such as two pets of canine teeth, beards on the males, etc. Whether those creat ures were mummified by human be ings, who formerly bßld them in rever ence, or were overtaken by some cata strophe, such as sudden convulsion of nature, or a cataclysm which en tombed them in their caves and thns preserved them is a secret that can never be known.—St. Louis Republic. Drawn Oat. The pain of a small burn can be easily ex 11acted by placing it near heat, which ilraws it out. One feels the pain going out as It were, and this illustration explains a broad principle of cure of many things. For in stance, in a sprain, severe or mild, warmth by friction begins a true operation. But. tirst and foremost, use St. Jacobs Oil. The needed warmth and friction comes from reh bing it on. The skin and Injured muscle grow soft and hcatod and take up the curative properties of the remedy, ana It is not long before one feels the pain drawn out. Other properties are at work to strengthen and restore, and a positive cure follows like magic. The old-fashione.l beaver hat was made with a body of rabbits' fur. Some floating aoips torn yellow and rancid. Dobbins 1 Floating-Borax Soap does neither. The .Borax in it bleaches it with ape, and the odor is delightful. Try it once, use it always. Order a trial lot of your grocer. Ins.at on red wrappers. A Turkish turban of the largest size con tains from ten to twenty yards. Dr. Kilmer's SWAMP-HOOT euros ull Kidney and Bladder troubles. Pamphlot and Consultation free. Laboratory Binghamton, N. Y. The cap of a Chinese mandarin sports a button at the top. "BROWN'S BitoNcn!ALTitocnKS"«reaslmp'e and convenient remedy for Bronchial Atten tions and Coughs. Carry them in your pocket. Silk hats have a muslin body as a basis. 9400 in l'rizeson Oats and Corn. Last year we offered S2OO for the biggest yield on oats. 209 bushels Silver Mine Oats won. This year we offer f'JOO more on oats, JIOO on Silver King Barley, a Barley yielding in 1805116 bushels per acre, and SIOO on Golden Triumph, Yellow Dent Corn, the corn of your dreams! What's Teosinte and Sand Vetch and Saca line and Lathyrus and Giant Spurry and | Giant Incarnate Clover and lots of such things? They'll make you rich if you plant aplenty. Catalogue tells you. Ir YOU WILL CUT THIS OUT AND SEJJO it with 10c. postage to tho John A. Salzer Scad Co., La Crosse, Wis., you will get, free. 10 grasses and grains, including above oats, barley, corn and their mammoth catalogue. Catalogue alone sc. (A.) FITS stopped free by DR. KLINE'S GIIEAT NKIIVK HESTOHEH. NO tits after first day's use. Marvelous cures. Treatise and trial bot tle free. Dr. Kline. Hill Arch St.. Fhila.. Pa. I am entirely cured of hemorrhage of lungs by Piso's Cure for Consumption. LOUISA LINUA.MAN, Bethany, Mo., January 8, 1894. Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup for children teething, softens tlie guins, reduces Inflamma lion.allays pain, cures wind colic. 2Sc.a bottle 1 112 afflicted with sore eyes use Dr. Isaac Thomp son's Kyc-water. Druggists sell at 25c per hot tie Nerves Depend upon tin'blood for sustenance. There fore if the blood is impure they are improp erly fed and nervous prostration results. To make pure blood, take Hood's Sarsaparilla The One True Blood Purifier. $1; fi for $5. Hood's Pills tirm. isaaiag l^ X Y N C—4 DAD WAY'S " PILLS, Always Reliable, Purely Vegetable, Pcrfe- ly tasteless,elegantly coated, regulate, purify, cleausi? and strengthen. RADWAV 'S PILLS for the cure or all disorders of the Stomach, Dowels, Kid neys B1 dder. Nervous Diseases, Dizsinsss, Vertigo, Costivene's, Piles, SICK HEADACHE, FEMALE COMPLAINTS. BILIOUSNESS, INDIGESTION, DYSPEPSIA, CONSTIPATION, AND 9 All Disorders of the LIVER. Observe the following symptoms, resulting from diseases or the digestive organs: Coustipatlon, in ward piles, fulln *ss of blood in tnc head, acidity of tho stomach, nausea, heartburn, disgust of food, fullness of weight of the stomach, sour eructation sinking or fluttering of the heart, choking o;* suffo cating sensations when In a lylni* posture, dimness of visi >u, dots or webs before the siKht, fever and dull pain in the head, deficiency of perspiration, yel lowness of the skin and eyes, pain in the side, chest, ght to some 400,000 tons applied on the equator. Other causes, he says, have also to be taken into account, a?, tor example, the in crease in the size of the earth, due to the falling on it of meteoric dust, which, it deposited at the rate of one footin 4000 years, would proiluce tho observed retardation by itself. Fur ther, such a phenomenon as the annual growth and melting of mow and ice at the poles, by abstracting water from the other parts of tho oceau, intro duces irregularities into tho problem, the abstraction accelerating the earth's ■notion, and the melting, by restoring the water, retarding it.—Bostou Jour nal of Commerce. Arße-itlnti'B I'flitnl v oltl"ineit. The Government of Argentina h'is con verted Terra del Fuego into a penal settle ment. SOFTENING BONES WITH LIME. It is not the lime that softens the bones when they are mixed with fresh wood ashes and lime, and the whole kept moistened with water, but the pota.b. Ihe potash in the water is in a mild condition, is the foim of a car bonate of potash, but the litz* takes the carbonio acid from the ashes and makes the potash caustic. The caus tic potash is very acrid, and eats the lime in the bones and so softens them that they may be crumbled with ease after a month's exposure to the mixed ashes and lime in a pit; so that with out the ashes it is not possible to soften the bones; the wood ashes are indißf ensible. When bones are burned the gelatine—which has fifteen per cent, of nitrogen] in it—is destroyed, and thus the greater part of the ferti lizing value of the bones is lost.—New York Times. FBOSPHATE FOK FOTATOES. Potash rather than phosphate would seem to be indicated as a fertilizer by analysis of tho potato. Yet many far mers have be*n very successful apply ing a little phosphate in each hill, not only increa-ing the yield, but growing potatoes free from scab. On heavy soil tho application of superphosphate may make more potash available. It always contains an excess of sulphuric acid which acts on the Foil and tits its potash for ÜBe. This same sulphuric aciit also probably- destroys some of the lungus which causes the scab. But the germicide corrosive sublimate ueed as a weak dilution for the seed is more effective in preventing scab than any i other application. The phosphate will ! need to be liberally supplemented with ! potash for potato crops grown on I sandy soil, and some of the potash should always be used on heavy eoils, as what they contain is often not in available form to be used as plant food. —Boston Cultivator. TREATMENT OK FROZEN PLANTS. "When the days begin to lengthen, the cold begins to strengthen," is an old weatherwise saying which is so true that often tho window plants which have com 9 through December unscathed will be frozen in January, 1 writes "S. C." When one rises in tlie ; morning to tiud them in such plight making up the tire and warming the room as soon as possible will bo fatal to all but the most hardy. On the other hand, if they are removed to a closet or the cellar and allowed to thaw gradually in the dark, many of them will be injured very little. I have frequently ha 1 geraniums como through the ordeal none the worse for it. Many persons cut the plants down at once, when they have been frosted, but this is not necessary with geran iums or shrubby plants, as they will usually put forth new leaves in a short time. Begonias thrive better than most plants iu the warm air of the sitting room, and hence are favorite plants for the window garden, but they are very susceptible to frost. A few va j rieties, the Vernon and Weltoniensis | among tb .in, will sprout up from the ; roots aff i being frozen down, but my I experiet :e with other kinds has been j that it is useless to try to save them iu ' such a case. Last winter I had hyacinths in full bloom frozen one very cold night. The hyacinth before it flowers will bear considerable freezing, but it seemed scarcely possible to save the waxen bells of tho flower spike. How ever, they went into the woodbox as soon as its contents had been emptied 1 into the btove. A covering thick i enough to exclude the light, and also ! the air for some time, was thrown over ; it. After some hours I peeped iu. | They had thawed, but the spikes were i drooping sadly. They were allowed | to remain in the dark all day, and by | the next morning scarcely showed the '■ effects of the cold. As a precaution against freezing it is well to water j sparingly in very cold weather. The few "green things growing" kept iu the windows brighten the home so much in winter that it is always a pity to lose them. —New York Tribune. j CARE OF THE COWS. Have you ever watched your cows on a bitter cold day sneak slowly up , to the water trough where you have I broken the ice and stick her tongue ia ' the cold water several times until she got used to it, then take a little sip and a little more until she could stand no more of it. Then she will walk I slowly over the frozen ground uutil I she gets in the shelter of an old wagon, and there with tier back bumped up she will stand for two or three hours shivering until what feed i she hap eaten has had time to warm ! that water up to a living temperature? .low long ought it to take a sensible man to find out where all of his feed is going, no matter whether it is a milk cow or a dry one. Nearly every pound she eats is needed to warm that water, and little is left to repair the boily, muoh less to make milk or fat of. The simplest kind ot a heating apparatus will cost not over ten cents a day to heat the water for a small herd twice a day. It will pay for it3elf twice over during the winter in food it will save and the milk it will allow the cows to make, and it will do the same in add ing flesh to the other cattle, especially the young oner. Then go a step further and buy some boards to build a shed with that the poor things may have a dry place to stand and lie down ui..ler with a wiuil break against the cold piercing storms. These are not only acts of humanity, but they appeal directly to the pootcet book. They make the stackß of hay, foddi rand the meal bin go nearly twioe as far, to say nothing of increasing the profits oC the milch cows. If a liberal allowance of straw, leaves or other trash is scattered under the shed the amount of manure saved will far more thau repav the cost anil trouble of collecting it, while it great ly adds to the eoiulort of the animals. If you axe not too tired bj this time. then get yon a sharp butcher's saw and take the horns off first from the boss cows and steer*, and then the younger ones. This is the best time of year to do it, when tbere are no flies to bother. —Home and Farm. IRRIGATION OF GARDENS. The importance of irrigation of gar dens and farm lands is a matter of rapidly increasing interest to those concerned. Irrigation has been n«?me what of a bugbear to farmers always, the idea being that it required costly works and much labor to accomplish it, and it has always been associated with the utmost aridity of climate and toilsome cultivation of the soil. But If there are in existence any districts where more than in others the profits of the farm are greater, and the ease of cultivation greater, too, with the certainty of maximum crops also greater, they are the irrigated dis tricts of the far East. Indeed, some of the causes of the depression in East ern farming is due to the less cost of growing crops under irrigation, and the ability of the farmers to sell the products of their farms at alow price, such as other farmers cannot afford to take. In fact, the time has come when irrigation must be made a practice wherever the water is available for it. For it is one of the laws of vegetable growth that this is in proportion to the quantity of water in the soil. But it is in the growth of grass that the application of water to the land may tie made the more profitable with the least trouble. The myriads of I rivers and streams that flow through I this broad land down to the ocean I may all be impounded and made to | work for the farmer without cost, ex j cept for the permanent works re quired ; and some of these need only be of the simplest kind. Here low banks thrown up by the plow, or otherwise by the horse scraoer, will re tain the water of a stream vhen it is high, while it deposits its load of dis solved or suspended matters to add to ; the bulk of the low lands along its i banks, and to increase the stock of I plant food in it. The water thus flows in at the higher end of the embank- I ment and, slowly moving down to the I lower part of the stream, gives up its i load to the greedy soil, and nasteus on j to the next farm, where it takes with it its newly gathered spoils, leaving thein behind as it goes on and on toward its final goal, the great ocean. Lands thus einbauked are quite common all over Europe, and are so productive of grass and the related crops —all use! for feeding—as to pay the interest on a value of SIOOO or S2OOO an acre. If the irrigated lands of the great West have lowered the value of the Eastern farms, why should not these take the same method of cheapening their products, while the quantity is increased, and so restore the old values io them? Irrigation, wherever it is possible, is one way to effect this improvement. —New York ' Times. FARM AND GARDEN NOTES. Dairymen should always remember j it is daugcrous to uso the milk from a I hick cow. I Get a good churn. They are plenty nnd cheap. Time is too precious to waste over a poor churn. If milk is properly pasteurized there is no cooked flavor present such as is noted in sterilized milk. In manipulating butter, never allow , the handu to come in contact with it | as their warmth melts and injures the grain. | As the conclusion of various exper iments, the cost of keeping a dairy j cow, without roots or silage, is put at $35 a year. | Young trees should be cultivated for . some years after planting, as this is an | essential condition of their making a vigorous growth. Now is a good time to cut out all useless, weak, or spindling wood in ' the orchard. A twig that can be cat with a knife now may require a saw next year. I It is important that the cow should be given a smooth surface for lying down. Dry bedding should be nro vided and cold drafts of air excluded j from the table. When packing apples for market preserve uniformity in size as much hs possible. Seleot the largest and finest to form an extra fine quality to tell at a fancy price. Trees which are heeled in during the winter should not be cohered with hay or straw, as such material draws mica and other rodents, which gnaw the young trees aud destroy them. I The colder apples are kept without freezing the better. They will endure a much lower temperature than will potatoes, but when stored in a cellar, good ventilation is necessary and as even a temperature as possible, i All young hogs in the orchard should be left uuringed ana free to root the soil as much as they like. Ringing older hogs is sometimes necessary, as iu a dry time old sows will get in the habit, if unringed, of gnawing the bark of the trees and thus causing irrepar able injury. The appearance of moss on apple trees shows that there is an excess of water iu the soil. The land should be drained for orchards as for other crops. Stagnant water is of no benefit. A system of underdraiuiug should be employed, so that the subsoil will hold more moisture for the use of the roots, i Every farmer should teaoh his boys the art of budding and grafting. Variety and quality of fruits in a small orchard may be greatly improved by judicious budding, aud such work may be made a pastime which will add in terest to (arm life and also inorease tbo satisfaction from the family orchard. At a marriage in Bohemia, the other day, the taper oarried by the bride was accidentally extinguished. She whh so effected that she expired in the bridegroom's arms. HOUSEHOLD AFFAIRS. VIRTUES OF WINTHK FRUITS. She had just returned from a for eign grape oure, with a bloom on her oheek and a light in her eye worthy of a Hebe. "It is the esthetios of medi cal treatment," she said. "There is none of the paraphernalia of a battle for health; but snnshine, fresh air and grapes. One can live on them from morning till night. At firit I could only eat a pound a day, but be fore long I progressed to ten pounds and even beyond that. Fancy it." Although we cannot all visit foreign cures, still, at this time of the year grapes are abundant and within the reach of most persons, who would un doubtedly find a pound a day good economy. We must let our imagina tions furnish the surroundings of the cure—the vines laden with purple clusters, the pleasant hotel, the high, pure air—and devote ourselves to the details of eating all the grapes possi ble. Very few p-ople are aware of the medicinal qualities of grapes; but these they possess. The pulp is nutri tious and the juice contains ongar, tannic acid, bitartrate of potassium, tartrate of calcium, common salt and sulphate of potassium. Without doubt the woman who cul tivates the habit of eating a great deal of fruit is the gainer in health and ap pearance. The grape-fruit, or shaddock, so called from its discoverer, Lieutenant Shaddook —or, to mention its soft Chinese name, pumelo—is highly prized by those who live in malarial localities. It is a charming rival to quinino and boneaet and is driving them from the field. She who eats her grape-fruit with a spoon from the natural cup or relishes it served as a salad may gladden her heart with the reflextion that she is not only pleasing her palate, but benefiting her health. Like oranges and lemons, the grape fruit has great medicinal virtues. If you are of a bilious temperament eat grape-fruit, if fevers threaten eat grape-fruit; but, in this latter case, do so only at the advice of a physi cian, as there may be certain tenden cies whioh the grape-fruit would only aggravate. The complaint is often made that this fruit is extremely bit ter ana unpleasant; it is only the white inner rind which is so, and this should always be carefully removed. To refer to "eating" cures, quite one of the prettiest salads I havo seen lately was a green pepper salad. The large peppers had been opened and the seeds removed, then a Russian salad, composed of varions vegetables, was heaped within the shells and covered with a delisious mayonnaise. These pretty green boats lay on a bed of lettuce leaves, and about the base of thom, and through the curled leaves shone vivid flame-like nastur tium blossoms. "How very pretty and artistic!" I exclaimed. "The oook does not think so," re plied my hostess with a smile; "neither she nor I ku >w that the pep pers must be cut or the seeds taken out under water, consequently she burned her hands."—Chicago Record. RECIPES. Glaze—Glaze is made by boiling the plain, olear soup, before the ad dition of vegetables, to one-tourth its bulk—that is, two quarts boiled rapid ly down to one pint. This will keep for weeks, and can be used for soup and sauces also. Baked Hubbard Squash—Hack a true Hubbard squash into as symmet rical pieces as possible and bake—the shell Bide downward—until done. Eit from the shell, each person seasoning his own with butter, pepper an 1 silt. Very rich aud sweet if the real Hub bard has been used. French Rarebit—ln a well-buttered dish put a layer of bread and butter, then a layer of cheese cut thin. Al ternate bread and cheese, with cheese on top. Turn over this two cups of milk to which you have added two beaten eggs. Bake till brown, twenty or thirty minutes. Dutch Apple Cake—Mix together one pint of flour, one teaspoonful baking powder, one cup milk, one egg, one-half cup sugar, two tab'espoonfnls batter. Pour over quartered apples and bake in flat pan. Make a sauce of grated rind and juice of one lemon, one cup of BUgar, one pint of wafer, one tablespoonful corn starch and a small piece of butter. Ked Vegetable Salad—One pint of cold boiled potatoes in thin slices, one pint of oold tioiled beets in small pieces and one pint of uncooked red cabbage, shredded tine. Mix two teaspoonfuls of salt, half a teaspoonful of pepper, six tablespoonfuls of oil, eight of vinegar (red from pickling the beets). Mix all the ingredients, let stand one hour in a very cold place and serve. Black Beau Soup—Soak one pint of turtle beans in cold water over night. Then add one gallon of water, one-half pound each of salt pork and fresh bee', out as for tea, one onion and one car rot, cut very small. Let boil slowly seven hours, then strain through a colander. Before pouring into tureen place therein one hard boiled egg cut in rings, a sliced lemon, wine glass of wine and a dessert spoonful of sauce. Small force meat balls are an improve ment. Chopped Rsast With Tomato Sauce —Two pounds of chopped bee/, our pound of ohopped veal aud one-half pound of ohopped salt pork; mix well together, season and putin buttered long mold ; moisten with a little hot water, top with bits of butter and cracker crumbs and bake. Make a tomato sauce of one-halfcan of toma toes, one cup of water, two cloves, two sprigs parsley, one tablespoon each of batter, ohopped onion aud cornstarch. When cooked ami strained turn roast out on platter und pour over. A mushroom sauce is also delicious with this roast. Uowbell Imbedded In a Tree. The Bowling Qreen (Ky.) Times says that Deputy United States Mar shal Smith, while cutting some trews, found in the heart of one tree, thirty feet from the ground, a cowbell. It waa completely imbedded in the wood. The tree was perfeot from the roots up. The bell is old-fashioned in form and looked as if it had just come from tha store. The Chinese invented paper 170 0. A NEW WITNESS. HEAPING CP THK EVIDENCE PROOF UPON PBOOF. A ffeit Troy M*n'l Testimony Added to that of Thousand* of Other* In Favor of the Wonderful Efllcacy of Dr. William*' Pink PHI* for Pale People, From the Timet, Troy, N. Y. The effectiveness of Dr. Williams' Pink Pills has been recognized tn thousands of in stances In recent years and testimonials have been received from every quarter of the globe, praising in the highest terms this Wonderful remedy, whioh has been of such incalculable benefit to mankind. On a recent morning an lnstanoe in which he pills had accomplished an admirable work was brought to the attention of a Times reporter, who started at onco to ascertain the authenticity of the report. It was In the village of West Troy, New York, that the object of the search resided, andsocn after crossing the pretty Hudson the reporter was successful in locating his man, Lewis Ferguson. Mr. Ferguson was found at his work in the large box shop of Harrington A Co., where he is engaged as foreman. He greeted the scribe pleasantly and In conversation Dr. Williams' Pink Pills were spoken of, where upon Mr. Ferguson's face brightened and he bc."an to tell of the good the pills had done for him. Mr. FergUnuc «ald: "About two years ago X had an attack of '"cial paralysis and my left side was affected. 1 nor.-d of the merits of Dr. Williams' Pink Pills and ) by addressing Dr. Williams' Medicine Com pany, Schenectady, N. Y. The Norway spruce, well dried, weighs thirty-two pounds to the cubic foot. Earliest ItadMies and Peas. Tho editor urges all readers to grow the earliest vegetables. They pay. Well, Salzor's Seeds are bred to earliness, they grow and produce every time. None so early, so line as Salter's. Try his radishes, cabbages, pons, beets, cucumbers, lettuce, corn, eto.! Money tn it for you. Salzer Is tho largest grower of vegetables, farm seeds, grasses, clovers, potatoes, etc. Ir YOU WILL CUT Tnis OCT AND SEND tO tho John A. Salzer See I Co., Li Crosse, Wis., with 10c postage, you will get sample pack age of Early Bird Radish (ready in IB days) and their great oatalog. Catalog alone 5 j postage. (A.) Catarrh Cannot Be Cored With local applications, ns thoy cannot reach the seat of the disease. Catarrh is a blood or constitutional disease, and in order to cure it you must ta*e internal remedies. Hall's Catarrh lure is taken internally, and acts di rectly on the blood and mucous surface. Hall's Catarrh Cure is not a quack medicine. It was prescribed by one of the best physicians In this country for years, and Is a regular prescription. It is composed of the best tonics Known.com. bined with the best blood purifier!', acting di rectly on the mucous surracs. The perfert combination of the two ingredients is what produces such wonderful results in curing ca tarrh. Send for testimonials free. F. J. CHENEY A Co., Props., Toledo, O. Sold by druggists, price 75c. The Most Pleasant Way Of preventing the grippe, colds, headaches and fevers is to use the liquid laxative remedy Syrup of Figs, whenevor tho system needs a gentle, yot effective cleansing. To be beneflte I one must get the truo remedy manufacture 1 by the California Fig Syrup Co. only. For sale by all druggists in 50c. and $1 bottles. A finotl l>og is Worth Looking After. If you own a dog and think anything of him, should be able to treat him intelligently « en ill and understand him sufficiently tn detect symptoms of illness. The dog doctor book written by H. Clay Glover, D. V. S.. spe cialist in canine diseases to the principal ken nel clubs, will furnish this information. It is a c'otli bound, handsomely illustrsted book, and will be sent postpaid by the Hook Publish ing House. 134 Leonard St., N. V. City, oi Jeceipt of ♦!> ct«. : n nostage stamns. THK AKRMOXOK oa am "; u windmill business, because It hu reduced the on' ui wind power to 1/6 what It was. It has man» brand 112 Houses, and supplies tts goods and repair' . at your door. It can and does furnish a K - better article lor less moon than others. It makes Pumping and Bteei. Bteei. OalTantsed atter Completion windmills. filling ► and nixed Bteel Towers. Steel Boss San Frames. Sieei reed Cutters and Peeo Urlnders. On application It will name one of these articles that It will furnish until January Ist at 1/3 the usua. price. It also maku Tanks and Pumps ot all Kinds Send (or catalogue Factory: 12th. Rockwell «*4 Pillaon Streets, Cfclcua nnillll Morphine Habit Cured In 10 IIIIIIIH to 30 days. No pay till cured. Ur lUM OR. J.STEPHEN»| Lebanon, Ohio. I 1 Be Sure | '7Us pure Cocoa, and not made by I the so-called "Dutch Processl I Walter Baker & Co.'s Break- j I fast Cocoa is absolutely pure —no J I chemicals. WALTER BAKER & CO., Lid , Dorchester, Mass. £ SALZER'S VEGETABLE SEEDS An rooogaiied m the best for all soils ud slimos, whether Em( or Wsat, Nsrtk or South, becaoso tho» Sprout Quickl7, Grow Vigoroualy, Product Enormouiiy! That is thoirrooord ths world OT«r. Being Northern-frown, the* are bred to oarltasss. There is lots of Moaoy nado ia sariy vegetables, sod we aro going to mako a hold lUMnoit hero that the earliest, ohoioost vsgetab'.os »u fM| ths world ara prodaeed tfm Bailor* hoods. Our Catalogus tolls you »».*■ •« it you wish to make mousy—tnat is, kavo vegetables ia the ntrkit I<> to 2» days ahead sf your aeighbors—plaat Oalser's foods load 40. for msrkot |»r donors' wholooalo list Cabbage Is ths ssrliost Cabbage novelty •ftheworld, fttfor Market ,a6odays! Pkg.7i»o ; os. 112 600 ;Klb , |S.OO. Wo make a specialty ofehoioe pedigree Oaioa Ssod: OUe per pound' Salter's Earl Us t Cuoaatker oaauotVi boat. Pkg., lOe; os.. We.; H • Me V Our utam»oth Pleat aad Seed Catalogue, eoutaiaiag a »agnifleeat arrav M ths ehoissst vegetables. with prioos dirt ebeap,ls Mailed to you upon r-ceint of 60 M postage, or Catalogue aad Package of Earl/ Bird Radish upon receipt cf Bc. ~ JOHN A. SAL2ER SEEP CO.. L«C»—aa. Wis. " Better »ior* vV sely THsb Work Hare." u«at Efforts aro Unnecessary In Houaa Cleaning if you Use SAPOLIO I SflOkfi I I ifcrffr I [ The general belief among | t doctors is that consump- | | tion itself is very rarely t 112 inherited. But tne belief X | is becoming stronger that £ \ the tendency to consump- £ [ tion is very generally I I transmitted irom parent 112. I to child If there has i | been consumption in the H | family, each member z t should take special care S [ to prepare tne system i against it. Live out doorr [ keep the body well no* t ished; and treat the ( [ indication of failing he Scctl* 6rrutlf | of Cod-liver Oil | Hypophosphites, | producing food - | tonic. Its r i by imprt i richer bi nerves and a action of all It strengthens „ of the body to 1 ease. If you h herited a tendency lungs, shake it off . ► JUST AS GOOD IS N J SCOTT'S EMULSION. N Y .N U- 4 Mr. R. L. Johns, ofSelma, Ala., is in tho habit of buying Kipanß Tabules at White's Pharmacy at Selma. When interviewed at the time of a recent purchnse, Mr. Johns sai sent to Tho Hlpan* Chemical Ccmpany. No. 10 Spruce ft., New Y >rk. Sum !•• vial. lOoeui . ASTHMA POPHAM'S ASTHMA SPECIFIC Gives reliet in HTk minutes. Sena for »FK ICE trial paukajce Sold by I)ruggi*t3. One Box sent on receipt of SI.OO. 31» b»i»«f».00. Address THUS. eoPIUM, PHILA. - fA» MEN AND BOYS! Want to learn nil about a yH Horse ? How to Pick Out a A •oodOne? Know Imperfee floa* and ao Guard against \ fraud? Detect Disease ani j»n 1 ' Cffect a Cura when same 1« / \ / \ possible? Tall the age by / \ / \ the Teeth ? What to call the Different Parts of tao Animal? How to Shoe a Horse Properly All tht and other Va aable Information can oa obtainei if reading our 100-PAUB ILLVBTR t'l Kll HtIR&R BOOK, which we will forward, on receiptor only 23 centa lu aiamps. BOOK PUB. HOUSE. 134 Leonard St.. New York City on: II ar.d WHISKY h»bil»cured. Bon. .Nt ' rlUnl iKKK. Ilr. M.«. HUM.. «»