AJffifellßAL Growing Crab Grass. Crab grass seems to thrive best when warm weather and rains favor other crops. It is strictly a summer grass, or weed (as anything not wanted Is a weed), but ti'ab grass does not grow on a soli tliat Is made loose after every ra'lll. It grows only when the soil is somewhat compact. This fact detnon , strates the advantages of rolling the soil after seeding to a crop of wheat, rye, etc. The earth is pressed to tho jieeds and they then germinate sooner than when the soil is loose. Profits from Poultry. There are two sources of profit from poultry: eggs and the fowls themselves. As to eggs, this flock averages between three and four dozen per day summer and winter. Their resting spell is dur ing the summer while the price is low, and during the winter while there are good prices, the hens are at their best. It is then that the money from eggs is made. There is no trouble in getting the eggs if the hens are kept In a warm place, given warm food at least once a day, and warm water to drink, with an occasional chance to ex ercise in the open air. Hens are quick to show a material appreciation of good treatment. The other means of profit is by selling the fowls them selves. With 50 hens and an incuba tor, as many chickens can be raised as one person can well look after. Salt and Ashes for Hoe*. One item of feed for hogs which should never be neglected is a good supply of salt and ashes to which they can have access always. Wood ashes can always be had and the hogs should have all they will eat. When not con venient to give ashes, charcoal Is a good substitute, and even soft coal will be eaten for want of something better, says an exchange. Hogs are never in jured by eating all the a3hcs they want, but it is not safe to give large amounts of salt to animals not ac customed to its use. The salt and ash es mixture should be kept in a low box under a shed where it will be pro tected from rain, and should consist of about two quarts of salt for each busiiel of ashes. Many feeders prefer to add a few ounces of copperas to the mixture. Free access to such a mix ture will do much to preserve the health of hogs, and sows which have an abundance of such feed will rarely eat their young. Cultivating Koadildes. A recent visitor to Long Island tells of passing places where not only the enclosed fields showed Indications of being under high cultivation, but the roadside was plowed and planted al most up to the traveled track. This kind of work is usually done by those of European birth, who have been ac customed to making the most use pos sible of the small tracts they have. No land lies idle, close planting is the general rule, and one crop follows an other so closely that the ground has some growing crop covering it almost every week in the year. Those who are accustomed to the large farms of quarter and half sections may laugh at these little gardens, but some of those same "pocket handkerchief lots," as they are called by visitors from tho west in allusion to their diminutive size, actually return as much Income to theirowner as a 100-acre wheat field. While the farmer with plenty of land may not cart} to plant even potatoes between his fence and the wagon road, ,* - e know some who Jtcep that space cleared up and In grass and got good loads of hay from it, while it is fer lilized by the road dust and the ele ments that are in what is dropped there, and ground into dust. Not only 1* there a profit in it, but the grass plot looks much more pleasant than bushes nnd briars, or heaps of stone, tin cans and other rubbish often de posited by the roadside. Cultivation of tlie Orchard. Apples in a cutivated orchard ripen later than in one that is not cultivated, the fruit hangs 011 the trees better, and it keeps better than fruit which ripens earlier. Fruit trees should occupy the best land on the farm, as it requires a good soil to furnish the constant supply of plant food that is consumed Jjy the trees, for a bearing tree con fumes more food from the soil than a Iree which does not bear; hence the im portance of heavily manuring orchard land. Fall is the best time for setting trees, for trees set in the fall become Well established, and are ready to grow Ahen spring comes. The wound 011 the roots, made in transplanting, heals over during the winter, the soil be comes firm around the roots and resists drouth much better than spring plant ed trees. The holes which are to receive the trees should be at least three feet square, and of sufficient depth. The soil should be thoroughly mixed with well rotted munurc and well filled in and pressed among the roots. Trees set In tliis way will grow twice as rapidly as trees set in a haphazard way. All cross limbs and water sprouts should be cut off each year, and shortening the tops annually is advantageous as trees are then not lia- Jlc to break down when loaded with ruit and the fruit is more easily gath ered. Orass shall never be grown in an or chard nor any grain crop as they tend to draw the moisture from the soil nnd leav« the trees without the necessary supply to mature the fruit and sustain tne wood growth. Turning under growing crops of clover and cow peas, adds a large quantity of humus to the soil. Potash Is generally deficient lu old orchards, and to supply this Im portant element of plant food there Is nothing better than hardwood ashes applied at the rate of 150 bushels per acre.—C. W. Norris, lathe Agricultural Epltomist. A F#w Points Hesardlne Work. A writer who has spent years In farming has, In that time, taken quite an interest in his cows and how to in crease profits in dairying. He lived in the west and wWB a successful farmer, hence a few points from him may be of service to others engaged iu the dairy business. If you live in a town and only have one cow, she is of the greatest interest to you and yours, and to treat her well, and let her serve you abundai-*ly is the desire of her owner. There are sev eral ways to increase profits in dairy ing, and one is being regular, to be kind and gentle In treatment; supply plenty of pure water as near as possible and of the right temperature. Watch the process of feeding; this is very impor tant, "judicious feeding." Prepare comfortable housing and grow on the farm the most producing foods; keep the best of heifer calves, says this farmer, and raise them on dairy feeds. One thing tliLs western farmer writes that I know to be of the greatest help, is in thorough hygienic practice. Clean liness is imperative. He says the milk ers should wash their hands thorough ly and purify and disinfect them be fore milking by washing them in bo rax water. The best dairymen I ever knew had their men follow this strict ly, as they claimed that a little black under the rim of the nail might con tain poisonous disease germs. Another important item is, to wash the milk cans, crocks, etc., in warm water, and use a small brush and add a tablespoonful of pearline to the water to mnke a good cleansing suds; and you should clean the seams thoroughly, and rinse in warm water, and scrub well with this little brush, so as to get every particle of soil, every speck out. Bacteria multiply rapidly when milk is spilt or allowed to remain to dry about a dairy or milk house. Think over these points and they may be of great service.—S. J. H., in the Southern Farmer. Subduing Hoc Land*. The question of economically stil> duing and bringing under cultivation swamp lands is a very important one. Such areas often constitute some of our most productive lands, but the ex pense of bringing them under culti vation is often greater than their mar ket value when the work Is accom plished. The value of such lands to the farm, however, should not be judged by their market value, but by the per centage of profit they will return on the investment made in improving them. This will usually be greater than for most other kinds of farm lands. The area of about 16 acres on the college farm has given us many points of value as to the*best method of sub duing such lands. A portion of this swamp has been plowed and seeded to buckwheat without first removing the bogs, but it was found that the first cost of plowing was very heavy and that large quantities of partially broken down bogs had to be removed nftpr tln» buckwheat was harvested before the land could be plowed and wui , u u...i» K"<>" londition for hoed crops. On another portion bogs were cut and enrt"'' from thi> field, but the expense of this work was also vet heavy. On Mui anotuer portion tha largest bogs were cut and placed in small heaps, and when sufficiently dry were burned on the land. On the whole, this was found to be the most economical method yet tried. It baa not been found necessary to cut all of the bogs, as many of these could be plowed through without serious diffi culty. Last year a good crop of Hun garian grass was grown 011 a small area, from which the largest bogs were cut and burned in May. By attaching a plow to a stick of timber, fastened to the front of a cart, no that the plow came just outside of the wheel the ox team was able to rt-alk on the unplowed area, and thus the ox, that would naturally walk in the furrow, was able to walk 011 firm ground. By using a large plow with a short coul ter. the land was turned over quite flat. Notwithstanding the fact that the soil when plowed seemed to contain large amounts of partially decomposed matter, we were able to obtain a heavy crop of Hungarian by using a small quantity of lime as fertallzer. From one experience we would advise to place the bogs, 011 the swamp ai'ea, in to small heaps as early iu the spring as possible, to burn them as soon as they are dry enough, to plow the land in the early part of June, and to grow either Hungarian grass or buckwheat. Either of these crops could be removed In August, early enough to seed the land to grass. We would recommend the use of builder's lime, at the rate of 700 to 800 pounds to the acre, after the land is first plowed, and a corre sponding amount when the land is ready for seeding to grass.—Professor O. S. Phelps, of Connecticut Agricul tural College. The Office and I lie Man. "You aiv never In your office/* conv plained the angry taxpayer. "Yet be fore election you sought the office hard enough." "I did." replied the other man. "bet the office may seek me uow."—Balti more American. AGRICULTURAL CHINA. ITS VARIETIES OF GRAIN AND FRUIT WOULD BE VALUABLE HERE. Hie Chlnene Are Skilful Hunbandtnen and the World Can Learn Important L«a»on« of Thein—Advance In Orange Culture—Home of Winter Muskmelon, "China can teach the world some great lessons in agriculture," said Mr. F. V. Coville, chief botanist of the de partment of agriculture, to a New York Post correspondent. "For example, we know that there are certain cereals cultivated on the headwaters of the Ynngtse river, at an elevation of 13,- 000 feet above the level of the sea; they grow wheat there in some places at an altitude of 12,000 feet, whereas In this country lery little can be raised at an elevation of 8000 feet, and that Is in Arizona, where It is very warm. But the real test of the ability of the Chi nese is this direction is afforded by a comparison of cereal elevations with the timber line. They raise wheat within 1500 feet of tho timber line on the platenu of Turkestan, while in Ar izona our timber Hue is 4500 feet above the wheat belt. "A timber line furnishes a very defi nite basis of climatic measurement the world over, just as the sea does for the measurement of altitude. One thousand feet below the timber line is Arizona would mean substantially the same climatic conditions as 1000 feet below the timber line in New Eng land, and so when we say that the Chi nese raise wheat within 1500 feet of that Une, we mean that they have de veloped a strain which is far more re sisting of cold and drought than any thing we htive in Europe or North America. Their civilization is so much older than ours that the gradual de velopment of these strains has been brought about, and we could to advan tage bring some of them into use here. We have now a representative of the department in the upper Yangtse, where lie went for the purpose of gath ering specimens for Introduction here. Nothing has been heard of him for some time, and not a little anexiety is felt in his behalf. "Besides the wheat and other cereals, China is said to have considerable ad vantage over us in orange culture. The Yangtse valley produces a delicious orange, according to reports we have received, in districts where the trees are subjected to a temperature 20 de grees below the freezing point. That part of China 011 the borderland of the great Turkestan plateau is also the home of the peach, and it was from southwestern Asia that the modem world secured this valuable fruit. They have varieties there now quite different from any that grow In this country— not necessarily better, for the develop ment has been along different linos in the two hemispheres. Only a little while ago a peach was introduced from China into Florida, known as the I'eento, which Is shaped like a tomato —very short from stem to pit. It lias a short, stout stone, and its flavor is delicious. It does not seem to be a good shipping peach, and for that rea son seldom gets to the northern market. Neither is it especially adapted for canning, where the chief requirement is a certain firmness. The sugar used in canning takes the place of many natural defects in flavor and sweetness which the fruit may have. So the can ning factories do not need a peach of the type of tho I'eento. and thus far its use has been confined to the local markets. There are other varieties from China, however, which may be better adapted to the commercial needs of this country, and upon that subject our agent in the Yangtse was probably working when the recent dis turbances broke out. • "It was from this plateau of Asia, extending through Turkestan, by which China is bounded 011 the west, that we obtained the Turkestan al falfa, one of the best of our forago plants. We found It growing there in condition of great dryness and grent cold, and when the plant was sub jected to the same conditions in our far western states it proved most ac ceptable. Its Introduction has meant an enormous exteut northward and upward among the mountain sloi>es of the alfalfa culture, and alfalfa is the great forage crop of the west. "From this region, too, has come the winter muskmelon, which is now growing successfully In the west, ami only awaits for its general introduc tion in the east some improvement in the method of shipping. This we have decided to leave to the ingenuity of the west. This melon grows as large as a watermelon, is edible in the months of December, January, and February, and is as sweet and deli cate in flavor as any muskmelon that can be bought in the Washington markets today. I gave one last win ter to a member of Congress who was getting up a dinner for some of his associates, and, as he afterwards told me, it produced a sensation. He declared that if those melons .-oul.l he brought into tho New York market in good condition in midwinter people would pay any price for them. Juht at present the transportation problem Is a little difficult. They grow in the d< ep, hot valleys of Utah to the best advantage, and when subjected to the long journey seem to loose their fll'in ntsjs. I have 110 doubt, however, l>;-i thnt tills will bo corrected, and lli.it the muskmelon will be oue of the reg ular winter fruits of the future." Convenient for tlie Ant. Ants can stand extremes of heat and cold. Forty-eight hours' exposure to frost will not kill them, and one sort has been observed to build its nest In chinks in a blacksmith's forge. VICTIM CF SIMIAN JEALOUSY. Talented Monkey Uletl Became Shunned by His Envious Fellows. All that Borax, the little pink-eyed monkey, wanted of his fellows In the Lincoln park zoo was kind treatment, and when they turned their backs on him and ignored the inoffensive crea ture altogether he got sick and sulked in the darkest corner of the cage, The keepers had never witnessed such a strange manifestation of feeling akin to human among the animals and did not worry about Borax. The ostracism imposed on him by his erstwhile com panions made Borax sick, find he re fused nourishment. Sunday morning the little animal died, and his long tailed playmates of two rreek-s ago, un forgiving even in the face of death, refused to show the slightest sign of sorrow when he was carried away and burled. The circumstances of Borax's death were not known to the thousands who visited the animal reservation. They found the monkeys in new cages, and when something was said about a de mise in the colony they attributed it to an accident upon moving. There was one less simian to be bribed into a clever acrobatic feat with a handful of peanuts, but the demand was not lessened through the absence of the dead animal. Borax was the cleverest performer of all the monkeys, and his skill led to his fate. He handicapped his fel lows by his previous training, for he came from a circus where he got a bun if he rode a spirited greyhound around the track without losing his seat and a whipping if his performance did not suit the trainer. Borax's life at the Lincoln park zoo had promise of happy days. The first Sunday he performed he got as many peanuts as all the rest of the monkeys combined, but Borax was not selflsb and attempt ed to divide his spoils. The simian's generosity was regarded as an attempt to lord it over the rest and he was not thanked. After a month's stay at Lincoln park Borax apparently wished he had never left the circus, though the bun was frequently stale and*the beating a se vere one. There he was on good terms with the greyhound and the savage bull terrier that wouldn't treat any other member of the outfit with the least show of civility. Borax did his best to furnish amusement to the crowd, but would not accept the rewards. Af ter dark his cage companions would appropriate their despised comrade's emoluments though they made unkind remarks about him. "You can't tell me that the pink-eyed fellow didn't die of grief," said one of the keepers yesterday."lt was a plain case of getting shut out In the cold. He wanted to be the 'good fel low' with the crowd, but they wouldn't stand for it. It is just like men, any how. If they see a chap succeeding they begin talking bad about him. Bo rax wasn't accustomed to that sort of thing, and it broke him all up. I could see he could not live through it. He didn't see any chance of getting back to tlie circus or another job, so he went back in the cage and starved himself to death. That monkey was more sentimental than many a human being."—Chicago Chronicle. Strange FM'ining. Not all the farming in the world is carried on in the country. Some branch es of the farmer's work are pursued in cities, and even in their crowded parts. A writer in Ciissell's Saturday Journal is responsible for the state ment that the fattening of pigs is not incompatible with life in a densely populated quarter, and cites a case in point. A man who kept a small grocer's shop in the heart of a city was for years very successful as a fattener of pigs. Under his shop was a cellar, the front door and window of which were boarded up. Access to it could be ob tained only at the back. This cellar was always occupied by two pigs, although not always by the same ones. The owner would smuggle his young charges into the cellar by night, bed them down with the straw from his egg cases, and teed them on tlie bread and potatoes and vegetables that tlie youngsters of the neighbor hood bought him in exchange for a handful or two of candy. So little did it cost him to feed his charges that he is said to have grown rich 011 his profits. The same butcher bought one pair after another of these city-fattened pigs. A still more unlikely place in which to look for pigs is a back bedroom, but even this shelter is not unheard-of one to the writer. These particular pigs were well trained. They not only lived up stairs, but they walked down. Their owner knew that washing tliem helped to put on weight, so he used to take theiu into the small back yard for a tubbing, and taught them to walk up stairs and down. He would never have been found out if some of his neighbors had not complained of him. Too Mnny Reel. The honey-producing industry ot Evaiisvllle, lnd., has reached such magnitude that the city council is con sidering an ordinance declaring the bees a nuisance and requiring the own ers of hives to move them outside the city limits. It Is said that 75 persons have colonies of bees in the city and the bees produce SIO,OOO worth of hon ey a year. A woman is never so mad as she is when she sees a hat that is terribly cheap, right after some smooth man has talked her around to buy an en cyclopedia. §TAWS tL The Tatael on the Sleeve. A fvr-iher development of the Bishop sleeve or the belled sleeve is to ap pend a silken tassel to its lowest tip, near the outside seam. One could have rather too intieb ot such a mode if car ried to extreme, but It will probably be some time yet before the fashion of wearing a tassel on your «lbow becomes generally common. 111 truth it is a style better adapted to a negligee gar ment than for anything to be worn out side of one's own gown. The Pate Sapphire. For many years fashion has highly esteemed the beautiful "star" sapphire of ultramarine hue among the precious stones. But now it seems there is a craze for paler sapphires, those which have a steely glint being preferred to the glorious depth of color seen in the darker stones. The pale sapphire is mounted in scarf pins, It Is cut with Intaglio coat of arms, as a signet ring for the man of the family. Pale sap phires, three In a row, are mounted 011 a slender gold bar for a lace pin. White Tips. A modish toque of mauve panne is made up to bo worn with a foulard gown lu tender mauve varied by curl ing scrolls of white. The toque is en tirely covered with mauve panne vel vet. The feature of the garniture being the ostrich feathers arranged in a panache in front, slightly to the left. These beauties are of like tint, but they have creamy white tips curling »ver. The effort Is excellent with a mauve and white toilet. Evidently the Iyer's art has been developed to a pitch unthought of lu former years. The ltoatine Cape. For cool evenings on the water use a boating cape of blue cloth, the shade of which is neither dark nor light. It Is patterned after a golf cape, except ing in the detail that it is not volu minous, and is smartly trimmed with three bands of glace silk of tlie same color. These go down the fronts and around the bottom. They are slightly graduated in width, narrower over the chest, and broadening as they make the horizontal turn. Three straps of glace silk over cloth button the cape to the chin. The collar is high in the back. A Showy Gown. A showy gown is of fawn-colored India silk, made up with the front pan el entirely different. Tlie front jreadth, which is narrowly gored at the hips, is covered with a long panel of rich openwork embroidery 011 fawn silk ground. The cartwheel pattern predominates. Around the incisions embroidery is made with a darker shade of silk. Through tlie Interstices you see a glimpse of sky-blue chiffon. The bodice of fawn-colored silk opens over a waistcoat of accordion-pleated blue chiffon. The hat is of white crin, trimmed with chiffon. A Woman's Charm. Flowers have a magic in their soften ing influence, and few people can resist the soothing effect of 11 dainty exquis itely served. These little preparations are merely the daughter's background. She must come to tlie front with a question to her father about some pub lic event in which he is interested, or a story which will start a train of-con versatlon. A girl's tirst thought in this must not be to shine, but to please; not to put herself forward, but to bring the others out, to be genuinely interested in them, so that she may be an inter esting person. Interest is the salt which seasons life. Some of us regard almost with envy women of whom we hear, women who are spoken of by their acquaintances as fascinating and charming, and we wonder what their secret Is. Well, it is usually an open secret, and nobody can monopolize It; part of it is for you and for everyone who wishes to be in fluential and pleasing—forget yourself; think of others. Nan Occupation! for Women. Some women In England have made a beginning at learning pharmacy. There is a school in this science In London which begius lectures In Octo ber of each year. A preliminary ex amination in Latin, English and arith metic has to be passed. After the lec tures the would-be chemist goes to a dispensary or druggist for three years' practice. At the end of that time. If fouud proficient, a dispenser's certifi cate may be obtained. A London news. paser sugests to women that any one with $2500 cannot do better than to start a chemist's shop in that city. Another suggested occupation for wom en is photographing babies. This Is said to be the most difficult as well as remunerative part of a photographer's business. Mothers have their children photographed in a descending ratio, af ter the first few years, and to be a successful photographer of infants means a rapid multiplication of busi ness. The 11 limber of duplicates of baby's pictures is one of tho paying features of making pictures of little folks. Three dozen copies Is a fre quent order for children's pictures, while a dozen usually satisfies the per son of larger growth. Growing: Lktondtr in EngUid. At the village of Wallington, near Croydon, England, lavender-growing, as a commercial undertaking, is pros pering in a greater degree than ever before, while peppermint, pennyroyal, rosemary and camomile are also grown. DyelDg Is as simple as washing; when you ase PUTNAM FADELESS DYES. Sold by all druggists. Most counterfeit documents are de tected through some individual pecul iarity of the counterfeiter of which he himself is not aware. Florida and tile South. The Southern Railway, with Its perfect lervice, is tow handling a very large business for parties destined South and Southwest. The System operates through Sleeping Car service mm Now York to Atlanta, Montgom ery, Mobile, New Orleans, Chattanooga, Bir mingham, Meridian, Memphis, Nashville, '.'olumbia, Augusta. Savannah, Jacksonville »nd Tampa; also PitiJman Tourist Sleeping Oars Washington to San Francisco. Dining ar service on all through trains. For Infor mation call on or address .Alex. S. l'hweatt. Eastern Pass'r Agt., 1185 Bit Midway, New York Electric pt er is being'; increasingly ased on some large western -vfarms for pumping. \ There is more Catarrh in this sectlAa oHhs> '**- country than all other diseases put together, and until thelast few years was supposed'tobe incurable. For a great many years doctors pronounced it a local disease and prescribed local remedies, and by constantly failing to cure with local treatment, pronounced It in curable. Science has proven catarrh to be a constitutional disease and therefore requires constitutional treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cure, manufactured by F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, Ohio, is the only constitutional cure on the market. It Is taken Internally in doses from 10 drops to a teaspoonful. It acts directly on the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. They offer one hundred dollars for any case it tails to oure. Send for circulars and testi monials. Address F.J. OBENBT& Co.,Tolodo, 0. Sold by Druggists, 75c. Hall's Family Pills are the best. Nearly sixty per cent, of all Russians ire unable to read or write. The Bait Prnwlptlm hi Chills tnd Ferer It a bottl* of GROVI'S TABTBLMI CHII.L TONIC. It Is simply iron and quinine la a tasteless form. No cur#—a* pay. Ptlos Mo. It costs Chicago's automobilists $lO for ;ach repair of a punctured tire. If you want "good digestion to wait up >n your appetite" you should always chew i bar of Adams' Pepsin Tuttt Fruttl. Valpariso, Chile, imports yearly about 50,000 barrels of Portland cement. FITS permanently cured. No fltsor nervous less after first day's use of Dr. Kline's Qreat Nerve trial bottle and treatisefree Dr. R. H. KLINE, Ltd., 931 Arch St., Phlla., Pa. The world's wheat crop in 1898 was >,879,000,000 bushels. Plso's Cure Is the best medicine we ever used for all affections of throat and lungs.'— WM 0. ENDSLEY, Vanburen, Ind., Feb. 10, 1090. To become a soldier is a humiliation in Thina. SUFFERING AND BELIEF Three Letters from Mrs. Johnson, Showing that Lydla HI. Pink ham' a V egetablo Compound Cures the Ills of Women Wrote for rirs. Pinkham's Advice November, >897 , " DEAR MRS. PINKELAM lam a great sufferer, have muoh trouble/through the lower part of my bowels, fcud I am writing to you for advice. MK*S«S toe irregular and scanty, am troubled with leucorrhoea, and I ache so through my back and down through my loins. I have spells of bloating very badly, sometimes will be very large and other times very much reduced." — MRS.CHAS. E. JOHNSON, Box 33, Rumford Center, Maine, Nov. 20, 18D7. Improvement Reported December, 1897 "DEAR MRS. PINKHAM: —I wi«h to cell you that I am improving in health. I am ever so much better than when I wrote before. The trouble through the lower part of bowels is better and lam not bloated so badly. I was very much swollen through the abdomen before I took Lydia E. Pinkham's Vege table Compound. I still have a feel ing of fulness across my chest. I have used three bottles of it and am on the fourth."— MßS. CHAS. E. JOHNSON, Box 33, Rumford Center, Maine, Dec. 18,1897. Enjoying Good Health June, i899 " DEAR MRS. PINKHAM :—Since ayear ago I have been taking your medicine, and am now strong and enjoying good health. I have not been ao well for three years, and feel very thankful to you for what Lydia E. Pinkham's Vege table Compound has done for me. I would advise all who suffer with fe male troubles to try your medicine."— MRS. CHAS. E. JOHNSON, BOX 88, Rum ford Center, Maine, June 1, 1899. DISCOMFORT AFTER MEALS Feeling oppressed with a sensation of stuffiness and finding tbe Food both to dis tend and painfully hang like a heavy weight at the pit of the Stomach, are symp toms of Indigestion. With these the suf ferers will often have Constipation, Inward Plies, Fullness of the Blood in the Head, Aridity of theStomaeb, Nausea, Heartburn, Headache, Disgust of Food, Oaseous Eruc tations, Sinking or Fluttering of the Heart, Choking or Suffocating Sensations when 111 a lying posture, Dizziness on rising sud denly, Dots or Webs before the Sight, Fever and Dull Pain In tbe Head, Deflolenoy of Perspiration, Yellowness of the Skin and Eyes, Pain in the Side, Chest, Limbs and Budden Flushes of Heat. A few doses of DADWAY'S " PILLS will free the system of all the above named disorders. Purely aot without l>alu or griping, suii. 'nd easy to take. Price, 25 cents per bo„ Sold by all drug gists, or sent by mail ou receipt of prloe. RADWAY ft CO., 65 Elm St., N. Y. Be sure to get "Iladway's." AWERTOING?AvX H .i B N^ ■■■ IK CHILDREN ABB lIiAVMitA vorltable demons WW 111 and must be qulcklj 11 1 removed or icrloua results may follow* The medicine whleh for the past 60 years has held tbe record for successfully rld diug children of these pests Is Prey'* Vermifuge-made entirely front vege table products, containing no calomel. 25 ets. at druggists, country stores or by mall, Dostoftld. E A a. Fui. Baltimore. Aid.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers