Teinporatnre in Testing "Milk. A difference in temperature when testing cream of, say from 15 to 25 percent butter fat will make a differ ence of one-fourth of 1 percent .n reading; in cream of from 25 to 35 per cent fat it will make a difference of one-half of 1 percent. In cream of from 35 to 45 percent the dirierence will be close to 1 percent. In some experiments recently I found that with cream running from 45 to 55 percent fat the difference ran from 1 1-2 per cent up to 2 percent. This is certainly a subject that needs investigation. It is a matter of dollars and cents to both shipper and receiver of cream. It also means that all testers ought to be filled with a thermometer so that the temperature, when testing, can be watched. Also, some sort of damper arrangement and steam inlet are needed, so that the temperature can be regulated wu.ie the test is being run. 'mis matter of the regulation of temperature is one to which sufficient attention is not usually paid, 'la prevent errors and to get tests out accurately it must be carefully attended to. —A. C. Beebe, in Ranca and Range. SprnvinK the Ponltry Houses. Spraying u.e poultry .houses with a solution of sulphuric acid, one pound to 20 gallons of water, is an efficient remedy for lice, mites and all disease germs, if it is put on so as to cover walls, ceilings. floor 3, roosts and nests, and forced into cracks and crevices. It is better than some other sprays, as it is not necessary to keep the fowl out more than an hour or so, and it will destroy the eggs as well as tho developed insects if it touches them. Do this before the weauier reaches down to zero, as the hens should not be let out of doors wuen it is as cool as that. The miuule of a bright, pleas ant day is the best time for suehjvork, as then the hens can be kept out. The night before it is done, or before kero sene is used to kill lice, we like to go over every bird, and holding them by the legs, put insect powder all through their feathers, taking par ticular pains to get it around the head and vent, and under the wings, as that Is where they most frequently are found. This drives them off to the roosts, where the spraying or painting with kerosene will kill them the next Jay.—The Cultivator. <*razins: on VTlipat Fields. A cattle grower o. Ellis county, Kan., says: ''There are thousands of cattle now grazing on the wheat fields in that county and are in first class condi- i don. However, I think the plan of leas- J (tig the wheat fields to tho stockmen will hardly be so remunerative to them as it will be to the farmers. The latter are now getting 75 cents to $1 a month for a single steer. The cattle make excellent gains and wax fat upon the wheat, but the flesh is not hard as in the case when they feed on straight grass. This causes them to shrink greatly when taken off the wheat suddenly and put on the markets. I have known 1000-pound steers shrinking as much as 100 pounds in the time between their leaving the wheat fields and go ing on the scales at the markets. If the animals would eat a little hay im mediately after leaving the wheat, this shrinkage would be eliminated to a great extent, but they will not go back to dry feeds after having reveled in wheat for a few months. About all of the wheat cattle in our county are now ready for market, and between the middle of the month and the holiday season shipments from our section will be heavy."—lndiana Farmer. Treatment ol' Foot and Mouth Diseases. Considerable interest attaches to a circular said to have been issued by the Italian war office to the veterinary surgeons of the Italian army' The circular recommends to their attention a new treatment for the so-called foot and mouth disease of cattle. The treat ment was announced some little time ago by Professor Bacelli, and consists ',n the intravenous injection of a solu tion of perchloride of mercury cjud sodium chloride. The intravenous in jection of powerful antiseptics for spe cific diseases is, of course, not new. Puite recently intravenous injections of formic aldehyde were used, appar ently with success, in the treatment of numan pulmonary tuberculosis. We have not up to the present had access to the actual communication either of Professor Bacelli or of Dr. Guzzi, who appears to have been the f.rst to actu ally use the remedy in question; but it appears that the injected fluid c-onsist , sd of 1 gramme of percnloride of mer \ cury, 75 grammes of sodium chloride and one litre of water, and U.at of this solution first 30, then 50, then 70, and subsequently 100 cubic centimetres were injected. As «.ne body weight of the animals in question is unknown, an accurate esti mation of the dose given is impossible The ultimate remidal agent is the al buminate of mercury. The addition to the injecting fluid of the sodium chlo ride renders this substance more solu ble, and also tends to prevent the pre cipitation of proteids by the perchlo ride, and hence the formation of em boli. The animals treated all appear to have been cured of the disease. From the general standpoint, these re sults, if accurate, are of interest *n that they afford another instance of the possibility, by the intravenous in jection of of an antiseptic, of destroy ing, or at any rate influencing, the ma teries morbi without iniurine the host —Naturft Keeping the Winter Vegetables. Whether for later markets or homf use, it pays to store the winter vege tables with due regard to their keep ing so well that as little loss as possi ble will be experienced in rotting 01 shrinking. The hardest thing on win ter vegetables or fruits is the frequent change in the temperature. The first condition aimed at is, therefore, a uni form temperature. It matters not ii this temperature is very low, almost to the freezing point, so long as it is maintained. Alternate freezing and thawing will spoil the best of vege tables. Usually winter vegetables are stored in cellars, pits, barns or sheds, and they keep somewhat indifferently in any one, unless special attention is given to them. Most cellars are too damp and warm to suit vegetables. A lower and dryer temperature is need ed, and this can be obtained by giving better ventilation. Cellars that have no ventilation cannot have pure air. The air becomes heavy with the moist ure that evaporates from the vege tables, and this in turn affects the stored goods. An outside ventilation is absolutely necessary for a good vege table cellar. When the weather is wet this should be closed, or when the tem perature is very low. In this way the moisture and cold can be regulated to suit the needs of the goods. Most roct crops, except onions and potatoes, should not only be kept in such a dry cellar, but they will do bet ter if packed in bins or barrels and covered with dry sand Turnips, car rots. beets, parsnips and similar vege tables will in this way retain their plumpness and juiciness. Indeed, they can be kept so that they will prac tically be as good as when first dug from the earth. Mow all these vege tables in the middle of winter are in demand, and command good prices, but most of them are so shrunk and shriveled that they do not pass muster. It is by storing them properly that we are able to meet the requirements of the market at our own profit. Cab bages in particular need to be packed away in dry sand or earth immediately after digging, so they will lose none of their good qualities. They should be kept where the temperature cannot vary a degree until taken up for the market In some respects onions are the most generally small and shrunken of all winter vegetables. This is due to the fact that they are kept in too warm places, where they dry out and even begin to sprout. They should be stored away where they will stay al most to the freezing point until ready to sell. Then they will command win ter prices for fancy onions, which are the best and highest hat can be ob tained at any time of the year.—Wil liam C. Beliott in American Culti vator. Glowing Melons Commercially. For early melons I plant seeds lii inverted sods, placed on horse manuro in a sort of hot-bed or cold frame. This cold frame has a tight cover, which I put on during cool days and at night. When the v/eather is warm enough I transplant by placing the sods very carefully on a stone boat and take them to the field. They are placed in hills, which are prepared as follows: I plow my cherry orchard very early in spring, turning the fur rows away from the trees, thus form ing a back furrow midway between the rows. When it is about time to transplant my melons, say the middle of May in this latitude, I again plow, turning the furrows the other way. leaving an open or dead furrow where the back furrow was located. I fill this with manure, then cover by plow ing two furrows in either side. The ridge thus formed is rolled down very firmly and gone over with a drag con taining a large number of fine teeth. My rows of cherry trees are 20 feet apart. I put only one row of melon vines between two rows of trees. As I have so much space on either side of the row, I can plant melons close together, say six feet. The sods containing the young plant are placed carefully in holes on this ridge, and the ground is firmed about them. They scarcely seem to mind the change, but keep right on growing. I hoe and cultivate often while the vines are small, and continue to plow and drag down the ground between the rows of trees after the melon vines begin to start their runners. When they become well grown all that tan be done for them is to pull the weeds which may spring up and keep the ground around the trees well cul tivated. Melons delight in hot weath er and seem to rather enjoy a drouth, provided weeds are kept down and the ground not covered with vines kept well stirred. Melons are very easily prepared for market. In fact they require no prep aration. A little experience is neces sary to know just when melons are ripe, without opening them. To do this it is necessary to have a fine sense of sight, hearing and feeling. I have found nearby towns the best markets. Shipping to larger centres bas not proved very satisfactory. The past season I began selling melons August !> and continued until Novem ber 29. Of course, this was an ex traordinary season, as the frost held off giving plenty of time for ripen ing of a second setting, which started after the rains in July. This second lot grew large and ripened well after the first crop was marketed. In our northern latitudes quality is valued more than size. It is impossible for us to compete with southern melon growers in producing a large speci men, but we do not consider this de sirable. There is more profit in a load of uniform melons which will weigh about 15 pounds each end which will sell for $t per dozen than there is in a load of larger ones. —J. A. Symes, in American Agriculturist apjt TCHS? Ktt'ter for the Ten Table. If you want your butter to look really inviting, have it done in tiny rolls, one for each person. You can buy the corrugated boards for making it up at any iron monger's. Scald them thoroughly first and let them lie in cold water till you are ready to begin. Take a bit of butter about as big as a walnut, put it on one board and with the other pat It down till it is about an eighth of an inch thick. Then roll it, place it on the butter dish and do the next in the same man ner. Spots on Silk. Grease spots, pure and simple, upon delicately colored silks are best treated with either French chalk or corn starch. Powder the chalk flue and fill two little cheese cloth bags loosely with it. Lay one bag upon the board, stretch the grease spot, right side Sown, over it, ancl cover the spot with the second bag. patting it out flat. The chalk ought to be only a quarter of an Inch thick. Set a heavy hot iron upon top of the upper bag, and leave it there for several minutes —of course, taking care that it does not scorch the un covered silk. Remove the iron and the rthalk bags, then if the spot has not wholly disappeared, shake up the bags, so as to bring fresh chalk to the sur face, and repeat the whole process un til the last speck of grease has van ished. Art In One's Dwelling. It has become quite the acceptea thing in house furnishings that a cer tain trend of style s>iall prevail in each room. That is, for a parlor hand some effects are proper, but in a living room, where comfort and a prevailing air of "usedness" is desired, every-day things are de rigeur, while for a bed room suite dainty things are in best laste. For this reason the up-to-date housewife does not use handsome cur tains in the bedroom, so the simpler ruffled ones are more favored. Those in the know predict a growing mode for semi-colored effects for these ruffled curtains, as in keeping with the old timey flowered chintzes and cretonnes ?o popular for bedroom adornment just now. Not in bright, strong hues, but the softer tones, in Dresden effects, vet with quite large figures, too. White ruffled curtains with a wide border of iarge blossoms in Dresden tints just in side the ruffle, are especially liked. Table Ornamentation. It is a Viennese fancy to have the (lowers used on the dinner table match the prevailing color. Jasmine and iahlias have been used recently with artistic effect. Last season very little silver was seen on the tables at fash ionable dinners in Vienna. It has been .•estored this season, but all the articles ire small and ornamental. In preparing tiny candles for placing on birthday cake, heat the eye end of needles in a gas flame, and while hot torce them into the lower end of the ;andles. The little holders supplied in the shops are bulky affairs, and take up so much room where many birth day counts are needed that this idea ol in ingenious woman may well be rec ommended. Tiny stars may be cut from gilt or colored papers, or little candies may be used as ornaments foi the base of the candles. The Japanese fern balls make pretty centrepieces for occasional use, and are suspended from a chandelier by an invisible wire. They should hang to within an inch of the table centre, and If a circular mat of mirror glass is put just underneath a very pretty effect is secured. Quick Coffee Cakes. —One cup ol sugar, two eggs, one-half cup of but ter, one pint of milk, three teaspoon fuls of baking powder, sifted intc ?nough flour to make a batter as stifl as cake batter. Pour into a well greased baking pan. sprinkle melted butter, sugar and cinnamon on the top and bake for half an hour. Serve hot. Nut Patties. —Line patty pans with a rich pie dough and bake. Fill them ivith the following nut filling: One pint jf milk, two eggs, one ounce of finelj chopped nuts. Beat the eggs well anc' add to the milk. Moisten the flour in a little cold milk, add it with the sugai to the mixture. Cook until it thickens then acid the chopped nuts. Fill the (mtty shells, cover each with a me ringue. Brown lightly 'n the oven This is sufficient for 12 patties. Black Pudding.—This pudding be kept for an indefinite length ol time, in a cold, dry place. It can be sliced ancl heated in the steamer when ever desired. This is a particular!} good recipe: One cup of chopped suet ane cup of molasses, one cup of sweel milk, three and one-half cups of seeded raisins, scant half teaspoon of salt half teaspoon soda aud one teaspoon baking powder. Mix the suet, mo lasses, milk, salt and spices together; add the baitinc nowder to the floui ancl the soda to the milk. Stir in the milk, and lastly the flour. Steam fot three hours and serve with a hard sauce made by rubbing a cup of white powdered sugar with three tablespoon fuls ef butter and one-half teaspoon o) tan ilia STRANGE MONSTER IN FLORIDA. Reptile Formerly Thought to Be a Crea ture of Indian Imagination. An enormous reptile, more like the extinct brontosaurus, or fabled &ea serpent than any living creature, has just been' killed by a hunter in the lower Florida Everglades. He means to send the skeleton to the Smithson ian institution at Washington. It has for 100 years not only been a tradition among the Seminole In dians who inhabiated the borders of Lake Okeechobee, but it is stated as a fact wunin the knowledge of some of the Indians now living that an im mense serpent made its home in the Everglades and has carried off at least two Indians. The Indians reported the animal to be snakelike in appearance, with ears like a deer; that it had only been seen In the Everglades, and that it was very wild. They said that when it trav eled it frequently stopped, raised its head high above the sawgrass to take a view of its surroundings to discover enemies or to locate victims, a deer, bear, hog or some other animal. If frightened, the Indians asserted that it glided off at immense speed. These stories have kept the venture some hunter and trapper on his guard and in a state of more or less anxie ty. notwithstanding they did not give credence to these Indian stories. Re cently Buster Ferrel, one of the bold est and most noted of the hunters of Okeechobee, who for 20 years has made the border of the lake and the Ever giades his home on one of his periodi cal expeditions noted what he sup posed to be the pathway of an im mense alligator. For several days he visited the lo cality with the hope of killing the saurian, but was unsuccessful in find ing him. His pride as a hunter was piqued, and his desire to obtain the hide of what he felt sure to be one of the largest alligators ever seen in this section, where alligators are noted for their immense size, grew daily. He studied some plan to outwit it. A large cypress stood near its pathway, and he concluded to climb the tree and take a stand for his game. He accordingly took his position in the tree. For two days he stood on watch with his rifle ready. Nothing appeared. He was be coming discouraged, but determined to give one more day to the effort. On the third day, before he had been on his perch an hour, he saw what looked to him like an immense ser pent gliding along the supposed alli gator track. He estimated it to be anywhere from 25 to 30 feet long and fully 10 to 12 inches in diameter where the head joined the body and as large around as a barrel 10 feet further back. The creature stopped within easy range of his gun and raised high its head. As it did Ferrel shot at its head. Taken by surprise the serpent dashed into the marsh at tremendous speed, while Ferrel kept up firing until he had emptied the magazine of his rifle. About four days afterward he ven tured back into the neighborhood and about a mile from where he first saw the monster he saw a large flock of buzzards, and went to see what they were after, and there he found the cieature dead, and its body so badly torn by the buzzards that it was im possible to save the skin. He, however, secured the head, and has it now in his home on the Kissim mee river. It is truly a frightful look ing object, fully 10 inches from jaw to jaw. and ugly, razor-like teeth. He described the animal as dark colored cn its back and a dingy white be neath. with feelers around its mouth similar to catfish. He has gone back into the swamp with the intention of obtaining the skeleton and bringing it back, after which he will send it to the Smithson ian institution in Washington.—New York Times. "Master of tlie Mnslck." The court position of "master of tho musick," to which Sir Walter Parratt was reappointed recently in London, is much sought after by composers. One first hears of this quaint office in ItiGO. the first holder being Davies Mell, famous as a violinist and clockmaker. John Banister, his successor, was dis missed because he dared to think that English violinists were superior to those who came from France. In 1C72 Thomas Purcell. uncle of the great Henry Purcell, held the appointment, and he was succeeded ten years later by Dr. Nicholas Staggins, the first pro fessor of music at Cambridge univer sity. Sir Walter Parratt, who is the organist of St. George's Chapel, Wind sor, and who is an eminent chess player, was appointed "master of the musick" in 1593 on the death of Sir William Cusins. The band he conducts consists of 34 instrumentalists, one of whom, the harpist, is a woman. When performing before the court they wear a very picturesque costume of blue. Isolated Tribe in Mexico. In the village of Amatian de los Reyes, in the state of Vera Cruz, Mex ico, a little handful of Indians have lived for 200 years, and have continued to keep, during all that time, their na tional characteristics, their traditions, and their individuality. They are known as the Amaticas. The Amaticas are perhaps the only peopie in the re public who have succeeded in retaining for themselves wh?. f . is practically self government. It must not be under stood tuat they make any pretensions of being independent of the control of the federal authorities in Mexico City. They long ago gave up as hopeless any struggle against the power of the Span iard. and later on the Mexican nation, jind this submission is responsible for the fact that they have been able to retain their ancient customs, habits and modes of government. The BlfcKest The biggest authenticated bag se cured at one shot, of which I have ever heard, consisted of one rabbit (the cause of the shot), one beater, one onlooker, (a French cook.) a l»oy, and a dog. I once shot nine snipe at a shot —but this was in South America—they were on the ground, ancl they were shot for the pot. I have read of a sportsman (not Baron Munchausen), who shot a bumblebee and a butterfly, right and left; nnd, indeed, sometimes a large bumblebee does, for an Instan taneous second, look uncommonly like a distant advancing grouse; just as, when on the alert for partridges, the fieldfares, breasting tlie hedge, often cause a nervous twitch of the gun. (• urlous circumstances sometimes oc cur out shooting. A friend walking in line down a turnip field saw a startled hare running fast and straight toward him up a furrow. He stood still, waiting for her to turn, but the hare, with its peculiar vision, did not see him, and ran her head plump against his shin, killing herself and very seriously bruising his leg.—The Fortnightly Iteview. Chinese Feeling About the War. Down here in the South, the people are angry that they should be called upon to pay anything toward the big bill that lias to be paid before the Chi nese question is finally settled. A well-to-do Chinese gentleman said to me yesterday: "We had nothing to do with this outbreak. We cherished no animosity either against Christianity or the foreigner. Nor did the Emperor. This foolhardy bravado was attempted by a handful of fools in the north of China, whom the officials did not at tempt to suppress; therefore these fel lows should be made to pay the bill, and not we." Poor fellow! He forgot that China is one, at least as far as paying goes. There is therefore a great deal of grumbling and antago nism among the people against tills heavy tax.—North China Herald. It requires no experience to dye with PUT NAM FADELESS DYES. Simply boiling your goods in tho dye iB all thut is necessary, bold by all druggists. Wheat, rye, turnips and flax are de creasing crops in Great Britain. Barley, oats, potatoes and small fruits are on the increase. Catnrrli Cnnnot Be Cured. With local applications, as they cannot reach the seat of the disease. Catarrh is a blood or constitutional disease, and in order to cure it you most take internal remedies. Hall's Ca tarrh Cure is taken internally, andacts direct ly on tlie blood and mucous surface. Hall's Catarrh Cure is not a quack medicine. It was prescribed by one of tho best physicians in this country for years, and is a regular pre scription. It is composed of the best tonics known, combined with the best blood purifiers, acting directly on the mucous surfaces. The perfect combination of the two ingredients is what produces such wonderful results in cur ing catarrh. Send for testimonials, free. F. J. CHENEY .V Co.. l'rops., Toledo, O. Sold by Druggists, price, 75c. Hall's Family l'ills are the best. The world uses $500,000,000 worth of cot ton goods in a year. Of this Great Britain manufactures sixty-six per cent. Heat For the Ifowets, No matter what ails you, headache to a cancer, you will never get well until your bowels are put right. CASCAUETS help nature, cure you without a gripe or pain, produce easy natural movements, cost you just 10 cents to start getting your health back. CAS CARETS Candy Cathartic, the genuine, put up in metal boxes, every tablet has C. C. C. stamped on it. Beware of imitations. The number of Government officials in France is 410,000. Fifty years ago it was i*s,ooo. FITS permanently cured. No fits or nervous ness after first day 's u»e of Dr. Kline's Great Nerve liestorer. 42 trial bottle and treatise free Dr. li.H. KLINE, Ltd., 931 Arch St., Phila. Pa. Any man can be rich in relatives with out being relatively rich. Mrs. Winslow'sSoothlng Syrup for children teething, soften the gums, reduces inflamma tion,allays pain,cures wind colic. 25eabottle. The loftiest tableland in the world is that of Assuay in the Andes. Piso's Cure for Consumption is an infallible medicine for coughs and colds. —N.W. SAMUEL, Ocean Grove, N. J., Feb. 17, I'JOO. The man who is sandbagged and robbed of every penny is knocked centslcss. i;lr««"v*» 1 ~SJ. . 0 i ii Fifty Cents a Yea**— Less Than a c Pcnry a Number. THE SOUTH S LITERARY WEEKLY Published at Atlanta, Cm.—Circulation o« SUNNY SOUTH'S readable col umns. Other contests are contsmplated that will successfully exploit the ripening field of talent thitc niy needs such festering to illustrate the wealth that is shy to assert itself. FAc SUNNY SOUTH teems with the life ofthe creatsouth. The gen ial sunshine warms everything into activity, and the season Is never ccld enough to check the hand of Industry. The paper comss fragrant with the breath of tho magnolia and pine, and g.ves out the vjry air of the orar go, pa m and bay. Tho beauty and pathos, the romance and mystery of the land where the corn stores up the golden sunshine and the cotton whitens in the moonlight, will bo given in the wo'.l-flllod columns o.' this fascinating weekly. The subscription price is Only Fifty Cents a year, alike to all persons, agents, newspapers, pestm' srers and every one else. Clubs of five, accompanied by the uil 52.50, entitle the club raiser ta the paper one yoar gratis. •Send on a Postal Card the names of six of your neighbors who would apprec'ate the opportunity to read a copy o! The sunny South, and one sample will be mailod free. You cin gel your club of five out cf these very people. C/>e SUNNY SOUTH enters over 50.000 American homes now; end during 1902 is sure to be welcjmedin fully as many more homes, as the great weekly feast of good things, tho southern 1.1 erary Weekly, whoso columns for 1902 will be the most readable of all the papers that come ta you. Jiddrest Jill Communications to U/ye SUNNY SOUTSi, Atlanta, Ga. Mother "My moftier was troubled v.'ith consumption for many years. At last she was given up to die. Then she tried Ayer's Cherry Pectoral, and was speedily cured." D. P. Jolly, Avoca, N. Y. No matter how hard your cough or how long you have had it, Ayer's Cherry Pectoral is the best thing you can take. It's too risky to wait jj until you have consump g tion. If you are coughing | today, get a bottle of I Cherry Pectoral at once. jj Three alies: 25c., 50c., SI. All drojjlsts. H Consult your doctor. If he says take it, ■ then do as he says. If he tells you not ■ to take It, then don't take it. He knows. ■ Leave it with him. Wo are willing. J J. O. AYER CO., Lowell, Mass Ba«g— i—it m Stores and the best shoe dealers every where. (At'TION! The genuine havenameandpriceonbolloin Notice increase of sales in table below: ISDSsKjMMOOPai™. 1901 = 1,500,720 Pairs. Business More Than Doubled in Four Years. T W. sells more men's $3.00 and 13.50 shoes than any other two man'f'rs in the world. '»V. L. Douglas $3.00 and $8.50 shoes placed side by side with 85.00 and Sfl.CO Blioes of other makes. are found to be just as good. They will outwear two pairs of ordiuary $-(.00 and $3.r.0 ohoes. Made of the best leathern, including Patent Corona Kid, Corona Colt, and National Kanaaroo. I'Mt Color Cjelfli and Always KlnrL l'ook* nsrrt \\W.L.Douglas $4.00 'Millt Kilftf Line" ennoot be oqiiallrd. Shop«l)ymalie.»c. extra, (uliilou ire". ihmglnii, llrockton, M»a«. Capsicum Vaseline Put up in Collapsible Tubes. A Substitute for and Superior to Mustard or any other plaßter, and will not blister the most delicate skin. The pain allaying and curative qua ities ol this arti le are wonderful. It will stop the tot ha h# at once, and relievo headache and sciatica. We recommend it as the best and safest externa] counter-irritant known, ; ISo as an remedy for pains in the chest and sto-naclia:id*U rheumatic, neuraliric and gouty complaints. A trial will prove what we elaiin for It, and it will be found to b« invaluable in the household. Many peoplo say "It is the best of all y ur preparations." Price, 15 cents, at all druvnrists, or other deal*t% or by sending this amount to us la postage s arnpe we will send you a tube by mail. No article should be accepted by the public unleoi the same carries our label, as otherwise it Is nol genuine. CHEESEBROUGH MANUFACTURING CO., 17 State Street, New York Oity. CiD Book on home cure of Blindness, Cat «r»ot« Inflammation oi Eye, Dealness and He&a PVP Noises sent Fit Eft. DR. CALDWELL* B— * T-'-A, Avenue D, Brooklyn, N. Y. nOADCV NEW DISCOVERY; *iv«« l V& ■ quick r**tie r and cur-H w.irsf CHNoa Book of testimonials nnd lO dnysMreatnie »| L'rec. Dr. A. H. ©BBfcNSiiOHB. Box B. Atlanta. Ga, Mold Medal at Buffalo Exposition. McILtiENNV'Sj TABASCCi ADVERTISING p N A f K 3