omen, seived ‘ensus gs of sitver year, unted © rs ‘of ~~ Washington b . Hamilton.E. 0. fitting age, the history ‘alone affordsdeveral exceptions to a practice whicli is rendered necessary | 44 bY reasons of the highest policy. Pipl | -&he Secretary of the United States Treasury Sails for ¥uzoue, Sab Sed E ans 3 sae SECRETARY FOSTER. . ' Secretary of the Treasury Foster sailea from New York sailed for Europe on the Spree, accompanied by Dr. J. B, Hamilton, ex-Surgeon General of the Army, and W. ¥. MeLennon. Chief of the Warrant Division of the Treasury Department. He was to go from New York to Bremen, was to visit London for a couple of days and catch the return steamer at Southampton. The Secretary was accompanied from W. F. McLennon, Dr. J. B, 3 . Leech, C. M. Hendley and ..J. Wynne, his private secretary. It is ‘said that Secretary Foster is going abroad - his health. : “Secretary of War Elkins, ex-Governor MeCormick, of Arizona, and many other friends called at the Fifth Avenue Hotel during the morning to express the hope that his health would be benefited by the voyage, ‘and as the Spree steamed down the harbor she was escorted by tHe revenus cutter Chandler, on board of which were many of the Secretary’s friends. : x By order of the Secretary of War the Spree was saluted with seventeen guns from Governor's Island and also by the guns at Fort Wadsworth and Fort Hamilton. Seven. teen guns is the regulation salute for a Cabinet officer. gi A NEW POLITICAL PARTY. Closing Session of the Industrial Confer. ence at St. Louis. Fointsof the Platform. gE a St. Lousi, Feb. 25.—The National Indus trial Conference yesterday agreed upon a date and place for a national Presidential nomination. July 4 was selected as the date, the place for holding the convention being left to be chosen by a sub-committee of ten to be appointed by Mr. Taubeneck, of Illinois. The first thing the convention did was to resolve itself into a ‘blue and gray!” mass meeting—a regular fraternal love feast in which both Northern and Southern dele- gates indulged to their heart's content. The ‘incident ended picturesquely by a man on the platform snatching up a big ‘American flag and waving its folds over the head of "Cabell, of Virginia, a colored delegate. i ’ The Prohibition or temperance plank was - omitted from the platform, Jerry Simpson declaring that, they must cure poverty _befors.they could intemperance. Ignatius Donnelly offered an address to the peop e of the U. 8, The address calls for a new party and concludes with the following declaration of principles: ; First—Wedeclare that the union of labor forces of the United States this day accom- plished, permanent and perpetual; may its ‘11 Spirit enter into all hearts for the salvation of the Republic and the uplifting of man- nd. Second—Wealth belongs to him who creates it. Every dollar taken from indus- try without au equivalent is robbery. If any will not work, neither shall he eat. The interest of rural and urban labor are the same; their enemies are 1dentical. ‘hen a demand is made for a national currency fot the payment of all debts, pub- lic and private, without the use of banks; a tax not to exceed 2 per cent. as set forth in “the Farmers’ Alliance sub-treasury scheme; « free and unlimited coinage of silver; that the ! ¢irculating medium be increased to not less than $50 per capita; a graduated income tax; all national and state revenues shall be limited to government, expenses, that the government establish postal saving banks, all lands necessarily owned by railroads and by aliens be reclaimed for actual settlers; the government, operate railroads, telephone and telegraph © systems. The government issue legal tender notes and pay the Union soldiers: the difference between the price of the depreciated money . in which he was paid and gold J goid. The platform adopted concludes with the following: Y * Resolved, That we hail this conference as the consummation of the perfect union of the hearts and hands of all sections of our common country; the men who wore the gray ard themen who wore the blue meet here to extinguish the last smouldering embers of civil war in the tears of joy of a united and happy Jeople, and we agree to carry the Stars and Stripes forward forever to the highest point of national greatness. A resolution was adopted demauding that the question of universal suffraze be sub- mitted to the Legislatures of the different States and Territories for favorable action: The platform was adopted after a lively fight, and subsequently a new political party was organized, but no name was ‘chosen. Fred Swayne, ex:member of the Missouri Legislature, and a Jocal labor agitator, at: f° tempted to introduce an 8hour resolution. |- + A free-ight resulted. Swayne was attacked ‘on every side, and laid ‘out. Four of the antagonists were finally taken by the collar, waist and legs and carried into the lobby. Prohibition Still Rules in Iowa. Des Moines, Feb. 27.—The liquor license bill was put on its passage in the Senate. ‘The result was 23 yeas to 25 nays, but as two members were absent and a majority of the full house was necessary, the bill. was de-, feated. Singular as it may appear, the Ger- tan capital maintains and pays an official bird catcher. The catching of birds is prohibited, but the collec- tions and educational institutions of the University require, for scientific purposes, birds, bird’s eggs, nests, etc., and the taxidermist, Lemm, is the only person commissioned to furnish them. Although in the ordinary course of things it is the general rule for the heirs apparent to the thrones of Europe to marry as soon a8 they arrive at a of England. © Three hundred and thirteen places licensed for stage’ plays in the GRAND ARMY COLUMN A Michigan Comrade Has a Muster-Roll of the Black Horse Cavalry. The following memorandum is tak- en irom a Confederate muster roll of Co. K, 6th Va. Cav., while stationed near Hamburg, Va., and dated Dec. 12,1862. Itis in a good state of preservation and contains the names of 14 commissioned and non:commis- ‘sioned officers and 81 men. If any surviving member of this company, whose name appears on the roll, would like to get possession of it, I should be glad to correspond with him for the purpose of making an appointment to meet him at Washington during the coming G. A. R. Encampment. Al- though I have kept this old war relic ‘for many years, it being a constant réminder of many of my previous dis- comforts, yet it may be more highly prized by some survivor of that once famous Black Horse Cavalry, and if so I will take pleasure in presenting it to him at the time and place above men- tioned. Washington being so near the homes of many of that regiment, pos- sibly some of them may be attracted to the city at that time; hence this notice. The roll contains in a well: written hand the following" record of events: ir A “This company was with Gen. Rob- inson’s Brigade on the march from Harrisonburg to the Rapidan; also during his stay at Gordonsville and range Courthouse. It was also with him at the battle of Cedar Run, Aug. 8, 1862, but was not engaged, as the cavalry was not in the fight. It was with Col. Jones (now Brigadier-Gen- eral) when he crossed the Rapidan at Burnett's Ford and run the Yankee cavalry picketts into our infantry camp, capturing a Lieutenant of in. fantry and two privates, also two o1 three cavalrymen. It was also with the brigade when it advanced beyond the Rapidan, engaging the Yankees’ men at Brandy Station, Culpepper Co. on the 19th of August, where it sus. tained itself well under a long run of fire, in which there was one man woundad and one horse killed and three wounded. Later in the day if was in the charge made by the brigade at Brandy Station to within’ a short distance of Rapidan Station. The Yankees were repulsed and several prisoners and guns captured by the company. It was also with General Stuart 1n his raid on Catlett's Station on the day and night of Awg. 21,in which it had one man severely and one slightly. wounded. It wai with the guus in the movement on Ma. nassas and Bristoe Stations, and dur- ing the subsequent battle on that well: known field, It was on detached ser vice in Loudoun county from the 1si to the 18th of October, 1862, arresting deserters and conscripts. “On the 9th, Lieut. Meanes and 21 men, very poorly armed, went to Aldie on a sceut, where he met a scout of the enemy of about the same number, which he charged and put to flight with what loss has not been ascertain- ed, Lieut. Meanes and Private Russell, a Baltimorean, having been killed al. most instantly, the Yankees having stood to deliver a well directed fire before retreating. Serg’t Ball was also slightly wounde i. It is but due ta state that Lieut. Meanes had but seven with him inthe charge, the rest having been halted by another officer under a misapprehension of orders. *C. H. Ball. Captasn, Com’d’g Co.” —THos. MoLoNEY, in National Tri bune. OUR NEW NAVY. ‘We Will Soon bein Shape to Make a Very Respectable Showing Afloat. We have not been long at building our new navy; that is, long as othe: Nations go about the work, but we are already showing a strength afloat that attracts the attention ot the world. It is the intention of the Government to hold a grand naval review in April, 1893, in New York harbor, in which foreign nations will be invited to par: ticipate. Barring accidents, the fol. lowing vessels of the new navy, now in service or under way, will take part: Armored vessels. First rate: New York +... Cruiser, 5,150 tons « S648 ot Battleship, 6,314 Second rate: Monterey Amphitrite Miantonomoh kt Monadnock 3,815 st Third rate: ‘Harbor Defense Ram... sabi 2,050 tons Unarmored vessels. First rate: Cruiser No. 6 5,500 tons Second rate: Chicago Protected Cruiser, 4,500 tons Baltimore te i 4,400 Philadelphia, .. Newark 5 San Francisco..... Charleston Atlanta. . Raleigh... Cincinnati. .: Third rate: Cruiser No. 9 Cruiser No. 10. ives Cruiser No. 11 2,000 Bennington 1,700 Concor - 1,700 2,000 tons 2000 “ Yorktown 1.700 Delphin 1,485 Gunboat No. 5 000 Gunboat No. 8.x vous 1,000 Fourth rate: Vesuvius, Dynamite Petrel . zunboat, 870 * Practice Vessel he 883 “Torpedo Cruiser “ 50 Cushing 00: + Torpedo Boat No. 2 112.4 LX. 3 THOSE TO COME. : Tn May, 1893, the greatest cruiser: ever designed, Cruiser No, 12,common- ly called the Pirate,will be completed. Bhe will be first class, carry a heavy Cruiser, 970 tons armament. be protected, 7,400 tons,and will go 22 knots an hour. In Novem- ‘ber following three more battle ships o£ 10,000 tons each, the Indiana, Mas- sachusetts acd Oregon, will also be ready for action They will have remarably heavy armaments; more formidable than any now in existence, a speed of 16 knots an hour, with a radius of 5,000 miles, equal to many cruisers. In addition there are still in use the wooden steamers of the old navy, Galena, Richmond, Enterprise, Pensa- cola, Essex, Tallapoosa, Mohican, Iro- quois, Ranger, Monongahelia, Alert, Nipsic, Omaha, Swatara, Monocacy, Alliance, Marion, Pinta, Michigan, Fortune, Thetis and the training squadron, consisting of the Jamestown and Portsmouth. Crear HOW TO WRITE DATES. Many Modes of Putting Down the Day of the Month. 5 “The Listener” writes in the Boston Transcript: “January 3, 1891,” is a date which looks picturesque, distin- guished and fin-de-siecle on paper. It reminds one that the world is getting particularly old. It will be very in- teresting to write down “1900” at the top of one’s letters, when the year comes around; it would be still more interesting to write “2000” there. Few of us will ever do it, though if science does its duty and finds a way to prolong a civilized person’s life to a California Mission Indian's, some of us may hope to do it. . The writing of that date above reminds the Lis- tener that there is a great diversity of usages nowadays in the writing of a date. Looking over a number of pri- vate letters, the Listener has found them dated in all the following ways: December, 24, 1890. . December 24th, 1890. . 24th December, 1890. . 24 Dec. 1890. ; Dec. 24, 1899. , 24th Dec. 1890. * 1890, 24," December, 12 | 24 | 90. , XT171,°24, 1890... It would be hard to say which 1s the most approved of these methods. 1t is very much according to the taste and fancy of the writer, like the spelling of the honored patronymic Weller. Perhaps the commonest method is No. 5, while the most vul- gar is No. 8." It smacks of the retail store and .of laziness, too. Person- ally, the Listener does not like an abbreviation in a date, and conse- quently does not like No. 5. We ought af. least to have the appear- ance, with our friends and the gener- al public, of having enough time at our disposal to write out the full name of the month at the top of the letter. - None but a slave should be under the necessity of abbreviating it.’ No. 3'is old-fashioned and rather English; No. 1 and No. 2 are sensi ble and approved methods. The let- ter dated “XII, 24, 1890,” was written by. a schoolmaster, and is to be class- ed as: an evidence of eccentricity, rather than of haste and laziness. It has a sort of antique, Romanesque appearance, too, though, to be con- sistently classical, it should no doubt have been written XII, XXIV, MDCCCXC. Higher Education of Women. Theshigher education for women it undoubtedly an. excellent and com: mendable thing, but it is open ta question if it may not get too high for the best practical utility, says the Boston Jester. I number among my acquaintances a most charming young woman, who has devoted a number of her more recent years to the general furbishing of an ‘intellect naturally bright. = As a result, she scintillates with a continuousness and readiness that at once daze and delight. She knows as much about literature as the late Lowell, and she handles the piano with a touch altogether Pader- ewskish. . She has also given much earnest thought to the Rig Vedas of the ancient Hindoos, and also ta theosophy. She is, in short, intel: lectual. These tastes naturally com: pel a residence in the immediate pur- lieus of Boston, but she occasionally pays. a fleeting visit to her home, re- motely situated in New Jersey. Thither at the recent Christmas time she went. On the breaking of Christ- mas morn her little brother; a young person of 4, was up early to begin the investigations of the day,and Erudita, wishing to lighten the maternal cares, essayed to dress him. Finally, after great, deliberations and frequent ex- periments, he was duly attired. But the young man was not happy, and after the manner of his kind he soon began to snivel. “Why, my estimable brother, what is it that distresses you?” “Boo, boo! my clothes hurt me.” A long and careful search utter- ly failed, however, to disclose any- thing amiss. © But the tender tears still flowed till the mother appeared on the scene. “Who dressed that child?” she asked. “I did,” replied her accomplished daughter. “Well, you've got his pants on hind side be- fore.” ANG MOAN x ule A reporter saw a shoe at the store of the Cowles Mercantile: Company one morning, made for a member of ‘the fair sex, that for size caps the climax, . The shoe is No. 23, and { measures 16 inches in length. Now, kind reader, don’t jump at the con- clusion that thisismerely a ball-room slipper belonging to some Butler young lady. It isn’t. Neither was it manufactured for Sam Oldham’s best: girl—in fact, for none of the fair daughters of our favored city. ' The, shoe was made for the tamed Miss ‘Ella Ewing, of Fairmount, Mo., ‘who isonly 18 years old, and whose weight, is 325 pounds. Her height is: 7" feet and 10 inches, and she'is said to be a robust sample of our Missouri} maidens.—Rich Hill (Mo.) Review. ‘POPULAR SCIENCE. At Cassis, ¥rance, granite blocks of fitteen cubic metres have been moved by wave force. dt has been shown conclusively that insect or meat fed plants bear heavier and more seeds than those which are un- fed. The new British cruiser Pique in a re. cent run is reported to have made a speed of seventeen®Rnots an hour with- out difficulty. ™ Recent experiments in France on the velocity of propagatibn of electric waves give a mean velocit@¥which is almost ex- actly that of lighty It has been found “that vaccination is beneficial to horses having the glanders, and this treatment is now being used in France and Germany. A marine railway has been built in Elizabsthport, N. J,, which is capable of hauling a 2500-ton vessel out of the water in nine minutes. The enterprise of stocking the rivers of Arkansas and Missouri with the rain- bow trout of California is said to be a most gratifying success. The alleged power of camphor to awaken seeds or stimulate their germina- tion has been shown by the experiments of M. Henry de Varigny to have no real existerce. Currents of water serve to a vast ex- tent the purpose of distributing seed. Many trees are found on the banks of streams which carry their nuts miles away, where they spring into new for- ests. : An alloy which adheres firmly to glass and can therefore be used for joining up glass tubing, is said to be made by add- ing five per cent. of copper to ninety- five per ceat. of tin. ‘The tin ds first melted and the copper added subse- quently. A recent English invention is a buoy- ant life saving seat for ships. It isin- tended for a deck seat, the upper and lower parts being made of buoyant ma- terial, so that if thrown into the water the apparatus will support several people comfortably. Sometime ago Professor Parisi, of Athens, Greece, was surprised at being relieved of a tape worm after a very free use of cocoanut. Since then he has tried this as a remedy with almost in- variable success, and good. results are reported from its trial in America. : W. Verner writes to the Zoologist that the Kentish plover, like the stone curlew or thicknee, is being rapidly ex- terminated in the county from which it derives its name by collectors and so called ‘‘naturalists,” who, with walking stick guns, in and out of season, dsstroy all they can opproach, It is proposed to use electricity for the disinfection of ships. By the electro- lysis of sea water chlorine gas is liber- ated and the same "effect—that of ths oxydation: of the noxious substances — produced by chloride of lime results. The gas will be. carried in pipes from the electrolytic bath to the various. portions of the ship. Dew may be derived from moisture from the ground or from excess of mois— ture in the air, near the earth, coming in contact with vegetable or other sub- stances that have become cold by radia-~ tion. Dew falling upon metallic roofs ig free from the influence of ground mois~ ture, and is due to saturation of the air by cooling of both air and metal by noc- turnal radiation. : A recent improvement in arc-light pencils zonsists of a wire cloth contain- ing no carbon, butis coated with a chro- mate of any kind, These chromates are non-conducting, but the metal cloth starts the arc and the intense heat re- duces the chromate to a chromate of the metal used. These pencils burn at the rate of one-eighth of an inch an hour when the carrent is properly controlled. Crown and Scepter. The Emperor William of Germany is called ‘‘Gondola Willie” by his com- rades of the Life Guards. Every officer in this corps has a nickname. ‘William IL., the new King of Wurtem- berg, ig a man of simple domestic tastes, with no liking for the display and gay- ety that characterized the court while the late King was alive. But Charlotte, the new Queen, is only twenty-seven, and she may influence the King to furn- ish the people with entertainments. Francis Joseph of Austria is probably the most popular sovereign in Europe, and his death would place upon the throne his brother, the Archduke Charles Louis, who is dull and bigoted and en- tirely governed by his third wife, while of the archduke's two sons the elder is a decided ¢‘crank’” and the younger is a Toatle, rile JoUnger IY ! Queen Victoria's favorite retreat, it is said, is the private garden of Osborne Castle, on the Isle of Wight. She is less exposed there to the restraints of high place and the espionage of servants thap in her other residences. Gh The Queen of Holland is very partica- lar about her letter paper. _It is all pure white and very thick, with crowns and armorial blazonry of gold, scarlet and blue. The simpler sorts have only her name, surmouated by a crown. : Prince Henry of Prussia, the Emper- or’s brother, has also affected a beard, but, unlike His Majesty, has diligently let it grow. The young man 1s quite simple in his habits, and delights in walking the deck of his ship with bare feet to copy the custom of the sailors,— Chicago Herald. ————— ER re er—— A Wealthy Pauper. At Moisberg, near Labeck, Germany, wed recently Fraulein Susanne Morgen- roth, in abject squalor. For many years she has been an object of commiseration and charity, has gathered all her fire- wood on the highways, and drawn monthly supplies from the poormaster. Ip her mattress were found securities showing that she had over §10,000 safely invested, and stockings full of gold and silver were foupd under heaps of dirt and beneath the floor. —New HOUSEHOLD MATTERS. TO PRESERVE SCRUBBING-BRUSHES. Scrubbing-brushes should be kept with the bristas down and they will last twice as long. Common sense will tell you if you stand them the other way the ‘water will run down and soak into the. back, loosening the bristles, whether they be glued or wired.—New York Journal, — COPPER STEWPANS., The reason why copper stewpans are considered desirable is that in the first place they are more durable, far outlast- ‘ing any other; and secondly, being thicker, they cause the heat to be more uniform, hence they are preferred by our ¢tcordons bleus.” On the other hand, they require to be frequently retinned, and become a source of danger unless kept perfectly clean and bright ‘inside. For this reason, doubtless.they are much less used than formerly, which is very detrimental to the look of the kitchen dresser, as ‘*bright coppers” give an air of cheeriness and well being to a kitchen that is very attractive.—New York Tri- bune. = TO CLEAN WHITE FURS, Very few people know how to clean white furs, and it may, therefore, be of interest to learn the method recommend- ed to a Bazar writer by. the famous St. Petersburg (Russia) furrier, Cubzus, The furs must first be washed with tallow soap and lukewarm water, and then rinsed = with a weak solution of crystals of soda, all the soapsuds being removed from the fur with a hard brush. Should there be dark stains, such as are made by carriage grease or other fat sub- stances, on the fur, it will be necessary to rub them with = benzine a few hours before washing it. It sometimes hap- pens that in spite of this treatment the furs retain a yellowish hue; this can, however, be removed by bleaching them in the following manners While still damp the articles must be immersed in very cold water, in which four pounds of sulphuric acid ot natron have beea dilated. After an hour's soaking, four pounds of salic'acid are added to the mixture, which must be well stirred. ‘Whilst the furs are in the fluid the ves- sel containing them should be tightty covered, 0 as to exclude the action of the air on the acids. Lastly, the furs must be rinsed several times with pure cold water.—Boston Transcript. THE SCIENCE OF DUSTING. It 1s a science, since the doctors have discovered for us that the furnishings of our houses are the camping ground of lively unknowables called bacteria, writes Helen Watterson. The removal of dust is, therefore, not only a performance of esthetic necessity, but of the greatest sanitary importance as well. Itis not much need of classes in the hygienes of cleaning and dusting as there is of cook ing classes. | The simple ' displacement of dust isn’t dusting, and the whisking of the feather duster is no more evidence of cleanliness than the possession of many books now- adays is an evidence of learning. A room is dusted only when the dust is taken out of the room and that is done only when it has been carried out of the room. This is done by using a soft, slightly dampened cloth to ‘dust with and by wiping the surface of each article slowly and with care not.to throw the particles of dust up in the air, whence they will settle again instantly some- where else. The utility of the feather-duster ex- cept for walls is to be doubted, and even for walls a soft cloth is better. A thin silk cloth or a piece of cheese-cloth makes a good duster. So does a soft, firm woolen cloth, but linen and cotton flannel leave lint behind them. One woman uses all of her worn-out silk stockings for dusting and still another makes loose mittens out ot old woolen which she puts on as dusters. A turkey’s wing is admirable to get the dust out of chinks and between rails and chamois gives a last polish better than anything else. The best polish in all the world to keep furniture from lobking dingy is the following: Two tablespoonfuls cotton-seed oil, one tablespooaful turpen- and good vegetable oil may be used. This should bes well rubbed into the wood and then a last polishing given with chamois. This is the recipe of a famous furniture dealer in New York.— Chicago News. » RECIPES. A Dish of Snow—Oue pint of stewed, strained, sweetened apple flavored with rosewater. Add the whites of two wells beaten eggs. Eat cold with cream. Graham Muffins—Sift one aad one- half cups of wheat flour, two teaspoon fuls of cream tartar and one of soda, a teaspoonful of salt and three teaspoonfuls of sugar on a cup and a half of graham flour. Stir into the dry .ingredents. a cup of milk and two eggs. Beat wall and bake in muffin pans. Rye meal is delicious made by this rule. Golden Cream Cake—Cream three- fourths of a cup of butter, add slowly two cups of sugar, add four eggs, one at a time, ‘without first beating them. Beat well. Mix two teaspoonfuls of baking powder with three cups of flour, and add this alternately with one cup of milk. Bake in layers. This makes a yellow cake, whichis more attractive with coeoa- nut filling. A Game Soup—Break up the carcasses ‘of the birds, seasoning them with white pepper, parsley, a bay leaf, a bit of lean ham, adding water or weak stocks. After from this, and mix it carefully with a brown roux (i. e., equal parts of butter and flour, cooked together till perfectly smooth and a deep brown), add tle juice ‘of several oranges, with some of the going too far to say that there is just as. tine. Instead of cotton-seed oil grout oil boiling well strain the liquor obtained: / | WE 25) 0) ie % Bry. George W. Hammond of Root Post, G. A. R., of Syracuse, N.Y., T ‘Wounded at z Cettysbur, And an Intense Sufferer until Cured by Hood’ Sarsaparilla %C. 1. Hood & Co., Lowell, Mass.: ur “I was in the Army of the Potomac, and at Gettys: burg was struck in the ankle by a minnie bali, wh smashed the bone. My leg was amputated | field hospital, and after a long time it healed. Twas discharged and went home. After 8 years My Wound Broke Ope afresh. Dr. Pease amputated an inch of th and it healed. Four years later it once more and for eight years HOW I SUFFERED do not believe it possible for a human being tos worse agony. During this time I had to ge crutches, being unable to wear a wooden ‘Whenever possible I relieved my sufferings ing opiate, but when I was obliged to go with I suffered fearfully and thought I SHOUL CRAZY. 1tried every thing I could’ get limited means. Physicianssald T would ne any better. Finally my Si Blood Became Poison and It broke out all over my face and on some of my body so that my face is all cover scars now. One day I read of Hood’s Sarsap bought a bottle and began taking it. A week or later, my wife in dressing my leg, said it seemed be improving, and after taking 5 5 Hood's Sarsaparill; afew months, thank God (and I say it rever the sores all over my body had healed, a four years later, have never shown any reappearing.’’ GEo. M. HAMMOND, 21 Street, Syracuse, N. Y. Col. C. A. Weaver Commander of Root Post, G. A. R., himse armed veteran, fully confirms Mr, Hammond's 8 ment; and J. L. Belden, the pharmacist, also en it as perfectly true. 3 : Hood’s Pills cure Sick Headach PNUY : ULTE 0c ror! p FARR EOUL TRY diseases. Good for Sample for 1 ots. 1 Sane ack gan, by maf 1, La. Six a: cans, 85, ¢ m=O’ one year ce hy can $1, LS. JOHNSON & ce, 22 Sistom on Kennedy’s Medical Discover Takes hold in this order: Bowels, . Liver, Kidneys, Inside Skin, Outside Skin, Driving everything before it that ought to be out. = You know whether yotw need it or not. CE Sold by every druggist, and manufactured by DONALD KENNEDYs : ROXBURY, MASS. a .ELY’S when applied into the nostrils will be ab- sorbed, effectually § cleansing the head of catarrhal virus, caus- ing healthy secretions. Itallays inflammation, protects the mem- brane from additional colds, completely heals the sores and re- stores sense of taste WENN X= and smell TRY THE CURE. HAYF 4 A particle is applied into each nostril and {8 agree able.. Price 50 cents at Druggists or by mail. 3 : ELY BROTHERS, 56 Warren Street, New Yori. “Germar Mr. Albert Hartley of H His brother had just died from When he found his doctor conld rally him he took one bottle of Ger man Syrup and came out sound well. Mr. 8. B. Gardiner, Cle with Druggist J. E. Barr, Aurors Texas, prevented a bad attack pneumonia by taking German S in time. He was in the bus and knew the danger. He us great remedy—Boschee’s Syrup—for lung diseases.