Lost Hair " My hir came out by the hand ful, and the gray hairs began to creep In. I tried Ayer's Hair Vigor, and it stopped the hair from com ing out and restored the color." Mrs. M. D. Gray, No. Salem, Mass. There's a pleasure in offering such a prepara tion as Ayer's Hair Vigor. It gives to all who use it such satisfaction. The hair becomes thicker, longer, softer, and more glossy. And you feel so secure in using such an old and reliable prepara tion. ti.M a Wilt. All aratifitt. If yonr rtrnrjrtst rannot snrpljr yon, and tin ora doMtir And we will exprrta you a bottle, fie ftnre snrl rrWa the name of your nearest exrrrftft ofllco. Adurrs, .1. ('. A Y KH CO., Jewell. 1s. WPBSITTSSBK. The Home of the Kindergarten. The Japanese hare the most perfect kindergarten r-ystem In the world. In fact, they originated this method of Instructing by entertainment instead of by punishment Inflicted. Their play spa rat us tor such purpose Is ela borate, but all of It Is adapted to the infant mind, which It is designed at once to amuse and to inform. The little ones of Japan even become some what interested in -mathematics by seeing and feeling what a pretty thing a cone, a sphere or a cylinder Is when cut out of wood with m lathe. They make outlines of solid figures out of straw, with green peas to hold the joints together, and for the in struction of the blind flat blocks are provided, with the Japanese charac ters raised upon them. Tea Output to be Reduced. At the annual meeting of the CeV Ion Tea Planters' Association It was resolved to take steps to effect a combination with the Indian planters to restrict the output, snys a Colum bo correspondent. If the owners of SO per cent of the tea acreage In In dia and Ceylon Join In the movement a reduction of 10 per cent will be made in the output, or an equivalent amount of green tea be manufactured. On no other basis. It was considered, can the present unprofitable condition of the tea trade be remedied, its growth in Ceylon having been so rapid as to overtake the demand. It was estimated that this year the ship ments to London would be 9,000,000 pounds less than those of last year. THE SURGEON'S KNIFE Mrs. Fcktg Stevenson of Salt Lake City Tells How Opera tions For Ovarian Troubles May Be Avoided. "Dkak Mrs. Tiskbam : I stiffered with inflammation of the ovaries and womb for over six years, endurinp aches and pains which none can dream of but those who have had the same expe- WWT''''' tit ITER. ECKIS STEVEJtSON. rieoee. II nndreds of dollars went to the doctor and tho druggist. I was simply a walking; medicine chest and a phys ical wreck. My sister residing' In Ohio wrote me that she had been cured of womb trouble by using' Lydiav K. Pinkhain's Vegetable Com pound, and advised me to try it. I then discontinued all other medicines and gave your Vegetable Compound a thorough trial. Within four weeks nearly all pain had left me ( I rarely had headaches, and my nerves were in V much better condition, and I was eured in three months, and this avoided a terrible surgical operation." Mrs. Eckib Stiv-cnbon, 250 8o. State Bt-, Salt Lake City, ftah. $6000 ferfM tf on ttttlmontal not gtnmln. Remember every woman it cordially Invited to write to Mri. Pinkham if there is anything about her pymptonis she does not underxtand. Mrs. Pinkham'a addrcNS is Lynn, Mass. tto Dmot "Om lam r fern U W4 aMuti i jam hmwm tbiM km, Bahl mt Mm, lei Itoitra." ALABASTINE i it won't bub orr. Will rWMT b naH?. Klmilim en Wi Z,7M"e tdlmtm. ALAUlaTUiE h a 17r, iiniwnl end Malta wll mta. fo lk bnh bjr muta mU M.r. kf fimi Ml.n .i.rrkm. Bar la peekftfW u4 bw W otMiUm lim UIMTINI CO., Aran Rapids. Mleh. A " fT jmnw w.nioiiMitL .... Wcaiiiiciun, u.i? Simwii ci a Irrxu i. . .atoa Bur n Hwiaa.ntta.aia.awjamao ! Loe.itlnn nf lien Hives, The location of beehives during summer Is important. Boes do not work contentedly in a hive Hint If ex posed to the sun. During mid -day. when the temperature? Is high, work within the hive, such as comb building must be suspended, as tile, heat Is then too great for comfort, especial ly as the bodies of t'.io little workers also give oft" considerable warmth. The Management nf Stork. The real benefit derived f;'0!:i keep ing stock mny always be trneod to the management. Good blood Is esrentinl but no nnimnl can thrive thai Is com felled to depend upon Itself. Tine bred tlock demands the best care, but tlie mine mny nlso bo said of common Mock. The food Is tho importj.it lar tor In the production of meat or mlllr, but some animals can malt? better use of food than others. Tile farm t I'd attention, however, Is necessary lor all kinds of live stock If the ant. n.a'a are to give & profit. The Value of rariltlssrs. Every farmer should Invest large ly In fertilizers. They cost something, but thoy also greatly increase the yields of crops. Water is neeesrary to dissolve fertiliser, for which rea son fertilizers should be applied on the land early In order that, the plen tiful rains of spring may prepare tho ingredients for tho use of plants. The failures that may have occurred with fertilizers usually are duo to lack of moisture, and manure from the barn, yard will prove equally as useless If there Is an Insufficient supply of moist ure. filn'en Feed with drain. At tho Cornell station a test was made of the comparative feeding val ues of ground wheat and corn meal, and also of a mixture consisting nf 26 pounds of gluten feed and 100 1 oun.ls corniueal. Tho gluten feed and tornmeal mixture was prepared so as to have tho ramo nutritive ratio as (round wheat. To each of the three lots of animals sklm-mllk was fed alike. Wheat alone made a somewhat Letter shnwhiR than cornmeal. Tbe tornmcal lot consumed vne feast food f.nd made the least growth, while the mixed corn and gluten meal gave the greatest gain and produced cheapei lork than ground wheat. Tho experi ment Bhowod tliat neither wliwt nor corn, when fed alone, produced the Lest results. Sheep on thr. Farm. A correspondent of tho CKilo Kami fv gives some of the reasons why sheep arc a fi.io thing for tho larmer to raise. They pay for their lalRlng in profitable fleeces. They arc easily transferred from ono Inclosuro to an other and restrained by fences wliloh would not hold cattle or pigs. Their light tread and their dislike to mud 'rarrant their access to fields where the trampling of cattle and tearing of togs would not be tolerated. They waste less food in proportion to t;e quantity consumed than any other ani mal, and will hunt out an 1 utilize much that would otherwise be lost. They work for a living by keeping tho farm clean from weeds. No animal re turns more fertility to tho soil in proportion to the amount exacted for itr. support. They produce a pound of mfitton cheaper than a hog will o. pound of pork. Southwestern Stockman. Abfliit riltptng Horses. A Korse Review correspondent wish es to know tho advantages to bo do lived from clipping horses. Tho editor replies: , First The natural process of moult ing or shedding the hair is a draft on the vitality of tho animal. Tho ap petite 1b diminished, and with a work cr pleasure horso exertion is irksomo during the period. Clipping, or arti ficial removal of tho hair, accom plished in a very short space of time what nature requires much mora time to do. In other words, nature is an ticipated in her work and the animal a system la saved a call upon It. , Second A clipped horse Is less li able to take cold than a long crmtnd horse, because tho evaporation of per spiration Is more rapid. A "hot" horse will cool out quicker wita a short coat. Every groom is aware of this fact. Third A clipped horso requires less fuel (food) to maintain bodily beat than the long-coated horse; there fore clipping as a matter of economy should be generally practiced. . Fourth A clipped horse looks clean rr, acts more sprightly and keeps in better health. Horses Intended for tho tale or uhow ring should bo clipped at least two weeks before tho event. There will be a marked improvement in weight and appearance, with mani fest advantage to tho owncr'3 pocket book. These points about cover the ground. We add that clipping ma chines are so cheap that all horse owners can afford to have one. Bandit Slock with Car. JfSiy farmers who have not separ ate mangers for feodlng their stock cften trundle the coarse fodder down In front of them, and pay little heed to each Individual animal, to' see If it gets a full allowance of food. An In experienced hand fed our stock one winter, and I noticed that one of the coTTs did not gain and was very thin when nearly time to drop her calf. One day, after the bay was put down for the cattle, I saw the poor cow daintily picking each mouthful of hay, while two hearty eaters, one on each side, were eating her hay as fast as they could. Arter eating her hny they turned to their qwn, which they had poked aside so she could rot reach It. Wo had to kill this cow, as she was too weak to get up after calving. Annthrr time, through Ignorance, we did not give the enre thnt was needed, i ml hud to kill a line hoiror. Farmers rhould study the disposition aid necla of enrh animal they own, and then they will know how to han.llc, tiu-m with better success. When eattlo have to lie watered some distance from the barn, care siiould be taken thnt they safely get to nnd from the water. One man neg lected looking arter his eattlo when liiey went, for wntcr and had a cow fall down In the at ream In such a position thnt i-hc could not get lip and was drowned. Cntile that possess a nunirclsome na ture should not be let loose with cow's 1 eavy with calf. Many a valuable! cow lias been spoiled or killed. A few mln. tites' extra cai-o In looking arter stock each day ortcn saves tho cost of a cow. TO. j. II111, In New York Tribune Farmer. (Iran and Ray Crop. Ora?s and hay are crops that de pend largely upon an abundance of moisture to give the largest yields, and the object of every farmer is to get hlit 'grass crop as lar ahead ns possible before the dry weather of summer sets In. Sometimes a single shower, at a time when the ground Is dry. Is worth more than a prolonged period of rain early In the season. Sod land Is al ways ready to make growth as soon as tho warmth of spring begins, but when new pastures or grass crops ere seeded down early In tho spring the future progress or the crop will depend largely upon the manner In which the land was prepared and the amount of plant food supplied. There Is no substitute for grass in the sum mer season, as It provides bulky and succulent food before other crops aro rtady, largely adding to the production of milk, butter nnd meat, and Is har vested by the animals themselves while on the pasture, thus saving con siderable labor in feeding, as well as providing a variety of foods that can not bo secured In any other manner. The grass grown for hny should h p separate crop. Clover and timothy rre the standards for hny, although they do not ripen together. No hny grasses should be pastured, as the feet of the animals do conslderublf burin, while the field is never eaten off evenly. The pasture g.-anscs, intend ed for grazing purposes only, should consist of aa many varieties as pos sible, while such Is not necessary for the hny crop. A variety of grass that Is indigenous to the soil of tho pas ture lot may sooner or latey crowd cut all other variety and take posses sion, but If sucli variety Is relished by stock, and maintains Its hold on tho land. It will probably be found bet ter than any other kind on account of its hardiness and ability to withstand droughts. Whether for hay or pasture, the land should bo deeply plowed and well harrowed, so as to have tho soil in the finest possible condition. This Is essential, for the reason f.iat. the young plants will have better facili ties for feeding and will rapidly in warm days of July and Aggust. The crea'so In root growth before the more early growth the grass can make the better it will bo able to endure a dry spell. If manure Is used it should be thorousii'y decompose!. In order that all seeds of weeds may be destroyed, as It Is difficult to get at weeds growing on a grass plot. Tho safer method Is to apply fertilizers. Wood ashes nro excellent, but a mix ture of 100 pounds of nitrate of soda, 125 pounds sulphate of potash, and 50 .oumls nitrate of soda, per acre, If the land Is in moderate condition", will give the graes an early start and en able it to become well established be fore meeting with lack of moisture. The main point In the growing of a grass crop is to get an even and uni form Btand at tho beginning, for any gain at tho start will be of advantage at later periods of growth. While mixed grsses should be pre ferred on a pasture field, It Is better to grow hay crops singly unmixed tho mixing of the foods to bo done at the barn when feeding the animals, after harvesting the grass crops. It Is letter for tho fanner not to depend upon a single kind of hny crop, aa a prolonged drought may destroy it. In stead of growing clover and timothy only, there should be fields of cow j as, Hungarian grass, and fodder corn, which can. If necessary, bo seed ed Into and mowed at any slago of growth, according to circumstances. Pasture landa may Include ryo as a late fall and early spring supply, but grown separately from tho grasses, while crimson clover is also another late and early crop that may be made i i fill up a gap, being also an excellent green manurlal crop. An old sod that has furnished a crop for several years need not be plowcj under, because of beginning to fall. It may only need a liberal application of fertilizer to become useful again, but If the best varieties of grasses have disappeared, and some undesir able kind provides the green food of the pasture, it should be plowed un cer and cultivated in corn, so as to give the land thorough working, though the best time to do so Is in the fall, using lime on the sod and plowing in a manner so as to bury all tfie sod, in order to prevent It from growing the following spring. The cause of failure of pastures is largely due to close grazing and trampling by the animals; bence it should be the rule to have a change of pastures, In order io prevent cropping the grass too does to the ground. Philadelphia Record. OIL WELL8 OF JAPAN. Modern Methods of Drilling Have De veloped Petroleum Industry. Mr. Rentiers, of tho British Consu late service In Japan, has submitted lo the Hrltlsh Board of Trade a re port on tho petroleum Industry, which has of late attracted much attention and reached considerable dimensions In that country. The only placo In which the oil Is produced In large quantities Is In the province of Rch igo, on the west coast, the center of tho Industry being the town of Ar nase, where the largest oil company In the country has been at work since 1S88 with mnchinery Imported from tho ITnlted States. Here wells are dug in the sea and carried above the sea level by a double ring of piles filled In with enrth. In the north ern part of the province oil was dis covered In 188!) and led to a fever of speculation. In 1802 there were be tween BOO and 700 speculative com panies with small capital at work In Kchlgo, and most ot them failed. On their ruins arose lnrge companies working on a great scnlo and with Imported machinery. Hand boring has almost censed to exist, and with Improvement In methods of winning the oil came Improvement In the transport or the oil to the refineries, ripe lines were Introduced to convey it from the wells to thn refineries and from thn latter to the railway stations, and It has been proposed to construct a pipe lino all the way to Toklo, the cnpital, about two hun dred miles away. In 1809 the total production of the oil In Japan was 18.833.S1 5 gallons, of which 18,713, 230 gallons were produced In Ech Igo. A Hlstorlo Punch Bowl. The most revered piece of silver plate In the United Stntes navy Is the massive 18-pound sliver punch bowl of the battleship Indiana, which hears the honorable scars of an his toric bnttle. During that famous blockade and naval battle before San tiago de Cuba this rich piece of table ware was struck by a fragment of a mortar shell fired from the Socapa battery, and which burst In the ward room passage of the battleship. A five-pound hit of the shell struck the liowl on one of the stoutest parts of :he body, yet where the seal of thn Stato of Indiana forms the central riortlon of a beautiful decoration. The seal Is still there, but not as the art ist designed it, lor It now forms a pnrt of a large, Irregular Indentat ion, which. In the estimation of the olTicers and men of the bnttleshlp, enhances the value of the bowl a thousand times over. Portugal Halts Civilization. The Portuguese sits at his cafe at the coast of his East African posses sion and collects custom dues and sells stamped paper. For fear of the native he dares not march five miles beyond his seaport town, and the white man who ventures Inland for the purposes of trade, or to culti vate plantations, (loos so at his own risk, as he can bo promised no pro tection. The land back Of Mozambi que Is divided Into "holdings," and the rent of each holding Is based upon the number of native huts It contains, t he tax per hut Is .i.00 a year, and these holdings are leased to any Portuguese who promises to pay the combined taxes of all the huts. Ho also engages to ' cut new roads, to keep those already made In repair and to furnish a sufficient number of police to maintain order. All Newspapers Talk Weather. There are over 2,000 dally papers In the United States, and each one of these prints In a conspicuous place the dally weather predictions. Dm it ever occur to you that there Is no other Information that receives pub lication nnd attention by readers each day of tho year In every dally paper of thn country? Thcro are 47 tri weekly papers In the United States, 434 semi-weekly; and 14,734 weekly publications, tho grenter number of which publish tho weekly weather crop bulletins of tho bureau for their respective States. St. I.ouls has nearly $17,000,000 in bank or In sight for Exposition pur poses, and has reason to expect a great deal more. Thcirvlific production of a laxative of known value and distinctive action is rapidly growing in public favor, along with the many other material improvements of the age. The many who as wfcll informed must understand quite clearly, that in order to meet the above conditions a laxative should be wholly free from every objectionable quality or substance, with its component parts simple and wholesome and it should act pleasantly and gently without disturbing the natural functions in any way The laxative which fulfils most perfectly the requirements, in the highest degree, is Syrup :pf fl$s The sale of millions of bottles annually foi many years past, and the universal satisfaction which it has given confirm the claim we make, that it possesses the qualities which commend it to putlic favor. . HEADACHE, BACKACHE, DIZZINESS (PE-RU-NA CURES PELVIC CATARRH.) "I am perfectly well," says Mrs. Martin, of Brooklyn. "Pe-ru-na cured me." Mr. Anna Martin, 47 Hoyt street, Prnoklyn, N. Y., writes: " Vrrwna did so much fnr ttte thnt 1 frrl it ttiHrfiirif lo rernmmend It to other who until be ttlmllnrlii nffcf crf. .4 ho ii n yrnr npn my hfiiUh teas enm plrti'l a bi ol.rti itawn, had hack arhr, dlrztnr and irrraulnrltlrn, nnd lle seemed ilnik Indrrd, H'e had itard I'erunn in otic inine na a tontn nnd tor cntdn nnd vatarrh and 1 drctdrd to tru It for my trouble. In le than three month I became reg ular, my pal nit had entirely dfn pearctl, nnd I am now perfectly trrf." Mm, Anna MnrHtu Misa Mnric Johnnnn, 11 Columbia. Emt. Detroit, Mich., is Worthr Vice Templar in Hone Lodge No. 8, Independent Order (I. Kid Templars. Mini Johmon, aa ao many other womrn alio have done, found in Pe rnna a aperifie for a severe ea of female weaknrM. She writes: "1 want to do what I can to let the whole world know what a grand medicine rerun in. For eleven yeara I auffered with female trotiblea and complication ariaing therpfrmn. Doetora failed to cure me, and I deipaired of being helped. Pe ru n a cured me in three ahort tuonthi. 1 ran hardly believe it myself, but it it a blraaed fact. I am perfectly well now, and have not hal sit acne or pain for montha. I want my suffering aiafera to know what IVrtins haj done for me." Miaa Marie Johnson. , Miss Iluth Emerson, 72 Sycamore at., Buffalo, N. Y., writes: "I euffered for two years with irregular and painful menstrua tion, and Peruna rured me within aix weeki. I rannot tell you bow grateful 1 feel. Any nueney which bringa health and atrengtli to the afflicted la always a wel come friend, and to-day tho market is o Frog Farming. After laughing at the French peo ple for their frog-eating proclivity, tho United States is doing very well In that line, for the Food Commission estimates that we catch In this coun try about 2,000,000 frogs. These frogs, which have been hopping for years more and more Into gastronomic fa vor, are sought for In all parts of tho country, furnishing a paying Indus try, not only for the hunters of them In their natural haunts, but for scores of persons who have frog farms and raise them as they might raise chick ens. To these persons the frogs mean nil annual Investment of $100, 000, according to the report of the commission, and that means $150, '.iilO to tho consumers. The British PoBtal Department, In conjunction with tho llelglum Gov ernment, are having made a telephone cable to connect the two countries under the North sea. Ask Yonr DonJnr For Allan's Foot-!aaa, A powder. It rests the feat. Cures Corns, Hunlons.Hwollen.Rore, Hot, Callous, Aoblnif, Hweating Feet and lngrowtngNalls. Allen's Foot-i:ase makes nnw or tight shoos easy. At all Druggists and Hlioe stores, 26 cents. Ac cent no aiihstltutn. Wimple, mulled Facs. Address Allen 8. Olmsted, Laitoy, N. Y. In the Mrand Canyon nf Colorado a man's voice haa been heard a distance of eighteen miles. FITS permanently cured. No fits or nervous ness after llrst day's line of Dr. Kline's Oroat Nerveltestnrer. till rial bottlennd treatisefroe lr. It. II. Ki.ixi:, Mil., 1BI Arch St .. l'lilla., Pa. One miner is killed for every 1,000,000 tons of coal raised. Mra.Wlnslow's HoothingRyrup for children (entiling, aoflen the gums, reduces Inflamnm Hon, allays pniu.eures wind coll,-. 2uc. abottle It ia ono thing to count the cost, and quilo unother thing to pay it. rise's Cure cannot be too highly spoken ot as a cough cure, J. W. O'llaiKN, iH Third Avenue, N., Minneapolis, .Minn., Jan. 6, l'JIM When a fellow ia a bad egg don't try to beat him. ;li: il -l5ly.'.: Mrs Anna Martin. filled with useless and injurious medicines that it ia a pleasure to know of ao reliable a remedy aa you place before the public." Miaa Kuth Emerson. It ia no longer a question aa to whether Peruna can be relied on to cure nil such eases. During the many yeara in which Peruna has been put to test in all forms and stagea nf acute and chronic eatarrli no one year haa put thia remedy to great er test than the past year. Peruna ia the acknowledged catarrh rem edy nf the age. Dr. Hurtman, the com pounder of Peruna, haa written a book on the phases of catarrh peculiar to women, entitled, "Health and P.eauty." It will be sent free to any address by The Peruna Medicine Co., Columbus, O. If you do not derive prompt and satis factory results from the use of Peruna, write at once to Dr. Hurtman, giving a full statement of your rase and he will he pleased to give you hia valuable advice gratia. Addresa Dr. Hartman, President of The Hartman Sanitarium, Columbus. O. Guests Paes With Glaciers. Hotelkeepers In the Alps have a new trouble and are complaining at the loss of patrons, who are moving away from tho glacJors. Yes, the at tractive glaciers are actually passing from the landscape, and as they re cede the hotels along their borders find that their registers are shorten ing. These glaciers are not running away, by any means, but they are de teriorating slowly, with a persistency that means their final annihilation. Hotels that a few years ago stood very near to a great river of slowly moving lee now find themselves a considerable distance away, and the attractiveness of tho site Is lessened. Laid Up for Sixteen Weeks. St. Jacobs Oil and Vogeler's Cur ative Compound Cured Him. " I have been a great sufferer from Rheu matism for many years. I was laid up with Rheumatic Kever for nine weeks in 1S94, and again for sixteen (16) weeks in 1891. 1 tried many medicinea I saw advertised and others I was recommended ; finally I was induced to take Vogeler's Cnrative Compound, which did me more good than all other medicines. In fact, I feel quite a different man since I have been taking the Compound. All my neighbors and friends are quite surprised to see me bout and looking so well, 1 can only Bay that Vogeler's Curative Compound taken internally and by using Kt. Jacobs Oil outwardly acted like magic in my case, I had been taking medicines for yeara without obtaining benefit, but Vogeler's has practi cally cured me. I have recommended Vog eler's Curative Compound to, a lot of my acquaintances, and they tell me that it has wotked wonders. ' Wishing you every success in the sale of your Vogeler s Curative Compound and St. Jacobs Oil, I remain, gentlemen, " Your obedient servant, "George Clarke, Gardener, . "aj Ileechcroft Koad, Surrey. Send to St. Jacobs Oil, Ltd., Baltimore, for a free sample of Vogeler's Compound- MfaM s Excllerrvcc- is due to the originality and simplicity of the combination and also to the method of manu facture, which is known to the California Fig Syrup Co. only, and which ensures that per fect purity and uniformity of product essential to the1 ideal home laxative. In order to get lsrxerficiiil Effects always buy the genuine and note the full name of the Company California Fig Syrup Co. printed on the front of every package. In the process of. manufacturing figs are used as they are pleasant to the taste, but the medicinal virtues of Syrup of Figs are obtained from an excellent combination of plants known to be - medicinally laxative and to act most beneficially. &FflI(KlAifiyV!llP. San, Frekncisco. CM. LoxjisvilU.Ky. for lt by til drvtftsU J..11 II. U I II Mmm FOR EVERY jjllll Price $1.00 CUTICURA SOAP, to cleanse the skid Of crusts and scales and soften the thick ened cuticle, CUTICURA OINTMENT, to Instantly allay itching, lufltmma tlon, and irritation, and aoothe and heal, , and CUTICURA RESOLVENT PILLS, to cool and cleans the blood. A SINGLE SET of these great akin curatives is often sufficient to cur the most tortur ing, disfiguring, itching, burning, bleed ing, crusted, scaly, and 'i'mP,7 kin, scalp, and blood humours, with loss el hair, when all els fail. Millions of People Van CtmctTR Soap, a Minted by Cticuba Oihthknt, for preserving, purifying, and beautifying tho ikin, forcltanalng UiQ kVAlp ofcrunts, trains, and dandruff, and the stop, ping of falling hair, for aoftcntng, whttenlng, and toothing red, rough, and tore hand, for baby ran he a, ltthlng, and ch a lings, and fnr all the purposetnf ths toilet, bath, and nnr. ry. Millions of Women use CuTierm Soap in "the form of bathe for annoying Irritation-), Inflammations, and excoriations, or too frea or otfcnulTO perspiration, In the form of washes for ulcerative weaknesses, and for many sanative, antiseptic purposes which readily suggest themselves to women. XrrnoPRA ItroLvirrr Pills (Choeolato Coated) ato a now, tasteless, odorless, eoo Boralr'Al substitute for ths celebrated liquid CvririT a a HcsoLvKvr.ss well as for all other blood ptiriflcrnand humour cures. In screw nap vials, containing 00 doses, price 25o. Bolrt thrmrhtrat tha wntW. rA, sm., Our-marr, sncPrtu, a. llrtiUh lwti J7-2. rrurttrhouM Sq London. Frneh htpnti t K 4 Is Plz, Ptilt. Pot Tsa iittiw a Cusu. Cunr Hoi Prep, boitoa. U. &. A. CANOV CATHASTIC Brtflrtats V Genuine stamped C C C. Never sold la bulk. Beware of the dealer who tries to sell "something just as good." ens ron oust race CATALOGUE OF BASI BALL, FISHINO, TAC KLE BICYCLES, KO DAKS, TENNIS, SEW ING) MACHINES, BASV C A SI I AO IS A N O SPRING AND SUMMER SPORTING G0003 IT WILL SAVE VOU MONEY. WE ACTUALLY BELL AT WHOLESALE PRICES SOB CASH. CHMEIZCR ARMS CO. KANSAS CITY, MO. Colorado Beats eWorld IN SUCAR BEETS. Sl Million Dollars have just ben invested (a sural fat-tune, four Milliun mure will be luvot rtth s lear. I he hfnt ft.tMl stiirsr mn or thu world ars buylmr Immense a.-reiifre tor nnrar btn. Culorstle k first rtrsat mYatro exhibit lat month lor hiprlifst toiinitK rr ttire, anrl hitrtiASt ir'mntf nf suirar, brin -tvor twice ns inu h hu rttut. We sr onprimr lew shares ut to.'k lor salt in 'thn Culfiratlo Kt.iraT Hfr. ''. The Urst ami oulv iitf;ir stock i-fl"-! tn M; inililic. The comininv owns on ot Hie most modern ami com i let e ratlin tor plnnts in tm w. rl-l, sltimtM tn tl strlct where rim Mrhet itrire is laid lor suur in tns Count r v. Lo.-.ih'si itul Ists have anWriiied Five Hundred and Km v Thou sand rUars in CHhh. This is an opportunity ot a lltHt Hie hn, tnry is built and paid tor. Fur full particulars write to w.ti. !:!. ih-:k & o., llfl llroadwny, New York, or Exchange llulldlnn, lrnvcr, Colo. I'. N. U. , '(. Ldltttt ftrtikr All flSf n new ounn syrup, tiuuoj u in nmp. .iu nv nrnutfi rtwYork.H.Y Fritt fifty ctnts ptr bottlt. n 1 Si, i