FOR TWEN1T-ONE YEARS Catarrh Remedies and Doctors Failed Pe-ru-na Cured MR. A. K. KIDD. J i.ea... .. ELGIN, ILL. In a very recent commu nication from thin place come the new that Mr. Arthur Krncst Kidd, 1 well known architect of thnt city, haa made complete recovery from catnrrh of the head, from which he had suffered for nearly a quarter of a century. lie write from 18 Hamilton art.: "I am 42 year of age, and hare had ca tarrh of the head for over half of my life, aa a result of icarlet ferer, followed by typhoid fever., 1 nt sn bad that I wni al moat constantly coughing and clearing my throat. The catnrrh greatly impaired my eyesight, and the hearing in one tar, and reduced my weight to 110 pounds. "I tried nearly every catarrh remedy ad vertised, bcnidc a great many different physicians' treatments, all of which failed "I had heard and rend of l'eruna, and finally decided to try it two month ago. I have now tnken seven bottles, and weigh 172 pounds. Never felt happier or merrier. Feel tip top." A. E. KIDD. If you do not derive prompt and satis factory results from the use of Peruna, writ at once to Ir. Hartman, giving a full statement of your case and he will he pleased to give you hi valuable advice gratis. . Address Dr. Hurtmnn, President of The Hartman Sanitarium, Columbus, O. likyourDrgetlstforifrBiFi-ra-nillmanie Curious Chinese Customs. Of all the quaint Industries which furnish a livelihood for a corps of workers there Is none more worthy of comment than the aarred furnace of Mon-War, erected and supported by the religious fervo and reverential sentiment with which the Chinese re gard tholr letters and papers. In every Chinatown, however small, a building; dedicated to Confucius can be found. and to every almoncl-eyet? celestial that building Is sacred. Barred from the Inscription over the door to the blue smoke that curls up and mingles with the fog, for It is the oven wherein are Incinerated all the letters, newspapers and old books of the Chinese quarter. Every scrap of paper upon which a Chinese character lias been written or printed, when Its purpose In the bus iness or social work has been accom plished, is burned in a perfumed blaze, and the ashes are disposed of with reverential care. That they may not become contaminated with the touch of human fingers, they are, with acred shovels, scooped into sacks and are carried out to sea, where the tide runs swift, and there they are given into the care of old Neptune, who re spects equally the customs of all na tions. A German lawyer has left $50,000 for the foundation of a school of cookery. FUany women and doctors do net recognize the real symptoms of derangement of the female organs until too late. " I had terrible ' pains along1 my Spinal cord for two year and auffered dreadfully, J was given different medicines, wore plaster; none of these thing- helped me. Reading- of the curea thnt I,ydia E. IMnkham's ' Vegetable Compound haa brought about, 1 somehow felt that it waa what I needed and bought a bottle to take. ' How glad I am that I did so : two bottles Drought me immense re lief, and after using thuee bottles more I felt new life and blood surging through my veins. It seemed a though there had been a regular house cleaning through my system, that all the sickness ana poison had been taken out and new life given me instead. I have advised dozen of my friend to use Lydia E. Pinkham'a Vegetable Compound.' Clood health is India- rmsiabl to complete happlneaa, and ydla E. Plnkham's Vegetable Compound has secured this to me." Mas. Lavba L. Bbemkb, Crown Point, Indiana, Secretary Ladies Relief Corps. $1000 furftlt If original me tefttr awwtflf (simZiMMM wnnot M pvoduoti. Every sick woman who does not understand her ailment should ' write Mrs. Plnkliam. Lynn, Has). Iter advice Ls free and Always helpful . . ,.n 4, mm 2 i-Ni At llnteh.rlnt Time. In a cask of water sufficient to scald a 200-pound hog, throw In three or four handful of finely pulverized pine pitch. Stir the water a little, then sonld your hog, and If you'll keep It nn tho water long enough all the bristles, with the scurf skin, Will peel olt with the great est ease, scarcely leaving a brlstlo any whero. Even the toenails will mostly all come off. At the scalding of men subsequent hog add another handful of pitch. The effect of pitch In water will astonish nnynne who hnS never seen It tried. Should someone snrg 'St that tar Is as good or anything ap proaching it, any positively no. After a hog is scalded In this way there is hardly a bristle left on to shave off. Charles Haines, In Orange Juild Far mer. drains Irnlnt tn I.ltn. The grains are deficient In lime snd mineral matter, whllo clover Is rich In those materials. Corn contains 10 per cent of water and clover hay 15 per cent Of the dry matter corn hns but 1 1-2 percent of ash (time magnesia, potash, soda, etc.). while clover has over 6 percent. Clover hay contains 12 percent of protein and corn 10 1-2. Corn Is rich In r.tnrch and fat, however, con taining twice as much as clover. Clover hay has more crude fibre than the grain, hence is less valuable In that direction. While many farmers have always made clover hay a specialty In feeding adults, yet It Is more valuable for young stock than may be supposed. If cut up very fine, and then scalded, It makes one of the best rations In win ter for poultry and will promote lay ing. For ducks and geese It cannot be excelled. If cut very fine and mixed with cooked turnips and carrots, clover hay will be relished by young pigs, and It will promote rapid growth. In some sections clover hay is ground into what is termed "clover meal," and It Is then sold In bags. Cornmeal Is too fat tening for certain animals, but in win ter It may be used more freely, being an excellent ration when used in con nection with clover. Preparing Celery for Market. When placing stock In storage, con sider the amount of your trade, so as to have the celery ready at the proper time. You must have a sufficient control of the temperature of the stor age pit to be able to keep certain parts of It warmer than' others, so as to con trol the ripening. The dressing should be done in the pit to avoid breakage In handling and saving moving the waste, at a time when it Is neither cheap nor conven ient to do so. Remove all yellow or decayed stalks, then cut the root to a point, being careful not to tut too high. This takes live or six strokes with a 6 Inch butcher knife. Hold the plant with the root from you and cut with a mo tion aa If you were whittling shavings. The washing room should be In a warm basement or room where water Is convenient and a boiler or caldron at hand to warm water. A square cor nered tub Is most convenient. Use plen ty of water and have It quite warm, 90 to 100 degrees. This gives a gloss to the celery not obtainable with cold water. Dump a box of celery into the tub with the butts toward you; then with a com mon soft scrubbing brush give each head two or three downward strokes with the brush. This takes all the dirt out of the creases and gives It a bright shiny appearance. The tier stands at the table and ties it up four bunches to the dozen, using common white wrapping twine for the purpose, and running it twice around each bunch. All decayed leaves or tips should .be carefully clipped off. It 1b now ready to pack for shipment or home delivery. If you have a large amount of celery. It Is sometimes well to grade it, making a fancy of the larg est, and a standard grade of the re mainder. Do not try to bring your trade to the size of your packages to suit the trade. We have found that a case hold ing about one bushel Is as large as it is profitable to use. This will hold about ten dozen good sized celery, Line case .. th paper to avoid drying in warm weather and freezing in cold. Ship by express after cold weather .sets In. I. C. Smith, in American AgTl culturlst. rroflt In Qnlck-flrnwn tieef. High prices for beef have greatly Increased the Interest in cattle raising throughout the Eastern States. The ad dress of J. B. Sanborn at North Adams, Mass., before the state board of agri- culture, was on "Beef Production in New England," and was listened to with attention by a large audience of farmers. Said Professor Sanborn: "Conditions permanent In character have brought the steer again Into the range of profitable production In New England. The profitable steer here must be the product of high art He must have the beet form, as this brings more than the dairy form, with its maximum of cheap parts. He Is neces sarily a hothouse product growing and fattening continuously from birth to death. Maintenance Is eleven pounds a day on his average weight, and should not be lost by a single day's failure of rapid growth. Nor can a year's time be necessarily added, for It means two tons of fodder to run the machine this time a fatal amount He must go to the shambles at the lowest weight that will command the highest value, as it will require three times the food to make a pound of growth on maturing steer that is called for the first four hundred pounds' growth. It la shown that twice the growth a day Is made the first year that occurs the fourth year, so mat a uoudis toss occurs i one making an unnecessarily heavy steer. 'Palatable foods In abundance or great skill In feeding are required, as free consumption Is the basis of rapid growth. Old bushy pastures cannot be , the basis of cheap hoef, for they afford neither, abundant nor palatable foods. These pastures must he rid of weeds and bttHbes and fed. Protein foods In ettner the coarso foods fed or In the grnlns or meals must constitute a part of the ration, though not to the extent BdvociVed by students of Uermnn feed ing tables. It requires for a pound of butter fat under high feeding some twenty-five pounds or more of food. This food will make over two pounds of steer, probably two and one-half pounds, rs I have made a pound of prowth on a steer of average weight on nine pounds of dry matter. If the meat Is the product of a good breeder and feeder It will net about the same as butter, labor considered." Reforms In Dairying. There Is a growing tendency to make reforms in the dairies, and there Is no department on the farm which de mands more consideration than the present methods of handling both cows and tholr milk. It Is claimed that there Is more filth and less care in dairying than In almost any other oc cupation. The milk Is to be "sold" and "the dealer Is not particular,' while the consumer Is In blissful Ignorance of any of the conditions affecting the preparation of milk. Milk passes through so many hands from the cow to the consumer as to render the mat ter of obtaining pure and clean milk a difficult one. The dairyman consoles himself with the fact that he strained tho milk before selling It, but the strainer does not remove soluble filth. A pinch of salt or sugar In milk Is not arrested by the strainer, nor Is any other substance that Is dissolved by the milk during the act of milking. Those who handle cows know that it Is not unusual for a cow to get down on 'the floor of her stall to rest, without regard to whether the floor is covered with manure or urine, and her udder and teats may have rested during the night on a heap of fresh manure. The cow Is not as clean as the hog as far as selecting a suitable place for resting Is concerned, and where the dairyman himself is careless and does not keep the stalls clean, as well as brush and even wash the cows, it is almost im possible to have clean milk. It is grati fying to notice, however, that some dnlrymen wash the udders and teats of the cows at every milking, wiping with clean towels, avoiding every chance of filth entering the milk, but such dairymen get good prices, which are secured by their reputations for skillful management of their cows and their products. The ordinary dairyman Injures his business and loses profit by purchas ing fresh cows from other parties. Some of them will sell a good cow as soon as she becomes dry and buy one in her place that Is fresh, but which mny be much inferior to the one sold. Then there is the liability of bringing disease, as that great scourge of the dairyman abortion among cows Is contagious, being carried from one herd to another through the practice of selling the dry cows and buying oth ers that may do barm and which may not be worth the room they occupy. Then, again, the calves are taken from the cows when two or three days old, and the milk from their dams is added to that taken from the other cows of the herd, although such milk is ropy and usually unfit for use, being inju rious to children who are fed upon it. The milk from fresh cows should go to the calf until it Is at least a month old, but as the average dairyman milks his cows for the purpose of selling their produce he will not willingly sac rifice to the calf an article that he can put on the market. The result is that the milk sold in the cities Is of variable quality, much of it is unclean, and some, of It unfit for human use. There is room for Improvement, and there are hundreds of consumers ready and will ing to pay the dairyman for his extra care if he will provide them with milk of the best quality. It may take time to build up such a trade, but any dairy man will make it a point to seek such customers and assure them that he may be depended 'upon will find that he cannot easily supply the demand. The best milk Is from good and wholesome food. At this season of the year pasturage cannot be provided or the cows given an opportunity of se lection of good In the Acids, but selec tion by the dairyman of the foods giv en at the barn Is a matter which should not be overlooked. Each cow In a herd Is an individual, and must be treated accordingly. If she rejects foods that are readily acceptable by the others she should be allowed something which to her is more palatable, and a variety of food Is always better than the use of a single kind, as the health of the ani mals can only be promoted by supply ing them so aa to satisfy their wants. When a cow Is sick or "off her feed" the milk Is then unfit for use and should be allowed to eat ail that she re quires, as such cows are usually large producers and demand more food than inferior animals. Every dairyman should breed his cows and make It a point never to buy a fresh one. If his herd is healthy and free from disease he can then keep his animals in good condition with less difficulty, while the yield of milk from each cow will be more than doubled in a few years by Judicious breeding and selection. The buying of fresh cows by dairymen has been the greatest curse that has ever been encountered by them, as It is the foundation of all diseases and losses among the herd a Philadelphia Reo ord, - : r t i SUNSHINE AND MUSIC. A Isngh I Just like sunshine) It freshena all the day. It tips the peak of life with light And drives the clouds awayi The soul grow glad that hear It And fnels it eoiirim strongi A laugh I Just like sunshine For cheering folks along. A laugh Is Just Ilk mu.loi It lingers In the heart, And where It melody Is heard The Ilia of life departs And happy thoughts come crowding It joy till not to grmit A laiiith In Jil-t llkntniisle For making llrlngswent. Wellington Mar. HUMOROUS. She This fur rug Is very beautiful? to what beast docs it belong? Ho (can didly) To me. Rharpe Is all of Carlton's money In his wife's name? Wheaton Worse than that it's In her pocket. Wigwag It makes me hustle to pay my rent llarduppn The question of rent keeps me moving, too. Muggins Sklnflynt says he Is prac ticing economy. Bugglns I guess Skln flynt doesn't require much practice in that lino. New Boarder Who Is thnt making sueh a noise because he can't And his necktie? Landlady Oh, that Is the gentleman who dresses so quietly. SllllcUB So he wild I was level-headed, eh? Cynlcus I didn't think he put It exactly that wny. My recollection Is that the expression he used was flat beaded. Nell I know a girl who accepted an opal aa an engagement ring. Belle How unlucky. Nell Ves; wasn't It! She found out afterward that It was only an Imitation. "This seems to be a pretty live town," remarked the stranger. "Yes; worse luck," replied the funereal na- H... ' Vl'l, ,ln on tr ,,,. 1,.1,, t "I'm an undertaker' Blobbs Why was the engagement broken off between Harduppe and Miss BJones? Slobbs I believe they came to the conclusion that her Income wasn't large enough to support them. "Have you followed the course you marked out for yourself when a boy?" "No; I Intended to be a great financier, but I have never yet been able to get enough money to practise with." "Dearest!" passionately exclaimed the visiting youth. "You have led mo to adore ' "Good!" Interrupted a voice from the stairs, In relieved tones. "Now, I hope you'll open It and go out" Scribbler It doesn't require much Imagination or Inventive ability to write a historical novel. Serawlnr That's where you are wrong. It re quires a lot of Imagination to Invent the historical part. The Patron It seemB to me that every great genius should get you to make his clothes. The Tailor ( natter ed) Ah you think so? The Patron Yes; they say that a great genius' clothes never fit him. "Your face seems very familiar to me," remarked the man with the red necktie, as he slapped the stranger on the back. "Indeed," replied the strang er. "Now, It's your manner that seems familiar to me." Ida I don't see how you managed to hold that Miss Stout up when she waa learning to skate. She is so corpulent you know. Tom Oh, she seemed quite small on the Ice. Ida Indeed! Tom Yes a mere slip of a girl. The jury brought In a verdict of "Not guilty." The judge said, admon- tshlngly to the prisoner: "After this you ought to keep away from bad com pany." "Yes, youT honor.- You will not see me here again In a hurry." "Young man," said the stern parent, "do you think you can dress my daugh ter?" "Well," replied the suitor, "I can keep her In rings." "Rings? Do you think she is going to wear nothing but rings?' "Well, I only asked for her hand." Mr. Sprlgglns I fear you will make a mistake, Hettie, In engaging that girl. According to her own story, she has lived In no fewer than ten families In town within a year. Mrs. Sprlgglns That's just It Think of the Inside In formation she will be able to Impart about those ten families! A well-known authoress waa once talking with a dilapidated bachelor, who retained little but his conceit "It Is time now," he said, pompously, "for me to settle down as a married man, but I want so much. I want youth, health, wealth, of course, beauty, grace" "Yes," said his fair listener, sympathetically, "you poor man, you do want them all." lilaapp.arlns; Water. Dovil's Lake In North Dakota, the largest body of water in the state, cov. era about 8G0 square miles. It is a glacial lake, and once had an outlet to the south into the Cheyenne river, through a channel which is now well marked and empty. Observations for the last nineteen years show an almost uninterrupted sinking of the water level. Groves of trees, which once stood at the beach, are now separated from It by broad strips of land, and the shallow parts of the lake notably the long arms and bays, have been left quite dry. Another change Is In the water from fresh to salt This has taken place within the memory of man and Is in some particulars producing serious re mit. Fish, were found In great abun dance up to about 1888, but now prac tlcally none are caught. The United States geological survey has established a benchmark near the lake, and, under the charge of Profes sor C. M. Hale, of the state agrlcul t'iral college, will make careful rec ord and a general study of the fluctua tions of the waters, i TURRETS FOR COAST DfcFENSE. Plant for Their Construction Owns Its Being to the Spanish War. The United States will shortly pos sess a plant capable of turning out for coast fortifications, and complete In every detail, the world-famed Omson turret. Not only is the plant assured, but work has actually commenced on the erection of the necessary buildings, and to such an extent have the plans progressed thnt the casting of the plates for the intitlnl turret could. If required, be commenced In six months hence. The raison d'etre of the new Industry Is prlnmrlly the recommenda tion of the Endlcott Hoard of Ordin ance and Fortifications, calling for em placements of 22 turrets at coaat points of the United Stntes; but In the main the new plsnt owes Its being to, tho conditions which confronted this coun try on the breaking out of the war with Spain In 18H8. and to existing condi tions which make Imperative the adop tion of a system Impregnable to gun attack. Tho new organization Is called the Unison Iron Works, and will carry on tho manufacture of all de scriptions of chilled Iron work and heavy eastings requiring special strength and reflstenco for naval and marine work. Tho Interests associat ed with tho new company Include the largest manufacturers of chilled Iron In America, and the works will bo equipped with everything requisite for the manufacture of the largest rulllod castings, to which the particular plant for finishing Unison turrets can be quickly added. The site for the new works Is on the banks of the Delaware at the little town of Eddystonc, and distant only a few miles from the city of Chester, Pa This site was selected largely because of Its tide-water facili ties, and with special reference to the needs which must arise Incident to the shipment of heavy turret equipment Ownership of 8treet Trees. Should street trees be owned and controlled by tho city or by the abut ting property owners? The weight of opinion among those entitled to speak with some authority on the nuestlon Is that municipal ownership of street trees Is necessary for the best results, and Is besides the natural condition of things. Washington City Is a famil iar example of a systematic and suc cessful development of street shade trees on all the thoroughfares where trees are desirable. Street trees through private ownership are neces sarily a thing of shreds and patches and subject to the caprice of unin structed owners and the barbarous butchery of tramp primers. Neverthe less, there are tinder private ownership some good results In wayside treee here and there, while public ownership Is not always a success. City ownership and control of trees Is the best If that control Is enlightened and sympathetic. The Population of China. Some doubt has been thrown by rec ent travelers upon the correctness of the accepted notion that China Is a land of teeming population. It has been asserted that the human hives along the seaboard and the great rivers of China ought not to be taken as basis for estimates; that In those parts of the empire, which lie off the main routes of traffic (the natural and ar tificial watercourses) the population of China Is comparatively thin. A cen suse recently taken by the Pekin gov ernment for the purpose of assesss Ing taxes to meet the Indemnity pay ments seems, however, to prove the ac curacy of the older estimates. The census shows that the 18 provinces of China proper contain 407,737,305 Inhab itants; that Manchuria has 8.600.000, and Mongolia, Thibet and Chinese Turkestan a little over 10,000,000. The total poulatlon of the empire is 426, 447,325, according to this enumeration. The absolute reliability of Asiatic sta tistics Is questioned; nevertheless, the agreement of the results of the census with the accepted estimates Is so close as to Invite confidence. The statement that the Chinese Empire contains one third of the human race will hereafter be regarded more than ever as an ap proximate truth. Sweden has 324 co-operative socle ties, with a membership of over 8,000. Beware of Ointment For Catarrh That Contain Memory, as memory will auraly destroy the sense ol smell and completely derange the whole sys. tern when entering It through the mucous urfaoee. Such artfele. should never be used except on prescription from reputable phy stfllans, as the damage they will do Is ten fold to the good you ean pomllily derive from them. Hall's Catarrh Cure, manufactured by F. J. Cheney ft Co., Toledo, O., contain no meraury, and Is tnken Internally, acting dlrnotly upon the blood and mueousaurfane of tbeaystem. In buyiag H all's Catarrh Care be sure to get the genuine. It I taken In ternally, and Is made In Toledo, Ohio, by 9. 1. Cheney ft Co. Testimonials free. WHold by Druggist; prlxe, 76o. perbottle. Hail's Family 1'IUs are the beat. It sometimes happen that a fool girl will throw millionaire overboard for a man who can't borrow twenty cent. Mother Cray's Sweet Pointers for Children guecessfully used by Mother Oray, nurse In the Clilldrcn' Home In New York, Cure Foverlshness, Did Htomanh, Teething Disor der, move and regulato the llowel and Destroy Worm. Ovor 80,000 testimonial. At nil druggists, S5e. Hanp'.e mailed Fs. Address Alien H. Olmsted, ha Boy, ti. X. "Brightening their intellect" is a Bir mingham (England) euphemism for vio lent aasaults on the police. FITS permanently eured.No fit or nervous ness arterflrat day s use of Dr. Kline's Great Nerve ltostorer. trial bottloand treatise free llr. B.U. Knna, Ltd., Mt Arch Ht Phila., Pa. The man who sing popular song knows the lay of the land. Mrs. Wlaalow's goothingflyrup for children teething .soften the gu ma, reduoos Inflamma tion,aliiiy pain, euro wind eolle. 860. a bottle Strange a it may seem, th way to rasa houM is to take it down. IMso's Curs for Conumptlon Is an Infallible medicine for eough and eolda. N. W. bAMcai., Poena Prove, N. J., Feb. 17, 1900. The dreamer U often carried away by a train of thought. . Any one ean dye with Pum am FaDK XJtus Dyes; no experience required. It doesn't do much good to lead a band unkas there is something in jt. , ; My Lungs " An attack of la grippe left me with bad cough. My friends said I had consumption. I then tried Ayer's Cherry Pectoral and it cured me promptly." A. K. Randies, Nokomls, III. You forgot to buy a bot tle of Ayer's Cherry Pec toral when your cold first came on, so you let it run along. Even now, with all your hard coughing, it will not disappoint you. There's a record of sixty years to fall back on. Tart ilit. 1 15c., Mc., II. All fmulsts. Ceninlt ymir arwtor. If he nays tsks It, then On as he If ha tells ynu nnt to tsks It, tlisn don't lake It. Its knows. Lssrsltwllhhlm. W are wllllnr. J. U. AT EK CO., Lowell, Mais. P. N. U.- 0, '0:. MlADCV NEW DISCOVERT: m J W Vnaf M O I aniol r W sad tana wont mm. Book of iMttmonlasand IO SnrateMtnin trs. a, a. a. east so. st a. Aiisau. Ua. BEAUTY AND PURITY Ancient and Modern Ideas on tho Subject. Time and Disease the Effacing Agent3 of Beauty. What Has Science Dono to Restore the Lily and the Rose?. Socrates railed beanty a short-lived tyranny. Data a prlvlli ge of nature, Theocritus a delightful prejudice, Theophraain a silent cheat, Carneade a solitary kingdom. Homer a glorious gift of nature, Ovid a favor of the gods. Aristotle affirmed that beauty was better than all the letter of recom mendation In the .world, and yet none of these distinguished authorities has left ua even a hint of how beauty Is to be perpetuated, or the ravages of sge snd disease defied. Time soon blends the Illy and the rose Into the pallor of sge, disease dots the fair face with etitaneoua disfigurations and crimson the Koman nose with unsightly flushes, moth. If not mat, corrupts the glory of eyes, teeth, and Hps yet beautiful by defacing the complexion, and Alls the sensitive soul with agony unspeakable. If such be the unhappy condition of one aflllcted with (light skin blemishes, what must lie the feelings of those In whom torturing humors have for years run riot, covering the skin with scales and sores and charging the blood with poisonous elements to becomo a p.trt of the system nntll death? It Is vain to attempt to por tray such suffering. Death In many cases might he considered a blessing. The blood and fluids seem to be im pregnated with a fiery element which, when discharged through the pores upon the surface of the body. Inflames and burns until, Id his efforts for relief, the patient tears the akin with his nails, and not until the blood flows does sufTlclent relief come to cause him to desist. Thus do complexlonal defects merge Into torturing disease, and piqued van ity give place to real suffering. A little wart on the nose or cheek grows to the all-devouring lupus, a patch of tetter on the palm of the hand or on the limbs suddenly envelops the body In Its fiery embrace, a bruise on the leg expands Into a gnawing nicer, which reaches out Its fang to the sufferer's heart In every paroxysm of pain, a Small kernel In the neck multiplies Into a dozen, which eat away the vitality, great pearl-like scales grow from little rash-like Inflammations In such abun dance as to pass credulity i and so on may we depict the sufferings to which poor human nature Is subject, sll of which Involve great mental distress because of personal disfiguration. If there were not another external disease known, eczema alone would be sufTlclent Infliction on mankind. It pervades sll classes, snd descend Im partially through generations. While some sre constantly enveloped In It, others nave It confined to small patches In the ears, on the scalp, on the breast, on the palms of the hands, on the limb, etc., but everywhere Its distinctive feature Is a small watery blister, which diacharges an acrid fluid, causing heat. Inflammation, and Intense Itching. King-worm, tetter, seal led head, dandruff, belong to this scaly and Itcblug order of disease. Psoriasis, our modern leprosy, with Its mother-of-pearl scale, situated on a reddened base, which bleeds upon the removal of the scale, is to be dreaded and avoided, a of old. Im petigo, barber'a tich, erysipelas, and a score of minor disorder make np In part the catalogue of external diseases of the skin. Thus far we have made no allusion to those affliction which are manifestly Impurities of the blood. viz. t swelling of the gland of the throat, nicer on toe neck ana limns. tumors, sbsceases, and mercurial poisons, with loss of hair, betause the whole list can be comprehended In the one wortl scro luia. It Is In the treatment of torturing, disfiguring humors aud affection of the akin, acalp. and blood, with loaa of hair, that th. Uutlcura remedies Dave achieved their greatest success. Orlg inal In composition, aclentltlcally com pounded, absolutely pure, unchangeable In any climate, alway ready, and agree able to the moat delicate aud aenalUve, they present to young and old the moat successful curative or modern times. This will be constde ed strong Isngusge by those acquainted with the character and ooaiinacy or moon ana Kin numors but It Is Justified by innumerable suc cesses where su tne remeuiea ou metn ods tn rogue have failed to cure, and In many cases, to relieve, even. The Culicura treatment Is at once agreeable, speedy, economical, and comprehensive. Bathe the affected parts freely with hot water and Cutl cura soap, to cleanse the snr ace of crust and scalea, ana sort en tne thickened entiele. Pry. withon t hard ribbing, and ap;.ly Cutlcura Oln tmsnt Capsicum Vasolino PUT IIP IN COLLAPSIBLE TUBES. k KnrMtnt fnf and Hnirtrr to Mnitittl nrnf thr I'la-W, anrl wtll nnt lllntr tti nimt (l!lrat kln. I h ( tin dllftrlrif tri'l rnritlra fiiiishtkfl of IhlN ril' I r wrihlrfnl. t will top fli. tooik tv-h ! rnitK ana rll hw4Mfia and ewltttra. W rvVMifnmn1 It a 0m ritu and afnt itmat fnntitr-lrr1taiif knnwn.alai . an itrrnal rmM ir pain In tha rh'Nt ami atnmar-h ana felt rhr-a-tM', nnratirl ami rntj rmnrlaititii. A trial wtll irir what warlftlrrt (or It, anil It will ha fmiriff to bf InvaluaM tn f h-taountri.M. Man? uaopla aa ''It la Or lx'-t o all jmir rararatlt na." frier. i -atiti, at all 'trriif-irtaift, or other (erf-it, or tr ftfHlliur thin amount tu ua In poatvicaitainpfi w will (--till yon a tti' hy mull No arilrlp ih"iilr1 ft aTf.t hy th pntttlr tint) th- anma earrlaa onr latwl, aa other wi h la not von ii Ina, 17 Slate Street. New York CHy. Salrtr'i Rap, iyw nirn, j FARM SEEDS ' SATTFR'S svp.Da fiavta FArt.t t, 000.000 Customers MriMirajt rr-t iiru in mnj smunitin n nnt ani ynt wri am rrarhma; r.ut f ir morn, W draira, hf Julf nt, iu)fjijo mora and hano thia unprenadentM offer. $10.00 for 10c. wawfiimaii upon iwnpt of ior in stamp onr crmt raui(u, worth fiin.oo to any , , WI'Kl BRSU MIHT IT Brrtrurnfl- l ittnr wiih many farm ai a. m plea, fB.intiB.im). nrarnivH iiari'f. iinmiiu Kaprnr.,Hr.,poltiveIf worth . $10 On to g-i a start with. HpuniWipi rrr uuMWn, nd thia iu stamp. ratalo aid, with ioc to ttai a Naiwt at onra. Bjonsj. sw to allay Itching, Irritation, and Inflam mation, and soothe and heal, and, lastly, take Cutlcura Resolvent, to cool snd cleanse the blood. This treatment af ford Instant relief, permits rest and sleep In the severest forms of eczema and other Itching, burning, and araly humors, and points to s speedy, perma nent, and economical cure of torturing, disfiguring humors, eczemas, rashes, and Inflammations, from Infancy to age, when all other remedies snd the best physicians fall. The remedies con stituting the Cutlcura system will repay an Individual scrutiny of their remark able properties. Cuilcnra noap contains In a modified form the medicinal properties of Cntl enra Ointment, the great skin cure and purest and sweetest of emollients, com bined with the most delicate snd re freshing of flower odors. It purifies snd Invigorates the pores of the skin, and Imparts activity to the oil glands snd tubes, thus furnishing an outlet for unwholesome matter, which If re tained would cause pimples, black heads, rashes, oily, mothy skin, ana other complexlonal disfigurations, as well aa scalp affections and Irritations, falling hair, and baby rashes. Its gen tle and continuous action on thenatural lubricators of the skin keeps the latter transparent, soft, flexible, and healthy. Hence Its constant nse, assisted by an occasional nse of Cutlcura Ointment, realizes the fairest complexion, the softest, whitest hands, and the most lnxurlant, glossy hair within the do main or the most advanced scientific knowledge to supply. Cuticora Ointment Is the most suc cessful external cnratlve for torturing, disfiguring humors of the skin snd scalp. Including loss of hair, In proof of which s single anointing with It, preceded by a hot bath with Culicura Soap, and followed In the severer cases by a full dose of Cuticura Resolvent, Is sufficient to afford Immediate relief In the most distressing forms of Itching, burning, and scaly humors, permit rest and elf ep, and point to a speedy core when sll other remedies fall. It I espe cially so In the treatment of infants aud children, cleansing, soothing, and healing the most distressing of Infan tile humors, snd preserving, purifying, and beautifying the skin, scalp, and balr. - i Cutlcnra Ointment possesses, at the same time, the charm of satisfying the slnrplo wants of the toilet of all ages, In caring for the skin, scalp, hair, and hand far more effectually, agreeably, and economically than the most expensive of toilet emollients,1 while free from every ingredient ef a doubtful or dangerous character. Its One Night Treatment of the Hands,", or " Single Treatment of the Hair," or nse after athletics, cycling, golf, ten nis, riding, sparring, or any sport, each In connection with the nse of Cntlcura Soap, is sufficient evidence of this. Of all remedies for the purification of the blood and circulating fluid, none approochea in specific medical action Cutlcnra Resolvent. It neutralizes and resolves away (hence lta name) scrofu lous, Inherited, and other humors In the blood, which give rise to swellings of the glands, pains in the bones, and torturing, disfiguring eruptions of the skin snd scalp, with loaa of balr. Cutlcura Resolvent extends Its puri fying Influence by mesns of the pores to the surface of the skin, allaying irritation, Inflammation, itching, and burning, and soothing and healing. Hence Its success In the treatment of distressing humors of the akin, scslp, aud blood, with loss of hair, which fail to be permanently cared by external remcdlea alone. The grandest testimonial that can be offered Cntlcura remedies is their world-wide sale, due to the personal recommendation of those who have used them. It Is difficult to realize the mighty growth of the business done nnder this name. From a small begin ning in the simplest form, against prej udice and opposition, against mooted host, countless rivals, and trade In difference, Cutlcnra remedies have be come the greatest curative of their time, and. In fact, of all time, for no where lit the history of medicine Is to be fouad another approaching them In popularity and aale. In every clime snd with every people they have met with the same reception. The coo floe of the earth are the only limits to their growth. Tbey have conquered the world. - To the test of popular Judgment all thlnga mundane must finally some. The civilized, world haa rendered its verdict la favor of Ctleura,,nvl ifc e--V