Slips of the Pen. The best writers are not fre from Hps of the pen, and some such slips are very curious, rays the Liverpool Poet. Wllklo Colllnn, In some myste rious way, makes the moon to ride In the west. Hldr-r Haggard, In "King Solomon's Mines," contrives an eclipse of the new moon for the diversion of , the natives ami tlio entertainment of his readers. Coleridge places a star between the horns of the crescent moor rising In the east. Shakespeare makes a clock to strike In ancient Rome at a period 2,000 years before striking clocks wore Invented. Robin son Crusoe, 0:1 abandoning the wreck, strips off his clothing In order to swim to shorn. This, however, does not pre vent him from nillng his pockets with biscuits. And Anthony Trollope de scribes Andy Scott ns ''coming whistl ing up with a cigar In his mouth. j Doing One's Best. . This habit ct always doing one's best enters Into the very marrow of one's heart and character; it affects one's bearing, one's self-possession, says London Answers. The man who does everything to a finish has a feel ing of serenity; he Is not easily thrown off his balance; he has nothing to fear, and he can look the world In the face, because he feels conscious I that he has not put shoddy work into anything, that he has had noth ing to do with shams, and that he has always done his level best. This sense of efficiency, of being master of one's craft, of being equal to any emergency, the consclmisners of possessing the ability to do with superiority whatever one undertakes, will give satisfaction which a half-hearted, slipBhod worker never knows. Twenty-one husbands who reside In Bayotine, N. J., have met and organiz ed the married men's Antl Kuchre and Home Preservation Society. They declare It Is hlfih time their wives and other men's wives were cured of the progressive euchre habit, and pro pose to use all their efforts to estab lish such a cure. FITS permanently mired. No tits or nervous ness after llrt day's ue of lr. Kline's Great Kerven.eetorrr.t2t rial linttlenmltreatlee free Dr. It. H. Klixk, Ltd.. 031 Areh St.. I'hlla., Fa. It's an awful handicap for a nirl to hava younger sister who is a real beauty. adlea run Wear flh.e. On sire ImMler after uslnor Allen's Fool. ue, a rfwder. It makes tight or new shoes av. Olrea swollen, hot, sweating, echini feet. lnowln nails, eoms and bunion". At all druifRlsts nnd she stores, SRe. Pon't ac cent aJv sulmtitnte. Trial paekftije Far lv mall. Iddress, Allen f. Olmsted, Leltoy, N.Y. TWere is more steel used in the manu facture of pena than in all the sword and gun factories. t . ,Mrs.TVlnslow's Soothing Syrup for ehlldren teiethinir. soften the gum, reduces Inflamma tion, allays pnln.eures wind collo, 25c.a bottlo A man knows less after marriace than s J woman does before. Flso'sCurefor Consumption isantnfnlllb'n medicine tor coughs and colds. N. V. BiMCiL, Ocean drove, N. J Feb. 17, 1900. A machine for condensing sea fog into drinking water haa been invented. Export, the organ of ttie Central Commercial Geographical Union, of Berlin, In a recent Issue says: "If England is to maintain supremacy even In her own markets against the United States, Belgium and Germany, she will have to emulate those coun tries In their scientific methods of manufacturing and doing business." Nine-tenths of the external trade of the Bahamas, which amounted to $1, 275,000 last year. Is with the United States. The principal exports of the Islands are pineappt.es and sponges, and the lmpoiis flour and earthen glassware. Coat of Hauling Freight. The cost of hauling a ton of freight a mile on Great Britain's greatest rail way is 1.43 cents; on the Pennsylvania, forty cents, and on the New York Ccu. tral, forty-oue cents. 100 liewanl. SHOO. The readers of this paper will be pleasedto learn that thero is at leant one dreaded dis ease that aoleueo has been able to cure in all ltihtasea.and that If Catarrh. Hall's Catarrh Cure is the only positive euro now known to the medical fraternity. Calarr'i being a con stitutional disease, requirc-a a constitutional treatment. Mailt CuiarrhCurei" ta'enlnter Dally, actius direct ly upon tho blood aid mu cous surfaces ot the system, thereby lsstroy Ing the foundation ot tho disease, and giviu j the patient itrjeusin by building up the con stitution and agisting nature lu dolus it work. The proprietors haveeo much faith in its curatlvo power Inat they ofter One Hun dred Dollar for any easo that It full to euro. Send for list of testimonials. Address F. .1. Chkney & Co., Toledo, O. Fold bv FtruKRiats, 75 Take Hall's Family lills for constipation. The Teacher Interested. "Miss Biggs is interested in you, pa." "How so!" "Why. to-day, after she had told mo seven times to sit down and behave myself, she said sho wondered what sort of a father I had." Beaten In Our Own Field. Philippine Imports of iron and steel and manufactures thereof for the cal endar year 1903 show an increase of approximately 10 per cent over those of 1903. The figures are $2,102,915 for 1903 and $1,909,079 for 1902. Of the ' total for the two years the United States secured only about 23.7 per cent. More than three-quarters of the trade was captured by our English and European competitors. Dogs In the Army. The " dogi of war" in these days assist In field hospital work. In Ger many and Italy St. Bernard dogs bave fceen trained for years so as to aid, after an engagement, bearer parties In their search for the wounded, es pecially at night. Russia, apparently, baa no canine corps, and Major Rich axdson of Carnoustie, England, who has made a specialty ot tratning am bulance dogs, has received a communi cation from St. Petersburg asking him bow many be can supply for service U the Far Ett. Drinking Fountain. To make a fountain, take a Jnr of about four or five gallons capacity, and with the aid of a small point of steel (say three cornered file brok en off) and ft hammer, make a hole about two Inches from the top or. Jar (It should be an earthen one). The hole should be only about as larpe as a pea. The Jnr should bo filled with water nnd covered with a pan, and the whole, by a quick mo tion, turned bottom side up. Tb hole In the Jar or crock should be a little below the top of tho basin. When the fowls drink out tho water the hole Is above the water line, In rushes the air through the hole nnd down drops the water In the Jar, rais ing the water In the basin up to tho hole and no further. Thojr cannot fill up this fountain with dlrU Gams Fowls. I am a game fowl specialist, and bave been for years, having formerly tried many other breeds nnd found the games far more profitable. 1 have Imported and bred all the lead ing strains of English, Cuban and Am erican game fowls, and know from ex perience that a game hen Is the best of layers, laying at all times, cold or hot. They are healthy hustlers and great foragers, making a living cold days, nnd laying where breeds with less pluck and go-nhead ability would freeze. A pamo hen will hatch and rear to maturity with less at tention, a larger percent of chicks than any fowl living, which Is most certainly profitable to tho farmer. These chicks wll mature to two-pound broilers as early as Brahmas or Rocks. Their flesh Is sweet, Juicy and tender, with a flavor like wild game. They dress away far less than any other fowl, being of fine grain nnd compact ly built. Regarding the male, no more beautiful or graceful fowl ever crossed a lawn than a game cock in full plum age, and woe be to the hawk, dog or hog that dare assail one of his mates. It is a queer specimen of humanity, indeed, who does not admire the lord ly game fowl. Alfred Graham, In the Epltomist. Profit In Onions. Onions seem to he a scarcer article than I have known them to be in many years, writes T. Orelner In Farm and Fireside. Those who have had their patch of Gibraltar or Prlzetaker this year have found It not only as easy as any other year to raise the crop, but especially to sell their bulbs at a good price. Mr.' Colllngwood writes me that bis onions went like the hot test of hot cakes and that the "new onion culture" promises to bo ono of the most profitable departments of the farm. My patch of onions grown from summer sown need and Intended for earliest green onions for spring sale appears to be in the very best con dition for wintering;. I have the White Portugal, White Queen or Balotta, Prlzctnkcr, White Pearl and Brown Australian all showing off equally well at this writing. Whether they will winter ccinnlly well Is quite another question. If they do winter tho crop will undoubt edly prove to bo a very profltuhlo one, perhaps one of tho most profit able that could bo grown in a garden. Even if most of the plants take a notion to go to seed I can pull them up in time to bo used as green onions, and with the stock ot dry onions as low as I expect It will be next spring people will bo more anxious to got green onions than ever before. However, It is only these earliest green onions that pay so well. Later in the season they are usually very plentiful and are offered at prices which seem to leave but very littlo margin ot profit for the grower. Ventilation and Dairy Barns. Have you examined your roof boacds and rafters where they have been alternately wet and' dry from the animals below? If not, take a fork and prick Into the wood and Una out. If there Is no serious trouble yet, by all moans, before tho barn Is till ed with hay again, put in the King system ot ventilation. Make the cell ing above porfectly tight, so that not the smallest current of air can circu late from stable to loft. Provide the hay sbutes, of whatever form, with coverings quickly closed, and put these at the floor or ceiling; other wise they will be left open, and strong air currents will form, defeating the effort of the regular flue in Its work of carving out moisture and fotil air. Remember always that complete in sulation of the stable is ot first im portance. No amount of skill in flue construction will avail when the sta ble lacks the above quality. When men talk or write about ven tilation they do not mention anything but flue construction, which is the sim plest and 'easiest part of barn ven. tllatlon. Have one dead air space, and far better two, in the vail, using matched lumber lor the outside, in. side and between, with a coat ot building paper against each boarding. Make every door double, end the win dows also; put in a cement floor and I will guarantee the King system to keep that barn as dry as your house living rooms, and this from experience. I was examining today the lott of our barn, that has been built five years, and the shingle nails that prick through the roof boards have not rust ed. The ventilating flues have car. rled out the moisture, and this last winter baa been the most trying in my memory. I speck of these things now, early In the season, before new barns are built and before hay is put in, so that In the old ones the flues may be built In the most convenient places. When most convenient to have them come down In the centre ot the barn, If they are In the way during the feed ing or cleaning out manure, build the flue permanently from the floor above .and then build a smaller flue that will Jur.t pass Inside the main flue, and have it hung with weights, so It can be quickly raised out of the way and lowered nsnln nt will. H. E. Cook, In Tribune Farmer. -et- ' Pruning Forest Trees. It. Is posslhlo that some c f our rend ers desire to Improve the timber plot on their farms, and will therefore be glad to have a few hints on the best method of pruning young forest trees. We copy tho following from an nrtl tio on the subject In the Indiana State Board of Forestry, Just Issued: "Pruning forest 4 's not always right, but when It Is done at an early stage of growth It Is practicable. It will very materially aid to the best trunk formation. It Is found to pro duce the best results If applied when the trees are from 12 to 14 years old and Is not. too heavily done. The limbs should be cut off smoothly nnd as closely to the body of the tree as It can he done not to tear or disturb the hark on the body. The limbs are removed as high up as the woodman can execute the work well with an nx or pruning knife. When the prun ing Is performed In this manner the cuts sooner heal over and no blem ish Is formed to injure the wood value when tho tree Is cut for saw timber. If the limbs are- cut oft a short distance fnini the body, the snag left dies and rots down Into the body of the tree end forms a perma nent blemish to the wood. "The best time to prune Is from the last of June to the flret of Feb ruary. The sap will not exude from the cuts to attract Insects, sprouts will not form at the Junctures and the wood does not rot at the cut. If the pruning Is done at the season ot greater sap flow all the above points are reserved." This topic will be bet ter explained under the report of the work done In tinnier culture on the State Forest Reservation the past year. Horse Notes. With many men fast driving Is simply a trad habit. Regular and proper grooming adds much to the value ot a horse. When a horse Is excessively hot he should be cooled off gradually. A horse with long legs and flat sides Is not generally an easy ' keep er. In Intrinsic value, no road horse equals the easy, rapid, enduring walk er. Freedom, power to move easily along, is a great point in a young horse. Well rounded ribs, deep flank, and short legs Indicate good assimilating power. Many cases of diseased feet are the result of leaving the shoes on too long. Tho decth of many horses Is caus ed by tho sudden change from eld feed to new. With glowing celts, to give strength, elasticity and power, tho right kind ct fo;,d la indispensable. High tempered, sensitive horses are more easily spoiled by too much talk ing than slow, quiet methods. Do not buy a horse with a nar row or shallow chest. There Is not Bufllclcnt capacity for tho lungs. A moderate, quick walk either when under a load or when empty, exhausts an animal less than a snail's pace. A horse for uso does better with Just enough food to replace the wastes ot his system, and of a kind to keep him feeling well. Mares In foal should have exercise and moderate work, but under no circumstances should they be subject qd to harsh treatment. Tho actual cost of feed, added to tho service fee, represents the amount which horses you raise stand you. What they are worth above this la profit. A Promising Young Diplomat. There is a certain small boy, named Bertie, who lives on Green street not far from Twentieth, who will make a diplomat somo day. He has a sister one year younger than he is. Last Christmas their grandmother gave them an aquarium containing two beautiful little goldfish. One morning Bertie went In to feed the goldfi&b, and he found only one fish Instead ot two. Sad to say, the other one bad Jumped out of the aquarium during the night and bad died. "Sister," Bertie announced at breakfast, as soon as they sat down to the table, "your goldfish Is dead!" Tho littlo girl was terribly shocked and forgot that most goldfishes are exactly alike and that she and her brother bad never made a division. But after the period ot mourning was over she asked one day: "Bertio, how did you know It was my fish and not yours that died?" Bertie was nonplussed for a mo ment and driven Into a corner, so be took refuge in an air of superior con tempt. "How did I know?' he repeated scornfully. "Huh! Isn't that Just like a woman!" And the little sister meekly accpet ed her brother' decision. Philadel phia Press. UOLTORAL J '' Poultry Versus Waste, There Is one economic merit In poul try keeping that many farmers do not take into consideration, and that Is the large nmotiut of waste grain thnt they pick up and convert' Into meat and eggs that would otherwise be wasted, says an exchange. It does not cost much to keep fowls on a farm, niul no class of people can pro duce eggs nnd fowl flesh as cheaply as the fanner. ,,, , t.f i.,-Te Alfnlnt For Hags, Wallaces Farmer snys alfalfa bay, when fed to brood sows in winter should be cut flue and fed with little meal. For two years now we bave wintered our brood sows on plain al falfa hay without cutting, and they eat It up clean. Not a spoonful of grain Is given them until they farrow. The effect of nlfnlfn is seen in the splendid quality of the pigs produced and the abundant yield of milk by tho sows. Hoard's Dairyman. When to Ilg Potatoes, - Potatoes are ready for digging as soon ns the tops fall down. It Is best to dig them early lu the day and nl low them to renin In on the ground for a few hours, when they should be tak en to the barn and stored in a cool, dark, dry place; but it is not advis able to place too ninny In a single heap. All diseased or Injured potatoes should be removed from the lot, or they will have more or less effect upon the whole, ns they will be the first to decay, l'ottilot's nuiy be stored In mounds during the winter, but are not easily utilized lu that coudltlou. Mutton ts. M oot. It is claimed that mutton tit five cents a pound will pay better than wool nt thirty-five cents. Such claim depends upon conditions.. A good meri no will pay more In wool than cnu be derived from common sheep, while a breed of mutton sheep will give a greater proilt than can be derived from sheep that are not bred with an object to be ntlnlued.. Farmers who keep sheep also make a profit in the ma nure and In the utilization of the wasto materials consumed, but sheep require feeding as well ns other stock, nnd should not be expected to seek their food entirely at any season of the year. Disease Spots on Fruit. Writes a farmer to Tbe Epltomist: "I have found that from trees with their roots deep In the subsoil, even If they fruit freely, neither apples nor pears satisfy, because disease spots develop in the fruit when they are on the verge of ripening, If not before, rendering them of no value, because decay so quickly sets In. To bave good fruit, either of apples or pears, the roots of the trees must be active surface, fibrous ones, otherwise the crop will bo much reduced in value. Some sorts are greater offenders than others, it Is true, but even the best can be readily spoiled if tho conditions are not l-IisM." Fattening Hogs. Those who ore fattening hogs on corn as nil exclusive diet should try an experiment in feeding a variety. Tuko two lots of bogs, allowing ono lot corn only and the oth er lot a variety, which may include corn, brnn, scalded chopped clover, skim milk or ground oats. Tho bogs will grow uiucli faster and increase more lu weight on tho mixed food than on corn, whllo tho quality of the flesh will bo Improved nnd tho cost per pound of pork will be less than If corn is used exclusively. The reason is thnt a variety promotes digestion and is more "balanced" in the ekiucuts re quired by tho animals. Ringworm in Calves, This troublesome difficulty Is appar ent during the winter more than at any other time, and is duo to a vege table parasite. It is not a dmigcrous disease, but Is far from pleasant, and as it is contagious, considerable effort should bo made to overcome it. It usually appears on tho neck of tho all ium lc, working toward the face, and sdon leaving bare spots. If tho trouble Is noted on the calves, treat them at once by taking ono part of carbolic ncid, four parts of glycerin and six parts of ollvo oil nnd mixing thorough ly. Rub thoroughly into the skin nbout the parts infested after first washing tho parts thoroughly with warm water niado soapy with carbolic soup. Other animals in tho barn, es pecially calves, should also be washed with tho mixture to prevent contagion. Wash every other day for ten days. Where to line Iba Inenbator. There ure good places for the Incu bator and bad places. Much depends upon tho atmosphere of the room In which the incubator is placed. Tho kitchen is said to be a good place for iucubators, since the air in that room Is usually moistened by the steam ot pots and kettles upon tbe kitchen stove and can be kept at about the right temperature. But remember that the Insurance company which in sures your farm house will probably object to your placing an lucubutor lu your kitchen. Whenever you make changes in your buildings or additions thereto, or desire to put an Incubator In your cellar or any part of tbe bouse you must get permission of the com pany who insures your buildings, oth erwise you will make your lnsurauce policy invalid and thus secure nothing on Insurance In case your 'buildings should burn. A Good Caictsea Bouse, We built a chicken bouse last spring Ike this one and find It gives entire sat isfaction. Size ten by sixteen by eight feet high, from sill to eaves. We bave a window In each side and back end and door in front Now for the roosts. Take a two by four scantling and spike It above one of the side win dows, then take some boards and make a trough about fourteen feet long and let two feet project out nt the back end of tho building; put trough two feet above the floor. Now take matched lu mil ur or tome that will fit up close and nnll one end to the trough and the other end to the two by four scantling nnd make It full length of trough, then take boards thnt will reach from trough to the two by four and cut notches in them for the roosts to Ihj lu and put upper end on binges. When you want to clean the house, rnke the droppings down Into the trough nnd then rnke them out the Lack end Into a box or something that can be hauled away. The roosts will be high enough to walk under and put nests along the wall under them. Pig. 1 is end of trough, l'lonr Is fifteen Inches off the ground. Fred E. Denny, in The Epit oinlst. Increasing Demands For Livestock. The large and rapidly Increasing city population of this country demands n large supply of meat each year, nnd farmers arc coming to realize the Im portance of livestock ns never before. Small farmers are breeding nnd feed ing more nnimnls, nnd everywhere we see manifest Interest taken In this Im portant branch ot agriculture. In our ngiicultural schools young men nre eager to study livestock with untiring Interest. The Stato Livestock Associa tion meetings nnd short courses in stock Judging at the various agricul tural schools nre well patronized, and only go to show the attention thnt farmers nro giving to this subject. Sov. ernl factors figure prominently lu the advancement and Improvement shown along this line. Through our county and Htnte fairs, and larger expositions, farmers are coming to recognize tbe difference between superior and infer ior animals. The agricultural press has come to be a mighty potent agent lu the work of education. Farmers and stockmen, particularity, read nnd study. Tbe agricultural colleges and experiment stations are nutting much Important Information In livestock work. American farmers are coming to recognize the value of improved blood lu herd flock and stud. Breeders are breeding better, feeders Bre feed' Ing better, and marked improvement Is seen on every band. Among tho va rlons forces which are at work for the progress and advancement of ngrlcul tare, there is no one agent doing so much for livestock Interests ns tho big livestock shows of the country. Tho Ktnto fairs bavo done much 1 for nil branches of agriculture, nnd pnrtlcu Iniiy livestock. They nfford splendid opportunity for the fanner who Is a student of bis business. In thnt they give him new Ideals nnd inspiration to reach the higher degree of develop incut along somo definite line. Tho modern State fair has grown to bo n big tblug, and one to be encouraged at every opportunity. It brings to gcther the best there Is In the agiicul turo of the Stute. Indiana Farmer. Maple Hyrnp Making, Concerning the niter or malnte el lime nuisance In maple syrup n New Englnnd ,-Iomestead writer has said It Is well under way where a reversi- bio current evaporator la used. By having the evaporating pan construct cd with partitions extending length wise Instead of crosswise and with o syrup faucet on both sides a,t the back end, ns shown in the-illustration, thec by chnnglng the regulator gate from side to side and thus changing the cur rent or How of sap every few hours. QfieeuiATo' 2 I BEVBtlSlDLB CUItltENT EVAPOBATOB. and by so doing bringing the syruplng off first ou one side and then on the other, i.o niter will become burned on the bottom of tbe evaporator. It will come out with the syrup at a precipitate and can be entirely r& moved by tho uso of a thick felt filter. The filtering must be dono while tin syrup is boiling hot, and It. order tc have all tue niter form in a preclpl tnte it is necessary to bring tho syruj to 210 degrees F. If It is filtered befort that degree is reached much of thr niter will still be in solution and ap peur in the syrup it boiled afterward to staudard wolgut and in tbe sugar II sugared off. It syrup Is boiled tc eleven pounds weight and then "set tied" without filtering, it usually bai a cloudy appearance, und if put up foi market lu pans or bottles will deposll 4 sediment la the bottom after awhile. fid t v sfr fTl! none. - - -.0'I . Women After Middle Age. After middle age the average wo man begins to care more for women than she does for men. Her allegiance undergoes a psychic! change, ber eyes are opened, her Judgment cleared, ana she learns to appreciate her own sex fully. The characteristics that seemed to her hateful frailties long ago, are defended now as their poetic distinc tions. She sees In every girl the fair mirage of her own youth; In the pa thetic, care-worn face of the young matron, the, gentle heroism of her other years; In the mother of a grown family lit-r own queen days when sons and daughters suddenly grew tall and proclaimed her. And for them all she has a chastened affinity. Men have passed out of her calculations. They are the things with whom she failed or succeeded, from lover and husband down to her youngest son. And, how ever much she remolns dependent up on them, she Is no longer related to them In the same way. She has sur vived them and returned to her own. Independent. Professor Flinders Petile recently told nn audience at Owens College, Manchester, England, that one spot In the ruins at Abydos, In upper Egypt, tells a continuous story running 'back to Bnoo n. C. The remains of 10 suc cessive temples have been unearthed. Tamarisk timber 4000 years old has been found In perfectly sound condi tion In ancient Egyptian temples. FREE to WOMEN A Large Trial Box and book of ln tractions absolutely Free and Post paid, enough to prove the value ol PoxtineToHetAntiseplic Peitltie H In powaef form to dissolve In water non-eoisonoae nd far superior to liquid andteptlcs containing alcohol which Irritates Inflamed surfaces, and liave no r Iransleg prop erties. The content of every boa aiakea more Antkcptk Solu tion lafta longer firm ninnn in, Biui, 9 l In the family and own more geoo man any antiseptic preparaUoa you can buy. The formula of a noted Boston physician, nd used with great success as a Vaginal Wash, for Leucorrhcea, Pelvic Cctarrh, Nasal Catarrh, Sore Throat. Sore Eyes, Cut, nd all soreness of mucus membrane. In local treatment of female Ills Paitlnels Inyaluablo. Used as a Vaginal Wa.b we ehalloDRS the world to produce Its equal for thuronghneaa. Itisarcrelatlonin cleaming and healing power) it kills all germs which Cans. Inrlammatlnn anrl discharges. All lomdlndrussa keep Paitine; prlea.BOo. 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No matter what aila you, start taking CASCARETS today, for you wllf never (et w.ll and atay well until you set your bowela right. Take our advice, atart with Caacaret. today under abwlute fuarantee to cure or mont y refunded. The cenuine tablet .tamped C C C. Never Kid In bulk. Sample aod booklet free. Addrew merlins: Remedy Company. Chicago or New York. 50a r r w Yoa wnThis Book! Should IT SHOULD BE IN EVERY BE NEEDED A Slight Illness Treated at Once Long Sickness, With It Heavy Expense and Anxieties. : EVERY MAN HIS OWN DOCTOR By J. HAMILTON ATEflS. A. M M. P. , ' Thie ia a moat Valuable Book for tho Household, teaching as it doea the j eaaily-diatinguiahtd Symptoms of dillerent Diseases, tbe t'auaea and Mean a of l'revsatiin such iAaeasea, and the Simplest Komediea which will alleviate , or cur. COS Pagos, Profuaejiy Illustrated. ions, Eir'anatlona of Botanical Practice. Correct TL'se of Ordinary Herbs. New Edition. Revised and Enlarged with Complete Index. With this 1 Book ia the house there ia no exeuae for not knowing what to do in an em. ergency. j Pon't wait until Ton have illneea in y'ie family Sefnre yon order, but end at once for thia valuable volume. OVLY SO CENTS POST-PAID. , Fend postal Dotes or postage eta Bps of any denomination Dot larger than 8 cents. . . BOOK PUBLISHING HOUSE 134 Leonard St., N.Y. ' SORE FEET SORE HANDS One Night Treatment with Soak the feet or hands on retiring in a strong, hot, creamy lather of CUTICURA SOAP. Dry, and anoint freely with CUTICURA OINTMENT, the great skin cure and purest of emollients. Bandage lightly in old, soft cotton or linen. For itching, burning, and scaling ec zema, rashes, inflamma tion, and chafing, for red ness, roughness, cracks, and fissures, with brittle,, shapeless nails, this treat ment is simply wonderful, frequently curing in one night. Cfrmpltrt Homo Om, efmtlaHnff of fTTTCTlA Uol-tBt, SO. In form of ChnfoJate Colts! Filn, U. frr trial of IB t, otnlramt, soe., Roup, lAt. Ivpott: Londo. fc ('htnrrhouM i Pari. A flu d Ja Pali t Boston, 1JT Columbu At. Potior irug Ji Chm Corp., aW TfWj m& IMdtt fw M Hev to Cum ct Uuano." 8ucceif ully Prosecutes Claims. Lovte Pr1noln) Br.mtnor U B. PonalOD Bumau, 3jri9 jiril war. l&aajj rtiMtiua claim. tuty tiimm 1 r i HOUSEHOLD AS IT MAY ANY MINUTE. Will Frequently Prevent This Book is written In plain g very-day English, and ia free from a the technical term which render , most doctor books so valueless to the generality of readers. This Book is intended to be of Service ' in the Family, and ia ao worded aa to be readily understood by all. ' Only ao cts.1. ; The low price only hting made a poaaibla by the immense edition I printed. Not only doea thia Book contain ao much Information Bela- i tire to Disease., but very properly "V rives a Complete Analysis of every ' thine nertainina to Courtship. Mar- riaee and the Production and Rear ing of Healthy Familiea; together with Valuable Recipes and Freacrin 1
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers