The Dairy. Butter statistics are surprising. The census returned show tha enor nous aggregate of 000,000 tons, or 1,200,008,000 pounds, manufactured In the United States in 1890; and the quantity hat probably increased •Ince. ITow much of all this wa3 Meomargarine, so.d under the name f butter, it is now getting a little late in the day to inquire. But the the returns are professedly all of gen uine butter, and thismav be the fact. It is said that the 1890 product in this country would require 1,000 Freight trains of 30 cars each, and each carrying 20 tons, to transport it. lowa seems to he tha largest butter producer—lier return, three years •go, being a hundred million pounds (100,000,000), worth $21,000,000. Illi nois stood next, with 95,000,000 lyorth $20,000,(,00. Wisconsin's pro- Juet was 45,000,000 p mods, worth *9,000,000, and Minnesota's nearly as great—hers being worth $8,000,000 while Michigan's was worth $7,500 - 000. 11l 1885 the assessed value of cows was $700,000,000—0r more than the capital of all the national banks, at that time. Inctedible as it may *eem, it appears that the annual dairy butter product of the United btates exceeds in value that of all of the lumber, wheat and Iron com bined. I hat, at any rate, is the statement of a statistician who pub ■! B f !| es , tl ! e results of his figuring. ther dairy statistics, milk, cream, and cheese, also make a big showing. Curious Occupations of Hindoos. Census blanks recently distributed b? the English Government In India for the purpose of ascertaining the •Ize of the population have just been returned to the home oil ice, and among them are as curious docu ments us were overcollected in a sim ilar undertaking. Under the head of "profession, occupation,etc.,'' a num ber of Hindoos admit candidly they are "professional debtors,'' "constant borrowers," or "men of secret re sources." Others have put them selves on record as thieves, village thieves and brigands, Some of more modest aspirations call themselves tavern keepers, visitors of taverns, traveling story tollers, mendicants, ponsions on their sons-in-law, or sim ilar idlers. One Hindoo says that "ho cannot work beeau e he is a foot" Others .confess to a more seri ous occupation, such as "expounder of oracles," "cyo examiner," 'Sorce rer," "storm pophet," "tamtam player," "doctor of Greek medicine." Another says that ho conduct a mar riage bureau for young domestics; a second declares that "he is making a business of marrying oil his daugh-| ters for money," which latter is un doubtedly a very lucrative field. One profession which seems to be very re munerative Is that of "hiring out ns a professional court witness," and h I followed by several Hindoos—Su Louis Post-Dispatch. Hatch's Universal Coujjh Syrup will cur i that cough surprisingly qtiVk. cents. The unclaimed funds n the Englisl I sourls amount to t.2.1\410 Beechain* MUaaro better than mineral wa. ters. U' e< hutiiTj no others. 25 cpnts a box. There are 000 verities of eolton HOOD'S Sarsaparllla Lung and Kidmy Trouble, Dyspepsia, suit rheum, an aMnn'< of sliii.glos j snd a severe cough compelled ine to give uj j work as a mason and after Ave years of suffer I ln< neatly took away my Me. Then I tool Hood's Strsaparilla, which effected a cure ; The neighbors think it very strange to see nu at work again. 1 is the strength given mc lij Hood's Snrsaparilia which enables mo to do it." Isaac Aiikr Vienna. N. J. Get < nl> H 30d'8 Rreaparilla II sort's l'liu aro the •Ist d gestion, cur.-liend 't. e. urn s Try o boa I P N (J 4 > .1 Cures Whooping Cough and Asthma, tor Hon it has no rival; has cured thousands wiure all others failed ; will cure you if taken in time. Sold by Druggists on o. guarantee. ror Lame Back or Cheat, use SHII.OH'S PLASTER, ascts. f*H ILO H'Sy^CATARRH EMEDY llavo you Cotevrii V Th { ftremed v is jmarnti tced to cure yon, PrJoe LOcte, liijeetor free. TIOTHER'S •. FRIEND" .• is n scicntifioally prepared Liniment and harmless; every ingredient is of recognized value and in constant uso by the medical profession. It short ens Labor, Lessens Pain, Diminishes Danger to life of Mother and Child. Book "To Mothers" meiitd free, con taining valuable information and voluntary testimonials. Boat by ex pi- .<' [ rei aiil, 0.-i r.nel|,t cf pike, $12,9 per bott.e. BHAOFIELD REGULATOR CO., Atlanta, Ga. gold bv all ftnwrlftt. UNITED STATES MARINES. A CORPS ESTABLISHED IN THE EARLY DAYS OF THE NAVY. It Costa Nearly a Million Dollars a Year—Dally Routine at the Brook lyn Navy Yard. IT waR the lack of military quali ties in the sailor that lod to the formation, in the first days of tho navy, of the United States Ma rine Corps. The passing of a hun dred years has not changed the char acter of Jack Tar. While formidable in impetuous assaults with cutlasses or sabres, he has not the steadiness and discipline necessary in sustained con flicts and in the effective use of the rifle, and so with the recent growth of the navy the marines have come to constitute one of its most important branches. The corps is maintained by an an nual appropriation from Congress. This appropriation last year was $900,- 0(10, which covers the wages, clothing and living expenses of the 2500 men who compose the body. The marines are useful in times of peace for police duty in the navy yards and on ship board, but it is when the country is engaged in war that they are expected to justify their existence in Uncle Ham's navy. They are sea soldiers. If the time comes when the white battle ships of the United States will engage with the men-of-war of a hostile power it will be tho duty of the marines to man the rapid-firing Catling guns, fill vacancies at the other guns, scour the enemy's decks from the tops, fhe poop and forecastle with their rifles, cover boarding parties with their fire, and repel boarders with fixed bayonets. Should the enemy gain a foothold they must gather at the mainmast, so as to command the deck. They must make the small arms effective and dis able the enemy's men, while the great guns, with which the marines have nothing to do, except in case of emergency, play havoc with his ship. But all naval fighting is not done on the decks of men-of-war. Tho sur prise of camps or posts, and the escalade of forts, render shore opera tions necessary. Picked men are sent with the attacking sailors, known as pioneers, and the rest of the marines form a supporting column to cover tho retreat and embarkation of the sailors in case the undertaking fails. Every navy yard in the United States has its detachment of marines. The barracks in tho Brooklyn yard, however, are the most popular, and as the marines have their choice of stations when they return from a cruise, tho largest number are quartered here. The full complement of men is 300. The thing which first attracts tho attention of the visitor entering the part of the yard set aside for the marines is a very long and narrow building of gray brick, with a piazza running tho whole length in front, shaded by a line of trees. This is the barracks, the living quarters of the men in neat uniforms who pace slowly to and fro on guard, or lounge on the benches under tho trees. The parade ground, ordinarily green, but now brown with drought, stretches out in front. In u group of trees to the left, with a garden behind, is the house of tho Commandant of Marines, and at about the same distance to the right are tho quarters of the other officers. Each of these is approached by a stone walk canopied and shaded ' by rows of pear trees. There are men from all stations of life in tho Marino Corps. In the ranks may he fouud well educated men, college graduates even, who have become reduced by misfortune or bib ulous habits, country boys who came to New York to seek their fortunes and found want instead, and men who have lost their occupations. They all find a place of refuge in the Marine Corps, provided they are physically and mentally sound, nt least five feet six inches in height, between tho ages of eighteen and thirty-five, unmarried and of good habits. With tho frequent bugle calls niul the marines crossing aud recrossing the parade ground, there is always life about the barracks during the hours of daylight, but at 10:30 iu the morn ing, the hour of dress parade, when the marines are out ill full force, tjieir uniforms lending brightness to the sombre background, the yard takes on a gala-day appearance. But it only lasts for fifteen minutes. The marine, even iu these times of peace, does not live in a perpetual holiday by any means. At 6:30 in the morning tho men must be out of bed, aud ready fifteen minutes later for "setting-up drill," which is gymnastic exercise without apparatus. Then the mess coll is sounded, and they file into the long mesß room, furnished with two tables extending the whole length,, and partake of their breakfast of hash, pork and beans, or beef stew, accord ing to the day in tho week, and bread and coffee. After breakfast the order is given "To the colors !" and the flag is raised on the pole in front of the guard house. Then the guards take their posts and the routine of the day begins. The work for the men on duty is not sasy, but every marine with a clean record has twenty hours out of forty sight to himself. There are various ways in which he can spend this time. There are Indian clubs and dumbbells in the library and cards and chessmen, which are in great demand in the win ter, and an organ, too, at which the musical marine may indulge his taste, if the operation is not too painful to ais companions. In this event he is "called down" very speedily and ef fectually. At 11 o'clock at night all lights must Oe out in tho barracks, and the marines settle down to slumber, thoHO who nave been on duty during the day with (he pleasing contemplation of leisure and reoreation on the morrow, and tho others with the prospect of work he fore them. If the duty is well done it does not go without its reward. The men are divided into four classes, ac cording to their records. AVhen a va cancy occurs among the corporals, one of the first-class men is given atrial in the office. If lie does well, he is ex amined in reading and arithmetic. The successful passing of the examina tion entitles him to the corporalsliip and gives him the opportunity of soon becoming sergeant. A marine can never become a commissioned officer. The highest office to which he may at tain is that of sergeant major.—New York Times. Mississippi House-floats. The house-boats, it appears, arc a survival of one among many kiuds of boats which were very much more numerous upon the great river before the era of steam navigation than steam boats are now. Among the earlier forms of boats were the famous "Ken tucky flats," or **broad-horns," and family boats of this pattern were an early modification of • their general plan, which was that of a strong hulled ark, long and narrow and covered with a curving roof. I have read i That family boats of this de scription, fitted up for the descent of families to the lower country, were provided with a stove, a comfortable apartment, beds and arrangements for commodious habitanoy, and in them ladies, servants, cattle, sheep, dogs and poultry, all floating on the same bottom and on the roof the looms, ploughs, spinning-wheels and domestic implements of the family, were car ried-down the river." Fulton's Cler mont, which proved its usefulness as the first practicable adaption of steam power to water travel in 1807, must have been quickly copied on the Mis sissippi, for in one list of notable passages up that river I have seen a note of a trip by a steamboat in 1814. But long after that the barges, skiffs, liorseboats, broad-liorns and family boats must have remained very num erous. They floated down stream with the current, and were pulled up again by means of wheels worked by hors ea or cattle and by the toilsome and slow processes known as warping and bush whacking. A boat which was warpe d up the river kept two rowboats ahead of her carrying hawsers, which were made fast to the trees on the shore and then pulled in as the bigger ves sels were thus hauled along. When the length of one cable had been pulled in tho other boat had fastened the other cable far ahead, and so the ves sel "inched" along against the five mile current of the stream a little more quickly than a house moves when its owner has decided to move it down a country road to a distant cellar he has dug for it. It took a day to go six or eight miles by that method. Smaller boats were propelled against the cur rent by rowing, sailing or poling them along; and when the water was high and overflowed tho banks they bush whacked up stream—that is, they pulled the vessel along by hauling on the bushes that brushed the sides of the craft.—Harper's Magazine. What Makes People Red-Faced. Tho stimulus of the sun's direct rays aud that arising from the friction of the frosh air causes increased activity in the capillaries supplying the surface with blood. Wheu this stimulus is continued for any considerable time 'these vessels become gorged and min ute portions of the blood force their way into tho layer immediately under the epidermis or outer skin. It is the presence of tho red corpuscles of blood which gives tho ruddy flesh tint seen through the outer skin. At tho sumo time tho sweat glands and oil glands, whose function it is to lubricate the surface and kopt it moist and cool, become exhausted by over stimulus; the outer skin gets hard and dry and soon begins to peel off in tho familiar way, taking the minute particles of ex travasated blood along with it. Direct sunlight also has a darkening effect upon the actual coloring pigments of the Hkiu, but this action is distinct from actual tunning and manifests itself in tho form of freckles. The permanent bronze or ruddiness of complexion scon in sailors and travel ers in hot countries is a result, of tho long continued combination of tho two processes.—Chicago Herald. Hardy Mountaineers. There is in Denver a peculiar class of men. They are essentially men of the mountains. They may have their weaknesses, but cowardice is never one of them. They nre men with a pecu liar development of certain faculties. They handle money as a farmer handles seedcorn—only as a means of produc ing more. They are always spend thrifts. ifisers do not live a mile above sea-level, where the ether in toxicates, aud a hysteria of hope dis turbs the emotions of even the best poised. Physically, these men of the mountains are remarkable. Their chests average four inches more in breadth than those of the men of the East. They do not become giddy. They can climb anywhere. They can walk all day. They can sleep any where and they can eat anything, but are naturally luxurious, and the miner's cabin frequently knows finer viands than the dining-room of the conven tional and pretentious citizen.—Omaha World-Herald. tjiicer Names for Sermons. St range even to irreverence were the titles of some of tho sixteenth and seventeenth century sermons. Of such were the following: "Barueh's Horo Gently Opened and Salve Skilfully Ap plied," "The Snuffers of Divine Love," "A Spiritual Mustard Pot to Make tho Soul Sneeze With Devotion," "Crumbs of Comfort for Chickens of Grace, "A Balance to Weigh Facts In," "Matches Lighted at the Divine Fire," etc, Temple Bur. HOUSEHOLD AFFAIRS. HOW TO WASH FLANNELS. I Flannels should always be washed J by themselves in a suds prepared for : them; on no aocount be rubbed on i the board, unless very dirty. The , suds should be pleasantly warm to tho : hands, not too hot, and no hot or cold water be added while tho flannels are in the tub. They should be rinsed in clean water of the same tempera ture as the washing suds, and as many waters used as may be necessary to take all the soap out, as the flannels will never be soft with the soap left in them. They should never be blued. They should be pulled in shape before hanging, undershirts being hung from tho shoulders. They should never bo hung out of doors iu freezing weather, but quickly dried before the fire, or, better, over the register, and pressed as soon as dry enough.—New York Advertiser. ICINO WITHOUT EGGS. A recent newspaper article called at tention to an excellent recipe for mak ing icing without oggs. It is a con venient thing to know at this time of the year when we are entering upon the days of scarce and expensive eggs. The recipe in question directs tho stir ring of confectionary sugar—not merely pulverized—into orange juice. A still better way of making eggless icing is the following, which has been in use in some households for a long time, and has entirely superseded the usual method: Put over a bright fire a cup of granulated sugar to a quarter sup of water. Shako together first, hut do not stir once after they have been set on the stove. When it drops into a soft hall iu water take off and set on the ice or in a dish of cold water. When it has partially cooled begin to stir with a fork. It will be some a creamy pliablo mass, if all is well, that after flavoring is added can he spread at once on the cake. If it should harden too much, or be at all rough, add more water and cook it >ver. The final result is perfection for icing or for hard pudding sauce.— New York World. ARRANGING CUT FLOWERS. With very few exceptions, every flower looks best when arranged with the foliage Dame Nature bestows upon it. Flowers should not be crowded. Each one should have a fair chance, therefore do not use a dozen flowers when six would look far better. Buds and foliago are as important in flower arrangements as the flowers themselves. Dame Nature always arranges her flowers in this manner, and we cannot do better than to copy her as nearly as we can. Diflerent flowers need different surroundings. Tall flowers like j gladiolus, lilies, dahlias, ehrysanthe mums, need large, tall vases, while sweet peas, nasturtiums, pansieß ami other short-stemmed flowers need low vases, bowls or baskets. Iu whatever we arrange our flowers, let it be sec ondary to the flowers themselves. It should not be highly colored, so as to "kill" the coloring of the flowers, or so elaborate as to draw attention from them. v AVe are not compelled, as in former years, to put our flowers in the regu lation vase, says Good Housekeeping, or use a glass preserve dish. There j are many beautiful receptacles for i flowers, American cut glass, cut into innumerable facets, reflecting myriad rainbowß of colors; in bowls, baskets, and dishes of various forms. There arc howls and jugs of crystalline white, amber color, delicate yellow, turquoise blue, apple green and a thousand and one conceits of various kinds. Cut flowers should be taken from the vases each morning and a bit of the stems cut off, all decaying leaves and flowers taken out, and replaced in fresh water. Soft water is better than hard ; if the latter is used, a few drops, of ammonia may be added. Tho cooler tho flowers are kept the longer they will last. In the winter, when flowers are scarce, it is a good plan to take cut flowers from the vases at night and place them in a washbowl, keep ing the flowers above water. Put them in the cellar, or a cool room where they will not chill. They will freshen up and keep much longer than if left all night in a hot room. Never leave flowers at night in a sick room. It is hurtful for the sick person and the flowers. —Farm, Field and Fireside. IU2CIPES. Potato Salad—Slice in a salad dish one-half dozen large, cold, boiled po- ' tatoes and season with two tablespoon fuls salad oil, a half teaspoonful of sugar, pepper, mustard, salt, and a half teaspoonful of celery salt. Rub to a smooth paste, and whip in a tea spoonful at a time, five tablespoonfuls of strong vinegar; mix thoroughly, pour over the salad, and place on ice ! to cool. Jam Puffs—One cup flour, one cup j of dry mashed potato, one level tea- I spoon of baking powder and a pinch of t salt. Then rub in three tablespoon fuls of beef dripping; mix with enough i lold water to make a stiff dough. Roll ! very thin, cut into rounds, wet the | 9dges, put a spoonful of jam on eaoh j round. Fold over and press the edges I together, lay them on a greased tin j nd bake ten minutes in a hot oven. Corn Muffins—One pint corn meal, one pint flour, one tablespoonful sugar, ouo teaspoon salt, three teaspoons of oaking powder, one tablespoon lard, two eggs, one pint milk; silt together sorn meal, flour, sugar, salt and pow ler; rub in cold lard, eggs beaten and nilk; mix into a batter of the consist ency of cup cake: muffin pans to be told ami well-greased; then fill two birds. Pour in hot muffin rings, lake in hot oven fifteen minutes. The Persians did not punish mur derers for the first offense. Color Photography. J The art of photographing colors seems to be progressing in a very en ! couraging manner. The color photo j graphs of Si. Lippmann, which ex cited so much interest a year or so ] ago, have recently been surpassed by the achievements of Sf. Louis Lu ! miere. M. Lumiere, whose name in j English means ''light, "lias succeeded i in preparing gelatinobromide plates which give, with an exposure of half an hour, a photographic reproduc tion of the natural colors of objects. An exhibition of his work was made before the commltte of the I'hoto Club ot Paris at their June j meeting, M. Lippmann being present as the presiding officer. Photographs j were shown exhibiting in their nat j tiral hues boxes, colored cloths, fans, Japanese screens, flowers and land- I scapes. j The landscape photographs aroused | the greatest interest. Tho delicacy of tints which they exhibited was quite astonishing. All the shades 1 and gradations of color in the grass I and trees, the sky, the lields, and the houses were reproduced with extraor dinary faithfulness and clearness. The gain in time of exposure achieved by M. Lumiere is in itself It great advance. Former methods of photographing colors have re quired exposures of not loss than an hour and a half or two hours; but it is ; hoped that the thirty minutes rc quired by M. Lumiere's process will | soon be great ly shortened. The French are particularly inter ested iu the progress which color photography is making in their coun try. They call it the completion of ■ the invention of Dagucrre, and are eager to see it brought to perfection by their compatriots. It does not j matter, however, whether it is a ] Frenchman, a German, an English j man or an American who shall first make color photography the common property of mankind, in any event he J will win the gratitude of all nations. Health of Workmen at High Sum- Some noteable facts are furnished by the experience of the workmen engaged iu constructing the new Cen tral Railway over the mountains in j Peru. The line starts at Lima, ir, altitude twelve degrees, and the sum - mit tunnel of this lino at Galeria is !at the height of 15,64"> feet. It ap j pears that the workmen, up to the i height or" sou to 10,000 feet, do about j | the same relative quantity of work ■ as at tho sea level, provided they j have been inured to tho height or 1 brought up in t..e country; at 12,000 feet the amount of work deteriorates, and at 14,0)0 to is,ooo feet a full third had to he deducted from the amount that the same men could per form at sea level. Owing to the ab sence of malaria tho percentage of efficient labor at the greatest eleva tion has been a very high one. Men ! coming from the coast were not found capable of doing efficient work fur j about two weeks on an average when taken to high elevations, tho ca | pacity gradually increasing and reach ing its maximum in a few weeks ot months, according to the constitution of the individual. The majority of | the laborers being C'holos, or Indians i born in the Sierra, were found In capable of doing elfo tive work on the coasts or in the warmer altitudes without a long course of acclimatiza tion. Sudden changes, too, from the Sierra to altitudes of from 2,000 to 5.000 feet have resulted in sickness j and fever Reason Cor It ,i .icing. When Wesley and Nelson wcrt ( traveling through Cornwall, Iron: | j common to common, preaching to s| i people who heard willingly, but sol i dum or never prolTered them the ' slightest act of hospitality, they were j frequently hungry. They were detained some time al ] fit. Ives because of the illness of one | of their companions; and their lodg | ing was litfle better than their fa'e. "All that time," says Mr. Nelson, "Mr. Wesley and I lay on the floor; he had my great-coat for his pilio.v, and 1 had llurkitt's Notes on the New Testament for mine. "Afterhcingliero near three weeks, j one morning, about three o'clock, Mr. Wesley turned over, and llmling. mc awake, clapped mo on the side, say ing, 'Brother Nelson, let us he ol j good cheer! Wo have much to re i joicc in. 1 have onu wholo sido yet, lor the skin is only oil on cnc side.'" I Where Ho Mailo His Money. Mr. Coleman of Norwich, before lie was made a knight, was one day | in a Paris hotel, when an inquisitive damsel asked: "Are you the Mr. | Coleman who has made so much money out of the mustard we take off the sides of our plat's?" "No," j was the answer; "I am the Mr. Cole ; man who makes money out of the ! mustard you leave on the sides ol your plates." Don't Forget ttte BAKING POWDER | that makes the deli cious biscuit, griddle cake and doughnut. State of Ohio, City of Toledo, I LITOAS Coiintv. f * Thank J. CTiknev i: u;es oath that he is the | sottior partner of iue linn ol' T. Orkney & t inmiiala, free. F. J. Cheney & Co., Tol#de. O. yr bold by Druggists, 75c. Queen Victoria believes that articles made b3 r blind people brig luck. For Bronchi u.. AsTm* \t:o avt> Piti.mon \. n Y Com Pi A i vrs "V Jr. IC * ■ it I.IIC m Tn.v T l-ftvo remirkable curat.vo properties. bold onlu in buxc.< It istuid that .'U,0.)0 varieties of goods arc manufactured from woo'. Russia now has 44 warships, | KNOWLEDGE : j Brings comfort and improvement nnd tends to personal enjoyment when : rightly used. The many, who livo bet- ! ter than others and enjoy life more, with I less expenditure, by moro promptly | adapting the world's host products to j the needs of physical being, will attest the value to neallh of the pure liquid laxativo principles embraced in tlio remedy, Syrup of Figs. Its excellence is due to its presenting ! in tho form most acceptable and picas j ant to tho taste, tho refreshing and truly beneficial properties of a perfect lax ' ativo ; effectually cleansing tho system, dispelling colds, li cad aches and fevers and permanently curing constipation. J It has given satisfaction to millions and met with the approval of tho medical profession, because it acts on the Kid- I neys, Liver and Bowels without weak- i ening them and it is perfectly free from | every objectionable substance. Syrup of Figs is for sale by all drug gists in 50c and $1 bottles, but it ia man ufactured by the California Fig Syrup j [ Co. only, whose name ia printed on every J I package, also tho name, Syrup of Figs, I and being well informed, you will not j accept any substitute if ollered. MIIS. MILLY FFRIi U.SON, Troy, N. Y. The. folic,winom; uo.\t)i:itN io' >n . i run eat anyfdinar ■ want and it N•, ,bo porsimdod inlouu inforior urtb.'ls "Good Wives Grow Fair in the Light of Thei. Works," Especially if They Use "August Flower" Eight doctors treated me for Heart Disease and one for Rheumatism, but did me no good. I could not speak aloud. Everything that I took iuto the Stomrcli distressed me. I could not sleep. I had taken all kinds of medicines. Through a neighbor I got one of your books. I procured a bottle of Green's Aug i ust Flower and took it. lam to-day ! stout, hearty and strong and enjoy the best of health. August Flower | saved my life and gave me my health. I Mrs. Sarah J Cox, Defiance, 0. e _ P N L' 17 'S Oltickens w Money Yon cannot do this unless you understand them ID I know how to cater to tholr requirements; frnd I you cannot spend yearn and dollars learning by ex perience, so you must buy the knowledge acquired | ly otiters. We offer this to you for only 25 cents. YOU WANT THEM TO PAY THEIR OWN WAY, even If you merely keep them as a diversion. In or 11.-r (II ; .nil If I'd .vis Juili.MDtisly, you must know 6oiM ■(ii.iig about them. To meet this want we arc j IS"," ; a&rWttffSMMF 25c. twi• 111j -:I ve years. It was written by a man who put : all his mind, and time, and money to making a suc cess of Chicken raising—not as a pastime, nut as a | business—and If you will profit by his twenty-llr# I years' work, you can save many Chicks annually, j ana make your Fowls earn dollars lor you. Tha noln* la, that you must be able to detect trouble In I the I'oullry Yard as soon as It appears, and know how to remedy It. This book wl'.l teach you. It tells how to detect and cure disease; to feed for ergs and aim for fattening; which fowls to save for breeding purposes; and everything. Indeed, you i should know on this subject to make It profitable. Sent postpaid for twenty-Avo cents In stamps. Book Publishing House 184 Leonard ST.. N. Y. CT. STTTE WALL PAPER MERCHANT' fegSTry SELLS THE BEST, Hi! iKB THE CHEAPEST WALL PAPER 1 tiood I*iinor:{c. nnd 5c finld lnpera 5c., | Sc. nnd 10c. Send sc. Hinnips for kn ill pies. 511 Wood Street, Pittsburgh, PH. ! I DL9OD POISON 1 1 ft SPECIALTY. J•r,,^ financial hacking It •500,000. When mercury. I iodide potassium, sarsap irllla or Hot Springs fail, we tru i ran too a cure—nnd our Matlo Cyphtleno Is the only ! tains* that will cure permanently. Positive proof sent • scaled, free, toon Ukmkdy Co., Chloago. 111. Pa '.7 I"rAL FAMILY MEDrcfNE I For li-.iUgcst lon.^lJlUousnr^ I For 1 ree samples' address ' IIII'ANH cIIEUIOAIj CO., New York* THE WORST MECHANfcAi. niinTstnr treatment RUPT'JRE I. II.BKELEY vV CO.. 25 S. 11 ill Hi., I'hiinda. IlENSlON^ira^ft rsin lat war, lSuiijwdu^uiingclanns, attyaluca. Fill Pox. Mink,filler nnd < onu Pelfatwepay Iheh'Khest inniset prices for nil kinds or raw itirs. Khe lose a stamp lor our price bats. Chat. I'.i\ ck A Co . Id W. d s- . W llllamsport. Pa. 1> ITI/Vrsi' ll^l ' l M\i;KS i; , .mlnntl .n I ,\ I I'ilN I I,ml HdviceiiHiopalentabllltv of Invention. Send for (mentors (ttilde.or howtoget a pal tit. PATRICK ('!• AllltKbL, U ashinotoji, D.C. SaESßßiißaaairih •:* us HI list uns. ~ WT