Vice Versa. , Blinker—"Tho women know how t< handle a train." Diuker—"Yes, and If this new society fad of female boxing gets into vogue I suppose they will k,> having traineri to liandlo tlieui."—Philadelphia Inqui rer. SIOO Howard. 5100. The reader* of this paper will bo pleased to learn that, thero is at least ono dreaded disease that science has been able to cure in all it* stages, and that is Catarrh. Hall's Catarrh Cure is tho onlv positive cure known to the medical fraternity. Catarrh being a constitu tional disease, requires a constitutional treat ment. Hall's ('aturrh Curo is taken internally, acting directly on tho blood and raucous sur faces of the system, thereby destroying tho foundation of tho disease, tmd giving the pa tient strength by building up the constitution an l assisting nature in doing its work. The proprietors have so much faith in its curative powers that t liey offer Ono Hundred Dollars for any caso that it fails to cure. Send for list of testimonials. Address l'\ J. CHENEY & Co., Toledo, O. 65T* Sold by Druggists, 75c. Eight thousand tons of air aro sent into tho mines for ono ton of conl extracted. When Nature Needs assistance it may bo best to render it promptly,but one should remember touso even tlic most perfect remedies only when needed. The best and most simple and gentle remedy is tho Syrup of Figs manufactured by the Call foraia Fig Syrup C. Italy lias tho highest murder rate of any country in tho world. Soap bubbles will freeze when tho ther moinetor falls to 140 degrees below zero. It Will Pay To make some provision for your physical health at this season, because a cold or cough, an attack f pneumonia or typhoid fever now may make you an invalid all win ter. First of all lie sure that your blood Is pure, for health depends upon puro blood. A few bottles of Hood's Sarsivparilla will bo a paying investment now. it will give you pure, rich blood and invigorate your system. Hood's Sarsaparilla Is tho Ono Truu Blooii Piuill"r. HOOll'S PillS tlvo. la A?l druafuVa. o '23c" I' N U II) K < E arly to bcd ' Jpp-'- Early to rise, ii.E/yTf —- Eat. cakes made ol iM buckwheat, ' }{>/U ~C"!T ' ,c healthy and ks/MW" wis - BUCK WF^AT MAKES The Best Cakes. Always Light and Dainty. m TheOreatest fledica! Discovery of the Age. KENNEDY'S Medical Discovery. DONALD KENNEDY, OF ROXBURY, MASS,, Una discovered In ono of our common pasture weeds a romedy that cures every kind of Humor, from tho worst Scrofula down to a common pimplo. He has tried It In over eleven hundred cases, and never failed except in twocases (both thunder humor). Uo has now in his possession ovor two hundred certlll catc9 of Its valuo, all within twenty miles of Boston. Send postal card for book. A benefit Is always experienced from tho first bottle, and a perfect euro Is warranted when the right quantity Is taken. "When the lungs aro affected It causes shooting pains, like needles passing through them-, tho same with tho J.ivur or Bowels. This is causal by the ducts being stopped, and always disappears iu a week after taking it. Head the label. If the stomach is foul or bilious it will cause squeamish feelings at ilrst No change of diet ever necessary. Eat tho best you can get, and enough of it. Dose, one tablespoonful In water at bed time. Sold by all Druggists. PROFITABLE DAIRY WOko. Can only bo accomplished with (he very bert of tools and - . appliance:. With a Davis RP Cream Sepa rator on the Cf-Wj r r, farm yon are suro of mora and bo tic butter, while tho skimmed milk Is aval- uable feed. Farmers will make no mis take to get a pM**" Davis. Neat, Illustrated catalogue mailed FREB Agents wanted DAVIS & RANKIN BLDG. & MFG. CO Cor. Randolph ft Dearborn St* . OStesen. m i EWSS' 98 % LYE H Powdered nnd Perfumed, BW (PATENTED.! i J 'i" jflßfv A'*2NA^ A 1.1 K<j. CO., SUNFLOWERS. It would seem as it' the extensive cultivation of the sunflower were one ot the probabilities of the near future in American agriculture. The merits of this plant as a feeding crop have been long appreciated in Canada, the heads being mixed with corn and other fodder plants in the silo, while the leaves arc gathered as those of corn, and are found acceptable and nutritious. The seeds also are valua ble, uot only as a food for fowls but also for cattle, horses and other stock, while the roots make excellent fuel. The product of an acre is from thirty to eighty and sometimes more bushels of thirty-three pounds. The sudden awakening in this coun try to the merits of the sunflower has been caused by the appenrauco on the market of mellower meal, which threatens to become a formidable rival of oil meal. Ibis product has origin ated in llussiu. where sunflowers have long been largely grown for food and forage purposes. Sunflower cake lias always been esteemed one of the best auxiliary cattle foods in that country. This cake is tho residual product ob tained after the extraction by hydraulic means of the oil of the seeds of the sunflower. The oil has long been valuable for ils Kuperior quality for table and oilier uses, lut the cake has not found a foreign maiket owing to its hard ness. Mow that the question of its disintegration has been successfully solved, it will doubtless soon be in general demand owing to its composi tion and palatability for fattening cat tle. Jt has been found possible to prepare two qualities of the meal, cno rich in proteid and poor in fatandthe other rich in fat and poor in proteid. The crop is an easy one to raise, as sunflowers will grow readily on al most any kind of soil and it seerus as if with our improved modes of farm ing it might be made a very paying one. At any rate, it is worth giving it u fair trial,—Now York World. WHEN AND HOW TO FEED. These are questions that are an swered in various ways. We will now compare a few of them to see which wo will accept as our standard, writes 1\ W. T. Hcrm, of Indiana. There is a class of farmers that pay but little attention to their fowls anil only feed them once a week, if at all, giving them all they can cat. TLioy will have their till, too, if ho gives them a chance. Such farmers spend the greater part of their timo walkiug in the garden and lields and say "It doesn't pay to keep "em." Tho lions roost in the trees, for tho hen house, if there is one, is full of lice and tilth. Tho hens die of indigestion (he de clares it's cholera though) from eating so much at one time in order to make lip for the long vacations. We come now to the man who feeds only once a day, that is in winter. Corn is his only food, too. His fowls are dyiug from indigestion an l bowel disease caused by tho fowls eating too much at a time. A method that is hard to make some see is a mistake is feeding three times a day. They argue that man eats his three meals a day, why not tho fowls. Fowls that oro fed three times a day expect to do nothing but eat and grow fat. They have no reasons to exercise, and, of course, lay few eggs. Let fowls learn to work for themselves. It makes them hustle about, and their blood circulates more freely, which is suro to bring eggs soon. They canTiot live on nothing, nor with no chance to even scratch for their living. My way is to feed a half feed in the morning, warm masli is tho best in the winter, then they still have an appe tite to work or scratch for half pint of millet seed or wheat scattered among 3umo loaves or cut straw on the hen house floor. What a time biddies have while they hunt for their other half ol breakfast! Such talking, singiug, cackling, flopping, jumping, running, lighting, picking and scratching you j cannot imagine unless you have seen it. It's all "hustle," "hurry-up" tho entire day. Exercise seems to be mere beneficial to fowls than to mau. Just before dark, after tho biddies grow tired of their work, I give them a full supper of wheal, corn or buck wheat, and they go to roost contented over their day's work.—Farm, Field und Firesido. PROTECTION AGAINST FROSTS. This is a vital matter to fruit grow ers and truckers, whose season's labor and investment may bo wiped out by j a siugle destructive frost. Tho more ] valuable the crop and tho greater the ! risk of frost, tho more effort and ex pense may be safely put into means of protecting against frosts. A famous California orange grove is equipped with a system of iron pipes through which watex is conducted to nozzles at frequent intervals, tho idea beiug that the spray will ward off light frosts. Barrels of tar and rubbish in different parts of the orchard arc available for making a smudge of smoke, which is the most practicable menus yet de vised. In the case of a freeze, siuh as visited California two years ago and Florida last winter, or a real hard float in other sections, neither of these methods is of much avail, Smoke is good against all light frosts, and is easily obtained. Hlrawy ma nure, leaves, rubbish, etc., should be piled in the lowest places and about | the sides, and covered with hay caps ! or ducking (previously painted with j | two coats of linseed oil and dried), so , as to be always dry. Have a barrel I of kerosene oil handy, some cans and 3 torches. When frost threateus, set } a night watch to inspect theruiomet ] ers placed on stakes in various parts 3 of the field, especially in tho most ex f posed places. It the mercury drops 1 to thirty-five degrees by 1 or 2 a. m. . it is likely to mean a frost of more oi t less severity before sunrise. Then call up the folks, light tho torches and let each person take torch and oil can r (previously tilled) and set tiro to the i row of rubbish heaps previously as j signed him. If the wind blows the . j smoke away from the field carry some 4 J rubbish over to that side so the smoke ; will bo blown on to instead of off from j the field. If the danger never comes, 1 no expense worth nieutioniug has . j been incurred as the piles can be scat . | tered and plowed under for manure or I burned, the aslies making excellent j fertilizer. No prudent person thinks tj of leaving his buildings uninsured I against fire. Certainly it is just as . j important to lusuro againt frosts so • | far as it can be done by such simple s , means as smoke coverings or water. i We wish all who have had experience • in this matter would send it for publi- I i cation. Mr. E. P. Powell, a sucessful I and brainy horticulturist in Western . | New York, writes: < "The very best preventive against - | frost is not tiros but thorough spray i ! ing with water during tho evening . and niglit. When this can bo done, . we can overcome the daugcr from n , fall of two or three degrees. This will > [ often save our whole crop. This last > I spring I lost mv grapes by a margin of ! not more than two degrees, but on a preceding niglit anticipated tho frost . by deluging the trellises with water. ; ; Of course bonfires may also bo used. f anticipate we shall bo compelled to . | adopt irrigation in all lho Eastern . I .States."—Now England Homestead. TRAINING THE HEIFER. I A heifer should not be given too . ! rich or stimulating food for a week • ; before calving. A pint of oil meal in > j thin gruel given every day for the 1 week before will generally prevent any trouble with tho placenta. Tho udder must be closely watched, as | heifers are peculiarly liable to inflam : mation. Should it become unusually I distended, it may bo necessary to ; j draw from the teats from one to scv- I j oral quarts of milk in order to pre j vent inflammation. If this is done, it : | must bo pertained at rogular intervals, i i AH soon as possible after calving give ' a warm bran mash, protect the heifer j from cold iiud wet and supply her fre -1 queutly with a moderate amount of i water from which the chill has been ! taken ; feed moderately an I give flax seed gruel, warm bian mash or other i laxative food. Authorities disagree a3 to whether i it is best to separate tho cow and calf at once or to leave them together for the first throe days. We prefer the latter method. The udder at this ! time is apt to bo inflamed and hard ened and the sucking of the calf is the easiest method of softening aud re | clucing it, aud tho milk is at this timo I unfit for use. If tho udder is very ' distended the cow should bo milked immediately after calving, but if hot it is best to let tho calf be tho first to reduce if. The cow should be rogularly milked night aud morning at tho usual time, so as to remove any milk left by tho calf. This is a very important pre caution, and any neglect of it might seriously injure the cow by leaving a i portion to produce inflammation. It i has another great advantage, how ever. I? accustoms tho heifer to hand milking as well as to sucking, and when the latter ceases with tho re moval of tho calf tho usual por j formance of breaking is largely avoided, tho milk isnotheld up or the j pail kicked over, nor is there nearly j such undue excitement at tho loss of I her call', her ulFeclions having been equally divided between her offspring aud the gentle coaxing milker who foods and pets her. Tho so-called maternal instinct is simply the desiro to supply nourishment for the young, and tho heifer thus skilfully managed classes the calf and milker iu the j same category and yields her milk us freely to one as to tho other. I As habits soon become second ! nature wo cannot bo too careful about I those formed by the future cow. One | of the worst is the habit of shrinking I in the milk as scon as the pastures be- I gin to fall. Tho reason for this in the beginning is the deficiency of uutri- I ment in the ripening grass. Hut tho habit once formed by tiio heifer will cling to the cow through succeeding years evon though tho cause be re moved by supplying bran or shorts in addition. We may find this expen sive, but an we educate a child to fit him for his future career without grudging tho cost, so must wo treat our heifer with a view to future rather than present returns. —C. I>. Bell, in New York World. Tho largest wooden ware works in tho world are located in 13ay City, Mich. The present output ever ten hours is 1801) tubs and 8500 pails. Of mineral waters, used to medicate tho American interior, this country bottled and barreled in 1801 18,392,- 732 gallons, valued at #2,930,250, HOUSEHOLD AFFAIRS TO MAKE JSEETS TENDER, The favorite French way of cooking beets is by baking. They are placet! in the oven on a bed of straw, covered with earthenware plates and cooked from six to tou hours, "This method of cooking," says Miss Parloa, who is in Franco studying cooking, ''makesa beet firm and tender and full of color and juice."—St, Louis Star-Sayings* MOCK CHICKEN SALAD. One head cabbage, one large bunch celery dressing, one-half cup vinegar, one teaspoonlul of yellow mustard (which can bo omitted if preferred), piece of butter size of an egg, three eggs, small teaspoonful of salt, cay enne pepper to taste, one tablespoon ful of cream, one tablespoonful of su gar. Mix the eggp, mustard and vin egar together until thick. Eggs aro beaten light before vinegar is added. This is excellent for a picnic and also makes a very good salad dressing all boiled together, eggs, mustard, salt, pepper, vinegar, butter and sugar.— Detroit Free Press, A FRUIT sour. Fruit soups are more comraou abroad than here. They aro served cold, of course, and arc a pleasant and easily prepared novelty for the company summer luncheon. Mrs. Rorcr's recipe for cherry soup calls for ouo quart of sour cherries and one quart of cold water over the fire; when boiling add half a cup of sugar and press through a colander and re turn to the fire. Moisten ono table spoonful of arrowroot, add it to the boiling mixture, cook a moment, add ono tablespoonful lemon juice, and turn out to cool. Serve cold in glasses with a little cracked ice.—Chicago Tiuics-Hemld. OKEEN TOMATO PICKLES. Take a gallon of green tomatoes, gathered on a dry day, and carefully remove the outer skin, slicing the peeled fruit. For this quantity, take two and a half tablespoonfuls of ground mustard, a gill of mustard seed, a tablespoonful of powdered cinnamon, half a pound of brown su gar, two teaspoonfuls of cloves and three pints of viuegar. Divide the spices into tbrce equal parts, and put into throe small muslin bags. Take half the quantity of viuegar, au I iu it boil tho spices for half an hour. Then put in tho sugar and stir till thor oughly melted. Now place a third of the sliced tomaloes at the bottom of n jar, put iu one of the spice bags, and pour a third of tbo boiled viuegar over. Then another third of bag and vinogar, till all are arranged. Then fill the jar with the cold vinegar till tho pickle is covered, using more than tho three pints if necessary. Cover securely and set away for at least a mouth before using. A softer pickle is made if tho sliced tomatoes are boiled with tho other ingredients, but at the sacrifice of some of tho flavor; if this course bo pursued a smnll quantity of celery seed, may bo added.—Roston Cultivator. WAYS OF SERVINU PEACHES, "When simply sliced, to bo eaten with sugar and cream, poaches sboul I bo set on ice for a short time, but never sweetened beforehand, as stand ing in sugar destroys their delicate flavor. Baked poaches are nice, an 1 this is nu excellent wily to use those that aro not quite ripe. Fare and halve tho fruit. Remove the stones and iu each cavity left put a piece of butter aud cover generously with sugar. Bet each half peach on a round of but tered toast, springlo with more sugar, lemon juice and a very little nutmeg. Rake in the oven for twenty minutes and serve hot, with cream. Pencil trillo is a dainty dessert, con cocted of nicely peeled and sliced peaches, two cupi of milk, four table spooufuls of sugar, three eggs and a small stale sponge cake. Make a boiled custard of the milk, the yolks of the eggs and half the sugar. Slice the cake, lay it in the bottom of a glass dish, and cover with the peaches well sweetened. Rout tho whites of tho eggs, with the remaining two spoonfuls of sugar, to a still' nuriuguo an l heap lightly on top. All the m grodients should lie very cold before they aro mixed, aud the custard is poured over the * 'trifle" when served. Pc-aeh roll has a rather rich suet crust rolled out in a long sheet. Cut up the peaches rather lino aud spread thickly on the paste, sprinkling liber ally with sugar. Roll up and fold tho ends over. Then wrap in a strong cloth, tie closely and steam for two hours iu a steamer. It is oaten with either a hard or soft sauce. Cut up peaches aro a delicious ad dition to hard pudding sauce of butter and sugar creamed together, and transform even a plain batter pudding into a royal viand. Poach potpio is merely a plain pin crust lllle 1 with a deep layer of sliced peaches, then a layer of sugar nu I nutmeg. Cover with a crust and bake slowly for two or three hours. For preserving, tho best quality of peaches bliould bo selected and they should never be either over or under-ripe. White freestones are the best. Like other largo fruits, too, they should al ways bo peeled with a silver knife an 1 thrown immediately into cold water to prevent discoloring. When this is done divide each peach aud remove tho stone. In a porcelain kettle make a syrup of ono pound of sugar and one pint of water for every pouud of fruit. Drop in the halves and lot them boil lor twenty minute- 1 . Then dip out and lay on a large dish. Roil down the syrup until it is quite thick, when return tho peaches to it, and cook gently until they appear trans parent. Put up in glass jars aud screw on tho covers securely.—New England Homestead. Nearly every picture of Queen Vic toria represents her as wearing her crown. A curious combination of the new woman and the old is the Oklahoma bloomer quiltiug bee. Mrs. Johu G. Carlisle believes iu bicycle riding as a part of the educa tion of every healthy girl. Florence Nightingale, who is now an iuvalrd, recently completed tho sixty-seventh year of her life. A daughter of the poet Longfellow lives in Washington. Her name is Marion Longfellow O'Douohue. After every member of a womau's club in Spokane. Wash., had been President tho organization went to pieces. Brown University has conferred tho degree of Doctor of Letters upon Mrs. Julia J. Irvine, President of Weilesley College. Mrs. Cleveland's fad is amateur pho tography, and she has in her posses sion many suapshots at tho members of her household. Mrs. Stanford devotes all her timo and energies to tho management of the California university bearing her deceased son's name. Among the fellowships most valued at Cornell aro those in literature, and one of thorn this year falls to Miss Louise Bobbins of the class of 'ill. Miss Agues Irwin, Dean of Radcliffe College, Harvard University, has been honored with the degree of Doctor of Laws by tho Western University of Pittsburg. De Piazza's bride is a plucky girl. She will accompany tho great explor er when he returns to the Congo next month, aud will share the privation* as well as tho honors of his work there. Miss Gertrude Pearson, of Roston, has received tho prize for tho best written work in general chemistry out of a class of fifty-two or more students of the College of Physicians and Sur geons. Miss Nellio Temple, who graduated at Vassal* in 1892, has been engaged by the University of Leipsic to assist Dr. Raisel, its American professor of history, in preparing a history of tho United States. East port, Me., has a genuine new woman, but of a type not likely to bo como fashionable. She regularly does a man's work on a woodpile, handling tbo bucksaw and axe with all tho skill of the hardiest male expert. The Queen of Italy is said to be an enthusiastic cobector of boots and shoes. Her collection includes shoos of Marie Antoinette, of the Empross Josephine, Mary Stuart, Queen Anne, and the Empress Catherine of Russia. Au article on tho elegancies of tho toilets of fair Parisians, in Figaro, contains the iuformatiou that "baths qualified by fresh strawberries are said to bo very refreshing; twenty pounds ure rubbed through a sieve lor each bath." When Emma Willard begau tho higher education of her sex by found ing the Troy Seminary, she was told that sho would be wanting to send the cows to school next, and the State of New York refused to Hpeud a dollar iu aiding her experiment. Tho fin-de-siocle "dude3s" carries her watch anywhere except iu a pock et—pendant, for instance, from licr bolt or waist. European papers as sert that, as a consequence, many more ladies' watches are nowadays lost or stolen—but not stolen by pickpock ets. The first women graduates of Glas gow University, Miss Sarah Logan I3lair and Miss lsabello Blacklook, were loudly cheered by tho young men at their attendance upon the "capping" ceremony to obtain their M. A. de grees. Tho boys made tho old hall ring with tho strains of "She's a Jolly Good Fellow." Senora Maria dc Burton died in Chi cago recently. She was tho wife of tho lato General H. S. Burton, United States Army, and was a claim ant for an enormous tract of land in Mexico, uuder a grant made by the King ot" Spain to her grandf ither, Don Joso Manuel Ruiz. A Chicago syndi cate was negotiating to buy tlie claim, which is valued at $5,000,000. Lady Irving, wife of tho licwly knighted actor, is described as "a slender, sweet-faced woman with weary-looking eyes and a pathetic droop at tho corners of he: mouth a charming woman, looking much too youthful and fragile to be tho mother of two tall sous." Lady Irving lives IU strictest privacy, apart from her husband, but her boys visit her very often. The Empress of Austria has not yet followed tho example of the court ladies around her and taken to ilie bicycle. She is a confirmed pedes trian, however, and daily takes a walk of from four to seven miles. She wears a short black dress that does not reach tho ankles. She walks atraight on wherever sho wishes ami her Greek teacher follows close be hind, talking Greek or reading to her. Queen Margherita of Italy is now mountaineering at Gressonay, in tho fair valley of Aosta. As accommoda tion is rather rouglt iu this remote spot, tho Queen is building a villa to bo ready for use next summer. Tho villa occupies a beautiful site about twenty minutes' wnlic from Grossonay, ■with tho torrent of tho Lys on one side and an extensive view over the valley and glaciers of Monto Rosa iu tho background. STOMACH AND HEAD PAINS , A KKHKDV. Womeu Ars Subject t ItoMi, on Account j of Tight Lacing. From thl> K- .v.— ~ W'O.i ri, .V. r. ! Ow (it (in liap:>;<ui w.iiiuri in tliis city i. i Mrs. George O. o* 20 I Street. "Xo one to look at mo now." said Mr,s. Reiss to a reporior, "would think for a mo ment that I was so ill that the do Mors said I could not possibly bo saved. About thrci years ago I began to suffer fr mi terrible pains inmystomaeh and it was almost im possible for me to do any work. Then Iha I severe headaches that almost distrusted me nn l altogether I wa> in a very sad condition. Of course I wanted to be well again, and like most people in such eases, I consultod a doc tor, spent money for medieino and took it { faithfully. To my iuiluilo regret I got no belter, and another do .'tor was called in. More medicine was prescribed and this I took, but it did uo good. Those terrible pains continued to make life miserable for inc. The doctors blandly told me that L could not be cured entirely, if at all. Pleas ant news, wasu't it? Well, I eontinued to f work about the house here and suffered un told agonies. T did not give up hope but did ! all I could to relieve my misery. Nothing 1 gave me auy reliof, however, and I had be- i gun to think that all hope must he abaud- i otiod, when, in reading the Evening AVic*. 1 j s.nv Dr. Williams' Pink Pills advertised. The printed testimonial coming from a res'.- j ■ dent of this oily led me to believe timt I, too, might be benefited by these pills and not i without some misgivings 1 bought a box ol , them. ''Almost as soon as I began to take tliom 1 felt relieved and the first marked indication i i of improvement was when that tired, weary. | don't-care reeling disappeared. This was in 1 , it self something to bo grateful for. bit othe | . and more pleasing results followed arter I had taken more of the pills. My headache ceased entirely and the pain in my stomach j troubled me no more. Now once in a great 1 while I have an occasional aeh" or a pain, | lut 1 know tho cure. Out comes the Piuk rills, and after taking one or two of them, j away the pain goes. It all seems so good t ■ i me that at times I <• scarcely believe that' it can. be true and vol l .know that if I had j not used these Pink Pills 1 would still be ' suffering agony such as few people do in this 1 W lid."' Dr. Williams' Pink Pills contain, in a eon- | deu.sed form, all the elements necessary to give new life and richness t<>tbo blood and j restore shattered nerves. They are an uu- j failing specific for such diseases as locomotor ' ataxia, partial paralysis, St. Vitus' dance, i sciatica, neuralgia, rheumatism, uorvout i headache, the after effect of la grippe, pal pitation of the heart, pale and sallow com- | plexioDS, all forms of weakness either In i male or female. Pink Pills are sold by all dealers, or will be sent post paid on receipt of price, iSO cents a box, or six boxes f->r j •rii.fjO—they are never sold iu bulk or by the : 1 ;, 0) by addressing Dr. Williams* Medicine i Company, Schenectady, >!. Y. Highest of all in Leavening Power.— Latest U. S. Gov't .Report Absolutely PURE ® a|(et bmih& M. mm, tlx- races at Hamilton same years ago, pune"^'leHCßiM Invitoil certain tenant farmers to tht C . „ ' „ CRADE palace In witness the sports. Amory '% L COCOAS anil CHOCOLATES tllOSe Who ClllllP wore some oldors of tllf J pj, O" thli Continent, htv*reemd kirk, aud one who held similar office HIGHEST AWARDS In the After the races ftnm were over the ilukc asked the Fret ST*m'\ n t-; n | „„j r„„j Clin fell elder how he had enjoyed him Bj I ■ Industrial and FOOd self. "Grand, yottr grace, just grand |w ,i d ! EXPOSITIONS an' I've won some hits o' hawliees, too j AH i ,V t\ |H EUROPE AND AMERICA, lmt dinna let on to onybody, for I'm US : , 1 Pc a ,,tinnTTrTi.w ' ">• I'll'' l - I '''- I'll'- never mind that." said Fffl j, , H^SESL tile dllke. "So-ailli-So and So-antl-Sc I sl2l tf) Lf'ewulK, etmtunirrßßhnuUl make run . IvIBL I it 1 our plncp of manufacture, have lieen betting. too, and tliov ai'f vliiiltfiWHlJP*** l 1 " ' ' 1 11 1 elders." "Oil, a.v; they are elders, nac ; prin aon *ch package. (loot; but they are Auld kirk eiders, an SOLD BY GROCERS EVERYWHERE. they're no' nearly so strict a boot theii duties as us Free Church folk." WALTER BAKER 4 CO. LTO. DORCHESTER, MASS. - FN If IO 05 TTc Would Talk. Gus de Smith 1 wonder if the editor f Jf? I" LJ tikfffl A of t lie Huglo would say a pood word P pa Pwe for our ere,nation society if I asked lgf|&. PQPHAfii'j ASTHMA SPECIFIC 1111,1 • llf f in FIVR minutes B*nd .Innes 1 gness so. Nothing pleases him any heller than giving somebody imStftt ti roast, -'testis Sittings. [ill n 'hi n tin iiwnin fMiiHiw 00000000-OCOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOCKJOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO L^HWcb S ter' S International o it" . Dictionary! a |j °fi tno , 1 Conri.tiin f.S. Oov'l rrintinir OflUv.aml O 9 i /i\ r nearly uli Stuoclbooka. Louiincndedbyniiitaioftupi-nuteiiUciiiHor sciiooß o X {MM '• THE BEST FOn PRACTICAL PURPOSES. X ~ r i It is casj' to find the word wanted. o O J It is easy to ascertain the pronunciation 6 ' S lo trace the growth cf a word. £ o gtfarwiS ls eas y to learn what a word means. 0 6 c:. Cc t". NScrriam Co., KprinjflicUl, Mass. j O o-oooc -o-000-o-0000000-0000-000-o-00-O-00000-00-000 borrowing' from health. ~— /&./% '| If you have borrowed from I ' jfflX Efjai health to satisfy the demands • of business, if your blood is ' , ciffe'/?' 1101 getting that constant v §&% supply of fat from your food '"""v-'V- W ! ' it -Wild li:t\ \ "it must \ /%••'V ' |I,IV 1,, uk fn'm somewhere, - potm v. in-re will he from the fat stored up in The sign of this borrowing is thinness; the result, nerve ■fvastc. You need fat to keep the blood in health unless you want to live with no reserve force —live from hand to mouth. SCOTT'S EMULSION of Cod-liver Oil is more than a medicine. It is a food. The. Hypophosphites make it a nerve food, too. 11 comes as near perfection as good things ever come in this world, T>e sure you gft Scott's F ///.v ',; /• whe:: you want it and not a cheap substitute. Scott & Bowne, New York, am Druggists. 50c. mid sl. Brevity is the Soui of Wit." Good Wife You s\3eed SAPOLiO AN UPKIGHT !>IAN There is eertainiy some, slight feeling of hu miliation in being bent down and obliged to | creep along for fear of a snap in the spinal 'column. It is such u plain show of decrcptl lude that we fcl embarrassed. P's seen ever> day when lumbago lakes a g od hold on a stitch in the bark. There is vei\\ little syinpa thv for one in such a plight, for it is so well known that St. .bo ohs oil will mre it prompt ly and that neglect is tlie < ause of so much disability. Why not the remedy always on hand and prevent such dix omfort. Over 700 comets have boon visible to the uaked eye during tho Inst I,HOO years. To Avobl constipation is to prolong life. RipausTalmles are gentle, yet positive in their cure of consti pation. One taoule gives relief. Asiatic cholera is the most rapidly fatal di sease known to medical science. FITS stopped free by Dn. Kmnk'k (*HKAT NEUVK liKsTour.u. No tits after first day's use. Marvelous run Treatise and S'.'.oo trial bot t '*• free. Dr. Kline, (01 Arch Ht., Phila., Pa. Out of a population of <500,003 Sweden has 2,000 lioman Catholics. Mrs. Winslow's Soothing .Syrup for children teething, softens the gums, rcduees inflnnvi ticn. allays pain, cures wind colic. 250. a bottle Thero nro several oiivo orchards iu Califor nin, with orer 15,000 trees. IT. Kilmer's SWAMP-HOOT cures nil Kidney and Bhuldor troubles. Pamphlet and consultation" free. Laboratory Binghuinpton, N.Y. Tho leek is indigeneous to Nwi'/.erlntid, whence it was introduced into England. Ifa (flirted wi I h -■< ■• \\ •* IIT I r. Na ac TIMIIIII ton's Eye-water. Druggists sell at 25c per bottle Ten thousand lead toy soldiojs aro ttiruod out in Xurember every day. We Iftvr nut been without I'lso's ( are lor ( ousutnptioii for 20 years- L.iz/.tK I KKKI.I. Camp street. Harrisburg, l'a.. May 4, About 400.000 pounds of soap aro used iu Clroat l'.ritlan yearly. A Gorman Custom. The custom of celebrating gold and silver weddings belongs to Germany Tho silver wedding occurred only on the twenty-lifth anniversary, and most people could celebrate that, but to be fifty years married was a sort of an event in n family. The house was quite covered with garlands, all the neigh bors from far and near were assem bled. Luck of Breeding. "She certainly was a person of very poor breeding." • "Why do you say that?" "She absolutely refused to enter Intc conversation while the quartet was singing."- Judge.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers