FIELDS OF Ai)VENTURE,! THRILLING INCIDENTS AND DARING DEEDS ON LAND AND SEA. A T.lffhthoiißo Keeper's Daughter riunged Into Seething Waftrs to the Rescue of Two I>lpu WOO Had Fallen Overboard —Dove Hunter's Exciting Experience. A Bridgeport (Conn.) correspond ent of the New York Herald says that Stratford Light shelters a heroine. Agues Judson, tlio pretty daughter of the light keeper, late on a recent after noon dashed into the waters that seethe and boil off the base of tho light, and with tho help of her brother brought ashore two men who, while fishing, had fallen from their boat. One of the men was about to give up the struggle for life when tho girl reached him with a rope and brought him ashore. Agnes Judson is scarcely seventeen years old. Blie lives with her parents and her brother Henry in the light houso, and at times assists her father and brother in attending to the light. She is a noted swimmer, and lias won prizes in amateur swimming contests along the shore. The water of the Sound off Strat ford Light is always rough, and under tho iutluenco of any high wind is broken into waves which, because of tho shoals and tho rocks iu the vicin ity, become dangerous. At times it is almost certain that any boat anchor ing in tho vicinity will be dashed to pieces. Yet notwithstanding the well known dangers of the spot, it i 3 a favorite resort for fishermen, tho weak fish and bluetish running iu' great numbers in tho vicinity. Miss Judson was up in the tower of the lighthouse. A strong wind was coming in from the south, and the surface of tho sound was broken into choppy waves, which were every hour growing more difficult for any small boat to contend against. As the plucky girl was looking oft' shore she saw a small yawl which had anchored off tho reef earlier in tho afternoon pitching and rolling ominously. 111 it were two men who had been fishing and who did not seem to appreciate tho danger of their situation. While Miss Judson watched them she saw one of the men arise from one of the thwarts, nnd, going forward, attempt to raise tho anchor. There is considerable wreckage at this locality, and the man seemed to be unable to dislodge the anchor, which had apparently become entangled in some of the sunken iron and rocks. His companion, noticing his difficulty, and being summoned by the fishermen in the bow, started forward to help, but he was unused to tho constant shifting of the boat, and as he reached the for ward part his companion gave a pull, which threw him over 011 one of the gunwales. The sudden roll made the man in tho bow lose his foothold, and head first he went overboard into the seething current. His companion was unable to recover his balance and quickly followed tho other fisherman into the Sound. All this happened in a minute. Miss Judson at once appreciated tho peril of the two men. Seizing the rope of the alarm bell, which is used only in cases of the greatest emergency, she rang an alarm. Then, rushing down the winding stairs of the tower, slio called to her brother, who was 111 a room 011 one of the lower stages, to follow her, and dashed out 011 the rocks facing the scene of the accident. Miss Judson was clad in a light summer gown. Seizing a rope which had been fastened to a timber of the tower, she again called to lier brother and plunged into tho waves. The men were struggling in the deep water a hundred yards from tho light house. One of them seemed scarcely able to keep himself afloat. He hud already shown signs of distress when Miss Judson 11 oared him. She called to him at the top of her voice to keep his courage up and then she struck out to his rescue. licnry Judson also had gone into the water and was following his bravo sister with as sturdy strokes. The weaker fisherman seemed just about to sink for the second time when Miss Judson succeeded in getting the end of the rope within his reach. He was so dazed that at first he did not seem to know what to do, but the plucky girl commanded him to "catch hold" and by sheer force of her determina tion compelled him to grasp it. Then with lier assistance the man was gotten into shallow water, while Henry attended to the other fisherman and succeeded in landing him at the lighthouse platform. Once within the lighthouse, the man whom Miss Judson had saved and whose name is Edward Lowe, was overcome by his experience, but re storatives were administered and soon he and his companion, Herman Chase, were able to leave the lighthouse and go to their homes in Bridgeport, where they related their experience and the tale of the pluck of pretty Miss Judson, who had saved both their lives, A Dove Hunter'* Exciting: Experience. "What was the most exciting ex perience I ever had?" repeated Clar ence Haight at tho Olympic Gun Club. "I think it occurred last sum mer, when I was hunting doves up in Sonoma County. Now, shooting doves is not particularly exciting or perilous, hut this was one of the hottest experi ences I ever had. "I had been traveling all day with a big bag, and was pretty well tired out when I struck the country road and started for home. It was a good four miles' walk, and I was pretty well pleased to see a wagon load of liay ap proaching. The rancher gave me per mission to ride, so I scrambled up on top, lay down on tliej sweet, new mown hay and went swaying and swinging down the road. I was just dozing oft' when bang went my shot- Sun. I* had forgotten to take the cartridges out of it, and something had pressed the trigger. The horses gave a jump, and the driver rolled oil' into the ditch. "Then I discovered that my gun had set lire to the hay, and I thought it was about time for mo to escape. The horses were teariugaiong the road as hard as they could run, hut I clam bered for the side of the load and slid for the road. The tail of my stout hunting coat caught on the top of a sharp standard, and there I hung to the careening wagon that threatened to upset and dump a load of burning bay on me at every turn of the road. "The fire was crackling and burning fiercely, and already I could feel the flames. Still the horses ran, and still my coat held me fast to that seething j mass of flames. My trousers com- i menced getting hot, and then I founcj ( my coat was 011 fire. The next moment the loose cartridges in my pockets commenced exploding from the heat, and then I smelled my doves broiling. • "J had just made up my mind that all was over, when the tail of my coat burned oft' and I was thrown into a ditch full of water beside the road. I did not stop to see what became of the hay and the horses, nor the rancher, but cut straight across that field for home. That, gentlemen, was the most thrilling expeiience of my life." —New York Press. Savon Ills bather From a Bull. John August, of Woodward Hill, in the town of Coventry, Conn., was badly gored by a bull the other night and would have been killed had it not been for the heroism of his nine-year old sou, Hubert. Mr. August was off his guard and unarmed when he entered the en closure, and the bull charged him without warning. Ho dodged suc cessfully once or twice, but there was neither time nor opportunity for escape. Twice he was tossed on the horns of the animal. His clothes were torn and his body was injured, and he was already sinking from exhaustion. At this juncture the son appeared, and, quickly arming himself with a pitch fork, began a combat with the bull. At the first thrust the animal merely lashed his tail with fresh fury, and rushed again. The boy struck home. The bull finally turned upon his young assailant. The boy struck the animal a sharp blow across the nose. The bull hesitated. With renewed anger the bull low ered his head for another lunge, and once more the prongs of the pitchfork ' pricked his neck. Again he paused and stared in apparent amazement at the little fellow who was meanwhile . shouting words of encouragement to his father. One more blow in the face I and the bull stepped backward. Pol lowing up his advantage tho boy soon had him retreating sufficiently to al low tho father to crawl out of harm's way. Then, with his eye still on the hull, which was preparing to renew the light, he nimbly dodged the next rush and escaped. Boys Fight With n Bear. Henry Sutton and Daniel Hart, two hoys, had a desperate encounter with a bear, which attacked them near Marble, Col. Hart wounded the bear, which became more furious, and struck at Sutton, who plunged a knife into it. Hart fired again, and then the bear knocked Sutton ten feet and 1 was about to kill him, when Hart fired again, killing the bear. It weighed 582 pounds and measured fivo feet ten inches. Near by in a cave were a fe male bear and her cubs, but they es caped. A Useful Ant-Kuter. When a horde of yellow caterpillars infested the linden trees atthe Zoologi cal Gardens last week, Head Keeper Mauley, who is in charge during the ' absence of Superintendent Brown, was sadly puzzled for away to get rid ol the pests. Poisonous sprinkling mix tures, tar and coal oil were applied to the trees, but the results fell far short of what had been hoped. The cater pillars flourished iu spite of all, and seemed to increase in numbers. Then tho ingenious head keeper had a happy idea. lie took the South American ant-eater from its cage, and, securing it with a collar and a long cord, started it up one of tho trees. The way the creature laid about with its long sticky tongue, scooping in caterpillars by the dozen, more than realized Mauley's greatest expectations. It took to them with as much relish as though they were its natural food, and in the course of half an hour completely cleaned the tree. Mauley put the ant eater up another tree and it ate until it was gorged. Since then it has been turned out three times a day, and su great have been its industry and appe tite that the caterpillars are nearly exterminated.—Philadelphia Record. Picture on a Grain of Corn. Probably the smallest piece of paint in;; in the world is that executed by a Flemish artist. It is painted on the smooth side of a grain of common white corn, and pictures a mill and a j miller mounting a stair with a sack ol gruin on his back. Tbo mill is repre sented as standing on a terrace and near it is a horse and cart, while a j group of several peasants is shown in the road near by. The picture is ! beautifully distinct, every object be- j ing finished with microscopio fidelity, j yet by earel'ul measurement it is shown that the whole painting does j not cover a surface of half an inch square.—Chicago Journal. Lowly But Learned. *"• Advanced domestic servants who read Carlyle, Ruskin, Darwin, Huxley and Herbert Spencer have been dis covered by the Daily Telegraph in London. It has also found a cook who took a Latin prize at the Poly technic, and a housemaid who passed a university extension geometry exami nation. Improved Summer Coraot. Among the myriad of comfortable things for the summer girl is the im proved summer corset of silk net, with soft elastic gores, simply edged with feather-stitching in silk floss. There are no fripperies nor extra frills to take Up any room, nor become frayed, hut the corset itself is a gem. It is the perfection of shape, and the manufac turer claims that it will wear better than any of tlio "ventilation" corsets of heavier fabric. Stout, short-waisted women have quite made up their minds that the short, graceful tennis or bicycling corset is a boon for them for constant wear. Beauty nnd tlio "Blue-Stocking.•• The popular idea of the day, that in tellectuality is not abundant where beauty dwells, is strengthened by the fact that we have learned to associate spectacles, frowsy hair, and lack of style in apparel, with higher education iu woman. The "blue-stocking" ele ment in womanhood is not given to personal adornment. It is apt to place too light an estimate upon beauty of feature and style of dress as compared with intellectual growth; and it is this condition which lias created the pre judice against higher education of wo men. Physical culture may have some effect upon this; but at present the "college-girl face," with it 3 intensity of expression, its stamp of superiority is something to avoid. Beauty and intellectuality may travel band in hand, and have done so down the ages to the present time. Beauti ful women should be as brilliant and as accomplished as plain women. And plain women may cultivate the most attractive kind of beauty to take the place of that which they have been de nied, by studying their personal ap pearance and their dress, and by culti vating a charm of manner which will lead tho observer to forget the com monplace type of tho face itself.— Doinorest's Magazine. A Story of l'l-lncest* Victoria. ' The English papers are still engaged in resurrecting stories of the early life of the Queen. One of the most recent is anent a certain Mr. Hunnings, the son of a rich landed proprietor, who lived near Kensington Gardens. He was about twenty-five when, meeting the young Princess Victoria of Kent, befell madly in love with her. The police were at first disposed to inter fere, but {finding that his intentions were the most harmless in the world, they contented themselves with watcn ing him. Hunnings was wont to fol low the Princess wherever she wont, and one day sho mistook him for a beggar. To prevent a repetition of this error, he took to driving every where she drove in a carriage exactly like hers, except for the eoat-of-arms. This offended Victoria, and she begged to be delivered from tho man. Deprived of his former mode of at tracting her attention, Hunnings turned to heroic methods; he wrote her a let ter asking for her hand. This was, of course, intercepted, but in the mean time some wag interfered, and Hun nings was made the frequent recipient of ardent love letters, presumably from the Princess. The honor was too much for his reason—evidently never very strong. One day at a charity bazar, having arrived too late to secure a pieco of needlework of Victoria's own manufacture, lie became violent, and had to bo put in u straitjackot. He died soon after. A touching incident of the otherwise grotesque affair was a very manly let ter written by Hunnings to Victoria before'he became [completely insane, and when she ascended the throne. Believing that she loved him, 110 never theless wrote sacrificing his love for her upon the altar of his country. Tlio Fashion in l'arasols. Parasols have undergone a radical change since last year, and this will bo hailed with rejoicing by the woman who unites a desire for present styles with a moderate income. The ela borate, chiffon-covered creation has had its day. It may be seen marked down at every bargain counter. The parasol of the present is a plain coach ing parasol, and by judiciously choos ing the shade one may be made to do double duty, or even quadruple, where ono cannot have a hat or a parasol to match every gown. This does not mean that parasols no longer match gowns. Many are made every summer to go with a particular costume. The blue and white combinations so popular this year are generally accompanied by hats and parasols in harmony, if not an exact match, but it is not ob-1 ligatory. Changeable taffeta parasols are still .much used, and the combinations seem inore alluring than ever. White para sols with a hemstitched hem look very cool on these hot July days, and tempt those of us who had bravely decided to forego this accessory to our light gowns to indulge in one. This hem stitched hem may be seen iu other colors, but looks best in white. Tucked parasols are also seen in mauy shops, changeable red taffeta silk with tucks of white laid on it being shown in one of the most exclu sive shops. Such striking combina tions, however, should not be purchased by those who cUnnot afford to lay them aside when tired of tho novelty and brilliancy of shade. Gros grain and moire parasols are seen very often, and have a more staid look than the taffeta. They are n^ore suitable for tbo ohaperon of the sum- j iner girl than for that interesting dam sel herself. Umbrellas grow thinner and thinner and the handles smaller and smaller, until one wonders what will support them over one's head on a rainy day if they continue to grow more modest. The favorite umbrellas are of dark changeable, green, blue or red silk, with a smooth, straight, wooden han dle, finished with a tiny round knob of silver or of mother-of-pearl finished with silver. Of course, this modesty of design makes tho very best sort of an umbrella within the reach of a not too well lined purse.—Washington Star. At the Now Hospital for Women in Londou, England, all tho doctors are women. | Governor Tanner has appointed j three wo men as deputy factory inspec i tors for Illinois. Ellen Terry charges twenty-five i cents for her autograph, and gives tho money to endow a child's b3d in an j English hospital. Miss Kate Mickles Bradley, of I Washington, D. C., daughter of tho j lato Colonel George W. Bradley, | United States Army, has become a professional model. The will of the late Charles Bill, of Springfield, Mass., bequeaths S7OOO to j Wellesley College, the interest of which is to bo given as a scholarship to deserving students. iMiss Christine Lav/, of Springfield, Mass., has been appointed assistant 1 clerk of courts. The appointment is ! for three years, and is a tribute to j Miss Law's faithful work. Miss Helen Gladstone will under take the opening ceremony in connec tion with the Hotel for Women Stu dents, which has been erected at Ban gor, near Belfast, Ireland. Three sisters—Perl, Lulu and Zoe Griffin—are the editors and proprie tors of a daily newspaper in Maryville, Mo. It is the only daily newspaper in tho Fourth Congressional district outside of St. Joseph. Mrs. French, of Beloit, Wis., left by will to Beloit college SSOOO on con dition that no vivisection bo practiced in any of its departments. If this condition is not complied with, the amount is to go to the American Hu- | mane Education society of Boston. Mrs. Ulysses S. Grant has rented ' tho [[cottage of, Ex-Vice-Presideut Stevenson at Sorrento, Me., and in- j tends to entertain extensively. In her household of ten will be thedaugh- | ter of Mrs. Sartoris, whom Americans 1 still like to speak of as "Nellie Grant." Mrs. Jennio Benson, who conducts ; a large store in Omaha, Neb., employs ! only women in her establishment. For nine years she has managed her business alone, extending it every year and finding time with it all for social duties and oven a little literary work. In Cambridge, England, tho applica tion of young women students for hon orary degrees was denied by the Uni versity Senate by a majority of nearly three to one. The undergraduate students, as a body, viciously opposed the proposition, and became fairly riotous. Mrs. Lydia Leggetfc is at present pastor of the Unitarian Church at ■ Dighton, Mass. She has made efforts to enter the divinity school at Harvard. The faculty has decided by special vote to admit her. She will retain her pulpit at Dighton, making weekly trips from Cambridge. Mrs. Lovey Aldrich, one of tho seven widows of Revolutionary soldiers who fought in the war of 1770, died at the home of her son, E. C. Aldrich, in San Diego, Cal., recently. Mrs. Al drich was born in Sanborn ton, N. H., on March 29, 1800, and was in her ninety-eighth year at the time of her death. A daughter of the brilliant Du Maurier apprenticed herself to a fine London dressmaker and perfected her self in tho details of tho business. : Sho is now married to a London bar rister with his fortune yet to make, but she is reputed ono of the best dressed women in London, her gowns of her own design and manufacture. Fashion Noted. Hum! engraved leather goods attract deserved attention. Pearl necklaces and jeweled collars are still fashionable. Brocade opera bags with gate tops j . of silver gilt are very popular. Toilets articles in porcolain and mounted in silver appear to please. I Full capes of tine wool, cloth and velvet are cut out in pretty desigus, 1 outlined and embroidered in passe menterie to show the rich silk lining. Visiting mantles are trimmed with 1 bead, spangle and jet embroideries. 1 Much jet and ribbon are used to trim I capes of patterned materials fitted at the back. A style of saeque coat has a charm- j ing effect .on slender figures. It is | cut in three pieces, has bell sleeves, : and a pretty braiding to imitate u i Figaro front. A fine, squarely built settle is a handsome piece of hall furniture. It is richly, though soberly carved' on j sides and high back. The seat, when I lifted, shows a chest beneath, and at I each end is an umbrella raok. i- THOUGHT HE WAS A HERO. Dilemma of the Man Who field u Burat Duthtub Together. One of the most ridiculous situations which at the time bring the coldest sweat out of a man's brow, ami ever after re;aain with him as a constant I source of mirth, occurred to a Skelton ! merchant a few days ago. He thought ! he would take a bath, and as his fiat I Is minus one of the ehief requisitlos for the job — a bathtub—he extemporized one out of a small washtub and eii- I joyed a cooling ablution. 110 had just concluded and stepped from the tub for the towel, when sud denly the top hoop of the tub burst with a sharp report, and the man saw to his horror that the whole contents of the tub would soon be Hooding the floor. At the same moment he thought of the store beneath and the amount of damage the water would do as it ran down through the ceiling. He is a man of quick thought, and In a moment ho did the only thing possible, threw him self down beside the tub and, clasping his arms around It, held the already fast swelling staves together. He was successful in keeping the water in—but what a situation. He dared not yell, for he was hardly In a condition to receive callers, especially as he knew Uiat all in the block at the time were of hlie gentler sex, and he realized at fflnce that tho only tiling left for him Was to stay in that position until ths return of his wife, who was out on a shopping expedition. Llko the boy who saved Holland, he manfully remained in his most uncom fortable position until relief in the shape of his wife appeared. Then to rap the climax, when he asked her to j got a rope or any old thing to tie about I the tub, she, after a long fit of uncon trollable laughter, asked him why he didn't carry the tub and contents out to the sink room and pour out the water. With a look that froze tho smile on her face he did ns slie said, and without a word donned his clothing and wandered out into the cold, unfeel ing world, a crushed and humiliated man.—Ansonia Conn.. Sentinel. Curious Lands In Florida. j Payne's Prairie, three miles south of this city, covers an area of 50,000 acres. A large proportion oi' the prairie is now covered with water, but there are thou sands of acres around the borders of the lake which has been formed on which horses and cattle graze. There Is no way of estimating tbo number of cattle,-but there are many thousands, and they are in fine condition. The prairie, or savanna, which it really is, occasionally goes dry, tho water pass lug out through a subterranean pas sage called the sink. Where the water goes to has never been determined. When the sink is open tho lake goes dry, and when tho outlet becomes gorged or choked, a lake from live to ; seven miles wide and about eighteen miles long is formed. When the waters of the lako suddenly leave it, thousands of alligators, snakes, fish, and turtles are left with nothing but mud for their places of abode. Tho fish and turtles perish, but the and reptiles seek and find other quarters. For miles along the northern border of the lake there is a succession of sinks, averag ing in depth all the way from 25 to 100 feet. Subterranean passages run in every direction, leaving the ground in the shape of a honeycomb. The ground is liable to give way at any time, cre ating a new sink. The scenery around tlio lake, especially on the north side, Is unique and grand, niul is an attrac tive feature tcf strangers who visit this city. The sink has for many years been a popular resort for citizens of Gainesville, who go there to fish, boat ride, and ia other ways enjoy them selves. It Is said that this vast area of land could be drained at trilling ex pense, and were it drained it would bo the largest as well as the richest tract of productive land in Florida. It is for the most part a bed of muck. Tho land Is owned by various individuals.— Gainesville Sun. Where the Office Sought the Man. Talk about Poo Balis, Representative King of Utah claims to carry the x>rizo for offleeliolding. "I o>noe held six offices at the same time," he said yesterday to a reporter. "Ln the early days of Fillmore City, in my State, we actually had more offices than men, consequently I was City Assessor and Collector, City Recorder, City Attorney, County Attorney, mem ber of the Board of Education, and member of the State Legislature. That was a pretty good handful for a young ftian not 22 years of age."—Washington Post. In a country town, when & man buys a new suit, people guy him for a week. STATE OP OHIO, CITY OF TOLEDO, ? LUCAS COUNTY, f FRANK J. CHENEY makes oath tliat ho is tho senior partner of the firm of F. CHENEY Co., doing business in the City ofTolodo.County aiul State aforesaid, and that said linn will pay the sum of ONE HUNDRED DOLLARS for each and every case of CATAUKH that cannot be cured by tho use of HALI/S CATAUKH CURE. FRANK J. CHENEY. Sworn to before me and subsoribed in my l presence, this 6th day of December, SEAL V A. D. 1866. A. W. GLB A SON. —) Notary PubHf. Hall's Catarrh Cure Is taken Internally, and nets directly on the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. Send for testimonials, free. F. J. < HEN BY 6c Co., Toledo, O. Sold by Druggists. 75c. Rail's Family Pills are the heat. Try Graln-Q! TryGmin-O! Ask your grocer to-day to show you a pack ago of Grain-O, tho new food drink that taken the place of coffeo. Tho children may drink It without injury® as well as the adult. All r.ho try It like it. Grain-O lias that rich seal brown of Mocha or Java, hut it is made from puro grains, and the mostdelicate stomach re ceives it without distress. One-quarter the price of coffee. 15 cts. and 35 cts. per package. Bold by all grocers. Fits permanently cured. No fits or nervous ness after first, day's use of Dr. Kline's Groat Nerve Restorer. s3trial bottle and treatise free DH. R. H. KLINE, Ltd., U3l Arch St.,Phila.,Pa. Mrs. Wlnslow's Soothing Syrup for children teething, softens the gums, reducing inflamma tion, allays pain, cures wind colic. 35c.a bottle. I So "Particnlnv. "They seem quite partieulnrinParls," | I said an attache of the state depart, j I ment, "about having the French lan j guage used by any representative of j j the United States." "Yes," replied Miss Cayenne: "I un- ■ derstand they go so far as to insist on putting French labels on American wines."—Washington Star. Without Effort. Anxious Mother—l don't understand how it is, Bertie, that you are always at the foot of your class. Bertie—l don't understand it myself; j but I know It's dreadful easy.—Eoston Transcript. Gettlnc ot the Root of Thinen, Eea (sadly)—l don't know what to do with that boy of mine. He's been two years at the medical college, and still he keeps at the foot of his class. Perrins (promptly)— Make a chiropo dist of him.—Tid-Bits. C) Pistols and Pestles. % Ip §pih The duelling pistol now occupies its proper (OA I ' place, in the museum of the collector of relics ffSj) of barbarism. The pistol ought to have beoido J|f it the pestle that turned out pills like bullct3, JIK f|p) to be shot like bullets at the target of the (SJ liver. But the pestle is still in evidence, and /5fC \,) will be, probably, until everybody has tested the virtue of Ayer's sugar coated pills. They treat the liver as a friend, not as an enemy. mm) Instead of driving it, they coax it. They are t compounded on the theory that the liver does pSf Q J its work thoroughly and faithfully under f \ obstructing conditions, and if the obstructions JS Vvjiy are removed, the liver will do its daily duty. (Cfill) When your liver wants help, got "the pill V J that will," V. / • ; Ayer's Cathartic Pails. ft C ) *__ . _ O * i ► The list price of a Columbia Bicycle ] j means just what it states — one price to \ \ all. We do not list at one price and sell j j j for anything we can get; when the price j ' j changes it changes for all alike. j 1897 GOLURftBiAS, .... $75 i STANDARD OF THE WORLD. E 3 1896 COLUMBSAS, .... SSD \ j| 1697 MARTFORDS, *.. *. . 50 : HARTFORDS Pattern 2, . . 45 HARTFORD Pattern I, . . . 40 : HARTFORD Patterns 5 and 6, 30 ► , 1 ► i POPE MANUFACTURING CO., Hartford, Conn. | ! I If Columbias are not properly represented In your vicinity, let us know. ► IWMANWIIM By J. Hamilton A yore, A. M., M. D, fThis is a most Valuable Boole for Househo: tWimic.il terms which render most Doctor Books so valueless to the generality of readers. This Book is 5*- • intended to be of Service in tho M /If Family, and is so worded us to be readily understood by all. Only 60 CTS. POST-PAID. Before and After Taking.* (The low prioe only hei m(|d# possible by the immense edition printed}. Not only does this Book contain no muoh Information ltolative to Diseases, hut very properly gives a Completo Analysis of everything pertainiug to Courtship, Marriage and tho Produc&m and Rearing of Healthy Families; together with Valuable Recipes an I Pre scnpUona,.Explanations of Botanical Practice, Correct us© of Ordinary Herbs. New Edition, Revised and Enlarged with Complete Index, With this Book in the house there is no excuse for not knowing what to do in an emergency. Don't wait until you have illness in your family before vou order, but sen I atones for this valuable volume. OtfLY GO CENTS POST-PAID. Bend postal notes or postage stamps of any denomination not larger than 5 oents. BOOK PUBLISHING HOUSE 134 Leonard Street, N. Y. City. In a World Where "Cleanliness is Next to Godliness," no Praise is Toa Great tor _ SAPOLIO DRUNKP^ii M# Hll Bill Writ* Kenovt Chemical Co., routea. climate, and toe indescribable wi-iltii awuiting tha miners. Sent,, postage paid, on receiptorfiOo. in m imps, by the Toronto Newspaper In I oik Publishers. 44 Buy St., Toronto, tauuils. Try Allen's Foot-Kase, A powder to lie shaken into the shoes. At thf# season your feet, feel swollen and hot, and get tired easily. Jf you have smarting feet or tight shoes, try Allen's Foot-Ease. It cools the feet and makes walking easy. Cures and prevents swollen and sweating leet. blisters and callous spots. Relieves corns a - d bunions o' all pain and gives rest and comfort. Try it fo-fkit/. Sold ova 11 druggists and shoe stora® for 3a cent*. Trial package FKEE. Address Allisn S. Of.MSTKii, Leßoy, N. Y. I hare found Pise's Cure for Consnmptfoui an unfailing medicine.—F. R. Loxz, IJUG Scot# St., Covington, Ky., Oct. 1,180-L. 1 S/LOS KG# HOW TO BUILD ASK WILLIAM® MFG. CO.. KALAMAZOO. MICH. great riches, Ht.-. we do a regular patent i>u>