C0DF1SIUNG. HOW AS IMPpRTANT IISII IS CAUGHT. FOOD Characteristics of the Co Trawl Fishing IYo m Dories Iiines ; 3000 Feet Lionjr Our- lag iiic i- weighed The cod along our shores differs a little from that on the Banks, being of another species. It is not a migratory flab., like the mackerel, but lives in great colonies, having but a limited range. Although they may live in very near waters, if is said that they do not inter mingle with those of a neighboring colony. The fish of each has character istics wTiir.h distinguish it from those of another. ! In general, it may be said, that the cod is of a greenish brown, when fresh from the water, and is spotted with red dish yellow. The under part is a silvery opaque white, and the fins are of a pale green. It can be distinguished from the haddock, with which it often feeds, by its white lateral line. The lino on the haddock's side is always black. In the upper jaw there are four rows of sharp teeth, in the lower, one row. The scales are small and the eyes large. There are ten fines, three of which are upon the back. i I have seen a codfish that nearlv one hundred nounds. and have heard of one caught near by that weighed one hundred and fifteen pounds after its entrails had been taken out. But one of eighty pounds is considered a large one even by fishermen, and an amateur will go wild over one of twenty. Those caught upon the Banks . seldom reach eighty pounds, being of a smaller species. : The cod is a 4eep-sea fish, as indi- "otpr. hv ft liHlo nnnenr.fto'fi- two inches j r i o-i . long, hanging from its lower iaw. This is called a barbule. It finds its foods at the bottom, upon sand-banks and around sunken ledges usually at some distance from the shore, although, in cold weather, it may sometimes be taken by fishing from the rocks. As the season advances the cod re sorts to deeper water, tor it is strictly a cold-water fish. Its food consists of worms, sand-eels, crabs and other small fchellfish, bt is not over -particular as to what it swallows. A great variety of 1 articles has been taken from the stomachs of cod straw, stones, rubber balls, jacknives, snulf-boxes, nutmegs, old iron, glass and broken crockery. The Indians caught fish with lines made of bark and hooks of bone. Formerly all cod were caught by mean3 of handlings, and some fish are still taken in this way, especially in the autumn when they are abundant. The most, however, are now taken by trawls, which were introduced here about 18'JO, and were first used by the French. A trawl consists of a line about three thousand feet in length, to which are at tached short ones about thirty-six inches long, on each of which is a hook. The short lines are placed about six feet apart, so that each trawl has about five hundred hooks. Attached to each end of the line by a rope is a buoy, sometimes only an empty powder keg or a mackerel kit. In the head of the buoy is a pole three feet long upon which is a small liag to attract the attention of the owner when in search of it. To each end of the line also is fastened a small anchor. The hooks are baited with squid, herring, or other small fish, if they can be secured. Each fish will bait four hooks. If these cannot be obtained clams are used. Squid bait is con sidered the best, and great quantities are caugat in weirs on Cape Cod, and many vessels resort thither in summer to secure a supply for their trips. To bait a trawl requires from an hour and a half to two Lours. - .' ., When it is ready it is placed in a tub made of a half-barrel. The long line is coiled up in the centre, and the bait lies next the sides of the tub. One man uses from two to six trawls which are often set in the afternoon and visited very early the following morning, and perhaps once or twice more in the course of the day. , " The process is somewhat as follows: "When one buoy is reached, the end of the trawl to which it is attached is drawn up and then hook after hook is examined, and the fish, which have been causrht. are taKen on. uy means oi trawls a man may catch more fish in a single night, than by a week's hard work with, hand lines. Of course they are not all cod. This is a hake, that a haddock, the next a dogfish, and the next a halibut. The un expected is quite likely to come to the . surface upon one of the many hooks. It may be somejiideous fish, or some un couth object which has lo.ng been lying in its oo7.v Vinfl. I have described trawl-fishing as con ducted by one or two men in a dory at from one to five miles from the shore. Schooners of from ten to twenty tons make trips off shore to a distance of i r nil T.wpnrv m a nimn ron tv i i o j 'l imn take a supply of ice as well as of bait, and run into Boston or some other port once or twice a week and sell their fish to dealers, who supply the trade all over New England. Larger schooners visit Georges Bank, the "Western or those of Newfoundland, and may be gone three or. four weess, . bringing their fish to market on ice, , or they may be gone from four to six months dressing and saltans: their fish on board. ' The process of curing fish ha? not changed for two hundred years. In dressing them several men are engaged. The cutter cuts the throat and rips open the fish; the header breaks off the head takes out the entrails, saving the liver; the splitter splits the fish com D'eteiv ODen from throat, tn tail and takes out the back-bone ; the salter salts them, and piles them in bulk in the hold of the vessel. The amount of salt used in Gloucester in a single year amounts to more than a hundred 'thousand hogs heads. When a schooner arrives at port with a "fare of fish" they are taken out with pitchforks, washed, and when the weather is suitable, spread upon flakes to dry. The flakes are frames covered , with triangular slats, aad are about seven feet wide and raised three feet above the ground. At Provincetown they may be seen not only upon the wharves, but also Ln all vacant places between the houses and even in the front dooryards, so that the smell of codfish regtles the passer by instead of ti e fragrance of fiower3. Great care is required to dry fish properly. Cl;ar weather and westerly winds are mosj to be desired. Foggy weather spoils them, and a hot sun melts, or, as the fishermen say, Vnashes" them. To prevent this, screens made of cotton cloth are often placed eighteen inches above them as a protection from the sun's direct rays. ""lu vu. JWU1 U11U UIMJ1Y U&ll 11S- origin in the custom of keeping an ac count of each man's catch, and the dis tribution of the profits of the voyage ac-' cordingly. To make sure of the count the tongues are cut out, and at night taken to the skipper for record. Sometimes three or four men go as "share3meu," and hire the other members of the crew; and sometimes the firm which fits out the vessel takes one-fourth of the proceeds, and divides the rest among the crew after taking out-certain expenses. Youth's Companion. New, York city consumes over 1,000, 000 quarts of milk every month. It re quires the best efforts of -60,000 cows, averaging fourteen quarts in two milk ings, to furnish this amount of milk. Statistics show that during" 1888, re tailer in that city purchased $23,748, 637 worth of milk. The veterans of the late war ate dying t the rata of 6000 a year, - The Ceremony of Incineration. As the public mind becomes more familiarized with the idea of incineration the practice gams in popularity, and the New York Cremation Society is now cremating from ten to twelve bodies every month. . The crematory at Fresh Pond, Long Island,-i3 in its present state far from an imposing-looking structure, but had the original plans been perfected it would present a different appearance. Imagine a bare, but substantial-looking building, of white-washed bricks, with, two lofty smokestacks, and you have a good idea of the building. Neither within nor without is there the slightest attempt at decoration. All seems cold, austere and forbidding. , The body of Heury Walley was in t afternoon. The mourners1 were seated in a row upon wooden chairs . ranged in front oi tne furnace. The coffin was carried into the 1 J Al V.sts3. An rear room, . ope nea, anu mo uuuj en veloped in a sheet soaked in a solution of alum, and then placed upon a cradle of iron, which wa3 in turn laid upon a catafalque of the same metal. This was wheeled into the next chamber, the heavy iron portal swung open, the cata falque was placed in the furnace and the doors reclosed. Two small, round apertures glowed through the im penetrable iiron like two lurid eyes of flame. While combustion is taking place and the gases are escaping through the perforations in the retort these orifices become dull and dark, and it is not until calcination has taken place that they again assume their pristine brilli ancy. It takes four hours to accomplish this at a heat of 2000 degrees, and, to. make sure, the remains are lett until morning. : When the door is again ODened the bodv lviner m the sheet ap pears to be intact, but contact with the air causes it to crumble into dust. The ashes which have fallen into the retort beneath are gathered up and placed in a covered tin can and sent to the relatives. They appear like extreme, y fine grayish powder," and are perfectly odorless. Strangers are shown all that remains of Mr. Cohen, one of the editors of the Slants Zeilung, who left his ashes to the cremation society. , "The putting away of the mortal re mains of a relative is necessarily a har rowing spectacle," said the attendant, "but after all, the sight of a body unaer going the process of cineration is not more heartrending than consigning it to the grave. It is merely less conventional and more unfamiliar. This mode might be robbed of half its horrors, and the ceremony invested with a halo of poetic sentiment were the surroundings of a more ttsthetic nature. Even a thin drapery thrown over the bier would con ceal tht stiff outlines of the dead form and render it a less repulsive spec tacle." New York Press. AGRICULTURAL. TOPICS OP1NTERBST RELATIVE TO FARM AND GARDEN. Onions for Poultry. People who give their poultry finely chopped onions once er twice a week along with their other food, will find it an excellent preventive, to various dis eases, especially where fowls are not al lowed to run at large ana gamer ioou for themselves. When kept mthe close confinement of small ruus, much mon attention is necesssry in supplying the : with a variety than where they have a larger liberty, and: for keeping them ii good health onions are among the bes things that can be given them. ZW York World, A Demand for Bijr Horses. Don't be afraid: of breeding to3 lur -horses, says the New York Herald. Th people of the present day want therii The best farmers will have them, an the heavy freighters in the cities canno do without them.! The si :e of the hora of the future will fix its value. Th boom is up for big ones, so don't neglec to breed them, and afterwaid to fee. them. A big pair of half-breed Norman that are well matched will bring $500 a quickly as one silver dollar will brini another. The best horse for the farme to rise is the draught horse. The 140 to 1700 pound draught horse requires n special experience or training to sell, an c the farmer has no need of a professions trainer. A ready market is constantly open for the draught horse. The de maud far exceeds the supply. Tht farmer can turn them into cash at their real value more quickly than any othei class of horses. While cattle, sheep and hogs have been so depressed the past veat or two, the draught horse breeders havt met an active demand at big prices; ii fact, thev are masters of the situation and about the only class of breeders thai can set up their too. own price, and get it POPULAR SCIENCE. WOMAN'S WORLD. Happiness in Doing Good. A big man walked down Fourteenth street at about 5 o'clock in the afternoon. He was faultlessly dressed with a flower i a his coat lapel and a gold-headed cane in his hand. His moustache was gray and his face a little flushed. J He looked to be about fifty years old, and has been taken for a prosperous New Yorker. He was extremely dignified, j Nobody would have suspected from his walk that he was drunk. His inebriety was of the sort which doe3 not extend below the neck. His legs were perfectly sober, but he removed his hat and made a stately bow to an old darky who was passing in a coal cart. A red handker chief about the colored man's neck had apparently led him to believe that an elegantly attired lady was going by in a landau. J ust above G street a poor, measly cur dog lay on the pavement in the sun. The big man stopped and looked at him. The dog feebly wagged his tail, but was either too poor or too lazy to get up. A sympathetic and benevolent look came into the big man s face. Out from his trousers' pocket he pulled a roll of bills. It was three inches thick. There were tens and twenties, and there must have been hundreds of dollars in the roll. Carefully picking out a dollar bill he laid it on the pavement justhy the dog's nose. "Here, poor doggie, " sard he, "go buy yourself a bone," and as he passed on down the street his face was radiant with the consciousness of a good deed done. Washinjton Pout. ' ' Value of Ashes. "How much areunleached hard-wool! ashes worth per bushel to use on lane which is worth $150 per acre, and whet hay is selling at $12 per ton " asks reader in central Vermont, of the Net England Farmer, and the following re ply is made: "Ashes vary greatly in their actual value and in their selling price according to the kind of wood burned and their freedom from sand, earth and charcoal. The best hard wood ashes often contain nearly ten per cent, of potash while those from some oi the softer woods may show less than three per cent., though it is claimed by some that soft-wood ashes are not so in ferior as many believe, but being lighter than those from Jjard-wood ashes they are easily lost by being blown away while burning. The ashes from small twigs are much richer than those from the trunk of the trees. It is estimated that average ashes .will contain from tour to five pounds of potash in bushel of forty-eight pounds, and that compared with potash salts as now sold in the market they should be worth about twenty-five or thirty cents per bushel, the phosphoric, acid they contain add ing to their value. It is also believed ftnatasnes nave a beneficial ertect upon some soils, independent of their contents of potash and phosphoric acid. The chemist can determine the amount of valuable manurial substance in a given sample, but he cannot say what effect the Bample will have when applied to a certain soiL That is a question which " the farmer must himself answer, by ex periment and intelligent observation." Mercurv may be purified by the simple aspiration of air through it. . '. Electric targets for small-arm pracuco are giving much satisfaction in Italy. Vulcanized asphaltum pavement is being introduced in the City of Mexico. Silesia intends establishing a zoological station for the observation of fresh water fauna. I 1 T-ondon air has an i unusually large amount of carbonic acid in it daring the winter. The isolated electric light instalations In the Madrid theatres arc almost total failures. A soap mine has been discovered near La Mesa, south of Imuris, State of Sonora, Mexico. I A six weeks' electrical exhibition is nrooosed to be held in St. Loui3 next eeptemoer. Capitalists in Zurich and Basle intend utilizing the falls of the Rhine for elec- trical purposes. Professor Eaton, of Yale, advocates the storage battery system for street railways as being much sater tor tne puouc. In the Berlin Observatory a series of astronomical panoramas have bees pie -pared to explain the phenomena ot solar eclipses. j It is believed that the electrical equip ment of the Department of the Interior can hardly be equaled in the world for safety and efficiency, j Professor Ayrton estimates that the power wasted at Niagara Falls exceeds that which could be produced by the annual consumption of 150,000,000 tons of coaL In the country districts of Sweden electric lighting is rapidly increasing. Farmers are putting in independent in stalments worked by turbines at very small expense.' A scientist, who claims to have dis covered the secret of petrifying wood on a large scale, says that by means of his process the largest wooden buildings may be petrified. The microscope often reveals impuri ties in diamonds, particles of organic matter and bubbles of gas beintr com mon. Quartz, chlorite, pyrite, hematite and topaz hSve also been seen. Recent developments tend to show that the chief cause of the burning out of dvnamo armatures is the insecure fastening of the wire to the core, and the consequent chaffing of the insula tion due to the movement of the wire. It is reported that Dr. Eisenmann, of Berlin, has invented a piano which, by the aid of elejctro-magnetism, can sus tain, increase and diminish sound. Another novelty will be that by moviug the electro-magnets the timbre of the tone is changedfor example, from that of a violmcello to a piccolo. A fine quality of iron ore has been dis covered some forty miles west of Havana, Cuba, not far from the port of Manil, and found to test some sixty percent, in iron. The first cargo or this mineral is now loaded, destined for Birmingham, Ala., by Pensacola, Fla. It is said that there is some 100,000 tons lying upon the sur face at the mine, which can be brought to the coast at small expense. It is claimed that lighting trains by electricity has been a rather costly ex periment, and the results have not been altogether as satisfactory as was ex pected. At the commencement of the run the light furnished is all that could be desired, but after the current has been in operation several hours the light gradu ally becomes dim and insufficient for gen-? eral purposes Whether the motion of the train has any effect on the battery has not been determined. PLEASANT LITERATURE FEMININE READERS. FOR , Ladies' Hair. Long and thick hair is so scarce among ladies that when one comes to have her head washed who has a full suit she is always the subject of remark and envy. Not more than one in ten ladies have full suits. Some who had long and thick hair as children have lost most of it through carelessness. The hair will fall out if not kept clean, and many find that, after reaching a certain length, it breaks off. However, if a lady has just enough hair to hold a switch the hair dresser will do the rest. Style, , more over, has favored the short haired, for less and less hair has been worn lately. From the immense waterfalls to the present scanty head-dress is a wonderful change. Switches are universally worn, but in constantly decreasing size. Still a woman with long hair is to. be envied, for her hair will always look natural. A switch needs refreshing because, with out the natural oil of the head, to keep it bright, it will look different from the wearers own hair. Some sleep in tneir switches so that they may take the oil from the head, but this Is bad lor the scalp, making it too hot and causing the hair to fall out. So many ladies wash their hair so seldom that I do not wonder they lose it. Globe-Democrat. ", A Nurse by Instinct, r Grandmother Chapman, of Vassar, Mich., the daughter of a Penn Yan, (N. i.) physician, is a nurse bv instinct and ambition. Her remedies are so mild that if she does not cure, she is certain not to injure her patients. lour years ago, owing to the lack of sewers; there was an epidemic of diphtheria in the village of Vassar, which has suuimnnaDitants. The physicians were successful in many of the cases, but notwithstanding tneir knowledge and skill, quite a number of beloved childien died. One child was pronounced fatally sick by two doctors. and the parents were so told. The parents sent for Airs, cnapman at once, one responded with alacrity, for it tickled her vanity to be called in after two popu lar phvsicians had given the child "up. She soaked the infant's feet in hot water with a large quantity of mustard stirred in it, and applied a mustard piaster to its chest. The child was wrapped- in a wet sheet taken out of warm water, with plenty of clothing to keep out the air completely. ln half an hour the child breathed easily, and tne next a ay it ate its meals and played. Mrs. Chapman's remedy for burns is one that is availa ble in almost every house. one applies common baking soda wetted with cold water. This takes out all the fire im mediately, and slight burns can be cured in fifteen minutes with it. St. Louis Star iktying3. Tlrld ITrltlnr. A tttfla daacrlDtiv viae nUtlsd "Over th Guns, from the Detroit Free -Press, of which wa pre a paraprapn. rrminui u tut great advertisers, like H. H. Warner & Co., proprietors or Warner's ceMDraiea oaievur, mieht tret a hint from it Here is the paragrapb: Shoot to the right or left, over tne guns or under them. Btrike where you will, but strike to destroy i Now the hell rarees down. van to toe windows or the old iarm-nouae now back under the apple trees and beyond them. .Dead men are under tne ponaereui wheels of the guns, mad devils are siasning and shooting across the barrels. No one seams to know friend from foe. Shoot, slash, kill and "But the hell is dissolved. The smoke is liftisr. shrieks and screams stow fainter. and twenty or thirty living men pull the dead bodies away from the tuns. Three hundred dead and wounded on the single acre. They tell of war and glory. ixk over this hell's acre and find th latter. And In just as deadly a strife, though noiseless, are men falling at our right and left to-day. Is it war! xes, war ot th biooa itiooa loaded with prison through imperfect kid ney action. And is there no power to atop tbis awiui siaugnierr xes, wame. s oaia Core, a tried specific, a panacea that has brougbt lite ana nope to nanareas ox iqou- eauds of dying men and women. Be enlisted, therefore, in tne great army of living men and women who have been rescued from disease and premature death. and be eternally grateful that the means or life can so easily be yours. A Faithful Feathered Pet. The keenness of vision and the per ceptive faculties of the carrier pigeon have been noted in soDg and prose, but it is doubtful whether the most fanciful writer ever suggested the probability that the 'angels of the air" could find their way to their homes after an absence of nine months. This has hap pened, ho x ever, and a bird owned in Pittsburg by Mr. Hermann Haupt, o.' Sarah street, soutn side, is entitled to the distinction that belongs to the feat. The Disjalch, of Pittsburg, says that one day in June of last year Mr. Haupt and several of his south side friends, who are pigeon fanciers, sent a large number of carrier pigeons to Inch mond, lad., on a trial trip. They were all excellent flyers, and had been away cn a good many excursions oi aimosi that distance. Among others Haupt sent the one which only returned the other day. The pigeon is named Favonte, and it has a very good record as a fast and sure racer. Haupt was much astonished, therefore, that Favorite did not return the next day, but he was even more astonished when he saw the bird alight and walk into its own coop the other day. Haupt thinks .that somebody i caught the pigeon and locked it up.with a view of keeping it, and ne values Favorite now more than ever. Old Care for Pneumonia. An article in the Medical Record deals mainly with the results of the recent ex periments in pneumonia of the Italian physician Maragliano, who proposes to revive the old plan of blood letting when the heart is on the point of breaking down. - It is certain, as the Hfedical Record says, "the management of the affection of the present day is' , far from satisfac tory." Pneumonia appears to be an in fectious disease, depending upon the presence of micro-organisms. The first practicable measure for combating it is to promote the elimination of the pcison ous matters from the blood, which oc f asion the most fatal symptom of sud den heart failure on the patient. Blood letting sufficiently practised at the critical time, relieves nie . hanically the pressure on the heart. Dr. Maragliano bled twelve cases of pneumonia of aver age gravity, abstracting from five to ten ounces on the fourth or fifth day of the disease, the venesection being repeated unce. ne iounu xnat mere was an im provement in the circulation, the pulse aimmismng in trequency and becoming fuller, and the twelve cases all recov ered. This is strong evidence of the value of bleeding. The Italian physician's plea for the re vival of bloodletting is that its judici ous employment may save many lives that otherwise would be sacrifice d when the heart is on the point of being over powered by the toxic matters in the pneumonic patients. - - Jewelry That Men Wear. 5 Harrowina. Both in the preparation of the soil fo: the crops before, planting and in giving the earlier cultivation afterward, the harrow can be used with profit; to a more or less extent. For fining the sur face of the soil it is one of the very best ' implements we have, aad, with the large number of ditterent kinds sold undei this name, we can secure an implement adapted to almost any" kind of work and in almost any kind of soil. The im provements made upon the old A harrow, are giving us the squarei Scotch, vibrat ing, flexiblef and smoothing harrows, to which may be added quite a list ol spring, disc and catting or slicing har rows. In this line of implements there would certainly seem to be a full supply, so that no matter what kind of soil the farm is composed of, a harrow can be used with profit on nearly or quite every farm. But with the spring, disc and cutting hai rows, they will do much bet ter work with some soils than with others. One will be best in one kind ol soil, and the other in a different soil. Some are better for some! kinds ol work, and some for others. ,. It is best to have the soil prepared inja thoroughly fine condition before planting the seed, and to keep the soil iu a good tilth until the plants have made a suffi cient growth to be able to commence using the cultivators. Weeds are much more easily destroyed when young than after they get a good start to grow, and if the soil is prepared in good tilth be fore planting the seed, in a majority of cases the harrow will be found the cheapest and best implement to use in destroying the weeds. Ihe disc, spring or cutting harrows are good implements to prepare the soil in a good tilth lor seeding oats, grass or other small grain; or when oats are sown on corn-stubble or land that has been planted in the fall. They are good lm plements to cover the seed, sowino- thf seed broadcast and then covering them wua me aisc or cutting narrow. The same applies to sowing wheat in the fall. iney win nne tne surtace and prepare in a good tilth for sowing the seed with the drill or seed-sower. And the work- can be done so much more economical!? that in many cases these can be made very profitable implements. PrairU farmer. The Speed of Thought. . Some of the readers have no doubt frequently made use of. the expression "quick as thought," but have any of them ever stopped to consider how quick thought is? A writer in the Nineteenth Century has made some interesting cal culations regarding the combarative length of ticie it takes to call to mind various everj-day facts. It takes about two-fifths of a second to call to mind the country in which a well-known' town is situated, or the language in - which a familiar author wrote. We can think of the name of next month in half the time we need to think of the name of last month. It takes on the average one-third of a second to add numbers consisting of one digit, and half a second to multiply them. Such experiments give us considerable insight into the mind. Those used to reckoning can add two to three iu less time than others : those familiar with literature can remember more quickly than others that Shakes peare wrote j"Hamlet. It takes longer to mention a month when a season has been" mentioned than to say to what month a season belongs. ine time taKen up in cnoosmg a mo tion, the "will time," can be measured as well as the time taken up in perceiv ing. If I do not know which of two colored lights is to be presented ' and must lift my right hand if it be red and my left if it be blue, I need about one- thirteenth of a second to initiate the cor rect motion, i 1 have also been able to register the sound waves made in the air by speaking, and thus have determined that in order to call up the name be longing to a printed word I need about one-ninth of a second, to a letter one- sixth of a second, to a picture one-quarter of a second and to a color one-third of a second. A letter can -be seen more quickly than a word, but we are so used to reading aloud that the process has become quite automatic, and a word can be read with greater ease and in less time than a letter can be named. The same experiments made on other persons give times ditler- g but little from my own. Mental processess, nowever, take place more slowly in children, in the aged and in the uneducated. Wife and Steamboat Captain. Captain Mary M. Miller stood up and was sworn in approved style the other day in Lou:sville, Kj. Captain Mary w.is in the presence of Inspector of Steamboats Irwin Dugan, and was re newing her license as a commander of steam craft on the Ohio and Mississippi rivers. She merely .took an oath to faithfully and honestly, according to her best skill and judgment, and without concealment or reservation, perform all the duties required of her as master by the laws of the United States. Captain Mary is the only woman who has evei been licensed as the commander of a steamboat in this district. In fact, but two women captains have ever been licensed, one of them being Captain Mary and the other a Southern lady who runs a boat on the lower Mississippi. Both of them are careful and capable commanders, but Captain Mary is inter esting for other reasons than her profes sional ability, as she is young and good looking, and as shrewd at driving a bar gain and as stern in the discharge of her duty as she is fascinating. When not on the river her home is in Portland, where resides her aged and invalid hus band, Captain "Natural" Miller. Cap tain Mary is the old river man s second wife, and. she has a stepson as old as herself. She learned the river from having accompanied her husband on many. of 'his trips, and when the Cap tain's health failed she took the helm of the old City of New Orleans, his vessel then, and ran her successfully. .. Cap tain Mary is, of course, popular with her crew, both on deck and in the office. She'has saved many a poor deck-hand's head from a stroke with a club in the hands of a hot tempered mate. Captain Mary has been a licensed commander for three years. Ihe Captain is without a vessel at present, but she expe ts a berth in a short time. New York Press. The ultra-fashionable young man wears a good deal of ;'ewelry, for his gold match-box, with its uncut rubies, sapphires, and diamonds upon it, may be counted among his jewels, while the sil ver cigarette-case carefully enameled in white and showing on its white back ground a pretty ballet girl in black must be considered another. On the little finger of his left hand he wears a heavy gold ring in which is imbedded either a ruby or a sapphire, but never both, and above this he likes to have a Somewhat worn wedding ring, which he can attribute to his grandmother, for he is not above proving that he has one. Auout his neck is a long, sender gold chain, very fine and very closely woven ; on .this is a little heart incrusted with diamonds on one side and having on the other, behind a clear bit of glass, the face of the woman to whom he has sworn eternal allegiance. White enameled buttons and links are in best taste for evening wear, and, indeed, are worn bv many men all the time, though in reality the plain gold buttons are proper for the uay uuie. vnicago l imes. ; Exquisite Brooches. A JNew York jeweler has sent some wonderful brooches to the Paris Exposi- iney are gold enameled orchids tion. of fifteen varieties, each as perfect in its way as me product ot nature. The stems are made green with emerald . The coloring of the leaves is marvelous beyond description, testifying to the er. traordinary skill of the designer as well as io ine artistic sense and exquisite i - e ii , , . . . "i i enameier. JNOtning more oeautnui can be imagined than the gen eral effect of each plant. A boat-building firm in FisaumVn Me., has recently received a large oraSr for canoes to be sent to England, Farm and Garden Notes. Mulch your orchards. x-eas snouia not oe sown until warm weather. Save and store a full supply of fruit and vegetables; none are so cheap as those grown on the farm. A hen should be set in a dark, quiet place with access to plenty of water and corn, ana a good dust bath. A few drops of carbolic acid in the drinking water is said to be srood for 1 ..... iowis attected with the cholera.. Do not be afraid to feed bran, for every ton of $15 bran you feed ma ves the manure into which it goes $!) richer in plant food. Hens do not need antidotes tn make tnem lay. Provide comfortable and !&unny quarters and feed and water regu larly and they will produce plenty of eggs without coaxing. TXTl . - . , . r nea a man is insmtenecl or a.ncrpv his digestive organs do no work ; this is aiso true ot an animal hence the profit oi Keeping it ma peacelul and fearless state by kind treatment. An ardent pig-fancier contends that tne raising ot pork, if properly con ducted upon the farm, wiil lift the mortgage or raise the bank account more rapidly than any other farm stock. A JS ...' - . a. uue queen lor Dreedinc nnrnna . I I should not be allowed to expend her iorce by too much egg-laying, but should be kept m a nucleus and only be allowed to keep that up moderately Bcroug. No system of dairying is complete that loses any of the fertility at th Save all, liquid and solid, and do not be afraid of manure drawn to the fields in tne winter losing value, as compared with tne usual leak from washing manu.e Yi 1 A. anil .t.kl. 3 ... . A Woman's Invention for the Blind. Mile. Mulot, of Angers, France, has invented a method by which the blind can easily correspond with those who see. ihe invention is, therefore, a marked improvement, on the Braille system of raised letters, by which persons afflicted with loss of sight correspond with each other only. Mile. MuloVs apparatus is really a little printing press in a portifolfo about the size ot a sheet of note paper. m ai-n - .. ine oiino person spreads it out and im presses the letters required on white paper, under which there is a colored pad 1- - 1 . - A . V 1 wmcn gives tnem a blue appearance, and they are thus not only brought out in relief for the touch of those deprived of sight, but are also visible to the eyes of tnose who see. Une of Mile. Mulot's blind pupils has been able, by. means of this system, to take part in a competi tive examination for the diploma of ele mentary teacher, and to "distance" some of the'eandidates who were in possession oi ineir visual iacumes. Cuban Country Folk. The country people of Cuba live in thatched houses of three or four rooms with dirt floors. The leaves of the royal palm are used for thatching, and the bark for the sides of the bouse. One room is used for the kitchen. They have no stoves or are places. In the center of the kitchen is a table about three feet high covered with dirt. On this they make the fire and do the cooking each utensil having a small fire under it. The smoke escapes through the doors and windows. Ihe babies live mostly on the dirt floors, consequently they are 'not very clean or prepossessing. -The dogs and pigs seem to be perfectly at home with the children. On the rafters inside the room tobacco is hung to dry. The family all sleep in one room. They are very hospitable; they meet you on the threshold with the salutation : "Mi casa estu a su disposesionl" the house is in your possession. The woman of the house goes to the kitchen and pre pares a cup of coffee for the guest, which is drank out of a cup made out of a fruit similar to the cucumber. After partak ing ot tne conee, a board ana some tobacco leaves will be brought out and in a short time the guests are provided with cigars. They all know; how to make cigars. Itwould be quite impolite not to accept and smoke cigars when offered. The young ladies' smoke cigarettes and some married ladies cigars. , Their bill of fare is rather a singulai one, and one that Americans do not relish to a great extent. Everything is served n courses. They boil all the meat and vegetables in one pot. I have seen and eaten of a dish composed of cabbages, potatoes, beets, carrots boiled with ham, beef and bologna sausage. This dish they call "olla," and is one ol which the Cubans are very fond. An other favorite dish is baked turkey sliced and served with onions. Their coffee ii always good. Times-De-mocraC, A great man is happiest when he can sit down and write his memoirs and forget all the mean things lie knows about himself. JACOBS TRADE THE CBF&T IT CONQUERS patinj-. II m r Believe and cures BEEUHATISU, NEURALGIA, Sciatica, Lumbago. HEADACHE. Tocthache, Sprains, BRUISES, Boms anif Scalds AN HONEST DRUGGIST, when istea of the best blood-purifier, always1 recommends Dr. Pierce's Golden . Medical Discovery, because he knows it has by far the largest sale and gives the best satisfaction to his customers. Golden Medical Discovery cures all humor, from a common Blotch, or Eruption to the worst Scrofula. Salt-rheum. Scaly or Rough Skin, in short, all diseases caused by bad blood are conquered by this powerful, purifying, and invigorating medicine. Great Eating Ulcers rapidly heal under Its benign influence. Especially has it manifested 1 potency in curing Tetter, Eczema, Erysipelas, Boils, Carbuncles. Sore Eyes, Scrofulous Sores and Swellings, Hip-joint Disease, "White Swellings," -Fever Sores," Goitre, or Thick Neck, and Enlarged Glands. Consumption, which is Scrofula of the Lungs, is arrested and cured fcy this remedy, if taken In the earlier stages of the disease. I . - ---rm-r-i-n Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery V fTf il ATUTF: Tl I Is the only medicine of its class that is MBBWHBaMBMaBBBBJ guaranteed to benefit or cure, in all cases of diseases for which, it is recommended, or the money paid for it will be promptly refunded. . For Weak Lungs, Spitting of Blood, Shortness of Breath. Bronchitis, Asthma, Severe Coughs, and kindred affections, it is an efficient remedy. Sold by Druggists, at $1.00, or six Bottles for $5.00. Copyright, 138S, by Wokld's Dispetsakt Medical Association. Proprietors. X3ST Longest Aqueduct In the World. The longest aqueduct in the world is the Vyruwy Lake Aqueduct, which brings the water supp.y of Liverpool from the mountains of Xorth Wales. From the lake to the distributing reservoirs is a distance ot o? miles; to the town hall at Liverpool 7 7 miles. The reservoir is an ancient lake basin :ut out by glacial action, and the site a picturesque Welsh village. JNature s original rampart has been restored by a mass of solid masonry WiZ feet long and 120 feet thick at the base. The water passes into the aqueduct through a tower, where it is strained oi ail organic impurities. Ts'a Chemical. Is These Days when food adulteration Is bo common, it is a comfort to find an article for the table tliat is thoroughly reliable. Walter Baker & Co.'s breakfast cocoa is eminent in this limited class. No chemicals are used in its manufacture and it is absolutely pure. It forms moreover a delicious and healthful drink, as refreshing and more nutritious than tea or coffee.and free from the injurious effects that those beverages sometimes prodece. And It Is very cheap withah The house of Walter Baker & Co. has maintained for more than 100 Fears a great and honored repute by the ex cellence and purl y of its manufactures. There will be about ninety vacancies this year at the United States Naval Academy. Interested Pele. Advertising a patent medicine In the pecu liar way in which the proprietor of Kemp'a Balsam, for Coughs And Colds.does it is indeed wonderful. He authorizes all druggists to giv those who call for it a sample bottle Free, that they may try it before purchasing. The Large Bottles are 50c and $1. We certainly would ad rise a trial. It may save you from consumption. Alt Australian experiment of shinDinc granges to London proved very successful. Far Rickets, Marauiuman4 Wasting Dis orders af Children. Scott's Emcxsiox of Pure Cod Liver Oil with Hypophoephites Is uneqoaleJ. The rapidity with which children gain flesh and strength upon it is very wonderful. Read the lollow ing: "l nave used Pott's Emulsion in cases of Rickets and Marasmus of long standing, and rave been more than pleased with the results. is in every fi-e the imDrovement was marked." J. M. Maiw, M.D., New York. A Radical Curo far Epileptic Fit. To the Editor Please inform vmir nultn that I have a positive remedr for tha ihnvn named disease which I warrant to care the worst cases. So strong is my faith in its vir tues that I will send free a sample bottle and valuable treatise to any sufferer who will gira me his P. O. and Express address. Kcsd't. H.G. ROOT. M. C 183 Pearl St, Kew York. The best COUtrh medicine is Piso's C.nr for Consumption. Sold everywhere. 23c. septic soothing and healing properties of Dr. Sage's Catarrh Remedy. ILL'ATJ is conquered by the cleansing. anti- . i oroT. oy areu'rm. . mmiM usx. For two years I bad . rhcomatismsobadthat it disabled me for work: and confined me to my bed for a whole year, daring which time I coma not even raise my bands to my bead, aod for 8 months could not move myself in bed, was reduced in flesh from kl99to8Slba. Waatreat- ' ed by best physicians, only to crow worse. RoaUy I took Swift's Specific, and saon bena to Improve. After a whilewaa at my work, and for the past nve montns nave oeen as wen as 1 ever was ail from the effocU of Swift's Specific . - v-' Jon Rat, Jin. 8, 1883. Ft. Wayne, lad. Books on Blood and Skin Diseases mailed free. "inn Sraciwc Co., Atlanta. Ga. jv vorr wish 1 X UOOD KEfULItK ' pnrchaae one of the cele brated SMITH WESSON arms. The finest nnaU arms ever mannfacfon-d and tha tint rhoiaa of all eraerta. Mannf actnrad in calibrm 32, 3 and 44-lua. Sin wlt, ot doable action. Safety Hammerlesa and Tirnt models. Constrnrtfal entimlvof best mmi ity wrwacht steel, carefully inspected for woia- mansh pand stock, tney are nnrivaiea tor nnla. durability and arenracy. Do not ba deceived by cheap malleable cast-traa imitatiana which a-e often sold for the a-ennine article and ara not nnlr unreliable, but danrerona. Tha 6M1TH as WESSOX ReTolTera are all stamped upon tha bar rels with firm's name, addreae and datee of paten ta and are aaarwateed perfect in arery detail. In- siat noon bavtna- tha a-enuine article, and if your dealer cannot auwlr yon an order anttoaddrej helnw will nreivs oromDt and careful attention. DeacrptiTecataloame ani prices f nrniahad upon ap- pucaton. SMITH & WESSltt, HVMentlon this paper. jSarlnsSald, Mil Taylor's Hospital Cure for C atarrrvl warrantea to give .satisfaction or money refunded. Sold on ten days' triaL Price com- k plete. $2.50. For pam- Iphlets and terms of sale ' address City Hall Phar macy. No. S04 Broad way, New York. I ft 1T" - Tn anwat r ar ia. I at aad a a fa ratal REMEDY lm tha world that laxataatly steps tba aaaat xcrac latlag p av t at a. It It Irmly, the great C05Q.CKRUR OP PAl.V, aad . hai alow mare good tha at any fcmawm remedy. Fr SPRAI!CB.TmtISE8. BACK ACHE, PAIW In CHKT r SIDES. IIEMK ACHE, TOOTHACHE. r any other E TKKKAIj PAI. av few applifatlaa. art like magic. raatla( IS rAW STASTLV STOP. Far COS OESTI01.HFI. t MM ATIO . SORE THROAT, HKOIIITI. COI.D lm tha CHEST. HHECMATI vn, KAL.GIA, LVMBAWK SCIATICA. PAIS la the Small mt the Bark, etc., more et tended, longer toaliaard aan repealed applications are ncrrsaarjr to ertect a cure. ' All 1STER? AI. PAINS (in the BoweM or Stoma til, CRAMPS. SPASM. SOI R STOMACH. KAVSKA. VOMITli HEARTBlRSf, DIA RHII E A, COLIC. FLATL'LESCY, PAISTIXG SPELLS, ore relieve lmatantly and (ACICKLV CURED by taking Internally aadtrrrt- oaU Sola by Drmrglsts. mr, ovt. IAD WAY' PILLS THE GreatLiYBP&Stomacli Remeay WANTED! A reliable man in each county to take tha arenry for the best, moateajiily Drarm and almp'eat Au tomatic Bura-lar Alarm on the market. Airentamake from as to $36 per day. " ostabls ok ctatiok as y. Pan be affixed inetantly. tvrxM-w nrou : nnra imifiiv The verdirt ot evere rma wno eeea it: "ine bet Alarm I ever saw." Addreaa with atamp, Tna Ezcklsiob KraoLAB AiABat ca, 1'ieTeiana, onio. PENSION A GOOD- LIVING FOB EVERY MAN vrrxuNQ to work. GOOD PAY! 'At Drngriata and Dealers. THE CHAKUS A. VOSELER CO.. Baltiasrs, Mi. Diamond Vera-Cura FOR DYSPEPSIA. AND ALL KTOMACH TROUBLES SUCH AS Tndia-eatlon. Soar Stcmach. Heart burn. Naiuea.nid- iiiBaaa, conatipation. rmlnesa alter ealina-. 'ood Itinas in the Mouth and diaairreeabla taata after tana. iterTOuaness aod 1ow Spirits. At Drvmiitta a4.yjrmler or mml h mtnfj crtpt of ot. (S (xxtrm at 00) in ataatna. &ia,le Ths Charles A. Vogcler Ct., Baltimore, Mi NTNTJ-15 joBNW.nonRis. Lata Principal Examiner, U. S. renaton unreaoUT at Law. Waahisgton. D. C successfully prosecutes claim -original, increase- re-rattor. widows', children's and depen dent relativea'. Experience : S years la last war. IS years ln Pension Bureau, and attorney since, uea. Write to W. A T. Santa, e arserTnie n. UCNIUil a. for lm ins Unaaaalad facilities. Kan luaale wpteioltin. One ot tae largess and beat-known Nonaries in tbe country aVfc.NEVA M atStKT fcateollaaed IB 4C. r.sur.iPTion laai a noeitfee reined for to abeT disease: trttam tboataada of eases of tae won kind and of lonr standing nave Been enred. eo Mrtif m m taita in ks amcner inas 1 will send two botUaa free, torethar witk a Talnabio treatise on this disease to an snfferer. 6te Express sa t rean bl. n. 1 For the care of aU disorders of tha STOMACH, LIVER. BOWELS. KID- KEYS, BLADDER, SERVOl'S DISEAS ES, LOSS of APPETITE. HEADACHE. -COXSTTPATTO.f, COSTIVEXESS. IS DI- CKSTIOST, BILIOUSNESS, FEVER, tSFLAMMATIOV of theBOWELS.PILKS ana all derangements of the Internal Viscera. Pmrely Vegetable, containing o anercmry, minerals, or DELETKK- IOTJS DRUGS. PERFECT DIGESTION will he ar- eompUsaeal fey taklnar RA1J ' PILLS. By ao atelnc DYSPEPSIA, SICK. HEADACHE, FOIL STOMAl If. BILIOlS.fESS, will he aToldeel. and the food that la oaten rontrihate its noarish,tng properties for the aappert ef the nataral waste of the body. SOLD BY ALL. DRUGGISTS. Price per box, or, en receipt of price, will ha , sent by small. boxes for One Dollar. KADWAV ii CO., 34 Warns Kt,X. V. GRATEFUL COMFORTING. EPFS'S GOODS GO P. O. addr T. A 8 LOCUM. M. O, 1st Pe E guarantee no other LAWN mm f 11 C n win do the work or tae rilUW Cn YI.VANI A l.o wo aw nr Continental Lawn Mewrr. Lioto k Bomn Habowabb Co.. Philadelphia. Fa - ERAZERI nirsT TX THF, WORLD UULMUi W UOk Ut UnHllimtb - Jiw-w waswoi ELY'S CATARRH SCC.r?tSJ; mir Till If I is I Dlnin'a Dl Free Mason rr. Slams. Grip' and Morgan's fata by mail on receipt su Peoplea fun. Co, fct ram, amm CDrnidZkl - ow rtfll AA m RJoaRESui HAYFEVTR uiujruu union tr IS WORTH SIOOO TO ANY MAN, Woman or Child BUFFERING FROM CATARRH. Not a Liquid or SnvJJT. n. feu 1AL-17 in aW-M 'SUC:is i into each nostril and is tt aa ET E V E E? agreeable. Price 50 cts. l ""Ift atdruTiriBts; by maiL.-reristerel. CO cent. x-LY Bi;OTHbRH,aS Warren St.. Jew YorK. a 31 1 Great English Gout ana ttic Remedy. Oral Bex, 34 1 reaad 14 rills. Blair's Pills.crS BREAKFAST. "By athoronrh rtKiwleOre of tbe nstnra! " sni ii''"' f.ne ir"lr- Mr. Vlj has ptonvi atr.y CavciureO 'T' which roern the operations J direction in i nutri tion, and by a careful application of tb- ties of well-selec-ted Co ts. our breakfast tables with a dehrat ersare which may aae ns many b r tlortt.r I-:-" It is by the jo'lxamia nea of such srticles of rt t thit eint4 tii twin mav lie wraiiuall liuiit unlintli tr 1-ft enonirh to reeist eery tepdency to rliseae. liu" dred of subtle maladies are floatina; around npr-ni to attack wbereer there ia a n point. aeu escape many a fatal ahaft by keepina our-elve w. ioruuni viio pun iikiuu uw f 1 : 1 1 j ui'u' " - Mi .vrrv Maderimply with boilioa-water or milk. ScH CUT in half pound tins, by omcers. lslielled tb'i: JAMES EPFS sV CO Kotn.eopathic Cheui--A London. Ens land. SJl Q DATS.j tT-i bbo Sarmarw. tadf art-sat hy an) VT7 tnll rVaaLsfcl SA OraswaZtirkt I prescribe and folly en. dorse Bis U as the M T specific tsrineceriajneura of tbis disease. O.H.lMiKAHAM,V V . Amsterdam. ". Y We hare eold P.c 6 for many years, and tl aas riven the best ci sa. rArtian. r D. R. DTCKE k CO . Cb'caco. l.r. 1.80. Seld by CrniiJ " " - ei-. 1 The Gold Hunters9 Ad' ventures tn jiusirunu, U3 by lVm. II, Thomes. -J? As etdtbc stay sf two Yaekx, Adwati-w f"i , Aaawalia, ia ts early sa. waea 11 ew- - " LT-,V"t euraews s stW ere-4 ef nrl. - "fc ' JW Basaraazao, "TVaeW Uxn.' Uwi iwi, .i variety ef Aseeatanej. - The most fascitis! Ine story of I GER. EXCITKMK.NT, HAKIHir and CONFLICT, errr written ! I Marriage Ages. A Austria, 14 years for both sex. In Spain, the man at 14. the woman nf 12. In Russia, the man at 18. the woman at 16. : In Greece, the man at 14. the woman In Francethe man at 18. the woman at 15. ; In Saxony, the man at 18. the Woman at 16. In Belgium, the man at 18, the woman a i, io. In Germany, man at 14. In Switzerland, the man at 14,' woman at 12. - ; . . In Hungary. Catholics fh man .m the woman at 12; Protestants, the man ub woman at 12, Chicaao Mail. the man at 18, the wo- the Your Blood eeas a good cleansing- this spring- in order to overcome the impurities which hare accumulated during the winter, or which may be hereditary, and causa you much suffering. We confidently recom mend Hood's 8arsaparilla aa the very best spring medicine. Sy its use the blood is purified, enriched and vitalized, that tired feeling ia entirely overcome and the whole body given strength and Tiger. The appetite is restored asd sharpened, the digee- tive organs are toned, and the kidneys and liver in vigorated. -I was f-eling very much worn out and .found nothing to benefit me till I took Hood's Sarsaparilla. I have now taken several bottles and it has made me feel p rfectly well. I was also troubled with sores breaking out in my month, but sinci taking Hood's sarsaparilla hare had ni furth-r trouble from them. I have recommended it to. others, who have be-n very much benefited by using it." Mas. Mast Addeklt, 627 North Water Street, Decatur. IU. Hood's Sarsaparilla Bold by all druggists, tl; six for $. Prepared only y ti l. auui) COt. Apothecaries, Lowell, Hat ipo Dpses one Dollar s. lOWoMPROYEDChestei Iwaksamtco OMOLERA nftOO. lEXPRESS PREPAID. Wins I ST I Ionizes in U. S. a Foncten Coun-l iTBitS. 2 WEIGHED 2808 LBS. i3iNorej DcaoaiwTien a naici err ' hrnisc famous woes, also fowls. Ll SILVER CO. Ct-tVSLA NC. O. CEAiS company sold lv head for breeding pnrpoees Is ism. aeaa ior lacis ana mcnaoa wua paper.) hli of U. S. and World 9Ce M I LHW ISt Fare. II F.lthpl.w.ssUWI Minv nt them uoiored. Also ava. amount ot mlorifta. tion relative to different state and Countries, Form at Government, Farm Products ant x aloe, sc. imiv Xbc u Btampa. Addreaa iioon Pus. Housa. 134 Leo sard St.. H. T s lfllC"rSTUnY. Book-keeping, Business Forma U UmC Penmauaoip. Arii hmrtic, bhort-hsnd, etc I thoroughly tsutcut by MAIL. Circulars tree. sirTaat'B College, 457 Main KL. Buffalo, N. Y V A iV. - X .nrfi nn.l(T. v-;-V.feJ .-'-. ' ' ' ! AsBWaSkt nlaww rf (64 r..aa 4 I "3 ?t-r,' v Av 1 r & S K f . - . Si niaatratiaaa. witS ka.4.Ba bp4 La a w. I M U. -Sy ' S:J5 Ts Cbaaasn. tartsMMd sn raa-1aaoa,.f S' viv ,--r 11 i.:.-r s rv-fi price only s UU!8i iiisJ 5 CKNTS! " et poetpaid t r- M.EX. T. LOYO 4t CO., The W" SMeKaildlae;. Chicago, III. fW-IUolt ar rt.l N Ci. r t tAwn. W. L. DOUGLAS $3 SHOE FOR CENTLEMEN. sey Piso's Cure for Con sumption is THE BEST for seeping the voice clear. 25 cents. Tttt In tha vn4. Vvaaafna lite SS.OO GENI I J K HAKIKsKWKIt SHOE. 4.00 HANIVKEVfKU HKLT SMK. POLICE ANO FAK.MKRV SHOE. U0 KXTRA VAX UK CALF SHOE. 2.25 WORKI?iGMAN'S SHOhZ. f.OOaadtl.75 BOIS' KCHOOL SHOES. All made la Concress, Bnuoa aad Lace. L. DOUGLAS SHOE iV DIES. Xost Material. Seat Stylo. Best lit ting. ff" fi TnllTn rI 11 "7 dr. r be has the W. IV. DOUGLAS SHOES without Mil I Mini aanso aad wriee. atamned on hattim. nut kir riww . fraud. If r-l ' aold by your dealer, write T. I. LKJUGLAS. BROCKTON. MASS. T?OU J A I.E. 1.900 Acres Timber rand in Tncket A7 Co., W. Va.. cear Hendricks, on W. Va. C. B. B Eeavily timber -d ; Poplar, Asb, Oak. Cherry, V a. nut Ac j-nce sia.oo per acre, i ltie penecu Aoaita E. W. McSKlL, Oid t ielda. Hardy Co.. W. Va. Si 1 to SS a day. Mamplee worth elAU'uJkB Lanes not under tne noire a leeu rite i Brewater iiaieiy Keui HoldexCo.. Holie; . Mlj PE5BLESS DIES Ar the- rrrT. Tbe man who haa Invested from three to five dollars la a Bnbaer Coat, aad at Bis S rt naif hour's experience ia a storm Sods to his sorrow that it is hardly a setter srotecnon than a mee quite netting, sot only feels chaenned at being ao badly takes tn. Sot also feels if be dees net look exactly like Alk tne tne-rirl BRAND" 8UCEJ.B A WET HEN T a eSer the aaaa woo wants "i"-' (aot stvle) a gsraient that wul kera aim dry (a the hardest stem. It i called TOWEKS USH F!tAM 8IJCXEK.- a aaate famUisr to ever Cow-soy ail over the land. With Uirni tbe oaly perfect Wind and Waterarrf Coat Is Toweri Fnh Krsnd hucscr. and take no other. If yoorstereieeaer meU k than....... . w m q.m. t Vlaa-aft. Al Aa. 'i'M"i"i"i rmmmmmvmmi'i i