V s . ) A A J' MrB. Fidelia Fapa, who ia visiting friends in Cleveland, is the widow of the famous Dario Papa, one of the founders of the new Republican, party in Italy and the owner and editor of Zi'Italia Popolo, one of the foremost papeis in Italy and the organ of the Republican party. Miss Trill "I love to hear the birds sing." Jack Downright (warmly) "So do I. They never attempt a piece beyond their ability." Tit -Bits, i. ' The Caretaker. I Caretaker Is a word aJopted into raodsra use aud moans one who takes care of, audi 'ia very geuerully applied to those employed to tafcd care of things committed to their . keeping. The way some people have of tak ing care of themselves is very suggestive "of tha need of a caretaker. The human tody to such Is a mansion filled with Ipreuious things uncared for, where thieves jinay break in and rust doth corrupt. Pains -aad aiilies are thieves, aud the body left un jCared for to their spoilage will be robbed of all its comforts and despoiled of its peace of yftiind and happiness. It is a bappy thught to look upon St. Jacobs Oil as a yftretaker, to employ it as a, watchman fcgafust such intruders. There is hardly an nohe, from a toothache to a toeache, that it can't take care of and effect a cure, and pains the most violent are conquered by its use. Its office as a caretaker is to prevent the spread of aches and pains into a chronic stage Keep a bottle of it in the handiest place and be assured of good care and coin- tort, b . V- :, frve carner-Diireon was m uso uv mo StattVePartment ot tne Ottoman Empire Ob., What Splendid Coffee. Mr GooS "lllltt.lns vo., xu., writes; "From on!? P&ckage Salzer's German Coffee Berrv eostW grew.300 lbs. of better fyman, Williams uo., ill., coffee than V,cau UJ m " lb A. V J. A package o this coffe9 and big seed and plant catalogue3 sent you by John A: Balzer Seed Co.. iV Crosse, Wis. upon re- ceiDt of 15 cents 'SiuMJ3 " Out of the enormoul number of women' in Constantinople, not read or write. Dre than 5000 ca' State op Ohio, Cit y or Tolec0' I ggj L'oleS0' I iiTJCAS countt. V,' . . , Frank J. Cheney makes oath ieT; neistne enior partner of the firm of F. J. CNIfc'ET Co.. doing businessin the City of Toledunty j and Stato aforesaid, and that said firmj'' the sum of one hundred dollars forSXft?" a ti 1 pvpru paeA tf riTiRRH that. rn.nni.4. uu ured by the use of Hall's Catarrh cum? Frank J. Cheney. i sworn 10 uei i prese '- seaiA A. D. Sworn to before "Yiie and subscribed in m presence, this 6th nay of December, , ism. a. vv. ItLeason, i Notary Public. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, and acts directly on the blood and mucous surfaces Of the system. Bend for testimonials, free.' ' F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, O Sold by Druggists, 75c. r Hall's Family Pills are the best. The title of "Majesty" was first given to Xouis XI. of Franc-?. Before that time Sovereigns were usually styled "Highness." , Mother Gray's Sweet Powders for Children Successfully used by Mother Gray, for years a nurse in the Children's Home, New York, !will make a sickly child strong and healthy; A certain cure for Stomach Troubles, Head lache and Feverishness in Children. They jtnove the bowels,- cure Teething Disorders, 'destroy Worms and never faih At all drug !dsts'. a cts. Sample sent FREE. Address Uilen S. Olmsted, LeRoy, N. Y. t The Queen has instructed her Commis sioner atBalmoral to present all the young women on the estate with spinning-wheels Florida. ' Florida literature secured free upon appli cation to J. J. Farnsworth, East'n Pass. Ag't :Plant System. 2til Broadway, N. Y. There are G0O.000 people employed in 'Italy in rearing silkworms. To Cure A Cold In One Day. Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. All Drucsists refund money it' it fails to cure. 2oo. : In Scotland the last day of the year, a" !2Jew Year's Eve, is called Hogmanay. Fits permanently cured. No fits or nervous tiess aiter tirst day's use of Dr. Kline's Great ;Nerve Kestorer. $2 trial bottle and treatise free Da. R. H. Kline, Ltd.. 931 Arch St..Phila.,Pa. ! Before he preaches a sermon Dr. Parker, of the City Temple, London, takes a cold feath. ! Mrs. Winslow's Soothinoj Syrup for children : teething, softens the gums, reduces intiamma iiou, allays pain, cures wind colic, 25c.a bottle. f ' The longest tunnel in the world is in (Hungary. It goes under ground for over itn miles. Chew Star Tobacco The Best. Smoko gledge Cigarettes. . A butcher in Morrisville, Vt., kills all hi? Icattle by stating them with a rifle. : I have found Plso's Cure for Consumption ;sn unfailing medicine. F. R. Lotz, 1305 Scott jSt, Covington, Ky., Oct. 1. 18!i. j" In England one woman in every sis earns her own living. . f Don't anoint the cuticle, but use Glenn's iSulphur Koap for eruptive disorders. iKill's Hair & Whisker Dve. black or brown.50c. Look out for colds At this season. Keep Your blood pure and Rich and your system .Toned up by taking Hood's Sarsaparilla. Then You will be able to Resist exposure to which - A. debilitated system Would quickly yield. !'iionE.Coleman, Attorney-at-Law and Solicitor fteuta, wa i St., i. v., tvasiungton, v. C. liest references tn an iari vi tnw conn try. A CEfJUiriE BORAX C'leanjtei Finest ClojhM. il X3 tn.i For Hal h. Toilet nad Hair Mbumpon, worth treble its cost. Full pound ):ar at all sorts of stores. f 3 H m m lit bore get: URClbU CI C 1. OUHIi rtNSIONS, PATEN I S, CLAIMS. 'IIjOHNW. MORRIS, WASHINGTON, D.H j i'l Vt Pnot:l)l Enminer U. 8. Pension Bureau, i Q ' J yrs. ia bt&i wit, U a.ajuciuit.u cUiiua, atty. eiuc. 1 a HQ H n H 1 J? 1 SEEMONS OF THE DAY. RELIGIOUS TOPICS DISCUSSED BY PROMINENT AMERICAN MINISTERS. "Christian Cheerfulness" Is the Title of the Eighth Sermon In the X. Y. llerald'g Competitive Series By a Brooklyn Minister Dr. Talmace on Home Life. Text: "Eejoiee in the Lord always: and again I say, Kejoice. rhilippiaus, iv., 4. What is so common among men as the disposition to see only the dork side of the events of life? Many of us have a tendency to exaggerate our ills which amounts al most to melancholia 1 If it is not -always high tide in our course of fortune we sink into a condition of morbid despair. We are too apt to forget that In nature the tide must fall as well as rise. We do not realize that it is the part of wisdom to make the best use of the opportunities we have. We compare our circumstances with-tnose of others who are more fortunate and brood over "the slings and arrows of outrageous fortune."' The tenden-jy to dwell upon our ills grows with time. In the beginning it -can be checked easily, but in time it becomes like a torrent gaining impetus with its descent, until it is beyond control. Now and then we receive the sad news that one whom we esteemed as upright and godly has allowed this morbid tendency to obtain such head way that it unseats the reason and with it the sense of moral responsibility. Then we learn of the self-destruction of such a one and we are not surprised. It was almost the inevitable consequence of a false, one sided view of life that ia supported by neither common sense nor religion. With reference to the character of the mind men may be divided into the matter of fact and the exaggerative. While the former are liable to be unsettled and dis contented occasionally, the latter are apt to be so as a rule, because their minds, be ing imaginative, create for themselves ideals which they seldom, if ever, attain. Nevertheless, the normal condition of life is one of cheerfulness. God teaches us this in nature, which, as a rule, is bright with sunshine, gay with color and filled with joyous sounds. Laughter and song, harmony and beauty are the radiant fig ures of that living picture whereby our Heavenly Father points out to each the road to happiness. It is the desire of every earnest man to please God. There is no better way to do so than by showing ourselves satisfied with what He gives us. A preacher once said: "We do not please God more by eating bitter aloes than by eating honey. A cloudy, foggy, rainy day is not more heavenly than a day of sun shine. A funeral march is not so much like the music of angels as the songs of birds on a May morning. There is no more religion in the guant, naked forest in winter than in the laughing blossoms of the spring and the ripe, rich fruits of au tumn." ' How few cultivate a sunny disposition! How fflw mnk nn AfTnrl: tn hn honrfnl vhen they feel unhappy! There are some tJie hard lines of whose faces never break jVto a "smile. There are others who know oily that mirth which is provoked by arti neyal means, such as a Joke or a ridiculous jnttident. Some are cheerful only when theY have driven a good bargain. You all knoy the business smile worn by those who are jinxions to gain your good will or your neonlefrhr wortr r nTfcsk of cheerfulness for the outer world anlTa&ask of terror for their homes. Little do they who go through ISat isfled and cheerless know how mueiThey lose of that which is sweetest in humai? perience. Not only thov but all with whon they come in contact are robbed of a Dor- tion of the blessing of existence. We owe It to our families, our friends, in fact to all our fellow men, as well as to ourselves, to make brighter, not gloomier, this human life. St. Paul's example shows that even in distressing circumstances cheerfulness is possible. His injunction, "Kejoice inthe Lord," was literaliy obeyed by himself. The consistent Christian must be cheer ful. Even when the knowledge of his sin fulness weighs heaviest upon him he be lieves that God is forgiving and merciful. The bitterness of his sorrow is sweetened by the promises of God. The gloom of his soul Is illumined by the light of God's love. However forbidding the darkness by which he is surrounded, however great the suffer ing to which he is subjected, however mer cilessly the hand of misfortune may tight en its grip, he knows he shall be higher in the esteem of his God and more fit for his destiny if, with patience and a cheerful heart, he bears these things. The conso lations of his religion will never fail him if he appeals to them. Gloomy Christianity is a misrepresentation. However well meaning those may be who dwell only on the sufferings of Christ, only on the wrath of God and the punishment of sin, they do God an injustice and teach only half the truth. There is nothing to gain from such a repulsive presentation of religion. It is not natural, necessary nor fair to our follow men to minimize those features of our re ligion that God has made most prominent. There is a bright side which it is of the ut most importance to emphasize in order to win men to religion. The dawn of redemp tion and the joy of spiritual triumph for ever obliterated the sorrows of Calvary. The justice, mercy and love of God irradi ate prismatic light on the sombre picture of sin and judgment. James B. Nies, Iiector Church of the Epiphany, Brooklyn, N. Y, HOME LIFE; Dr. Talmage Preaches On the Cares of the Household. Text: "Lord, dost Thou not care that my sister hath left me to serve alone? Bid her, therefore, that she help me." Luke x.,40. Yonder is a beautiful village homestead. The man of the hou.se is dead, and his widow is taking chargo 'of the premises. This Is the widow, Martha of Bethany. Yes, I will show you also the pet of tho household. This is Mary, the the younger sister, with a book under her arm, and her face having no appearance of anxiety or care. Company has come. Christ stands outside the door, and, of course, Jhere is a prood deal of excitement inside the door. Tho disarranged furniture is hastily put aside, and the hair Is brushed back and the dresses are adjusted as well as, in so short a time, Mary and Martha can attend to these matters. They did not keep Christ standing at the door until they had elaborately arranged their tresses, then coming out with their affected surprise, as though they had not heard the two orthroe previous knockings, saying: "Why, is that you?" No. They were ladies, and were always presentable, although they may not have always had on their best, for non of us always has on our best; if we did, our best would not be worth having on. They throv7 open the door and greet Christ. They say: . "Good morning. Mas ter; come in and be seated." Christ did not come alone; He had a group of friends with Him. and such an influx of city visi tors would throw any country home into perturbation. I suppose also the walk from the ci'ty had been a good appetizer. The kitchen department that day was a very important department, and I suppose that Martha had no sooner greeted the guests thnn sho fled to that room. Mary had no 'worriment about household affairs. Khe had full confidence that Martha could get up the best dinner in Bethany. She seems to say: "Now, let us have a division of labor. Martha, you cook, and I'll sit down and be good.", Ho you have often seen a great difference between two sis ters. There is Martha, hard-working, iains taklnr, a good manager, &ver inventive of Zwtry, or discovering something wijrvnrM liouskeeping. frnti'.n. ethics she has no time to attend to tii questions of household welfare. It is noon, Mary is in the parlor with Christ.. Martha is in the kitchen. It would have boon bet ter if they had divided the work, and then they could have divided the opportunity oi listening to Jesus; but Mary monopolizes Christ while Martha swelters at the fire. It was a very important thing that they should have a good dinner that day. Christ was hungry, and He did not often have a luxurious entertainment. Alas, me! if the duty had devolved upon Mary, what a re past that would have been! But something went wrong in the kitchen. Perhaps the fire wpuld not burn, or the bread would not bake, or Martha scalded her hand, or something was burned black that ought only to have been made brown; and Martha lost her patience, and forgetting the pro prieties of the occasion, with besweated brow, and, perhaps, with pitcher in one hand and toDgs in the othor, she rushes out of the Kitchen into the presence of Christ, saying, "Lord, dost Thou not care that ray sister hath left me to serve alone?" Christ scolded not a word. If it were scold ing, I would rather have His scolding than anybody else's blessing. ' There was noth ing acerb. He knew that Martha had al most worked herself to death to get Htm something to eat, and so He throws a world of tenderness into His intonati as He seems to say: "My dear woman, do not worry, let the dinner go; sit down on this ottoman beside Mary, your younger sister. Martha, Martha, thou art careful and troubled about many things, but one thing is needful." As Martha throws open that kitchen door I look in and see a great many household perplexities and anxieties. First, there is the trial of non-appreciation. This is what mado Martha so mad with Mary, The younger sister had no esti mate of her older sister's fatigues. As now, men bothered with the anxieties of the store, the office and shop, or coming from the Stock Exchange, they say when they get home: "Oh, you ought to be in our factory a little while; you ought to have to manage eight, or ten, or twenty subordinates, aad then you would know what trouble and anxiety are!" Oh, sir, the wife and the mother has to conduct at the same time a university, a clothing es tablishment, a restaurant, a laundry, a li brary, while she is health officer, police and president of her realm! She must do a thousand things, and do them well, in order to keep things going smoothly; and so her brain and her nerves are taxed to the utmost. I know there are housekeep ers who are so fortunate that they can sit in an arm chair In the library, or He on the belated pillow and throw off all the care upon subordinates who, having large wages and great experience, can attend to all of the affairs of the household. Those are the exceptions. I am speaking now of the great mass of housekeepers the wo men to whom life Is a struggle, and who, at thirty years of age, look as though they were forty, and at forty look as though they were fifty, and at fifty look as though they were sixty. You think, O, man of the world! that you have all the cares and anxieties. If the cares and anxieties of the household should come upon you for one week, you would bo fit for the Insane Asylum. The half-rested housekeeper arises in the morning. She must have the morning re past prepared at an irrevocable hour. What if the Are will not light; what if the marketing did not come; what if the clock has stopped no matter, she must have the morning repast at an irrevocable hour. Then the children must be got off to school. What if their garments are torn; what if they do not know their lessons; what if they have lost a hat or sash they must be ready. Then you have all the diet of the day, and perhaps of several days, to plan; but what if the butcher has sent meat un mastleal la, or the grocer has sent articles of food adulterated, and what it some piece j,e eBcked, or the roof leak, or tho plumb ing fal!or nnv ono a thousand things occur vriiJinust ready Spring weathbr cornea, andutojn,ust b0 a 'evolutioa in the family waru7tbe; or autumn comes, and you must shutWlih9' D0IhT but what If the mothS5retf ded yu k ht. i JTriuSiifi year, the -rri., Ttot last year; wuat it tne lasmons nave changed Your house must be an apothecary's shop; it must be a dispensary; there must be medicines for all sorts of ailments. You must be in half a dozen places at tho sama time, or you must attempt to be. If, under all this wear and tear of life, Martha makes an impatient rush upon the library or drawing-room, be patient, be lonient! Oh, woman, though I may fail to stir up an appreciation in the souls of others in regard to your household tolls, let me as sure you, from the kindness with which Jesus Christ met Martha, that he appre ciates all your work from garret to cellar; and that the God of Deborah, and Hannah, and Abigail, and Grandmother Lois, and Elizabeth Fry, and Hannah More is the God of the housekeeper! Jesus was noyer married, that he might be the especial friend and confident of a whole world of troubled womanhood. I blunder; Christ was married. The Biblo says that the Church is the Lamb's wife, and that makes me know that all Christian women have a right to go to Christ and tell Him of their annoyance and troubles, since by His oath of conjugal fidelity He is sworn to sym pathize. Again there Is the trial of severe econ omy. Nine hundred and ninety-nine households out of a thousand are subjected to it some under more and some under less stress of circumstances. Especially if a man smoke very expensive cigars, and take very costly dinners at the restaurants, he will be severe in demanding domestic economies. This is what kills tens of thou sands of womeu attempting to make five dollars do the work of seven. A voung woman about to enter the married state said to her mother: "How long does the honeymoon last?" The mother answered: "The honeymoon lasts until you ask your husband for money." How groat are. the 'responsibilities of housekeepers. Sometimes an indigestible article of food, by its offset upon a king, has overthrown an empire. A distinguished statistician savs that of one thousand un married men there are thirty-eight crim inals, and of ono thousand married men only eighteen are criminals. What a sug gestion of home influence! Let the most 1)0 made of them. Housekeepers, by the food they provide, by the couches they spread, by the books they introduce, by the influences they bring around their homes, are deciding the physical, intellec tual, moral, eternal destiny of the race. You say yourlife is one of sacrifice. I know it. But, my sisters, this is tho only life worth living. That was Florence Night ingale's life; that was Payson's life; that Christ's life. FRANKFORT LOTTERY CLOSED. Legal Fight of Twenty .two Years Ends In Abolition. The forty-one offices of the Fraokfort Lottery scattered over Louisville, Ky., were closed for the first time in twenty-five years, and no drawings were mado at the principal office at Third and Green Streets. Tho lottery is closed for good. The mandate of tho Supremo Court has not been received, but the owners of the lottery felt that nothing would be gained by keeping open, as Criminal Judge Barker announced that his first act would be to proceed against the lottery without waiting for official notice. Thus'has ended a fight that has been waged for twenty-two yars against the policy shops of Louis ville. The company had two drawings daily, and its profits averaged $1(000 a day. Quail a Test. McDonald County (Missouri) fanners re cently issued a general invitation to hunt ers to come and kill quail, tho birds having become so plentiful as to be a past. Postage stamps in England 'ara gummed ' . HELPS FOR HOUSEWIVES, i , ; OIl Kid Makes a Good Loop, , It is the ouggestion of tin experi enced housekeeper that a piece of, old kid makes the best and strongest loop to sew ou winter coats and wraps to hang them up by. Use au old kid glove, cutting a narrow strip iu the best part of the leather, roll into thu apiece of course string, sew togeth'ei neatly, and attach it to the garment with strong thread. Homemade Zwieback. '-, Zwieback, which is often the most digestible food for children and dys peptics', may be made at home. It is a sort of Geriuau cake, and calls foi balf a pound of sugar, five eggs, and one pound of rlour. Ktfend' this well together until quite stiff, roll the dough out flat about three inches wide, brushing the mixture over with the white of an egg, place in a moderate oven, and bake for half an hour, then take it out, a:id with a sharp knife cut into thin pieces while hot, dust it lightly with sugar, and place it again in the oven until both sides are a -light brown color. New York Tost. How to Manage the Lamps. Here are rules Avhichwill make lamp light a delight, and not a smoking, iily nuisance: Never let the wick grow very short. 3npply a fresh one when the old Dne seems clogged and stiff. Do not cut the wick. Eub the sharred portion from it with a soft rag each day. Fill the oil tank with fresh oil each Say and never fill it quite full. Let there be at least an inch and a half tree at the top of the-tank. Wipe the outside of the oil tank and pf the whole lamp perfectly dry. The oily exterior is a frequent cause of dis igreeable odors. Wash the chimney every day and the shade, if it is of glass or porce lain, at least once a w eek. Dry the jhimney with the regular drying cloth ind polish with soft newspapers or chamois. Once a month boil the burners in rinegar. The smoke, the oozing oil wd the dust form a disagreeable com pound which can be removed only . by the action of the acid. A burner treated to this bath and dried thorough ly, supplied with a fresh wick and good oil, gives a light by which it is a iistinct pleasure to read, write or sew. Keel pes. Apple Salad Use tart green apples jut iuto dice; cut one-fourth as much jelery into squares. Mix all carefully, md pour over it mayonnaise dressing. Apple Pudding One pound of su gar, one pound of butter, one pound of stewed apples, twelve eggs beaten light, flavor to the taste. Bake in puff paste. Potatoes (sweet or Irish) and mush can be used instead of ap ples. Lemon Pudding Yolks of eight eggs, eight teaspoonfuls of butter melted, eight tablespoonfuls of sugar, flavor with lemon and stir, but do not beat, bake in puff paste and make a tr- Micno of three whites and three pTSsiiwivs of sugar. This quan- uiuiebpuoaiu and ia ft m6st titv mnks miH t i iin"rmin in " i-"-w w--Df, delicious lemon pudding Veal Loaf with Tomato Sauce pound of veal chopped fine, three Bos ton crackers rolled fine and sifted, salt and pepper, one egg well beaten. Work until thoroughly mixed, form iuto a loaf with the hands; butter a tin, place the loaf in it, rub a little butter on top, pour over this a cupful of tomato catsup. Bake for one hour, basting often. Serve cold with water cresses. Fried Potatoes These two ways are excellent: Slice them the long way, dip into egg and then into bread crumbs, and fry in deep lard. Or chop cold boiled potatoes, season well with salt and pepper, put into a skillet with very hot fat, and cover. Stir freauent- ly, then let a brown crust form on thei l. i. i. i.'fi ii . . . . .r uuivum, an, xnis, ana stir again. JLJu in a cupful of milk, cover tightly until the milk is hot, then Berve immediate ly. Scrapple Take the amount of meat you wish to use, two pounds of beef and one and one-half pounds of fresb pork. Cook in plenty of water till tender; remove the meat, stir corn meal into the liquor ns you would make mush. Cook until done. Chop the meat very fine; season with' salt, pepper and a little sage; stir this into the mush, and turn out into dishes to cool. Fry as you do mush for break fast. In cold weather this will keep for a week or more. Watch it that it does not mold. A Curlouti Town. The most curious town in England is Northwien. There is not a straight street, nor, in fact, a straight, nouse m the place; every part of it ha? tho appearance of having recently suffered from the visitations of an earthquake. Northwieh, as every one knows, is the centre of the salt indus try. On nearly all sides of the town are big salt works, with their engines pumping hundreds of thousands 'of gallons of brine every week. At a depth of some 200 or 300 feet are im mense subterranean lakes of brine,iinJ as the contents of thjse are puuped and pumped away, the upper crust of earth is correspondingly weakemed. and the result is ayi occasional 'sub sidence. These subsidences , have, a "pulling" effect on the nearest build ings, which are drnwu all ways, giving the town au upsia down appearance. London Sun. ,' Lord Kelvin c; ber of molecules gas is 100, 000, 00: and in each of t leulates that the nnra in a cubic inch of any ,000,000,000,000,000, iese molecules there are several atoms moving among them selves at the rateVoi seventy miles minute. VHin r i- ? ' A Huge Python. A python twenty feet in, length, that iied in the reptile house of Jthe Lon ion Zoological Society last month, was the largest reptile ever confined ihere. ; There ia a general imprecsion that pythons reach a length of forty feet or more, an absurdity made mani fest when the authorities assert that the female Indian python still in the gardens, and but a trifle ovr eighteen feet long, ia the longest snake in cap tivity of whioh there ia any record. General impressions as to the length of these great reptiles are due to the absurd picturea that formerly decorat ed geographies and other works msed sometimes as text books, showing a picture of a python in the act of crush ing and swallowing an Indian buffalo. That was a ridiculous picture' that was the father of many (of the "freak journalism" ' pictures of the present day. The London python, which was a real instead of a fabulous reptile, was just over twenty feet in length. It was obtained in Malacca, and was presented to the society by Dr. Hamp shire on August 29, 1876, and had, therefore, lived ' rather more than twenty years in England. During that period it had been fed principally with ducks, of which it sometimes swallowed four or five at one meal. Its food was offered to it once a week, but it sometimes refused to eat for a month together. ,The specimen will be mounted for the Tring Museum. Some Tricks of Heredity. ' Dr. Conklin gave many peculiar in stances of family characteristics run ning through many generations. In one family it was noticed that three extremely long hairs appeared on the eyebrows of the children generation after generation, and in another family a small mark on the earwasreproducod for three generations by actual knowl edge. Twins and triplets usually ap peared time and again in the same family, and while the marked heredi tary characteristics might be latent in one generation, they would appear in the next. He said that in Italy many hundred years ago a son was born who had six fingers and the number of his descendants who were similarly affected was countless. The facial ex pression, the color of the eyes, the hair, the carriage, and many little oddities appeared and reappeared. In his own family he noticed a peculiar manner of crawling on the floor in childhood was repeated in descend ants and could not be corrected. Pittsburg Times. ir-r r V "V 'Hr "V "V " k A A A A. : Is vourjlriaard ; brittle jsjtj jt y Sgyl Is it falling out?--Does yanfMutt trouble you? For any or all of these "J Jf A i conaition? mere s an injaiiiDie remedy in Ayers' rj 41 ' i' " - v" : 4 H 1 1f 1 1 CWVP ' ' k ; . . v. ; ; ;j V fllQi !.&.' FOR 14 CEHTSj ' V :-iM VF' -W VlA "SA 'fr 1 P"T,lp-3py Radish, Mag . 1 I f: .1 Vfl 1 I J CJ g r'W ': ,A lPkg. Krly Spring Turnip, ; lOo W 1 till .ti fJ il -. Jp IfcW.?! " Earliest Red Beet, lOo 9 I i t l 1 ;1 1 1,1 My 0 IPWf " Bismarck Cucumber, 10c . ... I '1 fl if 1 y Z Queen Victoria Lattace, loo f I y, II , LI tJ J, lif S MM1' ; I? I SWdyke Melon, 16o S ' ' ! OR INTERNAL AND EXTERNAL USE. CURES AND PREVENTS Coldsji Couehs, Sore Throat, Influenzal Bron chitis, Pneumonia, Swelling of the Joints, Lumbago, Inflammations, Rheumatism, Neuralgia, Frostbites, Chilblains, Headache, Tooth ,' ache, Asthma, DIFFICULT BREATHING. qURES THE WORST PAINS in from one to twenty minutes. NOT ONE HOUR after rending this advertisement need anyone SUFFER WITH PAIN. ltailway'n Keatlv Relief in a Sure Cure for Every Vain, Sprains, Bruises, Pains iu tho Knck, Cheat or IJiubs. It wait ' the J irnt anil ia the Only I PAIN ItEJMEDY That instantly stops the most excruciating pains, ullays iiiflauiuifl tion, and cures Congestions, whether j of the Lungs, Stomach, Bowels or other glands or orgiuus, by one application. A half to a teaspoonful in half a tumbler of water will in a few minutes cure Cramps, Spasms, Soar Stomach, Heartburn, Nervousness, Sleepless ness, Sick Headache, Diarrhoea, Dyaeutery, Colic, I'latulenoy and all Internal pains. There is not a remedial agent In the world that will cure fever aud ague and all other malarious bilions and other fevers, aided bv HAD WAV'S PII.1LS, so quicUy as KAOWAV'S HEADY UEiaEF. Fifty cents per bottle. Sold by Druggists. KADWAY 4 CO., 65 ELM ST., NEW YOKK. "A Gosd Tals Will Bsar Telling Twics." Use Sspilbl -Use SAPOl Sent to BOOS PUBLI City, tfill seoure for yc prepaid, copy of.--filled with valuable inforr:-- CHICKEN Br 1 0 lit able. C'Mckens can b ' I . , Bad Digestion, Bad IlearW Poor digestion often causes irreirularlt of the' heart's .notion. ' This irregularity may po misianen ior rem, organic neait disease. The symptoms ara much thosamel There Is, however, a Vst difference-between the two; orranio heart disease is often incurable; apparent heart disease is curable if Rood digestion be restored. A case in point is quoted from the Keio Era, of Greousburg, Ind. Mrs. Ellen Col som, Newpoint, Ind., a woman forty-three years old, had suffered for four yjsars with distressing stomach trouble. The gas63 generated by the indigestion pressed on the heart and caused au irregularity of its action. She had much pain in her stomach and heart, and was subject'to frequent and severe choking spells, which' were most severe at night. Doctors were tried in vain: the patient became worse, despondent, and feared impending death. A CASS OP HliAET FAILURE. j She was much frightened, but noticed that iu Intervals in which her stomach did not annoy her, her heart's action became normal. Keasonlng correctly that her di gestion was alone at fault, she prooured the proper medicine to treat that trouble, and with immediate good results. Her appetite came back, the choking spells be came less frequent and finally ceased. Her weight, whioh had been greatly reduced,' was restored, and she now weighs more than for yearsw Her blood soon became pure and her cheeks rosy. The case is of general interest because the disease is a very common 6ne. That others may know the meaus of cure we give the name of the medicine used Dr. Williams Pink Tills for Pale People. Thege pills contain all the elements neoessary to give hew life and richness to the blood and restore shattered nerves.- f What Was Not In 1T97. Think of New York about one century ago! It , did not contain one bathroom or a . single furnace. ' In summer there was no ice. There were no public stages, no matches ' and there was no such thing as a latchkey. The streets were narrower than the Liberty or Wall street of to-day. They were widened. There was a State law that commanded pedestrians northward bound to get out of the way of those going south. Pigs wero the city scavengers. There was scarcely any light from the miserable lamps at night, and not a man in the city limits wore a mustache. . , , mail you free, together with our great Plant and Seed Catalogue . upon receipt of this notice and Ho. jotice 'onr ti try postage, vve invltayoiir trade and ' know when yoa once try Salzer's I seda yoa will nevar gt aion g wit h-1 out them. Potatoes at S 1.50 i l Bill. Catalog alone 60. No,,n 1, iOAA A. SALCBR BIRD CO., Li CK0S8K, WIS. ALASKA GOLD FIELDS MAKE NO MISTAKES, For your life depend upon getting reliable supplies anil havjug them packed properly. Keep away from Srheraors and others who know nothing about your wants. We have sold thousands of Alaska outrits, know exactly what is wanted and everything is packed by experienced men. Wo are the oldest and among the most reliable Arms in this business. We mail free of charge a pood map show inf the best route and a supply list sho win cost of articles for "one man for one year." Address COOPER & LEVY, 104 8c 10 First Ave., South, Dept. N, Seattle, Washington. Ecfersnvea: Dexter, Ilorton Co., Bankers, Seattle. ADVERTISING- WJ; Y plMi f 3 " Brilliant Flower Seeds, luo J? I MWl Worth $1.00, far 14 cent. j I ttUUTO M.V UtUS, HUHU WH Will M iCLOIOllCl OQLIa IF YOU ARE GOING TO THE T j 5 - 1 i-i.i2e irom potatoes.