i off s- 'J it Itl tl I 11! III St ' it :.f i if l f 1J 6 I 3, i Sri Returns from prison wardens in thirty States ami Territories show that out of j 31,176 convicts arc imprisoned for : arson or incendiarism. A Manitoba man has invented a car heating device. Manitoba has sent us many a cold wave, so it is about time she scut us something in the heating lioc. The sardine crop is a failure this year, but that will not make any difference; you can get your hcrring,young bluetish, and young everything but sardines, but all labeled "Sardines a Thuilo" just the samc as usual. An estimate of the raluc of the pro ducts of the orchards and vineyards of California in 157 has been made which foots up a total of nearly $ is, 000, 000. More than live-sixths of the wholo amount was produced in central Cali fornia. It is not generally known that the coeducation of the sexes is carried on without restrictions in the University of Texas. Yourur men and young wony?n arc admitted to the same classes in every department and arc eligible to degrees and honors without exceptions. One of the big bridges of thc world will scon be ready for trafiic. This is thc iron railroad bridge across thc Mis souri a few miles below Kansas City. It is TJJJi feet long, weighs 31,275 tons and h fifty feet above high water, with towers reaching to a height of 200 fctt. The Kussian government offers prizes for lamps that will burn heavy unrefined naphtha oil ; first, 2500 roubles for a jingle lamp of cheap construction; sec ond, loo roubles for a lamp of better ronst ruction. The Russian war minister offers three prizes each of 500 roubles Tor a stove that will burn naphtha refuse; for a cheap galvanic battery for electric lighting and third for phosphoric uibstanees to bj use 1 in illuminating. Emn 1'asha, whom Stanley was sent to relieve, but who subsequently sent word to Kuropu that all the relief he needed was an open way to the sea cont, seem', to be well enough off at Wadolai, not only to attend to thc advancement of civilization in Africa, but to do somc !hing for the eau-e of European educa tion. The natural httoiy branch of the Brit Mi Museum at London has lately rc :cived from him a valuable collection of African bird si; ins, mammals and but teitliei, besides soui.; anthropological specimens, with a promise of another consignment of such things at an early day. ' Some idea of the extent to which mc chan'ciil ingenuity and efficiency have vlvaec- d m ly bo h i I from the follow ing si it-inc'it : ,,lt is now possible to ;onMi;irt a compUtc sewing machine in i minute, r sixty m ono hour; a reaper jvery liftceu minutvs, or less; :',00 ivatch- s i'i a d.iy, complete in ail their ipp"i:itmc:'ts. Mr; important than Ihis even, U llio fact i :i at it i; poiblc :o coa'tnirt a locomotive i:i a day. From the plans of a draugliMn m to .ho execution of them by th; workmen, ivery whocl, lever, valve and rod may 'jo con rue! ed from tin metal to thc en gine intact. Kvery rivet may bo driven in thc boihr, every tube in th; tube sheets u:nl from tho smokestack to the ashpan, a loeomotivo may bo turned out n a working .lay, c mp!( t .ly equipped, fealy to do th0 work of a hundred horses." Without such machinery and tho skilled labor to operate them, tho t ivi:i.od world of today would be an inq osMtility. All competent observer in Russia igree in representing tho condition of lhc c wtnlry since thc emancipation of ;li M i fs as very wretched. Kach rural rommnui; is responsible for thc relief ol its own poor, and Sir R. Morler, in a foreign vtticn report jir-t published, says that the officials .;iro quite incapable ol rrpl ring ali that was done for the peas aiils by the 10:J,000 large landed pro prietors whose ii t ( rest it formerly u that th. ir dependents should bo able to weik w li and constantly. Since lsiw;, accordingly, there has been permanent famine ii about fourteen province-., and it is officially stated that in the large r provinces, such as Kursk, Tambow, and Kostroma, over 100,000 peas nils have a'widoucd tho plots of tiglit acres each allotted to them. The number of beg. par in scvcnty-one governments is given as :JM,000, of whom ls',000 arc peasant propii, tors. The most hopeful r-medy Mig-esled is the formation of labor colo nies, which have been successful in fiennany. runishiiig a 1'i iiup. An anec.lote told of tho young Prince of Italy shows that the bringing up of kings re,,uires lessons in democracy: One d iy when tho Prince wa playing with thc daughter of one of thj ladies of honor he got into a quarrel with her and at last said in an autocratic tone: "Now, then, I'm going to cut your head off." The little girl commenced in cry nnd the King, who chanced to be pass ing, on learning what had happ-iml had hU son placed in doso confinement for fifteen days, in order to impress him with the fact that nowadays kings may no long, r decapitate their subjects as in " the good old days of yore." Boston Journal. Taming Birds. A New York woman, who has great success a a bird tamer, says tho secret of her power is in making tho birds be lieve sno is ainu-l of them. At lirst .. .T., ,KCK ni ncr lor Her j lun.uuii-v, uut wneu uioy na.i Her still more humble and anuablo they "row Rorry for her and kind to her, and final, ly end by being fond, tho fondness ol thc strong for tho weak. f OR FA KM AND GARDEN. D.mp or Shallow Frames. An apiarist in Maine expresses him pelf in Home and Farm on the subject of deep or shallow frames' as follows: "I find by observation that bees on the np- i proach of cold weather cluster below their stores, but the lirst very cold day you w ill find them at the top of the frames at the end and next to the cn- - (rancC) aml ;S winter wcarg on ftn(1 thdr storcs an cons;ini(Hi 1ll0y movo towards lhc othcr om of thjJ fram( takiH thc , f . f th f thc width of the cluster, and if thc frame is narrow they sometimes take all the honey from the upper part of the frame and starvo to death with plenty of honey below the cluster and on thc adjoining frames. ''1 am fully convinced that a long frame is better for wintering bees than a deep and narrow' one. Give mc a long frame, with the entrance at thc end of the framt, and no more frames in the hive than thc bees will cluster on, with plenty of good storcs and a good chaff hive for wintering on thc summer stands." Distributing Manure Evenly. On most long-tilled farms the yearly crop is largely dependent on thc yearly application of manure. It is therefore important that tho manure be evenly distributed; if not, thc crop will be not only deficient, but unevenness of ripening, if of grain, will make what there is of it harder to harvest. This is especially true of commercial manures, which, owing to tho small amounts used per r.civ, cannot easily be distrib uted uniformly so as to cover the entire surface even with tho drill. On small fields with short bouts it is generally better done, for at each turn the driller puts in a fresh supply and sees that the tubes are working all right. If the bo,uts arc long the farmer puts in a larger quantity, which is more apt to clog the tubes and cause them to distribute unevenly. The re sult is seen in a streaked appearance of the field after the grain' is up, and this continues until harvest. More than half thc value of commercial fert li.crs is lost by imperfect distribution through the drill. Sown broadcast they are still more unevenly ditriluted and have the further disadvantage of not being in contact with the seed. It is this last circumstance that make the drilling of commercial manures so widely popular. If the work is well done it gives the grain a quick, even start, and soon puts it into position to make it? own way to a succcful crop. ---Cultivator. Ch.iri;o if Iitnrp. There h more good solid sense ex pressed in the old saing that 'A change of pasture makes fat calves" than most people are apt to realize on a casual reading. X-t only calves but all de scriptions of live stock need for their hiuhe-.t thiift some little variety in the way of foo l, and the pastures, to main tain their best condition, need an occa sional rest. Roth stock and pastures are therefore benefited by a chan". Thc stock coming into a fresh pasture find every variety of grass natural to it in full growth, ami are able to till them selves easily without toi much exertion; and if the animals are of an improved character and quality they never fail to give a good account of the luxuriant feed. There are some grasses in tin pasture which will not stand very flow grazing; the sun let in too directly upon their roots acts unfavor ably and they seem incapable of making much growth until after they have progressed to ab ut a certain stage. If constantly grazed the pasture is cer tain to lose its due proportion of such grasses. It i better, therefore, for both stock and grass that the pastures be di vided into several lots, that one portion may recuperate while another is being used. If there is a difference in its pro ductive capacity some portions grow ing more luxuriant food than others it is well to make thc divisions with refer ence to that fact, for if there is not prof itable food on any portion it is better that the stock should not be suffered to tramp around over it. Suitable divi sions of thc pasturage also enable tho farmer to keep different discriptions of stock separate, which is quite desirable. Especially in periods of drought it is es sential that thc farmer should be able to manage the pasturage with tho greatest care and intelligence, for there is danger of th - permanent stand being in jured in such portions as arc too heavily bur dened with stock at such a time. Breeders' Gazette. Storlii'; Potatoes. Digging as soon as the vines are dead and not leaving them to long in the sun are good points. To build sheds or carry thc potatoes under a tree .where there h only one tree on a ten-acre lot yicl ling from 200 to 100 bushels per acre, makes much useless labor. Stop and think before you attempt to carry 2000 bushels u ider trees to dry or to temporary sii ds, either. I have seen people dig potatoes in a hot sun in thc forenoon an 1 leave them until after dinner and then pick them ui I throw them into a cart, and at night dumpth' in down the cellar window to sweat, and rot, and then complain about their rotting. 1 had a bin in the home cellar last year twenty-two feet long, five feet wide an I MX inches from the ground, and I began to fill it in August. By the middle of September it was from four to five feet ! hi'di. n fid was ;n no-ir t1- (.in nl-.. that we could not empty any more in it. j took o k out the first load in December nnd sold them as fast as a first-class hotel wanted them, and thc last 1-a 1 , was taken out iu Aprii. There were not four quarts of unsound potatoes in thc whole bin. I did thi3 knowing thc others complained of rotting, and I ai$ doing thc same this year. For tho lasl five years I have had no trouble with rot or' unsound potatoes when handled with the same, care used in curing a to bacco crop. After thc potatoes are a little dry on top begin to pick them and put them in bags or sacks, and lot them stand in the field until night and then cart them to thc cellar and set them on boards placed on the ground. Never empty thc same day they are dug; if placed on the ground they will gather moisture in a very short time, lie sure and not leave a single one in the bin that is not dry. Of a single bag picked in a hot day as soon as dug, and carried to an open shed and set on tho ground, thc most were soft or rotten within a week. Leave the windows open until cold weather, with old sacks or carpets for curtains to keep out the light, for n bright light will make thc potatoes look dark-colored when cooked, and thc more there h in a bag the less they will shrink in bulk and weight. New Eng land Homestead. Farm and Garden Notes. Ichneumons, lady-bugs and spidera destroy other insects and should bo en couraged. It has been claimed that Ayrshircs arc more except from tcrbcrculosis than any other breed. Rail-fences are expensive on account of thc ground they occupy and the weeds they protect. Sheep manure contains 90 to 05 per cent, of the plant food contained in the rations consumed by sheep. It is there fore, a very rich fertilizer. Professor Roberts of Cornell Univer sity is reported as saying that under favorable conditionit cost 1 1-2 cents p:r quart to produce milk. Good clover hay is always considered as equal to any oth-.-r. It is thestaudard by which all other grasses are compared, and no farm is considered fully supplied for thc w inter that has not had a crop of clover grown upon it. It needs extra warm pens and good feeding to make lato Fall pigs pay foi wintering. As a rule pigs dropped in October or later should be sold for what they will bring. They will cost more to winter than they will be worth iu the spring. Don't set your milk in shallow pans or crocks; get a portable creamery, or, if you can't afford that just yet, have some deep iht cans made, and set them in a tank of cold water. Time, labor and cream saved w ill soon enable you to buy a creamery. The Allans Express Company is rep resented by the New York Wico as having learned by experience with their horses, which are out in all weathers, that blanket s do more harm than good. Too much co Idling enervates animals ol all kind, human included. A correspondent of Vick's rccom momls planting potato onions late in fall, so that they can get a little start before the ground freezes, for early use. Covci them an inch or more and pack the earth around the bulb. The correspondent has had 20 years' experience. In pruning trees of any kind it is bet ter to have one strong branch or limb than two or three weak ones. It's better to keep heads low than high. It's bet ter to keep limbs thinned out than to cut back and make two close heads. Let thc suu's rays in through all thc t ree. Scaly leg is caused by a minute insect which burrows under thc scales on thc hanksof fowls, causing them to enlarge. This may be cured by dipping tho shanks of those aff.cted into crude pe troleum, or a mixture of lard and kero sene may be thoroughly rubbed into tho j scales. Repeat the treatment in ten days, and thc euro will be completed. Cleanliness in Japan. Those who come around thc world eastward, writes a Ht. Louis CJlobc cor respondent from Nagasaki, find all the Asiatics from Fort Slid to tho ends of China and Corea one in tho great broth erhood of dirt, and sitting meditatively and in contented indolence in tho midst of filth that would do populate those countries by one epidemic, if there was anything in tho theories of sanitary en gineering, malaria, germs and microbes t hat could be applied to Asia. To them Japan is even more of a wonder and de light than to those who come to it west ward from our very practical and prosaic Am.rica. The first boat and boatman in tho harbor is a shhfng example of cleanliness. His one scant cotton gar ment may be patched and darned all over, but it is as e'ean as daily washing can make it, ami thc boatman himself is as clean as constant scrubbing, soaking in hot water and rubbing down with his illustrate! Japanese towels can make him. The wholo nation is amphibious, and although thc government has done away with the publiebath homc,whcr every one went in together, the con stant babbling and splashing in tanks of boiling water has not ceased since the Arcadian fashion was dou-j away with. Tho bath houses arc the club houses, thc places of public resort, where any one drops iu for a smoke and a chat with hi 5 neighbor, and there is no special boar or limit to tho indul gence. The lowest coolier; do as much bathing as the nun of hi gh rank, and cleanliness is not, as in England, the badge ami altrilmte o? tho better class es only. The clean faces, the wel! serubbed boats, the clean and sprinkled streets, tho pretty little homes, with their toy balconies without spot or speck on their .Inning Moors, arc an ecstasy to. tin- ey ; after tin; mu l hovels, tlu dirt fio r the filth, rags and repulsive peo ple living ju it across tho Yellow sea. SEAL SKINS. Interesting Processes of Prepar ing Them For Use. An Inside View of a Celebrated Factory. The Albany Press reporter describes thc processes of dressing and dyeing seal skins iu a largo factory in that city. He 3 ay s : Thc building in question is the factory of Messrs. Tread well & Co., and in it arc annually dressed and dyed thousands of senl skins as well as many other furs of value. Thc firm has carried on tho business for about fifty years, and for the last twenty-five years the work of pre paring the fur for the market has been carried on in tho present quarters. Lon don is thc great fur market of the world and all pelts of value arc shipped there, whence they are distributed to all parts of the globe, principally to northern countries. The seal skins used by Tread well & Co. are purchased in London, and thousands arc imported direct by them every year. They embrace tho Alaska and Copper Island seal. Tho Shetland seal has been about annihilated and no new skins are to be found in tho market. The skins como packed in a barrel, like fish. They are packed in salt which with thc abundant blubber of thc seal forms a sort of brine and pre serves the skin. They arc generally used thc season following their capture. The price of seal skim remains about thc same every year, owing to tho fact that thc great Alaska Fur company regu lates thc si.j of each season's capture so as to just supply thc demand. The con tract with tin government allows an annual rapture of 100,000 seals, but of ten the actual number killed falls be low this amount. The process through which the skin goes in thc course of preparation for actual use in the making up of fur garments is very interesting. There certainly is nothing attractive in them when they arc first taken out of the barrel, where they may have lain iu salt for perhaps a year. They arc lirst blubbered on a beam, a process in which all the fatty adherents arc re moved by scraping, and then thorough ly scoured on a table with strong soap nids until thoroughly clean. They ire next unhaircd, thc long hairs being pulled out by the roots by a kind of hand-knives, leaving thc fur in. Thc skins, which are usually of a slaty gray color, now, with tho long l air out, be come a light drab. The next step is to shave down th pelt to an even thick ness. Next they are gotten ready for milling and passed through a fuller's mill that softens the pelt and thorough ly cleans the fur. Tho next process is to stretch out the skins and prepare them for the dyer. Thc dying process occupies about two weeks, after which both pelt and fur are thoroughly washed agaiu. Thc pelt is second time shaved, this time quite fine, and is prepared to go through thc milling process again. In the process of milling line saw dust is employed, largely of mahogany and rosewood. This process both cleanses and softens. After this the fur is ready to be made up, and it is sent to thc Uroadway store of thc firm where a large force is con stantly employe I working it up into every kind of garments demanded by the trade. In the' preparation at tho Van Woert street establishment each skin passes through nine different oper ations, and it is about six weeks after it is taken out of the packing barrel before it is ready to be made up. For a seal skin sacqtic of the prevailing style, threo or foui skins are used. Thc skins after coming from thc factory arc ali assorted according to the grade and only the very best ones employed in making up tho high grado garment?. Some single ?kinofthc same batch may be valued at $100, while others perhaps may not be worth over one-third as much. Add to these values the cost of the expert work in cutting nnd making up and one will readily see that it isnot strange that seal garments command so large a price. Solving a Vexed (ucstiou. Admirers of Lord Tennyson have long sought to ascertain to whom the po;:t laureate alluded in the opening ines of "In Memoriam:" I bold it truth, with him who sings To one eleir harp in .livers tones, That, men may rise on sU-ppinn stones Of their dead sebe:s to higher things. Many poets have been mentioned, but hitherto (ho allusion has never been traced. A little while ago an inquiry in tho p int appeared in Notes and (Queries, and has elicited thc following reply from Rev. Dr. (tatty, vicar of Ec clesfield, Yorkshire, who some years ago issued an able key to Lord Tennyson's threat work: "The poet alluded to in the first slim.a of 4In Memoriam' is (Jocthe. I know this from Lord Tenny son himself, although he could not iden tify (be passage, and when I submitted l) him a small work of mine on his mar vellous poem he wrote 'It is Goethe's creed' on this very passage." Until Waiting. Wist Citizen Do you want to see Mr. Smith? Second Citizen Yes, sir. First Citizen He is upstairs. I'm waiting for him to com? down. Second Citizen (a collector) -I'm waiting for him to "come down," too. (The Epoch. Not a Proposal. He Do you want a little puppy, Miss EJith? She---Am I to consider that as a pro posal ? He Not at all; good-bye Tho .Earth CLIPPINGS FOR THE CURIOUS. The first British writers wero Qildasj Nennine and Bode, ia thc Eevcnth ccn tury. In Mexico they have special funeral cars over thc horso car routes to tht cemeteries. Amarath L was tho founder of th power of Turks, and reigned from 135? till killed in 1390. J. M. Cook of Howard county, Ark., raised a pear this year that weighec two pounds and four ounces. Paris was known as Lutetia until 1184 when thc name of the great French cap ital was changed to that which it has borno ever since. Tho buyer of a largo Cincinnati to bacco house, who is paid $10,000 a yea! to know good tobacco when he SCC3 it, neither smokes nor chcw3. Though St. Paul's College, Cambridge, England, was founded as early as 1257, it was a place of education as early as thc time of Roman dominiw in Britain. The origin of thc expression, "Paint the town red,'' i3 credited to an ener getic circus agent who announced the coming of his show in flaming red char acters. A rooster at Salem, III., is so fond of music that he will fly in at thc window of his master's house and run to and fro on thc keys of the piano, delighted with thc sounds he evokes. In 70, Jerusalem was razed and plowed over by the Roman emperor, Titus, in order to obliterate and make unrecog nizable spots venerated by Christians. It was refouuded, as a heathen city, by the Emperor Hadrian, A. D. 140. Mrs. T. R. R. Cobb of Athens, Ga., has tho original draft of tho Confeder ate constitution as itcamo from the com mittee that drafted it. Her husband, a brother of ex-Speaker Howell Cobb, wai one or the committee. On February 17, 1571, Marcby Hill, near Hereford, England, began to move, bearing with it cattle, trees and hedges 5ii its surface. It continued in motion for two days, overthrowing a chapel that ay in its path, and leaving, where it formerly stood, a chasm forty feet deep ind thirty long. A similar phenomenon iiapponcd in Dorsetshire in 15.S3. Burglars' Tools. P. J. Jennings, a New York cngincci ind michinist, tolls an interesting story ibout his dealing! with a burglar. Ho na? sittiug in his office one day a few iionthsago whm two man cnterel with l design they wanted to make of steel lie took the job and turned it out ac ronling to or ler. The men came thc ict day, and r.ftor chitting pleasantly ibout matters of popular inten-st in the ?ity, paid th-ir bill aad went away. S -v-nal other designs wero brought him by he two men and he got to know them piite well. He did not learn their busi ness, however, but it is a common thing :o deal with m:u whom one knows only 5y sight and Mr. Jennings never both ;rcd his head about it. But he found out who thc men were ifter all. O.io day th?y calle I to have lim make half a doz ;a eight-inch steel screws. H-; promised them for 5 o'clock, Dut thi men.li I not ome. Ho did not ice them on the next d ly or the next. Iu (he third day one of Pinkcrton's de ectives droppvl upon him iu thc ifterii)OU cavrvi ig a hrid-satch d. Hi pened it an I threw a lot of curiously ihaped pieces of steel on thc table. "Were those nude in your shop, Mr. Fennings?" casually remarked the Oc tet ivc. "Yes, that's our work."' "Who did you make them for?'' "Now you've got mc it's more than t can toll. I never had any reason to mpiire, and tho men didn't bother ibout telling mc." 'But you are sure you mada that steel tvorkhcre." Two days later Mr. Jennings was mbpovmed by the prosecution as a wit less against two men who had attempted ;o crack the safe of a bank in Ellen villc, UMer couaty. Ho met a Harlem -machinist and an ironworker from down low n at the co.irtlivisi in Kingston. I'inkerton's men opened wi 1c th.'ir eyes ivhcn ho look thc pieces of steel that ?ach ha I shaped and, putting them to gether, showed what a perfect sectional jimmy they made -New York Letter. Lincoln's Statue Unveiled by "Little Abe." The great statue of Abraham Lincoln was unveiled recently at Liucolu Park, Chicago. The- booming of cannon startled the assembled multitude, and as the sound of thc cannon died away over :hc water of Lake Michigan, "little Abe" Lincoln, the son of Robert T. Lin coln, stepped up to the base of the i ig ?overed bro zo figure of his grandfather, ind pulled a rope which he'd the cover ing. The folds slowly unb osened and rlroppcd down at thc base, and the tall erect figure of Abraham Lincoln shone brightly in the sun. A tremendous shout went up, and it was joined a mo ment later by the roar from lhc cannon. Thomas V. Withrow, one of the trustees of thc Bates fund, out of which tho cost 3f thc statue was defrayed, formally pre sented the figure to tho Lincoln Park hoard, a id W. C. Con ly rcplie I in be half of t ic board. Th ! oration was de livered by Hon. Leonard Swott. Siswy Disappointed. Hostess (at an evening entertainment) Do you sing Mr. Sissy? Mr. Sissy (vh ) sings on thc slightest provocation) Oh, yes. Hostess I am so glad. Mr. Feathcrly is to favor us with a song, and you, being musical, will enjoy it, I'm sure. He has such a fine voice. Sis-y hitcs Foatherly. Siftiuga. MEN WHO wiy. Plve Hnndrerf JlAttilM fhrowtt Away Ills Aim Was Success. A good 'healthy body is almost sure to bo found associated with a good conscience. A close student of human nature is rarely willing to place large matters of trust in tho bands of another until he has BBett the oivS whom hj is to trust. He looks for the fresh health and vigor, the honest, frank counte nance and manly form, and in fact all that is attractive in men. He doubts the dyspeptic with sallow skin, drawn cut features, the evident weak and irritable nature. He feels as fehakespeare makes Julius Caesar say: ' Jf 1 ?M: hflTe men tt,,0"t me that arc fat; Meek headed men, and mich as sleep o'nichlB: ?tn. , ,iuK halh H lcai1 anu hungry look; lie thinks too much; such men are dangerous!" He does not doubt the honesty of the ioor unfortunate, but feam disease of the body will affect the mind, bring misfortune Upon the individual, and loss to himself. It may be injustice to the w eak, but if the man has not the mental strength, or if ho is wrapped up in his misery, he cannot take in the situation of tho world, doeii not see that idea j arc broadening, and that isms and teachings aft? ad van -ing! How can an em Wbyer hope for success from such a man? The dyspeptic look, the wax-like complexion and sallow feature show disease. The far seeing man notes all these si-ns, and knows that tho great light of man, the brain, is af fected, or will be, at no distant day He discards the poor victim of digeaSo who goes wearily Cut into tho world. Discouraged at last he takes to his sickbed. He seeks medical aid. Lacking tho broad ideas of the Miccessful man of tho world, he tries the same medical treatment that he has tried many times l ofore. The same bigoted coun sel is sought, the same drugs are administer ed l.y the same old family lriend that treated him months and years before, and his parents before h:m, and in such a way he drags out his miserable, unsuccessful existence. Is he to blame? Why not? When ho sees daily, and hears from every side, proclama tions of a remedy known us Warner s safe cure, which is becoming more popular daily, hourly, while he is becoming weaker. J. A. Gettys, insurance agent of Chillicothc, Ohio, suffered for nearly three years with dyspepsia in its worst forms, having periodi cal siiells of vertigo, fainting and chills. He HV!1,is. mvn signat: "I spent about $.)00, had the best medical attendance, tried all the remedies recommended without suc cess, until I was induced lo try Warner's safe cure. I used three bott'es, have gained twenty pounds and feel like a new man." Such a man as wo have described, nine times out of ten, unconsciously to himself or to his physician, has a kidney disorder, which is fast wasting his bo iy and lite. He sees the merits of Warner's sate cure at everv turn and heara it proclaimed from the house tops' and yet he does not use it, because it is said by his illiberal physician that it is not profes sional, and not admitte.l by the code. Mean while the man of the world presses forward, cares not a fig for this or that school ; his aim in life is success, and h ? looks hopefully for ward to the world beyond, believing and trusting in man in this world.and to his faith for tho world beyond. Books in their present form were invented by Altulus, King of I'ergamUs, in An Important Airenl. The arrest of a suspicious character upon his sreneral anpearance.movemenls or companion ship, without waitini? until he has robbed a traveler, tired a house, or murdered a fellow man, is an important function of a shrewd de tective. Kven more iniHrtant is the arrest of disease which, if not cheeked, will biiuht and destroy a human life. The frequent eouh.l's of appetite, general languor ordobMity, pallid skin, and Imdily ache-sand pnin, announce the approach of pulmonary consumption, which is promptly arrested and permanently cured by Dr. Pierce's "Golden Medical Discovery' SoM by druggists. The tirst iron ore to be discovered in tin's country was leund in Virginia in 1713. Consumption, Scrofula, Gen rial Debility Wnntinsr Disease of Children, Chronic Coughs and Bronchitis, can t cured by the use of Scott's Emcxsiox of Pure Co;l Liver Oil with nrpophesrhite. Prominent physicians use it and testify to its great value I'lease read thj fol'owins: "I used ScottV Emulsion for an o'-stina'e Cough w t'i Hemor rhage, Lo.-s of Appetite, Emaciation, s eep lesness. Arc. All of these have now left, and I believe yonr Emulsion has saved a case of well-developed Consumption" T. J. Flnpley, M. D., Lone Star, Texas. Speak well of your friend; of say ncthin. your em my Tho Special Offer of The Yotth's Companion, which we have Sublished.fncludcs the admirable Double 1 1 li ay Numbers for Thanksgiving and Christina.?, w-ith colored covers and full-pane pictures, twenty pages each. These. with the other week ly issues to January 1, is, will be sent free to all new subscrilicrs who send 51.75 for a year's subscription to January, In-'.'. The Compan ion has lieen greatly enlarged, is finely illus trated, and no other weekly literary paper gives so much for so low a price. A wise man is not inquisitive aiout things mp.-rtini'iit. Weak lungs, spitting of blood, consumption and kindred aucctiens cured without physi cian. Arhlres. for treatise, with 10 cents in stamps, World's Dispensary Medical Associa tion, 06a Main Street, Buffalo, N. Y. Truth is a rock large enough for ali to Gland upon. ,fI Don't Wnnt Kcllcf. Hut Cure," Is the exclamation of thousands suffering from catarrh. To all such we sav: Catarrh can be cured by Dr. Sage's Catarrh Itemed y. It has been done in thousands of cases; why not in yours? Your danger is in delay. Enclose a stamp lo World's Dispensary Medical Associa tion, Buffalo, N. Y., for pamphlet on this dis ease. Judge charitably and act kindly to each other. Offer No. 171. FREE! To Meiu'iiants Only: A genuine Meerschaum Smoker's Set (livepieces),m satin lined plush case. Address at once, K. W. Tan SlLt, & Co., 55 State Street, Chicago. Consumption Surely Cnrctl. To the Editor: riease inform your readers that I have a positive remedy for the above nameddiscase. By its timely use thousands of hopeless cases have been permanentl v cured. I shall lie glad to send two bottles of my remedy free to any of your readers who have con sumption if they will send me their Express and r. O. address. Kespcctfullv, T. A. SLOCUM,M.C, ltd pearl St.. N. Y. Pnnjtlilcrs, Wive nnd Mother. Send for Pamphlet on Female Diseases, fros fecurely scaled. Dr.J. B. Marehisi,tItica,N.Y. KoyAl.Gl.rK meiiils everything! Broken China.Ulass. Wood. Free Vials at Drugs & Gro The fall of a leaf is a whisper to the living. Catarrh May afreet nny portion of thc body where the mu cous membrane Is found. Hut catarrh of the head a by far the most common, and, strange 1 1 sny, the most liable to be noRleeted. It originates In a cold, or succession of eoldo, combined with Impure blood. The wonderful auccesa Wood's Sarsaparilla has had j In curing catarrh warrants us in urging all who ! buffer with this disease to try the peculiar medicine. It renovates and invigorates the blood and tones ev ery organ. , "Hood's SarsAparilla cured me of catarrh, soreiicia of the bronchial tubes and terrible headache." It. Gibboxs, Hamilton, Ohio. Hood's Sarsaparilla Sold by all druggists. $1 ; six for Prepared oi by C. t. HOOD A CO., Apothecaries, Lowell, M.w. iOO Doses One Dpar MARVELOUS ill! DISCOVERY. Wholly unlike nitlflcinl nyMlem. Any book lenrnrtl In one rending. Recommended byJlAUK Tw.ux, Kt.-n.ou l',t r-ron. the (scientist, Hon. W. V. Astoh, .Tci.wi p V.-mi! Uin, Dr. Misoii. &f. Class of no Columbia L.r.v dents ; 2 at SJcrtde n ; 2.-i at Norw I -h : :rm at i liei-lii. College; two classes of 3leactmt Vale; i .-t n,! yerslty of Penn, Phlla. ; at Welli sley College an'l three large elaases at Chatatiuua tTnivershV .te i'rospectus idst hikk from PKOF. LOlSKTTt:, 2 !7 Eifth Ave., Krw York. Blair's Pills.' 4k I U . a . Great English Gout and Rhfiimatie llm.irl , Oval Bx, 31 1 round, l i 1MU. hfOrW rtTI inlftebarUcrlitorm. i'he rcmt PO.M M 1L SLICKEtl Ha perfect ri'Jm;; cort, iAH UK l-VV I and coTersf cnt.ro aJ.l!c. Beware ef lmitt!ong. Kojm rciiuias wit!ioi t t:ic W K fc i j "ffish Uracil traga-iaarV. Illuitrsted Catalogue tn-n. A ..T.Tuv-r. I'steiiJarJ. DAYLIGHT. If a gentleman by the name of lav volunteers to throw the light Of his ex. perience Into the darkened places of misery, so that others may go and do as he has done and enjoy life, may it not be reasonably called daylight? As for instance, take thc case of Captain Sargent 8. Day, (Jloucester, Mass., who vrite3 April 10, 1881: "Some time ago I was stifteriiig with rheumatism. J used a small portion of St. Jacobs Oil and was cm j at once. J have used it for sprains and never once have known it to fail. I will never be without fl bottle," Captain Day also re ceived a circular letter, and in reply undei date of July 1, 18S7, he says: "I used the Oil as stated and was permanently cured ut rheumatism by its use." During the inter vening pix yeara there bad been tio recur rence of the pain. Also a letter from Mr. II. M. Converse, of tho Warren (Mass.) Herald, dated July ft, 1887, as follows: "In response to yours of June 22, would say that ill ls-40 my wife had a severe attack of rheumatism In shoulder and arm, so that she could not raise her hand to her head. A few applications of tit, Jacobs Oil cured her permanently, and she has had no return it." Another case is that of Mr. . 15. Kyl. Tower Hill, Appomattox county. Ya., win writes, November, lssij; "Was alllioted for several years with rheumatism and grew worse all the time. Eminent physicians gave no relief; had spasms, and was' not ex pected to live; was rubbed all over with St. Jacobs Oil. The lirst application relieved, the second removed the pain, continued use cured me ; do relapse in ii ve years, and do aa much work as ever." These'are proofs of the perfection of thc remedy, and, taken in con nection with the miracles performed in other cases, it has no eo,ual. UN C 45 KIDDER'S ST A SIIKE CURE FOR INDIGESTION and DYSPEPSIA. Over fi.noo 1'hyxlcl.mn have rent us thlr appr-val of DIGESTYLIN, sayiiifr that It Is tlie tiest preparation for IinJ Igest ( n that- they have ever used. We havp never Iward of a ea of Dyspepsia wher DlUKSTYI.IN wait taken that was not curnd. F03 CHOLERA INFANTUM. IT WILL CURE THE MOST AGORA VATKO CASES IT WILL STOP VOMIT1NU IN PKKONASCY IT WILL KKLir.VK CONSTIPATION. For Sum ir. or CoinplaliiU a;; 'I Clironlc Dlarrh,Ta, wM'-li are 1h illi-ect results of Imperfect -digestion, DIGESTYLIN will effect an immeli;ite oure. Take DYGESTYLIN for all pains anl dfr1erg of the stunim-li : th"v all co?ne from iu1irestin. Ask vo;ir rlrucglst fcr DK.IOSI YLIX (price $1 per l.irpp l;'lt!e'. If he iIocr l:et h'ive t. ri nii one olljr to u .mil we tvi!l 5ei'l a Imttle to yen. xprrss r; "p.'il'l. Do not hesitate t semi your fnoiirv. Our uoue 14 reliable. Kst:illi-.!ies twcuiv five vciiw. w.n. p. 1 1 1) it r. r: ;v co.. If nnnfhriiM-inar Clieiiit- . John St.. N.V. WELLS' HAIR BALSAM rc-stcres (liaj Jlair tooriRi palcclor. An softens cu.lteautities JNogrtasenor oil. A Tonic Itestorative. l'reveuts hair coniinK out ; etrentfheiis. cleans. b ami htals scalp. OOc.DrugfrUU E. S. WELLS, JE11SEY CITY, IT.. If you are losing your grip on Ufa Tw "WtU' Health Renewer." Goes direct to weak spots. For weak men, delicate women. BUCHU-PAIBA Remarkable Cure of Catarrh of the Blad der, lnilainnintlon. Irritation of Kidneys and I'.ladder. K!or.p or Gravel 1'iseasos of the Pros tate Gland, Ip-psical Swellings. Incontinence .or over Continence, Diseases of the Kidneys and allied Orpans In either sex. f 1. Prugidstq fcrEs. 0 bets., 5. E. S.Wells, Jersey City, N.J. KRONClHTIst, tIA V FKVi:. and nil Din cnen ol the II I.OOI). ran he enrril oiilv by DR. HAIlt'f HTEM of Treatment, which is now recognized hy the medical world at the only one that will positively and permanently cure Asthma, its kindred Rlt'ectiop!' nnd nil hloixl diseases. Not only in.s it ecel all other method) in giving quick relief. lut it absolutely cures tha worst cases permanently. Tiiouanils have been cured by it. Convincing and conclusive proof will be found" in my 6t pnuc T remise. Pi nt free. Uli Dt Hi nrtllli CINCINNATI, OUHI- Wher. I m-cure I do not mean nirr?!.v to pfji them for ill line nnd t lien have them return nc-iin. I mnn tt nidim! cure. I hno ninoY-1 he d:.!".-r,i ol Kl T.S, l-'.PIL-KPSY er FALLING S! 'KNE.SS a lifo long study. I RT.rrnnt my remedy to cum t ho worn? cape. Becatifse Others have failed im no russon i'or not. now receiving a cure. Send at miee for n treatise and a Free Ilottlo of r.iy inf.i'lilile reneily. ;ivo Kxprrx and Punt Office. 11. ii. KOOT. .11, C, 1 83 Pcurl tit. View York. a npiTAct: B25T IN TIIK WORIiD UllhflOL IBtJcttlioC-ev.uIti". S -Id r.verv, .. . AGENTS WAHTEQ SXYJSKIii , PATTERNS, for making Kiikn. I ioiih. nooo, .ii ii ten:,, etc. rati chine went ly mail for $1. Scno for lute redtiee.l price IHt. . ! c Co., Toledo, O. to Sellers . Ulr. Send stnmi for elrc'tUrs. COL. L. lU.Vt 3 HAM, Att y, Wanbliiiton, i. U. A MOM!. Aymttn'tiptfit. !WbotlI big articler. in the world. 1 sample Yrre. Address .TA V li ZUXtHJX, Vet roil, Mich. Morphine Hsldt Cure la 10 Jo 2p 4nyn. ho pay till enred Ur. J. (Stephens, Lobaaoa, Obi. PATENTS B HAM, IV tout Attorney, Ofifaincd. PetifJ (damp f"i inventor..' CiiIiIa I.. lilSA y, WashiiiKtou. V. C. TP I PCRAPHY1 r" he:'' m,,, furnished. Writ Valentine Brov. ,ati;i iile.U is A i3S a dnv. Samples worth jil.W), fKEI- yi TJnes not under this horse's feet. Write V W lirewsiers ifeiy Kiln Holder Co., Holly. Mich PEHSIONSs An Increase may le1ti. Ad Mil.o I!. SrKVf-1 s c I o. UrovcrBdV.WaMhintt'n.I) r'OKALL. ft?! a week nnd rxpen laid. Valuable outfit and f -irt ,-i!n -free. 1 o. V1CKKUV, Aun.-la. MPilRBAlin CICTU UIUCCI Latest v and CaiTlm Improvement. 11 Ell I! It A MJ CO.. Preuiout, P CUCmWC t S..ldl.-r and Heirs. Send fori ir hiiiiiunti eiil-,r Xo fee unless siicco-sf"'- K. ll.UEI.MTON CO.. WashbiKtoii. J. ''. II.M' flii.lnr Colletrr, FhlK. Pa. . t Ions f urn shed. Lire vein lar.ihip, 10. Wr.ie GOI.P I" worth $7) per lb. T rttlfs Eye Palve is worth $1,U, but i. soi l at 2"e. a box by ilcalcr. I Tlie Best 'Waterproof Coat. B GOUi FITS I CHAT Si AXLE 9 8Bf5&.Bl 1230 i ! S' I