KNOTTQ ZZ Publishers & Tr THC t . A Little of tho i. ry of That Pop ular Order. Of all orders there is nore probably whose objects and aims are so generally misunderstood as this order. Its name suggests to the reader that it is a body of laboring men banded together for the purpose possibly of maintaining a stand ard of wages and for such other objects as labor organizations arc usually ettab lished. This opinion does not prevail among the poorly educated classes alone, but also among those whose carelessness nad want of investigution have led them to an erroneous conclusion. It is within the knowledge of but few outside of its membership that it is a purely benevolent organization, created for the purpose of relieving the suffering, caring for the sick, burying the dead, and bequeathing to the widows and children of deceased members a modicum for their support and maintenance. It was learned from a member last night that one reason for the general ignorance of the people concerning this order arises from its recent establishment. About seventeen years ago this order had its birth in Mcadville, Pennsylvania, among a few of the best of that smoky city's business men and manufacturers. For a time it trembled in the balance, and many of its friends feared it would not live, but those who had sat around the cradle of its bitth nobly stood by it until it had become a strong and vigorous child. It is an order which has for its motto, "Charity, Hope and Protection." It has its lodges, select knights, grand lodges, jurisdictions and supreme grand lodges; it has its signs, countersigns, pass words and grips for the purpose of pro tecting its members from imposition by strangers. The meetings of its lodges combine business and the amenities of a social gathering while the general plan of operation is business. In their theory and practice, these meetings have a dis- v tinctive social character and unite the I members in a common brotherhood of fraternity and allegiance. The principles Jind teachings of this order are also in keeping with the highest morality. The noblest .instincts of man's nature are in perfect harmony with the whole structure of the order and it compels respect from the best men in communities where its aims and objects are not misunderstood. It is secret in character and transacts its business after the manner of other socie ties having secrets. In connection with the society is a sys tem of insurance, also, which is purely mutual in its operation. Each member bears his just proportion of the whole expense and shares equally in its privi leges and benefits. Each member takes out a policy for $2,000, no more or no less. Its membership is confined to no class or condition in life and no questions political, religious or sectarian, are ever discussed in their lodge meetings. At the session of the supreme lodge, li-ild in Cincinnati in June, 1882, the territory comprised in the state of Nebras ka was attached to the jurisdiction of Missouri until such time as there may be enough lodges in the state to organize a grand lodge. Since that time experienc ed deputies have been sent into this state to build up now lodges and help those existing. This order was established in 18G8. There are now eight hundred and sixty lodges, all prosperous, and their membership constantly increasing. Concerning Cemeteries. A dilapidated individual came into our office today and said : "Gimme a quarter." "What for?" "Cause." "We don't give something for nothing. What can we see in your illustrious feat ures to produce a quarter." He leaned back against our best velvet plush arm chair, threw his hands behind his head, assumed a dignified air and said : "I'm a philospher. I have an'object to benefit the human race. Cremation is the popular ide&y but I've something better, give me a quarter." "What's your idea ?" "Well, you know, that in large cities the cemeteries become over crowded in the course of time and an effluvia arises that causes contagious diseases. Well, my idea is, that when a person dies he should be crammed feet first into a can non that contains a charge of 18,000 pounds of gunpowder depress the muz zle touch the fuse and you fire him 1G.000 miles through the earth, then " the narrative ended r'ght there. An in quest will be held this evening. The Moors Want Peaca. Washington, April 6. The secretary of state today received a cable message from United States Consul Lewis at Tan gier, from the tenor of which it is inferr ed that a satisfactory settlement of the trouble with the Moorisn government will soon be reached. . ..iIING i.Ai SUGAL . ;C OF THE MOST DELICIOUS MEM ORIE3 OF CHILDHOOD. - A Trip to tit Oldtlro f'When I'atenf Evaporators 4 ' known Golden Xrlpa of Ir Sweetness "It Ropas!" There ia one thin; that r tate. I have seen and tn . . of manufactured sugar; but I my spring bonnet if 1 cannot tell i from the Imitation very time."!,, delicate bouquet of flavors comrnin maue up mapie syrup nve m numixr, i . i sure, if not six. These I can tell, on from the other, and glucose is not one of them. The most delicious memory of my girlhood is of a day when I was permitted to go with my father to the "bush," half a mile from the house. The bunh, or grove, was about seventy-five maplo trees, scattered in groups and singly up and down the 6lopes of a great glen, or lurched on top a grand knoll. We rode on a stone boat over the snow, for the farmers could carry barrels of sap more easily on such a vehicle, and it did not cut into the snow. I remember to this hour just where a crow sat perched on a dead hemlock; and as we went through the old orchard a woodjieckcr, who was pecking a hole in a stubbed limb, turned his queer head around and looked at me as much as to say: ''Well I who are you, any way?" The crow said nothing, which is a crow's way of saying a groat deal ; for when a crow keeps still you may bo sure he is very busy thinking. In the maple tree by the brook tliere was a squirrel's hole, and as there had been some warm weather, Bobby was abroad, and I suppose gathering in from Lis caches or store houses. HONEST OLD DOBBIN. Then we were in the bush, and the horse was hoaded near the fire, so that he should bo comfonablo, and an old buffalo robe was thrown across his back, and a bunch of hay laid under his nose. fco all tho morning Dobbin munched his hay or took a nap be tween bites, and I rambled about under the south slope, where the snow had thawed away and the dry leaves lay in heaps in little hollows. "The folks," that is my father and my two big brothers, were patiently emptying buck ets that stood by the trees, into pails, and carrying the contents to the great cauldron kettles that hung over the fire, near by Dob bin. There were none of the improved ways then, nor any patent evaporators; but there was genuine sap, that ran out of real trees, and we boiled it till it was thick, honest syrup, every ounce of it. Then we took it to the house, where my mother cleansed it with a cup of milk ; for the milk made the dirt to rise to the op when it boiled. When it rose, ono must quickly skim it off, with a great long handled brass skimmer. "You are quick," said my mother often, "and your eyes are bright, now you may take the skimmer." When it was cleansed, it must "boil down" for awhile, till it would "rope' and grain. Oh, sugary days of childhood I Oh, golden drips of indescribable sweetness ! For one whole hour we stood around, al ways conveniently near, to help test the boil ing joy of robust stomachs and a "sweet tooth." Saucers and teaspoons we all had, and a small amount was in turns ladled into our dishes, that we proceeded to stir and taste. W hen at last the liquid, held aloft, came down from the spoon into the saucer in threads and strings, we cried: "It ropes 1 it ropes!" "Well, then, it will soon grain," the older ones would say. So we stirred all the more lustily, and ate all the more rapidly. for we must know the moment it would grain. FROM LIQUID TO SOLID. First of all, the pure white scum that rose clean and foam like would thicken when stirred till cool. Then the true sugar began to show a sign of turning from liquid to solid. The pot must now be quickly swung oflf from over the fire in the great fireplace, and in turn we stirred the fiery contents with a wooden "pudding stick." You do not know what a pudding stick was. i ou do not deserve to know, for having been born at so late a day. You should have been born sooner, mere is no romance now. hue pudding sticks and rolling pins every girl knew the meaning of in those days, We were brought up on much mush and many doughnuts, and we gins knew all about it. Manual instruction! Indeed, it was the rule in those days. It is no new thing. And our mothers also knew how to use their hands. But, as I said, one is always getting born too soon or not spon enough. But what is more, nothing ever stays as ft was, J go now to look for the bush, and in its place is a street with houses, and no end of children peeking out the windows. They it is who have usurped my piaoe, jes, they nave crowded me along, and are the boys and girls of today; and it is they who hold the saucers and the spoons; and I hare by sheer compul sion taken to the pen. It is well, little ones. The world has none too many of you. It never wm nave, isut, as ior us, we nave the past, and no one can take it away from us. Ana JI one pas me past one can mase suear from the trees that used to grow and are now cut down. I call it the maple sugar of memory. Only some ono there are that have the knack of making sugar, and can only make vinegar. One must not throw away the past when once it is lived, for it is delightful property to have. Dear old sugar bush ! no ax shall ever eufc you out of my loving heart. Mary E. Spencer ia jQlobe- Democrat. Cotton and Corn. The southern press seems to have finally persuaded the farmers to abandon the all cotton idea, and to grow more grain. It has been calling their attention to this mat ter for some years, with little effect, but the farmers appear to have finally waked up to the fact that there is more money t l made by cultivating cotton end food product together, than by devoting themselves to tlie great southern staple alone. Diversified crops prevented an overproduction of cotton and low prices, and it freed the farmers from too great dependence on the west. Formerly nearly all the profit from the cot ton crops went for food products. New that the latter are being raised on the place, the cotton becomes a urpjus crop, with which the farmer can buy bis pjot.hing, sugar, coffee and such other articles as be cannot raise. The change in agricultural methods in tUa south is shown in the fact that last season's our n crop wa3 of nearly the same value as the cotton produced, the two standing cotton, $264,852,000, com. 213.662,920. Adding the oats, wheat etc.. it is probable that thus cereals raised in 1SS7 were equal, if they did not exeped. in value "ting cotton." 'ew Orleans Times-Pcmo- crat. 1 a Forced Economy. George Shall I put some more coal on the fire, dear? Clara (with a little shiver) N no, I th think not, George. George But you are shivering, ray love. - Clara I know 1 am, George; but I am afraid that papa rshtht hear you. The .Epoch. LA FIQ. 1 CORK MARKER. Fig. 1 shows a marker which makes three rows at a time, and is plain to the eye. The headpiece is 3x3 inches and is hinged at A, to permit all the markers to touch the ground at all times. Without this hinge, the inequalities of the ground would often keep one of the markers off the ground. B is the guage rod, to the outer end of which is attached a marker of some sort to follow the last row previ ously made in order to keep the rows straight all over the field. If the markrs do not make the marks plain enough, nail a piece of plank on the bottom, as shown at C. It is better to have the gauge rod hinged on a post over the central marker, and then it can be turned over at the ends, to use In going back. 2 FIO. 2 CORN MARKER. Fig. 2 haa the gauge rod extending out on each side far enough to reach the last row marked. The middle marker la hinged to the headpiece, instead of having the latter hinged, which answers the same purpose. For making four rows at a time, the hinge in the first cut must be put In the center of the head, half way between the middle two markers. In the second one illustrated, the hinged mark ers must be at the ends of the headpiece. A marker making four rows Is rather un handy to use, and in practice three marks will be found enough. PIffcrent Modes of Potato Culture. Not a great many years ago it was the practice to plant whole potatoes in such quantities as to form quite a large per centage of the expected yield, which has been succeeded at the present time by the opposite extreme of planting single eyes, leaving ample roni between the two methods for cultivators to experiment an to the amount of seed and the methods of cultivation from which the best results may be obtained. Owing t the short crop of last year, seed will be high, and it will be a good time to plant whole small potatoes, such as have been given to the pigs In plentiful years, and with many persons they have all along been preferred to cut seeds. Planting Irish and Scotch grown seeds is unsafe, as those who have experimented with them generally repre sent them as unsuited to our climate. There is a general agreement on rows about three and a half feet apart, with hills twelve inches apart in the rows, and one or two eyes in a hill, while at the Bamo time occasional trials with whole seed have yielded larger crops i but so long as cut seed proves satisfactory a ma jority will no doubt continue its use. It is of no use to plant potatoes on wet, heavy soil; while the ground should not be excessively rich, it should be clean, dry and mellow, and generously fer tilized. Where barn yard manure is used, which contains all the necessary elements, ifc should be well rotted and decomposed, as ia its green state it is liable to cause scabby potatoes; where this is not plentiful some reliable commercial ar- tjrfc should take its place. Another quite good plan ia to spread the barn yard ma? nure and plough it under, and at planting, drill th commercial kind moderately iti the rows. This method i3 practiced in many sections and by it the tubers get the advantages of botn kinds of fertilizers, first from the quicker action of the highly concentrated one, and later on from that ci the barn yard, a moderate application of both belli thoughf better than the use of either one by itself. A successful potato grower In Unioa county, New Jersey, says his practice for several years has been to plant only one eye to a hill, cut from the butts of large potatoes, not using the other end with its more numerous eyes at all. Ha puts In the rows COO pounds of some well known brand of commercial manure to the aijp, mixes it with the dirt in the rows by drawing a chain through before dropping the seed, and using no. other kind. He has always had good crops, even including the present unfavorable year, and believes he can profitably use a fon to the acre of commercial fertilizers whenever tha pyerage price of potatoes in this section can he obtained for his crop. The potato has the habit of degenerate Jog to a degree that has caused the best Mid favorite vajrigfjes pf former timea to become obsolete, go that even their names are scarcely remembered, and some pf tfce more recent ones, each as the Peach Blow and Early Rose, are giving place to newer seedling varieties, to be themselves dis placed hereafter in the same way. If we were depudn( gn the tubers alone for the propagation of' the poUtq h3. would be an alarming fact, but fortunately we have in the 6eed the ready means of re juvenating the species, and the more than 500 n&if ysrleties, many of them surpass ing the former elh;nc'efi of the parent stock, attest the success of potato specfal ists in this direction. In states where the crop can be har vested in May or June, and sometimes as l ite as Julv. it ia becoming somewhat Common to raise a second crop by expos ing the (small potatoes to the air but not to the sun--for a couple of weeks or longer, until they become dry and green in color. These are then planted whle, and are lui in the fall for seeds the next year. This seed has not the same tendency to sproul through the winter from a warm il Ut .niiio h is v ad- ...1 -ci.. .era ft re i -u their c it for their " that can :n, nr pari louded fur . : the wain, c from your own . your neighbors adapted to yon'r . Tills, however, U l. discouraging any ci!-. moderate wr.y tV.o i dvntly rev ' )' , oialJst, &. it i u:l i-i the host euu find their use. conll- , va 6pe wanner that way into general In the Vegetable Garden. . It is a very important point, in forming a good garden, so to arrange the planting of the different vegetables as to insure both a judicious selection of sorts and a proper time of planting for each of the varieties selected, thereby securing for the table a succession of the different kinds extending throughout the. season, rather than a dozen varieties all coming in together, when it is impossible to use more than three or four; or, on the other hand, the occurronce now and then of times when there is no vegetable whatever ripe for the table. In arranging dates for planting vege tables for a succession, it should be noted that as the season advances and becomes warmer, peas and, in fact, all kinds of vegetables grow faster and overtake one another, as it would seem. The dates of planting the different sorts do not lead to corresponding intervals in gathering the crops. Hot example, though nve days' difference in date of planting peas in April will make about as many days dif ference in the time of tho harvesting in June, yet five days' difference in planting in May will make hardly any visible dif ference in the ripening in July. Important Points in Cheese Making. One of the leading features of the forth coming report of the kew lork state dairy commissioner consists of opinions from leading dairymen on the best methods of conducting the cheese busi ness, the prevalence of fraud in produc tion and by what means the consumption of it can be best increased. The question of branding cheese with the official state brand evidently remains an open one among the state dairymen. A good many of them are pronounced in favor of the plan; others consider such a branding advantageous to consumers only; others are indifferent, while a consider able number condemn the state brand as useless or detrimental to the natural rela tions of producer and consumer. The replies to the question, How pre valent is the habit of branding cheese as "full cream" when it is not, cannot fail to gratify cheese consumers, as In more than 100 reports on this point there is not a single expression of positive knowledge of the existence of this habit, nints About Truck Fanning. "Where truck farming, as it is called, or gardening for market is to be carried on along with other farm work by a farmer who has sons grown up or nearly so, it will be an excellent plan to put one of them in charge of this department and require no other service from him, or else hire a reliable man for the purpose, or rent the garden plot on such terms as may be agreed on. In this business it will generally be found best to separate it as much as possible from the ordinary farm work, else both are liable to suffer from conflicting demands for attention from each at a critical time. IIo w to Lay Ont Gardens. Since it is becoming the practice to ly out vegetable and berry gardens so as to be kept clean by horse cultivation, it i3 well to place the different crops iu such a position with each other as to make them convenient of access, as well as to afford a pleasing appearance, As a single example of such an arrangement is here repro duced from Country Gentleman an lllus tration in which a line of raspberries was placed next to a narrow grass walk ex tending lengthwise through the garden and next to the raspberries several rows of strawberries, and still beyond these a line of currants. STRAWBERRIES WALK RASPBERRIES. The grass walk was four feet wide, and was kpt cut short by passing a hand lawn mower once a week, with only a few minutes' work. At the edge of this walk was a line of Caroline raspberries, this variety bein? of lower and more rounded growth than other sorts, and when in ruit its rich yellow berries give it a quite ornamental appearance. Tbe 6trawberrieg next to the raspberries, being well en riched with manure, and kept well culti vated and clean by horse power, the rasp berries have oa one side all the advantages of high culture, while all the crop may be gathered from the smooth grass walk In laying out a kitchen ami fruit garden, an occasional grass walk extend ing lengthwise, gives much easier access to the different part. The edges of these waits are keptgnffipiently trimmed by the cutting blade of the one horse enltivator or with the light one horse plow, and la borious hand labor is almost entirely avoided. A grfouttiral News. The vegetable crop in most of tho southern states will be large. According to The Cincinnati Price Cur rent, the clover seed crop of 1887 was a fairly large one of good quality, Tho crop was short in the northwest; else where, according to the authority quoted, the supply was about as 'usual. The Massachusetts cattle commission ers, after due investigation, report that hog cholera in that state is spread by feeding swill containing germs of the dis pase brought from tho west in fresh pork, and that in uo caso does it Fprcnd from pen to pen unless infected animals come la contact with healthy ones. It can lo given in i c tea without the knowledi ... taking it; is absolutely harnik. . . . . effect a permanent and petMy cure, whether the patient is a moderate drink er or an alcoholic wreck. Thousands of drunkards have been made temperate men who have taken Golden Specific in tP"-v coffea without thir knowledge.and t' noWi.JiaTo they quit drinking of tluir bjdy1lL IT NEVER FAILS. The i ..4Utm impregnated with thn Speci iicTt becemes an utter impossibility for the liquor appetit to exist. For full particulars, address GOLDEN SPECIFIC CO., 185 Race at, Cincinnati. O. 33-1 y Slate of Ohio, City of Toledo, Lucas county, ss. Frank J. Cheney makes oath thut he is the senior partner of the firm of F. J. Cheney & Co., doing business in the city Toledo, County and state aforesaid, and thut suhl firm will pay the sum of ONE HUNDRED DOLLARS for oach and every case of Catarrh that cannot be cured by the uso of Hall's Catarrh Ccrk. FRANK J. CHENEY. Sworn to before me and subscribed in my presence, this 6th day of December, A. D. '86. ' A. W. GLEASON, (Seal) Notary Public. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally and acts directly upon the blod and mucus surfuccs of the BTstcm. Send for testimonials, free. F. J. Cheney & Co. Toledo, Ohio. t2T"Sold by Druggists, 75 cents. Eggs, Eggs, Eggs! Lots of eggs and no sick, drooping chickens where Will J. Warrick s Im proved Poultry powder is used. Just the thing to make hens lay and keep them in good health. Try one panml, it will oniy co6t you zv cents, ana it you are not satisfied he will refund, the money. Also Ground Bone and Oyster Shell, 41bs. for J5c at Will J. W arricx's. j8-3m ditw-th. To Whom It May Concrn. Notice is hereby Riven that the underslroaH will mxke application t the city couacll of I'latTsmoutn at its nrat regular meeting Ir. -ipril 1b88. to wit : On tbe ih tiny of said month far a license or permit to sell malt, rplr- ltous and vlaous liquors for the vear endlin May im itjK9 lar medicinal, meonsnlcal, chem ical and sacramental rurpog at in y place of uusmesa on si y, ai ioi 11 iiiocK 2 city i iHiisuioiiiu, Cass vvuuir, siatn tvpDra.ii; a. WILL J. WAKKICI. AN EXTRAORDINARY OFFER TO ALL WANTING EMPLOYMENT. e want nye, euergetic, agents id every county in the United States and Canada to sell a patent article of great merit, on its merits. An artie'e having a largefsale paying over 100 percent, profit, having no competition, and "n which the agent is protected in the exclusive nale by a deed given for each and evpry coun- Ly ne jiiuy (secure ironi us. wun an tlif se al- vantaiies to our agents, and the fact that It ia an article that can be sold to every iiousehol iiWi.er, it might not be necessary to make "An cxiraoiaiuary uner" to secure Rood agents at once, out we liave concluded to make it to show, not only our confidence in the merits ol our invention, but in it suiabiiity by any aire, t mat win nanuie it with euerirv. our a cent now at work are making from Sisoto i-jbo a month ck'hr, and this fact makes It smfe for us to make our offer to all who are out of eimilov- ment. Any agent tut will give our hu-ineHc a thirty d - ys' trial and full to clear at least $100 in t hie time, above all expenses, can re turn all goods unsold to us a"d we will refund the manev pa d for them. No such employei of -Rent ever dared to make such offers, not wouia we ir we did not know that we have agents now making more than double this amount. Our large descriptive circulars ex plain our offer fully, an-t these we wish to sen-' to everyone our ot employment who wilt end us three one cent stamps for po-daue. Send at once and secure the agency la time for the boom, and go to work u the trms named in our extraordinary offer. Address, at once. National Novkitv Co.. fl8-3ui-diw 514 Smithfield St., Pittsburg. Pa. Neglect kills inguries; revenge in creases them. A neglected cold increas es its'injurious effects en the Bystem till consumption finally kills, unless cured by Warner Log Cabin Cough and Con sumption Remedy. It is ye reliable rem edy of ye olden time. Begg's Cherry Cough Syrup, Is warranted for all that the label calls for, so if it does Bot rejieve your cough you can call at our store and the money will be refunded to you. It acts simul taneously on all parts of the system, thereby leaving no bad results. O. P. Smith & Co., Druggists. j25-3mdfcw An observant metropolitan barber says that he can tell one's phylcal condition by the state of the hairj SSOO Reward. We will pay tbe above reward for anv case of liver complaint, dyspepsia, sick neauacne, indigestion, constipation or costiveness we cannot cure with West s V egetable Liver Pills, when the directions are strictly complied with i ney are purely vegetable, and never fail to give satisfaction. Large boxes containing 30 sugar coated pills, 25c. r or saie Dy an aruggisis. .tseware ol counterfeits and imitations. The genu ine manufactured only by John O. Well & Cp., 86? W. Madison St. Chicago, Its Sold by w. .J Warrick. Desperate Hungarians- Wilkebarr, Pa., April 5. A start ling story was told in the mayor's office last night. Charles EDgel, a reputable citizen, swore that at a. meeting of Hun garians held tho night before It wa. re solved by them that three men who bore evidence against the Hungarians for par- ipating in the recent riots ahould be put to death. The meeting was a secret T one, but one of the conspirators became frightened and gave the scheme away. The plan adopted was to go to thfe houses of the doomed men on a certain night, a la Mollie McGuire, and kill them la bed. Warrants have been issued for the arrest of all whose names could be obtained. a now.. w siuiply to Ui i... best that science, can produce, and will claimed fur them. For aches, weakness, lameuev., they are unequaled. 404 Folton fit .fUnrttmltY.O.NoT 81, Tim AUilrliur lHaator a. u-4 i nnuric. It im Hut bM I ever truil mo UavA lli"d inanr Iix1h. Our (lruiv "ulutiini inoll fclxmt Um Mm hi,, 1 lont think hi nuw. I iiirftlaiwl mv and "hoiil.l.T iu July, and it baa l )aiuful aiaou, but It tn uot pain mo all now. Mrs. Wu.ua Uauilu ; 09" SVnd fl cent for th tx-nutlftil colored r'1 tuns, ' Moorish Maiden." THE A THL0PH0R0S CO. 112 Wall St. H. I HESOELROTH'C ' SWEDISH t WIWE OF IROL. TBS GKE1T ClimTXTIMla UITJa. jroi- ixkintr. ri -WW ftltH, J.avaaraar. rla a. a 4 aB,taBl Cftraaaar ) tloa mt ta HlMaf. laaa r A T trill. uarsitnal mf l -, ItrtaaiMM, Valaaak r Ua Mrt, 0 MV Man mm, Vaaaatla WaaOa aaaa, aaa la Mat all aJaaraa arista naslw ata m tha blaatf, aad a DlaaraaraJ Cxtaaltlon t iaa SlfMUt Ora-aaa. Iw affuet en tha hsmaji iatam U MARVELOUS. Br xrAUat tha stoaiaeh t aarfaa dlaaalloa of food. It anrtaaa as au slrainrtbSDS the biooa, (Wing om anil vigor to tba whols trtiaai, taa Clow of bsaith, alaau atapa. aa4 uoyant aplrlia. iTlns am pi a avfc danoa of Ita banaaatal aaaata. If oonstloatad aaa naaaalmaato Oslatina-OoaMKl Bloo4 and Livar tills, i nay aoal no mora taaa axativa cilia, and ara apvrior. jta jour irrniigiai ior naaaairoia in an Trinaar iron (rnaa i pr aocua; ati kottlaa,! ana Haaaalroth's Blood and Uvar nils Maa. a box; are aoxaa, ai, or aana airact to 'v Growers Hands. - send upon aoolicanon RiEE.TheirncwiIIura!?d Catalogue a A a M al a A Aaa fARM & GARDEN IMPLEMENTS S REQUISITE FoUTHE Towner Villarrodto u$r(zta!e9UvJ rV&aEvaAf.oco.Linfra. new york- :SEEDSMEN:-47M9 CDHTIAHDT ST. Begg's Cherry Cough Syrup. Is the only medicine that acts directly on the Lungs, Blood and Bowels, it re lieves a cough instantly and in time effects a permanent cure. Sold by O. P. Smith & Co., druggists. j25,3mo,d-w. Di. Schliemunn has gone to Alexand ria with Professor Yirchew. and will spend several months in Egypt making explorations. Begs's Blood Purifier and Blood Maker. No rcmcdv in thn -w-orlrl 1... ..;n..i jf the popularity that this medicine has, as a hold on family medicine. No one should be without it. It has no calomel or quinine in its composition, consequcnt Ij no bad effects can arise from it We keep a full supply at all times. O. P. Smith Co. Druggist. j25-3mod&w If Diogenes lived today he would bo out with a lantern looking for a Demo cratic lawyer who hasn't been mentioned for the office of chief justice of the su preme court. How Men Die. It we know all the method of approach adopted by an enemy we are the letter enabled to ward off the danger and post pone the moment when surrender become inevitable. In many instances the inher ent strength of the body suffices to enable it to oppose the tendency toward death Many however have lost these forces to uh an extent that there ia little or no help. In other cases a little aid to the weakened lungs will make all the differ ence between sudden death nl years of useful life. Upon the first armrT. toms of a cough, cold or any trouble of the throat er lungs, give that old and well known remedv Bosrh Syrup, a careful trial. It will nravs what thousands sav ot it tob- r.Ak.. ar f -aw mSVUW factor of any home." kheumaitm. Femala WBjTrSriii ...T"'' mora of th Stomach aad BowaXaT 6! HINDER CORNS. wtxta at faruiNciaia. iiiaoox A Co., a. V. Children Cry for Pitcher1 Cirtoria. XThnik Eaby was sick, tre car har Caatorta. When she was a CUM, th crlad for Caatoria, Whan sha became Miss, she clunr to Caatoria. When she hod Children, sba par Um Caatoria. i-igsasBaaag iMM M or lx: i l ll 1 - J