A Llaallaal f apply. GilbaoiT- Ho you are going to marrj aBOttwr ooe of those Jones (iris ? H voder ion Yes. "You have ben murriad to two ot them, ha n't you 't "Yes." "And there are only two unmarried lUter tort?" "Vm; that's all." "Well, then, you ought to be care ful, with those J onus girl and not waste auy more of them or they will not hold out.- Texts Siftinirs. TO PUT ON needed flesh, no mat ter how you've lost it, take Ur. Fierce' Golden Medical Dis covery. It work wonder. By restor ing toe normal ac- ' lion of the deranged orfrans and functions, it builds the flesh up to a safe aud healthy standard promptly, pleasantly ana nat urally. The weak,' emaciated, thin, pula and puny are mad? strong, plump, round and rosy. Noth ing so effective as a strenjrlh restorer and flesh maker is known to medical sci ence; this puts on healthy flesh not the fat of cod liver oil and its filthy compound.!. Jt rouses every organ of the body to ac tivity, purifies, enriches and vitalize the blood so that the body feci refreshed and strengthened. If you rc too thin, too weak, too nervous, it may be that the food assimilation is at fault. A certain amount of bile is necessary for the reception of the fat food in the blood. Too often the liver linlds back this element which would help digestion. Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Iliscovery stimulates, tones up and Invig orates the liver, nourishes the blood, and the muscles, stomach and nerves get the rich blood they require. Spent Hundred ol Dollars with bwM. M. I. Colemam of a Sarrtnt St.. Koxburr. Han., writes: " Aacr n suffering from dyarx-pia end constipation with un told irony tor al leant is f&ontht, I am more than fileasrd to say that a Art aung lr. Firrcr's Golden Mrdtcsl Discovery and tfraaant Pellets lor one snooth, 1 was entirety cured, and from that day so this I do not know, shank God, what even a alight headache is. I paid a doctor on Trernont St., Boston, in one day (for hit advice only.) the sum rf tmm with Si f,r mrdicine, and derived no M J- Colrmak. Eo, broent, I got more rrlitrf in on hour from your nmlidne. as tar my stomach was concerned, than from all tbe other medicine I used If any perwoo who reads this is sufferios; from dyxpepdia or ctmrfUpalion and will ue your Biedtnne as I have dune, he wiU never regret it," ' W O R L 6 1 s fa! r Hit justly icquired the rrputatton of be uif The 5alvator for Invalids he-Aged. An lta"i.PAAiu.E Alimfnt for the Growth and Ihotix-tion trf INFANTS ami : H I LDREN A tuperior nutritive in continued Fevers, And reliable remedial agent in all t. as trie and enteric diseases; tiflen in instances of consultation over patients whose dicestive organs were re duced to sui li a low and sensitive condition that the IMPERIAL (iRANUM was the only nourishment the stomach would tolerate when LIFE seemed dependlnx on its retention ; .And as a I'OOI) it would he ditlictilt to conceive u( anything more palatable. id bv DWl (KIISTS. Shipring itcpnt, JOHN CAMI.E sV SON5, New Vark. W.L.Douclas ft4! CUAC tsTMCBcar. sSsS AnUC HOMUIaeiNO. W9. COKUBAn, a-aaOaaauA rtlSaJfl I tftfll IT H?4rirCDUf&K)sNeAIU 3.VPOUCE,JSOU3. flATAiiMUE value 9j aifupji'S - - . , twtumi.wbicb prutect yoo sgslut blh prtc D.l tbe aslddlrmsa' prwflta. Our akers equal ouatooi wor In Mr la, ay flttl so warlag qitallil se tbn S'.ld vfrywbr al lowrt prlca r l'inmi:.iHin:;"i fViake. lakonom illlul. If v-.w ,iel' 'A t supply you, wcvaa. wtra v egeiaui" Nemtles. Hav .-tir.l irianr Inoeaans aptnrnun.nl hopTlfaa. Krom nrt 'a avmp a 'anion llpr"sr. slid In trn ) s J'sM t wu IITn lit all anlnHDa ar r-in'""-u. ""V.-..i' retlmunlala oi miraruiini m ' " V li ii a fls.t Trastnaat Finlcllll Fflt If Ml II. II. 1. 1 Jwill ISM PUUlltll IttUTI MIIIU UP-TO-DAlt CLOTHINtt SI4dll'ttuHi-.uniW T HlWMt rsi a .r Mar grl. Hiij JirwS fo u ' itii ri'iin.u nni'tw- .... frnsi VI I.. HU r rant M .Vlt. Urn Kil or vl.s-r "''-' H J pi.mlilraUuli lulfl IS. :.... mni 1 ril III T. BrnU-4si ..rrHrlf ,si...olB -sulog. IM' aa gftMiK Ave.. Cnicaao. in. PlttlTS. TMJLM15, Baawlaslloa and Advlee a to " tir" ' lT Ji. swsuub. . Sa4 for lTena'l. ' ;; aTaSSi. TTtot V) aaaau, wabuiuei. I. . Morriii v n!!!,1!?,1 lFa7VTa M IS ED I C2. SaN. 1 I ' 1 -pa; - . - sV a W asssi A V5-iTr mqckTOM. MASS. ' retlasT Wvtlrj4,t"'"'" Ibis gtsdt of .h.Jp tS?0''. xTguarsaiee thj I 1 SCIATIC RHEUMATISM. Mow rwHiM M laawiaa Safari with IS-HI Cwre arwlaw On aw Faw iao la Keatueky are batter knows tbaa Hon Joha ML sUce, of Loaiss, Law rence Couaiy, lata Circuit Juds of lb Slsteealfa Judicial District sf Kentucky, and few maa la that or aar otbar Stabs psaiad through a mora remarkable a i per leu ca and li to tell th tale. About sli year aro ba aa attacked with sciatic rheumatism, which drlopd so fast that be ii lust all control of bis lag nn .Dole ayatsni twain a deranead and b waa loll a phy.i-al wreck The ; muscles of bis limb aar reduced by atrophy to tuera sirmgi. nd h lellln.it bis Ills i gradually wearing away, j i-uinent pbyslrtans wnr consulted and all j known nieaat of relief employed vltbout (avail, and U Inrtoej seeiued as those h ;hntu. ky was to lose one of her most ! valued elllrn it sa al Mil. time that Judge Bice first beard of lr. Williams' Fink t ills for Pale i i'eoyle. Me promptly applied Hum 10 bis "n cam, and as a result be is to-day a ; i ail imii The effect of the Fills was 'oixrvelous Judge hue retained 4 he power I'jf bis limbs, h a appetite returned, and aature train performed ber functions , proper y. The aliove case was investigated j sod vouched for b tbe tovington font, , sod stands as one of tbe moat remarkable Cures known In tb annals of medicine. ) No dWcuvery In medicine bas created j more dissuasion, both In medical circles land In tbe newspapers, than lr. Williams' jHnk Pills The nisnr reaiarkable SKirles that have been published of the cures f-'fi-cti'd by these pills have brought tbem Into Ilia grestl promiueuoe bo b In this ouutry and abroad, i hey have been en- alyted by some of the most eminent chein jlsu and It has been ascertained that they are an iiarainnz specific for such dis ease a locomotor ataxia, partial paraly. iia. H Vitus' dance, sciatica, neuralgia, rheumatism, nervous headache, tbe aner iffecu of la grippe, palpitation of the Heart, pile and snllow com pie loin, that Ured feeling resulting from nervous pros tratlnn; all disease resulting from viti ated humors In tb blood, such as scrofula, :bronlc eryalpelaa etc. Ihey are also a i peel tic for trouhle peculiar to females, turn as suppression. Irregularities aod all forms of weaknes folly's (iui.t. It is not always easy to be generous, try as one may. "I was mean to (leorgy this morning when you gttve me the bread and but er," confessed eigh-year-old 1'olly to 'ier mother at bedtime. "Why, Polly." said Mrs. Jenks, "I thought you were quite generous; dldnt rou (five tleorey the larger piece?" "Yeg'm," sighed Polly, "but I kept the butterest piece myself!" Youth's Companion. Nlrkel Hteel the fouling Metal. Though nickel was used for coin two nturies before Christ, It is only re ently that the discovery of its alloy with steel has brought it into general jominercial prominence. The tensil tirength of this alloy nearly one-fifth trenter than that of ordinary steel, while its difficult remains the same will doubtless cause it to supplant com mon stfftl In many places where great itrength Is required. For instance, the American Atlantic liner Paris has been tupplted with a spare length of seaft ng of this allo. It Is said that this lasting has a teosil strength of about X,0 pounds, t'ois leaving existing British or tier man steel shafts quite a -espectable tlistance in the rear. The production of nickel bas increased within 10 years from 1.000 tons per all ium to over 5,000 tons, while before 1876 :iot more than 600 tons were produced In tny one year. The most noticable in crease has been In the manufacture of nickel steel, ostensibly t'-r armor plates tnd guns, but it Is not likely that itn use will stop here, especially as the price tends steadily downward. Age jf Hteel. Rlieiiiiintism knocked higher ihun a kiti-. Mr. .1. V liuc licr, .Mineral Point, Chin, ik (Kinei ami savs: -'I lian nseii Salvntion ulil for rlieiitnatiin. ami in one or two np plifHtioiiK kniH'ti'-il it hiirlier than a kilo." Patent leather boots and shoeti should tie kept on it tree or shaped with papei to prevent the slock from cracking. A few dropa ol putioleum applied with a woolen cloth Is all the dressing needed to keep the leather soft. ! ! TT-T- Hot Noons Chilly Nights Of Kali present to many variations of tern-. liexiiUire a to tax tlie strengui ana maKe a pathway fur ilineiiar. Hood's rjarsapa rjlla will fort iff the system against tlieso dangers, bv making pti"'. healthy blood. g Sana- .fures fnf limbs. I tried di'florcnt medicines, m. J L I.uIomI III... At lait my inoitiei; ncsru "i ihhhi i Korea began to heal, and alter a short time I ws completely eureu. v e seeo it n the house most of the time. An a blood ,,n,iA.r t irm.w of nothing better. ' I.kon hT. John. Fairmont, Minn. Hood' PHI are purely vegelnble, band maile, perleet in p'oporl ion and appearanee WALTER BAKER & CO. The l.srgt Manufacturers of PURt, HIGH QRAOK COCOAS AND CHOCOLATES On IhU Continaat, kaa rtl"4 8PECIAL AND HI6HE8T AWARDS an all Ihtlr Uootlnalth CALIFORNIA MIDWINTER EXP08ITI0N. ru.i. agravrsftT rflflfll I1) Which, iinllka IHHrh IVa.a, 1 1 in4a vlisnui in iimui I r.Sharlhnnlral'O' Iri. U ahw biil.tr ssia sad lMa. as aaia. .lata Ikaa saa eanl a au. sold at oRocia svtarwHiBt- .H.kiaiuf l'rivlrif (11 hN York Xt k wsrliei. ana h Ns York Sine". "rk V , HOsnrt Hrrttiiy, New York, rn,l to rros)aj"tiis A A wondat nil Invention. No mtir geniS 'bnkN lamp CBldnn. tlulel ,e "r, lit proflU NirB.t, . I- ' Orflanr. O, ya rv. aVCJ itm AGRICULTURAL NEWS A FEW SUGGESTIONS FOR OUR RURAL READERS. Bow Morses Nbould He Miud A Srrrke sble f'olalw anru-r-aaviwg la Laaor at Hay Mafclag Butt-nwe frowt Uai4 Hiitms -1 am Koteau A hrrvlreenle I'otato Sorter. Id xoiue Kectioao where laiite quan tities of potaux-a are rained, some kind of sorting ap; ar tus Is a oeces 8iiy. The wrk (if plt-klntf over po tatoes is souictbitit; tbat cots too lunch to t done I y liacd, aod yel potatoes classed into eveu i.e al ways i-ell letter than uueveo lots. In the jfreat tenter of couiruercial jin ductloD of this croii, aborting I always done by some ort ot a ma chine, whl h tarlcit in tin- dilTcreut ! sections, hut are almost aiwav- ho i.e- m.iili!. The oue herewith Illustrated, from sketches In thf Aru. r can Atri culturieL, Is in Uj: Id New Vorlc State by many potato planters, and is a simple and inexpensive affair, and belrif; adUHtabl' it will I c found more valuable than many other de lnu. The Kent ral form is usuall.' made eiuht fed In length, fourteen inches wide at the lttom and eiiht Inches at. the lop, Ibt sides beim ii llgVICg Otl itrSOHTIMO l TATOKH. Inches high, the whole supported upon four legs nailed to the .sides Six st.ips cinht Tcet In length, three Inches wide and one inch thick form the bottom of the sorter seen In tho sketch. The strips, a, arc beveled to a sharp edge at the lower side, and tho rest In Y-shaped notches cut Into the supporting etrlp, r. Hy taking out or adding to the sui porting strips and dividing ihe spaces, larger or smaller potatoes will pass into t he di erent boxes place I al ng the lcnifth ot the sorter, the larger ones being discharged at the lower end, tbe form of the bottom strips preventing clogginv. An io dine ol twenty in lies in eight feet will prove about right, although the lorui of potatoes to be screened will haw inn h to do with this, a loot? lulier requlr nit a stoe(x-r incline I liati round una MtiiN- lig llorne-- The greatftxi care is necessary to so shoe the horse that the relative oosi tioo of the leg to tiic foot lu their ii mal stale should be maintained, says an Knglish veterinary. The liearing of t he shoe shou d be le el all around. If heel or toe. the inside or the outside of the fot were too high or low, the relationship of the limb to leu was disturbed - in faet, the whole mechanism ol the limb .as thrown out or gear ; neuual pressure, however sllghteiied, would surely end Id serious damage to the. , limb, and among the frequent re sults of such treatment is enuunent injury to the coilin bone, ('ontrae i tioo of the heel, tie maintained, was not an active) diseas but a passing condition ilueto the horse casing his i tcet so to niiuimle the pain felt at hi - heels from bad shoeing. lie had I little faith in i. echanieal arrange ' menls for widening contracted heels. ".shoe the horse, he remarked, "so i that the bearing surface is properly maintained at the heel, and expan sion will follow as a natural conse J oiienco '' ' To I ear b ii t 'nti to L.-a-f. ' This ijj a good wav to tea liay..uug colt, or caf to ieau. I'm, a strap j lengthwise around its ! y and 1nother str'ip or rope over its back to , hoid this up. Put on a halter of bridle and tie the halter strap to the rooe around the body aod put it up through the halter rlntr. The colt is , then ready to lead I'earl Harris, I balmer, Thurston County, Wash " Winter IHilrylnn. Henry Talcott, the nhio Dairy Commissioner, and a successful farm er says he can make t."t to 7o per cow easier by winter dairying than ho can to 4o per cow by having his cows calve, in spring, as most farmers yet do. He is not bothered much with cows and caring for milk wlilie ne Is irrowing his summer erops. Winier dairying olversi es farm In oiisti ies, an. I furnishes ihnt soiue tlnDg to do tn wint"r, the lack of which Is the chief obstacle lo su i'.'ks oT Noil hern ratniers. lUititf')- .ii res ensilage and warm stables for c ,w in winter to make winter dairy, mg n oil table. It is harder also to raise the fall-farrowed calves, part y because milk is more expensive. Id winter and they are apt to get less of it, and partly because when milk it is apt sometimes hi be given cold and throw the calf into an attack of scours. With some cheaper substi tute for milk, aud care not to'ulvc the calf any cold feed or drink the fall calf can be kept in thrifty con dition. tiinlfs far Mock. l'rof. Sauodars, In an address to tbe Canadian fruit growers, stated a BW sw s -m BBS I ?a ( II I N o" ji?T.T TO Ui" that tbe food value of apples depend in a measure on tbe condition of ripe oeg or tbe rait, also on tbe variety or apple from which tbe supply is to be furnished. European tautbor.tles consider the money value of fodder constituents in ordinary varieties of apples and pe rs as somewhat higher than those roniained in o equal weight of turnips, and those of the apple pomace as about one-third higher in feeding value than tbe whole apple which has served for its production, and about equal in value to suttar l.eets Where apples are fed to stock they should be given in mod erate quantities, and should be lib erally supplemented w th more nutri tiots and more hinhly nitrogenous food, such as bran, shorts, or oi cake, with a fair proportion of hay. f arm'ng lu Japan. The fertilizer most used in Japan is rice straw, cut into i-mall pieces, as with a hay cutter. Put cultiva te rs depend mostly upon irrigat on from the rivers, i.nd most careful cultivation; not a weed Dor a waste piece of land will he seen in a long railroad ouruey. The farmer util izes every bit of land he possesses. But farm tools are very crude. The 1 og hoe is the chief tool used; occasion ally a black bull may lie seen bitched to what is called a plow, but tbe im plement Is so small it looks like a my. With tbe hoe, the blade of : which is four inches, the soil is j tu ned over, left a few days in the sun, then leveled ana seed put in Every crop but rice is planted in rows, straight as an arrow. Men and women wo k in the fields, and : rice threshing is performed by draw ling the rice strap against the teeth of a saw-I ke blade, by which the i seeds are dislodged. 1 To Make a Hayr'r't. i The cut represents how to make a saving In labor at hay making. AAAA are four poles 32 feet long. They may be made of 4x4 material and spliced. Pll are -1x4 and 4 feet li ng. 1H) are two timbers 4x1 and ; 20 feet long, fastened together with -inch bolts 1;' inefie long. A pulley ' for inch rope is under U and Fa trip block for a hay tarrler. Any bay earrler that will work on a 4x4 may be used. About 10 ) feet of Inch rope isreiulred, which should run from the top ol the poles A A to a stack K. It Is unnecessary t) dig holes for the poles; when moving the rigging, move but one pole at a time. The load of bay must be outside of the poles K as shown in the cut. To unload, from twenty to thirty tons of hay must be put in a rli k or eight tons in a slack. In the center of 1VB a round groove Is cut and a yoke made of -Inch rod passes over BB and down throutrh the 4x4 1). This may be put together on the ground and raised with a team of borses. When the derrick Is on the ground, drive a small stake n the groun i at the end of each pole to prevent slip ping when being raised. M is a stake with pulley for a rojio to run from policy under H for the horse to pull the hay up by. A A is fasienod at the top end with a txilt. It is fas tened ti AA with bolts Farm and Home. l-ar ii ol VViii.iik ciitt you tret a belief pic ture to h.itig ove Hiur ilc-k than an acctira e i.mp of toor larpi. with t he Ileitis numbered and correctly meas ured. f'r. vmiikks, tomatoes, melons aud squashes a'e now generally mulched after the last cultivation in order to k;.' lie soil moist during the drv wen' her of late summer. It is cheaper to fatten an animal before winter than after the cold sea son appr.itt lies. If. stoc.K is 1 ODr on the opening of w; tcr the probability Isjhnt he will not pay for the food T.:r. best time to cut com is when the most forward husks negin to drv. The hu,k is a better guide than the leaves. When cut at such a stage the largest proportion of nutritious tufjtter is secured. Tut: best, way to keep honey from candying, says a writer, is to seal it In tight .a.s the same as fruit. This U the way tbat the bees ao, and it is tho only safe way. It should be thoroughly heated before putting up Thk hog Is said to b nearly as good a scavenger in the orchard as the sheep, and if allowed o run there t.c will destroy the worin-lnfeled Iruit that fails to the ground, and lusodo i!'g he jvIII desttoy the worms. He will also ( nrlch the ground. It Is now so well established that the plum curculio, the eheny worm, the coddling moth, etc.. t:i:tv he de stroyed by spravlnu1 with aisenle,tl -o. lutlons that i here Is no longer .m nx Ciiso for delaying plan. tng the best, and finest varieties of every fruit TliKUK should be grapes on every farm and vllbige plot. They need ' well drained soli, good cultivation 1 and close pruning, and will then well ; pay for the spa e they occupy. Soap suds is an e cellont fertilizer for : thotu Itecaiiso of tbe potash It con- talus. , ! In nincty-nlne casts out of 100 the farmer wbo contemplates moving to a more favorable, lorat on will find it more profitable to stay o i tbe old farm and let his "inov tu" consist of getting away from tbe old profitless methods and up to the newer and better onw Highest of all in Leavening Power. Latest U. S. Go art Report AD60LUTELV FUBE Cbauee tu Prove Devotion. Wife If you can't support me as I ought to be supported, you might at least go to tbe races. Husband What! Do you want me to gamble on horse races to encourage your extravagence ? Wife Of course not. You needn't bet at all. But society is always will ing to make allowauces tor a woman if they think her husband is go:ug to the dogs. New York Weekly. Presence of Mind, "The presence of mind displayed by the members of asuiall theatrical troupe wbo were playing in a frame building In one of tbe mining towns of Bolora do U'St winter, struck me as being al most heroic," said Clement Sawyer of CiDcinuatti. "1 bad struck the town on .business and to pass away an hour iu the evening bau looked into tbe little hall to see a traveling company give a representation of -The Dauities." The performance was by no means bad and I was getting quite interested in the adventures of the heroine, when all at once I noticed tbe stage manager beck on the star to the screens which served as wings. He whispered something liurridly and a second later the star fell on the stage as though in a faint. The curtain was rung down and the stage manager, coming to the front, stated owing to the sudden and dangerous illness of the leading actor the per. formance could not go on. A free en tertainment would be given the follow ing evening to make up for the short ening of the play. The audience be fan to tile out quietly andtlie hall was nearly half empty when a burst of Ike came through the curtain. The shanty, for it was little more, had caught lire behind the scenes and the stage man ager's idea was to get out the bulk of the audience before a panic set in. He succeeded so well tbat, although, of course, the building was burned to tbe ground, no one was hurt, and the men who had been cheering the actors a lew minutes before helped to save the ad joining buildings by stretching wet blankets over the root's." The Cigar Indlsii, Most ot the figures used for cigar store signs which formerly wore made of wood, are now made of zinc, and 05 per cent of these are Indians. , Some t these figures are excellent; in some cases the original model cost $1,200 or 11,500, They are made in various sizes from a small figure that can be bought for t25 or 830 up. A good seven-foot Indian can be bought for f 100. THAT JOYFUL FEELING With the exhilarating sense ol' renewed health and strength and internal cleanli ness, which follows the use ol Syrup of Kips, is unknown to the few who have nol progressed beyond the old time medicines and the cheap substitutes soiiuaiiiies of lexed hnt never accepted by the well in formed. Capes are growing longer, and as t.h cool days come on ttn-iy will increase n length and be of heavier material. An Kngnsh surgeon shys that peopl" who use rocking chair, b-eome deaf the soonest, and that, rocking also hur s the eyes and makn.-' people 'ieHri',rite. . Hall's Catarrh Cure I takea .n.er. .illy. Pi ee 76 renta Pale, pink or colorless lips, blue cir cles under tbe eyes and cold, dry hands and feet are evidences of a deranged and weakened system and call for the prompt, attention of a nurse or phys sician. strs. W inslow's Hrx.THiN'i Hvnuv for child ren leethiTiir, widens tlie gums, reduces inflam mation, slhy pain, (Mires wind code. 'i'ie bottle. An eminent meoical authority asserts that a sudden emersion of the body in cold water soon after meals is extreme ly dangerous. It chills the digestive organs and arrests digestion. If you've neuralgia, take St. Jacobs Oil rub it on rub it on bard keep rubbing it on it has got 1? M. to stop tbe pain that's what its for. JXiSaSSSSiSfei fn.r-af Coughs and Colds, Sore Throat, HionehitiH, Weak LungM, General Debility aud all forms of Knifteiittion are Hinjedily cured by Scott's Emulsion CobMimptivoH always find threat relief by tnkinr it, and consumption is often cured. No other nourishment retttnrea strength no quickly and effectively. Weak Babies and Thin Children are ikado strong and robust by Scott's Emulsion when other forms of food soem to do them no good whatever. Tho only genuine Scott's Emulsion it put up in salmon colored wrapftr, Kofnae cheap substitutes! Send for pamphlet on Scotfs Emultitn. FREK. lean a towns. N. Y. All DraaTatfat. 0 ont and tl. 1 i Bis Heroic Wife. Mr. HenpecU I believe I've got the most heroic wife In the world. Friend What did she do? ilr. Ilenpeck A burglar came into tbe house during my absence. My wife didn't scare worth a cent. ;he re ceived him politely. I saw him Just as I entered the bouse be jumped through the window and escaped. He was a young fellow and good looking. Friend (who knows htr) No wonder be was scared. Texas Sittings. nrkUh Fountains The Turkish fountains of Constanti nople form one of the most attractive features of the city They are usually in the center of a square, and are over hung by noble trees, the resort of turtle doves, winch no one ever thinks of mo lest in-.-. The fountains are generally cons' ructed in the Saracenic style, witli vast, overhanging eaves and their mar ble sides profusely decorated with sculp tured arabesques and inscriptions from the Koran. Around them are constaut grouped women and children, water carriers and their donkey?, bearing earthen jars or leather water pouches. The cool, open courts of the mosques are also invariably provided with an eiegant fountain in the center to assist 'lie faithful in their ablutions, which I hey always perform before entering the holy edifice to pray. Leather belts or boots that have been soaked in water and dried hard may be softened by rubbing plentifully with coal oil. If the leather is very dirty, wash it with good hot soapsuds first. Fur lined circulars are among the coming probabilities. They are of course the legitimee outcome of the present fashion for capes. t . a. aa .j : I r . -. . ne vireaie&i mcuiun ui.-s.uiti j of the Age. KENNEDY'S ' MEDICAL DISCOVERY. DONALD KENNEDY, OF ROXBURY, MASS.r Hai discovered in one of our commoir partiAiic wctua a lemony mat uncia tvciy kind of Humor, from the worst Scrofula down to a common rimpie. He has tried it in over eleven hundred cases, and never failed except in two cases (both thunder humor). He has now in his possession over two hundred certificates of its value, all within twenty miles of Boston. Send 'postal card for book, A benefit Is always experienced from the first bottle? and a'perfext cure is war ranted when the right quantity is taken. When the lungs are affected it causes shooting pains, like needles passing through them; the same with the Liver or bowels. I his is caused by the ducts being , stopped, and always disappears in a week ; after takinj! it. Read the label. ! ' If the stomach is foul or bilious it will i cause squeamish feelings at first, j No change of diet ever necessary. Eat j the best you tan get, and enough of it. i Dose, one ttb'espoonful.ni water at bed j time. Sold by all Druggists. i OJRKCTJo.S'S for ii 1 CIlK.iil II AIM -ijipll a imrlirle nf tin lliilin. veil up in!" I If Vi.s'. Aflern it'iihif nl ilnnt trimi) hrailh l.lirmyh tin i ntixc. I'se thret tintr a iloi nfteT me.uh jirftrrri'ilriiiii h-f'irc rvliriny. ELY'S CREAM BALM. oju-ds and cleanse the Nasal 1'asus.iges, Allays I'ain and Inflammation, Heals the Sores, Pro led ttie Membrane from colds. Restores the Snse of 'I'sBle mid Smell. The Bulm is quicklv stisorhed and gives relief lit onee. A fMirttele I applied tnlo eaeh nostril and is agrees Mi. I'riee SO e.ents lit DrngKiats or by mail. Kl.Y HltU I II KKS, .V. Warren (St., New i ork. M btECTRIC BELT tsnt on TMt VIIVV Jir.Judd s.lietroit.Mich. WsntsatBLx AMUJCt N. N It. No. 306-43. York, Neb. WHKN WRITING TO ADVKKTISKK pltnasc say o saw the aavrrtlaemeua in this paper.