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/The New Bread.' Attention is called to the new method j ot making bread o( superior lightness, | fineness and wbolcsomenefs without yeast, a receipt for which'is given elsewhere in this paper. Evcu the best bread makers will be interested in this. To every reader who will try this, and write tho result to the Royal Raking Powder Co., 106 Wall street. New York, that company will send in return, free, a copy of tho uiost practical and useful cook book, containing one thousand receipts for all kinds of cooking, jet published. Mention this paper. In the dining-room of aa English hotel a Scriptural text is hung on the wall, as follows* "Wait oa ttio Lord and lie shall exalt thee to inherit the land," ami alongside of it is a warning from the landlord, reading "Watch your hat aud overcoat, as tin proprietor is not responsible for them." Westminster Bridge, built in 1750, Was the first in which the foundations were laid by the aid of cni-sons. Ladles needinn a tonic, or children \vh?> ?1want bulldloK np, Rhoiilil take Brown's lion Bitters. It la pleasant to take, car-s Malaria IndlKCHtlon. Biliousness and Liver Complaints, makes the Blood rich and pure. Of the LS,:i >? leinnle depot.tors in thf savings banks of Philadelphia, S2 I ? are described as iicarding-h-tii'- keepers. Hood's Cures My Health is ?olid As a Duck's Foot in tho Mud Cured of 11 ra vol ami 11.digest Ion by Hood's Sarsapu rttlii ' Mr. Frederick En rnf red Chicago, Illinois. " I want to say tliat I have Won ma.de a new man hy Hood's Sarsnpnrilla ami II?uh\'? Pills. I was in a wretched condition and jiaid to one physician $t'J for attcndanc* ami prescriptions, which gave inc no relief. I suffered intensely from srairol. mill think I have cmliirril.ax much mitcry as any ninn from that complaint. 1 cave up lmjve of ever getting well ami was only walking alvout to Save Funeral Expenses. Nothing would stay on my stomach. 1 began :o take Hood's Sarsnpnrilla, and found lliai It did me good, so 1 kept on till I havr taken fourteen lvoltles, and now in) health Is as solid as a duck's foot in HOOD'S Sarsapajjlla CURES the mud. 1 shall keep Hood's Sarsaparilla in the house, as I consider it the cheapest and best medicine in the market. My indigestion is entirely cured, ntul all symptoms of the gravel have disappeared." Fkkukhick Kakskiikd, No. fit South Carpenter Street, Chicago, Illinois. N. B. Bo sure to get Hood's and only HOOIl'S. Hood's I'llls net easily, yet promptly nnvt oftlilentl.v. on the liver nmt bowels. 23 cents. Unlike the Dutch Process rrfo j No Alkalies iOlher Chemicals fSif *re used in tho preparation of w. BAKER & CO.'S mreakfastGocoa HI V:'' in which <i absolutely HI 1 R|, !fl pure and soluble. Mfl I Hf *[] Ithasmorrf/ianf/ireeflmeo EM AS | I H the at rrngtli of Cocoa mixed ' mwh Starch, Arrowroot or Sugar, and is far tuoro economical, coaling teas than one cent a cup. It Is delicious, nourishing, and basil* diokstbp. Sold bjr Qrorert e?crjwh?rs. W A CO., Dorchester, Man. DeumteWomen Or Debilitated Women, should use BRADFIELD'S FEMALE REGULATOR. Every ingredient possesses superb Tonic properties and exerts a wonderful influence in toning up and sfrengihcning her system, by driving through the proper channels all impurities. Health and strength guaranteed to result from its use. " My wife, who was bedridden for sigh, toen months, after using /??-mlfield's Vemale Jteyulator for two months to getting well." ? J. M. JoHMtoK. Mnlvern, Ark. UHAUIIBI'U IIIWUIJATUK 1 <>., AlJailll, Ufl. * ore?Consnmptlon.CoDghfl, Croup, Hor# Throat* Sold by ajl Druggists on a Guarantee. r-\ Ftjfjjf # 15 UNHAPPY ANP, Jg wontj beTT^rinen r* HOME NAILS . ARE CHEERFUL AND SHARP t asin thi' nim-DruT si/i-s * / c?are very anxious TT) v^|// < ,/. adapt themselves^/ / // At" toallthe.uses a \// > \>^ A1 l /^ /^V T?n Used in all homos. Home Nails, . , Sold by all dealers. Homo Tacks. Kao'a Remedy for '"atarrh Is the |B to f'we. i? .1 ('I.p,*\f''?t . Sold by dnigglsta or wnt bymaliT^^T Wo. B. t. JJrtiellkie, Warren, ['a. ^ SUNNY ISLES OF HAWAII. J c HOW LIFE GOES IN THS PACIFIC s PABADISB. ( Honolulu ami Iin Varied Populatloc t ?Amusement* of llw City ? iionu 1 lileol (hnNailvei, ' I IN tire silent waste of the hroal Pa- , citie < >ceau, 2000 miles or more j from Sail Francisco, lie the sunny isles of Hawaii, which sorao daj may be a part of the Uuitcd States of America. When you steam into the Iiarbsr of Honolulu you be^in to catch the flavor of the island. At one side tower t w* i gigantic mountain |>eaks of Molokai, 1 where the leper lives. | i A line of fonni-fritigeJ reofs i\n 1 1 a stretch of gloaming sand, where * > single group of sontinel palms rear their heads iii tropic beauty, make up the tir.t I glimpse of tho island. Still bsyoad t these palms~can bo seen the steeples and 1 flagstaff* and gray cmbossc I greea roofs ' of Honolulu, whilo, frowning down upon { it in the fur background, is tho deal magnificence of a crushed volcano. Toe docks at Houolulu. which is tho capital city of the Island Kingdom, present a curious spectacle. To greet the big iron Paciht Mail steamer, says tin New York Journal, there fleet brown, "coppery colored natives, in their simple, il ivvcr-dcckcd garbs, almond-eye I Chinamen, little subject! of the .Mika lo, Portuguese, Germans, Britons, Americans, all coolly clad in white duct. Honolulu lias a population of 25,00( souls. It has tiftceu miles of street railway, 1300 telephones, 300 public hacks, macadamized streets, lighted by electricity, and in its business part is well built of brick and stone. Its resident portion is almost entirely of wood. In Honolulu, as everywhere else in tho islands, one is struck by the chtrac tor of the population, Americans, ten glisli and Germans number only 4VK) in all the islands. Portugal hai f?irnished HOOO people, while China furnishes 20,000, the laboring classes in the island being nearly all Chinamen. Of the pure native that once upon a time ate up Captain Cook, there are less than 115,000, and they are dying at the rate of two per cent, a year. But the native had married with the alien races before dying, and the result is the half caste race, which numbers about 60 10 and is very inllucutial socially and politically. As you drive through the streets in the hush of the early morniug, you soon learn what is meant by the luxuriant repose of the tropic. The bloom of unwonted flowers, the burnished sheen of the leaves, the lance-like foliage of the palms, all tell you that you are far away from battling New York. The Hawaiian home Is in itself a type. It is but one story in height, with a broad Inuai or wide verandah in front, into which open wide doors from parlor, dining room, billiard, and, in fact, from all the rooms on the iirst floor, the lanai being a sort of common meeting ground for everybody. Swinging in a hamtuocic, one can watch the white-fringed reefs where the loug Pacific breaks. Below you lies the town in indolent repose, and you drink Iiu the mellow air and become a lotus cater. 'I'll/l ] a iro r rrtAmo a f t li ? mma ??H IUHVI IV/WUIO V/* VUU 11WU9U niu nil p! auued for coolness, for wo arc in the tropics, miml you. Toe windows are shaded by blinds and curtains, the floors arc matted, with easy, light aud graceful furniture. The slecpiug rooms above are planned for comfort, too, for ico is a manufactured luxury iu Honolulu, aud "keep cool'' is the motto of its citizen. Still, there arc many more pretentious homes than the one describe I iu Honolulu, built after the American and English styles. (Jlaus Sprcckels, the "Sugar King"' of Hawaii, owns a splendid brick palace, while the Government House, or the palace of the recently dethroned Queen, aud the Queen's Hospital are modern brick houses ot elegance. In fact, Honolulu is a town where civilization is at high tide. In no city in the world is thcro so much business done by telephone as in Honolulu. Nearly every bouse in the city can be communicated with. One fairly lives iu a network of wires. The shop, the market, the doctor, the dentist, the undertaker, all respond to t'oU long distance talk, and no small amount of gossip wings its way over the sensitivo wires. It is so easy to laze away the day on your lanai, with a telephone at your elbow, through which you can chat with your friends. "In the lauai wc take no note of time," is a favorite Hawaiian saying. When early evening c nncs it is the fad nvnrtr nil.. ... 11 .. I.. ?.% 1........ ? . , .... ......J ...... ... .............. ... .? Thomas square, the biggest open space in the city, to hear the concerts given by a band of musicians# Their efforts are aided by the sinking of bauds of natives, whose music contains a pathetically weird strain, full of pathos. All the Honolulu world strolls about in the mellow moonlight, during these concern, while stately palms mako fantastic silhouettes against the sky. OntiMului at ft asm?L * '?* call winter as well as in summer, the Hawaiian devotes to pleasure. In Honolulu baseball is the fad. All the island world goes to the grounds and watches gentlemen teams play. Many of the young ladies in the city go to the grounds on horseback ; some ridiug astride iu male fashion, but always with escorts. Then the Hawaiian Jockey Club has a race track near Honolulu, and to it, during the racing season, the fair world and the brown world of Hawaii go. I A . -II . I i *1.1/ oil incao nuiiiiuiiicDis tni native | band is a conspicuous feature. Tbe band : lias forty members, all natives except j the leader, who is a German. The band ' cost the late Government $50,000 a year l to support. | Tiic native Hawaiian lives an easy life. , His home is in a funny gra*s house, like some gigantic hay mow. Its interior is one room, in which arc a few of the 1 primitive articles of a modern house. ; Hut there is much to ad niro and comI mend in their character. T.ie natives j are amiable, honest and generous, and I have certainly shown themselves susceptible of intellectual and moral elevation. Physically they are of good stature, active and well made. The descendants i of the chiefs are usually large men and I exceed in height the average European. All are experts in swimming, and are good tishormen and horsemen. Pishing is their usual mode of living. The nativo women have rich olive complexions, well-developed form?, black, glossy hair, and large, lustrous ' ' V. t iyes, ana many ot tnem may oe consia red beautiful. They dress ia gey :olored bolokus, e sort. of gown, end ireer wreaths, pr, as they term it, leii >f flowers. In his food'- the Hawaiian native stll ;liogs to the nXtlvo fashion which be longs to his primitive condition. Hi menu consists of poi, boiled or bake taro and raw neb. roi is a sort ot stei that smells worse than the rankest lim bergcr cheese, but which isn't so bai after all to the taste. Taro is a tropica fruit, from which taro flour is made. While the native male is making a fc dollars at fishing, his spouse earns trifle, too, by the lotni looii treatment n which the native woman is kt\ expert I'lio tcr.n really stands for what is kndhsj n civilizition as massage, the native rora time immemorial being experts ii ts manipulation. Although small iu numbers, th< American In Hawaii 4-gets there" ever; irue. He owns four-fifths of Hawaii&i wealth, nine tenths of her foreiga com merce, and carries in his ships elghl tenths of her freight. Still further, it must bo remetnbere that the Hawaiian Islands have, by the! strategic opposition, the positive conti*c of the commerce of tho Pacific Opeur which will bo enormously increase when the Nicaragua Canal shall be con: pletcd. i Tho United 8taies already/by trea holds possession of the splendid H> waiian harbor of Pearl Rivert which the best pla6c to occupy until actual at ncxation is established. * i Vf ' Hawaii is well equipped with new papers. There are two daily Euglii papers, and ono daily Hawaiian pane citlclKs llolomua, meaning tho A vane. There is another daily Hawaiit sheet, which is called Ki Loo o 1 Lahui, or, Tho Voice of the People, ai then there are monthly Chinese, Port gucsc, English, German and Spnnish p pers, catering to the wonderful cosm politan population that make up tl 100,000 souls ou the isiand. There are eight ol these islands, whii have an area of 6740 square miles, about 500 square miles larger than Co nccticut and Rhode Island put togcthe Tiicy arc situated 2100 miles from St f^rannitrn !N1 (I milfw f rnin Anlrlant New Zealand; 4 481 miles from Australi 3440 miles from Yokohama, Japan, au 4800 miles from China. In general character the islands ai alike. Tuoy consist of mountains, vo canic in nature, seainod with valleys an gorges, with rolling plains lying batwoo and along the foot of tho mountainThe live principal islands aro ilawa from which tho group is named, Mai Oahu, Kauai and Molukai. Honolulu located at Oahu. Marvels of Plant Life. Nowhere is the evidence of desig'A nature more emphatically set forth tli: among certain forms of plant life whic in theit various functions^ seem to a proncli so near the animal kingdom U the observer feels that theie is soi strange plant animal?somsthtog tl might possibly form a connecting li between the animals and plants. In a close study of these plants we s many evidences of seeming intelligen that are not found in some animals, a so remarkable arc the acdons plants'that the iirfpressloFft for3^\!pl us that we are confronted with jnti ligence, or something strangely akth it. In Ihe present paper I wish to Call ? tention to the group which is popular known as carnivorous plants* or fle caters. A familiar example is the lit! droscra, so common in various portic of the country. The plant is smtll ai Inconspicuous. The lirst one I ovor en caught my eye by a sudden flash of fie red light* and kneeling on the dai grass, I fairly caught the little carnivo in the act which has rendered It so fat oils. There were several tender,dclic. stalks in too centre, ana around about near tlic ground four or five singuli round, pad-like objects, about the s of small buttons. These were leaves, and thoir upj surface was covered with reddish' to tnclcs that stood boldly up, each benrii a delicate drop of dew that gleamed a glistened in tho sunlight like a vcrital. garnet. Across the top of the leaves long logged fragilp insect lay, caug but a second before and dying n rat terrible death. Five or six of the hair-like tentaci were thrown across its legs and winj holding it down and pressing its ho< nearer and nearet to the leaf,while oth rich blood-red stalks wero in all pos tionr, bending over to encompass t victim. The sight was a horror in ininintur and reminded nic of tho actions of octopus or devilfish, as the iitt'o caph lopod is commonly called. It iias cig sucker-lined arms radiating fro n a sma bag shaped body, aud cic.'i arm has i the sinuosity, all tho possibility of m lion of a snake, ever undulating, qnlvc ing, as if with suppressed emotion,whi over tnc entire mass waves an I varn s'nndos of color seem to ebb nud How. The California!!. .?? u*?w in mo Army. The insignia of rank of General Ci manding is denoted by two gold i broidored fivc-ray stars, one on each s equidistant between tho center and outer e'Jgo of the strap, with a g shield in the center. J/cutenant-Goc al, three silver embroidered fivestars. oiir alar nn iho xantnr and one on each side equidistant bet w the center and edge of tiie strap; center star the largest. Major Genei two silver embroidered five-ray sti same size, the ceuter of each star < inch from the outer edge of tho g embroidery on the outer ends of straps. Brigadier-General, same Major-General, excepting one star, stead of two. C>lonel, same as Maj General, omitting tho stars aud sub tuting a silver ombroidered eas Cloth of the strap for general staff a staff corps, dark blue; artillery, scarl infantry, light or sky blue; cavalry, j low. Liouteamt-Colonel, same Colonel, according to corps, omitti the eagle and introducing a silver ? broidered leaf at each end. Major, sa as Lieutenant-Colonel, according corps, substituting a gold embroidei leaf at each cad. Captain, stmo ai Major, according to corps, omitting I loaf and substituting two gold embro ered bars at each end. First Lieutena same as Captain, according to corps, < ceptiug a use of one gold embroidei bar at each end. Second Lieutena same as Colone1, according to cor| omitting the eagle.-?Detroit Free Pre -JT & n n.owiuyr ana woiriing uervisues, suet) c M tNB^on "oi/,<sl'ocia'ly coluluctc<1 to t a 8?? tne East," are a coin- p paruwfefy mirmiess sort of lunatics com- r ^ paicji with those types of the African M ^ bights who, "oouverted" to Mahdism, <j burn to run amuck with the rest of the tl unbelieving humanity. Once fairly bit- s| j ten with the tarantula of Moslem sector- j( IfJ/t-w acal, the proselyte is consumed with ]< ^ _ the belief that the delights of the *| ( ' seventh or any (lumber of heavens await (] * him if he can only engage in sturdy, h steady butchery with "infidels," of his ? own or any race. It Is a mutter of indif* , fcrcuce to him if, in the operation, while n ' he sheathes htA -.^word in his and hit t| l.~ Prophet's enemy, the latter is doing the 3, same to him. Quick and happy trausla- l tion he holds as his cure roward. The still fight the other day bctwccu s-" the Egyptian troops south of Wady * Haifa and the Mnhdists recalls to me many a bygone incident and fierce strug- t gle between British and Egyptian tloops ( ^ and forces largely composed of D.-r- e j vishes. Ambigol Cataract, where tho t sKirmisn too* piaco, is aoout sixty miles 0 11" south of Wady Haifa. Tucrc is au Egyp- u ia tioo outpost at Genial, wbero the great j 1 Second Ofttaraet proper begins, an I nn- c other at Sarrass. The ono station is ftf- t tcon miles and the other thirty-tlirco c miles further vp stream, and the railroad | 01 lino and ironclad train still run through t Q- to both posts. No doubt when the Dor- ^ r* vish raiders, numbering 400 strong, were j 10 repulsed from tho forts they fell back *? from the river towards tho easier-going t n? tracks inland, along which they must c have sped on their camels. Tho Egyp |i tian cavalry?which, under careful Eng f lish training, have learned to trust their (] ' weapons and their own physical strength t in a contest with tho Bcdouincsc?pro'a- j| a ably not numbering more than two s<]ua 1- 1 f* tons, overtook the raiders at the pleas |] ant aforetime camps of Ambigol. There, c no doubt, under tho palm-trees* grateful i shade, hard by the rush nnd roar of the mighty river, tho Egyptian troops at once opened fire upon thorn. Althou ?h tho whole of the enemy were unlikely to "ii have been Dervishes?for these gcutry v) never run away, but, when necessary, *elk sedately out of a fight, merely to kp assume a fresh coign of vantage?a sharp i a' engagement teems to have ensued. The | nv Mahdists, nothing loath, swarmjd, j* mnnr.tsd and foot, up the rocky hills, nl which their pursuers had, with sound, tactical judgment, crownod, and whence e? thoy had opened fire. iC? 1 think It was at the battle of El Tcb n ^ first made tho acquaintance of the in* r\??i.i... / . iv id run crazy, Those so-called "holy beggars," self-swore to devote themsclve? \ts to the Prophet's cause, came at General ly Graham's square of marines, Highlandsb moo, and stout linesmen as if we had tit been children to be frightened by a cry. mi Clad in their patchwork rags, with r?o shaved bared heads, many armed with in no better weapons than stick;, they >n charged full in front of the fire-walled n*l square. Down they went by scores and irs hundreds, but others quickly took up the m running toward us. I saw them that it< day?more than one of them?pierced ; it through and through with Martini-Henry ir, bullet wounds, come fiercely on, reeling i2i like drunken men, their teeth gleaming and eyes aflame with hatred. Happy tot were they it they could but crosi n. weapons with our bayonets. When etna hausted nature failed them, their last act nd was generally to burl the weapon they ?lc carried, stick, lanes, or sword, toward a our rAnks, and shout an Arab imprccalit tion against us, "Nosranil' (Nazarunoh An old gray-haired sheik actually charged the square reading the Ivoran ' ''' aloud, which ho hold in his hands. Later on, when Sir Herbert (then *. Colonel) Stewart charged the worsted Atnb footmm with his two regimenta o t ctvalry, their mounted Dervishes faced his whole lores and 0 boldly charged thom in return. Again, n|| at Tama), when the Arabs broko into General Davis* a square, whore I was, ,ii: and baring temporarily captured our six II* machine guns, on which tnev dancod in |kll fiendish glee, the Dervishes were in the forefront ( tlie attack. A big marine, ,r. who had bayoneted ono of them, found i|u his rifle caught and clutched by the fa? . I natic savage, who strove to wrench his _ foe man with hia sworJ. It was at the moment we were being driven back, and while the marine tugged and sworo to get his-weapon ire?, the reeling Dervish essayed with his parting strength to slay 3,1:1 or wound our Tommy Atkins. In the Bm desperate battle at Abu-Klea, similar scenes occurred. I state it as a fact, o( t'w which I took personal note at the time, 0,1 that during tbo rnelcc In which Colonel ,or Burnaby fell, a Dervish, who had struck rai that officer, and vu promptly bayonete I 'aP' through the back, twisted about while eet thi the steel was protruding, and tried to ral thrust his lance into the sol lier. Even ,rj' the crippled aqtl wounded Dorvishes on 9D( the field of battle lay in wait to stab the old chance passingj-oaemy. Asked to "surlb, render/' and pit down their swords and w ?pea in, the invariable answer of tbo jD. sorely stricken 'Dervish was, "Christian or. for infidel) dogs, never 1" When I saw sti. them last in the Soudan, n few years ago, ,le there was no abatement in their blooded thirsty ferocity, nor show of hesitation, whether they numbered few or many, of rel' a longing to gtft to close quarters with u their enemy. iQ? ? ion Weeping free*, fron whic't dropt of rnt pure, cold water fall, are of frequent to occurrence in . ?? forests of Oregon, fee Montana, Washington and British Coli i an. bin. ^j' The raarriago ta"announoed at Itew . York City of Elep.otherios Pebtlai tc : Catharine Eleferopuls. The priest write , Vot Paisios Ferentinoe' rod m ??1 1 at, A light nsp#Mt<tf? ftrldgo was built at P#> Wngara Fall* in 1849 and removed in I ** 1854. : THE FIGa)teg1>ERVISHE^. '? SONS OT THn DXflVBT WHO ABB 5 |( UTTZBjpT VHABLBSS. ' . '. .jar r Obirglng trpfifcj^Flre-Wnlled Squares * ot KnglUfiMoldterjr With Reek- j! r Bravery. c i- "T"T is easier (to turn a hungry tiger h i I aside from his prey than a thor- n X I oughly excited Dervish from his e ivnnn nn kn nnnmv. wril/>* a for. #! w respondent on jthe London Telegraph. S| a His halt *brotherin lanatioism and creed, c the Indian or Afghan Ghasi, is terrible, i but the Atricaa and Arab Dereish is j< superlatively at*tul, with an incurable |( s delirium lo*^ ]his opponent's gore. 0 Av. , ' X niicwec Onyx Cure. . 'What I believe to be the largest and Inest onj* deposits in (he world," said m' Jr. Pbilo 13. t Shepard, "hare recently n': een discovered in some cavea in the 64 Cumberland Mountains of West Tennesee. It has been known for some time *? bat there was a fine quality of onyx or * 1 halccdony tlicro, but the mines or cavea ave scarcely been touched, and recently *? iy"attention was brought to the exist' ot nee of largo cavos in Anderson County, he roofs of which are bristling with 811 talactitcs of onyx, and in some cares the olumns reach to tho floor of the cavern. 8ai found one column fourteen feet In ?ngth, tho top of which is more than ^ our feet in diameter, and, I believe, an nyx slab four feet wido by six long ould be rawed from it. The onyx in '01 hesc cavrs is wonderfully free from sand 8UI ockets and other blemishes, and is raoro wc ichly colored than any I ever saw, and w" ems to exist in unlimited quantity. *? ?nvx, as you may know, is formed by le drippings of limestone, and iu early iages looks like prisms of glass or frosted jicles hauging from the roof, and count;ss . ages must elapse before even tho mallcst cone of ouyx could form, whilo 10 large column I hnvo described must ave been growing since tho boginuiog f time. When the value of these stoucs ccotnes known to the world then Ten #n'T I'l'liu'iiTtiT'i'ii nJflii " mado-medicine ferOwishs, " Bronchitis and other diseases of the Throat and Lungs. Like other socalled Patent Medicines, it is well advertised, and * having merit it has attain- ^ mI a wide sale under the ! name of Piso's Cure for Consumption. It Is now a "Nostrum," though At first It waa compounded After a prescription hy a regular physician, with no Idea that It would ever go onthemarket as a proprietary medicine. But after compounding that prescription over a thousand times In one year, we named It "Piso's Cure for Consumption," and began advertising it In a small way. A medicine known all over the world is the result. Why Is It not jnst as good as though costing fifty cents to a dollar for a prescription and an squal sum to have it put up at a drag store? ^ Flower I should have died before this. Eight j'ears ago I was taken sick, and suffered as no one but a dyspeptic can. I employed three of our best doctors and received ne4>eyAfi^grhcy told me that I had heart, ^*an<* liver troubl Every thistressed m^^so I] that I had to thrdV^Mi^^Xugust Flower cured me. There is no medicine equal to it." Lorxnzo F. SuiKPKK, Appleton, Maine. a WVNAnAMAAAAMMWVNM?AAM\MVWMMI ROOT, BARK - BLOSSOM Vh* BwtRUaMk, UnriKMfM H4BIM4 RtAlf. P?ln? In Bask and IJabt. Tired, Dtufnl OlLlimtM Feellrg, Debility and Low Vitality Qalrkly Cared a* wrll a, Dytpapala, Conatlpavton, gleeclrmn?, 111?In?n. BhaunailMs or Catarrh. hMknw for ?amp*. ^ AUENTa PAID WKBKrf IALABT. Jba*twomonlh?'*upply I IfMltraallwilBMllnr W* on* month'* (unply f I ytat*. Try It and B* W#iL ROOT, BARK * BLOSSOM, Newark, N. 4. /vwvwwvwwwwvvwvwwvwww IMIIftT IIA1IM A urnta AT ONCE. KampM VIU # I HWIE Saahloe k fl'nt. '93) free by maO for 2c. Stomp. ImnienHc. (n ri\nlled. Only good one ever Invented. Ileal* ivi'lglitu Halo* unparalleled SHI n day. M'rffd quick. Brohard, Phlla., Pa. \\WEBSTER'S |i |! INTERNA TIONAL DICTIONARYi \Askyos'<- H<- r \o lip ^ft toyfhi' 1 IYbtMicd by 1 | I [o.&c.?:rnniA?i co.,spRiscriRtb.MAM.,iT.8.A. ], < 1 CTT*':rfi'l (or free nrnrpcctuft eonlnlnlng rpcelmeni [ i 'pSio-i'. Illustrations, let-tlmonlaU. ete. i [ < ( |3T*IIo r.ct lr y rcprlnla of cnclent edition*. > *IBpB!EaBB3*i Wcofra I be Beat tougli HyrupTIQ QTaoieo (IimnI. I'w In tlme.M |.i|> Villi csscc onyx will bo more widely known inn Italian marble, but as yet only a few implos have been taken out."?-St. rouis Globe-Democrat. Mexican Pearl Fisheries. The Mexican Government has leased o the Compania Porliforn ine la Bajn 'aliforuia for sixteen years the pearl Usuries comprised between tho mouth of he Colorado Kiver and Capo San Lucas, >n the oast coast of Lnwcr California, kod betweon tho port of Mazitiau and iarra do Suchlate, on the Pacific Coast if the mainland, with the exception of he Ensenada do Ciiainela tisherioi. The onsidcration is tho payment by the commuy of $10 per ton of pearl oysters ohaiued in the first throe years, and $12 >cr ton during tho remaining thirteen ears of the leaso. The fisheries are to ho divide 1 into wo portions, to he worked alternately very two years, thus preventing tho ex* must ion of tho hods. Tho company urther hinds itself to avoid tho uso of lestructive methods of fishing, to pro- _ oct and extend tho oyster beds, and to ntroducc improved broeds, sued as the "ahiti pearl oyster or so no other su- I icrior variety.?-Jan Francisco Uuroa' I lo. Z "August Flower" \ " I am ready to testify under oath j that if it had not been for August f , rv - >w ry? BT TMrag: v'-.,19py^l ~i i ? ria KMOfiia)Hfr Foal. A It is a well-known fact that sea-ana* onei have a sense by which the* reeog* bo tood. This has beon studied r?. ntly bj Heir Nagel, at tho Zoological atioD ia Naples, and he has endeavored localize it. Among other experiment* imall piece of a sordine was brought refnlly to the tentacles of one of these imaU; the tentacle first touched, then hers, seized the food and surrounded and the morsel was swallowed, A nilar ball of blotting paper, saturated ' th sea-water, brought noar in the ne way,was not seized. If, however, c ball was soaked in tbo juio? of fish was seiz *d with tbo same energy as b piece of fish, but often liberated ain after a time without being swaU wed. Blotting-paper saturated with gar acted like the other, but more lakly. If saturated with quinine, it is refused- thn Inntspln* drstvinir ban*. New York Post. The New "O OYAL unfermented }Teast, avoiding the in the flour by yeast 01 peptic, palatable and 111 eaten warm and fresh wi is not true of bread made Can be made only with Receipt for Mai ON ft quart (lour, 1 tcaspoonful salt, half a teaspoon fill sugar, 2 heaping teaspoonfuls Royal Raking Powder, half medium-sized coM boiled potato, and water. Sift together thoroughly flour, salt, sugar, ancl baking powder ; rub in tho potato; add sufficient water to mix smoothly ami rapidly into a slid batter, about as soft as for poundcake; about a pint of water to a quart cf Hour will be required? Do Not Bo with I'MtM, Kumtli Mil Paints which staJn tha I Sand*. Injure the Iron and burn red. I The fUsln< Run More Polish I* Brilliant, Odor- I lee*. Durable, and the consumer pays tor bo Mb I or glass package with erery purchaao. I AN IDKAI^/MILY MKDICINf For ladlscatloe. ttlllonsacss, Headache, UaaaUeatUe, Had Complexion. Offeaoivo llroalh, an<* oil iiiaerhn of the Rtomach. iiUeMlfon follows their use. Hold I by druggists or sent bjrmall. Box itf trials?, Tto. Package (4 boxes), t*. For free samplesaddress_ _ KlPtHll CHtMIOALCO., ltsw Tsifc | 8. N. U.-ll tnillll Morphine Habit Cared la 10 IDIIIHtoSO dsrs. Wo t?BF till cured. fU I wm OR, J,STEPHENS, L??ai?On,OMO. "A STJ< F. J. Cheney & Co., I have suffered from cai and have tried several until I commenced to us February. I must say t' the dropping in my thi after the first bottle. It that I now weigh eight ] jomary weight. I have and all who used it have speak highly of it. One yesterday and expressed winter. Will you pleas terms you could furnisl keep it in stock. H< soon, I remain, Yours r< R. C 80LD BY Df A , BEWARE OF FRAUD. , Bj line niihuai W. L. UsuiIm bam i lud price aiimprd on Itoitom. JLoek ? for it* hen yon ha?. A M 4 A Mold crei jr?There. W ( i?j wH^RSefi!' rmMitVn ?: l Bm? *f All " in a |tntl* ud truly beDeflctflZ Btarhen the Springtime come*, UMH^B^H|H^R^BtDedy>8yrTip of Vl?a. ?m the family and eoetsonlyaPrente^Q^RkelseSl. Try It and be pleased. Maauf adPHSubs Callforala Fig Synip Qq only. . In A. 15. 105 Trajan built a magntfl- yj, pent atone bridge across the Danube 4*770 feet long. " lll| Many persons are broken down from overwork or household cares. Brown's Iron Bitters rebuilds the system, aids digestion, remores excess of bile, and cures malaria. A splendid tonlo for women and children. It i? ail<l thfit .t Ml 1 n (InAi nAt ?*-t hie lull moutAl po.vcr until the sg? of twenty five, and the development of ta'ent is most marked between the agee ?f thirty and forty-five OoiTonR Ann Hoarsknrsr.?The irritation which Induce convblnK relieved by use of "Brown's Bronchial Troche*." Sold only in boxes / Bread. * . I bread, made without M decomposition produced other baking pbwder; ^*$9 ost healthful ; may be thout discomfort, which 9 ' in any other way. Royal Raking Powder. king One Loaf. more or less according to the brand * fl and quality of the flour used. Do ^ not make a stilt dough, like yeast bread. Pour the batter into a greased pan, .15-2x3 inches, and 4 . inches deep, filling about half full. The loaf will rise to fill the pan when baked. Bake in very hot oven 4$ minutes, placing paper over fu st 15 minutes baking, to prevent crusting too soon on top. Bake at once. Don t mix with milk. * \ MFNII YMIR OWN HARNESS IVIBill 90 I WVlf VfVIV IISBWW I with ? THOMSON'S |B| ^ BLOTTED CLINCH RIVETS. No tool* rrquiicd. Only a hammer needed t.> drive and clinch thrm eaallr and quickly, Warlne the clinch absolutely ?month. K.-quliln# no ho'e to bo made In the leather nor burr for ilia Rivets. They are ntr?M, ( aril and tfmrmhlc. Million* now In us*. All lencthv uniform or assorted, put up In base*. A*k your dealer Ibr them, or *cn<1 40o. In tamp* for a bos ul 100, aisorle.l sixes. Man'fd by JUDSON L. THOMSON MFQ. CO., 1 WALTUAM, MANS. IHHHBHHHHHMH *n7 one double we can cure the mult obBL000 A S DC MA I TV I particulars and tavsatl" ablALI I. Kato our reliability. Our financial backing I Iodide potassium, sarsapjrllla or Hot Springs fail, wo guarantee a euro?and our Maola Cyphtlena la the only thing that will cure permanently. Positive proof eeat sealed, free. Cook Rs?ki>x Co., Chicago, Ul. 4 .-jrovR 3CESS." Toledo, O., Gentlemen:? tarrh for about five years remedies without relief ic Hall's Catarrh Cure last hat it is a A SUCCESS, oat disappeared entirely increased my appetite, so xrnnds more than my cus" recommended it to others been greatly relieved and ! of them was in my store I his wish to peddle it this y J e let me know the lowest i it for, as I would like to )ping to hear from you jspectfully, . HAUSWEDELL, Lake City, Minn. , " ''Si IUGGISTS, 76c. 4 V. L DOUGLAS 3 SHOE GENTLEMEK. k sewed shoe that will not rip; Calf, nless, smooth inside, more comfortable, ish and durable than any other shoe ever I at the price. Every style. Equals customle shoes costing from ?4 to #5. be following are of the same high ?*odat4 at nerit j n?. vr fa.oo and $5.00 Fine Calf. Hand-Sewed. , ' ' 5J.CO Tollce, Farmers and I^ttcr-Cariiera. L*3-50, 93.38 r.nd fa.oo for Working Men. fa.oo and fi.78 for Youths end Bcya. ~J" k fa.OA I M? _1> $? B,o and a.oo iongoU, j LADIE3. 91>70 tor Misses. d