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F "Westfjelp, Mas?., Nov. 27. 1893. ' l The Genesee Pure Food Co., Le Roy, N. Y. I Gentlemen?Having used your Grain-0 for the past 3 mos. I thought I would write and let you know how inueh good it has : done me. When I was on my vacation last ' summerthe peoplel visited asked me totry ! Gka:s-0, aud I drank some, but I didn't like , it; but the more I <lrank the better 1 liked j it, and now I wouldn't drink anything else. i I never weighed 07er IOC lbs. and last wlxitnt ' I was down to 103, and now I weigh just 120 j I never felt better in my life. It gives moan i awful appetite and makes me strong. It is i doing me more good than nnytbicg I evei took. I recommeud it to everybody. Yours trulv, Mrs. Geo. Jl. Ekown. I JapHime Wit. A tale of Japanese wit has been re vived in Paris in connection with the present visit of Jcpnnese Ambassa dors. A Japanese Embassy bad come tc Paris to arrange for three free ports to be open in France and Japan re epectively. The French selected Yo koha*ua, Yeddv and Han-Yang. Tin j Japanese at once suggested Havre, i Marseilles and Southampton. "But i Southampton," said the Frenchman, with a burst of undiplomatic laughter "is in England, you must kuow.' "Yes," said tho Japanese, "and Han , Yang is in Corea."?London Globe. Valuable Onarriefc Discovered. Some old quarries of Oriental alabaster have recently been discovered in the neighborhood of Monte Amiata, near Siena. It now seems very probable that the beautiful columns of that material in the interior of the Cathedral of Siena came from those quarries. The quarries are about to i i._.i oe wur&vn. What Do the Children Drink? Don't give tbem tea or coffee. Hav? you tried the new food drink called Gb.aix-0? It is delicious and nourishing and takes the place of coffee. The morf Gbain-0 you give the children the mort health you distribute through their systems. Gkain-0 is made of pure grains and when properly prepared tastes like the choice grades of coffee, but costs about \ as much. All grocers sell it. 15c. and 25c The pessimist never believes the goot things he hears about himself. Do Your Feet Ache and Burn? Shake Into your shoes Allen's Foot-Easo, i powder for the feet. It makes tight oi new shoes feel easy. Cures Corns, Bunions Swollen, Hot, Smarting and Sweating Fee and Ingrowing Nails. Sold by nil druggists and shoe stores, 25 cts. Sample sent FltEE Address Allen S. OlmsteJ, LeRoy, N. Y. Lots of women who. couldn't sew a bur ton can patch up a quarrel. What Shall We Have For Denser' This question arises in the family daily. Le' us answer it to-day. Try Jeil-O, a deliclou? and healthful dessert. Prepared in 2 mln. Nc boilingl nobaking! Simply add a little ho' water & set to cool. Flavors: Lemon,Orange Baspberryand Strawberry. At grocers. 10c The population of London increases a the rate of about 60,000 a year. 1 To C.ore a Cold In One Day. t?v? T.irmvR Rrovo OriKltf* TABLElS. A1 drupcists refund tbe money If it falls to cure ?. W. Grove's signature le on eacn box. 25c Any man who has the piice of a wig cai raise a good head of hair. A BLOOD TROUBLE Is that tired feeling?blood lacks vitality and richness, and hence you feel lite a laggard nil day and c:m't get rented at night. Hood's Sarsaparilla will care you beonase it will restore to the blood the qualities it needs to nourish, strengthen and sustain the muscles, nerves and organs of the body. f It gives sweet, refreshing sleep and imparts new life and vigor to every function. Tired Feeling?"I had that tired feeltog uud headaches. Was more tired in the morning thau when I went to bed, and I my back pained me. Hood's Sarsaparilla k, and Hood's Pills have cured mo and made me feel ten years younger." B. Scheelein, 274 Bushwick Place, Brooklyn, N. Y. Hood's Sarsaparilla , Is the Best Medicine Money Can Bny. Prepared by C. I. Hood A: Co., Lowell. Mass. Origin of Vlcitinc Card*. "Tbe nse of visiting cards dates back to quite an antiquity," explains Mrs. Van Koert Schuyler, in the Ladies' Home Journal. "Formerly the porter at the lodge or door of great houses kept a visitors' book, in which he scrawled his idea of the names of those who called upon the master and his family, and to whose Inspection it was submitted from time k> time. One fine gentleman, a scion Df the nobility from the Faubourg St. German, was shocked to find that his porter kept so poor a register of the ' aames of those who had called upon aim. The names, badly written with ipluttering pen and pale or muddy ink, suggested to him the idea of writing his own name upon slips of paper or bits of cardboard in advance Lyafr E. Pinkham^-TTege table Compound; and Blood Purifier. I am now regular every month aDd suffer no pain. Your medicine is the best that any suffering girl can take."?Miss Mary Gomes, Aptcs, Cal., July 6, 1699. Nervous and Dizzy "Dear Mrs. Pinkham I wish to express my thanks to you for the great benefit I have received from the use of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com- j pound. I suffered constantly from ter- I rible sideache, had chills, was nervous j and dizzy. I had tried different kinds : of medicine but they all failed entirely. > After taking three bottles of Vegetable j Compound and three of Blood Purifier I ; amall right. 1 cannot thank you enough j for what your remedies have done for . me."?Miss Matilda Jexsex, Box 18? j Oirdensburir, Win.. June 10. 1899. '-V,/ . r st* ' , \ PARS AND GARDEN. 1 J5 jjWTfSTrWWfWWTfWTrit Length of Time Cows Remain Dry. It was found by making inquiries among a large number of farmers that a wide variation existed in the length >f time that cows remain dry. The shortest time reported was ten days, while the average was fifty-seven daju. By far the largest number lay betreen six and twelve weeks, and eight weeks occurred in the reports mora than twice as often as any other one '.:ime. Teach Colts to Walk Fast. t>U lUCl'C 19 JLIU puuo DU taiua^ic \jl oc ranch appreciated and so practically useful in a horse as a fast, fair, Bquare a-alk, and there is nothing that will cause an animal to be driven harder and kept so continually on the other paces as a deficiency in tliis respect, says the Horse Fancier. Months of time and hours of patient, intelligent e;Tort are expended to make the' horse n fast trotter, a high actor, a perfectly gaited saddle horse, but so far as the walk goes, he ia generally put upon the market as natnre made him and rolls along at the pace his ambition dictates, commended by his owner as a wonder if he happens to walk fast, ! and sworn at and overdriven by every one if he chances to be lazy and slow. The fast walker is often made so by being put with a mate while breaking which happened to be a quick, free mover, and no farmer or breeder can bs too careful in seeing to it that no colt of his is ever driven or led beside, - : 1: .1... 1% DlUg?13U, XUUUUVtl pttl'ULftCA* ' V.v.-;.V* A Solf.Closlnff Stai\ctiIon.V^ ' My plan of mating a cow stanchion, shown in the accompanying illustration is, I think, simpler than any that has been presented to your readers, writes W. H. Pelsne, in American Agriculturist. The bottom .piece, a, has a four by four mortised feo that it1 will fit the bottom of the stanchion post, b. Thesfe posts are tapering ?-? "VC'V ? > toward the top, as they look bettered are just ae strong, j- TJie top pi?66-of the stanchion is rmtde-of two two "bjfour'8. between which; the-tops, of the uprights are placet,.* Let ijie fixed stanchion extend through and beyond the piece, d. Let the looaa stanchion, b, extend one-half inoh above d. Place the latohes, c, between the two by two, e, and its companion pisce and adjust them so that when the movable pieces are palled to the left the latoh, c, will just hold the loose stanchion shut. Let tjie latoh beyond the notoh be long enough so that when the movable piece,.e, is pulled to the right the latch will not drop down upon the stanchion as shown by, the dotted line, at o. Attach the lever, f, to thq movable piece, e: If it is desirable to let-out any individual cow and .keep int&e^jthers, the latch can be raised without disturbing the others. If it'iirdesirable to keep in ioy particular cow in d remove the otherB ,take out the pin at g, Dlace it at h and that co^r mnst remain in. The small cirfcles it ihe illustration 'on'd Represent tM/. ^lecea for these pin's. Iuse plain Iaxob?r for all this work jitfdawe a fixed piece of.the stanchion atj^8ione:eighth oi an inch thicker than the one that is loose. This permits tie movable oneto move cnsiJy. . Cblcken Cold*. / A bird will tak*4"co]d"' as easily R9 will a human . heing, yet those who turn the' fo^g$8ut on stormy days da not give this fact a single thought,. !8i}j?r ar^ subject to cold in the head,]k raw ;in the bowels, lung disea8M,Hhrpai1difficulties and all the ailmenta;i..?ri*^ng usually from colds, dampriefifc-or - in^den changes of the weather^ ; Even" when they are provided with a warm: coop * ^change in the direction of t^.xtind may oause the fowls to be aatjjeefc -to draughts of air, to be followed by the same troubles t^A^c^d likely have befallen hnmim beings under- similar ciroumstanees. - When the hens have J if calling upon his neighbors lest his aame should fare as badly at the lands of their porters. This oustom '' loon became generally established." THE HEALTH OF YGURC WOMEN Two of Them Helped by Mrs. Pinkham ?Read their Letters. "Dear Mrs. Pixkiiam:?I am sixteen years old and am troubled with my monthly sickness. It is very irregular, occurring only once in two or three months, and also very painful. I also suffer with cramps and once in awhile pain strikes me in the heart and I have drowsy headaches. If there is anything you can do for me, I will gladly follow use of your | dies, taking both colds tnej vm not lay, anu-ior tnai reason every precaution should be taken to prefect them from dampness, chilling vjncfs and sudden changes. Give plenty of fresh air, but not as a draught, and allow the house to be freely ventilated during the day; but when the birds are on the roost they must be snug and warm.?P. H. Jacobs, in Farmers' Advocate. Effect of Mulching on IMooininc Plants. In spite of the repeated experiments at different stations, as well as in gnrdcna'of private persons, there are some pebble who still talk about mulching trdes and plants to retard blooming. Mulching plants can retard blooming only when the entire plant i$ ' covered with the mulch, as in the cai^e of strawberries or raspberry and/fcjackberry vines that are laid do?ir and Covered up. This, however, , can make but a few days difference-.in the time of blooming, for it will not be safe to keep such vines coveted after they have begun A a 1 /vn or o o aw Ironn W IVIIAUI X*. o <VUQ uo vuvj u cold the mulch may safely be retained. . In the case of trees, however, the mulch will not retare the b!o?soming for a single .hour. The mulch affects only the rbpts of the tree, while the sun and heat awaken the sap in the limbs and trunk into life. It is the life in the top of the tree that causes the flowers to spring forth. Experiments with grape vines have demonstrated that their roots may be in frozen earth -and yet their branches, if taken into a hothonse, will bring ' forth blossoms and even leaves. It is possible for mulching to become a detriment if left on the gronnd above the roots of trees in the spring, especially if the mulch be so thick that it keeps the ground frozen for some time after the ground around it has been thawed out. As has been said, the sun will start the buds and leaves and the sap will begin to flow. The nest operation must be the development "f the various parts of the tree, inc ing the roots and the root-ht?irs. is. therefore, desirable that the eroi. warm up and dry up as soon as possible to permit the various activities of the tree to get ioto fall operation. In most cases, however, the mulch is too thin on the ground to prevent the thawing of the soil. Generally speak-* ing, it does not pay to attempt to control flowering of any plants by means of the mulch.?Farm, Field and Fireside. Culture of Strawberries. The following excellent method foi * " - ~ f lO O./I glUWlIJ^ UI DUU\T UtiiiVW WV.WW--Wby the Virginia Experiment Station: In the first place, select only young plants for setting. These can always be distinguished by their red roots. As soon as the plant has fruited the crown and roots take on a dark color. It is not advisable to select many varieties. For a family garden two first earlies, two medium and two late varieties are sufficient, and one of each season would probably be better. However, it is necessary to avoid se-' lecting varieties with imperfect blossoms. One row of plants with perfect flowers will readily pollinize two or three rows on either side. It is best to set strawberries in the spring. Early setting is not important; but they should be planted when the ground can be put in good condi ' ?It fofa tiuu auu givoju uicuu uuibuio lumi ? in atithran. Care should be taken to remove all blossoms the first season. Place the plants in rows four feet wide and 20-24 inches asunder in the row. Turn the rnnners along the line of the rows so as to fill up a matted'row about one foot wide. It is well1 to prevent the plants from setting in a tight mat. This can be accomplished by pulling off runners after the' plants have set sufficiently heivy. Having given the plants good culture until late fall, the applicaticn of a mulch in wfhter is very beneficial for several reasons. It prevents unseasonable bloom, which often occurs in Virginia, and much weakens the plants, moisture is retained and the berries kept olean by the mulch. The mulch must be applied carefully, for if too heavy the plants will be-killed. Put on just enough material - to cover the vines almost out . of sight. Old, partly rotted stack bottoms avo generally the best material available in this state, Eresh straw is apt to carry [considerable grain and weed seed. , The mulch can often be slightly parted over the rows in spring with advantage tp the plants. Spring cultivation^ beneficial if done early, but j ifris a question whether it will pay to i remove and replace the mulch. If i not, omit the cultivation. The charac- j nt onil mill VlOTTCl V>Pnrincr nil tlliS I CI V* GUJi nil* UUT V wvw> ? Q -? plant.,; Light noil does not so much | need cultivation. A Simple Water Ram. I have a spring on my farm thirty- j five feet below the level of the house : and 900 feet away, and only strong I enough to ran a hydraulic ran>about ' one-half of the time, and we have plenty of water for house use and from six to eight head of horses and cattle, also hogs and poultry. From spring to rain I have ten feet of fall, making a rise from ram to house of forty feet. While it is pumping it brings about twenty gallons per hour to the barn. As it is idle about half the time, we get about 240 gallons per day. It would require about all the L \--l i ti a. | FIO. 1. ?THE TRIP AND RAM. water that would run through a threequarter-inch pipe to keep the smallest size ram running continually. The reservoir at spring holds water enough to run the hydraulic ram about an hour, then it stops and holds the'water from running away until the spring fills again and runs out through a pipe at top of reservoir i - Tl. ~ 1 ana operates a inp, rjg. jl. Any one handy with tools can make a trip of this. kind. There is quite a large per cent, of the springs no jfc.?~ b'::) ;0h J \ ma, 2-^-PLAN OF THE WATEB RAM. ? . l >i . i i. ? strong enough to run a hydraulic ram withoafcsoz^ethingof thiBkind. Where a hydranlic ram can be used I. think it is farbhead of a wind pump, as it is cheaper to begin with, will last longer, uriH ni\t Vilr>rtr /Inrrn om? rcnniroB Tin oiling?all you need to do is to take care of the water. The pipes should not be less than four feet under the ground or the water wijU be warm in saibtaer and too cold in winter. In Fig. 1 s is the spring; r,. ram. 900 feet of pipe run up to t, a sixtygallon tank iu pantry; with overflow pipe, to b, a ten-barrel tank in the barn. In Fig. 2, a is a board 8x14;b, lever twenty incheB long, with a quart bucket on long end which has spaall holes in bottom to let the water leak out, and a weight on short end to raise bucket when empty. E, plunger that puts valve d in motion. B is a block on the Ijoard a, under plunger c, with pin at e, to guide c off of valve while* bucket is leaking empty. Dotted .lines show position of lever when bucKet is full.?Ohio Former. A Light Gun. Twelve pounds only is the weight of the new automatic machine gun under experiment in the UuitedStates Army. It fires 450 shots a minute <uid can be carried by one man. The Money Value of Good Roads. y I y HE report of the Maryland I f Geological Survey for 1892 I annonnces that tbe people oJ q that State have expended ovei ?6,000,000 in tbe last ten years on theii common roads; most of the money has been wasted in continual repairing. Many of the roads have no natural drainage. They are bad roads a pari or all of the time. The Survey hat made a careful estimate showing thai it costs the people of Maryland $3, 000,000 a year more to do their hauling over poor highways than it would cost if they were turned into first-rate roads. This estimate supplements the in< formation collected by the Department of Agriculture in 1895, when it re ceived data from over twelve hundred counties from all over the oountryand found that the average cost of hauling a ton load*one. mile was twenty-five cents, while the average cost in six European countries that possess im? proved highways was almost exactly one-third as much. More than one faotor enters into the cost of hauling, but the main ' reason why our farmer* i _ n : . i pay inree limes as mucn per mne af European farmers pay is that they can haul, on an average, only one ton ovei poor dirt roads, -while the European farmer hauls from three to four ton* at a load over fine highways. > No one knows the total mileage ol our common roads, but their length in New York State is estimated at 123,' . 000 miles. The more important high* ways of Massachusetts have a mileage of 20,500 miles. All students of highway improvement agree that the condition of most of the common roads it America is about that of the English roads, early in this century, when they -were so bad and toll rates sohigt that the question of improvement -was forced upon the British public. Eng laml Had no railroads then, and if it had not been for the wonderful development of our railroads the question of highway improvement would 1 have (Some to the front long ago in thie country. The people, however, are more and more impressed every year with the fact that road improvement is necessary to reduce the cost of hauling, i to make roads fit for pleasure driving, and to save' the enormoue waste of labor now expended on bad roads. When we fully understand that there is no economical way to obtain good roads except by building the best, our practical education will have made a long step. * This lesson has not vet JfcMBdn learned thoroughly. Many of our ' so-called good roads are not the best and, therefore, are not economical. The men who built them would have done better work and spent no more money if they had profited by the experience j of England and France. Maryland has gone about the work i r>f road imnrovement in a wav that promises excellent results. The State | has recognized the fact that geological j considerations are a most important1 factor in good road-making. In 1898 the General Assembly passed a bill for the annual expenditure of $10,000 by the Geological Survey in the investigation of road construction in the State. The first published result is this comprehensive report on thp distribution of the rock material required for good road-making, on the failure of the "improved" roads to meet the needs of modern traffic, chiefly owing to the fact that they were built without competent engineering supervision and without care as to grades and drainage, and on many other practical matters. The report will help to place road improvement in Maryland n? inf/illiffflnf Koci'o f f aVinnls? * likewise promote the caase of good roads throughout the country.?NewYork Sun. Free Roads For Baltimore. With a view to keeping the publio roads leading out of Baltimore free from toils the United Railways Company has made a free deed of gift to Baltimore City and Baltimore Couniy of those portions of the Baltimore and York turnpike, the Baltimore and Hartford turnpike, and the Belair turnpike which lie within the limits of the city and county. The company officials say they are in the railway, not the turnpike business, and that their object is to build up and develop the city and surrounding country, acting upon the theory that such development is certain to benefit the railway company. To se cure proper development, they claim all roads entering the city should be free. The York Road tnrnpike is thirty 1 miles long, the Hartfcrd eighteen miles, and the Belair Road nine miles. Two miles of each of the former roads and one mile of the latter lie within tho city limits. On the York Road in the city limits the company has spent $40,000 grading and macadamizing. The Hartford Road cost the company 1 originally $30,000, and on it the company has spent$8000in improvements. The Belair Road cost the company $25,000. HiRhwny Work by Convlcti. According to the report of the Industrial Commission, the State of New York leads the Union in the enlightened recognition of the moral as well as the economic value of highway work by' convicts. California jnd North Carolina are also doing well. Roadmaking does not interfere with conducting other forms of labor an State acoount also. There are some months of every year when work I sn the highways is impracticable in a Northern oilmate, and days here and there even in the mild season when train- prevents. This leaves a considerable aggregate of time to be devoted to indoor labor, such as making clothing and other, prison supplies?a line in which overproduction, followed by long periods of enforced idleness, is the rule when indoor labor is the only dependence. A Serious Question. When a Government official, in- . struoted to investigate the economical Bide of the question, reports there is an annual loss of $500,000,000 to the country because of bad" roads, it certainly appears the matter is worthy of the teritus attention of the political partj^g and Congress. If there is any person whom you dislike, that is the *?ne of whom you ' ?hr?ufd never BDesk. j HOUSEHOLD MATTERS. To Clean Silver. The best way to clean off the dark maiks of boiled eggs from silver is with a little powdered and sifted bicarbonate of soda mixed with whiting. A Waterproof Varnleh. A good waterproof varnish for old umbrellas and storm-coats is made of two parts of tnrpentine, three parts oflineeed-oil, and one part of powdered litharge. Mix thes6 ingredients together thoroughly, and boil in a waterbath, that is, in a vessel floating in boiling water, the same as the cabinetmaker melts his glue. When the var msh is thoroughly boiled so that every part is dissolved remove it from the stove and apply with a brush while warm. It should be painted over the article to be varnished with the same care as if it was paint. If it is an umbrella, open it wide, and spread the varniBh smoothly. After it has dried a second coat may be applied if needed. When the varnish has dried it will not be stiff and oracklyi but will show great elasticity. This varnish can be employed in a great variety o! ways. The Dlnlng-Room. Every dining-room should have its rug. The quality of this rug must, however, vary with the purchasing power of the individual. Two things ought to be remembered. The rug must not he so thin that it rolls up with every chair that is .drawn across it, not so thick that no chair oan be dracra at all. The rug may be laid over a bare floor, a carpet, a filling, or a matting. BagB made of pieces of carpeting with a border are never possible in really beautiful dining-rooms, And am nnlv tn innnnidflrfid when J questions of economy have to enter in. it mnstnot be understood by this that these rags are in bad taste, bnt simply that thpy are a confession to weakness, as it were?of the necessity of using something which a salesman sometimes tells you,''though cheaper, is exactly as good as the.other." Rugs of every' kind are manufactured today. The housekeeper has only to take the dimensions of her room,state what price she can afford to pay, and then choose the best that comes within the range. Rugs ought always to be lower in color key than the rest of the room, or they seeki to jump up at you, and make a most.unpleasant effeot.?Harper's Bazar. "Floral Bower" Bedrooms. The flower room has not been overdone apparently, for the ingenuity of the art decorators has been taxed sorely to find some novelty to introduce into the bowery nooks for whioh they have created a demand by arfiutirt nunors und riftinfced fnr.nitnre. When the flower-room scheme first came into being roses, forget-me-nots and chrysanthemums were the stock flowers. Then original maidens with favorite flowers and indulgent .mammas ordered their dressing tables, bureaus, etc., of white enamel, curly birch or bird's-eye maple, to be decorated with sprays of blossoms, bunches of violets, clusters of corn flowers, daisies, buttercups, even dandelions, and one woman had a set of white wood painted witji exquisite orchids. Fond lilies made beautiful mother set of white bedroom' furniture, and scarlet poppies painted on i background of curly birch made a brilliant showing for a room whose woodwork and hangings were of dull, soft green. . Wall paper, floor coverings, window hangings, chintz and cretonne for furniture coverings can all be obtained in the same colors and designs in these artistic days. In any case the flower is repeated in all the "fittings" of the pretty room. Dimity curtains of white colored flowers are charming for cottage windows, and otfingtothe skill wjth which they are made manage to look quaint without being garish or too highly colored. Ketfpee. Plain Cake?Cream together two eggs, two heaping tablespoonfuls of butter and one and pne-half cupfuls of sugar, then add one cupful of cold water and two teaspoonfuls of baking powder, sifted in with three cupfuls of flour. Peanut Cake?Delicious peanut cakes may be made by rounding and rolling a cupful of peanuts and adding one cup of butter and one-half cup of sugar, three cups of flour and three eggs that have been well beaten. Make this into small cakes and bake till they take a light brown color. Cabbage Salad?Chop one head of cabbage fine. Put it in a dish and nv-kwinVl a ttti + Vi oolf an r? Wart at* Panf Dpj.iliA.iO nr XIU DUIU HUU i'v/ Wi one egg thoroughly and adu it to one cup of boiling vinegar. Rub two tablespoonfuls of mustard to a paste in a little cold vinegar and add to the boiling vinegar, together with a small piece of butter and one teaspoonful each of pepper and sugar. Poar it over the cabbage while hot. Piquant Salad?Wash and crisp a head of! lettuce, crisp and clean a bnnch of crcss, and have ready one or two bunches of green onions. (Place on individual plates a bed of t lettuce, some cress, carefully arranged; slice the onions in very thin slices and drop between the lettuce and cress. A few slices of radishes may be used if liked. Just before serving place a spoonful of rice salad dressing in the center of each dish. Pumpkin Pudding?Stewthe pumpkin until tender and rather dry; rubit perfectly smooth. To a pint of pumpkin add one-half pound of sugar, a saltspoon of salt, a tablespoonful of butter, one pint of milk, the beaten yolks of two eggs and a scant tea spooniui oi cmnamou. mix well, tnen add the stiffly beaten egg whites and beat thoroughly. Turn > into a pudding dish and bake in a moderately hot oven. It may be served either with or -without,honey-cream sauce or whipped cream. Pomme Rctia an Homage?Beat well sufficient hot, freshly cooked potatoes, add one (or two as needed) teaspoon of gOod butter, two beaten eggs and salt and pepper to season; shape them in a small bowl, tben transfer to a buttered dish, then with a knife-blade easily handled make small depressions regularly to imitate the sorosis of the pineapple; raise the form to be like this fruit; then grate cheese over it, drop melted butter from tho top and bake in a quick oven a delicate color. ... ? ~ ' - - . I^Spring ] ?M Nearly every one needs a goi gjji that will remove impurities fr< BB| digestion, and bring back the iff nerves. A perfect Sarsaparil ? Safsaparilla that contains the i m| gredients: a Sarsaparilla accui fga one that experience has shown I'T'Um^V i | 111(113 J |H f4The only Sarsaparilla made ut Ha three graduates: a graduate SB chemistry, and a jr W $100 a bottle. i- . ( pHI "I am perfectly confident that Ayer'i SOB by taking them every fall and spring. Snnalilne aud Iuflaeuza. In view -of the known bactericidal inflnenm nf snnlicrht it wonld nofc be surprising to learn that an inverse relation exists between tbe amount of sunshine and tbe prevalence of infectious diseases,providing, however, tbe temperature is not excessive. Some observations recorded by Rubeman appear to indicate tbat influenza, is more prevalent Jwhen. tbe amount of sunshine is less, and it is not impcs-.j sible tbat a similar rule would, he found to apply to other infectious /diseases also. In the eight years from 1893 to J900 the. number of'hours of sunshine during the month of January, when influenza was exceedingly prevalent, was "between 9.8 in 1900, and 62.3 /in 1899?tbe mean being 36.4. A similar state of affairs was observed in Madgeburg, where from 1882 to 1900 the number of bours of sunshine varied during tbe same month between 19 in 1900 and 86.3 in I 1883. Similar figures were obtained j in observations made in otber cities | of Germany.'?Philadelphia Medical Journal. ' Deducting dubious vessels, the completed battleships of England now number thirty-six and those of France and Bnssia thirty-eight. Jell-O, the New Dessert Pleases all the family. Four flavors:? Lemon, Orange, Raspberry and Strawberry. At your grocers. 10 cts. It's only natural for ft felJow to feel cheap when bis salary has been reduced. The Bept Prescription for Chills *nd Fever la * bottle of gnovb's TabtiL868 Chill toxic. It 1b aimply iron and quinine In a tasteless form. No cure?no pay. Price 60c. Hungary's annual cool production has loubled in ten years. , l Carter's Ink la the Beat Ink made, but no dearer than tbe poorest. H&a tbe largest sale of anr luk In the world. Only one perBonin 1000 reaches 100 years if age. _ J. O. 8impson, Marquess, W. Va.. says: 'Hall's Catarrh Core cured me of a very bad >ase of catarrh." Druggists sell it 75c. The man who beefs ia liable to get roasted. I do not believe PisO's Cure for Consumption aas an eoual for coughs and colds.?Johx F. Boyeb, Trinity Springs, lnd? Feb. 15,1900. Every square mile of sea is estimated to jontain some 120,000,000 fish. Mrs. WlnsJow'sSoothing Syrup rorobildren ieething, softens tbe gums, reduces inflammation, allays pain, cures wind colic. 25c.a bottle. London manufactures $10,000,000 worth of umbrellas annually. fT s j 1900 I 1 | There is every good v' I | reason why j J |i St. Jacobs Oil II 1, should cure J1 ][ RHEUMATISM <; II NEURALGIA y I; LUMBAGO I ;i SCIATICA | j [ for the rest of the ctjkry. One par- < ' j 1 amount reason is? itjps cure, ^' I SURELY AND PROMPTLY j ccctiCLt&jP' % B g\ It you have got the PILES, Dll l v you have not used Daniels r II r _% Sure File Cure, or you i | hi would not have them no*. The only Guarapteed Cure. No detention from business, no operation, no opium or morphine. 12 Suppositories 50c. or 84 and box of ointment $1.00, postpaid bymaU. Send for book of valuable information on Piles, FREE,whether you use our remedy or not. THE dan'ELS SURE PILE CURE CO., an Asylum St.. Hartford. Conn F^ENSiON?K^K.'ft rSuccessfully Prosecutes Claims. Late Prlnijoal Examiner O S. Petition Bureau, Syrsiu 15 ailjudicutiic < Uioji?,ut( y .-iuca n D NEW DISCO VEEY; fc.Tei \J and cures wuntt casus 10 days' treatment ?, iUuu. vV' .i %>., - V?Jf : V' V. ' .' ' ' r . ) i tbe children this spring? H [lining a good deal of head- Mffl , can't study as well as usual, ?? asily fall asleep, and are tired rM| all the time? And how is it gM with yourself? Is your IgS tcnethsliooineawaY? Do you id V 1 JL W /, J ble easily, are your nerves all n g, do you feel dull and sleepy, pjj oq lost all ambition ? lat's I Poisoning I ad spring medicine:a medicine sm the system, strengthen the BH old force aod vigor to the gjj tla is just such a medicine; a ?R choicest and most valuable in- 3BB rately and carefully made, and . is perfect in every way. m ^xCK^I idcr the personal' supervision o! g$| in pharmacy, a graduate in |? cdvate in medicine." Ira * w$W All Druggists. ?j? i Sanaparilla and Pilli have saved my lifu jU9 I have kept them in the hotite for the iuffalo, N. Y., March 29, 1900. 9gm lALABASTINEr^S | baso wall coating in 5 lb. paper packages, made ready for use is white and fourteen beautiful tints by mbrintf with cold water. It is a cement that gat* through a process of setting, hardens with ago* and can be coated and recoated without waahiaf off ite old coats before renewing. Al ADAQTINC different HLftunu i mi. from all tin rariouskalnomineB on the market, being durahje | and not stack on the wall with glue. AlabastiM | enaiomers should insist oa having the gooda la package* properly labeled. They should reject all Imitations. There is nothing "just as good.* IALABASTINE Prevents much sickness, particularly throat and lung difficulties, attributable to unsanitary coating* on walls. It has been recommended in ft paper published by the Michigan State Board of Health on account of its sanitary feature*; which paper strongly condensed kaleominps. Alabastine can be used on either plastered walls, wood ceilings, brick or canraiv and any one can brush it on. It admits of zsdi- , cal changes from wall paper decorations, thus rannnnahla exriense the latest and best effects! Alabastine is manufactured by iHa iMBKiipiyoflM Rapids, Ittja Instructive and interesting booklet ma&d fir) to nil applicants. * IM? For headache (whether *ick or nervous), toothache, neuralgia. rheuroatisai, lumbago, pains ant weakness In tne back, spine xtr kluneys, pain around the liver, pleurisy, swelling-oj the joint* and p?in? of all kinds, the application oTBaa?a;1a Beady Relief will afford immediate ease, and lt? continued use for a few days effects a pervanemi cure. CURPS AND PREVENTS ^ Cods, Coughd, Sore Throat, Hoarseness Stiff Neck Bronchitis. Catarrh, Headache Toothache rlheumatisnt Neuralgia Asthma Bruises Sprains, niiifflutr Than Anv Known Rcmedr. No nutter how violent or excruciating the pai* tlie Kheiunatic. Bedridden, lu'irm. Crippled, Nervous, Neuralgia or prostrated witli diseases m*? sufler, RADWAY'S READY RELIEF Will Afford Instant Eiuir. ntkbnallt?A half to a teaspoon ful In naif a tumbler of water will In a few minute* cure Crump*, Spasms, Sour Stomach, Nau**a, Vomiting, Heartburn, Nervousness, Sleeplessness, Sick Headache, Diarrhoea, Colic, Flatulency and nil internal pains. There Is not a remedial agent in the world that will euro fever and ague and all other malarious, bilious and other fevers, aided bv UADW4VN PI LI.8, so quickly as HAD WAY'S HEADY RELIEF. 50 I'eiiM per Bottle. Sold by Drutgiati. BE .SURE TO GET It A I) WAY'S. x-S FREY'S VERMIFUGE (/,. *1 cares children of W0RSI8. I I Removes tbern effectually 1 ^ I and without paiu or an* ^ Anoyance, CO years' inoa U broken record of success, vl <T\ J i't is (fl remedy for all V J ~ ' i worm troubles. Entirely vegetable.25c.at druntffeu. *"* *' ! country .'-tores or oj man. B. <fc fl. FREV? Baltimore, Hi. pa Oil FOR OLD (lAoH METALS Send your old metal. You will receive honest treat ment and check immediately. _ WIliLfAM KALUS, 863 Ten^fa Avenue, Xcmv Y ork City. W. L. DOUGLAS S3 & 3.80 SHOES )&<?? ^SWorth $4- to $6 compared Jw\ with other makes- / M >7*1 \lsdoned by over p ^ 3 AS5I/^ 1'000'000 rearers, fel & ? 1 Mf The genuine have W. L. f f** t J [?J Douglas' name and price r Pf T t\ (IB stamped on bottom. Take t* A VU*j no substitute claimed to be \ ij as good. Your dealer >4%^* /V. ft si should keep them ? if /ZSk \\ -Ja not, we will send a pair 'Wf^Tlon receipt of price and 25c Vextra lor carnage, ataie mno 01 UK ^OfcJsize. and width, plain or caD toe Cat tre? ?u*m5i * L Om\M SH0 CO, Broc?ton. Has? (m asm j% stopped free I H Permanently Cured (if | I % OR. KLINE'S GREAT 1 1 t> NERVE RESTORER Ko Flu ?fwr flr?t d?j'? uc. Ctntultttien, Mnooal or br mtll; trutiie lit S3 TRIAL BOTTLE FREE to ril pitlMt* who p?J utprtil*K< only od itUrtrj. Pennant*U Curt, not only umparirj relief, for?ll A'?rCOWJ DUordm. IplIeciT. Bpumi. St. Vine' Diaet, Debility, ExbkuttoD. DSL R. H.KLIKE. U. SI Aft* Street. PhUadelnbua. rauuiad uu. ADYffiTISINQ _ BL . ??