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Doakay-KkUag ta Knrpt. The English gtfrerness of the Khedive's daughter, in her book. "Five Tears in Egypt," tells her experience ot donkey-riding in that country. "My donkey was rather an unsociable animal, and was not satisfied with winning, but carrkd me on far beyond evr'u the hearing of my companions. Then at last be though: tit to slackeu lrf?-pace. As .he was thus walking laiunrKir atone 1 "lietsin 'o examine the contents of my pocket, aiid took ont my notebook to make some entries While i was thu* occupied, the donkeyboy. who bad run noiselessly after me on the sand, suddenly rushed up. and with blows urged niy donkey ou again at full speed. I bad only time to grasp the reins, and away 1 went, my treasures all scattered behind me and I shouting to the boy to desist. These boys ran us fast as the donkeys, and. In answer to all my scolding, he replied: 'Yes. missus, you very good donkey; he call "Flying Dutchman":' and then, to keep the honor of the name, another blow to urge him forward! Id a few minutes I was on the t ank of tbe river, ;oug Deror* my companion*. :ind tbcu the l?oy bad tbe effrontery to ask for Laksbieb for having got me bere first !** Pttrauif. Tbe impressionist bad finally sold one of bis creations. A brother artist who had arrived, or as we say "got there," not only persuaded one of bis own customers to l>uy a painting by the less successful man. at a good figure, but got him an invitation to visit the patron's house to see tbe picture as It hung on tbe wall. It was a painting of a sky. a bridge and a stream, and as they stood before it the purchaser fairly exhausted his vocabulary of art in expatiating on the naturalness of the water and the poetic beauty of the sky. Tbe man who bad done the painting smiled and smiled, but at tbe same time mopped beads of perspiration from his brow. Finally be got bis friend into the hallway and there exploded. "Good gracious!" be groaned. "They've hum: my picture upside down T'?New York Tribune. T ?>> Baikal'* Mighty Steamboat. Tbe trains of the Trans-Siberian rail" way are to be ferried across Lake Baikal on a steamboat, which, it iq aid. will possess the most powerful engines employed in an) vessel afloat. Tbey are of 40,000 horse-power, and a large share of their immense energy ? 111 v.- ? t.?Aotr - n.nr fn* \ win v*- irt|uucu iv uiru? a ? ?; tut the boat through the thick ice which covers the lake in the winter The engines of the great steamship Kaiser Wilbelm der Grosse are of only 28.000 horse-power. TW Uait For Diver*. Submarine divers have not yet sue? ceeded in reaching 200 feet below the aurface with all the advantage of armor. air supply and weights to sink them. The effort ha* been made to reach a wreck in 240 feet of water The accounts state that at 130 feet the diver began to experience serious trouble. At 200 feet, after suffering terribly, he lost consclousncss. Quarantine was first established against infectious diseases In the temh cemury. Ladle* Can W?ar Shoe* One size smaller after u?inp Allen's FootIn*, a powder for the feet. It makes tight or new .?noe* ea?y. Cares swollen. hot.?< went in*, aching feet. tngroiring nail*', corns and bunions. At all druggist* and shoe store.*, 25c. Trial i*ckage Fbee 1>t mail. Address Allen 9. Olmsted. Le Koy. N*. Y. Poacher* using small exj?'o?ive hombt have killed a great number of salmon in the River Dee, England. FITS permanently cured.No fitf ornervousaeas after first day's use o! I>r. Kline's Great NerveRestorer.t>2trial bottle and treatisefree ^ Dr. R.H. Kuxk, Ltd., i'31 Ar -h St.. I'hilu.. Pa. Kamskatka has many volcanoes, the only ones in Russian territory that arc still active 8. K. Coburn, Mgr. Clarle Heott, writes "I find Hall's Catarrh Cure a valuable remedy.'* Druggists sell it, 7V. Tigers killed 357 perrons and panthers 295 last year in the Indian Central Provinces. Mr.*. Wlaalcw''? 8c othinp Syrup for children teething. soften the gam*, reduces inflammation.allays pain,cure.* Hod colic. 25c. a bottle There's a difference between having something to say and having to My something. Fiao's Car* is the best medicine we ever used lor nil affection* of throat and lunjp.?W*. o. E?f?L?T. Vanburen, Ltd.. Feb. 10, 1900. The average duration of life in towns it calculated at thirty-eight years, in the country fifty-live years. Long Hair "About a year ago my hair vaa coming oat very fast, to 1 bought i bottle of Ayer'e Hair Vigor. It stopped the falling and made mr hair grow very rapidly, until nov ft * itdfiacheafa length."?Mra. A. Rflvdafnn Atchison. Kiel. There's another hunger than that of the stomach. Hair hunger, for instance. Hungry hair needs food, needs hair vigor?Aytru This is why we say that Ayer's Hair Vigor always restores color, and makes the hair grow long and heavy, slm m*. as If jroar dranist nanot enrol? 70a, tad as om doR&r and ? win axyrcas jroaatettl*. ? ?*iatadrireU?bum el Mt MKMt oprat oBtf. Add. cm, J.C.ATTatCO.tLwwH.Mm. Liver Pills That's what you need: something to cure your biliousness. You need Ayert Pills. Vast yocr BMftache or beard a beaatifil browa or rich black ? Use Buckingham's Dye SttZTX TSwum's Ert Witef .CTT-" f ' V> ?i"? --7T- - I SCENES IN T OF ST. PIER] BY wn Tf T-&EN We laiidcil at Fort | A / Franc*-just two weeks l/l/ ter the ftW^iU..cataRtrui If M which in one blow laid 1 the most prosperous city, not only Martinique, but iu all the Lesser J tllles. it was difficult to realize tl only sixteen miles away lay the worl greatest picture of ruin and death. Between Fort de France and 1 pot where once was St. Pierre 1 JjflREp 83 THE DIS.MAXTM ! land comes down to tbe sen ! nlt? I Eating scallops and licy valleys. H I lus from tbo people of Fort de Frau i tbe monster bead of Mt. I'elee. t | two-beaded Carbet rears Us giant foi : over ;iwu reel auove me levet 01 i ocean. In some ages of the past t mud flowing down " Carbet's pea formed the scallops which now ei abruptly with the ocean. I>otted he and there oetween these mud ban covered with delightful verdure a red-tiled houses surrounded by wavli fields of sugar cane. On the topmc point of each ridge there now ?tan a huge cross as a guard from i fury of Mt. Pelee. But even so. no; but a few of the mp?t hardy have i malned In 'their homes outside of Fc de France since the day of the d structive eruption of Pelee?that mou tain which was once the pride of tl citizens of Martinique. Two little towns are situated on tl shore between Fort de France and tl line of death which marks th?* termin tioo southward of the zone of influen nf \ft PkIcp Kimt Is Cnso Navii and then, a little further up, is Ca Pilot*. Only a little further along the coa and St. Pierre Is before us. Now tl mountain in all its terrifying glory clearly visible, only a short distan ahead. For over 4000 feet It ris + ' ?' ' \1 A SHATTERED TOMB AT ST. PIERRE, from the sea and throws forth f< niauy thousand feet higher niassSi clouds of now white and now blai smoke nud vapor. It seems as if son giant hand, controlled by a su|>erna ural power, has, with one scoop, di out near the mountain's base an h mense hole with an owning only t ward the sea aud Mt. Pelee. In tli hole there once thrived one of the tuo prosperous citirs in all the West I dies?it was the site of St. Pit-ir Now it is hard, from the distance of mile, for one to discern that there r mains anything which bears r semblance to the works of man. A li if " &L . :! ' ' ' A ST P1EKRE STltEET. LOO tie nearer in the laud seemed Fitup] rougbeued. aud It was not uutll v had couie very near to the shore tl? It Trao Dose1Lit to distlDgrish betwec HE DEAD CITY RE. * * * LIAM MASON. do the place where the city had onct af- Wen and the works of nature In th< he rear toward tho ruouutain. ow Hu: let us euter the town. It hardlj ^of"s(ieeui8 possible to tell in which direc in- tiofrTT!i4-H^t?ri* the streets had former lat ly run. IIouse&">Jvere toppled in anil d's scattered themselves to sU4'h an extern that it appeared as if the sffttt?~gianj the hand which had once formed the site the for St. Pierre had now swept ItseV -4 "xji? ;d cathedral bell. ft- over the entire city, knocking down id- buildingii with the ease that ten pins ce fall when struck by the rolling ball. ue inert' must nave oecn n winu wiin me m fury of a terrible cyclone, for Iron l?e bars as large as a tnau's wrist were he bent and twisted and huge trees have ks licCn literally torn from the earth nnd cast in every direction. Where there re were no nlns to be seen it was due ks to the fact that they bad been buried re far below the rivers of mud. which ?S had flowed down Pclce's side through 181 this natural gateway iuto the city. But ds most surprising of all. there was no be ir.va. De Looking to the north, to the east ert ?????? len be be -j? ? REAR OF THE CATHEDRAL * and to the south there was one continued stretch of desolate ruin. At no place in the city was there to be seen a house with a roof, and. indeed, there was not one house with Malls higher than what had been its tlrst story. Dust and ushes were piled high acninsr the sides of these flattened walls, and huge rocks?some from the volcauo and sumo which Lad fonne<i pcrts of building#? liad been thrown here, there and everywhere. And In and ainoug this monotony of wreck | and ruin were the decomjioslng bodies of the former people of St. Pierre. IIow did this city meet Its doom? How was it |K>ssible that in less than five minutes St. Pierre was changtd - from a place of life, joy and happiness ^r to this desolation? From an eye-wit"e ncss?a priest?who lived about five k kilometers inland from St. Pierre and ie partly around the mouutain just outt side of the blast of Pelee's breath, we ig obtained what is probably the best u- description of the destruction of the o- city that has yet beeu given. is At about half past T in the morning st of May 8th a dense black mass of a- smoke rising rapidly, rolling, twirling e. and twisting upward to a prodigious a height, was seen coming from Pelee's e- crater. Suddenly the upper portion dle lated like a huge- sunflower ou its stalk, i it- and the lower part became wrapped ' >?. v tv f '<= . I . . > . ?" I - I KI NG TOWARD THE CATHEDRAL. ly I in a snow-white wreath of vapor, re I which encircled the column and then it j intermingled with it and appeared aa n I bl::ck cloud and silvery mat-see. / i-r.. &w'' - I Tbroogh the pitchy awning above lightning played incessantly and below . on the side of the moantain monster Jets started upward until the whole ' _ IBS?i V&Sfefik 4aE$ffl 1 RUINED MANSION OF A WEALTHT RESIDENT OP ST. PIERRE. mountain appeared to be a submerged, smoking, burning mass. There was a blinding flush. and it appeared as if some keen-edged knife had cut the stalk of the flower, and with a loud report, like the guns of the navies of the world simultaneously exploding, the black cloud swept down the mountain upon the little city. Lightning flashed and crackled, and the surrouudIng world became as dark as the darkest night. As the cloud reached the city there was another blinding flash and a loud report, and from north to south St. Pierre burst into flumes. The only flre from the volcano was that of lightning. Flames do not come from the crater. Only a short distance from whore the quays of St. Pierre were formerly situated stands the ruins of the beautiful cathedral. U*?!y a small section of the front ana rear walls are now standing, and between them are huge stones?the wreckage of the towers, the immense bell aud the broken and desolated altar. The flow of mud has buried nearly everything. Here. In this wreckage, were found many bodies, and it is very probable tbat at the time of the eruption the church was tilled with people praying to the Almighty for deliverance from the volcano. These people, be it known, had been given dot less than twelve days' warning of the subsequent catastrophe. The first eruption, on May 8th, left standing a large part of the cathedral, but the second eruption, on May 20th, IN WHICH WAS THE ALTAR. left it in the condition shown by the photograph. Formerly, standing upon the apex of the roof between the towers of the cathedral, there was a larg* metal figure of the Christ. When the hot blast burned itself across the city the Christ fell, und Is now burled many feet below the debris. The principal street ef St. Pierre was JIik. Vlntnr llnvn If la V.UIIVU l?ut ? ?V%Vi *? u>ry difficult to determine Just where this street ran. What had once l?een shop*, hanks und opera house and a city hall was now hut a pray waste, on which dust and ashes had drifted in large piles covering heaps of stones that had formerly t**en reared in magnificent edifices. The ruins of the Hotel de Ville. the City Hall of St. l'ierrc. are shown in the photograph. This building stood in a great square. *01/4* OP Trte ^OTEt PC V1ULC. THt CfTY ^,U. or il r-C^.S where once had also been fountains, . gardens and statues. , In what was known as the central , section of the city there is perhaps slightly less devastation than anywhere else. But even there it is nrxt , to impossible to distinguish one house . from another. In one of the ruius. however. I found a little crevice tilled with clay pipes, not one of which bad been broken in all of this rqiu. Walls had tumbled ami toppled around them, and the blast* of superheated gases had killed and destroyed all life for miles around, and yet these little fragile pij?es bad remained intact. In another place we fouud a nest of chinaware. with only a few pieces trarkt'd by tlic intense heat. Here. also, immense rocks had fallen. but in such a way as to protect the ware. Walking over aud along where once was the Hue Victor Hugo down into Anse one i* most forcibly reminded of I I,ord Lytton's last days of Pompeii. \ There, where those smoldering ruins s are now seen once stood the palatial residence of Iriouied. A little beyond had lived Clodius aud down this street had tied (ilaucus, bearing in his anus t the beautiful form of his beloved lone, f But from St. Pierre no human soul en- t Iff liSlftl rtl'ii i 'I f I iTilii";' * > 1 PELVIC C CAUS palpitation of the Heart, Coli Feelings?Pe-ru-na Cures Ca caped, and the novelist of tbe future, who attempts to narrate and describe the horror? which befell St. Pierre on that fateful morning of May 8th. roust, if he lx> truthful. I?ring a ?cr different ending to his hook than Lord I.ytton gives to his famous work. The silent evidences given hy the dead bodies scattered throughout the ruined city show conclusively that some of tbe people, at least, saw the whirlwind of Mack cloud. Hashing lightning, burning gases and boiling mud coming toward St.Pierrefrom the burniug hole on the summit of Pelee, but not ouc ' escaped.?New York Independent. I BOSTON'S AERIAL CAMP j A Unique Hospital For Sufferers by Heat Prostration. A "roof garden" for the treatment of heat prostration cases is the latest addition to the equipment of tbe Boston i City Hospital Relief Station, says the j Boston Herald. The flat top of the j building has been closed hy a raised I platform, inclosed by a wovenwlre Iron pi[ence. and from iron stanchions erectedvfll convenient ]>oints awnings have beensTNtfched. When the work is completed th\roof will have the appearance of a crffnp of four or live tents. Each tent ftMMjuipped with two cots, and supplied wH& tables, chairs, etc., as wen as adorne<N{y plants and ferns. The sides of the tenttTNlfi' uot placed in position in fair wentWT. ln order that the patient may receivfc^he full Itenelit of tbe circulation of when this circulation 18 noi naiunnv induced electric fans will be opera teo\ as auxiliaries. Iu addition to the nutnBOSTOS AERIAL HOSPITAL. her o< hatli rooms especially provided in the body of the building for the treatment of heat cases, a portable bath tub will be installed on the roof. A Jtpantw Hoaactuald. Japanese women servants have the reputation of being the must aristocratic looking and haughty menials In existence. Some idea of the prettlness and daintiness of their dress may be obtained from the accompanying picture. which shows a typical "servant girl" of the laud of the chrysanthemum about to set off for her morning's marketing. These dainty little creatures | are the most thrifty of workers, and ! the best of housekeepers and cooks, and if Jt were possible to induce a few thousand of them to immigrate to America a solution of the ever existing "servant girl problem" might speedily 1 be found. A New Field For Yonng Mnn. There ap|>ears to lie a new Held open, iug up for ambitious young men. It is l lie field of scientific forestry?one of the most important matters of the day. The younp forester lias prospects of a salary that equals that ??f the average college professor. To men of mental ;ind physical vigor who delight iu nature and outdoor life, this would seem j to be a congenial and lucrative occupation. In forested States the ahauiloued stum lands need scientific a:- j tcntiou.?Success. Grinding Grain la Japan. Japan and the Japanese are progrr*? five, but hand labor is so cheap that l?ro>rr**iiK in souie directions win i?e uecresarlly slow There art* now hundreds i>f water, steam aud electric ]>ower establishments iu Japan, but the hand mill in Mill exclusively used all over [be agricultural districts of tbe .Mi- ! ivTrrp.'. JAPANESE GRAIN GRINDER. iado's Empire. The cut shown here- ! villi, executed in Japanese style, j ibows tbe process. ^ i Like American f?boci. TLc sale of tine shoes of Ainericab iiauufacture lu Canada has trebled !u He year#. It is estimated that it will ' hi* year amount to fUOO.OOU. 1 .A.w,\Acjfria'ii?-. Cii ... ififcxjS . ? V J 11 < ? Mr*. X. Schneider, 2409 Tbirtj-aerenth cj Place, Chicago, UK, writes: ? "After taking several remediea J| without result, I began in January, p 1901, to take your valuable remedy, c Peruna. J teas a complete wreck. ? ffad palpitation of the heart, cold r hande and feet, female weakness, mo f, .appetite, trembling, sinking feeling ti iMfty all the time, Tou said I was t ?ujfrrino with systemic catarrh, and 1 belteCC4h+* I received your help in o the nick of time, I followed your ? directions cay^/ullyand can say to- a day that I am wBU again. 1 cannot c thank uou enoua&JLor mV cure. 1 C wUt alwaya be your (tgbtor. I have already recomwisndedS^Ptruna to 1 my friend* and neighbor*** they mil praise it. I with that all Buffer- v ing women would try IL r/?"/V f this according to the truth. "V-tfra. P X Schneider. \ g Orer half the women bare catarrh iPl Sleep-Walking"Ten per cent, of the world's population Is more or less somnambulistic," said a physician, "and every one. at one time or another, has done a little sleep-walking. I myself, when a lad. got up, dressed, took my books and went to school on a summer night, my father following close behind to see that I should come to no harm. Blond persons are more apt to be somnambulists than dark folk, and in cold cli mates mere 11 more ivwuiiuiuunBiu than Id warm ones. In certain Greenland villages, I have been told, tbe but doors are locked from without by a watchman In order that those witbiu may not come forth in their sleep, and maybe freeze to deatb. But in Egypt and such like hot lands such precaution is unnecessary."?PLiladel- ( pbia Record. Gtanioe stunped C C C. Never add la balk. I ? Beware ?the dealer who tries to sell j ? "something just as good." ' 11 ~ d( ^PSA3l*rini|inHnnsj|Kin ? ji ODADQYrawdiicotsxt;?** p UBick r*Urf m4 curat ?ora( mw 1M tt UtutiMJtit ind lO^ayi1 umuiiu m Vrtt. Sr. 1. 1 MIU UCII Im l. liluit.M. Q' ADVERTISING K "" SV" f Lp. In tUnn. >o<d by drufyutt. N*! yffffifH'<HiiiBiaLM||l d ? 3k k id ? | THE > HOUSEHO ONLY 25 ?M 200-PAGE ILLUSTRATED BOOK 0/ FOR THE FARMER AHO Ti And firry other man and ?reman trho ts @, perxence of those brainy and patient soul ! practicing the result* of those experin.ent i obtain the bes' knowledge as to how certai ?all that valuable information is gathered |j broadcast for the benefit of mankind at tK !| It treatsof almostevery. . C?? thing in the tcay of IJoutt- */ f\ IK MS, _ f; hold Matters, including ' Z xj ST AMI I i?)'! RECIPES FUR FAMILY USE. antrum iw 11 the SimpUnt ami m<at Approved Met'imlt I COOKISG RECEIPTS, inrludum aU khule ftitl. Dinner ami Supper. j/f5S . CAKE OF CHILDREN. in the mr*t ratUna N&'il Old ennwjh tn TaKe Car* of Tliemtelrrr. DISK ASKS OF HOUSE. COM", SHE EH. H i E*leacuius Treatment. ? , MISCELLANEOUS HECE1PTS. mmprun iif./rnin cleaning White Pant Ui Ktepin HOME IRE ATM EXT OF DISEASES. SytnpUnnt of each Ditea*e uril't the Ea -m.' Method of Curing. (Q) rpoo NUMEROUS to mention-* vrr 1 tmergfiicy ruch at comet to every fa : book it icortkuiany timet itt tout pricr. ? j SENT POSTPAID FOR 25 C I BOOK PUBLISHING HO f Southern Fomnoat In ? lu kirfc-dw; m tba coouMrcial caatraa and Winter rmor\?ot th? boa work of boM all aod#rn laipro??ta?nu ara aao?>ta<l. 1 mart tamrioa' arrrtc*ocwrati:ir ita train* (rota ?ia? Baflroatl aad ihrara via aoutham liUvifi tic. Ailanta. Challnnomm. Birmil New Orleans. Texas, Mexico and California. uJSJl' tar lb* lonrltt mtoo. Ob^rrjty.u Car Si? York Wiabiarton !o Sxa Frauds u without cHaun. Iloui Savannah. Charleston, Angus Jekyll Island, Thomasville, Florida. Nassau and Cuba. Ocd<l*alaJ Steamship Liar for K*y W#?t, Havac* a*. Uall?i oi?rmt*i Uurtajr tb* uiarut w?ioa. Pinehurst, Asheville, Hot Spri Memphis, Nashville, Tenn., am BiiM of nodm ?mL LmtIbit H*w York (Ufif for I ITIm xiiln of lb* ttoutbtro lUthray, i*rrfi-akar ERS'M PAXJC L1M1TKO- ?t?l "WAHfllSOToK ar Lbltm ilWbMMM of loturtook nlhnjr nrml. T1 (tJmOuU to Lb* faatMt In tb* ?nOr? S-ju'li, wblla It Its kuIc attraction* ar? nnnilxrto? and Mtlrojld. New York Offices: 271 a LEX. S. THWEATT, El 11M CtrMr tl W. A, TUXZt Pw tm? XfT., Wuhiaftoa, I. H. HAlDWICt :atarrh E S 1 Hands and Feet, Sinking itarrh Wherever Located. ? ? )2>e form or another. And yet, probably, ot a tenth of the women know that their isease is catarrh. To distinguish catarrh f various organs it has been named very ifferently. One woman has dyspepsia, another broohitis, another Bright'* disease, another rer complaint, another consumption, anther female complaint. These women ould be very much surprised to hear that bey are all suffering with chronic catarrh. lot it is so, nevertheless. Each one of these trouble* and a great lany more are simply catarrh?that is, bronie inflammation of the mucous lining of rhich ever organ is affected. Any internal emedv that will cure catarrh in one locaion will cure it in any other. This is why 'eruna has become so justly famous in the ure of female diseases. It cures catarrh rherever located. Its cures remain. Peana does not palliate?it cures. Hon. Joseph B. Crowley, Congressman rom Illinois, writes from Robinson, 111., be following praise for the great catarrhal anic Peruna. Congressman Crowley says: "Mr*. Crowley ha* taken a number f bottle* of Peruna on account of ervou* troubles. It ha* proven trong tonic and touting cure. lean -* ? i* m r a neer/uuy recvmmeim* ?. ?. ?. Irowlcy. A catarrh book sent free by The Peruna ledicine Co., Columbus, Ohio. If you do not derive prompt and seti*?ctory result* from the uae of Peruna, rrite at once to Dr. Hartman, giving a ull statement of your case and be will be ijeased to fi'.e you his valuable advice ratis. Address Dr. Hartman, President of The iartman Sanitarium, Columbus, 0. RHttNS I did Wknow what it wu to eat a good bre^fost in the moraiDg. By noon I become to sick and have treatVi? and discomfort. I got so that I \jouM do without eating as long as fclould, so as to avoid the misery. AtSP'ght I could not sleep. The doctorK^'d I had nervous indigestion. I hefc^d much about Ripans Tabules and aJSjM 1 1 thought 1 would try them. only taken one box when I obtain^ relief. ^ At dnifgftata. \ Tk? Fl7?-Cmt pack* it noacta for u ordinary oocmIob. Th# family bottla, tO Mat*, contains a supply for a ymr. (10)000 YEAR. Anot* Want'd?T-arwaat ml ftrm In tba < rl'i i? MttblKliiQ^ amuci?a tiirr/4<fa <ut tba nltf-J sutaa f ir tha aa'a of it* N?w i ark i4tr l>r >prtlaaon .nataknaataof |S tiliopar Month. cxrrritfa UfalnsurancaUr.ldas an i?u>>ru>ou* local buainaa? tha outaUa inaml for an opportunity to abar* lu tba rruwtb : tba Itniwrfal City of tba World ba? bean ao araat la paat jraar and a haif tbat are un aold naarlr ,muu.?uu worth of property frotn Alaaka to ttoutb rrw-a. Our ajrauta ara tnakiiuc from 11, OM to MkiMl Vfif, A bu<in<?a? conducta-1 aa boDMtly and otuarrar rrly a> od-a > rapab!a of aa rraat d?v?lopinant ta ie Satloual U!r Insurant* Couj[>any vltb luAnita rrvstrr iaw, vltb a comp?n<?ttoa Bra iIidmu Mt an<l tbauppurtaulty for an nr?tU\ booaat. id'Utjrent an-1 r?-?; >n?fbl-? loan to build up a parinvput buslnaaa for tbatna<]v?a aud abara in tba auhaa> oaut trruwtb whi' b la aura to com* to oa. Wawaot a r?priH*utatiri> who la not wIlllM to work raaror who haa not sittrteat capital to visit aw York to w our :-roi*rty and ba taiuht tba loat ffwtlvp uk'! bod of dotnr bmtnoaa; to all w to aa: thaaa r*nuHnn<*ma and can irlva ratwam aa > probity wr will maka taoat liberal tanas. ?paitl> izutora ntonvjrin jtntrnc Ion and qutpaaautfor ta work tban tbalr New York trip baa cv?t. AJ WOOD, HARMON & CO., ept. Y-i, 256 Broadway, New York City. i i i & LD ADVISER J? CENTS. r INFORM A TIOH AMD RECIPES ^ IE FARMER S WIFE, " urttmut of brnetitina from the ?r- : * ieho hate been experimenting and j jm*. | $, feneration after generation, to j (jOj n thing* can be accomplitlied, unt.i [ together in this volume, to bt spread j ,e popular price of I'rffe I rS i *':e iMimlu madt prw- \sJ k TAK ^ by ii'trmnv* uumlterof 11 | V. * the Umksbtin'j printed and sold all the Common Complaint* and i/tvin? I? | i of 'treatment. t| ^^11 i>/ I'Ui'ti and Fancy Dishet for Breaki %ntu from birth v> Uie time llui are IOC. DOG and POL'LTJtV, ncith met I nff almost Frervthirm y>u can >j liutter Sweet. ii^S' 1 Arranged Atfhaheticalli/. yicuitf the j rust, (jutchert and M-*t Satirfijintf , i liable JJourehold Adciser. In an ?n mily not containing a doctor, thir 1 I, EMTS ID STAMPS (S) I WSE. '"CTg"ri /IV I ? Railway] ink* ith. In tba territory eorerad by Ita rut natiod oa do railroad is AnMrlra will be toutd r York to Washington or* lb* Paana> Ivaaia - Tbra* faat trains daUr from Ignain. 5?? lork with tu|*rb 1'allman > t&iDjr Car Sarrloa. Tka Bouta of itva Vuti othwe?'.?ro Ll oil tod Connactions at Jfaw b Suuthc.Ti Pa**lfie Spartal Soawt litnttari York Ttt^eday, Thursday and Hatardar dorto Atlanta Pullman tourist Slasjlaj Oar Uja, Wadnaadays ?nJ Krid%jrs. , _ Tbrsa sap rt>!y ?iuli>t+d tua trams 'io< dan:.v rbr tourut t*uon. rlria* tba >et satisfactory vJuHiala oWi injr aud l>i#? Car S?r*ii-? to i ho Wintnrna>r:an( Gfuni^ Carotluia and >*l?nda. CvntA-tlooi both 1 Miami ?aJ Tatnp* with th?- PrumiuUr aud 1 Sltaaai The runt* of tba toa'.liani'a Palm _ __ "Tk? I-and Thraa fact ax crass n?S, aftkc Hky" trains rlrln* aQ tba d Hot Springs. Ark. bs irraatMt health raaorta of ia-rtcv lyTtha^MtTj^vtaHralti^lM^^OCTClMj id aol THVOjTKUN' UMITKD," la thr I M Wouthun's road-bad la th? brat and Ita I PnHm?n? we Uw WnI Mtd flBMt. tad | Hjj Jid 1185 Broadway. | stern Passenger Ajent, g M m R?W Tift. K D.& 1 , tnl ha. Aft, WatfciafCM, > 0. 1