Newspaper Page Text
Chinese float Dwellers.
•zsrzssjrsns.is
CK.W.M b„.to m«Tin K r.rtl«.ly np
«MlT«b«“'Jh*7™2 Suf/hM?
•cted by the thousands who glean but
ft ^h' !' hV( l!h ° J 1 '
dl-ilv.-LR pan^tnnd^u’jon l
t)i<f 0 riv.r * oLYmU
h»» liftb. f/kd J ' t},*<
or motion's o»r and propelling bc'iiiM t< ‘] r tuG
of hist theboat,earning
hi* living at in Iheorv, ; from the
earliest nge
Wbeltetcr lii. hair i» ...mcfently
long to pi,lit into a respectable tail, bo
l«gin. I» manipulate nmleUmJ chop Micks, to
ne'e f, rciKucra, to tbc
ring of money and in time to paddle
his own small wherry and carry a for¬
eign devil up and down the river. If
he wishes to see a little of the world he
may ship upon a traveling junk, not
to venture,how* ver,outside of Chinese
waters, and nftir accumulating a few
dollars he tak os to himself a wife and
establishes his homo umoug the river
’pnlation. — Ouf.iti ij.
Nothing Nurrrnl. I.ikr Snrrm.
Th • «itif*t »**v h a>'li!(*vctl by nirn and tilings
a ■ hut ahvayn !>a <• 1 upon merit. Iiut ft fiuc
' '■** « c 11 iii< i'eil mill a "Pi recedente<l in tbe
ftnriftln of prop! b*ln v m me. liould these
ev*-r i om»- to lie written, 1 Hast tt« t's .* t< in
ftf'J) Hjf.f r , „ ft bo I ft It c inrtliri I III <1 «co ve red
neatly ball n <■> ritnry mo, a tb<' lending
rein lr dy for nod preventive of inalm ial. rlieu
rna and ki m. y • oniplui tit", (lyxpep.iln, eou
rUp"tion and ii i otlhll H-.
Hcvcrnl knlvc- far mbit-a r> have been found
In tin* catacombs near Athena.
To < l< it n«vr i In* N •, hi ein
effectually yet gently, alien costive or bfilotlft,
Of w bea l be blood Is i in Jilin* or Bbi^gi.sh, to pt*r
marieiitly euro habitual cn tipnl ion, to awak¬
en Hie khlio* i ft ml Tver lo ft h'*ftl thy activity,
_
« 11 limit irrltftllntf or wen ken late the in, to di s
I" 1 b»*a Ifttihcs, raids or fevers, use Syruj) of
Fl«t«.
Tim r; <* k s hnd oafs IJ. (’. 200, but used them
oal) as ((Hid (or tboii bar es.
Hr. KlIniHr’H Sw mi', ftoo r rnra* 1
nil Kblimy and Hlftddrr troubles.
I'ft in jib lot. and ('onsiiltatlon fn*e.
Laboratory Hla rbninton. N. f
An onyx m>h 1 r'n hr-loan n t to nn ancient
Athenian, vva Ini *tj <Iui4 up near Athens.
Alivin 1 f nr i'h
Iml ire lion, Uy-ui.ijHia, Bad Breath, I bllity,
H mr Sionim-li, Want of Appetite, istr .-■i
Alior Kail ij 4 , and all evils arising train a
wcilt or disordered stomach. It, builds up
from the 111 * I dose, and n bottle or t wo will
cure I lie worsl r uses, itiiiI insure a good ftp! 6
tile, exee lent dii 4 < union and result In 'Igor*
oos bea i h h ml bn oviincy of spin (s. There <s
no b. iter way lo in-ur.* uoob b allb and a
if'' Hum lo keep the stoniiieli ii lit.
I vner's Ity-prp in Iteni dy is guaranteed to
y” '"Is. '1 ne TiaiHiniliziag Alter Dinner
by Drink. For _ sale bv I u nm; s s. Manufactured
<;. O. Tyin r, Atlanta.
I’on’t Tobftcro Spit or f im.be Your I.if*
Away
Jh the truthful, staitling title of a book
about No-To-line, the ltniinli >*s, guai It DIG
tobacco lier\ elitniinites hiibit eut< • bat *Tfrffi aniiAtu
es, I In nleot ine j oisen
weak men gain sdengtb, vigor ami immliS
0, rmi 1,0 pb.vsb’.il or financial risk, ns
n* J o-iine | Is sold by Druggists
bmier a guarantee to every where,
s’" i v,ok rr euro Sterling or money refund¬
»'“- Ad. Itomedy (Jo., 1
York ot Chicago.
Mrs Window sHoothin-4 Syrup for child r«a
'.I tion, I allays .H* pain, the gums, wind rein colic, esiallam na¬
cures ‘ib. ft iKitf.l y
It 1* Merely <• oil 11 ('III 111.
That, beautiful complexion D iikm.tii, pro
rve<| l»y Ulinms Tubulis.
akin Hlpnns Tabules purl (y Hie til ol, clear tbe
tn l lt-iuisbes and make life more worth
living.
W<> w 111 (fiv e $ 100 rewnr I for any rasp of ca¬
tarrh dial cannot be cured with lliili’s Catarrh
Cure, Taken interna ly.
F. J. Chunky A CO., Drops., Toledo, O.
We think I’iso's (’are for Consumption Is tho
only medicine for Cou.lis. JtNsin ITnck
aiu>, Hprinntlo'd, 11 'h,, Oct. 1, 1804,
ll Im ill or i* Tlmu \V ondei Hit
how pat ii ni removing: ly people tilTcr with corns. Hot
comfort by them with Himhrcorns,
Is Your
Blood Pure
It it Is. you will bo strong, vigorous, full
of life and ambition; you will liavo a good
appotlto and good digestion; strong nerves,
sweet sleep.
But how few can env tlmt their blood is
pure! How many people are suffering blood, daily
from ula, the consequences rheumatism, of Impure scrof¬
salt rheum, catarrh, nerv¬
ousness, sleeplessness aud
That Tired Feeling.
nood’a Sarsaparilla purifies, vitalizes an 1
enriches the blood. Therefore, it is the med¬
icine for you.
It will give you pure, rich, rod blood and
strong nerves.
It will overcome That Tired Feeling, create
an appetite, give refroshlug sleep anu make
you strong.
Hood’s Sarsaparilla
Is the Only
True Blood Purifier
Prominently In the public eye today.
M n AArl UUU V D pi III | I £> family tho after-dinner cathartic. pill SScts. and
«
WALTER BAKER & GO.
The Largest Manufacturers of
PURE, HIGH CRADE
COCOAS AND CHOCOLATES
On thi» Continent, h.vo recelred
HIGHEST AWARDS
from th. frreat
Industrial and Food
EXPOSITIONS
! ln Europe and America.
n
t nl*.k<* th. Dutch Alks
lift or other t'hcmic*Uor Djrt »r«
Thrlr 1 _ d.Helout NX BREAKFAST *C'i in irv ot COCOA their rrcpsfalior.^ •b.olut.iy
d U
pur. nn »olublo, and com* leu than one cent a cup.
BOLD BY GROCERS EVERYWHERE.
WALTER BAKER & CO. DORCHESTER, MASS.
Notice to Mill Men
A" 1 ’ tumors owning srai .II power The finest soft
mo *.in l. ie >»<* Mi l in ex stone* to-duv, is m.snn
fjrlur. ,L>0 111 (I !>v til;i 1 *1>< Vu*„ M>\< \ilntiiii. It >1(1.1. IL*. t| Fli.CI., To k first
u
pnir at Wor if' Fiur at Chicago. .Ml mxos. from 4 .1
P. up t<> till? )«rjp*st Fr ee- ro tuco 1. Nwmt for cnl t
I"Ctie i*h >wt *k rr» improvement-; a so of P-«table
Corn Min, B »li*f Pre>-es mi i Turbine Water Wheels,
Pu leys and fth«ftu\K and all kind- of mil suppl es.
PARKER’S
HAIR BALSAM
frails and beautifies the halt.
MB l*rom«<fa*9 a hivin&nt pr wth.
Never Pails to Kestore Gr*iy
Hair to its Youthful Color.
Con s fv&.p d. amu* & hair tai Inf.
50c, aud f 1 A em I)r*.iL*s;^»
I - I
12:. crs._.
lies! . £S WHIR? Syrup. All ELSE FAILS
Cough Tastes Good. Use
tn time Sold by drwegtsti.
STS
'25:???“
0
rt/n\\ ^ti g p^waBKjp> »% K
1 I ^ ~ A^"fcP^Slc\
f '
: •&*» locn* * &***zLj! \V§|/n\ £__\ f\v W ) J>7 ' L—U ra L!»\J \|
AFThB failcreh ak» remzdies. I
The priwary eamo of the recent
*PP^° failures of \V* tern New York j
Cornel ” ne -]f®I* LniT««ity. Fft « T9 .f hto The bulletin remediea of the to |
no applied are summarized as: Till- i
!ff' P r,, ” in '’
T?” , 1 1 ’ rou ’“;. c =<lr.cc i 10 . 1 ' Lowe may F be r ; followed P««‘T
'
v’‘i‘^“5 w vona T ,“,° * ,rwt Br0Ter3 —
rREFAGE rOF SPRAYING.
Any farmer who has a dozen or more
apple or pear trees, should have a
spraying apparaius and familiarize
himself with the use of fuugiciJcs and
insecticides. The difference in value
between a good and a poor crop will
more than pny for the outfit, and it
often comes handy for spraying other
crops, such ns potatoes, tomatoes, etc.
—American Agriculturist.
FASTENING FOR COW3 IN THE STABLE.
I ho safest mode of fastening cows in
their stalls is by n strong leather
si rap around the neck, with a ring
stitched in, into which a snap hock
may be quickly fastene 1. The hook
is attached to a short chain with a
ring at the cud which slides up and
down on a bar of iron fastened to the
tide of the stall. The chain is long
enough to permit tho cow to reach the
further end of the feed trough. If
there is a gutter eight inches deep be¬
hind the cows for the manure, they
will stay on the floor inside of the
gutter. The inner floor should slope
two inches from the front to the
gutter, which affords ample drainage
and keeps the cows clean.—New York
Times.
VALira OF SLAKED LIME.
Lime, either air slaked or unslaked,
is used as a fertilizer where there is
large amount of vegetable matter that
only slowly decomposes. Such laud
is always wet and cold. Dry land lias
enough warmth in summer to prevent
the accumulation of much vegetable
matter, aud on such land the lime can
only act by directly supplying this
mineral to plants that lequire it.
When used to make vegetable matter
decompose more rapidly as many as
seventy to 100 bushels o‘ icyo par
aero are sometimes p^ad|
puts
nr
v-iome n experiment, but: not as a
substitute for manure. Lime should
not be used on land intended for po¬
tatoes. Tho potato does not require
it and its caustic effect on the tuber
makes tho skin tender and predis¬
poses it to scab fungus attacks. -Bos¬
ton Cultivator.
WHAT TO FEED YOUNG TURKEYS,
The food for young turkeys, like
all other young poultry, should be
thoroughly cooked and given in a
crumbly condition. Feed little and
ofteu the first two weeks. Turkeys
have small crops but they digest their
food rapidly. Give a variety.
Turkics soon tiro of any kind of food
if given too ofteu, and will refuse to
eat it. It will not do to let them go
hungry. Hunger causes indigestion,
and indigestion will produce bowel
trouble.
Eggs ore a natural fooJ for all
young boiled poultry, but too much hard
egg will cause bowel trouble ;
it is a better plan to moisten their
food with raw egg. Cnco or twice a
day for a week or ten days feed a stiff
mush made of equal parts of fine oat
meal.'cornmeal and bran or middlings;
add a little salt and a tablespoonful
of bone meal ono day, and a little
fiuely chopped meat the next.
Chopped onions, cabbage or other
garden greens should be given as soon
as they wilt eat them. Bone meal,
meat and vegetables aro necessary for
the health aud growth o£ young tur¬
keys. They feather earlier than any
other fowl, and this demand on the
system must be supplied by judicious
feeding. Cooked potatoes and rice
are variety. excej^ent When and will week help make ten days up a
a or
old begin to teach them to eat grain,
either ground or whole. As soon as
they are given a range the number of
meals per day may gradually be re¬
duced.—Farm, Stock and Home.
SCIENCE IN FARMING.
Agricultural education in France
has progressed by letps and bounds,
and the French farmer tills his ground
more scientifically than any of his
neighbors. Agriculture is taught in
schools of all grades. In 1893 in¬
struction was given to 2700 pupils in
French normal schools and to more
than 300,000 persons who attended
their conferences. Model farms are
scattered all over the laud for the pur- j
pose of experiment aud instruction.
Whfle France is probably ahead of |
all other Governments m the applies
tion of science to farming, Germany
is a good second, aud in some direc
tion?, notably in the production of
the sugar beet, is iu advance of her
rival. In England the general dif- ^
fusion of the knowledge which renders
scientific farming possible is shown I
by the fact that even in a bad wheat
year the average yield per acre is over
thirty bushels, Contrasted with this j
our own average yield of thirteen
bushels shows sharply the need of the
National Government to make some
better provision for edccation along
agricnltuaal lines. Farming, like I
every other branch of industry, has
made rapid strides with the last two
decades. It has become highly skilled
labor, aud it is necessary that nrovi-:
ion be made for acquiring the nsces
eary information about it as with any '
sff-ibfY trade, lateasiye forming as it:
is practised in Europe will eventually
redeem much of the unused land ia
the Eastern States, and at the same
time furnish onr cities with cheap,
Potable iork world. and healthful food.-New
CARE OF THE TX39.
Ordinarily until the pigs are six to
eight months old there should be no
cther thought in connection with tho
raising of them than how to make
them grow. Any surpius fat at thi3
time is in tho way. The pig needs
thnt kind of feed that will develop bona
and muscle, giving him size and a ro
bust constitution. These things are
never accomplished by the farmer who
growa enthusiastic by spurts. It is
nature's way to permit of no stop-offs
on the route traveled by the pig from
the farrowing nest to the packing¬
house. If ho does take a stop-over at
any point in his career from any
cause whatsoever ho does it at his own
expense. Regular and even develop¬
ment is always nature’s way, and her
way should be our way.
For the first few weeks of the pig’s
life he is to be fed wholly through tho
dam, and it must always bo rightly
borne iu mind by the feeder that when
ho is feeding the dam he is feeding the
pigs. It is very often a thoughtless
indifference upon this point that is the
cause of one of the most vexatious
troubles with young pigs. Scours is
not considered a very dangerous ail¬
ment, but it is a much more costly
thing to the farmer's pocketboolc than
all other ailments combined. Thumpe
kills its victims in all probability and
the thing is at an end. One pig in
the litter is about the limit of the
trouble with thumps. But with scours
it goes through the litter. Tho trouble
does not arise perhaps from getting too
strong a, flow' of milk over an extended
period of time, but rather from too
much at one time and too little at an¬
other, caused by spurts in feeding, or
by sudden changes in the character of
the milk caused by feeding the wrong
thing. Whatever the cause the wors;
phase of the matter is not simjfly that
the pigs are afflicted with a disorder
somewhat difficult to cure, but that it
stunts growth permanently. The pig
that has had the scours never will
make the hog- that it mi ,de
T
for general market fowls or
Nearly every poultry raiser hat
more or less land upon which crops
may be grown that are especially suit¬
ed for poultry.
Equal parts of bran and corn mea,
mixed with water and baked hard is
an excellent food for young chicks
especially if soaked in sweet milk be¬
fore feeding.
If you have a stony or gravelly
point in the pasture that jwoduces
nothing, stimulate it with a dressing
of horse manure iu which there it
plenty of grass seed.
The time to kill weeds in tho potatc.
field is when they first start. Weeds
that have been permitted to grov;
large have done the crop about all tht
harm they can do.
One very common mistake made by^
owners of clay farms is tramping them
when wet, end cases are not rare
where there has been almost a failure
of a crop from this cause alone.
Look over your raspberry canes,
and if they seem swollen, cut off the
infected canes and burn them, thus
destroying ono of the worst pests this
delicious fruit has in this country.
Burn all clumps of dead, adhering
leaves found in your fruit trees, a*nd
save the fruit buds from destruction
by the tiny worms that havo passed
the winter in hiding in these leaves.
The farmers of Texas use ordinary
baking soda with quite good success
in keeping weevil out of corn and
other grain. The amount used is
twelve to fifteen pounds of the soda
to every hundred barrels of corn in
the shock.
The feet of foals very seldom re¬
ceive the care and the frequent in
spection to their %
so necessary future
perfection of form and soundness,
^trses’ "^quently feet, become from this deformed, cause alone, defec¬
tive and unhealthy.
Not one garden in a hundred ever
has okra growing in it. This is
great omission. It is perfctly easy to
grow, it bears edible pods all summer
long if they are kept cut off as soon as
large enough, and they are delicious
in soup?, ragouts, etc., and for pickles.
It is better to have the space in
your buildings devoted to roosts sep¬
arate from the laying or nesting sec
tion. They can always be found in
one or the other place at certain peri
confi'ned'L^on’e [ pkee^ do dr aor^befoul
otlier rts of t] e building,
Hens like green cabbage when it is
, , beie tuey chip off bit
up w can a
80 inclined, and in the winter
ftUt ^ ea J ' spring, when there is little
S convenient reeQ iooi | growing, and beneaetai. nothing Onion is more tops
in springtime are cxctuent as a blood
simulant and should be fed with soft
Any building yon erect for venr
poultry sbonld, if you keep 100 head,
have a room in the center for storage
of grain and such tools and cooking
apparatus as is necessary about a wefl
ordered henhouse. The building should
have winge on either side with a tliree
foot passage way in the center, throw
ing pens, say five by ten feet on either
side, the anmber of such pens fle
pending upon the size pf the building
you erect.
^StSMBL^U ULbnUXJ
h °The
latest waists fasten in the back
ami show the blouse effect in front.
Modern drawing-rooms have more
the aspect of being furnished for
Kse *
The summer girl will have just an*
other season of ehirt waist and sailor
hat.
Women who economize in material
for the godet skirt are fashionably
lost.
Princess Louise is actively engaged
in many benefits for crippled cbil
dren.
Many of the tall palms seen in the
hallway of the modern house are arti
fi c i a l.
Nowadays the really stylish woman
designs her buttons as well as her
clothes.
Lady Arthur Butler has had a base¬
ball diamond laid out for her tenants
at Sandleford Priory, England.
Bonnets are merely flat little tri
angles or circlets in front, with straw
supports for bowa or other trimmings
at the back,
Miss Mary Proctor, tho daughter of
the astronomer, will lecture on astro¬
nomy at Chautauqua during the com¬
ing summer.
Accordion-plaited silks, with the
plaits running across the goods, now
come by the yard, and make very
pretty waists.
Every season it is predicted that
the reign of the silk waist will be over,
and every season it reappears more
beautiful than ever.
In order to meet the requirements
of the fuller skirts of dresses, petti¬
coats are made wider by tho addition
of very deep, full ruifles.
Tho new sheer French and Venetian
goods are like the finest silk in tex¬
ture, and may well be classed among
tho luxurious fancies of the season.
All-wool challies in black and navy
blue grounds, which can now be pur¬
chased at half their former price,
make comfortable and desirable house
gowns.
Miss Marion Talbot has been ap¬
pointed Doan of the Woman’s College
in the University of Chicago, taking
the place ot Mrs, Alice Freeman
Palmer.
The Dowager Countess of Glasgow
died recently at the age of ninety
nine. She had been a grown woman
H§H|caLvears_when the battle of
BRWrasoand ■PfflTngbrido will not ask
to go shopping with her
or to take luncheon in a tea room with
a great feminine patronage. It hastens
the day of disenchantment.
The old saw, “There is nothing new
under the sun,” cannot be said to
apply to millinery, for there is always
something new, either in combination
or in mode of adjustment.
Countess Rantzau was one of the
twenty-eight guests at the luncheon
given by Bismarck on March 25. The
presence of a woman at a political
gathering is a novelty in Germany.
Silks are even prettier than ever, if
that is possible. Flowered designs
on light grounds are popular, and
black gros grain, with a very heavy
cord, i3 again becoming fashionable.
Many of the female students at the
University of Michigan want to wear
bloomers and they are going to make
a fight for the privilege. Some of the
professors’ w r ives are backing them up.
Lord William Beresford will re¬
ceive $30,000 a year as the Duchess of
Marlborough’s husband. The Duchess
was formerly Mrs. Hamersley, of New
York City, the widow of a millionaire
grocer.
Iu London entire gowns are being
made of velvet, but as yet they have
not reached New York. Velvet, how¬
ever, is used here profusely as a trim¬
ming on evening frocks and street
gowns alike.
Miss Gertrude Ainen, of North Da¬
kota, is one of the tallest women in
the world. Miss Ainen is six feet one
inch high, but is so graceful and well
formed that the height is not particu¬
larly noticeable.
A fanciful bonnet worn by Mrs.
George Gould is of rhinestones and
jet strung in a lace pattern. Pert lit¬
tle rosettes of cream lase are poised
over each ear, and bunches of forget
me-nots give the touch of color need¬
ful.
Mrs. Eichard Watson Gilder, the
wife of the editor of the Century,
studied to be an artist when she was a
girl. She says she hopes none of her
three daughters will ever have any
special talent for anything but being
truly good women.
The . hats . .
new straw come in every
imaginable tint. There are dark
greens shading ° off to the palest tea ;
ruby red . to , famt , • , shell . „u pwik • , ; deep ,
purple to lightest mauve. The straws
are either very light and rough or are
woven “. jour” and almost all have
large waved brims.
All stvles, J whether for voung or
old, ,, says tuat ,, , sieeYd3 , _ must j be either ...
long or very short. The new blouses
are nearly all made with elbow sleeves.
W,th long suede gloves these are verv
pretty, but very few women can afford
to display the lower part of the arm
and hand without a covering ° in broad
daylight. , v ,
A verv lovely model for a brides
maid’s gown shows a cream-colored
silk chiffon dotted with small pink
silk flowers. This is made up uuliued
over a close-fittino princess slip flar
ing from the knees downward, the
bodice part cut low in the neck. The
L chiffon i waist iaJddto is cut in a deeo Y front
and biMSfc, and addea to thisehar um coming mine
toilet is a Mane Antoinette fichu
formed of Venice lace, trails of valley
lilies %ad half-opeu roses.
__3Icre Twin and Triplet Letters.
*»«»,«.
denominate. them. There . 8 little va
^ ° lease ^ U ^ waste ^ *"
basket recently •
“We have two children and expect
another very soon. If it is a boy it
will be named Grover if you will lend
me $500.”
“My wife noticed in the papers an
account of the triplets which were
christened after ywur family, and the
outcome of the matter. She says now,
how will it be with a fourth-class post¬
master’s children? We have two girls,
which we have christened, one lluth
and the other Esther. Unfortunately
we have no photographs as yet, not
being able to Lave them taken. Any
little memento will satisfy her and will
be thankfully received by all the fam¬
ily.”
“Sir: On the 12th of .Tune, 1S93,
there was a boy baby born to me at my
house, weighing ten pounds at birth.
I was so enthused over your election
and inauguration that I named my
baby Grover in honor of Grover
Cleveland, president of the United
States. My boy will be two years old
June 12, 1895, and would appreciate a
present from the chief magistrate of
our nation.”
These begging letters, which were
quite interesting at first, are getting
to be tiresome as they multiply.— JS r ew
York Times.
A’l tho Women Counted.
According to the most reliable esti¬
mates, tbe world today contains 280,
000,000 grown women. Among civil¬
ized nations tho United States has ac¬
tually the largest share, its feminine
population beiug 30,554,370. Russia
comes next, with an adult feminiuo
population of. 23,200,000. Then a
long way after comes the German em¬
pire, with 10,930,000; Austria with
9,680,000; Great Britain, with 8,796,
000; France, with 8,586,000 and Italy,
with 6,850,000. Spain comes next on
the list, 4,130,000 of the fair sex, and
she is followed by Belgium, with 1,-
340,000; Roumania, with 1,260,000;
Portugal, with 1,080,000, and Holland,
with 1,070,000.
Tbe countries whose adult feminino
population does not reach 1,000,000
aro Switzerland, which has only 690,
000; Norway, which has 465,000, aud
Greece and Denmark, which are tied
at 490,000. Iu this estimate it will be
noted that tho entire female popula¬
tion of the United States is given and
only the number of grown women in
tho different countries of Europe. As
fact, in proportion to its
^^ffiiscouiitry lias fewer
in in
thatfj the jf lory iu Nm|‘*
ploys women.— Urooklyi 1
zen.
“Carrying Coals to Newcastle.”
An English lady set out for Germany
on a visit to some of her relatives. She
took with her a handsome present, con¬
sisting of a silver urn, by way of show¬
ing her dear continental friends a spec
men of British artistic skill. When the
present was unpacked aud carefully
examined, there was found stamped in
a corner the following legend : “Made
in Germany. ”
There are about 34,000 tame deer in
Southern Norway. Most of these are
scattered throughout the mountains of
the Saeterdal district, but about 7,000
live on the plateaus of the Yiddas and
surrounding districts of Hallingdal,
Thelemarken, Numedal and Sogne.
A LIYINa SHADOW.
RJEMARKABI/E TRANSFORMATION OF
A NORTH CAROLINA iflAN.
Strange, but True, Story From tbe Lum¬
ber Regions of a Southern State—
Verified by Personal Investigation.
(From the Greenville, N. C., Reflector.')
The following interview has just been given
our reporter by Mr. G. A. Baker, the overseer
at the farm of Col. Isaac A. Sugg, of Green¬
ville, N. C. It will interest anyone who has
ever had typhoid fever. Mr. Baker said in
part;
“I was living in Beaufort County, and on
the 2d day of October, 18S3, I was stricken
down with typhoid lever. I had the best
physicians to attend me and on the 15th day
of January, 1894, I was allowed to get up. 1
was emaciated, weak and had no appetite.
I could only drag along for a short distance
and would be compelled to sit down and
rest. This continued for some time and I
began to give up hope of ever getting well.
I lost my position in Beaufort County and
having secured one in Pitt County, clerking
in a store, I undertook it, but was so weak I
could not do the work and had to give it up.
The disease settled in my knees, legs and
feet. I was taking first one kind of medicine
and then another, but nothing did me any
good. I was mighty low-spirited. I moved
out to Col. Sugg’s about four or five months
ago and commenced taking Dr. Williams’
Pills. I took three a day for about three
months. I began to regain my appetite in a
week's time, and then my weakness began to
disappear, and hope sprung up with a blessed
ness that is t’ e yond all telling. At the ex
piration of the three months I was entirely
cured and could take my axe and go in the
woods and do as good a day’s work as any
m8D - 1 was troubled with dyspepsia and
!
God bless Dr. Williams: may he live fora long
1’?^ bis reward 1 kx \°T for he \ has iU done U P y° a wonderful nde ^ to t f e Jot ?P
of good. Tell everybody that asks you about
Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills for Pale People that
if tbe P come to me I can certainly satisfy
I take one.”
were forcibly struck with the earaest- be
Mr " ** keT aEd his statements ma y
relied od.
D r . YViUiaiEs’ Pink Pills contain, in a ecn
densed form, all the elements necessary to
^toresha/ter^fnerwesf 6 nej^are^an un
failing specific for such diseases as locomotor
ataxia, partial paralysis, 8t. Vitus’ dance,
eciat i- «* neuralgia, rheumatism, nervous
plexions, pSmtof^rheart^aie all aLf saliorcoml
forms of weakness either in
male or female; and all diseases resulting
frcm ^ ared fc « mors * the blood. Pink
^ lsare so i d by all dealers, or wiff be .,ent
pest paid on receipt of price, (£0 eents a box,
or six boxes for $2.50) by addressing Dr,
Medley Co 8eb*aectsay, n. T.
Take no Substitute for
Royal Baking Powder.
It is Absolutely Pure.
All others contain alum or ammonia.
Kxtortion Eliminated by Electricity.
Every one who has ever visited
Niagara Fulls, remembers the exor¬
bitant charges of hacks, elevators, tolls,
admissions, etc., ami congratulates
himself that he escaped with his mor¬
als, even if his pockets were empty.
AH that extortion is soon to be dono
away with by the Niagara gorge elec¬
tric railway, from Niagara Falls to
Lewiston. The plan of the route in¬
cludes all the principal points of in¬
terest on the American side—in fact, a
continuous trip along tho water’s edge
at the base of tho deep river gorge,
past the islands, whirlpool rapids,
Devil’s hole and every notable nat¬
ural feature. It is proposed by this
railway to ehargo but one faro and
that not extravagant, for the round
trip, to include the finest views to be
had from the American side. It is ex¬
pected that this electric railway will
be running by the time the tourist
season is at its height, and that it will
attract many more visitors to this
greatest of nature’s wonders, especi¬
ally as it will be possible to offer bet¬
ter rates to excursion parties from all
points.
Agreed With His Cross-Examiner.
Mr. James Hyde, once n lawyor in a
small town on Long Islaud, tells a
good story about himself. He says:
“It was when I used to practice luw r
in a little town near tho center of the
state. A farmer had one of his neigh¬
bors arrested for stealing ducks, and I
was employed by the accused to en¬
deavor to convince the court that such
was not the case. Tho plaintiff was
positive that his neighbor was guilty,
because ho had seen the ducks in tho
defendant’s yard.
<« « How do you know they are your
ducks?’ I asked.
“ ‘Oh, I should know my own ducks
anywhere!’ replied the farmer, and he
gave me a description of their various
peculiarities, whereby he could roadi
ly distinguish them from othors.
“ ‘Why,’ said I, ‘those ducks can’t
be of such rare broed ! I havo seen
some just like them in my own yard.’
“ ‘That’s not at all unlikoly,’ replied
the farmer, ‘for they are not the only
ducks! have had stolen lately.’ ”— In¬
dianapolis < Sentinel .
The Gospel Rest.
summer; the
^^the birds
irl
ho grass
flit to be
k.
Alt are not.
The world looks blue; our feet are
heavy, and the work that meant so
much to us a few months ago, has be¬
come a hopeless bore.
Somebody suggests “spring fever,”
and some other body whispers “sarsa¬
parilla.”
Now don’t.
It isn’t dosing that you need, but
dozing. You need rest. Nothing else.
You want to let go your hold upon
your little world for a while; forget
your husband and the children and
drift away to a land of dreams.
Never mind the housekeeping; let
the boys attend to that; if they’re their
mother’s own sons, they’ll be glad to
“bach it” for a while, and if the
mountains or the i ea c .hore is out of the
question for mother, they’ll bundle her
up, and send her out into the country,
if it’s only a half dozen miles away,
where, free from harassing cares, she
will eat and sleep as she has not since
girlhood.— Womankind.
McDonald’s Mills, Gn.
Tet-terlne is the only remedy I ever sold tha 1
would cure Tetterine so it would not return.
I’ve sold six dozen in a year, and guaranteed
every box. l’vo never had to return the
money had for Tetter a single box. 1 told a box to a cured man
who for 62 years: 2 boxes
him sound and well. I consider I urn doing
the public a favor to recommend Tettenne.
B. II. Tanner. Sent by mail for 60c. In stamps.
J. T. Shuptrine, Savannah, Ga.
finjmfred Health is Not Easily Regained,
yet Parker’s Ginger Tonic lias attained it in
many case*'. For every weaknessand distress.
Wife used “ Mothers’ Friend” before first
child—was quickly E. relieved; suffered Eufaula, but little; Ala.
recovery rapid. E. Johnston,
If afflicted with soreeyes use Dr. Isaac Thomp¬
son’s Eve-water. Druggists sell at 25c per bottle,
>AINT C
rr CHEAP PAINT OR Guaranteed 5 year*.'
LEAD.
a well-painted house is in the implement-, best indication of a thrifty man. Every particle of
wood or iron in your houses, etc., should be kept well painted. They will
!a<*t TwiCEas lonir. Lime<d Oil is the best preservative, amt Hamrnar Paint the only
Pa nt that requires much the addition of pure Oil before using. That ia why they are best, be
S iiles they are cheaper.
Keep the Baby Fat.
“ Cave Spring, Ga., May 21,1894.
“ Mv baby was a living skeleton. The doctors said he was dying of Maras*
mus, Indigestion, etc. The various foods I tried seemed to keep him alive, but
did not strengthen or fatten him. At thirteen months old he weighed exactly
what he did at birth—seven pounds. I began using “.Scott’s Emulsion,” some¬
times putting a few drops in his bottle, then again feeding it with a spoon; then
again by the absorption method of rubbing it into his body. The effect was mar¬
velous. Baby began to stouten and fatten, and became a beautiful dimpled boy,
a wonder to all, Scott’s Emulsion supplied the one thing needful.
“Mrs. Kennon Williams.”
Scott’s Emulsion
* s especially useful for sickly, delicate children when their other food
fails to nourish them. It supplies in a concentrated, easily digestible
‘
, just . the nourishment . , ... they need a ^ to build ■. *u them and . . them ..
iorm, up give
health and strength. It is Cod-liver Oil made palatable and easy to
assimilate, combined with the Hypophosphites, both of which are
most remarkable . , , nutrients.
Don t DG persuaded tQ accept ^ a Substitute !
& Bowne, New ..... York. AJ1 , _ Druggists# 50c. and 3
j 1 ;
Not This Time.
Tho robber cautiously entered the
house.
All was quiet and still. Tho only
sound was that of tho ticking of tho
clock on the mantel.
Sh!
He heard footsteps. Porno one was
coming. Should he shoot? No, it was
only a woman.
“Woman,” he said, “if you make no
sound I will not harm a hair of your
head.”
She looked at him fearlessly.
“You could not harm a hair of my
head if you tried,” she said.
And then slio took tho wig off and
swung it iu the face of tho bold, bad
man; it was too much—ho fled.
Too Hard for to Learn.
“I'm a good deal worried about my
son,” said Mr.Whykins. “Ho doesn’t
.seem to know tho value of a dollar.”
“Well,” replied ih 1 man who was
puzzled over finance, “if it’s a silver
dollar that ho doesu’t know the value
of, I don’t see that you can blame him
much.”— Washington Star.
The Lexington Savings Bank, wdiieh
was opened for business at Baltimore
recently, will be managed exclusively
by colored men. It was incorporated
last week with a capital stock of $10,
000 .
LOOK OUT FOR BREAKERS AHEAD
when j) i m p 1 e s,
and eruptions, like manifes¬ boils,
tations of impure
blood aj pear. They
wouldn’t appear if
your blood were
A1 pure and your sys¬
tem in the right
condition, They
show’ you what you
need—a good blood
purifer; that’s what
you get when you
fW take Dr. Pierce’s
Golden Medical
Discovery.
It carries health
with it. All Hlood,
Skin and Scalp Dis¬
eases, from a com¬
mon Blotch, or Eruption, to the worst
Scrofula, liver are and cured by it. It invigorates
the rouses every organ into
healthful action. In the most stubborn
forms of Skin Diseases, such as Salt
rheum, kindred Eczema, ailments, Tetter, Erysipelas, Boils
and and Scrofula, it is an
unequaled remedy.
+ ASK YOUR DRUGGIST FOR it
/
★ THE BEST ★
FX>00
FOR
INVALIDS
★_JOHN CARLE & SONS, New York. ★
The Greatest fledical Discovery
of the Age.
KENNEDY’S
Medical Discovery.
DONALD KENNEDY, OF ROXBURY, MASS.,
Has discovered In one of our common
pasture weeds a remedy that cures every
kind of Humor, from tho worst Scrofula
down to a common pimple.
He baa tried it In over eleven hundred
cases, and never failed except in twocaaos
(both thunder humor). He has now in
his possession over two hundred certifi¬
cates of its value, all within twenty miloa
of Boston. Send postal card for book.
A benefit Is always experienced from tho
first bottle, and a perfect euro is warranted
when the right quantity is taken.
When the lungs are affected it causes
shooting pains, liko needles passing
through them; the same with tho Liver
or Bowels. This is caused by the ducts
being stopped, and always disappears in a
week after taking It. Head tho label.
If the stomach is foul or bilious it will
cause squeamish feelings at first
No change of diet ever necessary. Eat
the best you can got, and enough of it.
Dose, one tablespoonful in water at bed¬
time. Sold by all Druggists.
A. N. U. Twenty-two, ’95.