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The total protduct of the dairies of the United States is estimated at $450,000,000 per year. That is pretty rich skilxmning. The New York Journal thinks sci. entists in rounding up the microbe are rather overtoing the basiness when they discern a lurking danger in fresh eggs. VibraLting in 'Tuneful Accord, Like the strings of a musical instrunumnt. the nervous .ypternI in health lharmnonizes pleasantly Wlth the other parts of the .ys:icne. But weak. ened or overwrougIht., it jangles Iost Inhanjon tously. Quiet anl inv:igorato it with the great tranquilizer and tonic. Hostetter'? :;:omanlch Illt ters. whbieh |lroO:n:)t(, dlig~'s,:vn. hilllus sec-retion and a r'ggular action ut the bowels, lmid prevents zualartal, rheumatic aln kid.ney '"lniplaiuts. The stingy Ian robs: himnself every time he puts a dillar in his pocket. A Final (are. "I used it for tetter which had been running for live years. Nothing could give relief un til 1 u-ed your medicine, and one box imade a dtual cure." Mlts. S. E. IrAHiT, Cross Trails, Ala. 1 box by mail for 50e. in stamps. J. T. SacrTsroi ,Savannah, Ga. The right kind of martvrdom is never eon cerned about whit wll be said on its to'ltb stoue. No.To.Blae for Fifty Cents. Over 4(XJO.lX cured.. Why not let No-To-Bae regulate or remove your desire for tobacco? vr-esmoney, makes health and manhood. Cure guaranteed. 60.centa and $1.10, at all druggists. Somne pray: "Iead us not into temptation," while going into it of their own accord. Jusr try a 10O. box of Cascarets, candy ca. tharti., fiuent liver and bowel regulator made. The Christian should emulate the lark the higher it flies, the sweeter it sings. CAscAR.TS stimulate liver, kidneys and bowels. Never sicken. weaken or gripe; 10s. Love is the greatest thing in the world, and yet nine people out of ten are after money. WnrAw bilious or costive, eat a Oasearet, candy cathartic; cure guartutee,; 10c., 2iic. People who carry sunshineo with them. shine the brightest in the darketr places. Mrs. Winslow'sSoothing Syrup for children teething. softensthe gums, reduces inlammar 4lon,allayspain, cures wind colic. 25c. a bottle. The world has learned more from its poor, than it has from Its kings. FIT8stopped free dnd permanentlycared. No fits after first day's use of Da. KaisE's GCEAT NERVCRIESTORaEI. Free $2 trial bottleand treat es. Send to Dr. Kline. 151 Arch St., Phila.,Pa. Cotton. With careful rotation of crops and liberal fertilizations, cotton lands will improve. The application of a. proper ferti lizer containing sufficient Pot ash often makes the difference between a profitable crop and failure. Use fertilizers contain ing not less than 3 to 4"; Actual Potash. Kainit is a comple;. specific against "Rust." All about Potash-the resultsof its use by actual ex pernmett ,n the best farms in the United States--is told in a little book which twe pubish and w:ill gladly mail free to any farmer in America who will write turit. GERMAN KALI WORKS. 93 Nassau St., New York. REVOLVER FREE. WATCH FREE 138 other articles. Cost notlling. liea our offer *E/ Every per'ollt wiho cuts lh IulIt tiunl rt l'Ift tluls, uani. . . pr. tt. le. . . ill. u ,hrti t!- l to 1 I ntu ati.tt dlldl te telt l . S.& W. tn del ,t or i ral. I; Ktlol:;er, 1 tldid .. Ll t to l, itn whtl and ih t l tl Watch. .eleg.tt riled id $I1 VesCi litaml .:II tipil .lvr plated le'Ia , lonnw rlrth $1. pair ':', pit:itt d t Ciull" lhttolt t .gold l . ,, v. plated iutch l.driu' w ith tSr., I i/ft- . diaunrn ,oi:1d ,l.hi t : var Pint , Sde2.Co C ,tr luttona. t, O I l rlopn4. l Ido. hiigh.fladut Leadl l'Pecibl, i/ /, ,, sI- 1 Lead !Pent'I shtlO'ener, I lock. ~J;I_ . tf leumrtnll um and I I'<rpet u-l, t Iltl ttin l :e ColtiqOet. i t All we sk, in order to in. It d .ce ouI, r cigars, i that REE you allow uIl to endl la; . 7 s2am - packa-, 650 ,r our , tlt",. he. t lsl .alf ned at $t.07. F lil lrxaitllltatilii .Ulowad. :etnematl;or, voun nly pay $4.1; antd epll e s forll thu ilart., ani theI o ll i r nI i n, isu tl lovo ar e1'ea. It , ou do 't ionslhir the it tllth , ltitti a hat u nskl , L don' pay 1 I il it. Address WJN.-'ION .tlF(. CO., WIiton. N. Co's F THEl MOST POPULARl OF ALL 1 5ct. Cigars. t Guaranteed all Long Havana Filler. At lOct. Is a General Favorite witll lovels of Hligh Clitost Goods. ALBERT 3IACKIE GROCER CO., Ltd., NEW OlRLEANS. ItPDiatrlbittllrs for Loulsiana and Mieslssippi. IM "DRUNKENNESS OPI Mared a li/tsIOIOy ,aw0N • IL. d £nDR.J.L. ST PlIoSPIN A'L O&wbI Hl t N ooosooo osoo t SECOND-HAND TUERK WATER MOTOR FOR & ILE. Large size; cost $4oo; 12 horse-power; in use only four months. Will be Sold at a Bargain. Apply at once to S Vicksburg Newspaper Union, VIcKSBUBG, ]UISS. ' I l i 9 · .C -w I a TW' 'd~;~= OUR DOMESTIC MACIaINERY. One of the things that surprise foreign housekeepers, notably French women, when they come over here is our cumbrous domestic machinery. Particularly are they amazed that it should be such an almost universal custom to have the family washing done at home. It is bad enough in the dwellings that shelter only one family beneath their roofs, but laundry work going on in the little sets of rooms in the apartment houses fairly startles the Parisian chatelaine. That this custom must be changed sooner or later seems inevitable. So much of co-operative housekeeping could be adopted with profit to him or them who would undertake it and with enormous addition to the comfort and convenience of living. The nearest approach to this millennium at the moment is the scheme of some of the laundries to take the family washing by the pound. Five cents per pound on all bundles of five pounds or over is charged, a price which includes the ironing of certain flat pieces like towels and bed-linen. The starched pieces are returned, starched and dried, and ready to dampen and iron, and the other pieces rough-dried. If such a system will pay in isolated establishments with necessarily limited patronage it deserves a trial on a wholesale plan.--New York Post. WHIITE iHOUSE ETIQUETTE. When the President and his wife drive out the President sits on the right hand seat and his wife on the left. If there are others in the carriage, whether ladies or gentlemen, they must sit with their backs to the horses. When Mrs. Cleveland was first mar ried she tried the experiment of plac ing her mother opposite the President and herself in the Presidential landau, but the people laughed at it so im moderately and professsd to think Mrs. Folsom (as she was then), to be the maid, that it was speedily dropped. When the President's wife drives alone she sits in the right hand cor ner-the place of honor. The lady of the White lIouse cannot sot foot within those splendid houses in Washington whose flagstaffs mark the foreign embassy or legation. She coul1d not go without the President, and as an embassy or legation is tech nically a part of the country it repre senty the President could not go-so that she never sees the inside of a diplomatic house as long as she pre sides at the Executive Mansion. The President dines only at Cabinet houses, and his wife cannot dine any. where without him. President Arthur dined with Judges of the Su preme Court and with Senators-but as he had no wife the whole system was vwry much simplified for him. The President's wife may, if she chooses, go to luncheons where there are no gentlemen, or to teas, both be ing regarded as strictly informal; but the danger of giving offense by ac cepting one invitation and declining another is so great that it is seldom or never risked.--Illustrated American. TIUE PARFlER'S DAUGITERT. The daughter of the farmer sits be fore the looking glass, with its tarn ished gilt and painted flowers. Her bodice is unhooked. Iler hair kisses curves and nooks. She hardly notices the smell of the kerosene lamp, so closely, so proudly and so sorrowfully does she look at herself in the glass. No play 'etress or model shown in the cheap picture magazines is her equal. 1 The farmer's daughter does not suspect this; she knows it. No summer city boarder, in spite of skillfully con trived costume, could rival or ap-. proach her in enchantment of figure. And the girl sits before the looking glass with its tarnished gilt and painted fiower.3. She thinks of the artist who stopped on the farm last summer. She remem bers his carless mannerashis ease with himself and the world, his trinkets, his velveteen jacket, the smell of his pipe, his pajamas thrown upon the floor. He never wooed her in direct speech, but she recollects the compli ments of his eyes. The landscape chilled her all the day. The wood pile smelled of mor tality. Mullein stalks shivered under the leaden sky, The hills watched her ironically. There was for her the treadmill routine of housework. At ' supper she noticed the shriveled skin of her mother, the untidiness of her mother's hair alongthe nape of the 1 neck. Her mother is not so very old in years; and yet how tired she is! Her father blew on his tea in a saucer. He complained of his daughter's I indifference to the storekeeper's son I and then he pulled off his boots and I dried his feet in the oven of the kitchen stove. And now she sits with unhooked bodice before the looking glass with its tarnished gilt and painted flowers. It is not 9 o'clock, and yet what is 1 ·there for her to do but go to bed? And what change or pleasure does she see approaching *her for weeks to come': A whistle calls to her far down the valley. She starts up and i goes to the window. She peers into [ the night, hoFing to see the lights of Ia the express train as it hurries toward I the city. A mist enwraps the house. a T'he daughter of the farmer undresres herself slowly and puts out the light. i Of what avail is her sumptuous beauty ? i Only the looking glass, with its tarn ; ished gilt and painted flowers, under stands her and appreciates her.- t Boston .Journal. iIELBA'S MAIRVELOUS~ GOWn. The gown which Mine. Melba wears in the third act of "La Traviata"-the ; ball-room scene-cost nearly fifteen thousand dollars. The embroidery is of seed pearls and of small diamonds applied by some wonderful French process, and its construction occupied over a year. The ivory brocaded satin of which it is composed was specially woven for it, and is of such body that it resembles a heavy cloth in weight, requiring no lining in either shirt or bodice. It is of an ex traordinary lustre, producing an opalescent effect in certainlights, and, combined with the fortune of gems which Mine. Melba will wear with it, will give her the appearance of stand. ing in a robe of glimmering light. The trained skirt is a mass of jeweled embroidery. The pattern is outlined in a spiral plume, the stem composed of small diamonds. The body of the plume is of spangles in virgin silver beaded with seed pearls. The em broidery outlines the seams of this skirt, interspersed with an applied etching representing the camellia, the stems and leaves being in different shades of green. The bodice is made of satin in folds that seem to drape the form. It is without sleeves, being upheld over the shoulders by chains of diamonds-three strands to each side. On the left shoulder is a bunch of real camellias' fastened with a mag nificent diamond clasp. The slippers are made of the sane satin, and are embroidered to match with seed pearls and diamonds, the Instep being liter ally studded with gems. Mine. Melba wears nearly one hundred thousand dollars' worth of jewels in this act, and will be a veritable blaze of hght from head to fool. Upon her head will rest a tiara of diamonds and pearls-the latter being the rare 'pear-shaped pearls, beautifully matched and per fect in color. In her hair, which will be rolled in a Grecian knot, a camellia will be fastened by a dagger of pearls and diamonds. Close to her throat will be worn a seven-stranded col larette of pearls, fastened by three diamond clasps. Below this will be a pendant of pear-shaped pearls and diamonds matching the tiara, said to have cost fourteen thousand dollars. There are two long necklaces reaching below the waist-a string of diamonds and a rope of pearls. There are five hundred pearls in the string, each one as big as a pea and perfect in shape. Their color is fainly tinged with rose, and the lustre is superb. This with diamond necklace, represents over fifty thousand dollars. To the diamond necklace is attached a curiously beau tiful little charm, which Mine. Melba calls her talisman. It was presented to the diva by the Baron de Roths child. It is a little goat, made from one large pearl: the horns and feet being tipped with diamonds,-Ar gonant. F.tSHION NOTES. Vinaigrcttes of cut-glass and gold set with gems are also very pretty, and a number of salve boxes in similar de signs are to be seen. A dainty accessory to a simply made house gown is a fichu of pink or blue mull with insertions and edgings of yellow Valenciennes lace. Variety in girdles is welcome, and one of the plrettiest and most dressy girdles on a black gown is of miroir velvet in gecranium, coral and similar shades. The novelty puff boxes shown for SChristmas are lovely. The jar itself is of cut-glass, and the top, which screws on, is of embossed gold in which turquoises, rubies, etc., are quaintly set. Those are comparatively inex pensive. Since fashion decrees that we must have boleros, variations in design are very ~desirablc. The slashed bolero of black satin, with black silk cord lacing and small flat pearl buttons, is now and exceedingly pretty, Hercules braid, with a coral edging, is being used extensively on the inner edge of walking skirts, instead of velveteen binding. It is said to wear far better than its predecessor, and bids fair to become very popular, al though it is slightly higher in price- fifteen cents a yard. Cloth capes are a trifle shorter than those of last season, and are decidedly fuller. The newest, lined with bright plaids or small, vivid-colored checks, with hoods to match, and big shuggle coilarse are decidedly English, and will, therefore, "obtain," as the French say. The newest glove is a real novelty. It is of suede to about three inches above the wrist, where it is of exquisite lace, with, maybe, tiny colored spangles outlining the lace pattern. At the top the lace has ribbon uin through it, ending in a dainty bow. Another ;novelty for evening gloves shows little frills of lace running up to the tops, where a ribbon beading and pretty little bows .give a stylish fiaiih. ... " SLEIGH BELLS. With a tingle and a ts,igle, All the sounds a seemfig jangle, And a swinging back urd, forward, ita fro; On the frosty morning breakintg. Clear their silvery notes oatshaking, The sleigh bells are ringing o'er the snow. Hote they set the nerves a-thrilling, Through the heart a joy distilling, Mingling misic with the beauty of the day As with slipping and with sliding, Swiftly, softly, smoothly gliding, With a song o'er the snow we drift away. -Eliza A. Fletcher, in Outing. PITH AND POINT. The stupid dude is improved most when a clever girl gives him a piece of her mind.-Judge. Tommy-"Oh, paw?" Mr. Figg-. "Well?" `"How can a solid fact lcak out?"-Indianapolis Journal. SBrown--" haven't a friend in the world." Jones-"You can make one; I need five."--Chicago Timnes-Herald. Poak-"Tho way of the transgres s sor is hard." Joak--"Trne; but the trouble is,it's generally hard on some I body else. "-Truth. To the strong-minded female you might give an "atlas of the world," to show her how grasping she is when she wants the earth.-Judge. Landlord- "'ll have to raise your rent this month." Tenant-"Wish you would. I have been trying to do it all the month."-New York Ledger. She pleaded, expostulated, gesticu lated; all to no purpose, and then re mained unmoved. She couldn't strike a bargain with the trackman.-Puck. "I am hopeful that you will pay me that $10 before the end of the week, Smithson." "That's right, old man. Be hopeful, but don't be sanguine." --Judge. "Lemme see; what is that saying about the great oak growing from the little acorn?" "Oh, that isn't an oak any more; it is a chestnut."-Cincin nati Enunirer. Fisher-- "Do you believe in hered ity?" Mann--"Sure. Many a timel have noticed that when a man was rich his son had the same trait." Cincinnati Inquirer. First Tramp--"The papers all say that work is starting up everywhere." Second Ditto-"I know; isn't it aw. ful? You and I may be drawn into it yet. "-Boston Transcript. Hoax--"What! You buying a bi cycle? I thought you detested them." Joax- "So 1 do, but I've been run over long enough. Now I'm going to have my revenge."-Spare Moments. "Is there no way to convince you," he pleaded, "that I would do anything in the world to make you happy?" "Yes," she coldly replied ; "get a move on you before I become a total wreck from loss of sleep."-Cleveland Leader. "What do you wish, madame?" said the election officer to Mrs. T'enspot. "You have already voted once to-day. You voted before noon, you know." "Oh, yes, I know that," replied the voteress, "but I want to change my ballot. "-Harper's Bazar. Mistres: (reprovingly)-"Bridget, breakfast is very late this morning. I noticed last night that you had com pany in the kitchen, and it was near ly 12 o'clock when you went to bed.'" Pridget--"Yis, mum; I knowed you was awake, fur I heard ye movin' around; an' I said to meselt y'd nado slape this moruin', an' I wouldn't dis toorb ye wid an early breakfast mum."-New York Weekly. A Rooster in Court. A peculiar lawsuit was in progress in Esquire Eiler's court yesterday, and lasted all day,[says a Munice (Ind.) dispatch to the Chicago Chronicle. It was a suit that cost over $100, and all that rwas involved was an old roos. ter, and by sight a person would judge that his life would end within a week. The rooster has for some time been in possession of T. Kirby Heinsohn, of the Hotel Kirby, but was owned by Delbert Galliher. A few days ago George Alvy laid claim to it, but as Heinsohn or Galliher would not give it to him he entered a suit of replevin. Each employed a couple of lawyers and yesterday over seventy-five wit nesses were examined, and the trial resulted in the rooster remaiining in the possession of Galliher, and Alvy had all of the costs to pay, amounting to over $100. During the trial the rooster was perched upon the judge's deck and crowed almost continually from the le:ginning to the end of the trial. Since the trial it has been learned that the .ooster is one of a breed that has held the reputation as being the best fighters in the United States. The chicken was brought from Covington by the Hemingrays. and has won many a fight during his time. He is ke'pt now for breeding purposes only. Mnaking Phrases. The makling of phrases has frequent. ly been the sole distinction of many a - prince, 'erhaps the most remarkable phrase uttered by a modern sovereign was spoken by King Hubibert, of Italy, a few years, when cholera was raging in Neples. He had been invit ed to a banquet by the municipality of Geuoa, and declined in the follow ing words: "Men are feasting at Genoa. Men are dying in Naples, I - go to Naples." Well Codled liss. A fourteen-months-old child of Read. ing, Penn., rejoices in the ,rather, unique distinction of having four great-grandmothers living. Only one of these great-grandmothers wears spectacles, and all live within a short distance of the home of thie presume ably well coddled zaiu.-Philadolphis Pr e_ .. The Norwegian Moose Elk. The moose elk--as big game as Eu rope can sut)ply--is gradually getting extinct in Norway. It has been for some time protected by law, but by a law through which a keen sportsman has been able to drive, if not a coach and six, at least the necessary stalk ing horse anglt I>lment. Its venison certainly is not the excuse for its slaughter. fuljttill less its beauty. It Is the only ag~i" memiber of a singularly graceful family. If It should ultimate ly disappear from Northern Europe we cannot lay the blame either on ladies or epicures. Its enormlous nose, in deed, is said to be gooe eating, and the Norwegians seem to like its tongue, but there its attractions end. The law for its protection in Norway is curiosly simple. More than one moose elk is not allowed to be killed on one property in one year. Unfortunately (for the moose) nothing is said as to the size of the property. The Norwegiaus are keen sportsmeon d nda law-abiding peo ple. They don't poach much, but they evade the law. An \;wnr of a prop erty with moose oil it sub-divides the land into small shares. and then has a battue, killing otf a whole family of eiks.--London Daily News. For Fun at a Party. When ;the fun at the party lags start up and tell those present quite conti dently that you can pilac a glass of water on the table so that no tone (can remove lt without lupsettlng it. Of course, every one will say that you can't do It. Without waiting for ex planations fill a glass to the brim and cover it with a piece of paper, which comes well over the edges. Leave the paper flat. Place the palm of the hand over it, and by a quick move ment turn it upside down upon the table. Withdraw the paper gently. The water will remain in the glass, but no one can move the tumbler with out spilling it. With a little practice any boy or girl can do this trick very easily. WVhence It C'aine. The straw manufacture o\wes its in troduction Into England to Mary Queen of Scots, who, on quitting France, was so struck with the making of straw plait by the women and children of Lorraine that she persuaduld a number of these folk to come over to Euglannd with her, in the hope that the peasantry might be able to learn the art. From their arrival in 1561 the phliters had but sorry times, until Jamnies I. estab lished the colony in the Luton district, where thousands are now engaged in this great id usitry. Sai Lard Wo rked. Mrs. A.--I :l1: surprised that you;: husband earns so little if he works :t, htrd tas you say. What idot's he do? Mrs. B.--The last thiglio lhe dhi Wa:; to calculate how lalny tlines a clotk ticked in the course of 1,(tIO years.- Philadelphia 1 Inq uire.r. Solving her turv'e,. "True," observed the King of Mfwptka as he gazed upon the captive. "she has a well-rounded form, but.-- -" He strokedl his chin. "That is no reason why she should not makre a good square lleal."-Ex change. 5 arsa p ra I l a 1s Any sarsaparilla is sarsaparilla. True. So any tea is tea. So any flour is flour. But grades differ. , .You want the best. It's so with sarsaparilla. There are gradcs. You want the best. If you understood sarsaparilla as well as. you do tea and flour it would be easy to determine. But you don't. How should you ? P MWhen you are going to buy a commodity whose value you don't know, you pick out an old established house to trade with, and trust their experience and reputation. Do so- when buying sarsaparilla. Ayer's Sarsaparilla has been on the market fifty years. Your grandfather used Ayer's. It is a reputable medicine. There are many sarsaparillas. But only one Ayer's. IT CURES. ANDY CATHIIARTI lo ° ALL 25 4 S0o 9 UG C14STS (@GO G lTE ED to Cro ,ny ¢aeofr cornflpation, Caearetf. are the 1deal iod - fiAe. AR A NTer trip or pripe,but C Wu e easyaturalrUtIls. eaI pie and booklet free. Ad. STET~f IN .iIE;: DY (t0., Chlcnzo. lontretl, Can.. owliew Tork. Vt )l Fruit- -- a _tlls , loaons, 0rras, gr IT t btheir A Wonderful Plant Food. Wbl rel'teoles. idd.reas, W. H. GARRETT, Bayou Labatre, Mobile Co., Ala, .- .- ,Dr.-~ c -. ·, I ALABASTI N IT WON'T RUB OFF. Wailt Per is Uuuanlt:ýý. RAlL0jlpe ýlX'Et TlaWA[oA Y0, 9, N0 Th, lI ®F 1 i £1) tibcAn1 g8 'ALA8 mTI.E. ..,,,_or TEREW,'ih"EWetlP ml MpASTwIE'n, pumenDut la l u0tr For Sale by 3ainnt Dealer EpLwiage,# beAt.Oaf Ao rR,.- WI28 UEsIer of antar here . Babrymay rentoer II l bat tr M Mit tSR 0 butenamstthri e?. FE AAIBAw 4 t's t A DECADE OF AGONY. A Young Lady of East .yracuse Tells Hnt Story. From te Slandard, Sracuse, Y. , Miss Rosamond Ash, who resides with heir I father, Mr. C. S. Ash, on Manlils Street,' Syracuse, forwards the following testimonlal! to the virtues of Dr. Williams' Pink P1lls ant acoount of her suLteriugs, which Is startlingly interesting: 31A.vLIts STxeer, Srnacr'ss. N. Y,, Ausulst 16, 1llM, "Por the past ten years I have been a fear:ul eiiTorer from tho most paiuful type of intlammatoury rheumatism, which would make its appearaues on thie leaot possible provocation. Winter was when I suffered' the worst, and it generally attacked me from my hips (town, and I hart to go to bed.' While these attacks la1nted, if anvone touohed" trh bed even, I would scrolem ith pain, ad the least contaet was unbearable, for every joint and every musele gave tnoexcruelating agony. "While I was in th's terrible condition, ay paqtor, Rev. Mr. (u!npbeil. (urns to visit me, and told me he1 know of a case very. similar to mine that hal been entirely curer by the use of Dr. Wiilanlms' Pink Pills fot Palo People and a:ldviodl mu to try them, as the pihysiclmns were not doing mro any good. On this my father bought rme two box_1' which I took ac:rording to directions, and began to recover, getti gslrouger everyday: I kept on with Dr. Williams' remoely until t had taken two do:aen boxes, ant by that time every trace of rhm-l:amtlist was gone, and I am .lw as well aus ever I was. "If you have any doubts, as to my state ment, I refer you for its ,oontlrnation to Rev. Mr. Campbell, of Ha:stings, and Mr. Server, of Hastings, the latter hding $upser intendent of the Methodist Sunday Scihool, who know all of the facts surrounding my extraordinary rerovprv. Pink Pill; saved my life and gave to, health and strength, and we will never be without theni in our house. (Higned) "Ros.Aitont An. "Manulune Street, East Syracuse, N. Y." Dr. Williams' Pink PIits contain, in a non-. densed form, all the elements neoresary to give new life and rlchness to the blood and restore shattered uervmts. They ara also a speoille for troubles pen liar to Females, such as supprcssions, irregularities and all forms of wtmkness. They build up the blood, and restore tlhe glow of health to pal arind sallow , hboeks. In men they effet a radioalt care in all cases arising from mental wprry, over work or excesses of whatoYer natur., Pink Pills are ohll in boxes (n,over in L!tias bllk) at 50 conts a box or six boxes: for *2.1~0, and may be had of all dttruggists, or dtirset by mail from Dr. Williatil' Medicine Company, Sohooctadly N. Y. Boys arnd Girls' Favorlte Dosran. Of all the different kinds of dogs,., wl:iat is your favorite? A vote's wi reerutly taken a.mong over 1,)000 boy marid girls of fluiiston, Tex., as it their favorite dog. It is hardly surprlsing that 107 of the t tal nuruber deciarted it favror.of the gentleh. lknowlng, bea utiful shepheri dog, or ell i.. If you have among your friends a shaggy shepherd dog, you art fortunate, ftdeod. The New founcldhnd, big. bhick ali 'lbrave, cam0 next, with 370 votes, and then thte 81. Bernard, with I7O votes. Thit shows that the young folk of Texas have I de!diled l)prefernce for larmg. dogs. 'The fourth tn fI'av.or was tie tat terrier, with 9i voles; then the l!htgliah mIastiff, wlIh 25 voted; the bulldog, with 7 votes; the cominou hotrnd, with 5 votes; the Scotch terrier, with 4 votes; the pointer, with :i rottes; the common spaniel, the water spaniel and the pug, with 2 votes eachl, and the setter, bloodhound, bull terrier and greyhound, 1 rote etah. Where does the poodlle come in, ally way? Perha:ps he isn't a f'-vorlto in Texa s.