FOR THE FARM A3!) HOME. Treatment of itlngbone. Ringbone is only curable in its first stages. As soon as the horse appears lame and the foot is found to be hot and tender about the coronet and pas tern, cold water should be applied and wet bandages used. As soon as the heat is removed, blistering ointment should be used. Rest is indispensable. jTwo months may be required for suc cessful treatment. When a ringbone is once formed it is past cure, as the bony deposit made around the joint cannot be removed. Lameness may be removed, but the enlargement can not. How to Make Cowl Utv M ilk. ; A writer in the Southern Farmer says that his cow gives all the milk that is wanted in a family of eight, and that from it, after taking all that is re* quired for other purposes, 260 pounds of butter were made this year. This is in part his treatment of the ccw. If you desire to get a large yield o:f rich milk give your cows every day water slightly warmed and slightly salted, in bran has been stirred at the rate one quart to two gallons of M ater, you will find, if you have not tried this daily practice, that your cow will giVe tWbnty-five per cent, more milk immediately under the effects of it, and she will become so attached to the diet as to refuse to drink clear water unless very thirsty. But this mess she will drink almost any time and ask for more. The amount of this drink nec essary is an ordinary water pail at a time, morniDg, noon and night. t —— js Give Chickens lUngr ) Young chicks M ill do. much better with liberty than without it. Sitting hectare very liable to be more or less infested ith lice. These, of course, wiff cover the chickens almost as soon as hatched, unless great care is taken to clear them out. Given a large brood, with hens confined in a small coop, and the chances are greatly against the chickens. Moving the coop daily helps the matter greatly, as when the coop re mains long on the same ground the vermin will infest that also, and swarm over the chicks at night. ! If possible, give the hen a free run about the grounds;but if your inclo sure is limited, give her as much as possible. The feed 3011 give joung chicks is till needed by them for their rapid.growth, but if they are obliged to sustain vermin in addition, the growth will be slow and liability to disease augmented. • If }-our garden plot is inclosed, put your coops up near the fence, so that the young chicks will naturally run through the small openings, and they wfll wage a busy warfare on the in sects which would do great damage if left to themselves in that garden. The old hen getting worried about their absence, or hearing the commotion as they run down some nimble-winged butterfly or cabbage miller, will call them to her coop often enough to keep quite large chicks from doing any real damage to the vegetables. Keep the hens confined and let the chicks roam, for remember it is "the old scratch" that does the mischief. Fowls are ac tive and willing workers but you must place them in the position where they can be most serviceable in destroying insects and larvse. Misdirected energy is productive of quite as much evil as lack of force.— Poultry World. Receipts. Tomato Sauce. —A quart of toma toes, a slice of onion and half a dozen doves. Cook ten minutes. Put into a frying pan two spoonfuls of butter heat and stir in two spoonfuls of flour. Stir until smooth and brown. Add the tomato, cook two minutes longer, season with salt and pepper and pass tSfr&ogh a fine strainer. Excellent with roast or broiled meat. fsuet Pudding. —Chop tine one cup of raisins and one-half cup of suet (one cup, if wanted very rich), add two cups of sweet milk, one cup of sugar, four cups of flour, one tea spoonful of cream of tartar, two tea spfihcfuls of soda, and a little salt. Cover tightly and steam or boil two hours. Leave room to swell. Pork chopped very tine, or a little less in measure of po/k fat, may be used. Eat with liquid sauce. Stewed Veal. —Stewed veal need not be the tasteless dish it often is, says the New York Post. Cook it in as little water as will possibly answer, and with it stew a few thin slices of ham or ba con. Nicely-cured bacon is one of the luxuries of modern civilization. Science has conferred a lasting benefit upon the world by teaching the farmer to feed his pigs in such away that the result may be traced in slices of fine grained fat with little strips of lean- This is the kind of bacon one should look for when marketing. Fish Sauce. —A good fish sauce is made of half a cup of vinegar, half a cup of water, the yelks of one or two eggs, a table-spoonful of butter, a third of a tea-spoonful of ground mustard, and half a tea-spoonful of cornstarch, a little sugar, pepper and salt. Stir the lumps from the mustard and corn starch when mixed with the vinegar, beat it gradually, and let it boil for about one minute. This may be used cold, on canned salmon or lobster; it will need a little more vinegar in that case to thin it. It may also be used in making a salad with lettuce. If pos sible, substitute fresh, white mustard leaves for the ground mustard. CLIPPI3GS FOR THE CURIOUS. Twice as many men as women die of pneumonia. A canvass of the American trades shows that American apprentices only predominate in machine shops and printing offices. Three factories in the United States consume nearly two million eggs a year in making a peculiar kind of paper used by photographers. Tomatoes, not many generation? ago, were known :is love apples and considered poisonous. Last fall there were 52,322,052 cans of tomatoes put up by the canning establishments of the United States. Alligators, writes Dr. Henshall tc the Forest and Stream, may be par tially tamed. When he talks to them they rise to their feet find keep up a constant hissing and whistling of tails, as if they liked to he talked to. Dr. Romanes mentions a similar fact in regard to them. Samuel Howard,of Mount Sterling, Ky., recently chopped down a big black locust tree, in the hollow of which grew another tree of a different kind which was ten inches in diame ter and twenty feet in bight. It had grown in perfect darkness, as there was no opening in the locust. In the Northern Pacific swhns a fish which explorers of the northwest coast call the ortolan of the sea. It is the fattest of all fish, and if a dried specimen is taken, till that lias*to be done is to light the head of the fish; holding it upright, and it blazes away like a sperm candle, giving light with out smoke or smell. The Indians call it the oolaehan. On some statues of the fifteenth century buttons appear enriched with pearls and precious stones, which cor roborates several entries in inventories of regal expenses about that date—as, for example, one in the royal accounts drawn up in 1349 of King Edward III: "For a gold case of twenty-live buttons, each button consisting of four pearls, with a diamond in the center, bought from Symon de Dampmart." A School ou the Pacific Slope. The school was in a rough boarded room which had been originally built for a store. The hats, bonnets, books and slates were piled on the shelves and the thirty children sat on high benches, their feet swinging clear of the floor. There was not a robust or hesdthy-faeed child in the room, and their thin, pale checks were a sad com mentary on the condition of their lives. Later in the day, as I walked from home to home, and saw everywhere slow, trickling streams of filthy water, blue, iridescent and foul-odored, I wondered not that the children were pale, but that they were alive. The history class were reciting a memorized list of "epochs" when 1 went in. They had them at their tongues' ends. I suggested to the teacher to a*k thein what the word epoch meant. Flank dismay spread over their faces. One girl alone made answer. .She was an Indian, or perhaps half-breed, fourteen years of age; the healthiest child and best scholar in the school, the teacher said. "The time between" was her prompt definition of the word epoch given with a twinkle in her eye of evi dent amusement that the rest did not know what it meant. The first class in reading then read from the Fourth Independent Reader, in stentorian voices, Trowbridge's poem of "The Wonderful Sack." The effect of slight changes of a single letter here and there was most ludicrously illustrated by one sturdy little chap's delivery of the lines: His limbs were strong, His beard was 1 ng.. With loud and enthusiastic emphasis he read them: His lambs were stroDg, His bread was long. Not a member of the class changed countenance or gave any signs of disa greeing with his interpretation of the text; and the teacher, being engaged in herculean efforts to keep the poor little primary bench still, failed to hear the lines.— Atlantic Monthly. Organs in History. In the Bible the organ is mentioned eighteen different times. It is, how ever, obvious that this instrument was very small, and capable of being car ried about. Organs are also mention ed by Pindar five hundred years before the Christian era. The first mention we have of an organ, which must have been a large instrument, is one that is said to have been given to Charle magne, and is reported to have made ''a noise like thunder." The earliest organ mentioned as having existed in England was at Westminster abbey, where there was one in the tenth cen tury. The first organ erected in Paris was at the church of St. Severin, in the year 1358, though they had been introduced into France as early as the third century. In the year 1463 tne cathedral church of Toulouse had five organs, all on the rood-screen, which shows that even up to that period the instruments were generally small. The earliest organs now existing date only from the end of the fifteenth or commencement of the sixteenth cen tury. Several in French and German cathedrals are of this date. LATEST NEWS. London, <ur.e, u.—After the fete at Fe. tioffeky Park, at Moscow yesterday the ETU -Icror invited the ciders and marshals of the provincial nobility to a dinner and addressed tlinn, thanking them for iheir loyalty. Ifc said it must be understood that the rights of property are unassailable. The revolutionists now completely sor roond Guayaquil, and communication can only be held through tho lower part of the liver. The first shots were exchanged on tho night of the 22d. and it is believed the city will Lo token within a week Tho Paris Voltaire says that the French commander in Madagascar has been in structed to withdraw his forces from that country only after Queen Ranvato has rec ognized the French protectorate specified by the treatise of 2840 and 1841. The promoters of the Parnell fund hope to lftise tho amount to i'iJO.OOO, of which sum the United States is to furnish one half. Mr. MoCoan hnr, withdrawn fr"ui the Par nell party, owing to Mr. FarneH's action in the recent McCoan O'Kelly affair. Alberto Mario, tho trusted friend of Garibaldi, died ct Lendinari yesterday. A heavy rau fell at Council Bluffs, low a, on Friday evening, Hooding all that part of the city l}ing between tho bluffs and Broadway h'even iron bridges and two stone culverts were swept away. Indian creek, which runs through the city, swelled to the proportions of a river in a few minutes, and many houses were invaded by the water so suddenly that tho inmates barely escaped drowning. As fa r as known, no lives were lost. The damage to property is estimated at f TOO,OOO. The vails of tho new opera house, now in course of erection were undermined, rmd must Le hken down. A man named Covalt was car ried clown tho creek, but lodged in the branches of a tree and was rescued. Over 100 pledged pension cirtificatos were voluntarily returned to the Philadelphia pension agent by pawnbrokers and saloon keepers, making over 700 returned. It is the intention of Gen. Sickel, tho pension agent, to crimina'ly prosecute a'l persons who persist iu holding tho papers as collat eral. An abstract of the special report of Mr. Rureliant, director of the mint, upon tho production of the precious metals in the United States, shows that the yield of the mines of the United States for 1882 was ST2,- ">OO, CO.' in gold and $48,800,000)0 silver. GENERAL NEWB. LONDON, June 1.-An account of the slaugh ter of Captain Riviere and his men in Hnroi is published in Paris. A c nimittee of Irish women has appealed to Mr. Gladstone for a co'i'mutation of the sentences of Caffrey and Kelly, two of the condemned Phoenix Park murderers. It is reported that the German ministry has decided to take the regulation of church matters into its own hands. The Vat can has abandoned the hope of establishing diplomatic relations with Eng land. Chinese vessels buil 4 at Kiel will sail with a supply of torpedos fo• China next week. LONDON, May 31—The grand jury in Lon don has found true bills against Dr. Galla gher and the other alleged dynamite.conspir treason-felony. It is said Mr. Gladstone rejected the Duke of Albany's proposition to be Governor-Gen" eral of Canada on account of his youth. Fighting has been renewed with disas trous results between the forces of the Auieer of Afghanistan and the Shinwarris. Vice President Blanchard, of the Erie Railway, has given his opinion in favor of the English Channel tunnel. It is reported that the King of Annam will be held responsible by the French for the re cent hostilities near Haoni. The manifesto by the Czar is sniil to have created an unfavorable impression in St. Peteieburg. 1 he directors of the Maryland Centralßail road Company held a meting at North-Ave nue Station yesterday and farther consid ered the possibility of floating the proposed second mortgage loan and the eitention of the road to its term nal j>oint at Delta. The track is expected to reach Belair June 10, and by the 16th the road will te in running order to that point. Capt. Geo. N. Mittnacht, &{>ensioc, lawyer, has been indicted by the United States grand jury in New York for alleged attempt to de. fraud the pension fund by getting a woman to personate the widow of a deceased office*" of the late war. The public debt statement issued yester day shows the decrease of the public debt during the month of May to be $4,890 476.G0. During the month of May 127,000 acres of Mississippi land was entered, costing about $150,< 00, and there is still a great demand. Advices from San Carlos etate that Luco's wife, son, son-in-law, daughter and pran l chiidaen, with fourteen women and six buc* s, have surrendered to the military au thorities n< ar San Carlo-*. The Indians are direct from Mexico, and report that all the hostiles are ready and anxions to surrender, so that a speedy ending of the Indian war in Mexico and the return of Gen. Crook to Arizona is anticipated. J. W. Mobley, agent of the Texas Express Company, and John Reeves, a passenger on a Texaß-Pacific train, got into a dispute at Baird's Station, and Reeves shot A bystander named Davenport was wounded by one of the shots fired. The body of Mm. Lenders, a rich Phiadel delphian, who di-appeared a few duys ago, has been found in Gulph creek 6ix miles from Hot Springs, Ark. On liis person were $3 in and SBOO worth of diamonds. Gen. G. P. Buell, United States army, died yesterday at bis residence, noar Nashville, Tenn., from the effects of an operation per formed on his jaw some three weeks, ago, complicated with heart disease. A preacher named Byard has been tarred and feathered by a mob at Franklin, Ne braska, for beating his daughter, who had informed her mother of hiß relations with other women. Bartholomew Nealon, in a fit of dranken passion, cut his wife's throat at their h me, in Boston and then went to his father's house and cut his own throat. The steamer City of Tokio, which arrived at San Fi ancisco recently, brought 9C6 cases of opium, the duty on which amounted to nearly $208,000. The board of overseers of Harvard Col lege, by a vote of 11 io 15, refused to confer the degree of doctor of laws on Governor Butler. Geisen'a brewery at Canton, Ohio, has been burned. Loss SOO.OOO. Ed. Buckley, wool dealer, San Antonio, made an assignment. Liabilities, $200,000; assets, $150,000. The alleged cause is shrink age in the price of wool. btrawberries are now so plentiful in Charecton, 8. C., that farmers are giving them away to anybody who will take the trouble to pick them. Judge Mitler, of Montgomery, has refused liquor licenses to all applicants, and no li quor will be sold in that country this year. During the performance at the Academy of Music, at Pittsburg, an unknown man who under the influence of liquor was mes. merizcd by Kennedy Bros., and at the con elusion of their act they were unable to res tore him to consciousness. Several physi cian* were called in, but up to midnight all efforts to revive him were unsuccessful. The net earnings for the past year of the Clifton cotton factory at Clifton, S. C., in which eeveral Baltimore firms are stock holders, were 16 ier cent During the year dividends aggregating 8 per cent, were paid, nnd the balance put aside for improvement purpose?, including the building of com fortable homes for the employe®. John M. Wort, foreman of'he Fort Wayne (lndina) Gas Company, entered a small bri'k structure containing the main gas mtter yesterday, with a lighted match. The explosion blew the building to nttoms, nnd shook houses half a mile distant. Wort re ceived fatal injunee. Thoiron manufacturers of Pittsburg ehsrg that the action of he Amalgamation Asso i ciation in demanding 'he restoration of the | scale of 1381 in the Cincinnati district is a j breach of fuith, and will solidify the rnanu ! facturers' ranks. They ulso declare that ii. 1 tho strike they will assume the offensive, in dead of the defensive, as heretofore, and licit tho resu t will certainly be a large in ciease in the number of non-union mills, if not the complete anni.Ration of the Amal gamated Association. The new water-works at Knoxville, Tenn , have just been completed, at a cost of $150,- 0 0. Water was turned into the mains when the bottom dropped out of one of the reser voirs, nmK 00,00) gallons of water disappeared | in live minutes. Tho reservoir was built on i top of a cave, whose exis ence was not sus -1 ected until it swallowed up the water. Pennsvlyartia Notes. Ex-Chief Justice George Rharsw-'od died at his risidence in Philadelphia, age 72 years. Peter Straus, a young woodman, near Meckville, Pa-, died a 'errible death Sun day, the result either of a snake's or a black spider's bi'e. His body was fearfully swo len and discolored. His teeth dropped out and his throat nnd mouth became gangreu ous. He was in perfect health before his misfortune. lie died iu spasms ns if be had | been bitten by a rabid animal, James McHenrv, one of England's great speculators, ha" lately been judged a bank rupt by the English courts. Mr. McHenrj once owned immense tracts of land in Centrc Cliuton and Clearfield counties, Pa. Mr. W. M. Bingerly, proprietor of the Philadelphia liecurd , has a dairy of six'y five cows on his farm in Montgomery county Pa., and sends 1,000 pounds of milk daily to a creamer}-. At Montgomery, Pa., the 6aw mill of Jolui Johnson, with ninety tons of bark, the 1 store and dwelling of J. F. Derr, the saddle shop of Edward Felsburg and the shoe shop ot J. E. l.loyd, were destroyed by tire. The losses hnve not been ascertained. Johnson has no insurance on his property. The other buildings wt-ro partially insured. The Pennsylvania prohibition hoine-pro tection convention, in Pittsburg, yesterday nominated Ira E. Howard, of Franklin, Venango couuty, for Governor. In the House of representatives Pennsyl vania Legislature the free oil-pi|>e bill wa defeated for want of a constitutional major ity. The Senate bill declaring that no iu surcacco policy elmll be forfeited while there are unlimited premiums to meet pnymenie, and making policies incoutestible after two years, passed fina ly. The si guirg of the scale of wages by the iron manufacturers at Pittsburg caused great rejoicing among all classes in that city. Most of the mills have shut down ti 1 Monday to allow employes to attend the annual picnic of the Amalgamated Association at Beaver, Pa. 31 rs. Susan E Douglas, aged 27 years re. siding at Huntsville, Cumberland county* during the absence of her husband, cut the throats of her three children—George, aged 5, William F-, aged % and H. A., aged 1 year—and then killed herself. All were found dead. Af'er a struggle of about thirteen years the friends of a free pipe bill won a victory in 'he Legislature. The bi 1 grants unlim ited powers. William 8. Harris, formerly a wealthy merchant and banker of Pittsburg, com mitted suicide in Louiville Friday. He had lost bis fortune in speculation. Washington Notes. Bowen, the ex-detective of the Department of Justice, whose unsiyory performances brought such discredit on those who em ployed him, nnd who was indicted for t --tempting to bribe a star-route juror, for feited his bail bond. The uuveiling of the monument to Johu j Howard Payne, nt Oak Hill Cemetery, on I June 9, will be aecompamei by appropriate i ceremonies Captain Hosea Ballou, aged 90 years, the oldest Free Mason in the United States, 1 died of eenie debility. THE MARKETS. DAlllMOliK. FLOUR -City Mills extra,. $4 2.1 @5 00 WHEAT--Southern FUUT: .. 1 12 <&1 23 CORN—Southern white 01 @ 04 Do yellow til @ 66 RYE—Good 68 @ 70 i)ATS—Maryland 51 @ 52 COTTON—Middling 10K@ 1< % Good ordinary 9 @ 9.!$ j HAY—Md. and Pa. Timot'y 17 00 (£ 18 00 ' STRAW—Wheat 8 00 @ 10 00 ; BUTTER—Western prime.. 22 (n> 23 j West Virginia 20 (a 21 CHEESE—New York State choice 12 @ 14 Western prime 12 @ 13 EGGS 17 18 CATTLE 6 75 @7 00 SWINE 9 @ 10* 4 ' SHEEP AND LAMBS 1 TOBACCO LEAF—lnferior. 1 50 @ 200 : Good common 3 00 @ 4 50 ' Middling 6 00 @ 8 00 j Good to tine red 8 50 @ 10 00 j Fancy 1000 @ 14 09 ; NEW YOB'S. COTTON—Middling upland 10 (<i 11 FLOUR—Southern coin, to fair extra 4 30 @5 20 WHEAT—No. 1 white 124 @125 RYE—State 74 @ 78 CORN—Southern Ye110w.... 68 @ 70 OATS—White State 45 fa) 46 BUTTER—State 15 @> 21 CHEESE—State 9 @> 12 EGGS 20 @ 28 rniLADELTHIA. FLOUR —Penna. fancy 4 75 @5 10 HEAT— Pa. and Southern > I 1 24 m 25 RYE—Pennsylvania 70 @ 72 CORN—Southern yellow ... f-i (3 05 OATS 49 @ 50 BUTTER—State 20 (3 25 EGGS-State 15 @ 17 lawn Burr's Pistols* Bom 6 weeks ago the writer ran across perhaps the most famous and fatal fire, arms on this superrb duelling pistols of Aaron Burt. They are a bone-breakihg brace of the first Caliber, and the property of Captain Brent Hopkins. One of these pistols fired the ball that killed Alexander Hamilton of Weehawken. It is iden tified by a long, deep notch indented on the handle. The pistols were made by Mortimer of London, England, and were imported by Burr at the close of the Revolutionary war. The barrel 8 are thirteen inches long and carry an ounce ball. They are flint locks, and the pans for the priming are lined with gold, and the touekholes are brushed with the same metal. They are hair triggers, and sboot with great force and accuracy. The locks are very superior and of exquisite mechanism* The pair came into the possession of Captain Brent Hopkins, the present owner, through his uncle, Captain Sara Goode Hopkins of the forty-second reg iment of United Stales dragoons, who purchased them from Burr in Washing, ton city in the winter of 1813 or 1814, paying SSOO in gold for them. Burr remarked at the time he would not let any one else have the pistols, as he had used them with Hamilton. The weapons have surely a blood stained history. They have been used with falal effect in eleven duels. Among the sanguinary combats, Pettis of Virginia, killed Biddle on Bloody Island, near St. Louis ; Edward Towns of Virginia, killed a Frenchman nea r New Orleans; Captain Sam Goode Hopkins, killed a Spanish count nea r Madrid, Mo.; Hugh Brent killedaman from Georgia on Diamond island near Henderson, Ky. They were used sev eral times in Virginia, twice in South Carolina, and more than once in Ken. tucky with deadly effect, Robert Trip. Lett of Owensboro shot the old lawyer, Phil Thompson, through and through with one of them, but, strange to say, Thompson recovered, and grew as fat as a bear. Henry Clay and Capt. Hop" kins were fast friends, and the former was to have used the pistols in one of his duels, but they arrived a day too 'ate. VOIC E OF THE PEOPLE. R. V. Pitrce, M. D., Buffalo, N. Y.; I had a serious diease of the lung®, and was for a time conlined to my bed and under the care of a physician. His prescriptions did not help me. I grew worse, coughing very severely. I commenced taking your "Golden Medical Discovery," and it cured me. Yours respectfully, JUDITH BURDETT, Hillsdale, Mich. A father remonstrated with his eon, an Arkansas collegian, for wasting his time in writing stories for local papers, and cited j Dr. Johnson as nying that a man who wrote I except for money a fool. The son wrote | back : "I shall follow Johnson's advice and ; write for money. Please send me $50." "MADE NEW AHAIN." Mrs. WM. RTCKMAN, St. Catherines, Ont., "R. V. Pierce, Buffalo, N. Y., I have used your 'Favorite Prescription,' "Golden Medi cal Discovery,' and 'Pleasant Purgative Pillets,' for the last three months and find myself—(what shall say)~'mad€ ntw again'' are the only words that express it. I was reduced to a skeleton, could not walk across the floor without fainting, could keep noth ing in the shape of food on my stomach. Myself and friends had given all hope, my immediate death seemed certain. I now live (to the surprise of everybody) and am able to do my own work." Some one has been swindling actor® in New York. The man who would swindle an actor is almost as mean as the man who i would take advantage of an editor. Pierce's "Pleasant Purgative Pillets" are preventives of constipation. Inclosed in glass bottles.jdways fresh. By all druggists. It is said that buttons with the photograph of a different admirer cast on each are worn by some belles- Ladies and all sufferers from neuralgia, hysteria and all kindred complaint®, will find without a rival Brown's Iron Bitter®. It is estimated that the pawnbroker® of New York collectively have fully $20,000,000 of pledges in their poesessicn. FABMTHOTON, 111.—Dr. M. T. Gamble says: "I p-escribe Brown'® Iron Biter® in my practice, and it gives satisfaction." In answer to the question. "What is fame 7" a Kentucky paper replies tnat it is a word of four letters, and that is about all it is. FOBT STEVENSON, Dak. Ter.~Rev. James McCnrty pays: "Br wn's Iron Bitter® cured me of severe dyspepsia." "Dear" means beloved, also expensive. How often the two meanings are combined in one woman! Sklnnv Men. Wells' Health Renewer restores health, vigor, cures Dyspepsia, Impotence, Sexual Debility. sl. The ancients were acquainted with the vir tues of Petro'eum. Herodotus refer® to it nndspeaKsof vel® being found in Zante. Nowadays everybody has heard of it through C'arboline, the great natural Hair Restorer. For Thick Heads. Heavy stomachs.billious conditions—Wells' May Apple Pills— an tibilious, cathartic. 10 2 *c (iMtriDe. The increasing demand for this prepara tion as a household remedy for indigestion and dyspepsia is sufficient proof of its efficacy. Don't Die in the House. 'Rough on Rats.' Clears out rats, mice, roaches, bedbugs, flies, ants, moles, chip, munks, gophers, 15c. Nothing is uglier than crooked boots', straighten them with Lyon's Heel Stiffenere* Why don't you use St. Patrick's Salve? Try it. Use it. _ 25c. at all druggists. Little troubles wear out the heart, even as the minute pebbles cut the sole of the shoe. The Conflict of the Race® Between disease and health is often brief and fatal. It is better to be provided with cheap and simple remedies for such common disorders as coughs, colds, eta, than to run tho risk of contracting a fatal disease through neglect Dr. Wm. Hall's Balsam is a sure and safe remedy for all diseases of the lungs and chest If taken in season it is certain to cure, aud may save you from that terrible disease, Con sumption. It has been known and used for many years in America, and it is no exaggeration to say that it is the best remedy in the world for Coughs, etc. Ask for Dr. Wm. Hall's Balsam for the Lungs, aud take no other.i |Sold by alLDruggists. A young man in Boston cnlles h s sweet heart "Rare Opportunity because she is wor thy of being embraced. CONSUMPTION My newly discovered Treatment never fails to effect * speedy and permanent cure■ Give full particulars of case- Address Prof. lU. L NOBLE, Santa Clara, Santa Clara Co., California. j£T NO PAY UNTIL CURED, CUT THIS OUT SHS by mail, a Golden Boa of Good,, that will bring you In mora inonev in One Month than anything else in America. Abso lute Certainty. M. Young, 118 Greenwich 8t„ New York. tfiA a week in yonrowntown, Terms and $5 outfit Iree wU*r Address H. Hallrtt A Co., Portland, Mains. Our Rep*rt*''i Vaffnglon Nm. DTTVKO hi rambles this uuon, oar Mr. M. ha taken upon himself the task of satisfying oar num erous readers that whatever goods are manufactured in our goodly city of Roger Willi ami, are of JU high a grade and as flao in quality as can be produced in any spot on the globe. Especially ia thia ao when the skilled Pharmaoist of many years' experience resolves to extract from the finest botanical speci mens of the vegetable World the most potont cure for tome special disease. In proof of hk assertion that Providence. R. 1. affords tho best, he relates an interview with an acquaintance, given him while so journing temporarily at her residence. She ears: "About a year I suffered severely with Rheumatism In my limbs, and N-uralgia la the hoad. which I en dured two or throe months with as much patience as ixwsible, being under the treatment of an excel lent doctor, and trying many kinds of medicine without any ra irked effect. At last a medical Iriend advised me to try Hunt's Rem dy, because he at tributed my severe suffering to the bad condition o/ uir kidneys, which were not performing their proper function*, and I commenced taking it, and in a few days the neuralgia had departed, my headache bad entirely disappeared, the swelling In my limbs and loints bad gone, and 1 have not had a touch of it | since. More recently I was troubled with Impurity of the blood, which showed itself In severe eruptions | on my face. I again resorted to Hunt's Remedy .and j after taking It a short time was completely cured of ! that complaint. Hunt's Remedy has proved very beneficial to me In attacks of sick headache, which It a!wa>s alleviate*, and I notice the Improvement as soon as I take tho Remedy. This R-medy has strengthening elements, for It baa made me feel much stronger, and has been very beneficial to my general health. I most heartily recommend it to all sufferers like myself. Mns. L. G. TANNEO, NO. LDD j Pearl Street.'* limit I'ralnt. AJ.HM G. MANN, of Cottage Home, HI., says: "1 have been prostrated for three or more years with kidney disease ; at ttin< s I was not able to put on nay boots; my wife has often pulled them on for me. I was not so b id as that all the time, but I never : what it *■•> to be without pain in mv back uuth I ! commenced using Hunt's Remedy. Siuce I began to tnke Hunt s Remedy J have boon free Irom all paiu and take pleasure in eaitng that it is the best medi cine that 1 vrr knew for Kidney and Liver dirMses." Advertising Cheats!!! "It has become so common to write the beginning of an urticle in an elegant, inter esting' manner, "'lnen run it into 6ome advertisement, that we avoid all buch, "And simply call attention to the merits of Hop Bitters in as plain, honett terms as J possible, "To induce people "To give them one trial, which BO proves their value that they will never nee anything else." " THE REMEDY F O favorably noticed in all I the paiiets, " Religtot sard secular, is "Having a large sale, and is supplanting all other medicines. "There is no denying the virtues of the Hop plant, and the proprietors of Hop Bit j ters hove shown great ehiewdness "And ability " In compoundir g a medic ne whose virtues are so palpable to every one's o iservation." _____ Did She Die? " No!" "She lingered and tuffercd along, pining away all the time f jr years," "The doctors doing her no good;" i "And at last was cut el by this Hop Bitters the papers say so much about-" "Indeed! Indeed!" "How thankful we should be for that medicine." 1 A Daughter's Misery. " Eleven years our daughter suffered on a bed of misery. "From a complication of kidney, liver, rheumatic trouble ur.d r.orvous debility, "Fnder the care of the best physicians, " Who gave her diteme various names, " But no relief, "And now she is restored to us in good health by as simple a remedy as Hop B.tters, that we had shunned for years before using it."— THE FABENTS. Father is Getting Well. My daughters say: " How much better father is since he used Hop Bitters." " He is getting u ell after his long suffering from a disease declared inc irable." "And we are so glad that he used your Bitters."—A LAPT of Vtic a, N. Y. There has never P I I ■ an instance in If If " ■ ■ VRV which thlß sterling nw CIIEHATII invigorent and aati ' febrile medicine haa -- _ _ ~*mßr laria. Hundreds of affections Hortet- DISI BiTVFBB •" I I ■ pi Druggists and Dei! ■ ■ I mm ■ ere generally. FRAZER AXLE GREASE. Best In the world* liet the genuine* Every pnrkngc baa onr trade-mark and Is marked Eraser's. SOLD EVERY WHERE. Iron Lrrers. Stael B-arlnga. B--aa TARE BEAM. JOVES, BE PAYS TUB FsTlla". I I A Sold-n trial. Warrmata 6 yaara. AllUaeaaaiow. IB B i Far frtm book, addraaa JONES OF BIKBHABTOH, *vctti*Toy. s. T. OPIUM HABIT Cured Painlessly. Tbs Medicine <"H for# small margin at* ▼ , t he cost ol compounding. A I cae-s treated by specs! proserin tmn. horiull partleulara addms the ili-coverer, PH. S. B. COLLIN?, La Port", Ind. [JI Best Cough By run. Tastes good. (flg HQ Use in time. Sold by druggists. "THE BEBT IS CHEAPEST."" IKGIXES, THRF^HFFIQ SAFF BILLS . HorsePowm I 11IILU11 Lit O (loverßoilers (Suited to nil sections i Write for I'nee Illus. Pamphlet and Prices to Tho A'lltmsn <V Taylor Co.. MnnafieUt. rihin Kj's nE.tRn ntiiß eta..iawporsftvrr. I. n . . <> S M Ai.i-.t aUlitir.lll. An Open Secret* Tho fact is well understood that the MEXICAN MUS TANG LINIMENT is by far the best external known for man or beast. The reason why becomes an "open secret" when we explain that . "Mustang" penetrates skin, flesh and musclo to the ?ery bone, removing all disease and soreness. No other lini ment does this, hence none other is so largely used or does such worlds of good* A NOTED BUT UNTITLED WOMitt I [From thmflrntoa (fotaj Messrs. Editor• r The above is a good Mksncss of Mrs. Lydi* £. Fink ham. of Lynn, Mass., who above all other human betngt may he truthfully called tho ' Dear Fricfid of Woman," as some of her correspondents love to call her. fhA ia zealously devoted to her work, which is the outeomS of a life-study, and is obliged ia koep six lady assistants, to help her answer the largo correspondence which daily pours in upon her, each bearing its special burden of tufferlrg, or Joy at release from it. Her Vegetable Compound is a medicine for good and not evU purpose#. I have personally investigated It and am satisfied of ths truth of thia On aerocnt of it.- proven merits, it is re-ommend#d -nd prescribed by the best physicians in the country. One gays; "It works like a charm and saves much pain. It will ear# entirely the worst form of failing cf tho uterus, Leuerrrheea, irregular and painful M'ns'ruitlon.&ll Ovarian Troubles, Inflammation and Uleerati >n. Flooding*, all Disp'aeenrnti and the con r(jurat fpiaal weakness, and is especially adapted to the Change of Life." It p-nneates every portion of the system, and givas new hfe and vigor. It removes faintness, flatulency, destroys all craving for stimulant.*, and relieves weak ness of the stomach, it cures Bloating, Headaches, Nervous Prostration, General Debility, Sleeplessness, D'pcession and Indigestion. That feeling of bearing down,causing paln ; weight and bacleach;, ia always permanently cured by Its use. It will at ail times, and muter ail circumstance*, act in harmony with the law ■ that governs the female tyEtem. It co* to only fl. per Lo'-tle cr tlx fcr {5., and is sold by \ druggists. Any advice required as to special casca, and the names of many who have btpn restored to perfect health by the use cf the VcgctaLlo Compound, can be obtained by addressing Mrs. P., with stomp lor reply, at her homo in Lynn, 11x3. For EJdney Complaint of either sex this compound is unsurpassed as abundant testimonials show. " Mrs. Fink ham'a Liver Fills," lays cnc writer, "are ffle best in tho vor'.d for tho euro of Constipation, • Billousncre and Torpidity cf tho liver. Her Elood j Purifier works wonders in its special line and bids fair to equal the Compound in ite popularity. Ail must rerpect her as an Angel of Mercy whose sole ambition is to dogood to others Philadelphia. Pa. (?) Mrs A M. Ik B N U 22 UNIVERSAL TESTIMONY —IN FAVOB OF— "KIDNEY-WORT." THE GREAT SPECIFIC FOR KIDNEY DIB EASE. LIVER TROUBLES. MALARIA. CONSTIPATION. PILES, LADLES' WEAKNESSES, AND RHEUMATISM. TERKIBLB KIDNEY DISEASE. Mre. Hodges taye I cannot too highly prais# Ki iney Wort," says Mr. hem Hodges, Will.amstown, W. Va ! "Itcurtd my terrible kidney d scaae. My wife had te , turn me over in the bed, before using it." £EYEKB KIDNEY DISEASE. "I Was enitrtly eurti," recently said 3!r. N. Burdfek, of the Chicopee Box Co., Springfield, Mass., "of I severe kidney disease by using Kidney-Wert." C OI I.D NOT WORK BEFORE. i "I've had no pains since I wae cured by Kidney- Wort," aid Mr. Jas. C. Hurd. ol the Chicopee Box ! Co.. Springfield, Mars. "1 couldn't work before using It, so great were my kidney diff culties." KIDNEY AND MYER TROUBLES. " Several doctors failed," writes N. Steepy, Alleghany City. Pa., "but Kidney-Wast eared my kidney and liver troubles of two years' st. a ling." KIDNEY COMPLAINT AND DIABETES. "For six y-ars," says Enxinner W. ]{. Thompson, ®' C. M. A St. Pa li R. R. f "I had kidney compilings and diabetes. Kidney-Wort has ea'irely cured me." IT HAM DONE BONDERS. "I cen recommend Kidney-Wort to all the world, " writes J. K. Bingamon. Crest 1 n*, O. "It hat done ttonden for roe and many others troubled with kidney and liier disorders." C< n itlprt'or, P,1.-s and Rhmmntiem, "I hare found in iry practice thit CV-n-tipstioa and Piles in all fcrm*. as well as Rheumatic affections, yield readily to Kidney Wort."—Phil p C. B&Rou, M. D.. Monk ton, Vt. PI I.EM MIXTETN YEARM. •' Kidney-W r,rt is a medicine of pri eiet s value. I had Piles for sixteen consecutive yeais. It cured me."— Nelson Fairehiids, St. Albans, Vt. fiRAVI'I., PERMANENT RELIEF. "I have used Kidcey-W'ortforgraTei," recently wrct? Jas. F. ReoJ, of North Actjn, Me., "and it gat* ru permanent reliej'." TWENTY YEARM' KIDNEY DISEASE. "I had kidney disease fur twenty years," writes C. P. Brown, of N. Y. "I could scarcely walk, and cor Id no wo/I devoutly thank God that Kidney. Wort Las entirely *vred me." A tin EAT BLESSINf* for RIIEU3IATIS3I. "It is, thanks to kind PrjviJence, a great temporal Vesting," truly rem-trks Wxu. Ellis, of Evans, Colorado: The gentleman referred to Kuine,-Wort, and its magical curative properties, in cite* of rheumatism and kidney trouble. RHEUMATISM ON THE BENCH. A priceless jewel. J. G. Jewell, a Judge at Wood bury, Vt., says; "Kidney-Wort cured my rheumatizm. Nothing else would do it." PILES. From Nantucket, Mass., Mr. Wm. H. Chadwick writes: *' Kidney-Wort uorlte promptly and ejlciently ts caaeaof Piles as well as kidney troubles. It's a most excellent medicine." m DIAMOND DYES. y 0 Best Dyes Ever Made. rj-FOR SILK. WOOL, OK COTTON. DRESSES, COATS, SCARFS, HOODS, YARN, STOCKINCS, CARPET RAGS, RIBBONS, FEATKER3, or any fabric or fancy article easily and perfectly colored to any Shado. Black, Brown, Preen. Blue, Scarlet, Cardinal Red, Navy Blue, Seal Brown, Olive Green, Terr* Cottn and £0 ether best oolors. Warranted Fast and Durable. Each package will eolor one to four 1 be. of goods. If you have never used Dyes try these once. You will be delighted. Bold by druggists, or send us 10 cents and any color wanted sent poet-paid. 24 colored samples and a set of fancy cards sent for a 3c. stamp. WELLS, RICI3AILDSON A CO., Jlurllngten/Yt. GOLD and SILVER PAINT. Bronze Paint. Artists' Black. For gilding Fancy Baskets, Frames, Lamps, Chandeliers, and for all vt*u* M of ornamental work* Equal to any of the high prioed kinds and onlj lOets. n package,at the draggists.or post-paid from " T *"'i>l?py(l> ACO.. Burlington,Vt Engines. Reliable, Durable and Economical, trill furnish • horse potter tcith % less fuel and ua'rr than any n'Ker Engine built not fitted with an Automatic Cut-off. Send for Illustrated Catalogue "J," for Information and Ibices. B. W. PATNK A SONS. BOX Coming, N.Y. Til r C|| EHj "EVERYBODY'S 11 C 011 II NEWSPAPER; THE BUN S first aim 16 to bo truthful and useful its second, to write an entertaining history ol the times in which we live. It prints on an average, many more than a million a week. Its circulation is now larger than ever before. Double it! Subscription: Dailt (4 pages), by mail, &sc. a month, or 50.50 a >ear; SUNDAY (8 inges). 81-20 per \car; WEEKLY (8 pages), 81 per' ear. I. W. ENGLAND, Publisher, New York City. ATI n■ ■ IBti -U.OKPHINE HABIT, 111111 ■ BUB NO pay till cured. Ten | IV ■IB Bffig years established, 1,000 U I 111 IVI ired L Btate case - Dr * ™ ■ ■ ■ Marsh, Quincy, Mich. Crt R P\ by watchmakers. By mail 25c. Circulars DU 9m. Ufree, .i 8. BIHCTACo.. 38 DeySt.. N.Y. OPIUM BT$> Z wl I VITI Da. J. BTjcraKMS, Jjtbanon, Ohio, PATENTS&pensiTNS 8 ;^ 0 ' ■ J. 8. DCFFIE, Atfj-at-Lav, Washington, D.O. A MAN HOUR for aJI who will make spare time proL Nk ;a good paying business if you can devote your Wfcwhoietime to it. MunitAY HILL, BOX 788,N.Y MY TREATISE for the cure of Indigestion and Dys pepsia sent by mail for 2uc. JOHN H McALVIN Lowell, Mass- Myears City IVeasurer and Tax Collector! YflllWfi y° u want to "become"TELE TUUIVU mt IX GRAPH OPERATORS aid hk guaranteed employment,address P. W. REAM. Ada.O. A GENTS W ANTED for the Best and Fastest-selri J\ ing Pictorial Books and Bible.*. Prices reduced *'' : percent. NATIONAL PUBLISHING CO., PniU Fa $72 s?.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers