AGRICULTURE. FEUDING FOE EGGS.— Hens are the most valuable stock on the farm. They lequlre little care, and yield large dl \idendg. The writer has kept three horses, one cow, a brood of turkeys, and about 125 hens during the present winter, and he thinks the bens have I aid the whole bill, without attempt hie t° obtain the best retail prices. The ©BB® were sold at wholesale—the buyer making a profit of ten cents ier dozen. Perhaps 1 may add a word which other writers omit. First, kill in the Fall nearly everything but ear ly 3pri n g pullets; these can be made to lay all Winter. The older the hen the fewer the eggs. Second, warm the food, for the first meal especially. Let ihere be a variety of food—buckwheat and wheat screenings are the best grains: corn and oats come next. The best animal food in my experience is a beef's head. They will consume every thing except the eyes. It costs twen ty five cents and will last a week. When they eaten the outside meat crack it open for the brains: next split in two and with an axe pound up a portion of the bone dally Next stop and listen —hear them sing, and see them run for the nest. A beef's head is more profitable than lard scraps, as the lat ter has been pressed until the substauce is nearly gone. Keep an iron pot near the kitchen, into which order all the toraps from diumgroom. This ifeual ly goes to the pig; hereafter let it go to the Brahma* toward evening. Buy your pork ll you think it is fit to eat. BEST VARIBUKS OF WHEAT.— At a recent meeting of millers in Cincin nati, the comparative value of the diff erent kinds of wheat for flouring pur poses was considered. It was found difficult to decide which should be de clared best, on account of the modify ing influences of climate and soil in a territory measured by 23 deg. of lati tude and 67 deg. of longitude, an area of three and a quarter millions of square miles. It was declared that the same varieties growing in different States differ materially in milling val ue; that the Fife of Northern Mime io ta and Dakota is far superior to the same kind grown in Lower Illinois and Wisconsin; that the Rappahaunock oi Virginia, Georgia and Tennessee, is much richer in gluten than the same grown north of the Ohio River. Still the comittee venture fto recom mend for milling purposes? the fol ow ing winter varieties: "Longberry Amber," Lancaster, Indiana Red, Alabama Orange, Velvet Chatf, R ip pahanuock and Jennings. The first two are prel ei red, being rich In gluten and valuable for shipping to warm cli mates. The third is also very glutin ous, as is the Alabama, a variety that yields poorly in the harvest. The Jen nings is whole and hard, making flour of good color and strength. The Orange makes a family flour of lair strength,wiih small proportionef offal. The Rappahannock is variable, not very rich, yielding a good family flonr but is easily damaged by moisture. The Velvet Chaff is early, has a stifl straw, well adapted to rich soils,yields fairly In milling a product of good strength. C'afcson and Fultz, both of which are varieties popular with grow ers on account of their large yield, are unpopular with millers, who declare them soit and weak, with little glu ten. POTATOES —A Kansas farmer says he raised some of the finest peach blow potatoes he ever saw in the following manner. In the latter part of May I drove my two horses and plough to the patch of ground I wished to plant and commenced p'oughing around it. My b y follow ed, dropping potatoes, one in a place, every fifteen inchee and in every other furrow. I turned a light furrow on them, and when done I cov ered the whole patch with straw to the depth of three inches. They needed no cultivation, and in Augu-t, when we were having our dry sptll, the potato vines in fields plat.ted in the ordinary way were drying up and dying, these potato tops of mine were growing vi gorously, completely covering the ground. I shall p'ant again in this way, but, in the event of a wet season, 1 think the potatoes will be watery. It will be a good plan to plant both ways. DURING the dead of winter any liv ing plant which looks green adds to the cheerfulness of a room, and a mass of beautiful verdure is obtained by the following expedient: Take about twenty or thirty ears of wheat and tie them together, leaving the straw about two inches long. them up for a few daj s, keeping them spriLkled with water; the top will soon become a pyramid of verdure, and will retain Its beauty for several weeks. Tris simple plan may be put in practice at any time in the winter months. A farm cart, which, with good us age, would last almost a liietime, will last only a few years when exposed to the weather. Not the least promising applications of the new luminous paint is found in the production of a safety lamp for coal miners. It is said to give light enough for practical use, and, as it contains no lire, or heat, it is evident thai its use is absolutely free from risk. By means of this form of lamp, in con nection with blasting by compressed air, fire and the attendant danger of exploding gas might be ruled out, and the most dangerous mines be made quite safe. Herr Bergel , of Berlin, has bought out a curious device by means of which pictures of various kinds are burnt out on a piece of ordinary-look ing rose-colored paper. A glowing match is applied at two finely-perfora ted points, and the sparks communi cated then begin gradually to move over the paper, tracing out the picture. Neither leaves its proper path or in jures the paper beyond, and when the end of the path is reached the spark goes out. An easy method for showing whether butter is adulterated with .beef fat has been submitted by Hager. He satu rates a cotton wick with a suspected sample, which is first melted. He then lights the wick and permits it to burn for about two minutes. At the end of that time, when the wick is extinguish ed, an odor like that given off by a tallow candle, when its llame is blown out, is readily perceived if the butter is artificial. The experiment irrigating lands In the neighborhood of Paris with water from the sewers is said to be working successfully. Sterile tracts of land have been converted into fertile plains while no increase of sickness among the inhabitants has tollowed, as was apprehended. A great telesoope lens, nearly twenty nine inches in diameter, is being fin ished for the Paris Observatory. DOMESTIC. CURE FOR DlPHTHEßlA.— Diphtheria is becoming a dreadful scourge aud the writer of what Is here said, saw the working of this cure in the hnnds of an English physician at a time when the disease was prevalent in an Eng lish town. Speaking of the physician's application, the writer says: "All he took with him was powder of sulphur and a quill, and with these he cured every case without exception. He put a spoonful of flour of brimstone into u wineglass of water, and stirred it with his finger instead of a spoon, as the sulphur does not readily amalgamate with water. When the sulphur was well mixed tie gave it as a gargle, aud ia ten minutes the patient was out of danger. Brimstone kills every form ot Inngus in man, beast or plant in a lew minutes. Instead of spitting out the gargle he recomnieuds the swal lowing of it. lu extreme cases in which he had been called just in the nick of time, when the lungus was too nearly closed to allow the gargle, he blew the sulphur through a quill Into the throat, and alter ehe fungus had shrunk to allow of it, applied the gar gle. He never lost a patient Irom ulpLtherria. If a patient cannot gar gle, take a live coal, put it into a shovel and sprinkle a spoonful of flour of brimstone at a tltne upon it, let the sufferer iiihale it, hoi hug tue head over it, aud the fungus will die. If t lentilully used, the whole room, may be filled aimost to suffocation, the pa tient can walk about in it, inhaling the luiues with the doors and window s shut. The piau of luuiigaiiug a room with sulphur has often cured most violent attacks oi cola in the head aud chest." ONE secret of maktrg short crust light is to roll it only once, and to handle it as little as possible. Super ior pastry will be impioved by the ad dition oi the yolk oi an eggaiid two or three drcps oi lemon jaice. It Is gen erally understood that, for the best crust, equal quantities ot butter and flour should be taken; but very excel lent paß:ry i.ideed may be made with half the weight ot butter to that of fl )ur, and good plain pastry may he made with six ounces of butter or olar itied dripping und a teaspoouful of baking powder to one pound of fl >ur. For meat pies it is really undcsiriable that a large portion of butter should be used. MOCK GINGER PRESERVE.— Cut Into strips }lie thiex rind ola watermelon, tiim oft'the green and cut cut the in side until ilie rinci is firm; cover with water, into which throw enough soda to make lhe water taste of it ; Ift stand from twelve to twenty-lour hours; lake out, boil in clear water until a straw will go easily through; drain; put into syrup made of good brown sugar,very strongly flavored with pounded gin ger; let boll slowly until the syrup penetrates the rind. This is almost as goad as ginger preserve. STKWED BEETS.— Wash two or three large beets without breaking the skin or removing topstaiks or roots; boil them an hour in boiling water aud salt; then peel and slice them and stew them an hour in the following sauce: Mix together in a saucepan over the fire one tables poonful each of butter, flour and vinegar; gradual ly stir in a pint of boiling water; sea son the sauce with a saitspoonful of 3alt and a quarter of a saitspoonful of pepper. SCOTCH COOKIES.— Beat two cups of sugar with one cup of butter and five tablespoonfuls of milk in which has been dissolved one teaspoonful of soda. Beat two eggs quite white and add them. Mix two teaspoonfuls tartar with half & pound of flour and a teaspoonful of powdered cinnamon. Mix the whole together, adJing more flour from time to time to make a dough. Roll thin and bake quickly. To wash a fine cambric handker chief, embroidered in colored silks, so that the colors do not run, the secret is to wash in a soap lather very quick ly, wring thoroughly and then iron, so that it dries at once. There should be no soaking, and thet embroidered corner should be kept out of the water as much as possible. A little alum in the water will make the process more sure. ALWAYS have in the house a bottle of alcohol for use in case the gas pipes become frozen. A portion of the alco hol poured in the top-cock opening in the main supply pipe will enable you to have gas light, whereas you may be obliged to speud'an entire evening, as Mosses did wnen the light went out in the dark. LEMON PIE —For a good sized pli take one large lemon ; grate the rind and add the juice to one and o -e-quar tor cups of brown sugar. Beat the yolks of four eggs with a pinch of salt; add to the above, wh'ch requires only one crust. When baked, beat the whites of four eggs to a stiff froth with a little white sugar spread and dry In the oven. Frofessor Fleewing Jenkin has stated that the following are she main condi tions to be fulfilled in putting a house Into good sanitary order: 1. The liquid refuse from the house roust have a free passage to the town sewer. 2. The air from the town sewer must not have & free passage into the house drain. 3 No air or gR9 from the drainage chan nels of the house must enter the house. 4. No water or liquids must leak from those channels inco the ground under the house. 5. The drinking water must be stored in such a manner as to run no risk of contamination. 0. The air of the dwelling rooms must be sup plied without contamination. Profesasr Tyndall says that ''burning" of zinc is to be regarded as one of the most serious drawbacks to the general use of the electric light. Zinc, it is known, may be burnt in air—that is, oxidized; it may al->o be burnt or oxi dized in acidulated water, but it has to displace the oxygen from the kyrdro gen for this to occur, and four-fifths of the heat is used up in this process. Thus it is that when zinc is thus burnt only the remaining one-fifth is availa ble for ihe purpose intended. The rate of the burning makes no difference — one ounce of zinc, for example, always gives out the same amount oi luat. In 1669 Johannis warnmerdam wiote a treatise upon insects, in which he declared he could snow ail the parts of a butterfly in a caterpillar, and could make the change of ihe caterp l.er proceed slowly, so that he could pro duce a creature half butterfly aud half caterpiller. The experiment was per formed iu the presence of the duke of Tuscany. lIArriNKSS and prosperity arc so in dissolubly linked with good health, that all those suffering with Hoarse ness, Cough, Colds, etc., should try Dr. Bull's Cough Syrup and be cured. Price 25 cts. TUMOROUS. "GUII.TY or not guilty ?" asked the Galveston Recorder. "Of course I'm not guilty." "You went into this gentleman's room at the dead hour of night with a false key?" "That's just so, but 1 am not to be blamed for the false of the key, am I?" "No levity, sir. You found him fast asleep?" "So 1 did, und I didn't wake him up, either. My family doctor says It's dangerous to waken a sleeping man." "i suppose it is, particularly if he had a six-shooter handy. You took the sleeping man's pants aud stole noiselessly down stairs and gave them to a confederate." "That's all so, except 1 didn't steal down stairs." "You mean you stole up stairs." "No; 1 didn't steal at all." •'You are doing some tall lying uow." "And I didn't turn the pants over to a confederate, either. He was a Union man all during the war." "You admit you took the pants?" "Certainly, Judge; but if the truth has to be told, I'll give it to you. 1 went and got those pants merely to show to my friend, who wauled to take a pattern ot them to have a pair built Just like them. 1 was golug to take them back 1 was interrupted by the police. Do you suppose it 1 was a stealing man 1 wouldn't be In official position f" Tue case was taken under advise ment. t Spring field, (M ass.) Republican.] Edgar T. Page, E-q., Druggist, writes U9 from Chlcopee Falls, that Mr. Albert Guenther, under Wild's Hotel has used that remarkable remedy, St. Jacob's Oil, for a severe ease ol rheumatism and it relieved and cured him,as It by magic. Healso used It with great success among bis horses, in cases ot sprains, sores, etc., and it cures every time. THE other day a bright three-year old boy, "who has been around some," was taken to church to be baptized and christened. Although the little fel low's parents are church people, they mingle much with the world and are quite regularly at the theater, where the little three-year-old always ae o >mpanies them. Being takeii Into church there was some delay before the ceremony was proceeded with,aud the uuregenerate youth becoming un easy, crlecPout in a 'oud impatient tone, "Ma, why doesn't the curtain go up?" IT was a little evening gathering. She was a delicate daisy of about forty summers and as many bard winters. They were eating truit aud she re marked as she delicately pared the peach: "The skin ola peach always sets my teeth on edge." Her little nephew who i 9 sharp eared and sharp eyed, said, "Well, auntie why don't you uke your teeth out aud lay theui on the window sill, Tke you did this morning?" Her appetite for fruit vanished. The boy will sit sideways on the bench when he go as to school next Monday. "AH, dear," sighed Miss Fitzjo.v, as she yawned wearily. "There isn't anything to occupy one's mind now. I've made toilet cushions and tidies, and embroidered slippers and {tainted majolica jugs until I'm weary of life. 1 believe I'll go down into the kitchen and watch Jane make bread. 1 sup pose 1 ought to know how many pints of vea tit takes to make a loaf." And she penetrated the business part ot the house only to find out t.iat bread was "raided" from the baker's cart. [Lies Moines lowa State liegister. ] We uotice the following in an ex change: Mr. G. B. Haverer, Foreman X. T. & N. 11. S. B. Co.. suffered for eight days with terrible pain in the back, almost to distraction, until he herrd of and used St, Jacob's Oil, one bottle of which cured him completely. SMITH —"Say, Jones, let me ask you confidentially, why you as eminent physicians of seima I at last riS >rted to the use of your Vcgetlue (without and, to ray great surprise, my daughter has been restored to health. I write tii.s as a stra tle aot of Justice, and not as an advertising tedium. Respectfully, T. E CALMER. M. D. VEGETINE Worked Like a Charm-Cured Hall ltheuiu and Ery lpelu*. 76 COURT ST., ROME, N. Y., July 10, 187. MR. H. R. STEVENS : Dear Sir.—One year agi last fall my little boy bad a breaking out of Erysipelas and sat* hbeum, bis face being one unaltered sore, of the worst desurip.lon. Nollctug your advertise men In the papers, I purchased two oott lesor the Vegetine, and with the two bottles rny son was cured. 1 never saw anything like the Vegetine ;It worked like a charm, i have been cliy waftchin in at Rome for years. This testi monial Is gratu.tous. Yours, respectfully, HORATIO GRINDLEY. VEGETINE. Remarkable Cure or Scrofulous Face WESTMINSTER, Conn., June 19, 1819. MR. H. R. STEVENS : De ir Sir.—l can testify to the good effect o! your medicine. My little boy had a Scroiula sore break out on his head as large as a quarter of a dollar, and It went down his face from one ear to the other, under his neck, and was one solid mass of sores. Two bottles or your valu able Vegetine completely cured him. Very respectfully, MRS. G. R. THATCHER. VEGF.TIIVE, IS THE BEST SPRING MEDICINE. Vegetine is Bold by All DrnvflnO. ThoM anawerac an aavenuemeut wll eonfsr a flavor upon the Advertiser aad tb Publisher by stating that they aaw the adve tisemiat lu this iearual (nasalsx tb# pane To All Our Friend*. Having had numberless Inquiries for advertising cards from ladies in all parts ot the country who are interest ed in the prevailing fashion-of making "Card Collections," we are having ? Tinted for them a set ot seven beautl ul cards, each in six colors and on a goki background, in the very highest degree of art, illustrating Shakspeare's "Seven Ages of Man," We have spared no expense in these cards—they are simply little art gems. Our only aim has been to publish the finest cards yet shown. Applications tor them have come in so rapidly that nearly the whole edition is engaged before the receipt by us of the cards from the artist. We have therefore been obliged to adopt the.following plan for the dis tribution of the remainder: No more of the gilt Shakspeare cards, seven in the series, will be sent excepting upon the receipt of a statement from a grocer that the person applying for the cards has bought of him on that day at least seven bars ot Dobbins' Electric Soap, with price paid for same. All apply ing in this manner will receive the lull set ot seven cards gratis bv mall. This will iusure us that our frienus and pa trons gut their share of these beautltul designs, although it In no manner re pays us fo" the cost of the cards. Your grocer has the soap or will get It, a*.d the purchase by you of seven bars of It at one time wiy secure for you yrafw seven really beautiful cards. The soap Improves with age, and is an article of necessity iu your house every week. Therefore you are not asked to buy a useless article, but oue that you must have anyway, Please send us your application at once, and tell your lady friends making "Card Collections," to do the same. Urocers do not have the cards to deliver. Buy the soap ol thein, send us their bill, and to will mail you the cards free. Yours respectfully, 1. L. CJRAQIN & Co., lltf South 4th Street, Philadelphia, Pa. P. S.—Ladies not wishing to buy soap uan get the cards by reuruliig cost price, 25 cents. THKKK RKCIPKS TO CUKJC CORNS.—I. Bathe the corn with strong borax water: then shave It losely, but lie careful not to make it bleed. PJce over the corn a white felt corn plaster and wear it constantly until the corn has disappe red. Every night and morning wet the small caylty over the corn (and in the plaster) with a little borax water, or, if preferable, the pulp of a!e non. The corn planter can be procured at any druggist's. 2 Keep the feet clean by frequent ablu tions witli warm water, and wear easy sott boots or shoes. Without tLe latter prec mtion, corns will generally re turn even after thay appear to have beeu periectlv removed. 3. After soaking the feet In warm wa.er lor a few minutes, pare the corns us close as possible with a sharp knife, taking care not to make them bleed, l'lace upon the part afleeted, a small, circu lar pieve of leather or buckskin,spread with some emolient plaster, aid hav ing a hole iu tiie center correspond n* to the sisi of the corns. They may now be touched with nitric acid, by means ola small glass rod or wood toothpick, due care being takeu not u> allow tlie liquid to come iu coiitact with the neighboring part 4. It-peat, this process daily until the oflender be suliieieuily soltened to admit of re moval. Gut out Uouri. The close confinement of all factory work, gives the operatives pillhi faces, poor appetite, languid, miserable feel ings, poor blood, inactive liver, kid neys and urinary troubles, and all I lie physicians and medicine in tbe world cannot help them unless they get out of doors or use Hop Bitters, the purest and best remedy, especially lor such cases, having abnndance of health, sunshine and rosy checks in them. They cost but a trifle. See another column.— Christian Jlsenrd. THK moment you observe signs in your child of unwonted weakness, fatigue, or physical debility, particul arly if it is accompanied wltb a little fever. Make the cnild frequently open LB mouth, so tkat you c& i observe lie tnroat. it is in the throat that the lay observer will first diseovor any cer taiu signs of diphtheria. Never mind how red or how much infiamed the throat appears. That does not indi cate the disease. But the Instant you tee a white spot and detect a bad odor, run for a doctor. The white spot will appear, and eveutually ihey wtll run together in great blotciies it tin d seaie is not checked. The time to seek medical assistance is before these spots run together. THOUSANDS testily to the curative properties of Lydia E. l'lnk ham's Vegetable Compound In ail leuiaie complaints. The iiTe of a submarine telegraph cable is shown by experience to be from ten to twelve years. If a cable breaks in deep water after it is ten years of age, it cannot be lifted lor re pairs as it will break ot its own weight —a fatal difficulty, and for which there set UH to be no praeMcable remedy. There are many indications that iu the present condition of applied science the time is not far distant when all our telegraph lines will be unuer ground, where they will least impair tho beauty of our street* and be protected from adverse atmospheric influences. A GALVESTON school-teacher had a great deal of trouble making a boy understand hit lesson. Finally, how ever he succeeded, and drawing a long breath, remarked: "if It wasn't lor me you would be the bigge t donkey on Gjlveston Island." A BOYISH novice in smoking turned deadly pale and threw away his cigar. Said he, "Thar's something in tna'. air cigar that's made me s ck." 'T know what It is," saii his companion, pulling awav. ■•What ?" "foimcker." THE first thing to do in tue Spring is to clean house. For internal oieannng and re novating, no other medicine is equal to Kid ney-W orL —Palladium. Every square mile of the seaccntains from two and a half to three tons of limestone. v PFBULL'S COUGH SYRUP A CHRISTIAN: "What are you do ing there?" calmly asked a I elderly and pious looking skater of a young man who had fallen on the ice and was rubbing his thigh with consider able energy. "Doing 1" he exolalmed, pressing his J tws together to keep back a volley of profanity, "I'm trying to be a Christian." LAND of the free: "You boast that your country is the land of liberty," said a young English nobleman, who had married an American lady, to a Yankee traveler at a London chop house. "You call it the 'ome of free dom and ail that, but it's a beastly tact tdac 1 never lost my Independence till 1 got there." Aliuu.t young Airulu. My mother was afflicted a long time with Neuralgia and a dull, heavy In active condition of the whole system; headache, nervous prostration, and was almost helpless. No physicians or medicines did her any good. Three months ago she began to use Hop .bit ters, with such good effect that she seems and feels young again, although over 70 years old. We think there Is no other medicine tit to use in the family. —A lady in Providence, R. I.— Journal. A QOINCY boy sat beside his girl for just one hour the other night, and during that time kissed her ninety six times out of a pogilble hundred. The other four times she got In a hurry and kissed him. "A kiss," said young Charles, "is a noun, we allow; but tell me, my dear, is it pioper or common?" Lovely Mary blushed deeply and exolalmed: "Why, 1 avow, I think that a kiss is both proper and common." "VKOKTINK," says a Boston physi cian, "has no equal as a blood purifier. Hearing ol its many wonderful cures, after all otner remedies had failed, i visied the laboratory and convinced myself ot Its genuine merit. It is pre pared from barks, roots, and herbs, each of which Is highly effective, and they are compounded in Such a man lier as to produce astonishing results." A RUSSIAN claims to have found a new substitute for rubber. It is 6troi)gly suspected that while travel ing in tliis country recently he tack led a ham sand wioh at a railway res taurant. AN observer of Vesuvius notes an Increased activity In the crater at the time of eac.i full moon. THE marker Is flooded with worthless and vile compounds for the rejuvena tion of the hair, but Carholiue, the great petroleum hair . renewer and dressing, as now Improved and perfect ed, still takes the frout rauk as the best prepa.atlou ever offered to the public. I THE raw oyster is the lazy man's friend. An assistant opens the oyster and all the lazy man has to do is to open his mouth. "HE sleeps where he fell," says a late ballad, which suggests that he must have drink. FLASHES of lightning, which em brace the whole horizon, do not last one second. STATISTICS show that most insane people become so between the years of twenty and thirty. A YOUMO lady resembles ammunition because the powder Is needed before the ball. MBS. LYDIA L PINKRAM. OF LYNN, MISS, ■%£*//££— LYDIA E. PINKHAM'S VEaETABLE COMPOUND. Is a Poaltlva Cora for all Iktae Painful Complaint* and WwlinMlM •oooßtmoa to our bct female population. It will cure entirely the worst form of Female Com plaints, all orarian troubles, Inflammation and Ulcvra tlon, Falling and Displacements, and the consequent Cplnal Weakness, and Is particularly adapted to the Change of Lifo. It will dissolve and eipe! tumors from the uterus In an early stage of development. Tho tendency to can cerous humors there is checked very tpeedlly by Its use. It removes faintnem, flatulency, 'destroys all craving for stimulants, and relieves weakness of the stomach. It cures Bloating, Headaches, Nervous Prostration, Oeneral Debility, Sleeplessness, Depression and Indi gestion. That feeling o. bearing down, causing pain, weight sod backache, is always permanently cured by its use. It will at all times and under all circumstanoes act In harmony with the laws that govern the female system. For the cure of Kidney Complaints of either sux this Compound is unsurpassed. LYDIA E. PINKnAM* VEGETABLE COM POUND U prepared at 83 and 86 Western Avenue, Lynn, Mass. Prlco sl. Six bottles for *&. Sent by mail in the form of pills, also In the form of losengea, on receipt of price, |1 per box for either. Mrs. Plnkhaaa freely answers all letters of inquiry. Bend for pamph let. Address as above. Mention this Jhper. No family should be without LYDrA R. PtNEHAMf LIVER PI LI A They cure constipation, blUoosnssg and torpidity of tbollvw. 8 cents per box. 19- Sold by all Druggists. 1£ Acoluibin.it ion of Hops, Buohu, Man drakleaJ Dandel ion, wit* all the beat and most c%ura tive properties of ell other Bitten, makes\tbo greatest Blood Purifier, Liver Reg U lX ator, and life and Health Restoring Agent earth. No disease an possibly long exist where Hop Bitters are varied and perfect are their opcrati. •tc-.oaft, Thoy glvs newliVe aid rigor to the tgtd tad ioflm To all whose e%mpleyments cause irregular! ly ol the bowels urinary organs, or who re quire an Appetlzer^^.'lonic and mild Stimulant, Uop Bitters arc without IrrtOH* Icating. MBmL . No matter what yourfemellngs or symptoms are what the disease or ailw ueut '* ÜBO Ho P tera. Don't wait until you a% 1,0 sl f !£ bus If you only feel bad or miserable ,W U9e "tern at once- It may saveyourlife.lt hasB BaVO< l hundreds. 1500 will be paid for a cal * they wIH not cure or help. Do not let your frler_- suffer,but use and urge them^t 10 uso HOP B Remember, Hop Bitters is noX. v ** e ' drunken nostrum, but tho n a Medicine, ever mode } the "LNY "A®" D and IIOrE" and no person or should be without them. D.I.C. Is an absolute and trrestibio cure 1 forDrunkeness, use of opium, tobacco and IIMIB narcotics. AH sold bv dnigglsta Send ML jH for Circular. Hep Bitters Mfg. Co., M Rochester,N.k and Toronto, Ont. TEACHERS WANTED. to fleo per month. Steady work all Spring and Summer. For full particulars, Address J 0- McCURDY & CO, Philadelphia, Pa. "WHY IS it your loaves are so much smaller than they used to be'" asked a man of his baker. "1 don't know, unless It 1§ that 1 use less dough thin formerly," responded the baker. St Jacobs Oil ~m No PrtpMHiw ON earth equal* Sr. JACOB* Oil- u a lira, ma *i urn: tni CllKar Kitorul Rcaiedv. A irint entail* bat the cußiparKti*e>> trlUiuf outlay of 900ra ui iiwj on* tnfferiaf with pain can ha** olioaf and positive prerfdT fu oialau D lU i Tit) j,s Ik LLkVKA LAkOIAUE*. Mil IT ALL BBOS3ISTS ARB BIALKIS IH HIBICIRL A. VOC.EL.EIt A CO. Br'Hntoro, Md„ V. H. A, (DSffitUlft Biffeps Invalids who hare last but are recovering vital stamina, declare in grateful terms thejs appreciation of the merits M a tonic of Hostel* ter'a stomach Bitters. Not only does it impart sttvngth to the weak. It oorrects an irregular acid state of the stomach, makes the bowels act at proper intervals, gives ease to those who suffer irotn rheumatic and kidney troubles, and conquers as well as prevents fever and ague. For sale by all Druggists and Dealers generally. HH #% I I Pond's Exlral la tba only I ntnrrn •P*cl fl c for thla dlaaaae, Cold In I AI AI 111 tba Haad, Ac. Our Catarrli UUIUI I 111 Cara <74 conta), apecially pre parad to meet aerlou* caaoa, con- Ulna all tha curative p-opertiee or Poaid'a Ex- Irari) our Haul Nyrlnr* ( caou). Invaluable for uae in eatan hal affect lona, la ample and effectlva. Send for pamphlet to POND'S EXTRACT CO., 14 W. FOVETCX.NTH Street, N. T. The Richest Little Book Oat How to win the favor of LADIES, tba BRIDAL OH AMBER, and a few USEFUL HINTS. Mailed to any addreaa on receipt ef 3) eeota. Aildreaa IN WOOD PUB. CO., BYRN'S POCKET MICR'JSCDPJS ®6real Bafniiying Fewer. Detect* Ceuntarfelt Money, Shoddy In CI th. Forelcn Sub atancea in the Eye aod wonnda. examinee Inaecta, Flower a, Seed*, Grain, Flanta. Flewa in Mvtale, Illegible Writing, etc. Two double Convex Lena, l)a inches wide. Leather Mounted 36 cente in Stamps, Fre by mall. AGENTS WANTED. Addreaa M. L BTKN. 4 Naaaau Strwt, N. T. IK •SaT—aa-m A I AAA aim eapeoae* po afm, Ua / / / Outfit Free. Addraaa P. W AAA rrn*Y. trrata. Maine. AffX ELGIN WATCHEB 1 NSSSKfc A'HiSnWRg 60., Mtuhargh, Pa. ■ ■ If you are going wee M if of Chicago thla year liana 111 AMAN Eon can learn aotne- Save Money mm. ■ Bunding, Chicago. UNO M EE Learn Telegraphy I Eani Mb isawisais Wiaeonalu. Ah Jk. agents Wanted. Haßayali E* M ..rrLATroltM FAMILY KpEafcjljfl SCALE. Watghauptottlbn, RetaA price. 61.60. Tcrma jurprlM Afeota W ™ boaturiu bcAUK Oo_, Cincinnati. 0. iglL EIDITEY DISEASES, 8 are quickly and surely cured by the uae of KiDJNJHf-WOKT. new and wonderful remedy widen is having su all an Immense Bale In all porta of the country, workaon natural principles. It restores strencti and tone to the diseased or-mna, and through them cleanses the system of accumulated and poison. humors. Kidney diseases of"thirty y ears standing haye been cured, also Piles. Constipation, Bheumatism wIU w BssfeKS^Vi s". . " -"tyzzz, _ . ■■, xJI i 111.1 i - ~ |TPFIRSRSMFFLL^CUR?^M B KIDNEY DIBEASBB, ■ LIVER COMPLAINTS, M Q Constipation and Piles. I g|gg^%S£?s| I lag a mrnnUrmr and Kidney **** y| | IT HAS 11/ IIV <) fl ■ WONDERFUL fin POWER, immmm BaMMtt ft# BOWIUuI tit QDVXYf st ths mm tints. ISOSUM It oleantst tha nttsm Of I ■ the potoomous humotw that develop* H Q In Kidney and Urinary diastase*. *IH fid I tpusmsi. Jaundice. Constipation, 1 ■ Plloa* or in Rheumatism, Neuralgia ■ n onC norvoua disorders. M KHMfET.WO.BT Is elrr reeeteMoes*. I I poaad and eae fee sml by mall prepaid. I U Oa# package will maktelx gts of nedicfae. | H sjmTtoaSaY!, || YOO CAN BUV THE BLATCHLEY PUMP Unllnad,or with Copper. Porcelain,or Iron Lining*. Each one stenciled with my name 88 manufacturer Is warranted In material and con struct J on. For sola by the best bouses In the trade. If you do not know where to get this pump, write to me as below, and I will send name of agent nearest you, who will supply you at my lowest prices. CHAfI. 0. BLATCHLEY, Manufacturer, 808 Market St. Philadelphia. Pa. FOB SUNDAY SCHOOLS 1 THE BEACON LIGHT! ••The true L'gtr, which ltghteth every man that cometh Into the world." The Beaeon Li*tit is an unusually attrac tive and beautiful Sunday school Song Book, by J. H. TXNHBY and BEV. I. A. HOFFMAN, who have nod a very suxaaarui experience as song writers and composers. Their hook 13 one of the best ever mode. TUB BEACON LIGHT has many noble hymns, and the sweet* it of melo dies. Specimen copies mailed for SU seats, Liberal reduction tor quantities. Pontotoc Choirs and Societies will do well to udUldldoi end the musical season by perform ing either a Sacred cantata, as Back* ssth PSALM. (fl.) or Ch&dwick's splendid JOSEPH'S BONDAGE, (fl.) or bntterfleld's BELSHAZZAK. (fl.) or try the very easy ESTHER, (so cts.) or Boot's always popular HATMAERKS, (fl.) or Buck's classical Don Mono, (fi.6o). The Emerson SetM for Reefl Organ. (siho). By Emerson and Mathews, is among the very best, and has a good collection of in strumental and vocal music. Any book mailed, post-free, for retail price. OLIVER DITSON & CO., Boston. J. K. DITHOSf. * CO, UM Chuf ■! StreeL PhllaSelphla. ; § 145, |SS, SSS, 75, fIOO, #l2O : J ! Q and Upwards. Stool sod lostractl on : ! Book included. PIANOS, Site and 5 . & iK Upwards. AGENTS WANTED. Now j : Ss Catalogues now ready. ! CT T. L. WATER*, ldEajtldthStpeetjW^n^^ ENCYCLOPAEDIA TIOUETTES BUSINESS this is lbs cheapest? and OMT complete and relia ble war* on Rtiqaette and Business and Social Forms. It tells how to perform all the various da lles of life, and how to appear to die beet advantage on all occasions. AG hi NTs WANTED.—Send for circular* contain ing a foil description ef the work and extra terms to p£f£&phii dr K * A * IONAL PUBLISHING OG., TIMPinVMmT LOCAL OR Travolta* ■ PIVII LU I Ivf Lil I k t*t€ wklda ureierrM* ■f Also SALARY per month. AU EXPENSES ■ I advanced. WAUfiS promptly paid. SLOAN W to.s Ceorte SL Cincinnati. U. SQOO a year to Agents, and expense#. 8 S Outfit fUoo free. Addr's F. Swai* A Co., Augusta, Me. (o 8 Electricity & Absorption S 2 ®||l Combined 0. u\ 7T M SpeedDy restores the Vital .Farce* W / £ WLoet Manhood, and caring the ..W f TL worst cases of Seminal Weak | gi': FN Bees, Impotenoy, *. MATH •M |- M \ EWS' Improved Electro Magaeti* * * 1 § * Belt and Ahtorbent Pad Combined if' .• lg S (size of Pad. tx 10 inches, 4 times was i larger than other*), reaches at I 17 / 9 once the seat ef disease. Do not ft 1 purchase any old-style SBO Belts II I when yen can get the latest ion ; proved for ss.oo. fi El®Ctrte i i Light," a Urge 24-oolnmn news ft*), I paper sent free unsealed; sealed. f 431 Weat Lake St., Chicago, EL THE GREAT GERMAN REMEDY FOB RHEUMATISM, NEURALGIA, SCIATICA, LUMBAGO, BACKACHE, Q-OTTT, SORENESS or tu CHEST, SORE THROAT, QUINSY, SWELLINGS ASS SPRAINS, FROSTED FEET IKD EARS, STTXUUJS AM* ■O AZiD, General Bodilj Palm, TOOTH, EAR ASS " HEADACHE, Airs ILL OTHER PUS ASS ACHES.