AGRICULTURE. WHAT NBXT?—A California inventor has made a machine for pressing and drying potatoes so that they will keep for years, yet preserve their natural flavor, No chemicals are used in the oneratian of curing, everything being done by a simple machine capable of pressing six hundred bushels of pota toes In twenty four hours. The ma chine not only presses the potatoes, but lays them on a tray in a concave form with the hollow side down. After the pressure they are put into a drying ap paratus, where they remain for two hourß,then they arc ground into coarse meal resembling cracked rice. The first shipment of these preserved pota toes to Liverpool, last year, brought a large profit. The average price of po tatoes in San Francisco is about twen ty-five cents a bushel. Dried, they brought in England forty five shillings a hundred weight, or at the rate of a dollar and a half a bushel for green potatoes, This year preparation has been made for drying and shipping large quantities. It is said that there are three hundred thousand acres of ui cultivated land on the western slope of the Coast Range, near San Francis co, especially adapted to potato grow ing. The fogs and mists from the ocean supply sufficient moisture, and the soil yields bountifully. The only problem heretofore has been where to market the product. # THE moat widely spread and fata disease of swine is the hog cholera. Commissioner De Due claims that the aggregate loss to farmers of the Uni ted States from this source foots up from $50,000,000 to $80,000,000 per an num. Certain counties in the Western States, he says, lose from $50,000 to SBO,OOO from this disease alone Neg lect and allowing the animals to look after their subsistence on the ' root, hog or die" principle, are no doubt the leading causes of the devastation com mitted by cholera, though we cannot believe that the aggregate less amounts to anything li e fifteen to twenty mil lions of dollars. PRESERVATION* OK FRUIT BY BURIAL —Last January a California fruit dea ler took one hundred lemons fresh from the tree aDd buried them in the ground to see how they would keep. . Four months atter he dug them up and found them in perfect preservation, as sound and fresh and nice as the day they were buried. Every one knows how well potatoes keep when properly covered by earth. Apples would do cquslly well; and pes ibly the same method may answer for grapes and other more peiishable fruit. It would not cost much to try a'few expc riments in this din cticn, and success could not fail to be advantageous. ONlONS.— Onions require rich soil and clean culture. A newly reclaimed swamp is the best soil, and the longer it is kept in cnions the better they sue ie>d. The seed is sown in drills nine to twelve Inches apart, and thinned out to three or four inches in the rows. High manuring is required, and, with horoughly rotted stable manure, su perphosphate of lime is the best artifi cial help. . Excessive drinking of water by farm animals is said to increase the consump tion of fat in the body. Too watery fodder and too much drink are there fore to be avoided, especially in fatten ing, if we wish to attain the most ra pid and abundant formation of tiesh and fat. PROFESSOR Riley says that kerosene or oil of any kind is sure death to in sects in all stages, and the only sub stance with which we may hope to de stroy the eggs, Oils will not mix di rectly with water, but will mix with milk, fresh or sour, and then nay be diluted to any desired extent. THE excessive dry summer and aut umn of last year, oombined with the fact that now the ground has so iar teen well covered with snow, will no doubt add greatly to the fertility of the soil, and, other things being favor able, we may reasonably expect good crops. CCKHANT CUTTINGS. The fall is the best time to make and plant cuttings of currants and ether shrubs. The callus is formed at the end of the cut tings, and the roots start during the winter. The next best time is early in the spring as soon as the frost is out of the ground. HOGS require free access to water in the Summer t me. It they can have a place to bathe or wallow in, it i 3 bene ficial to them, as it cools and cleanses the skin. Mud is no filth :itis a good disinfectant and healthful. Sometimes mud baths have been found useful as medical treatment for sick people. .PASTURES that have been fed a few seasons will generally produce more, milk, or make more milk, or make more fat, than those which have been newly seeded dtwa. The Poison Habit. But under all circumstances make a firm stand against the poison habit. It is best to call things by their right names. The effect upon the animal economy of every stimulant is strictly that of a poicon, and every poisen may become a stimulant. There is no bane in the South American swamps,no virulent compound in the North American drug stores—chemistry knows no deadliest poison—whose gradual and persistent obtrusion on the human organism will not create an unnatura^ craving after a repetition of the lethal dose, a morbid ap petency in every way analogous to the hankering of the toper after his favorite tipple. Swallow a tablespoonful of lauda num or a few grains of arsenious acid every night. At first your physical conscience protests by every means in its power; nausea, gripes, spasms and nervous head ache warn you again and agam; the strug gles of the digestive organs against the fel 1 intruder convulse your whole system. But you continue the dose, and nature, true to her highest law to preserve life at any price, finally adapts herself to an abnormal con dition—adapts the poison at whatever cost of health, strength and happiness. Your body becomes an opium machine, an ar senic mill, a physiological engine moved by poison, and perlorining its functions only under the spur of the unnatural stimulus. But bye and-bye the jaded system fails to respond to the spur, your strength gives way, and alarmed at the symptoms of rapid delirium, you resolve to remedy the evil by removing the cause. You try to renounce stimulation, and rely once more on the unaided strength of the vis vitse. But that strength is almost exhausted. The oil that should have fed the flame of life has been wasted on a health-oansuming fire. Before you can regain strength and happiness your system must read apt itself to the normal condition, and the difficulty of that rearrangement will be proportioned to the degree of the present disarrange ment; the further you. have strayed from nature the longer it will take you to retrace your steps. DOMESTIC. SILK HANDKERCHIEFS AND THE DAN GERS ATTENDING THEIR USE. —It seems indispensable that a person In full dress nowadays should carry a silk pocket-handkerchief of a more or less brilliant hue. Old and young of both sexes a fleet this radiant appendage, the varied hues of which are so brilliant as to recall the altar paintings and stained glass windew of the pre-Rap haelite age. Brilliant colors, like the reds, the blues, the yellows, the pur ples and the pinks have been regar led by eminent critics like Ruskln, as in dicative of a pure state of morals in a community than where the sober half tints of grays and Quaker hues pre vailed. Innocence loves bright hues, while vice seeks the obscurity of twi light shades. If this theory be cor rect our pocket handkerchiefs are about the only redeeming feature of our color morality at present. It is sad to reflect that tbey have nothing but their fleeting dyes to recommend them. They are flimsy and iusubstautial in material and they won't wash. They are dyed by dangerous poisons, and every time they are applied to one's nose, or lips, or eyes.a portion of their malignant coloring matter is absorb ed. If any one will wash one of those gaudy pocket butterflies In tepid water, ('hey wont stand hot), it will be found that sutlicient color is leuioyed to pois on a cat or to destroy a large window plant If watered with the dye in solu tion. Many of the dyes are derived from compounds of chromium, which metal, by the way, receives its name from the Greek chroma, color, OD ac count of the beauty of the tints It pro duces in combination. Others are de rived from poisonous protosalts of iron, prussiate of potash and dyes equally poisonous. There is so much rivalry to produce rich, bright colors that the chemistry of the dyeing pro cesses is not carefully supervised, or well understood. Improper mordants are applied, aud fast colors are conse quently not produced. Some of the headaches too common nowadays are undoubtedly to be attributed to the use of those bright colored handker chief's,and when a physician is at a loss to explain the cause of a fetble, dis turbed and irritable state of the ner vous system, a little inquiry would probably disclose the Habitual use of those gay handkerchiefs as the source of the mischief. Mothers should lie especially careful that in fants are kept from sucking or chew ing the alluring baubles,for with some of the colors to be seen in the store windows, one such familiarity in the case of a baby would be fatal. RUSTIC WORK BASKETS. —The foot and frame are constructed of thorn or other knotted sticks, heavily gilded. The basket-shape portion has two lin ings. The outer one, which should be of dark rich satin, puffed, protrudes itself saucily through the manifold interstices. The inner ODS U arranged in a similar manner, except tnat it is titted to a fiat foundation, and should be of some v, arm. bright hue, gathered to a thick gold cord, making the ori- than it would be if it ter minated where the rustic work leaves off, besides serving as a rest for the exquisite cover which completes this realfy elegant affair. This cover con sists of a piece of cardboard of the pro per sze to lit inside the rustic frame, covered with satin of the dark shade upon which is painted a landscape or group of rustic ligures. The under side should have the bright color of the inner lining; while the picture should have a frame composed of double puffs of dark satin ; the outside or border puffs should stand up richly but the other ought to be rathei flat; a loop of gold cord at each side forms the handles. The French people use a pretty style of the basket for trim ming the knives, forks and silver trom the luncheon table. The shape re sembles a coal scuttle without a mouth or lip, and has a division across the center, so that the silver and cuttlery may be kept apart. The scroll hands rise on each side, ending with a loop, through which passes a curved bar bar with knobs to prevent its slipping out of bounds. CANADIAN JELLY CAKE.— Beat one teacupful of white sugar and four ounces of butter to a oreara; add the yolks of three eggs, well beaten and two tablespoonluis of milK. Stir into the above one pound of flour, with two teaspoonfuis ot cream tartar and one of soda mixed in it. Last of all add the whites of the eggs beaten to a strong froth. Flavor with lemon es sence, ana pour the batter into four shallow tins like plates, and bake fif teen minutes in a quick oven. When cold, two cakes are placed on the top of each other, with jelly or preserve between. The cakes should be an inch thick when baked, and served with powdered sugar. ORANGE PIE OR PUDDING.— One pound of butter, one pound of sugar teaten to a cream, one glass of brandy, wine or rose water; ten eggs beaten to a high froth; have two oranges and boil the rind until it is tender; change the water two or three times while it is boiling, then beat it in a mortar and squeeze the juice in,together with the rind of one lemon grated and the juice cf the same,mix all well together with the other Ingredients, and bake in a puff paste without an upper crust; half this quantity is sufficient for two ordinary-sized pies. NEVER use anything but light blank ets to cover the silk, The heavy, im pervious counterpane is bad, for the eason that it retains the exhalations, from the pores of the sick person while the blanket allows them to pass through. Weak persons are invaria bly distressed by a great weight of bed-cloths, which often prevent the'r getting any sound sleep whatever. BRAZILIAN TEA DISH. —Take some slices of bread about half an inch thick, cut off all crust, steep the bread in milk; when soaked through cover each piece with beaten yolk of egg, fry with butter a light brown, then arrange the slices on a hot plate, and lay on each piece a tolerably thick covering of powdered sugar and cinnamon well mingled. OYSTER FRITTERS.— Drain them tho roughly, chop fine, season with pep per and salt. Make a batter of eggs, milk and flour; stir the chopped oys ters in this and fry in hot butter; or fry them whole, euvelope in batter, one in each fritter. In this case the batter should be thicker than if they were cnopped. A SOLUTION of cyanide of potassium is the best poison to kill insects of any kind. A CLEAR head and quiek action must •be possessed for steady and successful effort: but who can have such while suffering from Cold? Use Dr. Bull's Cough Syrup and produce immediate relief. HUMOROUS. A DETROIT groeer displayed a dozen cakes of the clearest and nicest new uipple sugar possible to make and as he stood at his door acltzen halted and looked at the sugar and queried : '•New?" "No, It's old." "Make It yourself?" "Yes." "Adulterated ?" "Yes." "Shouldn't think it would be heal thy." "It isn't." y "Then why do you want to sell It?" "1 don't want to. I set It out here so that a dray could cart it otf, aud dump it on some vacaut lot-" The citizen looked up aud down the street, across the way, aud finally said: "I guess I'll take two pounds of your warmed-up, adulterated old sugar. If it was new 1 wouldn't touch the stuff at any price. Please weigh this cake." He paid for the sugar and carried It away, but lie looked like a man wtio wanted to say something mean to somebody. "1 THINK I may be excused for a lit tle show of pride in saying that 1 knew when to quit Wall street," he observ ed as an elevated train carried them over that great thoroughfare. "So you used to speculate?" "Yes; 1 was on the street for seven years." "Made your pile, 1 suppose?" "Yes; I made aud lust money the same as the rest. At one time 1 could draw my check for $83,000; that isn't so bad ior a man who went Into Wall street with only $lO in his pocket." "And you knew where to quit?" "Yes, sir." "1 hat was when—when?" "That was when 1 had euough left to pay my fare to Eluiira and hire a boy to carry my satchel up to my father-in-law's hotel I" was the reply. iTroy. (N. Y.) Press. Kill tor la I Approval. Mr. W. J. Melvin, Editor Warren, Mass. Herald , was cured of severe Neuralgia by the use of St. Jacob's Oil. SEVERAL gentlemen were standing on the corner of Galveston avenue when one of the most fashionable ladies of Galveston passed on the side walk. "Ah I" exclaimed one of the gentle me, " what a complexion ! There is nothing to beat it In Galveston. I am proud of that woman, 1 am." "Are you her husband?" asked a stranger. "No, sir." "Her father, then ?" "No, sir; 1 am no relation to her; but lam proud of her complexion. I am the druggist that sold it to her. I made it inyselt." YOUNG Malony D_-Suiith, who ex terminates melody with a fiddle, met old Colonel Northcote receuuy, and said to him: "Colonel, you must be on hand to-night at the DeSmith man sion. I want you to hear some really good music. 1 will give a few solos 011 the violin to a few Invited guests and afterward, at 8 o'clock, we will have some refreshments—oysters, wines, cigars, you know." "My dear boy, 1 will be on hand just a little after 8. Rely on me." "I CAN'T flud a place in the city to suit me," despairingly remarked a house-hunting lady to her husband yesterday. "Why so, my dear?" "Why, because, because, well, if you must know, I can't find a mantel long enough for tin crewel lambrequin 1 made last winter." A STROLLING theatrinl company was at dinner. A waiter approached one of the members and said, so up?" "No, sir," indignantly replied the person addressed, "1 am one of the musi cians." [Muscatine (lowa,) Dally Journal.! Messrs. J. . Bennett & Co., Muske gon, Mich, thus speak : St. Jacobs Oil is the best liniment around here. We sell more of it than of any other pro prietary medicine we have in our store. Our customers are continually praising its effective qualities; and we think, that it is the best remedy for rheuma tism, neuralgia, etc., we have ever had in stock. WHY are young ladies at the break ing up of a party like arrows? B<- cause they can't go off without a beau, and are all in a quiver till they get one. Two sightless lovers liaye been mar ried in Cincinnati. They went it blind. "NOT good if detached" may apply as well to married people as to railroad tickets. Ensilage, or GREEN FORAGE CROPS IN SILOS. Giving My Practical Experience. Also, the Practical Experience OP Twenty-five Practical Farmers With Ensilage and Silos, Giving their experience of feeding stock of al kinds with Ensilage and the practical results, conclusively showing the undoubted success or this process—the Ensilage of Green Forage Crops. By this process the farmer can realize live dollars in place of one dollar, as practised by the old system of farming. Also wonderful experiments of feeding poultry at one-half the usual cost on Ensilage. This book contains 120 pages, elegantly bound In cloth. EVERY ONE 18 PLEASED WITH IT, As being the most thorough and practical work yet published on this subject, and all are sur prised at the very low price. For sale at all bookstores, all general Btores and all news depots In every city and town IN THE UNITED STATES. If the work cannot be obtained of them send for It by mall. Price of Book 50 Cents. By Mail 60 Cts. Send post office order If convenient. Address H. R. STEVENS, BOSTON, Mass. A THIN old mar with a rag-bag In his hand was picking a number of small pieees of whalebone which lay 011 the street. The deposit was of such singular nature that the quaint-look ing gailierer was ask® 1 how be sup posed they came there. "Don't know," he replied in a squeaking voice, "but 'spec gome unfortunate female was wrecked hereabout some where." "1 declare, John, 1 never saw such a man ! You are always getting some new wrinkle." And he calmly re plied. "Matilda, you are not, thank fortune. If you had a new wrinkle, you would have no place to put it dear." Which was rather uneompli mentary to himself, seeing that most wives' premature wrinkles are caused by their husbands. Itl>j Saved I We are so thankful to say that our baby was permanently cured of a dan gerous and protracted irregularity of the bowels by the use of Hop Hitters by lis mother, which at the same time restored her to perfect health and strength.—The Parents, K tchester, N. Y. See another column.- Buffalo Ex press. A couple of young men went out Ashing the other day, and on return ing were going pasta farm house and felt hungry. They yelled to the farm er's daughters: "(iirls, have you any butter milk!" The reply was gently wafted back to their ears: "Yes, but we keep it for our own calves." The boys calculated that they had business away—and they went. A fa sii ion ah i. k Boston lady was un expectedly left without a servant. She undertook to make her husband a cup of coffee, but It took so long he asked what In the Halifax was the mat ter with the coffee. "1 don't know," she said, bursting into tears; I've boiled these beans for a full hour, und they are no softer now than they were when I llrst put them in the pot." Have You Head It? H. R. Stevens book on Eusilage, the preserving of green forage crops in silos, giving his own experience and the practical experience ol 25 practical farmers: 120 pages, elegantly bound in cloth; prtee 50 cents; by mall, GOqents. Address H. K. Stevens, Boston, Mass. The New Haven Register man stays out late o' nights, and is howilug lor mid night horse-cars. He confesses to being obliged to crawl home regularly everv night. Now what he wants is a man with a whcelbaraow to take him home through the back streets. Shk was a Vassar graduate, and sit— ting on the trout steps expounding some of the astronomical wonders, but the lovelight of her eye had a tinge of sadness, when she enthusiastically re plied : "Jess so! 1 see how folks get at the size and distance of the stars be cause they can see them through their glasses, but bless me, if 1 can imagine how they ever lound out their names." Flump girls are said to be going out of fashion. If this is true, the plumper the girl the slimmer her chances- If nature puts a wart on a man's nose. It Is pi-iced where she wants it, and not where it will help to hold his spectacles. Important to NnfTeerr*. The greatest benefactor Is one who relieves pain and cures disease. Dr. tiilsbee has ac complished both by his miraculous discovery of "Auakesis," au absolute, easv, rapid aud infallible cure for PILES in all stages of development 20,000 sufferers testify to its virtue. It is a simple suppository, acting as an instrument poultice aud med icine. The relief is instant, and cure cer tain. Price SI.OO per box. Samples sent free on application to ' 'Auakesis" Depot Box 3046, New York. For sale by all tirst-class druggists. As a Care for Plies, Kidney-Wort acts first by overcoming, in the mildest manner, all tendency to constipation; then, by its great tonic and invigorating pro perties, it restores to health the debilitated aud weakened parts. Chronicle. Cologne- —For the bine fit of those who u;?e cologne we give the follow ing recipe which not only makes an article ol superior fragrance but at less than half the cost of a bottled article of equal odor. Mix the following to gether, shake well, bottle and it is made ready for use. One drachm oil lavender, one drachm oil bergmnot, two drachms oil lem in, two drach ns oil rosemary,so drops tincture o( musk, 8 drops oil of cinnamon, 8 drops oi cloves, 1 pint of alcohol. Like all other colognes it will remain strong longer if kept well covered. DI'BULL'S COUCH SYRUP HOSMEI& 6ITTEB S Shooting Cbllls down the Back, Dull p in in the limbs, nausea, biliousness, ara Ryiuptoms of approaching fever and ague. Use without delay Hostetter's Stomach Bitters, which substitutes for the chilly sensation a ge nial warmth, regulates the stomach, and lnj parts tone to the liver. The bowels, the stomach and the biliary gland being restored to a healthy conditlOD, the-dlsease is conquered at the out set. For sale by all Druggists aid Dealers gen erally. S* mm _ A yBAK and expense* to agents Iff Outfit Free. Address I I I F. O VIOKFRY. Augusta. Me. Nice for Breakfast.—A nice dish for breakfast is made by taking bits of ham that hava b°en left from previous meals, cutting them in small pieces, and heating them with two or three eggs stirred In. Pieces of beef may also be used, and enjoyed if properly cooked. Chop them fine, season with butter, pepper and salt, and serve hot. The excellence of these dishes depends upon the way In which you cook and season them. Anything which Is warmed over in order to be palatable must be nicely prepared. Truth and Honor Query:—What is the best family medicine in the world to regulate the bowels, purify the blood, remove cos tiveness und biliousness, aid digestion and tone up the whole system? Truth and honor compels us to answer, Hop Bitters, being pure, perfect and harmless. See another column.— Toledo Blade. "Your handwriting Is very had in deed," said a gentleman to a college friend.who was more addicted to boat ing and cricketing than to hard study ; "you really ought to learn to write better." "Ay, ay," returned the young man, "It Is all very well for you to tell me that, but If 1 were to write better, people would find out how I spell." Lydia E. Pinkham'b Vegetable Com pound cures female complaints by re moving the cause. The hoop-skirt is coming in fashion again, and ten years hence the man who digs gar Jeu will feel tiie need of some new and wleked-looking words with which to expre s himself when he strikes one of ttie-e profanlty-pro vok ng cut-easts ab >ut lour inches underground. Nothing demoralizes a gardener more, unless it may be when his spade s rikes a piece of old rag carpet. We can lusure any person Having a bald head or troubled with dandruff, that Carboline, a deodorized extract of petroleum, will do all that is claimed tor it. It will not stain the most delicate fabric and is delightfully per fumed. The sign for an eating house that never closes "oysters open all night." IMS. LYDIA L PIMM!*, OF ITM, IAS&, LYDIA E. PINKHAM'B VEGETABLE COMPOUND. JjaPoottlveCnre for all thee* Painful Complaint* and Weaknesses Hraaasi population. tt win ear* entirely the wont form of Femals Com plaint*, all onriu trouble*, Inflamn*tion and Ulosrn- Uon, Falling and Displacements, and tho consequent Spinal Weakness, and la particularly adapted to 0M Change of Llfa It wIU dissolve and expel tumor* from the uterus la an early stage of development. The tendency to can. Oeroua humor* there la cheeked very speedily by Its use. It removes faintnesa, flatulency, destroys all era ring for stimulant*, and relieve* weakness of th* stomach. It cures Bloating, Headache*, Nervous Prostration, General Debility, Bleep! imp iw. Depression end Indi gestion. That feeling of bearing down, causing pain, weight and backache, i* always permanently cured by Ua us*. It will at all tiroes and under all circumstances act la narmony with the law* that govern the femal* lyAea. For th# curaof Kidney Complaint* of alther sax this Compound 1* unsurpassed. LYIHA E. PINK HAM'S VEGETABLE COM POUND it prepared at Ed and £36 Western Avenue, Lynn, Maaa Price ft. Six bottle*for 05. Sent by mall in the form of pills, alao In the form of losengea, on receipt of, price, fl per box for either. Mrs. Plnkham freely answer* all letter* of Inquiry. Bend 'for pamph let. Ad dree* aa above. Mention tXU Paper. No family Chould be without LTDLA E. PI NX HAMI LIVER PILLA. They cur* constipation, and torpidity of fine liver. B cents par box. ST Sold by all Druggists. -% ™OP BITTERS^ (A medicine* not a Drink.) CONTAINS hops, Mrcnu, mandrake, DANDELION, AND TH* Fraxsr AND BFST MxPioaLQraLi- I TIKS OF ALL OTUSB BITTKBS. THEY CURE All Diseases of the Stomach, Bowels. B'ood, I LLver. Kidneys, and Urinary Organs, Ner vousness, Sleeplessness and especially Female Complaints. SIOOO IN COLD. Will he paid for a case they will not cure help, or for anything Impure or injurious found In them. Ask your drngglst for Hop Bitters and try I them before you sleep. Take no other* I D I. C. Is an absolute and irreslstlhle cure for I Drunkenness, use of opium, tobacco aud narcotics. ■■■■■■ SEND FOB Chutlab. HBBMBBHI All >) o!d by ilrtieyitU. I Hop Bitter, Mf*. Co., Rochenter, N. YA Toronto, Ont, I VOONGMEN Lanrn Telegraphy I Bars (40 to (100 a month. Graduate* aaaranteed paying jfficoH. Address VALENTINE dßOS. t Januavill* Wisconsin. A POSITIVE CURE For Exhausted Vitality. Nervon* or Phys ical Debility Dr. Kleord'a KIATOKATI VI PILI.N. l.,is celeb rat d Frwuch Remedy is ap proved bv the Acsdi my of Me ieine.of Paris, and by the celebrated Physicians, ."ir H. Thompson, Dr. Periguid, l)r. Chevalier, Dr. Riiapail, and theg eat chemist LiebU, and others. Send for circular. Sent per mail in se ,i wpu, ad mramjk tfcsm Jmw tt> g,)w rf niwwi Ddwyti*wettM*%y W* md, ike Moo. Ou—Hpotlnn.BMinn—, yew. " law ifimWiwj ■finr A li kinrMkiekeUe Mtwn. wkUh do mm* tamttat nil m dsoollo adte, tot wMh§ DR. RADWAY'S Sarsaitrilliai Milt, THE GREAT BLOOD PURIFIER, FOR TEW CURE OP CHRONIC DISK ASH BOROFULA OR SYPHILITIC, HEREDI TARY OR CONTAOIOU* lt Seated la Ths Langs or 8\ wseh,Skis ear (tones, Flesh or Kervve, CORRUPTING VITIATING Chronic Rheumatism. Scrofula, Glandular Swelling, Hacking Dry Cough, Canceroua Affec tions, syphilitic Cora plat rite. Bleeding of the I ungs. Dyspepsia, Water Brash, Tlo Dotoreux, White (dwellings. Tumors, Ulcers. Bkln and Hip Diseases, Mercurial Diseases, Female Com plaints, Gout, Drop y, halt Rheum. Bronchitis. Consumption, Liver Complaint. Noi only does the SanaparUllan Resolvent excel all remedial agents In the cure of Chroma, Scrofulous, Constitutional and Skin Diseases, but It is ths only poattlve cure tor KIDNEY AID BLADDERCOHPLAINTS, Urinary sad Womb Diseases, Gravel. Diabetes. Dropsy, Stoppage of water, Incontinence oi Urine. Wight's Discs A Albuminuria, And In al eases shin there are brick-dust deposits, o the water is thick. cloudy, mixed, with sub itenoed Ilka tha white of an egg. or threads llxa white silk, or there is a morbid, dark, bilious p;>earanr* and white bone-dust deposits, and when there Is a pricking, burning sensation when passing water, and pain in the small of the back and along the loins. Sold by Drug flsta PRIOR ONE DOLLAR* OVARIAN TUMOR OF TEW TEARS' GROWTH OKJRJCD BY DR. RADWAY'S REMEDIES. One bottle eon tains more of the active princi ples of Medicines than any other Preparation. Taken in Teaspoonful doses, while others re (Mrs Ere er six times as mack. r! R! ~ RADWAY'S Ready Relief, CURBS AND PREVENTS DYSENTERY, DIARRHCEA, CHOLERA MORBUS, FEVER AND AGUE, RHEUMATISM, NEURALGIA DIKfTHERIA, .^FLUENZA, SORE THROAT, DIFFICULT BREATHING. BOWEL COMPLAINTS, Looseness. Dlarrboe i. Cholera Morbus or pain ful discharges from the bowels are stopped is 14 or 20 minutes by teklng I tad way's Ready Re- UeL No congestion or Inflammation, no weak ness or lassitude will follow the use of the R. R. R© 1* 'f IT WAS THE FIRST AND IB The Onlj Pain Remedy Chat instantly stops the most excruciating pains, an ays inflammations, and cores Consw£ uon\ whether of the Lungs, Stomach. Bowels or other glands or organs, by one application. I From fe twenty mlante*. no mat-. tor how violent or excruciating the pain, tudd iheum.ttlc, Bed-ridden, Infirm. Crippled. Nerv ous. Neuralgic or prostrated with dibease may Buffer. RADWAY'S READY RELIEF Will afford instant ease. Inflammation er the Kidweya, luflamm*tioß of tne Bladder, Inflananaatlea er the Bowela Cengestloa ef the Laogt. •e*w Threat, Difficult Breathlng, _ Palpitation ef the Heart. Hysterica, t'rsap, Diphtheria „ _ Catarrh, laflaensa Headache. Toothache, Nerve nances, Hleepleeenee, flenralcia, Rhea mat lain • old Chills, Acne Chills, Chilblains and Frost Bites. The application of the Ready Relief to the part er parts where the pain or difficulty erdsts will afford ease an 1 comfort. Thirty to sixty drops in a half tumbler of water will In a few minutes cure Cramps, Sprains. Sour Stomach, Heartburn, Sick Head ache, Diarrhoea, Dysentery, Colic, Wind In the Bowels and all Internal pains. Travelers should always carry a bottle of Rao way's Ready Relief with them. A few drops in water will prevent sickness or pains from Changs of water. It is better than French Brandy or Bitters as a stimulant Price Fifty Cento per cottls. Radway's Regulating Pills. Perfect Fmrg-Mves, Boethlmc Aperients, Aes Without Pain, Always &eliable sad Natural la their Operation. A VEGETABLE SUBSTITUTE FOE CALOMEL reifsotly tasteless, elegantly coated with ■west jum, purge, regulate, purify, cleans* and lU9WATT FILLS, tor me owe oc sB Disorders £the btomach. Liver, Bowels. ESdneyismad r. Nervous Diseases, Headache, Ooastfsstlon, OoatlveneM^ iidigestion. Dyspepsia, BUieue nesa. Feverimflasamation of the Bowela, Piles, and all derangements at the Internal viscera, warranted t* effect a perfect ours. Purefy vepoabie, oonfslnlsff h* ieeiouiy, Minerals as ■wobserre the lbDowlhf symptoms iwTt Ise (rem Dlscaeas of th* D restive Organs t ConatT pauos, inward Piles, Vuilnees at the Blood is Bead, Acldltv ef the Stomach, Nausea, Heart* burn, Disgurt ef Food, Fullness or Weight in ths stomach, Sour Eructations, Sinking or Flut tering at the Heart, Choking or Suffer ng Sen sations when In a tying posture. Dimness et vision. Dots er Webs Before the sight, Fever and Dull pain in the Heed, Deficiency of Perspira tion, Yellowness of the Skin and Ryes. Pauf in (he side. Chest, Ltabs, and Sudden Flushes Best, Burning In the Flesh. A tew dose* of RaWAT*s Feus win free the system from all ths shevs-hamed disorders Fries, 88 Cents per Bex. We repeat that mo render must consult wot books and papers en the subject of diseases and their ours, among which may be named: "False end True ,** "XUtdwHy ob Irritable Urethra,'* "Bad way en Gcrafmlsk," sndethars relating to different Masses §t Dm ■OLD BT BEUMXHim BIAS "FALSE ARB TEVI." •end a letter stamp t* BAB WAT * cm. He. 88 Varrsa, 6er. Ohvek It, Hew TerA. ■winfematten wrth mwissnds win be sent is you. TO THE PUBLIO. • There can be no better guarantee of the value ef Dn. RAWAT*I old established R. R. R. Rsxs. sua than the base and worthless imitations ef them, as there are False Resolvents, Reliefs and Pill* Be sure and ask tor Radway'a, and see that ths name TUdway- Is a whai you EMPUYMINT-BSS^SF JSSKf AIsaSALARY pcrsaontk. AU EXPENSES •drueei. WABKS pr*a*tlr ytld. SLOAN d Ce. SOS corse St, Cincinnati. O. ENCYCLOPEDIAS TIOUETTESBUSINESS This Is th* sh*s*Mt ud oalr ecasrlsts aaJ relia ble worn an ktloastts aad Bu.ine* end Soatsl Forms. It tID how te perform all th* vsrioyw d kies of llfs, sad how to apposr to th host adv&atags *a *ll ocessioDß. AOKNTS WAFTED.—Bond for circular* ooaUim lax* fall description of ths work and extra terms te Agsata Addrss. NATIONAL PUBLISHING Philadelphia, Pa. IHOM anewenng an aavertuement WLI confer a favor upon the adrertlser and the publisher by stating that they saw th* adver- HMinent In thta lonrnal fnaminc the paper. 808