In the Camp. On the Delta of the Nile, the Englieh and Egyptian camps are now facing each other. The Egyptians, should they be detested, have Cairo and the Libyan De sert to fly to; the British, with Alexandria, moreover, which is covered by the guns of one of the strongest fleets that ever went forth to do battle with an antagonist— have a tolerably secure place of retreat in the event of any disaster befalling their arms. The routine of the British soldier's life in the time of warfare is similar to that of the American. In the morning he must fall into the ranks at bugle call and answer to his name; later he has to take his turn at guard or picket duty; he may have to fall into a patrolling party or take part in a reconnoissance; then, when he has nothing more to do, he may lounge about among the tents, smoking his clay pipe or chattiDg with a comrade. The scene differs strangely in the camp of the Egyptians. There the majority of the soldiers are dressed In a mongrel European fashion, with the tarboosh or fez as the most conspicuous national characteristic of their uniform; but there is a minority whose picturesque costumes are distinctly Oriental. The Bedouin, with kis gaudily colored handkerchief wrapped about his head, leaving ends that float upon his shoulders, his long white, mantle-like gar ments, and his sandalled feet; the Soudan ese, with white turbans, flowing raiment and baggy trousers; the Abyssinian adven turer, who dresses as he pleases, much as his brother the Nubiau does—all form a singular contrast with the quietly uni formed soldiers of the "regular" force. On the eve of battle these soldiers show a different scene in camp from that which their antagonists present, bitting cross legged m front of their tents, which are but pieces of thin canvas stretched on cross-sucks, and are so low that their oc cupants have to enter them by crawling, they assemble in groups and pass around the chilbouque or nurghileh, the bubbling sound of which as the smoke passes through the water is almost the only sound that is heard except the neighing or the stamping of the horses that are pick eted by the heels behind the camp's ir regular lines. An officer gallops along and warns them to be reedy. They rise hastily to their feet, crawl* into their tents for their weapons and hustle up together before they finally fall into line. But they do it all with very little noise. It is possible to find not a noisy but a hilarious group; but this is generally where a chosen few ot the biack faced and laughter loving talthtul from the Soudan have surrounded a story-teller, whose narrations of the deeds of genii or the merry tricks among mortals of lesser supernatural worthless alternately excite their deep-voiced won der or their spontaneous, child-like mirth. A British soldier seeing an Arab or Eirypt" iau c&iup, and noting the recumbent posi tion and social manner of the majority of its occupants, might imagine that such people as these had no energy for fighting but lie would be egregiously mistaken. A French traveler, who recently closely observed the Egyptian army and all its incongruous elements of pute" fellaheen, Copts, Berbers, Nubians, Western Christ ians, Turks, Abyssinians, came to this conclusion :—They are admirably trained, drilled and disciplined under the super vision of an exceedingly able staff of American and other loreign officers, and ihe result is that a finer looking soldier than a Egptian soldier can be seen no where. "Such is a brief sketch of the trocps that are now waiting." Arabi's men are stroDgly posted in the viciinity of Ramleh; but his strongest position is on the narrow neck of land which stretches from the Aboukir Lake to the northern verge of Lake Mareotis. With a broad country behind him, a railway and plenty ol water in the Mahmovdieh Canal, Arabi Bey ought to be able to make a stubborn resistance to any British force attempting to move along ihe neck and drive him fiom bis pcsiiioD. A conspicuous teature of that neck of land is that it is filled with marsh giound, which will seriously intei ltre with the Iree movements both of British cavalry and artillery. The ground Aiabi has chosen is, on the contrary, firm enough to permit of very effecting man oevuring. Rivaling Electricity. The following is a description of a new ly-invented gas burner which is intended, and it is taid promises, to compete to some extent with the electric lamp, 'lliere was a time, when the gas companies had their own sweet will with the public, who were forced to deal with them, consume what ever quality of gas they might furnish, and pay pretty nearly what they saw fit to charge. Latterly, however, the condition of affairs has undergone a change the elec tric light proving a much more formidable competitor of the gas companies than the latter ever anticipated. The future of the electric light has, m fact, become so pro mising that the gas manufacturers have cause for serious a arm, and some of them are casting about for some means whereby they may cope with the dangerous rival. The burner before spoken of is the result of this demand for something more efficient and cheaper than the old form. The in vention, which has been introduced lately in London with so great a measure of suc cess that the inventors have cbtained the privilege of using the system m one of the prominent thoroughfares of the city, is described as somewhat similar to the ordi nary burner, with a gauze cap over it. It consists of two pipes—one for supply of air, at a pressure sufficient to balance a six-inch column of water, and the other for the gas, which is conducted from the meter in the ordinary way. On the top of the burner is a cap about two inches high and half an inch in diameter, formed of platinum wire gauze of very fine mesh. The air under pressure is delivered from an inner tube, opening into a larger one near the top of the burner, with an opening at its lower end. When the air is turned on an induced upward current is produced, and gas being admitted at the same time, the two combined and pass into the plati num cap. When the mixture of gas and air is ignited the cap in a few seconds gives forth a brilliant incandescent giow of high illuminating power. The essential feature of the burner seems to have been suggested by the incandescent electric lamp. The light is described as of great 1 . nnirnii ||nlj|ff| It* rivnl, |fi said to be very steady. The amount of light obtained in one experiment appears to be double that thrown out by the best Argand burner, both consuming the same quantity ot gas. The heat is but moder ate, and the combustion so perfect tbat when a polished silver plate was held over the burner it remained untarnished. Should this new lamp as successful as those interested In it anticipate, it will give the gas companies a new lease of life and additional strength to compete with their rivals. Strutt , an English authority on games and amusements, speaks of a Yorkshire jumper, named Ireland, whose powers were marvelous He vras six feet high, and at the age of 18 leaped, without the aid of a spring board, over nine horses unged side by side. AGRICULTURE, DRIVING COWS. —There is one practice Blmost universally iu use which is unpro fitable and cruel. It is for a man or boy to take a horse to drive milk cows to and from the pasture. A horse walks much faster than a cow whose udder is distend ed and heavily loaded with four or five gallons of milk. And yet we are pained every day to see town boys (some of them pretty old for that term) hurryiug a cow, in line condition, along at a dog trot, and, on her falling to keep out cf the horse's way, to receive a cut from a vilhanous whip. And there is scarcely an evening but that we see a f*mi!y cow brought home from the pasture with a horse at fu'l trot. Aud this is only what can be seen almost anywhere. Bafote boys got too lazy, or before mothers thought It disgraceful for their 60us to walk, a horse was not used for such a purpose. The boys were taught to drive the cows quietly anil slowly, and especially in the evening, when the cow is carrying her precious load to feed the fa mily. But the cruel and unmerciful way this business is done now,it will be strauge it judgments are not visited on the fami lies that permit such things. It will, and does, come in rendering the cow almost worthless. And m many cases the cow is entirely ruined. The judgment comes to the family in using unhealthy milk by injuring the udder, and sometimes over heating the cow. When children are weak or sickly where there is a cow belougiug to the family.it may be attributed in many cases to unnecessary cruelty to the animal by rash drivers. There should be no com • plaining, for judgments frequently come in that way as the necessary results of bad conduct. We have no doubt that m&uy cases of richness, and some deaths are caused by this inhuman practice,and there ought to be more. A boy who will be thus cruel to the kind and faithful family cow, will be a cruel man, dangerous to society, and the sooner he is removed from the evil to come the better. And in such cases the tears ot the parents should be few. USE OF THE HAND IIOK. With the intro duction of the horse-cultivaor the haud hoe went out of use on most Western farms. More woik could be done with the cultiva tor, and it could be done with greater ease. The more the cultivator was improved the more farmers became attached to it, and the greater was their reluctance to handle the hoe. At present the implement that has been used longer and to better advan tage than any other In the cultivation of crops is generally discarded on Western farms. Indeed, mauy market gardeners manage to raise most of their vegetables without using the hoe to any c inside ruble extent. The horse cultivator is certainly a very desirable implement to employ in both the field and the garden, but its use should be supplemented by that of the hand-hoe. It ie profitable to continue the use of the hoe m every garden and culti vated field. Work can be performed with it that can not be done with any implement drawn by a horse. The hoe should be used in every corn and potato field before the cultivator is put into operation. It should be employed to remove stones,turls aud pieces of hard earth that may be over the plants that are making their appear ance above ground, and for stirring the soil around them. The cultivator is excel lent for working the ground between bills, but for cultivating the hill itself there is no implement like tne baud-lice. It is very difficult to keep a held devoted to any cultivated crop entirely clear of grass and weeds without usiog tne hoe. A field that has been worked at least once with a hand hoe is always more productive than one that has been tended with the cultivator alone. The truth is, the former performs some work which the latter caunot do. POTTING MOULD. —There is one infallible method of treating potting mould it sus pected of containing yermin of any kind — that is, tc fill the pots the day before they are to be used, and water the soil in them with boiling water. Scald also as much as you will require for filling in. Next day it will be none too moist to work with,and there will not be a live creature in it. Do not mix coal ashes with your potting mould, that is just the way to spoil it. Earth-worms are not the enemies you sup pose them to be, and they should not be ruthlessly destroyed, they are appointed by nature to ventilate the subsoil by bor mg in it channels for the admission of air. They may be ejected from your pots or from tbe lawn when they have become troublesome by means ot lime water; the remedy at the same time will benefit the plants. YOUNG chicks are sometimes troubled witn a disease that, for lack of a better name, we call indigestion. They lose their appetite, ' bake up behind, mope around and die It is caused by feeding sour, un cooked food,lack of gravel and green food. The preventives are obvious. Feed only cooked food, provide gravel and plenty of green food. Onion tops or lettuce chopped and mixed with the softfood is excellent for young chicks and turkeys. Sometimes a cure can be effected in the early stages of this disease by giving a half teaspoonful of cioton oil or tincture of rhubarb, and then feeding for a few days on cooked rice or stale bread soaked in milk aud sea soned with pepper. A little pulverized charcoal added to the food twice a week tends to keep the digestive organs of young fowls in good order. To make an oilcloth wagon cover, pro ceed as follows: Take thick cloth, as tent cloth or sail cloth, and give it two coats on each side of the following composition: Linseed-oil, one gallon; dried sulphate of zinc and sugar of lead, each three ounces; litharge, eight ounces: boil with constant stirrißg until it drops in strings; then cool slowly, and pour off the clear part, if too thick thin it with boiled oil. This varnish is flexible and can be folded or rolled. PLANTS F>R WINTER — Kemember that if plant i are wanted for winter blooming it is well not to allow them to bloom much during the summer. During their growth at this season, the ext amities of the shoe's may be pinched in, to give them a proper lorrn, and only a small portion of the llow er-buds that are produced should be allow ed to bloom—the others should be remov ed. The result in autumn will be hand somely formed and vigorous plants, ready for blooming during the winter. —A_aii jg bad policy to keep land uncov ered by vegetation, as loon as one crop ia plowed under another should be planted. If the land can be plowed in September without mucn cost, a crop of buckwheat may be grown, to be followed with winter rye, which can be plowtd under in the spring and followed with potatoes; if the plowiDg is to cost too much, then sow the rye in July, and thus keep the land cover ed with growing vegetation, which is very important in our climate. AN English scientific journal says that oxalic acid promotes the sprouting of seeds so that seeds forty years old will germinate by its application. The method is to soak the seeds one or two days in a solution of oxalic acid till they commence to open out, when they are taken out and planted. Will one ot our readers try it on some old seeds, aud report? DOMESTIC. Ton following rules, it strictly fol lowed, will stimulate and promote the growth of hair, so long as the hair follic les have not lost their vitality: Keep the scalp scrupulously eleau, and particular ly free from dandruff. Brush the scalp dairy with a moderately stiff brush with out using too muoli friotiou. Wash the head occasionally with soap and water, to remove fatty substances which have become uoid. Keep the head cool and do not unnecessarily koep it covered iu doors, particularly in warm rooms. Koep the skin of the scalp soft, pliable and faintly moist, if not naturally so, by the judicious application of some bland substance as vaseliue, castor oil or al mond oil, all of which may be perfumed. THE following simple method of keep ing ice water a long time iu a common pitcher is worth knowiug. Plaoo be tween two shoots of paper (newspaper will answer, thick brown is better) a layer of cotton batting, about half an inch in thickness, fasten the ends of pa per and batting together, forming a circle, then sew or paste a crown over one end, making a box the shape of a stove-pipe minus the rim. Place this over an ordinary pitcher tilled with ice water, makiug it deep enough to rest on the table, so as to exclude the air, and you will be astonished at the length of tune this ice will keep, and the water remain cold after the ice is melted. CUP PLUM PUDDING. —One cup each of raisins, currants, flour, bread crumbs, suet and sugar; stone and cut the rai sins, wash and dry the currauts, chop the suet and mix all the above ingre dients well together; then add two ounces of cut eaudied peel and citron, a little mixed spice, salt and ginger, say half teaspoonful of each; stir in four well-beaten eggs and milk enough to make the mixture so that the spoou will stand upright iu it; tie it loosely iu a cloth or put iu a mould; plunge in boil ing water and boil for three and a half hours. As flies this s asou of the year are very troublesome, and as troublesome things are not healthy things, we give a cheap and effective tlv-paper recipe be low: In a tin vessel melt one pound of resin, and then add aliout two fluid drachms of linseed oil. While the mix ture is warm, dip a spatula into it, and spread what adheres to the blude on a sheet of foolscap paper and allow it to cool. When the m xiure is found to be too hard for spreading add more oil; when too soft, add resin. WHEN Dr. Wheatlej hail a headache, he used to take oft' his c lat, lay h jld of the axe, and rush out of doors and be labor some old tree till he found himself in a profuse perspiration, when down went his axe and off went the o'd doctor as hurd as he could tear to wrap liim felf up iu his blaukets, go to sleep, and wake as fresh as a four-year-old. Cheap mediciue that, aud good, too. BRICEJ3 FOR FURNACES. —French steam engineers deprecate the use of any bricks for the construction of furnaces except bricks which are very elosely pressed aud refractory, and which are glazed or suitably vcruished on the outside. Most of the bricks hitherto employed have been so porous as to admit a very unde sirable quantity of air. PIG'S FOOT CHEESE. —BoiI the hocks and feet of equal quantity loose iu a pot till the meat will fall freely from tlie bones; season well with jiepper and salt; put into a pan while hot and press it. Cut in slices and serve with vinegar or Worcester sauce. To make a hard sauce to serve with hot puddiug, beat together some butter and powdered sugar till it is as light as beating will make it. If the puddiug is highly seasoned, it will not be necessary to tlivor the sauce; put a tablespoonful of it on the top of each saucer of pud ding; it will dissolve gradually. FLANNEL CAKES WITHOUT EGOS. —Two cups Indian meal, two quarts milk, half cup yeast, flour for good batter, one pint boiling water; scald meal with the water, add the milk, if lumpy, strain, add flour and yeast; let stand till morning. If at all sour add soda. CITRON PUDDING. —Line your dish with puff paste: slice thin, orange, lem on and citron peels, of each one ouuce, six eggs ("leaving out four whites) well beaten, quarter pound butter melted; which mix all well together, and pour into the dish; bake one hour and serve. MARBLEHEAD CAKES. —Grate the crumbs of a stale loaf of bread, and sift out all the lumps. Stir in milk till a thick batter is formed. Beat eggs, al lowing two to every pint of milk, till smooth, and add to the batter; add a little salt. Beat all we'l together, and bake one hour and serve. FRIED APPLES. —Pare sound apples, slice them half an inch thick, remove the cons without breakiug the slices, fry them iu hot butter until tender, lay them in little piles with sugar and spice dusted over them, and serve them ou slices of toast. CLOTHES pins boiled a few moments andquickly dried, once or twice a month, become more flexible and dura ble. Clothes lines will last longer and keep in better order for wask-iiay ser vice, if occasionally treated in the same way. LADY CAKE. —Beat the whites of four eggs to a froth, one and a half cups of sugar and half a cup of butter, heap two cups of flour and dissolve half a teacup ful of soda iu a cup of milk; put a tea spoonful of cream tartar dry in the flour; flavor with almond ex ract. SWEET POTATOES. —Boil until a fork will go ensiJy in o the largest. Skin and lay iu a bake pan in the oven a lew min utes to dry. They are also very good to place in the meat pan with the roast and brown very lightly. A PALATABLE drink for fever patients is made by peeling and slicing some good tart apples, scattering white sugar over them and pouring boiling water over them. When cold pour oil' the water, and drink. The London Society of Telegraph Eu gineers and of Electricians have decided to offer annually three prises for the best original papers on telegraphic or electric subjects sent in by any person not mem bers of the council of tue Society. The prizes will consist of cooks or ap paratus, the first prize having a value of £lO aud the other two of £5 each. The first awards will be made tor papers sent inbtfjre the end of May nex*. I Oysters can live twenty-lour Lours In an exhausted receiver. The flame of a candle goes out iu one minute, chaieoal iu five minutes. HUMOROUS. "On, nui! yer oughtor seen Mr. Ligh ted the other night, when lie culled to tako Angio to the drill. He looked BO nice sittiu' 'long side of her with his arm—" "Fred !" Hcreftmod the maiden, whose fiico began to ahHUUie the color of the well-done crab, quickly placing her hand over the boy's mouth. "Yer oughter seen him," said the persistent informer, after gaining his breath and the embarrassed girl's baud was re moved; "he had his arm " ' Freddie! ' shouted the mother, as in her frantic attempts to reach the boy's angular ap pendage she upset the contents of the teapot in Mr. Liglited's lap, making numerous Russian war maps over his uew lavender pantaloons. "I was just going to say," the half-frightened boy plea-Ted, betweeu a cry and a half-in jured whine, "he had his arm " "You boy," thundered the father, "away to the woodshed.'' And the boy made for the nearest exit, exclaiming as he waltzed, "I was only going to say that Mr. Lighted had his army clothes on; and I'll leave it to him if he hadn'tl" Aud the boy wna permitted to come back, and the remainder of the meal was speut in explanations from the fam ily in regard to the number cf times Freddie bad to be talked to lor using h s ilugers for a ladle. A Voice from the Frees. I taks this opportunity to bear testimo ny to the efficacy of your "Hop Bitters." Expecting to find them nauseous and bitter and composed ot bad whiskey, we were agreeably surprised at their mild taste, just like a cup of tea. A Mrs. Cresswell and a Mrs. Connor, friends, have likewise tried, and pronounce thein the best me dicines tbsy have ever taken for building up strength and toning up the system. 1 was troubled with cosiiveness, headache aud want ot appetite. My ailments are now al. gone. 1 have a yearly contract with a doctor to look after the health of myself aud family, but I need him not now. 8. GILLILANJI. July 25, 1878. Peoples Advocate, Pittsburg, l'a A GENTLEMAN WAS going OUt Olio day in his carnage, to call with his wife, when he discovered that he had left his visiting cards. He ordered his footman, who had recently come into his serv ce, to go to the mentlapiece in the sittiug riKim. and briug the cards lie should see there. The servant did as he was or dered, retaining the articles to be used as directed, and off started the gentle man, sending iu the footmau with cards wherever the "not at home" oecnrred. As these times were very numerous, he turned to the servant with the ques tion— "How mauy cards have yon left?" "Well, sir, said the footman, very innoceHtly, "there's the king of spades, the six of hearts, and the oca of clubs," "The deuce!" exclaim ?J his master. "That's gone." A Protective Duty. l'he person subject to deraugemeut of the kidneys or liver has a protective duty to perform iu purchasing a package of Kidney-Wort. It imparts new vitality to the sick txxly and aires by eliminating ob structive matter.— Democrat, A FAMILY liviug a few miles from Washington, Ga., were awakened on the nieht the engiue house burned by the lady of the home, who happened to be awake, and saw the light. She awoke the other members of the household, aud when they saw the flames aud heard the thunder roiliug one of them ex claimed, "Judgment day has come!" A few moments after the whistle at the new mill began to blcwf then the other memliers of the family began to exclaim, "Yes, it is judgment day certain and that is Gabriel's horn." As long as the fire burned there was great consternation iu that household, but finally tliiugs quieted down and the family ielt in a measure relieved. Asthma aud Hay Fever. The L. A. Knight Company, 697 Broad way, New York city, advertise to send free on application Knight's new treatise on * 'Asthma and Hay Fever—their Cause and Cure." It is ably written and con• tains a great many valuable suggestions to those who suffer from these distressing diseases. See testimonials of Kuighl's Asthma Cure in another column. THKY had a good deal of trouble iu a Montreal court, the other day, trying to a wear in a Chinaman. He said he "be lieved" iu anything; that he "noswearee at allee;" and he didn't swear on a sau cer. When asked if he was a Buddhist, he answered: "Me no kuowee what you say. What you talkee about?" In reply to the question, "What religion do you belong to?" he said, "State of Ohio," and was finally svorn by crossing his hands on his heart. Pure cod liver oiL from selected livers, on the seashore, by Caswell, Hazard &> Co., N. Y. Absolutely pure and sweet. Pa tients who lisve once taken it prefer it to ail others. P.iysiciins declare it superior to all other od 3 . Chapped hands, face, pimples and rough skin cured by using Juniper Soap, mads by Caswell, Hazard & Co., New York. UNDER false colors: "Wife," wild a New Haven man, impatiently, "why do you lei that child run around to day HO dirty, so much like a little monkey ? I ran him in Neighbor Jones' yard just now, the worst-looking object I ever saw.' "Was he over there, though?" was the r sponded inquiry. "Well, he'll pasi for Mr. J ones' dirty brat so long as he is there. I'm not going to worry." Everybody is pleased with the Improved Cirboline, a deodorized extract of petro leum. it is as clear and limpid as spring water, and was originally intended by na ture as a panacea for all diseases of tbe scalp and skin and as a natural hair rene wer. HAPPILY twisted: When Sir George Hose was dining on one occasion with tie late Lord Langdale, his host was speaking of the very diminutiyo church ia Langdale, of which his lordship was patron. "It is not bigger," said Lord Langdale, "than this dining-room." "No," returned Sir George, "a..d the living is not half so good," Lvdia E. Pinkham's Y egetable Com pound ranks first as a curative agent in ail c miplaints peculiar to women. Cures K dney troubles ot either sex. AN Irish gentleman, having a small picture room, several persons desired to see it at the same time. "Faith, gentle men, if you all go in, it will not hold you." . WHY is the money you are in the hab it of given to the "poor like a new-born babe? Because it's precious little. Vegetine. SAYS s Boston physician, "has no equal as a blood purtfler. Hearing of Its many wonderful cures after all other remedies had failed, I visited trie Laboratory, and convinced myself of IU merit. It Is prepared from bar Its, roots and iierba, each of which Is effective, and tney are compounded In such a maimer aa to produce astonishing results," Vegetine Is the great Blood-Purlfler. Vegetine Will cure the-worst case of Scrofula. Vegetine Is recommended by pnyslclans and apothecaries. Vegetine Uas effected some marvelous cures In cases of Cancer. Vegetine Cures the worst cases of Canker. Vegetine Will eradicate Salt liheum from the system. Vegetine Removes Pimples and Humors from the faoe. Vegetine Is the great remedy for General Debility. Vegetine Is acknowledged by all classes of people to be the beat aud most reliable blood purt fler in the world, Vegetine IS THE BEST SPRING AND SUMMER MEDICINE. Vegetine Is Sold by all Druggists. c FOR THE PERMANENT CURE OF I CONSTIPATION. I No other disease is mo prevalent in this eoun fig P" try as Constipation, and no remedy lias ever ® equalled tlie celebrated Kidney-Wort aa a c E euro. Whatever tho cause, however obstinate O to the oase, this remedy will overcome it. w 00 |3l| pQ THIS distressing com- ® 8) ■ 11 tO s plaint is very apt to be £ oomplioated wlthoouatipation. Kidney-Wort strejigthena tho weakened parts and quickly a (8 cures all kind* cf Piles even when physicians £ a and medianes have before failed. £ <3- tJTIf you have either of these troubles T5 * PRICE sl. i use r TTTlglinatirSelH I a To id I whose iij>liynn"Utseauss irrepulitrp 3 H ty of the boa urinary organ*, or who r*- C y quire an aud mild hUmnbu.t, | a Bop Bit tor* are luTai^j l without into*- K ? Icating. ■nk Ko matter what your few"!!!** or symptoms I 1 are what the d.sonjw or ailY^ ,u nl 1" u? - Hop L.t- B I t>r*. I>on't wait until you aS IV 9 i cif but ld by diiij""' t*. Bead Bj. i for Circular. Ilop Bitter, Mflr. Cm,, j, losIPE^ 6|ffERS -fof a~qnaner or a century or more Hosts tterl Stomach Bitters has been the reigning speciflc for Indigestion, dyspepsia, fever anil ague, a loss of physical stamina, liver complaint and other dis orders, and has been most emphatically indorsed by medical men as a health and strength restora live. It counteracts n tendency to premature de cay, and sustains and comforts' the aged and to ll rm. For sale by all Druggists and Dealers generally. \ 111 \ Bliiji 1 1 1 if liw JLE. SELLERS & COL PITTSBURGH. PA, ViiiiflyitTi ! lm frJULLffIaW Medical and Mai Institute. For the treatment of diseases of men only. Dis eases of the generative organs recent or chronic, blood poison, pains in the tlesh and bones, red spots, ulcers, strictures, kidneys and bladder, weakness, nervous une general debility, prema ture decay, mental aud physical prostration, and other special diseases speedily and permanently cured. Patients may send a description ot their symptoms, etc., and appropriate remedies with di rections will be sent to any addreSk, DBS. J. W GRINDLE and A. D. GREY, Physicians and burgeons, 171 West 12th Street, New York. IEI | "BPf! STOPPED FREE ■ Marvelous success, Uforall ßß.TH cure for Pits, Epilepsy and Nerve Junctions. Ivr ALIIELE If taken as directed, No Pits aftef f rstdap suse. Treatise and $2 trial bottle free to Fit patients, they paying exprc ssage. Bend nima P. 6. and express address to Da. KLINE, 9H Arch 8L Philadelphia. Pa. SeevnnctpaictriiQifistf, TBI irU ts MIGIITT. Prof. MARTINEZ, TRU lis Bp*nlit| Bw, AIUOIOMI / IMMX tnd Pinhologtot, will, for 30 with *gf. height, I \ color of >ih and look of h*lr, Mnd * COR&KCT rlO-| P i TLRK of jour fotur, hmbmd or wlf#, with n*m, Um! SJ:' i I ~d pIMO of mMting, **d dW ofm*rriM. wcboloj. loiUr prodiotod. Money rolurneil to HI sot nulil. wBVg iSirtSi Prof. t. Umnuitc, WMout', Pl .Uo.wu, lUm- ALii on acountof Guitean: "My dear," said Job Shuttle to his wife, "dont't get exeitod. don't get excited. Keep cool, keep coof." ' I am keeping cool, I'm not excited; 1 tell you I don't care, I'm not. So there." "It's only your brain. You'll soon get over it." "Oh, Job Shuttle, you are enough to drive a wom an crazy. I shall die—" "And I predict that your brain will show pnecentral and retrocentral fissures on eaeh side, well defined and unconnected with other fissures, the inter-parietal fissure, on each side, in the transverse occipital, separated only by a slight bridge. The parieto-occipital will be marked on each side. The transverse occipital fissure on the right side ill-defined " "Job Shuttle! Job Shuttle 1" "There, there. Go right and lie down on the lounge and calm yourself. There, there!" and Job skipped off down town, chnckling to think he had secured a day to go fish ing with the boys. She wca so mad that she wouldn't stir a step with him, you know. "Golden Medical Discovery," has been used with signal success in con sumption of the lungs, consumptive night sweats, spitting of blood, shortness of breath, wet* lungs, coughs, bronchitis, and kindred affections of throat and chest. Sold by druggists. PICKING up: "I guess you must be better to-day," said Farmer Hodges to a sickly neighbor, whom he found rusti cating in his strawberry patch. "Oh, I'm picking up a little," was the reply, as the invalid bent over to gather a red nugget or so. "Men must work aud women woep, So runs the world away !" But they need not weep so much if they use Dr. Pierce's "Favorite Prescription," which cures all the painful maladiefi peculiar to women. Sold by druggists. "Is your wife a Democrat or a Repub lican ?" asked one citizen of another. "She's neither," was the prompt re sponse, and then glancing cautiously around, and sinking his voice to a hoarse whisper, he explained: * She's a Home- Ruler." The buge, dr&tl.c, griping, sickening pills are lust being superseded by Dr. Pierce's "Purgative Pellets." Sold by druggists. A GOOD catcher: Is that animal a suc cess?" inquired a neighbor of a farmer who had recently pureliaced a watch-dog. "Well, I guess so; he caught right on the tirstday," replied the owner, proud ly pointing to a mouthful of pantaloons debris near the dog's kennel. Kidney-Wort is a remedy which re moves foul humors from the blood, and creates healthy action in every organ. Torpid kidneys and liver lead to gravel, diabetes, constipation, piles and rheuma tism. Kidney-Wort is the surest and safest remedy 10 use.— Courant % CAUSE and effect: Eminent provincial tragedian—"Come hitherr, sweet one. Your mothorr tells me that you shed teorrs during my soliloquy in the Exile last night!" Sweet one—"Yes, sir. Mother kept on pinching me 'cause I was so sleepy?" There is hardly an adult person living but is sometimes troubled with kidney dif ficulty, which is the most prolific and dan gerous cause of all disease. There is no sort of need to have any lorm of kidney or uriDary trouble if Hop Bitters is taken occasionally. THERE is nothing that so takes the starch out of a young man who has been wedded about a year as to have to go to a store where there is a girl-clerk that he used to keep company with, and in quire for those large safety pins. 808 FULGUS HUM JUS. —The Vegetine has cured many cases of scrofula of five, ten and twenty years' standing, where the patient has had many physicians, tried many of the known remedies; and after trying the \egetine,the common remark is "It acts differently, works differently from any medicine I have ever taken.". Veme tine will cleause scrofula from the system. Try it. "Yes, sir," said Mr. Snooks, "it was funny enough to make a donkey laugh. I laughed till I cried." And then, as he saw a smile go round the room, he grew ied in the face and went away mad. Well Once More. 541 EAST ARCH STRRE ( POT rsv II.LR, Pa., bept, 22, 18bl. ) H. H. Warner & Co.: A'irs— I have suffered for many years with inflamma tion of the kidneys and bladder, and have never found anything that would give me any relief except your safe Kidney and Liver Cure, Mas. MART STAGER. The too free practice of removing tbe tops of grape-bearing branohes must be guarded against, because, as has been prov ed by tbe researches of M. Macagno, the green branches act as conductors of glu cose. Ibe most active agents in the forn - ing of glucose and tartaric acid are the upper leaves of the fruit-bearing branch. If ihere is enough of grapes care must be be taken to permit enough of loaves to re main for the preparation of the grape sugar or the quality of the fruit will be deterioi ated, „ Kidney Disease. Pain, IrriUtiou H-teu-i ui. Incmtinonoa. Depotti s. Grav 1. eo . cured by ••Buchu pait a." sl. Send for pamphlet' to E. S. WELLS, Jjisey City, N. J. The horns of the water-snail are hollow tubes, and when it draws in its horns the eyes disappear down the tubes, When the "optics" are needed again it is only necessary for the muscles round the tube to contract, and so to squeeze the tip gradually oat, Dr. Rime's Great Nerve Restorer is the marvel of the age for all nerve diseases. All tits stopped free. Hand to 931 Arch btreet, PuiladeJphia. Pa. Topham an Englishman, born in 1710, was possessed of astonishing strength. His armpits, hollow in lhe case of ordinary men, were with him full of muscles and tendons. He would take a bar of iron, with its two ends held in his hand, place the middle of the bar behind his neck, and bend the txwen ities by main force until they met together. Trfidl ? n abundance.—Ss Million pounds I L| VI Imported last year.—Price? lower I r U *9 than ever.—Agents warned.—Doat | A* II w waste time.—Send for circular. 10 lbs. Good Black or Mixed, for sl. 10 lbs. Fine Black or ltllxed, for 93. 10 lbs. Clioicc Black or mixed, far $& Send for pound sample, 17 ets. extra for postage Then got up a club. Choicest Tea In the world.- Largeet variety.—Pleases everybody.—Oldest Tea House In America.—No cliromo—No Humbug.- Btrolght business.—Value for money. liOB'T WELLS. 48 Vesey 5t.. N.V..P.0. Box 1887. 877 ▲ NOTED BUT UNTITLED WOMAN. [From the Boat on Otoft*] U'ssrt. Editor* The above la a good likeness of Vrs. Lydla E. Pink, ham, of Lynn, Unas., who above all other human batafs may be truthfully called the "Dear Friend of Woman," as some of her correspondents love to call her. She is sealoudly devoted to her work, which Is the outcome of a life-study, and Is obliged to keep six lady assistants, to help her answer the lary* correspondence which daily pours in upon her, each bearing its special burden of suffering, or Joy at release from It. Her Vegetable Compound is a medicine for good and not evil purposm. 1 have personally investigated It and am satisfied of the truth of this. On aooount of its proven merits, it is recommended and prescribed by the beet physicians in the country. One says t " It works like a charm and saves much pain. It will cure entirely the worst form of falling ef the uterus, Leuoorrhcea, Irregular and painful Menstruation, all Ovarian Troubles, Inflammation and Ulceration, Floodlngs, all Displacements and the con sequent spinal weakness, and la especially adapted to the Change of life." It permeates every portion of the system, gives new life and vigov. It removes fslntnses, flatulency, destroys all craving for stimulants, and relieves weak ness of ths stomach. It cures Bloating, Headaches, Nervous Prostration, General Debility, Sleeplessness, Depression and Indigestion. That feeling of bearing down, causing pain, weight and backache, is always permanently cured by Its use. It will at all times, and under all circumstances, act in harmony with the law that governs the female system. It costs only sl. per bottle or six for |S., and is sold"by druggists. Airy advice required aa to special cases, and the names of many who have been restored to perfect health by the use of the Vegetable Compound, can be obtained by addreesing Mrs. P., with stamp for reply, at her home in Lynn, Mass. For Kidney Complaint of either sex this compound is unsurpassed as abundant testimonials show. "Mrs. Pink ham's Liver Pills," says one writer, "are the best in the world tor the cure of Constipation, Biliousness and Torpidity of the liver. Her Blood Purifier works wonders In Its special line and bids fair to equal the Compound In Its popularity. All must respect ber as an Angel of Mercy whose sols ambition is to do good to others. Philadelphia. Pa. CD Mrs A. M. D. * My porcelain-lined Pumps are manufactured undrr license,and buyers are guaranteed against any and all claims from the Company holding the patent. l>on't fail to tnuke a note of this point, n*Y7 mzzmizm mmcsm Carefully made \ ALL of i \ the most Best Selected \ Valuable Timber. \ \ improvements. vzmvm:. The BLATCHLEY PUMPS are for .sale by the best houses in the tra e. Name of my nearest agent will be furnished on application to C. 6. BLATCHLEY, Manufacturer, 308 MARKET ST., PHILADELPHIA. PA. Prepared for Immediate Use. Bathings painte t with Pa nts mixed by hand have to be repainted every three years. The beat Paint cannot be made by hand mixing. The Paint used in the smallest item in coat of painting, labor the largest. Any bnllding will be repainted at oar expense if not satisfactorily painted with our Paint. For sale by on< dealer In every city end town in the United StatM DR. H. W. LOBB, MEDICAL OFFICES, NO. 329 NORTH FIFTEENTH STREET, Philadelphia, Pa. is years' experience. (Estab. lMied for treatment with purely vegetable medi cines.) Dr. Lobb's long experience In the treat ment of diseases enables him to guarantee a core in all cases. Consultation free and striotly con fidential. Ceil In person or by letter. Office hears: 11 to 8 and 7to 10 evening. RUPERTUS* CelkrMd RtacleßrMch LMUIDC Hhol tiun* at 913 up. Doable Barrel Bresoh Loaders, 916 Up. Forehand A Wadiworlh Chok* bore Kla- Br BrewK Loading Unas, at 914.50 up, uaaleand Brcerh Loaning (inuand Pis lot* of most approved English ana American make*. All kind* ofSportln* Implement* and artt alee required by Sportsmen and Gnnmakera. 10.1, C. üBUUB A CO., 71* Market SC. Sendß-oant stamp for Prioe-Liat Philadelphia. YOUNG MEN and be oertaia of a situation, address VAJJBMTEKI ■BOB. JanearUla. wlaceaaaip. Payne's Automatic Engines, Walla hie. Durable and Economical, wafrnrmtm e tores power o&H km?Mi amd wamr tktt* aaareOw Sfradslasggß II nirENGLAND CONSERVATORY OF 111 I- WIMIIOIP & SCHOOL OF ENGLISH 111 If HlUalb BRANCHES,LANGUAGES. II Lf I ARTS.ELQCUTIQN&PHYSICAL CULTURE l|niir spLE NDIDLY.FURNISHED. , U| | IIL IN THE HEART OF BOSTON. 111 llf 11 RARE ADVANTAGES. LOW RAITS. llUHlLsendfor circular. eiourjee. DRS. J. N. & J. B. HOBENSACK. THOSE AFFLICTED WITH THE EFFECTS OF INDISCRETION AND MERCURIALIZATION should not hesitate to consult J. N. and J. B. HO BENSACK, of 206 North Second street, Philadel phia, either by mail or by person, during the hours from 8 A. M. to 2 P. M. and 6 to 9 P. M. Advioe free. Whosoever wonld know his condi tion aid the way to improve It should read "WISDOM IN A NUTSHELL." Sent on receipt of ttiree-oent stamp. DHOTI IDE ~CRAR OUNAMI BJ J. A MATKRV bCllkdl I |K|i Mkcd. (traiwii C for U Cut BlUr I Untl VMiwy olfimf tuwd.' Advio. tw. OA Those annvenng au advertuement will ooufer a favor upon the advertiser and the publisher by stating that they saw the ad vf rtisemeßt |ntnif touroal (uftaU&f 9*99*