gelling cigar*. to be a successful salesman in a large retail cigar store a man must be an excel lent actor; he must possess a powerful memory, and above all he must always keep his temper. There is the customer for whom the clerk must have a smile, the man who always expects to be congratula ted on his 100k 8, and the weather fiend, to whom the clerk must say, 'Ms this hot enough for you?" To address this query to a wrong customer would bo disastrous. There are others who have smoked the same brand of cigars for years, They enter the door, deposit a quarter or a half dollar, pick up their cigars and depart, without a word. There wasone man, who by the way is a prominent board of trade speculator, whose voice the clerk has not heard for over six months, although he buys six cigars a day at the store. Not one man in a dozen knows ai vthing about the cigars he is smoking, and will smoke a five cent cigar with as much enjoyment as a fifteen cent one, provided he thinks the five ceuter is a high priced cigar. The label on a cigar box has a great deal to do with making a cigar popular, and the quotation, "a rose would smell as sweet by any other name," does not hold good in this iastance, as customers generally go back on a cigar when the label on a box is changed. It does no good for the clerk, to explain ard expostulate; the label is changed and the cigar has lost its attrac tions. Gamblers are as a rule smokers of the finest goods, but they are as customers very erratic, owing to the different chan 3es of fortune which they experience. For weeks and weeks a member of the fraternity may present himself at the same cigar counter and suioke his twenty-five cent cigars. Suddenly some day he ap jeare aud says he is tired of the brand and wfil try a nickel cigar. The cierk asks no questions and in a short time he returns to his twenty- five ceat weeds, The increase in a young man's salary can always be de tected by the obseivant cigar clerk, as the price of the cigar which the youthful cus tomer smokes goes up in preportion. There is one class of customers who are separate and distinct from the general line of smokers; they are the youngsters who smoke cigarettes. The peculiarities of the cigarette smoker have often been described but in a cigar store he shows up under a calcium light. They generally come in pairs, buy a|bunch of the toys and hold an animated discussion as to the merits of some brand which is "too awfully utter." Then they light their cigarettes, and sta tioning themselves in the door, act as cigar sigus until their noon hour is up. Their physique is in marked contrast to that of consumers of good cigars. It is a fact not generally knowu that the smoking of cigareites has a most injurious tffect upon the growth of the mustache us the poison generated while smoking acts upon the mucous lining of the upper lip, thus stuntiDg the growth of the hirsute appendage. It is not the intention of the "reporter to ruin the cigarette manufactur ers, but if this fact becomes generally known cigarettes are in danger of being a drug in tne market. A Home With a History. In a very siionume the building on New York avenue, Dear Fourteenth street, Washington, long known as Chamberlain's Club House, will be ow ned by the Young Men's Christian Association, and after being remodeled, it will be occupied as association headquarters. Of all the sport ing houses, restaurants and saloons in Washington. Chamberlain's is perhaps the most noted. Men of all classes have assem bled and regaled themselves there, it has been the scene of many political and otbe r plots, and by men of convivial dispositions it was considered the most complete estab lishment south of New i'ork. Its location and its peculiar architecture were features in its lavor and enhanced us value. The property was originally owned by the McCleary estate aDd. with the building was valued at about $28,000. It passed out of the hands of the McCiearys and was purchased for the above sum by the fam ous Washington Club, Governor A. 11 Shepherd, president, and its members, including Haliet Kdbourn, General Graut and many others who figured in the cele br&ted real e9 ate pool and other great steals, etc., which have developed here since the late war. Temporarily the Wash iDgton Club leased the mansion to the Chinese Legation. Subsequently the c'ub fitted it up lavishly and took possession themselves. For several years tte club flourished and schemes and plots of every character were concocted within its richly appointed parlors. Gieat sums of money were squandered at cards and sumptuous dinners were frequent events there. John Chamberlain finally secured it. For a long time be conducted it on a royal plan and it became even more famous than ever. The last two years, however, were without profit. Chamberlain appeared to be ne • glectful of his business and the great crowd of sporting and public men who bad been Iqs constant patrons began to lessen ana to seek their peculiar pleasures elsewhere. Chamberlain concluded to move. The Washington Club, being in a much demoralized state financially, concluded to seil the property, aDd lound purcha c ers in the Young Men's Christian Association. The price paid was $30,000. The change is generally regretted by all the prominent sportiDg men, but the religious element appear to be jubilant over the fact that the hails and rooms that once resounded to the jingle of champagne glasses and the sounds of ribald jests will soon echo hymns and give back the notes of the church organ. Nice Napkins. The napkins at hotels are now folded, in a half wet condition, into all sorts of shapes—a goose, a swan, a ship, a high boot are all favorite and fanciful designs —but it is a dirty fashion, requiring the manipulation of hands that are not always freeb, and the napkin must be damp at the folding, so it is not always dry when shaken out. Nothing is so unhealthy as a damp napkin. It is the death of a deli cate and nervous lady, a man with the rose cold, a person with the neuralgia or rheumatism, and it is offensive to every one. Never a 1 low your waiter to put on a napkin unless it has been well aired. There is often a conspiracy between the waiter and the laundress in great houses, both wishing to shirk work, and the nap kins not done up in time tire hurried on to the table damp, which is the height of yulgarity. The mistress ot the house should have a large chest of reserved napery which .is not used every day, but which must ail be washed and aired once a year at least, to keep it from moulding and getting yellow. Our Dutch ancestors were very fond of enriching this chest, and many a house keeper in New Tork and Albany is to-day using linen brought from Holland three hundred years ato. Tta f made in Ireland has, however, taken the'place for us of all other napery. Jt is good, cheap and some times very handsome, and if it can be bought unadulterated with cotton will last many years. Too much starch should never be used in napkins. No one wishes to wipe a delicate lip on a board, and a stiff napkin comes very near b< ing a board. AGRICULTURE, FERTILIZING VALFK OF CLOVER PEN.— The great fertilizing value coutained in a good clover pod does not seem to be appre ciated or believed by farmers generally. According to experiments and analysis made in Germany to determine the uum ber of pounds of roots and stubble cou tamed in an acre of clover sod to the depth ot ten inches, it is shown that there were 8921 pounds, which contained 191 pounds of nitrogen, beside considerable potash and phosphoric acid. The 191 pounds ot nitrogen at 20 cents a pound would bo worth #88.20. Uudoubtedly the acre ot soil waich contained roots euough to alTord such a large amount of nitrogen was pro duced on land In a high state of cultiva tion; but suppose that an acre of soil con tained only one-half as much nitrogen, or 93 pounds, worth #l9. How could the iarmer supply au equal amount of fertiliz ers to his soil so cheaply and so easily as'oy clover raising? The clover root is rich in mtrogeu, a fertilizer which is the most costly of any element of plant food offered in the market. It is just the fertilizer needed for the growth of wheat and corn. A crop of wheal yielding twenty-live bush els of grain contaius in the stem and grain about sixty pounds of utrogen, or only about one-third the amount found to be contained in an acre of good clover sod in Germany. Hence it would be iuferred that a clover sod would be an excellent preparation of the land for a wheat crop, and this has been found in practice to be the case. In England much dependence is placed upon the clover sod as a prepara tion of the soil for the wheat crop. The clover sod is equally valuable as a pre paration of the soil for a corn crop. Clover raising can be made to do great service In enriching sarins and reuovating worn-out land. More clover should b grown,and the laud seeded with it oftener. Dr. Voelcker, in Eugland, found that the clover sod was most valuaule as a fertilizer, after having been mown two seasons for hay. The roots then hail attained their full development and were then richest in fertilizing elements. What farmers need toaio, in order to avail themselves of the fall advantage of this crop, is to turn the sod under when full of roots, raise a crop of grain or corn, and seed to clover again. Cut the clover two years for hay, turn under the sod, sow to grain or plant corn and seed to clover again and so on, turn ing under a good clover sod every three or four years until the land is renovated. Whatever barn manure or other fertilizers can be spared for use on tne land will hasten the process." HERE is a remeuv, or preventive of the chicken cho'era, which 1 have successfully used for two years. While my neighbors have been losing nearly their entire HOCK mine have been healthy and 1 have never had a case to my knowledge: Take a bar rel, saw it asuuder in halves, put about 3 quarts of unslaked lime ID ODeof the halves together with half a pound or one pound to suit the necessity) of alum; till the half barrel with water: when slaked and settled take from one pint to one quart(as the case requires) and put it In every pail of water given the fowls to drink. The lime will an>wer for a second half barrel of water, but the same quantity of alum should he added as before. If continued daily dur ing the sickly seaaoh I can, from my ex perience, assure our readers that their fowls will uot be troubled with the chicken cholera. OF hot milk as a stimulant the Medical Jlecorcl says: "Milk heated too much above lUO degrees Eahrt-nheit loses for a time a degree of its sweetness and density. No one who, atigued by over-exertion of body or mind, has ever experienced the reviving influence ei a tumbler of this bev erage, heated as hot as it can be 6ipped. will willingly forego a resort to it because of its being rendered somewhat less accep table to the palate. The promptness with which its cordial influence is felt is indeed surprising. Some portion of it seems to be digested and appropriated alino t im mediately, and uiauy who now fancy they need alcoholic stimulants when exhausted by fatigue will find in this ample draught an equivalent that will be a uudautly sat it-fyiug and far more enduring in its ef fects. " ASHES. —Especially uuleached, should never be mixed with manures of any kind,(of which hea manure is one,) for the reason that ashes have a greater or less tendency to liberate tbe gaseous am moDia contained in the manure. Presum ing the proposed fertilizer is intended for wheat: the better way would be to first pulverize the hen manure as fine as need be and mix therewith an equal quantity of bone dust and double the quantity of rich earth, letting the same lie in compost, to be drilled in with the wheat at the rate of 4 0 pounds to the acre, and using the ashes tor seme other purpose, either for corn in the spring or sowing broadca9* (and as thick as you please) on the wheat as soon as up. CULTIVATION OF I?MAAL FRUITS. —Every one owning or cultivating the soil,whether in large tracts or a small garden plot, should plant email fruits, for they are even more than a luxury, they are a real necessity in maintaining health and avoid ing beavy doctor bills. Fruit grown on one's own place is much better tban that bought in the markets, as it is always fresh and thoroughly ripeued. making it more palatable and easier digested. Euough small trult plants should be set out to at least supply the family needs, and if there De any surplus it can be sold or put up tor winter use. WHEN COWS arc ted with a liberality that develops a full flow of milk, they will not overload with a food so litile concen trated ar green grass. The fact that they do overload is an evidence that their pre vious food was scauty tor profit, and con sequently that load had been endured on account of it When a chauge is to be made the herd should be admitted gradually to the new feed, and they should be supplied with all the salt and water they desire. The incrense in the new ration should never be so great as to change the flavor of the milk. DAIKY farming is more difficult and la borious than sheep farmiDg. Sheep cul ture has many advantages over cattle-rais ings as also over dairying. There is a necessity of sheep husbandry for meat production. The rapid incr-. of popu lation, the scarcity and increasing price of beef, the inferiority of pork in healthiness and nutrition, teud to the increase of mutton-eating. Cabbage worms can be kept within bounds, if not completely destroyed, by the uee ot Tansy. Make a 6trong de coction of plant aud add a small quantity ot saltpeter and sprinkle the cabbage plants when you find the worm has commenced its work. Try this and save your ca bage, The addition of saltpeter will prove a good fertilizer as well as a destroyer of the worm. TURNIPS are healthful for horses. They should be cut in thin slices, or, what is better, pulped finely and mixed with a little meal aud some salt. Rutabagas are belter than white turnips. DOMESTIC. WEDDING CAKE. —Prepare your ingre dients the day before making your cake. Pick and stone four pounds of the best raisins; do not uso the seedless raisins lor the cake; wash and pick over four pounds of currants; drain them in a col ander and spread them on dishes to dry, or you may sprinkle them with Indian meal, rubbing the meal well through the currants, and sif'iug them iu a sieve to clear them from it; cut up two pounds of citron in thiu pieces, aud when just ready to use the fruit strew it thickly with tlour; grate four nutmegs and mix thein with a tablespoonful of ground mace, two tablespooufuls of ground cin namon, and a small half teuspoouful of grouud cloves; sift these spices and mix well together in a cup; mix together two large wine glasses of wine, one of brandy aud one of rose water: cream together one pound of powdered sugar and fifteen ounces of best butter; beat twelve eggs until perfectly smooth and thick, and stir them gradually into the creamed butter ami sugar, together with a pound of Hour which you have sifted in a basin; then add by degrees the fruit, spice and liquor, and stir the whole very hard at the last; line your pans with well-greased paper, and bake in a moderate oveu for six hours at least; ice it the next morning, first dredging flour over the outside, and then wiping with a towel; aluiond icing is very nice for this cake. FRIED CHICKEN. —First, B© sure and get a youug chicken; clean nicely inside ami out; instead of cutting it iuto small pieces, out it iu only two, down the cen tre of the back; flatten it out, break the breast bone with a rolling pin, wash it off quickly with eold water arid wipe dry with a clean towel; do not let it re main in the water. Have ready a pan with about two ounces of butter which has been browned; put in the chicken and dip the butter over it; turn it every five minutew and baste with the browu butter between the turning; when half done salt and pepper to taste; make a gravy of milk or cream; take a tuble spoouful of flour stirred smooth for thickening the gravy. SALT pork for boiling should have lean streaks running through it. From such a piece cut two pounds or more, accord ing to size of family, scrape the rind well, wash clean, then put it to boil iu cold soft water; boil one hour, then change the water, filling up with boiling water from tea kettle; boil another hour, then take it from the water, lay it on a tin and set iu a well-heated oven to bake half an hour. Incline the tin, letting the pork rest iu the upper part, so that the grease, as it fries out, may drip away from the meat. Turu the pork from side to aide that it may crust nicely. Turn the grease from the tin as it fills up, so the pork will not rest in it wlieu baking. {Serve hot and see if the men like it. RAGOUT OF TURRET. —Cut the cold turkey that is left over from a roast or boil into bits an inch long; put in a pan the gravy left from the roast, addiug a little water if the quantity be small; and a tablespoonful of butter, a teaspoonful of pungent sauce, half a teaspoonful of cloves, a little grated nutmeg, and a little salt; when it boils up put in the meat; stew very gently for ten minutes, and then stir iu a table spoonful of cranberry or currant jelly, a teaspoonful of browned flour, wet in a little cold water, and a wineglassfnl of sherry or Mailt i "a; boil up once, and serve in a covered dish, A ragout with out spice, jelly, or wine is generally preferred. CREAM PCFFS. —One-half pound but ter, three-quarters pound flour, eight eggs, one pint of water. Stir the butter with the water, which should be warm; place upon the stove and bring to a boil; add the flour and boil one minute, stirring constantly; take from ttie fire and let cool. Beat tbe eggs very light and add to the coaled paste, first the yolks and then the whites. Drop in large spoonfuls upon buttered paper, though they are nicer shaped baked in muffin-rings placed in a dripping-pan. They must be placed far enough apart so as not to run iuto each other. When cold, cut out the center with a sharp knife, aud till them with thin-boiled custard, Season with lemon or vanilla. BAKED HAM. —Make a thick paste of floor and water (not boiled), and cover the entire ham with it, boDe and all; put in a pan, on a spider or two muffin rings, or anything that will keep it an inch from the bottom, and bake in a hot oven; if a small ham, fifteen minutes for eaeh pound; if large, twenty minutes; the oven should be hot when put in. The paste forms a hard crust around the ham, and Hie skin comes off with it. Try this, and you will never cook a ham in any other way. CREAM EICE TCDDINO —Wash four ounces of rice, (cost 3 cents,) through two waters, put it into a baking dish with thrae ounces of sugar, aud a tea spoonful of flavoring (cost 3 cent*,) pour in one quart and a pint of milk, (cost 12 cents,) aud put it into a moderate oven to bake an hour and a half, or until it is of a creamy consistency. This pudding is very delicate and wholesome, and costs 15 cents. To RESTORE THE HAIR AFTHR ILLNESS. —Equal parts of best brandy aud strong black tea, shaken well together and rubbed well into the roots of ths hair once daily, will usually restore the hair after long illness. Be careful not to scratch or irritate the scalp with rough combing and brushing. The mixturs should be made at least once in three days, even in cool weather. COAL TAR from gas works mixed to the consistency of mortar with tiuoly sifted coal ashes or road dust, is recom mended for leaks in gutters or valleys or around chimneys. It is also thought that it may be equally useful over an imperfect loof previously laid with felt or paper. CAMPHORICE FOR CHAPPED HANDS.— Melt spermaceti, one drachm, with al mond oil, one ounce, and add powdered camphor, one drachm. It will be im proved by adding a couple of drachms of glycerine, using as much less of the almond oil. To DESTROY WARTS, —Dissolve as much common washing soda as the wa ter wall take up; wash the warts with this for a minute or two and let them dry without wiping. Keep the water in a bottle and repeat the washing often and it will take away the largest warts. To fricassee eggs take hard-boiled egg ß an d roll them in bread crumbs sea soned with salt and pepper and nutmeg, and fry them a delicate brown in butter. To cure inflammatory rheumatism take half an ounce of pulverized saltpe tre, putin half a pint of sweet oil; bathe the parts effected, and a sound cure will be speedily effected. HUMOROUS. TTeu favorite name: There is to be a wedding soon, the way to which was paved with HO much delicate ingenuity by the lady in the case that it IH worth recording. The gentleman had been an accepted suitor lor months, but had never even remotely alluded to the wed ding day, and the lady, tir d With so much wH'ting. made up her mind to prompt him a little ou the lirat favorable occasion. It happened in this way; They were sitting in the gnrdou, and as was his custom he was making himself agreeable by gallant speeches, in one of which he alluded to her as "darling." He empnasized tha name by a tender pressure of the hand, and remarked that "darling" was the sweetest word in the English language for him. "Do you think HO ?'' hhe naked in a tremulous voice; "there is another name that to me is far sweeter." "What is it, dar ling?" asked the lover rapturously. "Just a little word of four letters —wife," she answered, with a gentle confusion, and there was nothing left for him but to ask her to decide the day when he might call her by lier fnyonte name. SufTurlng Woiu*n. There is but a very small proportion of the women of this nation that do not suffer from some of the diseases for which Kid ney-Wort is a spet ide. When the bowels have become costive, headache torments, kidneys out of tlx, or piles distress, take a package and its wonderful tonic aud reuo vating power will cure y >u aud give new life. — Watchman. You NO America: "Guess 1 won't take in the school to-day," said a Carson urchin with an Appeal 111 his hand. "Why not?" ' Concordia has fallen off ten cents and I don't dare to show up uutil it picks up agaiu." 14 What have the fluctuations of Couoordia got to do with your studios?" "A gotxl deal," answered the boy. "My teacher has one hundred shares of the stock and when it falls off a few cents wo all catch it heavy. I keep my eye on the list and when there's a break you bet I don't go to school. I play sick. Golly ! how she basted me the time Mount Diablo busted down to two dollars. My moth er's been patchiu' my pants now ever since the big break in Sierra Nevada, and if the market don't take a turn pret ty soon I'm goiu' to quit the public school aud go to work on a ranch." ANSWER Tins. — Is there a person living who ever saw a case of ague, biliousness, v nei vousness. or neuralgia, or any disease of the stomach, liver, or kidneys that Hop Bitters will nol cure ? THE old woman kept a private bottle from which she refreshed herself from time to time, as she felt the need, though none of the family kuew it. One eve ning her daughter, in rummaging through the pantry for doughnuts for her beau, spied the bottle, and had the curiosity to draw the cork and apply her nose to the aperture, at which moment the old lady hove in sight and angrily demanded: "W T ell, are you any wiser than you were? What do you su|v pose it is" "I don't know what it is, mamma," answered the shrinking mai den, "but it smells just like Charlie's moustache. - ' RKWTED FROM DEATn. William J. CoHghlin. of Homerrille. Mass., says: In the fall of 187. I was taken with BLKEDIXO of THE l.nNi>R. followed BJ • OOUFCH. IWT my apiietlte and flesh, and wase mflned to mv bed. In 1877 I was admitted to the Hospital. The doctors said I had a hole in mr Inns as big as a half dollar. At one time a report went around that I was dead. I gav* up hoj-o. but a friend told me of DR. WIL LI Alkf HALLS BALSAM FOR THE LUNGS. I got a bottle, when to my surprise, I commenced to feel better, and to-day I Iml better than for three years pa#t. BAKER'S PAIN PANACEA cures pain in Man o* llcasi. Var use externally or internally- IT is related of a yonng American clergyman who was traveling this sum mer iu England in company with an Englishman, that he kept his eyes on the landscape, aud his oompaniou said, "I suppose you are not accustomed to such rapid travelling, but I beg to assure you there is no danger." "Thank you," the American replied, "1 have been accustomed all my life to going faster than this, but I am expecting this traiH to run off the little island." Mother Shiptou's prophecy is supposed to be about four hundred years old, and every phrophecy has been fulfilled except the last—the end of the world in 1881. Buy your Carboline, a deodorized extract of petroleum, the great natural hair re storer, before the world conies to an end. "Now, my son," said a West Side cabinet maker to his little boy, "yon must remember that sins are like nails driven into a post. Repentance is mere Jy pulling the nails out, but the scars— the holes remain." "But, I say,"inter rupted the youth, "cau't we kiuder putty 'em up, as you do the worm holes in the rottou bass-wood that you use to make real English oak bedroom sets?" Catarrh of the ltlndder. Stinging eratitt ng irritation of t'" urinary passages, d'si-aiod d scliarges. cured by Hu cbupaiha $1 at drug oat-. Prspad by ex press, $1.25, 6 for $5. E. S. WKLLS. Jersey City, N. J. CHURCHYARD luck: "How many child ren have you now ?" a lady asked an old servant the other day. "Fourteen." he replied. "A large family, indeed." "Yes, ma'am," said the philosophic re tainer; but you see I'm not like many of my neighbors; I've never had any churchyard luck with my ehiidreu— they al! lived." Pure cod liver oil. from •elected livers, en the seashore, by Caswell, Hazard & Co., N. Y. Absolutely pure and sweet. Pa tients who have once taken it prefer it to ail others. Physicians declare it superior to all other oils. Chapped hands, face, pimples and rough skin cured by using Juniper ap, made by Caswell, Hazard & Co., New York. BACHELOR ladies: JSmily (littlesister): "What a large family the spinsters must be ! I hear in church every Sun day that some of them are going to be married." Frances (elder sister): "O you little stupid ! Don't you know what spinsters are? Bachelor ladies, of course." Pimples and Humors on the Face.—ln this condition of the skin, the "Vegetine" is the great remedy, as it aets directly upon the cause. It cleanses aud purifie3 the blood, thereby causing humors of all to disappear. ARITHMETICAL: She—"This is a pretty hour of the mght for you to come home, after promising me to be home at a quarter of twelve. He (pointing to the clock) —"Well, ain't three a quarter of twelve V It aiu't niv fault you don't know arithmetic." THE ONE GREAT MEDICINE. Without donbt there are now, and have been for years past, several medicines or remarkable merit before the public—medicines which have been used, in very many cases, with excellent success. The names of these will readily recur to our read ers, and they are the names of preparations whose worth, for certain purposes, no one IH supposed to deny. Hut we are fully Justified, by undenlab.e and notorious facts, lu saying, aud we do unhesi tatingly say, that the one great medicine of the present day— the medicine, we mean, which now stands pre-eminent above all others—is the fa mous \ KoxriNK of Mr. 11. 1L Htevens of Boston. Home of the undeniable facts respecting this fa tuous medicine are these: Kirst, it Is astonishingly efficient In really cnrlng the various diseases for which It Is especially com pounded and tnteuded. Second, it acts with a celerity which Is generally very surprising. A single bottle has often either cured the user of a serious diillculty, or brought about a most agreeable change, while a very few bullies have lu thousands of instances affected the complete cure of a long stun ling disease which had previously battled the skill of the beat phy sicians. Third, It acts directly upon the blood, of whieh It la the only powerful aud thorough purifier. Fourth, the testimoulals In support of these facts and the extraordinary worth of this medi cine are from well-known and most respect able men aud women, and, in many in st SIXTH, from persous holding the highest social positions. They are not certificates from unknown uud irresponsible individuals. We, our selves, kuow the very high estimation In which Vcgetiuu is held In one of ihe best families in the cltv. There Is, In Btiort, and can lie, no doubt or mis take whatever about the unprecedented aud sur prising efficacy, value and success of the Vcgetiue. As a pu.illcr of the blood and a quick renovator and invigorator of the humau system, physical and mental, no medicine, as is now generally conceded, has ever been devised and compounded at all equal to It; and, as a speedy aud thoiough cure for such coiup.aiuts as catarrh, cough, stomach .weakness and faiutness, loss of appetite, dyspep sia, cancerous humors, scrofula, rheumatism, kid ney and some other equally serious complaints, Vegetiue altogether surpasses any and ail other known medicinal preparations. The rapidity with which this great medicine has won its way Into all parts of this country and various foreign cues since its discovery and introduction, uol many years ago, is something alike surprising vind con firmatory of its intrinsic excellence.—Providence, (it. 1.) Gazette. Vcgetiuo is Sold by all Druggist*. ATOMACH _ ®iT7£s** For a fnarter or a century ©? nor* Boctattafi Stomach Bittcra hu been the reigning apecilc tar tadigeatloß, dyspepsia, fever and ague, a loaa t physical atamina, liver complaint and otbar dis orders, and ha* been most emphatically indorsed t>y medical men as a health and strength restora tive. It counteract* a tendency to premature de cay, and sustains and comfort* the aged and ta flrm. For aale by all Druggist* and Dealers generally. jjj Thc-Bl'ur. hLHnd lleat Medicine eer Made. 2 B Acof inhiuati >n of Hops, Bucbu, Man-S Pdrnk&e Dandelioi** w ' ( : *lc\ur* lie properties o -dl uthor li.'.t. r*.j| MJJlE p\the gr-*a-st Bloc i Furlrlcr, Live r J Re u l\. ator t aud life anu ll.jiiUi Agiut earth. No i!L-H-a.se possibly Vng exist * her* It fiJ lUttTs are varied oud perfect arc th. tr opcrati. : S3E-< Tiey gin tewliUfi atl vigcrto tia*sl si Itflna To all Whom c%n>ployiuc!iU eanao irreiful i.l ** -stt.i -ainaV uiiaary organs, or who re quire an —tuiU! KiitniA—•. HopßMenajcmval^hiuible.withou. IntOf Icattng. anak No nutUT what your or . r "iprnu r.rc what the diaeast. uriflMneut Is use Uop Bit ter*. Dont wait untilyouamI'® 1 '® sick but if you only feci bad or nihwrahlei* Urt ** t' lpm *T DDIV I ltiuaysaveyourlife.lthaaß ß **®d hundreds.B I *SOO will be paid for a cal will nr.tS euro o not nifer% begirt r f hu! u*e aud ur£* Hop 8 p Ketncmher, Hop Bitters is drugjrvdl drmken nostrum, but the n ___ ' i Medicine over made ; tlio "1> XUDS^^ naESD | and UOr*** and no person or should be without thonx. f0.1.C. 1* a'<*cle.tc and In—sttbkj cun-B mS> ■forOiunketir s.u-eof op.um. tohaoco and I WWr |nan-- tics. All soi lbv dmjorl ta txixl Jj r Wr ■tor Circular. Htp Btitrri Hfy. C*., /f iLjJJr I Kocherfs r,5. i and Toronto, tmt. mjjtffl PITTSBURGH, PA. ** pEEBaBBaaa cTHE CREAT CURE ; J I ron S i! —RHEUMATISM— s _ As It Is for all the painful diseases of the £ KIDNEYB,LIVER AND BOWELS. g (g It cleanses the system of the acrid poison 00 that causes the dreadful suffering which Q only the victims of Rheumatism can realise. > £ THOUSANDS OF CASES 2 £ of the worst forms of this terrible disease ► rt havo been quickly relieved, and in short time " PERFECTLY CURED. O PRICE, 91. LIQVID OU DRY, SOLD BY DUI CCISTS. v < 14- Dry can be sent br mail. 3 WELLS, BICHAUDSON & Co., Burlington Vt. * DBS. J. N. & J. B. HOBENBAOL THOSE AFFLICTED WITH TIIK EFFECTS OF INDISCRETION AND MERCUKIALIZATION should not hesitate to consult J. N. and J. B. HO BKNSACK, of 2ennaneittly cured by Its use. It will at all times and under all circumstances act In harmony with the laws that govern the female system. For the cure of Kidney Complaints of eltbsr sax this Compound Is unsurpassed. I.TDIA E. PIS KH AMM VEGETABLE COM POUND la prepared at 238 and >36 Western Averine, Lynn, Mesa Price sl. Sls bottles for 6. Sent by mall In tba form of pills, also in the form of losengeo, en receipt of price, |1 per box for either. Mrs. Pink bam freely answers all letters of Inquiry. Send for psmph let. Address as abovs. Mention ikl s Paper. No family should ha without LYDIA C. FIN A SAM'S IJVKR PILLS. They sure constipation, billon tutsstt t and torpidity of thr liver. K oenta per box. Meld br all Druaalsts. -©• !* y. porcelain-lined Pumps are manufactured I urd*r i i cense, and buyers are guaranteed against any and ail claims from the f ompany holding the patent. Don't fail to make a note of tfiio & \ rBM WSJKZM Carefully made \ ALL of i \ the most Best Selected \ \ Valuable Timber. \ \ Improvements. wmwrsjm: y Tl.e BLATCHLEY PUMPS are for .sale by the be.t houses in the tra e. Name of my nearest agent will be furnished on application to C. G. BLATCWLEY, Manufacturer, 308 MARKET ST.. PHILADELPHIA, PA. BUPr.RTVS* Olehreted Rlflffle BrOMh Leading Shot tiuus at #l3 np. Double Barrel Breach Loader*, §lB Dp. Fereliend A Wediwerih Choke bore Win- Kle Breeeh I.oiling (.una, at tM.ISO up, iassleand Breeeh LoadiagGanaaad Pis *leof mod approved Erurd-h and American makes. 11 kind* of Sporting Isuplesuenta and artt> alee required by uportsmeli and Gnnmakere. JO*. C. OKtJKHA to.. Tit Mnrhet U, ■snaß-oeDt siianp for PrioeJAst. Philadeiubla, RUPTURE.S3S^S in t t ~ *-j a—BwrAw Tuwiwa r | u ■ SvA kW.IL onwWee.tAJtrwtV.lt. SSi AACa ■,fSSW. Monuments ant Gravestones! I will allow liberal commission to good F artle * anywhere who will sell tor me. Wathan's Marble Works, 57 Lafayette Place y NEW YORK. ■■ | PpASTOPPEp FREE JTorMiMU IUOMM, I I I NERVE RESTORER aB Bbaiw * Nrbti Dtsmisßs. (mp iun FUt, Epxleprj mnd Atrss AJTecMU. ■1 w* iuh, not fitted with an AotomaUeOvt-edt ienH for Uluetratad Oatalogu. "J." lor Inform—ton 1 Tftoeu. h W. fmi h SOMA ki W, O Medical ant Snnical Mtnte. For the treatment of diseases of men only. Dl eases of the generative organs recent or chronlo, blood poison, pains in the flesh and bones, red spots, ulcers, strictures, kidneys and bladder, weakness, nervous and general debility, prema ture decay, mental and physical prostration, and other special diseases speedily and permanently cured. Patients may send a description of their symptoms, etc., and appropriate remedies with di rections will be sent to any address, DBS. J. W. GRINDLE and A. D. GREY, Physicians and Surgeons, 171 West 12th Street, New York. ONX.Y 5207 for thta style of PHILADELPHIA SINGER. Equal to any Bingsr in the market. lie-member, toe ecndittobeexamined.be fore you pay for it. Tbiatatheeama • ll? companies retail for IPOU* All Machines warranted tor 8 years. Send for Illustrated Clr* cular and Testimonials. Address CHARLES A. WOOD * COXj i 12 h. lentil St, PWadelpiiS ft, Agents Wanted. The Culminating Triumph. HOW to LIVE A complete Cyclopedia of household knowledge for the masses; now ready. Nothing like It t Going fast! Low priced. Illustrated, uuequnlletin authoritiip Send for Press notices and fun particulars now. Out lit and instruction how to sell, free to actual agent A. buocesa guaranteed faithful workers State expert • ence, if any, and territory desired. W. 11. Thsns • son, Publisher, 4W Arch Street, Philadelphia, Pa,