FOR THE FARM AND HOME. A Thin tow. If a gow is fed too much meal she "will be poor and thin, and the skin may be irritated and congested. Too much food has a similar effect, or is worse than too little, a* it produces indiges tion, which disorders the blood and causes a feverish condition of the sys tem. As it is only the food that is digested healthfully that makes llesh, fat and milk, these will not be made if a larger quantity be given than can be digested. A cow that is suffer ing from indigestion may bo treated as follows: Give a pint, of linseed-oil, and repeat it the second day after: then feed some bran slop or some cut feed with bran and a little meal in it, but in moderate quantity, until her appear ance improves. Potato Experiment*. \ correspondent in the Cultivator and Country Gentleman gives the re sult of some experiments in growing potatoes: Some years ago I selected some healthy potatoes that had no sign of running out, and made a selec tion of the largest and smallest tirm tubers in each lot. I planted the same number of hills of each kind side by side; gave the same treatment in even particular, and in the fall 1 weighed the product. There was one pound difference in favor of the large cut potatoes. I then selected the largest from the largest and the smallest from the smallest, and planted the next sea son the same number of hills side In side, with the same treatment. In the fall the weight of product was one and one-half pounds in favor of small tubers. I continued the experiment for five years, selecting the largest from the largest and the smallest from the smallest. Sometimes one yielded the best, sometimes the other; but the variation never reached two pounds. At the end of the five years' experi ment there was one-half pound in favor of the small tubers. The experiment comprised ten hills of each. Medium Hog*. It is never the oldest and largest hogs that are the most desirable for either the packer or the consumer. There is always double risk in curing the hams and shoulders from very large hogs over those taken from hogs of common, medium size; then if the hams of very large hogs come out well cured, there is hardly one consumer in a thousand but what would rather have hams out of hogs weighing about 250 pounds, even at a strong advance in price, than to have the mammoth sized hams. There is no doubt but what any fanner can make more clear money as a rule, out of pigs that come in the month of March or April, than can be m;ide out of pigs that come in any other part of the year. The early spring pigs will be ready to graze on clover about as soon in the season as it will be ready for grazing, and they will want little else but this kind of feed until new com will be ready to feed in September. They should in all cases be fattened on corn and made ready for market by Christmas, or about nine months of age. If the right breeds are kept, hogs of this age can be made to weigh 275 to 300 pounds, making in all respects as good pork as could be required for consumers' use in any market; or by feeding a moderate amount of corn and oatme.'d through August and September, they can be sold in October, and will then make first-rate bacon hogs, and it is never a possible thing to produce good pork any cheaper or as cheap as it can be done in this way, as the general weather conditions through all the life of such hogs is in the highest degree favorable for the growth and thrift of these ani mals.—Drovers' Journal. Composting Manure. One of the important questions which ever)- farmer has to decide is the best method of composting manure. Farmers do not agree on this subject ; while some hold that it is best to apply manure in its green state and compost it with the soil, others believe it best to compost it in the yard by mixing with it an equal quantity of muck or loam. Advocates of the last method c.aim that the manure is thus decom posed and brought into plant food that is immediately available. The advo cates of composting directly with the soil claim that it saves a large amount -of labor of hauling in material to com post with, the pitching of it all over, aha the carting out and spreading twice the quantity; and they also claim that during the process of deconiposi. tion in a compost heap, under ordinary conditions, a portion of the fertilizing elements is lost; while if applied direct ly to the soil, the process of decompo sition inproves the condition of the soil and prepares its plant growth much better than if applied after decomposi tion has taken place. While it is probably best for most crops to apply the manure in the green state there are some crops that need forcing with manure already well de. composed. For example, strawberries that have been set one year sometimes require a fertilizer that will act at once. Grass land, if manured between the first and second crop, should have well decomposed manure. The farmer, in composting his manure, should never forget that all cf the muck, loam or sand which he mixed with his manure above that which is necessary to absorb the liquids and gasses is a waste of labor, and only makes his manure heap a decept c which his crops will surely find our. While it is important that every farm er should always have at hand sufficient absorbents to prevent the loss of the liquids, but few farmers work to the best advantage when they haul into the barn yard as many loads of muck, loam or sand as they have < manure. The large additional cost of removing twice or three times such large quanti ties of materials but little better, if as good, as the soil upon which it is spread, never conies back in the increase of crops.— P/ouyhman. llOHfteltoltl Hint*. Fish may be scaled much easier In first dipping them in scalding water for a minute. Fresh meat, beginning to sour, wi!' sweeten if placed out of doors in the cool air overnight, Milk which has changed may be sweetened or rendered fit for use again I by stirring in a little soda. Tie a piece of cloth on the end of a stick, wet it with vinegar, and clean the mica of stove doors, even while the stove is hot. Five minu'es* soaking in water and ammonia will clean the dirtiest frying pan st> that it will only need rinsing and wiping to be ready for use. If the inside of your tea pot or coffee pot is black from long use, till it with hard water, throw in a piece of hard i soap, set on the stove and let it boil ! from half an hour to an hour. It will clean it as bright as a new dollar and : cost no work. The Field of Glory. Clambering over the rude bank of logs and earth that formed the defen sive line ot our antagonists, I found myself at last on the well-remembered : ground. But what a sight met my j eye! In the bright moonlight lay ! nearly 300 bodies of my comra les. I their picturesque zouave uniforms now blackened by contact with corrup tion. In rows and in groups, just as they had fallen on that fatal day, these unburied corpses bad become winl and sun-dried skeletons. The faces that were upturned to the silvery rays of the moon had lost all semblance to humanity and were now simply hide ous masks, the eyeless sockets of which seemed to mock me as 1 stood among them. But 1 was not done, for at my feet writhed countless swarms of the repulsive Virginia tumble-bug, all struggling for a share in the awLil banquet the god of war h id provided for them. Horror stricken and heart sick I gazed over the field and along the line we had held, seeing bodies in every direction and in every possible attitude. Here one poor fellow had crawled to the foot of a tree and died as he sat. The fez was still on his head, the gibbering .skull beneath it seeming to laugh at me, as the jaws had relaxed and fallen apart. On the sleeves were the chevrons of a ser geant, Beyond were the bodies of five or six men, lying one over the other; but now they seemed like a design on a carpet, having becomed flattened to one level. Near these men was the body of a man lying apart from his fellows. Falling on his back, the dead man had flung his arms wide apart, and one leg was drawn up as if ir. agony. Now the hands were bare of flesh and peeped hideously out of the sleeves, while the elevated knee had become shrunken, a wide rent in the cloth permitting the skin covered bone to protrude. Everywhere about me these ghastly spectres met my gaze. Bullet and t<7ielf. ' The Cashier Ahead. A new bank which had heen estab lished in a town in Indiana had engaged the services of a watchman who came well recommended, but who did not seem over-ex per ieneed. The president therefore sent for him to post him lip a bit, and began: "James, this is your first job of this kind, isn't it?" "Yes, sir?" "Your first duty must be to exercise vigilance." "Yes, sir." "Be careful how strangers approach you." "I will, sir." "No stranger must be permitted to enter the bank at night uiiuer any pre text whatever." "No, sir." "And our cashier—he is a good man, honest, reliable and thoroughly trust worthy, but it will be your duty re keep an eye on him." "But it will be hard to watch two men and the bank at the same time, sir." "Two men—how ?" "Why, sir, it was only yesterday that the cashier called me in for a talk, and he said you were the squarcst man in Indiana, but that it would be just as well to keep both eyes on you, and let tlie directors know if you hung around after hours.— Wall street, News. , mmurmma I The weeds found on farms come largely from the grass seeds, with which weed seeds are mixed. The mi-' croscope not only reveals to the eye the worthless seeds of the grasses, but by careful use it detects the weed seeds Bad seeds are a source of great injury to the farmers, and the subject should not be neglected. i THE NK\N _____ Archbishop Tascherean has informed the faculty of the Montreal Medical School that they must sever their connection with Vic toria College. A mandate has also boon received by the Superior of the Hotel Dieu , Hospital from his Grace, directing that med ical students from protectant colleges bo not admitted. A disastrous lire occurred at Greeley, Col. N. W. Hall's hardware and furniture, Jack son's dry goods store, the Union Hank build ing and the Masonic and Odd-Fellows' halls were destroyed. The loss is estimated at $150,000. A bill has been introduced in the Senate > t New York and immediately passed to a third reading, to prevent any attempt to per sonate or represent Jesus Christ, the Saviour, by any show, play or dramatic representa tion. l'apers were filed at Albany, N. Y., organi zing the Globe Telephone Company, with a capital of $10,000,000, to do a telephone busi noss throughout the United States. The purpose is to use instruments that will talk over long distances. I wenty-nino business firms burned out in Kcntland, Ind. The loss will reach $100,00(1, about one-half of which was covered by in surance. I'eter Cooper died at New Y'ork in his 93rd year. He was known the country over, as a philanthropist- Hb life was devoted to in dustry and morality. Spragne has been defeated in Rhode Island for Governor by 2,500 votes. Ihe libel suit of Prof. Mac Lean, of tho medical department of the Michigan Slate I Diversity, against James E. Scripps, editor and principal proprietor of the Detroit Been ll.e. At a meeting of Irishmen in New York Mr. Paraell's peace policy was repudiated, and dynamite was dealt;ted to bo the only policy of the future. Middlo and Southern News A severe wind, rain and hail storm pre vailed in Central and Southwestern Arkansas doing considerable damage. Along the line or the Hot Springs Railroad the force of the wind lifted a passenger coach from the track and sent it down an embankment. Several persons were bruised. Two buildings were blown down at Alexander Station, on the Iron Mountain Railroad. The tornado wa* especially disastrous at Mabelvale, ten mile? south of Little Rock, on the Iron Mountain Railroad. A dozen residences and as man* stables were blown down. A boiler attached to an engine of 75-horse power exploded in the factory of Geo. Bishoj at Newberue. N. C. The engineer and the fireman were killed. The house of Isaiah Wood, one hundred yards distant, was des troyed, and Mrs. Wood was, it is believed, fatally injured. Half of the factory was de molished, and all the houses iu the vicinity were more or less damaged. It is stated that the bonds of the ship canal, byway of the Sassafras route, from the Chesapeake bay to the Delaware river, have been placed in France by Mr. Henry B. 'libbits, of New York, the president of the company, and that the money has been raised for the canal which is to cost $*.050,000- The canal is to be completed in four yeitrs. By a fire at Shelb\ville, Tenn., tho house of J. P. Ingle, John Hanson's grocery, tlu building of the Western Union Telegraph Company, CLiiborn's barber shop, the house of Sam Taylor (colored), the house of T. W Buchan, me drug store ofT. J. Roane A Co.. and the Masonic Hall were burned; lossesti mated at $lOO, OX); insurance about $50,000. The Governor of Pennsylvania has issued a proclamation declaring the charters of corporation and companies which li ivt failed to make a return to ths auditor-gene ral within three years, as the law directs, forfeited. The list will include 775 corpora tions of such character as to cause general surprise to the public. George F. Kyle, 14 years of age, was mar ried to Lizzie May Hollingshead, 13 years ol age. The bride is an orphan and looktd like a little girl arrayed for her first party, and the groom hardly seemed to have passed the spanking age. Col. V. K. Stevenson, a Tennesseean by birth, who has become a millionaire in New York by lucky investments in stocks and reaj estate, has determined to build several large iron furnaces in Tennessee, in whose future prosperity lit- has great faith. The bill to prevent railroad companies from giving free passes to any one except officers and employers has passed the Penn-. sylvunia House of Representatives. It makes the granting of passes a misdemeanor, pun ishable by fine and impris onment. A decree has been published at Havana ordering an examinatioa by tho board of health of all American lard packed in kegs or other wooden packages. By the explosion of gas in a sewer at Balti more. Md., the sewer was destroyed, win dows demolished, and two persons lost their lives. The order of the Oriole, of Baltimore 1 f have decided on September 11, 12 and 13 for their annual pageant. The Endo Hotel, a three-story brick build ing, at Greenville, the county seat of Hunt county, Texas, was blown down, or fell down, and the ruins were then destroyed by fire, with an appalling loss of life. There were nearly fifty guests in the house, most of whom were asleep when the crash occurred, and of this number thirteen were buried be 1 neath the ruins, and then to suffer the terri ble tortues of cri mation. Over eight inches of rain fell at New Or leans in sixteen hours on April 7th. The Mississippi river overflowed its banks on the Algiers front, causing considerable damage? to property. Other suburban towns were overflowed. The Red river is reported to be "booming," and an overflow is feared. A Miss Duncan, niece of W. B. Duncan, a former member of the banking house of Duncan, Sherman & Co , of New York, died in Baltimore, it is supposed, from an over dose of chlorate. Her * oath has created a sensation among the higher circles of which she was a member. A fire at West Minister, Md., has burned j out a large part of the town. Assistance from Baltimore was asked for, and two chemical and one engine and two trucks were dis patched. Fire Inspector Holloway and Chief j Heiskill accompanied the apparatus. State Auditor Allen Ims informed the at torney-general that he would no longer pay the salaries of the judges of the Corporation Courts of Richmond, Petersburg, Norfolk, Lynchburg, Ac. The cities will have to pay these otllcials. The Norfolk Virginian estimates that there is coal enough in the mines recently opened in Pocahontas county, West Virginia, to supply the demands of the North for 2K) years to conio. '1 he fire at Westminster, Md., destroyed eighteen houses, caused the deuth of two men and twenty-live horses, uud a loss of $73,000. i'be loss on the Luthorian church and the Rector's library amounts to $15,000. The total insurance is estimated at $30,000. The Pennsylvania House of Representa tives yesterday passed a bill abolishing the contract system in prisons and reformatory institutions. Susquehanna shad aro appearing in the Raltimore ami Philadelphia markets. The Louisiana Supreme Court has over ruled the order of the lower court and re fused a mandamus requiring the city of New Orleans to levy a tax of $650,000 to pay tlu interest on the consolidated bonds. A police census of Richmond, Va., which has just been completed, shows the i>opnla tion to be 70,684. The United States censur of 1880 gave the population as 63,000. Nashville, Tennessee, is scourged with small-pox. Thirteen new cases woro reported on Saturday, and fifty patients are in tlu pest-house. One school containing fit'O pupils has been closed for two weeks. C. C. Fulton, proprietor of the Dailj American , of Baltimore, Md., has conveyed his property in trust, to Felix Angus, the manager of that paper The Baltimore sub treasury has sixty-five tons of silver in the vaults and 1,970,000 one cent pieces. The public demand for tbe latter has declined greatly since the five-cent car fare took effect. Ex-President Hayes positively refuses to nllow his name to go before the Republican convention of Ohio as a candidate for Gov ernor. • Foreign News. LONDON, April 4. —The National The at re at Berlin has been burned out. No lives were lost. Michael Davitt, from his prison, has written a vigorous letter to the Young Ireland Society of Glasgow, in which he says the dynamite policy can only have the effect of exasperating the English democracy. He declares that it would be far better to work and wait for another twenty years than to play into the hands of Ireland a enemies by giving rein todispair and revenge. LONDON, April 5. —There is great excite ment in Loudon over the discovery of a secret dynamite factory in Birmingham and the arrest of the proprietor, who is said to be an Irish American. Other arresta have also been made in London of men supposed to be in the league in the manufacture of explosives for the work of destruction in England. A mine has been discovered in Moscow connecting with the Kremlin, where the coronation of the Czar is to tAke place. l'he prefect of police in Copenhagen has ordered the socialist congress in session there to disband and the foreign members to leave the city. The chief of police in St. Petersburg and others have been decorated by the Czar for their attentions to the Jmuuette survivors. LONDON, April o.—The four men arrested in London on suspicion of being concerned in plots to blow up goverment buildings, were arraigned in Bow-Street Court yester day, and remanded. Their examination re vealed some important nutters. 170 ponnds of nitro-glycerino has been found in White head's factory, in Birmingham. At Ottawa, Canada, while Sergt. Hughes and police officer Codd were in the hallway of the eastern departmental building, at Ottawa, Ont., a bottle containing some ex plosive was thrown from above and buret with tremendous force. The men saw the bottle coming and succeeded in getting into shelter. The German government is determined in it* objections to American pork. Famine is imminent in Hungary. LONDON, Aprd B.—lt the bill to amend the law in regard to explosives, which Sir Wil liam Haroourt will introduce in the House of Commons to-day, should not prove retro spective, many members will support an amendment to the bill making it retrospec tive in its provisions. At a banquet by the Corporation of Civil Engineers, at Kensington, Saturday evening, Minister Lowell made a speech, in the course of which he said that no American believes that assassination is war, or that dynamite is the raw material of policy. Arrangements for the trial of the alleged Phoenix Park murderers have been made, Joe Brady will be tried first. One hundred and forty-five houses have been destroyed by fire at Vallorbes, Switzer land. The Brussels police have discovered proofs of a plot against tne Czar. THB MARKETS. BALTIMORE. FLOUR—City Mills extra.. $1 00 (at 75 WHEAT Southern Fultz... 1 14 Oi 17 CORN —Southern white 04 @ 66 Do yellow 6) (a" fit RYE —Good FIN (ft 70 OATS —Maryland 50 fit 53 COTTON—Middling 9 (it 10'.; Good ordinary HAY—Md. and Pa. Timot'y 17 00 (it 19 00 STRAW—Wheat 8 (X) (it 10 00 BUTTER—Western prime.. 19 (n 21 West Virginia 15 (S 17 CHEESE —New York State choice 15 Western prime 1.3 (it 14 EGGS 17 (>t is CATTLE 5 00 (ft fi 12 SWINV. 9 (it 11 SHEEP AND LAMBS A\((t 1% TOBACCO T/EAP- Inferior. 180 O 200 Good common .3 IX) (ft 4 50 Middling fi 00 (ft 8 00 Good to tine red 8 50 (it 10 00 Fancy 1000 (J|> 14 00 NEW YORK. COTTON —Middling upland 10 @lO% FLOUR —Southern com. to fair extra 4 10 @5 10 WHEAT—No. 1 white 1 23 @1 24 RYE—State 73 @ 74 CORN —Southern Y'ellow.... 68 @ fiS% OATS—Whitfe State 81 86 BUTTER—State 20 @ 24 CHEESE—State 14 (it 16 EGGS 20 @ 28 P ICM DJ'j? IA. FLOUR —Penna. fancy 5 12 @6 18 WHEAT—Pa. and Southern red 1 17 @1 20 RYE —Pennsylvania 68 @ 69 CORN —Southern yellow 63 @ 64 OATS 7)2 @ 63 BUTTER—State 25 @ 27 EGGS-State 18 @ 19 n. M. i. A Medley, n jll.v'f'O. n llarrd iind ■ Allm-tr. TTTK STORY OK A DREAM. Get money honestly if you can, but g< j l money," was a foolish father's ndvice H his son. Get money, if you can honestly, makes but a slight alteration in the order of the words, but varies the ie itiment con siderably. There is no harm in making money. It answereth all thing*. Urea rightly it is a power for (rood, and there is money enough in the world to form a lever by which the mas-* of humanity could be lift ed, ton certain extent, ontof its depths of soirow and despair. Money we must have for money makes the mine go. Some can make money who have no faculty for saving. Would yon save yon must know how to deny those who would borrow and never repay, as well as tho*c who beg simply because they are too lazy to wo; k. There are men who never want to see you except to ask the favor of a loan. 1 hey will ask for just one word with you, and that one word is sure to he money. An impecmiious fellow met a rich acquaint ance, and not liking to ask di;e tly for a loan, said, "Friend Smith, if you had ten dollars in your nocket, and 1 wis to ak you for the loan of live, how many would rem an in your pocket?" "Ten dollars, to bo sure," replied the rich man, without a moment's hesitation. Ho had gumption, and knew too much to part with his money hy any such rule of subtraction. Oil, I see, said the impecunious man thus rebutted, lie was able to owe. lie was ore of the Mieawber sort—always waiting for something to turn up. How like some le>i le who are sick. They think to get well by 1 tting disease take care of itself. Hut diss isos do not heal themselves, and too late their victims full often find this out to their sorrow as death seizes upon them. Had they been wise in time tiny might have added many yea sto their lease of life. The cure was nigh them, as it is nigh to rdl who read ihis medley. '1 hese paragraphs tell the story, as a pa'ient perusal will prove. Those wiio have keen insight and can read between the hue i may ;o'\o tlio conundrum the soon er for it, bat upon all, light will dawn ere the y read the final word of our st >ry. Light will dawn, we s: id. an i so it will, light of hope and he p. Light is wliut a certain individual wanted. Mr. Jones we will call him. He was very sick. Consump tion had fastened its fangs upon him. lie had long neglected catarrh, and laughed at the idea of t iking anything for it when ad vised to do so, ami so went from bad to woise. His lungs became <1 incased, a hack ing, churchyard cough racked him almost to pieces, and be was fast wasting away. A mere shadow of bis form -r se'f, he scarcely slept at all a night, or slept only to dream horrible dieims. Talk of nightmare! A w hole circus troupe, horses and all, seemed to make his b">d tl e oiena of their wild per formances. In this ease money did not make the more go, for ho sp t a deal e that the fitter- were not intended to snggo*t that a Good Many Doctors must yet be consulted in addition to all that had been interviewed, lie groaned in reply nnd remarked that if lie had to consult any more the o would have to be a Gold Mine Discovered in order to pay them. Every day for n week he and his faithful WKjuse search# 1 diligently for a key to the problem. In the dictionary, in such newspapers ns they happened to have, in books, on placards 011 the walls— ever} wi.ere they sought—hoping to find a c.'ew. l etters stand for words, and they hopt d to light upon the words that should suggest the cure. They Grieved Many Days over their lack of gcod luck, ns they said, and the Good Man Dreamed again and ng lin, bat saw no more angels. Hope deferred maketh the heart sick. "Oh, that the angel had Guided Me Definitely and Given More Directions," he >• claimed, again nnd again. Nearly two weeks had elapsed since the night of the Great Mysterious Dream, when there came to the house a pamphlet. Tired with his exhausting office work, which he still pursued, determining if possible to die in the harness, Jones was aliout to throw the pamphlet in the fire when something prompted him to examine it. Surely, thought he, hero ran be nothing that will Pierce this Gloom Most Distressing, or Giv® Me. Dishesrte ed, any relief. Poor man, lie had worked letters over in his mind, and made so many combinations with them, that they occurred in almost every sentence he ottered. f l hey entered even into his pray ers. Heaven Grant Me Deliverance, he would say, nor let disease Grind Mo Down, and so forth, ad intini.um, a;.d a mile or two beyond. Mentally tortured and si ffering in every fiber of his body, what won a- that l e read page after page of the para hlet. It was a work on disrates, and in thi) morbid state of his mind its conten s seemed to snit him. It spoke of almost every disease that flesh is heir to, but oh, joy! as he read, a Glimj so Most Delightful of light stole in upon him. "Eureka! /Surekal" he cried. "Wife. I have it, I have it." Everybody in the homre heard him cry Eureka, and rushed to the room to hear w hat he had found. All expected to see some Grent Miracle Done, nnd then came the ex planation. Simple, of course, but why hud he not thought v>f it before? Oh, what a rev elation! Here was hope for him and for all consumptives. Here, hope for suffering friend* and neighbors. That night hescaioe could sleep, hu f when he did. he again saw a bright vision of golden letters, in fact, a Glittering Monagram Deciphered readily, uid reading G. M. D.: and again P. P. P., ind yet again F. P.; and one huge P. around shich these of his own acquaintance, from John Robinson, whose torpid liver gave hiin constant headache and severe bil ous attacks, on through the list of those suffering from ulcers, cough-, weak and diseased longs, to his friend, General B . who was as near the grave as he. And for all these, as well as for himself, the Grave May Disappear from present vision, and each may bo Given More Decades of life than they had hoped to have years. Against tho milder cases lie marked P. P. P. Against the serious cases he marked G. M. D., not the Grizzly Mons'.er Death, which be so lon<* had dreaded, but something—oh, so much better, as we shall presently see. In a snort while onr hero was well, and went everywhere among his friends and neighbors, telling of his good fortune and showing Ihe sick and the suffering how they might be healed. Some laughed and con tinued to suffer, refusing to be healed. More v ere wise, took his counsel and proved liis vision of the night as he had done. "A vision, less beguiling far, Than waking dreams oy daylight are." Can anything be more delightful than health after sickness? To be a well man, to feel pure blcod coursing through your veins, to know that lungs, liver, kidneys, aud all Ihe Grand Machine y, Does its duty perfectly in one's body; to carry health's ruddy mark on the cheeks. Ah, this is Good Most Decidedly. This was our hero's case, and thousands can tell the same story. The good angel has come to them. T.iey hive seen the letters Gleam Most Distinctly before their eyes, an 1 Going Most Definitely to work in pursuing the instructions given, they have recovered that great blessing— Health. G. M. D. has been to them a chan nel of good. Good Mysteriously Done, and they bid their sick friends* do what all ihe sick should do, niutiely, put Hienvselvea in communication with the VV. D. M. A., Which Done M st Afimredly -will put tbffui in the Wav Desired Mokinif back upon his past eTpcrionc©, Mr. .Tones feels (irate ul Most Decidedly, and continues telling the old story of his sickness, his vision, and his restoration to Ivealth; for ail the sick are not well >et. But he lias had the pleasure of seeing, as he says, Good Miraculously Done to hundreds up., and of ihe W. D. M. A., Will Dawn Most Auspicious y upon you. Columbus discovered America and won high honor niul immortal fame, and they w ho have learned the secrets of the wonder before your eyes, good reader, Give Most Deli ;h.ful testimonials of their gratitude. < f all sad wo d* of tongue and jien, the sadd.-st are ties—it might have been — so eayeth the p it. When we think of the myriads that un- ht have 1 een saved from untimely graves h id they seen Mr. Jones' vision and sought hi- way to health, we feel pad. Yd we cannot but rejoice at the Gnat Many Delivered from death's door by G. M. D., a d that Pain's Positive Persecution b; s been escaped again and again by P. P. P. Virtues unnumbered se- ve to make O. M. D. the Greatest Mercy Doigned by favor ing piwidencts for the relief of sufferers, and its discoverer fetD P. P. P.—Perfectly Pardonable Pride in telling of the Growing Multitude De'ivered from the Grasp Most Dreadful of Greedy Mournful Death. Every sick person is interested in the theme before us, and e\ cry well pert* n, too, for who does not l.iiow some one who is sick and needs, therefore, the good news of health that is Given Many Daily. Deader, mystified reader, we will detain von no longer. Perhaps you have Grossed Most Deftly the hidden meaning. P. P P., von know, stands for Pleasant Purgative Pel lets, curing com t put ion, torpidity of the liver, headache and many olher complaints. F. P., of course, is Dr. Pierce's havorite Pre-err;! ion. ihat ha proved such a P. F., Prime Favorite and Precious Friend to la dies; iafe, e ty to take, working like a charm —curing the peculiar wta 1 ncsses in cident to their sex. The letters W. D. M. A. stand for the Wo;ld's Dispensary Medical Association, at Buffalo, N. Y., with its im posing structures, it< army of medical men, Kjiecialists, all of them, rnl its president, Dr. It. V. Pierce (the large and central P of Mr. Jones' second vision), a.l at the service of the sick and suffering, everywhere; while G. M. D. is—we'l, lei i the initials of the paragraphs of th's article ar.d you will see thaiG. M. D. is Golden Medi-al Discovery, tie I>o >n of the diseased. This wonderful medicine cores all hum irs, from the worst scrofula to a common blotch, pimple or erupt on. Erysipe'ns. salt rheum, fever sores, s *aly or rough sk n, in shorr, all dis eases cau* address.^on In stamps to ptypoate piIMP weekly, or for twenty 00 rmniir;mi,M. l f lß| .-r the JRIBUNB fit FAR '"S luTv-crBE-rarTKr. MER every week for iTP months. To anyone |l vt.f t*>i| llVrji SGi (HI sending us a club of .{.V:. ~* ""' four twenty five cenf send a Sample of 811- Iflliil' F,, '• 11 Ks[[9 ver-plated war# hi ,BPf , I*3 premiums, choice of Ik Butter Sugsr Pencil'or Book^^hctt- P ■ -J strictly ftrst^Suji iHAlity. Regular price, 51.00 a year. Established (2 years. Special features, original articles. How to make more Money In on* month than you ever did before. How to Make the Farm ivty. How Farm, era* arc Swindled, by bogus Commission Merchants, horse and stock auctions, etc. D. D. T. MOORE. Founder and for twenty-five years, editor of Moore's Rural Nnv-YorJur , is the Agricultural Editor of the TRIBUNE and FARMER and con ducts the best and liveliest Agriculural Depart ment to be found in any weekly newspaper in tills country. Special writers on Small rruita, Market Gardening, Horticultural Matters, Agri cultural Machinery, with a list of Agricultural Inventions weekly, Philadelphia Market Reports, Answers to Correspondents, Ac., Ac., Half dozen Hpli iicllcl Htorles every week, House, hold Department, whole page every week. Original letters from lady readers on all household topics. Regular Correspond enta Aunt Addie,AuntEva,"MaybellV and a dozen others. Fancy lit ork, r asn. lons, How to Entertain Company, Care of Children, Doctor's Advice, and Cookini Reclpw, worth double subscription price, 1 outh I Department, Stories. Puzzles, and Home Amuse mcnts, Most* HklnnerN Humorous Uiteiff Detective Sketches, and Answers K Corre*r>on' , en*N. No Sensational trash. Addreag U. K. CURTIS A CO.. Pubs, PHILaDtLTItIA. Pa It N U 15 ' ''jmrwcwrwrranw ' UPTVBP W" 'UT' i *■ ®k a fe f "* jf L. '>s i!H v n i A NEW DISCOVERY. ; CTFor several year* we hare furnished the 'Dairymen of America with an excellent artl flctideolor for butter; so meritorious that it met i with rreat success everywhere receiving the highest and only prizes at both International Dairy Fairs. _ ... 1 tirDot ly patient and scientlflo chemical re soar, H WC IJITO ImjiroTcd in several points, and l l now offer this new color aa the beat in the world. It Will Mot Color the RutrermUk. It I I I V/lil Not Turn Pancld. It la t*e Strongest, Brightest and Cheapest Color Made, I I nrAnd, while prepared !* oil, Is so compound ed ihat it is Impossible for It to become rancid. I I nrBEWARE e* ell Imitations. and of ail other oil colors, for they are liable to become ( ranci 1 and epoil the baiter. I ffylf you cannot pet the "improved" write ne to know where and how to get it without sitrs l expeuae- W WILLS, RICTUBDSOX A CO., Rsritsftsa. Vt. | H g|TETT£ jjv S2S2 n * CCUBKATU do . murt be gathered from what II has fßr\ done. It haseffected rsdicsl cores in tboa *WLl A Bands of c see of dyt rt^JL pepaia, btlwoa dls rders, tntermlttent 0 r ' >ar, nervous affee qsgrLhufl bilit/ eonstipetion, sick h adacha, men tal deep ndency. and plainte* a d dleablli." K aroM ACH C M M jsunfailinksndlnial, _ m WLE !k WlT'l w liable in curing Epll- TT FL IFLABNI £ A Fits, Spasma, convulsions, St. Vitus CURES AND *1 Dance, Aicohoßan, Opium Ealing NTR dies ai,rt all w hose 6e l causes*Ner\ ous Proa ra trarion.^lrregulantiwi Ntvis raiia A* E*.-iimulani. Samaritan AI F h Pfi > rvineisinvalcvble. fw ww I| 'ihousands proclaim it tlie most wonderful I n vlgorant that ever sustained the sinking eyst em. For * by &i) imiggivis TTTF. IR. 8. A. RICHMOND r tllilCA I. Ct • l - eeph. Mo. Engines. Reliable, Durable end Economical, wtO furnish m Aorta potrrr rt'A % lata fuel *n in a fresh, succinct, unconventioual wav all the news of the world, and it aayß exactly what it th nks about men and eveuta. Subscription: DAILY (4 pages), bv m.vii, 55c. a month, or Su-50 a rear; Sundhy (8 peiree), 81.20 per year; weekly (8 pages). 81 per year. I. W. ENGuAND. Publisher, New York City. tiffISIMPTIM. I have a positive remedy for the above disease; bvlte Bee thousands of cases of the worst ktnd end of long aundlnc have been cared. Indeed eo strong is rav faith fb Its olficacy, thai A will send TWO BOTTLES FKEK. to. Cther with a VALUABLE TKTEATIBB on this disease, to r sufferer. Give Express anu f. O. address. _____ T, A- RLOOUM, 1U Pearl hk. New Tork. 6MES L."Ei*AllS, Wl Best Cough Syrup. Tastes good, ta la Use In time. Sold by druggists. tS| •* THE BEST 18 CHEAPEST.'* mm TURPQHCRQ B^®^ HoDePower! I nnLOnLliO 0j OTer fl B j| eri (Suited to all sections i Write for FREE Ulus. Pamphlet and Prices to The Aultman & Taylor Co., Mansfield. Ohio. M " HEALTB HELPER 7 ' 1 11JJ JJ. Perfect Health. H■ H. Box 104 Buffalo. N. Y. nnillßl Morphine IfabltCared In Iff A A AFARMB FOR SALE—On or near salt water; _d | f ■ llieslthy and mild climate. Send stamp. E.G. WLIKDSEY A CO.. 124 Main et., N r/ulk, Va. A AAN HOUR for all who will make spare time prof- Jye jr able ;a good paying business if you can devote your w mjwhoie time to it. MCBBIY HILL, BOX 788, N. Y O A SHEETS fine writing paper, m blotter, with 1)13 calendar, by mail for 25c. Agents Wanted. WIdECQNQMY PHrNTiNoCo.. Xewburyport. Mass. AGENTS WANTED for the Best and FakttesteelT- U)g Piotorial Books and Bibles. Prices reduced 38 per cent. NATIONAL PUBLISHING CO., Phila. Pa. rIOItRESPONDENCE solicited from Towns tn Va." ' desiring railroad facilities. AMERICAN LAND AND CONSTRUCTION CO., 82 and 84 Nassau St., Now York. CK fa <9O Per day at home. Samples worth f:, rai". 8Q IP fffctl Addrea fitlnson & Co., Portland. Me. A Sure Cum for Epilei>sy or Fits in 24 hours. Free to poor. Dr. Krune. 2844 Arsenal St.. St. jg 0 f e I a week in your own town. Terms and 45 outfit frea f Address H. Hallett >fc Co.. PortlAnd. MaW D P OOLEMAN BUSINESS COLLEGE' V D V Newark. N. J. Write for a week. |l2 a day at home easily made "(WC ' £ outfit free. Address Taug a AaguM^Mk