FOR THE FARM AND HOME. ltlixinjr (iiniu Foods. Intelligent farmers everywhere real ize that a proper mixture of grain foods is more economical than to feed exclusively of one or two kind). A Connecticut farmer who makes farm ing pay feeds his cows two quarts daily from a mixture of 1200 pounds of coarse wheat bran, 1000 pounds of corn meal and 500 pounds of cotton seed. This is mixed by being thor oughly shoveled over on a tight barn lloor. The same farmer thinks it pays to feed coarse bran to hogs occasional ly, when meal is fed regularly, as it keeps them in good condition." Carrots. Our farmers do not raise enough carrots. They make a horse's coat very sleek. They should have good depth of soil and line tilth. Our farm ers' wives do not fully appreciate the value of the carrot in cookery. In deed, the liking for carrot) is an ac quired one. So is that for tomatoes. So is that for parsnips. Tho writer remembers that he was obliged to cul tivate a liking for green peas, which, as they were the old mushy, strong marrowfats, is not to be wondered at. But the carrot flavor, when liked, is a valuable addition to meats, to gravies and to soups. The French and Ger mans use it largely. The queen of England always has carrots and tur nips cooked with her boiled mutton.— New York Jlcrald. Substitute for ltnin. Hoeing, and the frequent stirring of the surface of the soil, are good sub* stitutes for rain. Those parts of the garden that are most frequently culti vated show the best results. It is probable that corn, watermelons, toma toes, Lima beans, and cabbage, and possibly other plants, if well started, in good, deep soil, may go through a two months' drought without very serious damage. A deep, well manured soil suffers much less than a shallow soil. Sub-soiling and manure are to a * certain extent substitutes for rain. Moisture comes from below, ruder draining is also a safeguard against drought. The course of the drains in the garden can easily be marked in a dry season, by the ranker growth of vegetation above them. Irrigation, in many parts of the country, will pay. The soil if well prepared, could use, to good advantage, twice the quantity of water it receives from rains during the dry months of summer. Scrniias Trees. V Do we approve of scraping trees? asks a friend of ours. Certainly we do, provided they need it, and one can rarely find an old tree that does not. Aside from the fact that the removal of the old bark-scales breaks up a re fuge for various insects, including the woolly-aphis, the increased beauty of the tree repays trouble. There are scrapers ma le for the purpose; one of these has a triangular blade, another a long blade, with one flat and another slightly concave edge. An old hoe is quite as good a tool as any; cut off the handle to about IS inches, and do not grind the blade too sharp, as a cutting implement is not needed only a scraper. On a very old trunk some force may be needed to detach the scales that are partly loose, but on young trees be careful not to wound the healthy bark. The scraping may be done now, next month, or later. "When there comes a moist drizzly spell, go over the scraped bark with . good soft soap, made thin enough with water to apply with a brush. Faint over a thick coat cf this soap and leave the rest to the rains. Later in the season the trees will appear as if furnished with mahogany trunks.— Agriculturist. Ko More Gate Sagging. Some years ago our attention was invited to what was considered as an inevitable and remediless evil the sagging of farm gates, and tho ques tion was repeatedly put if farmers were forever to submit to these imper fect means of entrance to their fields, barnyards, etc. ? Our reply was that time honored "bars" must be again adopted, for, all things considered, they were decidedly to be preferred to these sagging gates. "What, indeed, is more annoying than a sagging gate? It is forever out of order. It may be stiff ened up one day, and the next it will begin again to dFop, in a little while to dra|f4igain, and away goes a hinge, and this costs time and money to re pair. There has lately been, however, a substitute introduced for the farm gate, which is more efficient and con venient, and which requires no hinges, chains, clasps or a gate post. It is simply a panel of fence made of inch boards, say four slabs, six to eight inches wide, nailed together by cross pieces commencing about one foot from each end. At the back end of the panel two undressed common fence posts are set, one, the side on which the gate is to open, about an inch and a half farther back, and the posts to be only about the same distance apart. From one post to the other suitable supports are nailed, on which this end of the panel is to rest and move. At the head of the panel an ordinary fence post is set, the holes corresponding to the ends of the slabs in the panel, which can, if necessary, be reduced a little in width, and the four are to fit in the holes of the post. This panel can be moved easily, can be carried round fully, is equally as good as a gate, has no posts to sag, no hinges to rust and break or any iron appliances in the way of fastening at all, and will not cost more than a sixth or tenth as much as an ordinary gate. Any farmer who e;yn handle a saw and drive a nail ought to be able to make such an affair without further instruc t ion.— German to ten Telegraj >/). Ilounrholtl lltnt*. Drain pipes and all places that arc sour or impure may be cleansed with lime water, copperas water or carbolic acid. A little chloride of lime dissolved in warm water, and left in a lamp or can which has held kerosene,will deodorize it very soon. Salt liberally sprinkled over a carpet before sweeping will absorb the dust and dirt, ami bring out the colors as fresh as new. To make silk which luis been wrinkled and tumbled appear like new, sponge it on the surface with a weak solution Of gum a abie or white glue, and iron on the wrong side. To drive away red aats, put one pint of tar into two quarts of hot water. Put in carthern vessels in closets, or sprinkle sand, or strew oyster shells, or red cedar shavings. These will all be found effective in removing these little nuisances. A Prophet. Artemus Ward was something more than a sparkling humorist, lie was a mar of character and principle; there was nothing of the adventurer, very little even of the speculator, about him. Even in the depths of comedy he was always on the side of justice and virtue, and not with the big bat tallions. "1 ax these questions"— about Louis Napoleon "my royal duke and most noble highness and im perials because I'm anxious to know how he stands as a man. I know lie's smart. He's cunnln', he is long-head ed, he is grate, but onless he is good he will come down with a crash one of these days, ami the Bonnypartes will be busted up again. Bet yer life." These comic but prophetic words were written when the late emperor was at (he climax of his power, and about the time it was the fashion to call the second empire a perfect success. His devotion to his old mother was very strong; her happiness was constantly uppermost in his mind. At one time he wanted to get her to England— alas, it would only have been to weep over his grave! At another he thought of going home to live with her after he had made a fortune. His fame he valued quite as much for the pleasure it gave the old ladv as for the cash it brought him. He was the nat ural foe of bigotry, Peeksniflianism and immortality of every kind. He often hit shams, hypocrites and scoun drels; but throughout the whole of his works you will not find one sneer at virtue or religion, and in spite of a few broad jokes not quite in European taste, there is not really one loose or unguarded expression. "I never stain my pages with even milcl profanity; in the first pace it is wicked, and in the second it is not funny," writes Arte mus. The Telegrapher's Pest. A paper has been read before the electrotechine society of Berlin, giv ing some interesting particulars rela tive to birds and telegraph wires. In treeless districts the smaller birds in 'Germany are very fond of roosting both on poles and wires. Swallows frequently builcl under the caves where wires uin into telegraph offices, and actually stop work by causing contact, between the wire and some neighbor ing body which will tarry the electric current to the earth. Contacts with a like result are often caused by large birds alighting on tlie wires and caus ing them to swing together and touch. Woodpeckers frequently peck holes through the telegraph posts, and no kind of preparation of the wood seems to stop them from doing so. Sulphate of copper, corrosive sublimate, chloride of zinc and other poisons have been ap plied to the wood as preservatives against rot; but the birds peck away at them all the same. At the recent electrical exhibition at the Crystal pal ace a part of one of these pecked posts was shown. The theory was then broached that the woodpecker mistook the vibration of the attached wires for the hum of insects, and attacked the post with the notion of getting at them. This theory is now coinbatted on the ground that dry poles are frequently infested with insects. But wood sat urated with the poisons named above must certainly be excepted. The woodpeckers have evidently not yet. found this out. Headed Another Way. A tender-hearted clcrgym.tn, who resides in a town adjoining Hartford, was about to give a trapped mouse to the .cat when he caught what he thought was a beseeching expression in tho little fellow's eyes and he re lented. The mouse was so innocent and pretty, and the cat so eager to seize it, that the minister told his wife he would not sacrifice it. He took it down in the lot and set it at liberty. His wife told him that he liad done a very foolish thing, as the mouse would get into his barn and then back into the house again. "I guess not," said the minister, "I headed him towards neighbor B.'s barn," THE NEWS. A contract has just been closed at Fort Worth, Texas, for tho shipment of 75,(XX) head of cattle from the grazing region south of that city 011 the Gulf, Colorado and Santa Fe Railway to Wichita Falls, lit miles north. It will require 11,(XX) cars, or 216 trains of 14 cars each, at a total expense of SIOS,(XX). The shipment is rendered necessary by tho largo amount of fencing recently put up in tho southern part of the State. M. J. Gallagher, for many years a writer on the Chicago daily papers, and for tho greater part of the past six years connected with the New York World, either as night, editor or city editor, died in Chicago ot pneumonia. _ Tho live-story building Nos. 273, 281 and 283 llroadway, New York, occupied by Brad streets' Commercial Agency, E. Remington A Sons, the ritle manufactures, and the Hall Safe and Look Company, has boon gutted by lire, tho total loss being about SI7O,IXK>, which is partly covered by insurance. Ten stores and buildings have been burned at Plymouth, Indiana. t'harhs Smith, a well-to-do farmer, ox Earlvillc, lowa, went to his barn where his two sons, aged nine and thirteen years, were at work, ami killed them with an axe. Re" turning to the house, lie killed his wife with the same weapon as she stood by the stove preparing breakfast, lie then attempted to kill his two daughters, the only remaining members of tho family, but they reached a eighbor's house in safety and gr.vo thn alarm. When they returned, Smith had killed himself by cutting his throat with r butcher knife. Four hundred troops have been sent to protect the Apaches on the San Carlos reser vation. The Tombstone Rangers have taken tho field. Gen- Crook has arrived at Hor mosillo, Mexico. There will bo a conference to-day between Gens. Crook, Carbo and Topete, and Governor Torres, to arrange joint action against the Apaches. Ninety three persons have been killed on the Mexi e m side of the line since the troubles began, twenty-seven of whom were Americans. Civil servants are now refused access affairs in departmental blocks at Out., after office hours unless they have pe: mits from the department heads, 011 account of the recent dynamite scare. The National Board of Health will soon establish quarantine stations on the southern coast, to prevent the introduction of yellow fever from Cuba. At Lawrence. Ks., Margaret or "Sis" Vine gar was convicted of murder in the. lirst de gree for complicity in killing David Bour ninn, in June last- Peter Cooper, who died recently in New York, left an estate valued at $2,000,000. Middle andSauthorn Mews The Trent river, (North Carolina) has re cently been dredged by tho government, and steamers went 35 miles up the river through a country which had never before been reached by steam navigation. Kraut/, and Sparks, charged with counter feiting, were arrested on Saturday night at Glade Spring, Ya., ; n 1 committed to jail at Abingdon. Twenty dollars in spurious coins were found on tho person of Krantz. Thomas G. Steele, grand secretary of tin Grand Lodge I. (). O- lf- of W. Ya., died at Grafton Sunday night, aged 78 years. Gillet Bros., tobacconists, at Atlanta, Ga.. have failed; estimated liabilities $-10,000, assets $20,000. W. L. Murphy, proprietor of the fifth ward flouring mills, Louisville, Ky., has made an assignment. Major l'hipps, the Almshouse forger has been return* dto Philadelphia from Canada, for trial. At Atlanta, Ga., a jury in the Uuittd Suite* Circuit Court returned a verdict finding J. M. Robinson guilty on nineteen counts of an indictment charging him with presenting false accounts for his services as deputy marshal. CrisGeld, Md., has experienced another fire, w.iich ha destroyed many of tho best business houses. A year ago that town suf fered from a similar fire. Some eighteen houses were destroyed with their contents; loss estimated at $75,000. Parties from New York arc negotiating for a river front at Claremont, Va., on the James, on which toerect extensive dry dock tnd a large shipyard Grain elevator No. 2, at Canton, Baltimore Md., has been entirely destroyed by fire, with its contents. Two barks and a number of grain barges near tho elevator wero also damaged. Loss estimated at $100,0)0. David M. Crockett, who was awaiting trial at Wytheville, Yn.. for tho killing of Joseph H* F. Hurt, was taken from jail and hanged by a mob. Judge Ensibens Lee committed suicide at Ashtabula, Ohio, by taking laudanum. 110 was the presiding judge of tho Court of Common Picas President Arthur has formally accented n; invitation to attend the 114 th annual ban quetofthe Chamber of Commerce of the State of New York, to come off at Delinon ico's 011 the Bth of May. Several members o' the cabinet will also be present, and distin guished guests from both parties, represent ing divcrso views on tho tariff and othe: questions, are expected to be present and respond to Xoasts. A raid wns made on the New York gnmb ling houses and $75, (XX) worth of implement*- were seized. Tho police commissioner have discovered that the seizure of gaming implements was illegal. The code provide that tho implements can only be seized when the owner is arrested, and cannot bo dos troyed until he is convicted. Miss Katie Griffith, n school teacher a Martin's Ferry, West Virginia, in attempt ing to correct Wm. Beck, a fifteen-year-old pupil, wns assaulted and so severely beaten by him that she is thought to bo fatally in jured. Tho boy was arrested. The Scott bill lias became a law in Ohio It taxes each liquor dealer in the Stato s2)'- 1 per year. Those selling only beer and wine pay SIOO. Ihe Irish convention to De held in Phila dolphin April 25 and 26 will not be postponed on Mr. Farnell's account. The preparations for fitting out an expedi tion to relieve Lieut. Greeley and his corps of signal-service observers at Lady Franklin Bay litis given rise to some speculation as to the possibility of reaching that station. Adam Forepaugh, the well-known circus proprietor, has leased twenty-eight acres of land opposite the Louisville Exposition, building, for one hundred days, payingthere fore $13,000. Nine acres of the land will be used by Mr. Forepaugh. Ho will erect a building large enough to accommodate his circus and hippodrome, and during the ex position visitors will be entertained with chariot races, hurdle races, and all the ex citing adjuncts of a great establishment. The remainder will be 6ub-let for speculative purposes. A tornado swept over ft portion of Arkan sas which did great dftuuigo to property. Some ton miles west of Ozark forests were prostrated and houses were lifted from their foundations. F. 11. I'iser, postmaster at White Oak Station, lost his store and dwell ing. Three hundred dollars in currency were scattered by the winds. Several other dwelling-houses at the station were over turned. The storm averaged three miles in width, and was accompanied with a heavy fall of hailstones. Other sections, it is re ported, has met with appalling disasters. Thieves entered tho Metropolitan Dank corner of Canal and Chartres streets, New Orleans, on Sunday night, by cutting through tho wall from an adjoining building, seized and gagged tho watchman and blew open the bank vault. Every hank box in tho vauP was broken open and the valuables taken. A safe inside the vault was undisturbed. Cashier Van Home says tho amount ob tained by tho cracksmen will not exceed i?2,((X>. A mortgage deed of the Baltimore and Ohio Hailroad oompnny to Win. F. Burns, John Gregg and T. Harrison Garrott, trus tees, has boon tiled in the Superior Court of Baltimore city and the Circuit Court of Bal timore county. It is relative to the Philadel phia branch of the road, and is to secure an issue of £2,400,000 of bonds to Brown, Ship ley & Co., of London, England, April 2,188.5, at percent, per annum for fifty years. News reached Chatanooga of tho capture of Andy Taylor, one of the notorious Taylors who captured a train on the East Tennessee and Georgia Hailroad lust fall, murdered the sheriff and his deputy and liberated their brother. Andrew was captured near Em poria, Kansas. Ilite, one of the James gang, was captured nt Jonesboro', Tenu., by a Chicago detective. '1 ho contract for building the monument at Yorktown, Va., has been given to the Hal lowed Granite company of Maine. The monument is to be built of fine granite, to le 1)7 feet 2 inches high, crowned with an allegorical figure 1.1 feet high. Tho inscrip tions contain 1,488 letters, with polished faces, raised one inch. Foreign News. LONDON, April 15.—Six more arrests have been made in Limerick on tho charge ol conspiracy to murder. It is reported that i vessel with a cargo of dynamite has nailed from Antwerp for England. The completed railway mileage of Mexico is now stated at 2,2(15 miles, which shows ni. addition of about 1,100 milee of trnck in the last year. This is astonishing growth for n country in which railway construction \vn* almost unthought of until within tin? lasi three or four years. The Spanish government has sent a cable despatch to Cuba authorizing the importa tion of female cattle duty free for "anothe; year into the provinces which suffered in tin recent insurrection. Emperor William sent a message to th* Reichstag on Saturday expressing his solici tude for the welfare of the working people Germany, Austria and India nre about It lake action regarding tho unlawful use oi explosives. Numerous arrests nre being made in Russj; in consequence of the Nihilist intrigues. LONDON April 16.—Bernard Gallagher wa.- arrnigned in the Bow street police court, lioudon. yesterday, charged with beiug con uected with the dynamite conspiracy, and was remanded until Thursday. The Courrier du Suir (Paris) snys an ar rangement by which the claims of France are satisfied has been accepted by Queen Ranavolo of Madagascar. The president of the Austrian Reichsrnth has received a letter warning him that an attempt would be made soon to destroy the Parli; went building. The House ef Commons has passed a bi'.l giving General Woheley and Admiral S.'y mour pensions of £2,000 each. Mr. Parnell advises that the Irish conven tion in Philadelphia be iostponed until fall, when he may bo able to attend. Three British gunboats are waiting off Cork for nn American vessel supposed to h.wj on board a consignment of infernal machines. A man named Tubridy has given the par ticulars of the organization of a m rderous society in the Crusheen district of Ireland* The trial of Daniel Curley, charged with participation .n the Phoenix Park murders, began in Dublin yesterday. * Dr. Wm. Farr, F. It. S., D. C. L., of Eng land, is dead. LONDON April 17.—1t is understood iu Lon don that Patrick Egan, late treasurer of tho Land League, will reside permanently in America. Prince Thomas, Duke of Genoa, cousin of the King of Italy, was married nt Munich Monday to Princess Isabella of Bavaria, cousin of tho King of Bavaria. A despatch from Berlin says the corona tion of the Czar of Russia will probably bo postponed until the 10th of Juno. Queen Victoria left "Windsor for the royal residence nt Osborne yesterday. Bir Philip Rose, of England is dead. TIIE MARKETS. IULTIMOKK. FLOUR—City Mills extra.. *4 00 (ft 4 75 WHEAT—Southern Fultz.. 11l (rf 1 17 CORN—Southern white (M @ 00 Do yellow (50 @ (54 RYE—Good [it 70 OATS —Maryland 50 Ot 555 COTTON-Middling 9 @ 10tf Good ordinary 8""V HAY—Md. and Pa. Timci'ySl? 00 @l9 00 STRAW—Wheat KOO ffflO 00 BUTTER—Western prime. 10 (S> 21 West Virginia 15 @ 17 CHEESE—New York State choice llbjii 15 Western prime U 0t 11 EGGS 17 at 18 CATTLE 00(6 0 125 SWINE— 9 @ 11 SHEEP AND LAMBS .. 4',..5 7', TOBACCO LEAF— lnferior 150 (it 2 oo" Good common 55 00 (y) 4 50 Middling 000 (® 800 Good to tine red 850 (n 10 00 Fancy 10 00 @l4 00 NEW YORK. COTTON—Middling upland FLOUR—Southern com. to fair extra 4 10 (it 5 10 WHEAT—No. lwhito 1 25 @ 1 24 RYE —State 751 (6) 74 CORN—Southern Yellow... 08 @ OATS—White State 51 ( it 5(5 BUTTER—Sfcite 20 @ 21 CHEESE —State 14 (® 15 EGGS 20 (Ct 28 PHILADELPHIA. FLOUR —Penna.fancy .... 5 12 (a) 6 18 WHEAT—Pa. and South ern red 1 17 0b 1 20 RYP— Pennsylvania 08 at 00 CORN—^Southernyellow... 054 0t 01 OATS 52 01 5 5 BUTTER—State 25 27 CHEESE—N. Y. factory... 8 (it 12 EGGS Stute 13 @ 19 A biff handed sawyer named Shaw, rut his linger too near tho buzz-saw, lie saw bis mistake, Hut each pain and ache, St. Jacobs Oil cured in his paw. A rheumatic old man named Meeker, Was sick aw hole year in Topeekcr, Ho there would have died, Hut St. Jacobs Oil tried, It sent him back cured to Oswecgcr. The greatest English provincial pa per is the Lvtds Mercury. It pub lishes, besides its daily issue, an enor mous weekly edition, which is read all over the north of England, and is in- 1 finitely superior to the weekly Loudon Times. "ACCEPT Ol II III ATITI'ME." Dr. R. V. P neurit, Buffalo, N. Y., I tear Sir Your '"Golden Medical Discovery" has cured my boy of a fever nore of two years' (standing, l'leaeo accept our gratitude. Yours truly. 11ENKY WHITING, Boston, Mass. "What enn a boy do?" asked an exchange. Leave him nlor.e in the house with a pot of paint, a sharp knife and a bounding ball. Come back in an hour und see what bo lias accomplished. I)r. Pierce's "Favorite Prescription" is rot extolled as a "cure-all,"but admirably fulfils a singleness of purfM.se, being a most potent specific in those chronic weaknesses peculiar to women. Particulars in Dr. Piercers puin jiidet treatise on Diseases peculiar to \\ omen, *. (! pages sent for three stamps. Ad dressWOßLD'S DISPENSARY MEDICAL ASSOCIA TION, Buffalo, N. Y. A man named Penn, weighing 280 j>ounds. has married a girl named Sword, weighing DO. ll is another instance of where the yen is mightier thun the sword. Dr. Pierce's "Pellets"--little liver pills (sugar-coated)-—purify the blood, speedily correct all disorders of the liver,stomach and bowels. By druggists. A consciousness of having faithfully dis charged the duties of the day soltcus the pillow for the night's repose. As n relial lo remedy for indigestion and a certain cure fordjs]>ei* i ia > GASTRINS without doubt stands lir-t. GAHTUINE is in liquid form, hold by druggists. Skinny .llrn. Wells' Health Kenewer restores health, vigor, cures Dyspepsia, Impotence, Sexual Debility. sl. Tlie <"onirn*t. As the sable i T to ermine: as smut to flour ; ns coal to alabaster; as soot to driven sn >\v, so is Carbolinc, tho perfect on of all iiatr Ueuewers, to all other preparations. l or Thick llcutl*. Hc.ny stomachs billiousconditions—M el's' May AppU I'ills- antibilious,cathartic. 10 2~-c. The most comfortable boot in town that with Lyon's Patent Metallic Heel St.ffe iers. Don't Die in I lie llouw*. 'Rough on Rats.' Clears out rats, mice, r< aches, bedbugs, flies, ants, moles, chip munks, gophers, 15c. For sore feet, swollen joints, sprains, corns or bunions, use Bt. Patrick's Salve. An Undoubted nirsslng. About thirty years ■>;.>. a prominent I'nysician by tho n >iu of L)r. William 11 ill discovers 1. >r produced after LOTM experimental RCJOIROU. T rem • ly for diseases ol the turoat, chest MI L LUII#*, which WAS of ouch won derful efficacy that it soon NAMED A wide reputation in this country. The nmie of the medicine is Dr. Win. Hall's B -LSTM for the LUNGS, and toay be safely rehod cm AS a SPEEDY and positive cure for coughs, colds, sore throat, etc. Sold by ail Druggists. Diirnn'E ("ntiirrti SnnfT. This welt known remedy for Catarrh still maintain* it- WELL earned popularity. C. A. Savago, of Geneva. Kansas, writes, March T, IHS0: "I have used Durno'S * Catarrh Snuff, and it is the only thing that does me any good. It always effects ; cure." bold by all druggists, NIMH MJ Is the most DSNRFTOUS perfod of the year to those who suffer with THRE'T AND lumr c nqdsints. lie r. W. Nettle, liiint Ist M : in "DER, residing in Accomack county, \ a., SAYS that alter ruff ■•RING f. r more thin si* in- nths witfi severe lunc -and throat trouble he W*A speedily healed I v using NEW L.ife, the Great Ough Remedy, lie calls "it "a wonderlul medicine for throat and lung trouble. No matter bow loose an engagement ring may be. the diamond never slips around oil the inside of a lady's finger. >•: .I :,HI.IIII.JUMSIIMIIT' SJJI THE GREAT GERMAN ,|L!!I[J|CUIN:!INIANA!IB'| | REMEDY KSSI FOR PAIN. ! Relieves and cures llj RHEUMATISM, I# ! l „ J Neuralgia, III! """ M! Sciatica, Lumbago, J liilliL (NIHFFLHLHUUK: 4J| HATH A cut:, , iijIIP 4 *"' HEADACHE, TOOTHACHE, M SORE THROAT. Ijjll J Jjjjjj| ( tlllßlßllffllfflftJ r KPKAINV, j iji; jj!:jljjjji!!HWiireißfiils! , l! Soreness. Cuts. Bruises, FEJILUWL FROSTBITES. 'll 1 ITf f,ft ' c * f " t ' s " l( bottie j jit! 11111 il' Illjll 1 Sold by all Druggists uid I I lilt, ........MMOTLLI i Dealers! Directions IN 11 1 LLFTT|P* WU,{| IL languages. L 5 €P alllllliPlili The CHAR,ES A * Vogeler Co. atfJllP"'' (Basaewon to A VOUEI.ER 4 CO.) IF HI JK Italllaars, MD., C. 8. A. If yon are Interested In tho inquiry—Which is tho best Liniment for Man and Least this is tho answer, at tested by two generations: the MEXICAN MUSTANG LINI MENT. Tho reason is sim ple. It penetrates every sore, wonnd, or lameness, to tho very bone, and drives out all Inflammatory and morbid mat ter. It" goes to tho root" of the trouble, and never fails to euro in double quick time* nitmw w i.". " UT |1 n TCI iMhnp rleu and sold ■DTT-R nt-HU I CAUULY in tho orguiHl JU W JLKL JLJ uictal-liued, hull and quarter p .und H|| MI A pack YES. 1115-NL> ismmply tea in JL JTAXJL. itsnatuial conditi O), without color , LUX-without muiiiiiulatioiv-and :■ THE KIND THE T'HINKSK DIUNK THKMsKI.VES. II E NO TEA has been * warded Gold Medals AT Halt in .RO # Atlahta. Cincinnati, Ch&rlcstoD and Louisville E*p"t tions f< r PURITY and quality. Tho TUN>OR: EIID lIE-NO are Martin Gillet AC"., A house cstal.lisl e !at Raltimoie in IHII, who. to introduce IILS-NO TEA* will tieud by mail, on receipt "t gffc*. (pust age stamps or otherwise), an "LIKINUL una tier p >und on receipt of 3-JC. a half p tin I pack GE. 1115-N't I is the choicest drink ingtea atu modiT tcj>ric. bind fur circular. Address MARTIN GFJLI.ET & CD., Ititltimore, fflL. IMiTaTiCN STAtKEO GLASS. Indescribably beautiful. Easily applied to window class. L.HD references, sanipl S, etc., 25c. in stamps. AG ["NTS' i I EEAL.D. MS pp. (Ittc): fearless in its deunncHiti >IIH "( sundry humbujrj. Indorsed by SWi,(HNI Koverntnent officials andcitireus. Rare chances to coin ninney. bub-cription NEW subscribers Onlv 25C. t > fim'.er of lenire T word, each edition of Herald. E. I.L'JI SJIITU* Pliiladelphia, PU. '•THE BEST IS CHCAPEST." ENGINES, THPITCiIFRQ SAW MILLS, Horse Powers °JI J. ?Clovrr Hollers (Suited tc all sections > Wriiefor i' ItCC Tlltis. Pamphlet and Prices U* Tho A lltman c. Circulars DV K-O Saxtree. J-S. BLRCD&CO..i3i>eySt.. 2*. Y. Voluntary Tribolw of nratltade flsr Beaa flu Rrrelveil. Dfah Rrn—Please allow me the privilege of giving my foatiniony regarding the wonderful curative properties of yonr invaluable medicine, Hunt'J Remedy. During the pant six or seven years 1 have been s great snfferei Inrni kidney disease, and during a great part of the time niy suffering* bare been so intense ss to be indescrihr able. Only thee who have suffered by this dread disease know of the awful backache, and pains of all kinds, nccompanied by great weakness and nervous prostration, less of force and ambition which invariably attend it, I had all these troubles intensified, and was in such a bad condition that I could not get up out of my chair except by putting my hands on my knees, and almost rolling out before I could straighten up. I tried the best doctors, and many kinds of medicine, but all failed to help me, and I experimented so long endeavoring to get cured tlint last spring I was in very poor shape, and in seeking for relief my attention was directed by a friend to the roninrknhle cures of kidney disenes, etc., which were being accomplished by Hunt's Remedy. I WAS in. duced to try it, and began to take it, and very toon "limbered up," as it were; my severe backache and lh-' intense pnlns 1 had suffered so long speedily dis appeared, notwithstanding I hod boon bothered with litis complaint so many years. Wlien I began to take Hunt's Remedy I was cenrid sruhly run down in my general health, and suffered also Iroiu ioaa of appetite. Ever since I have been taking the Remedy, however, my improvement hrs been most marked ; my former complaints, aches, pains, etc., have dianppeared, rnd I now feel like my former self, hale, hearty and sound in health. 1 shall always keep Hunt's Ri-iuntly witli iue, #nd would moot earn-istly recommend all those who sre sufferers from Kidney or Liver dis eases, or diseases of the Bladder or Urinary organs, to Hunt's Remedy, and take no other. Yours very truly, Hrxnv H. RRELOOS, No. a-U Westminster St., Providence, R. I. " In the lexicon of youth, etc., there is no snch word ssfoit." That " lexicon " is now found in < h ' laboratory oi Hunt's Reuie ly. It knows no such word as—TWI. (BEFORE -AND - AFTER*) Zlertri; Appliixces trt test ca 29 liyi' Trial, TO MEN ONLY, YOUNG OR OLD, WHO are suffering from Nnr.vocs DEBILITY, 1-iohT VITALITY. I,A< K OK NEBVE Foots AKD ViO"it, WAKTI.NO Wt *k xi sHEe, nud all kindred disease*. b.M-edy relief mid complete restora tion of HEALTH, viooa niul MASIIOOU GUAHAX itni. Tho Kraixmt dl-covi ry of the N*ne teenth Century. 8 n l at cacc for Illustrated Pamphlet free. Address VOLTAIC CELT CO., MARSHALL, MICH. What the great re riff B I* 8 I U storative, lluatetter's ■■ ■ BkW\ Stomach Kilters, will gP CCLIBRATEI d->, must be gathered _ V fr< m what it has . r v3s v3n\ dce. 11 has effected Sffj' 6 cteaassof d>v \v j f >er, nervous affec- w i' a "• general de teTl bilit/ constipation, v '• y '^n < t>' llo Klt> - bpasnia, NIM Convulsions, Ft. \iiug ** CURES AND "*1 D.inee. AlcobolUim, Opiuui Kitting, Nerv A votisdebilitydSerofula "d all Nervous and diseases. lo - . c /•* Y'.'i • 1 t . rvvmen, '\rj] i.iternry nun, Mer rhauts. Rankers. I-i - -wy 14 a,l< l all 4 - i dentarj' employ men t 81 Pyty'tv ' "^f?-I'M raii'M >' J-jB-kv* ,! tiieblooo, stomach, -*'-(lw.vvelsor kiudeys, or ta ururo riu *- xv,l ° require nerve Dk tvaYt-it t tika. n.nic, appetiser or Nniw._ rigAb yl a.tutiliint. bamantan U ffY JLIS XJ v n Ptf Nervine i-Invalcable. *ill¥ U. 'i'honsands proclaim it ■ i rfulin vlgorantthstpvoi snstiilned thesinkingsystetn. For s: e tiv nil linicgists THK DR. b. A. lUClIMOM) f bUjiCAL ID. b. le pr....rn • M l. ".HALL'S COR TIIB n A g QAM lungs-dALoAM ("urea (.'onsainptlnn, (>lil, Pneswssla. liuenzß, Hiotiehiul Dillicitlties, Browcuilla, lloarsritrMs Asthma, Croup, }\ nooning tough, ntul nil Ihsrasrs ol" the Brentntng Orgittis. It soothes nutl kritls the .HenikrnM of the I.IIIIRH, inflamed nnd poisoned by the disease, and prevents the night advents nnd lightness across the eheat wbirli necomnany it. ( onsuiiipiioii is not nil inrnruble itiitlady. 11 ALL'S lIAI.M \.>l cure you, etTen XX.—NOTICE.—XX^ AS BLUE FLANNEL GARMENTS Of Inferior Quuiily of Goods are sold av the "genuine Middlesex." which are not made by that mill. The Midile-M?x I'. mpanv,in order to pnitest thoir cutomsrs snd the public, give notice tho. 9* John bt. New York. FRAZER AXLE GREASE. Beat In the world. (Set the genulae. Every package hns our trnile-maik and Is marked Frnger'. EOl.n EV KRY WHERE. PORTABLE SODA FOUNTAINS Scud for Catalogue, Chapman &/Co. MADIftQN, IND. Iron levers, Pte! D-r!ng. B-n*s TARE SEAS, Ja & JONliii. Etc: PAYS TKIi FHKIGHT. fl A Hold on trial. Wan-ints 5 yea.c. Allklzwuiow, H |f i For (if book, euaiuas W . JONES OF BfXGH WTOH, THE SUN No other newspaper published on this side of the earth is bought and read by so many men and women. Why? Because it in outspoke, n, (ruth-telling ami always interesting. It is ever bodv's newß]Nt( ear. [/; CURES WHERE A'.. E.SE FAILS. E3 LVj Best Couch Syrup. Tastes good. (2d 1! I.'se in t n:e. Fo fl by drugitists. 7 B MANILLA * . 4 * V " InJd l > ijaa-V 5 ■' B — <-.* -g j ins water-prooi maferinl royjnibleslineientber.iaufed for rmf-,outi;ie >. aih cf b>.i: disss, and inside in place vnYK, " s rr,Ttn FI.TXIR s-~v i J daya. Hotb jgaigid xd ji J^j jti w.,r*. \V II prove it or forfe t gIOO li) Pn*. pjt i'oraaga w,iK tlirecsiuaa oea:ed and pue*pa.d ct.ta, 6 !•>* 5® CU-.tUuiiiJur silver. L.A.Lijj4iliiALU^tcigu.iaiiLuc,lll ,QSYMPATWZE THE HOPE O3 WOMAN. ~^sru&S's£*■&£•" \\ LYDIA E. PINKHAM'S VEFLETABLB COMPOTOD. A flnre Cure for nil rEIfALB WEAK- T : SSES, Jnclutlinff LencoTTliw.* Ir regular nnd Painful Men*trnaln, Inflammation nnd Ulceration of (lie Wo.nb, Flooding, PKO LAPSCB UTERI, AC. (YPLEANANT to the taste, afficaelous and Immediate In lt effect. It LA a great help In pregnancy, and re- LUTCS pain during labor and at regular period*. PUT Sit 118 ISE IT IKB PMBCBOT IT PEIILT. GYFO* ILL WKAEOEMT3 of the gen era tire org ane of either tcx, It U second to no remedy that haa ere* been before the public ; and for all disease • OF TTW CTNVSTS It is the OrmUtt Remedy in the World. prKIDNtY COMPLAINTSaf Either Bel Find Ureat Relief la Ito USE. YVMia F PINKHAM'S BLOOD PURIFIES wiii eradicate'evenr to Blood at the same time will GIVE tone and rtrengtn to the system. As marvellous In results as tha Compound. YP-BOTH the Compound and Blood Purifier are pra pared at tS3 and 235 Western Avenna, Lynn, Mass. Price of either, |l. Six bottles for $&. The Compound U sent by mall In the form of pills, or of losenges, on receipt of pries, ft per box for either. Mrs. Plnkham freely answers all letters of Inquiry. Enclose loeal stain p. Bend for pamphlet. Mention Ws I^TPSR. rrI.TMA E. PIKEHAM'S L.ITXB PFLIA CORT Constlpa. GUN, LUIOITIMMSAD Torpidity of the Liver, K oeUa g4-Mold by all l)rß|(lsts.fl B >lvwNin Habit Cured iu IS F 'ilrS * S Pij'i ?"* t3H . T '*- X' ray tIl Cored. WII U V-T £?: 3 Dii. J. STJCTHIINS, .LEBANON, OHIOU S") \ \ HOUR for nil who will luske spare time prof \ ,W:l*..!E:a IRO id paying BUSINESS if you can devote your ■J jgwlv !A time t ■ it. Mtr RIIAT HILL, Box 788, N. Y sllO •. 9 IH>Rl H>R F '"Y MT home. Samples worth * > ~ AV A. - Adtires >1 AGENTS WANTED for the Best and inc Pictorial B-rnks and Bihlos. per cent. NATIONAL PCHLISHINO COJJM CCj week ia youi town, Aildrtts it. H.lL.otl CIIJH Ci T> ( 1 COT.EMAX BUSI^B /. J L V-'T X ' -I r'- V I 1M $-.0 a WEEK ia d-y at i u outati.ee. Address 'i'auc^H