FOR THE FARM AND HOME. Rosea from Cuttlnsa European horticulturists sometimes adopt this mode of planting rose cut tings so as to root with more certainty. They bend the shoot and insert both ends in the ground, leaving a single bud uncovered at the middle and on the surface of the ground. The cut - tings are about ten inches long, and are bent over a stick laid fiat on the ground, holes being dug on each side of the stick for the reception of the ends of the shoot. The roots form only at the lower end of the shoot, but the other end being buried, prevents evaporation and drying up. A cor respondent of the London Garden says that he has tried this, along with the old mode, and that, while the weaker cutting of the latter have shown symp toms of dying and failure, all the for mer have grown vigorously. Fnrftiiips for Anlmnla. "When mixed with hay and other dry feed, parsnips are valuable for horses and cows, the feeding being commenced gradually, as with roots generally. They possess an important advantage over other roots, in that the crop may be safely left in the ground all winter, as freezing does not injure them when they thaw out in the ground, and thus the labor of late au tumn harvesting is avoided. They are easily dug in spring by plowing a furrow close to the row and away from it, and pulling them out by hand —a few bushels being taken out at a time as needed. A quarter of an acre yielded 100 bushels last year on our grounds, or -400 bushels per acre, notwithstanding the extraordinary drouth. As the tops start to grow in spring they are rapidly cut off with sharp hoes, and thus the roots are kept for feeding for several weeks— Country Gentleman. Fruit Culture. The annual report on "Fruit Cul ture" issued by the Michigan State Horticultural Society, contains results of the experience of its members and many practical directions. A member who advocates summer pruning of small fruits applies it to the straw berry by keeping the runners cut. by which crown upon crown is added and the size and the productiveness of the fruit increased. He applies it to rasp berries and blackberries by pinching back, to concentrate the bearing wood and admit free passage between rows for cultivation and gathering the crop. Black caps require, in his opinion, more pinching than red raspberries, and early thinning, the leaves secures well-ripened wood. Thinning in time will make weak-growing sorts strong. Thinning the peach crop is generally recommended. Some growers thin out one half to two-thirds of the fruit on loaded trees, leaving the peaches seve ral inches apart. Some do not thin until early in July, others do it early in June or before the pits harden, as that is believed to be the process which exhausts the trees. Professor Beal, on the subject of cross-fertilization, says that crossing strawberries is easily accomplished. all that is necessary is to plant two sorts together. But grapes fertilize before the flowers open, hence the covering must be removed and the stamens be carefully cut away and a paper bag be placed over the flowers to prevent any outside pollen from reach ing them. The pollen having been previously gathered and secured in a bottle, is applied within a day or two. It is easily gathered for this purpose, whole stamens being cut off and drop, ped in the bottle. Apples are easily crossed, and are the best fruits for the novice to work on. Cut all the star : mens away before the blossom of a cluster, and remove the others. In a day or two touch the five stigmas with the selected pollen. It i§ easier to effect crosses in glass-houses, in the absence of wind or insects, which often disturb results. Plowing in green rye for enriching orchards has its advocates, who espe cially recommend this course in peach orchards. The seed should be sown in August, so as to secure a dense growth before winter. It must be turned under in the spring as soon as the heads begin to apppear. A single crop is insufficient, the green manur ing should be continued year after year. Household Hints. The water used in mixing bread must be tepid. If it is too hot the loaves will be full of holes. To make a clothes line pliable—Boil it an hour or two before using it. Let it dry in a warm room and do not al low it to "kink." To boil potatoes so that the will be dry and mealy—When the skins break, pour off the water and let them finish cooking in their own steam. To remove starch or rust from flat 'irons—Have a piece of yellow bees, wax tied in a coarse cloth; when the iron is almost hot enough to use, but not quite, rub it quickly with the bees wax and then with a clean coarse cloth. It is not generally known that mint gauce will keep if bottled, and be as good or even better than when freshly gathered. Of course I do not mean that it will keep indefinitely, but for a week or ten days at least. This will will be good news to the family to whom it is not alone the first swallow but the first mint-sauce which makcj the summer.- - New York Evening Post. Venoiu of Serpents. A remarkable discovery in toxicolo gy, the science of poisons, has recently been made in this city by Drs. S. "Weir Mitchell and Edward T. Reichcr*. Tht sso gentlemen have for some time past been conducting an elaborate study ot the venoms of almost -all American serpents, the bites of which are poisonous, as well as many foreign ones, and the recent report is made up from selections from their notes. l p to this time all observers have regard ed the venoms a- representing a single poison, but the researches of l>r. Mitch ell and IM\ Heichert goto show that many of them contain two and several separate poisons. The venoms especially mentioned are those of the rattlesnake, the moccas in, and the copperhead, which were obtained in a fresh state, in which they are all in the form of a slightly turbid, yellowish fluid. Dried cobra venom was also produced from Calcut ta, India. It was found that in drying the venoms about seventy-five per cent of their weight was lost, and that in a state of aqueous solution all the prop erties of the fresh venom were pre served, except that the intensity of the poison was slightly diminished. The reports show that the venom of the moccasin snake contains three pro teides—one analogous to peptones, and a putrefacient; one akin to globir lines, and a much more fatal poison, probably attacking the respiratory cen ters, and destroying the power of the blood to clot, and a third resembling the albumens. The external symptoms caused in animals by the several ven oms—cobra, rattlesnake, moccasin, or copperhead -do not ditrer radically, save in degree. In all alike, there is some primary heart disturbance, tem porarily lowered blood pressure, fatal enfecblement of the respiratory centers and local effusion of blood with lessen ng or loss of its power to clot. These atter symptoms are best seen when the animal experimented upon sur vives for some hours, or a day, and then, also, is noticable the breaking down of the capillaries and the tenden cy to local putresence and gangrene- Cobra venom is proved to be the most intense in its poisonous power, the venom of the copperhead next, then the moccasin and rattlesnake. The in vestigations in this line are as yet far from complete, and accordingly these facts are not asserted as being final or at all conclusive. — Philadelphia Rec ord. The Howling Monkey. The howling monkeys are the larg est found in America, and are celebrat. Ed for the loud voice of the males. Of ten in the great forests of the Amazon, or Orinoco, a tremendous noise is heard in the night or early morning, as if a great assemblage of wild beasts were all roaring and screaming together. The noise may be heard for miles* and it is louder and more piercing than of any other animals, yet it is all pro duced by a single male bowler sitting on the branches of a lofty tree. They are enable*! to make this extraordinary noise by means of an organ that is possessed by no other animal. The lower jaw is unusually deep, and thi 9 makes room for a hollow, bony vessel about the size of a large walnut, situa ted under the roof of the tong le, and having an opening in the windpipe by which the animal can force air into it. This increases the power of its voice, acting something like the hollow case of a violin and producing those mar velous lolling and reverberating sounds which caused the celebrated traveller Waterton to declare that they were such as might have had their origin in the infernal regions. The howlers are large and stout-bodied monkeys with bearded faces, and very strong and powerful grasping tails. They in habit the wildest forests; they are very shy, and are seldom taken captive though they are less active than many other American monkeys. The Enr. Perhaps the most acceptable theory to-day is the one which places the ori gen of the trouble in the inner ear- The ear consists of three parts: the outer of these runs in as far as the drum; the middle part is the inside of the drum, and contains the chain of ear bones; while the inner ear is a compli cated affair, containing the essential or gan of hearing. As far as we are concerned, the in ner ear is a membranous bag filled with fluid, and situated in the solid bone. From the back part of this bag run out three semicircular tubes communicating at both ends with tho bag or vestibule. These run in three different pianos, and are lined with hair-like nerve-filaments, which are much more numerous and sensitive at the anterior part of the tubes. The tubes are filled with liquid in which float little calcarious particles, the otoliths. These tubes are known as the semicir cular canals. It was difficult to see what connection with the sense of hearing these canals could posssbly have, and some time ago it was noticed that injuries to these impaired the sense of hearing in no way, but caysed most curious effects in the loss of the equilibrium.— Popular Science Month ly, LATEST NEWS. 1,-.indon, .Inly I.' --A French officer boarded an English vessel at Tainatavo recently and would allow the cargo to be landed only on the piiytmvul of duty. V sentry was placed on bond the steamer. A tiro at Eiptoszontimiklo, Hungary, has paused c )in>ideiable loss of lite. 1 wenty persons, including the perfect of police, are missing. There wya a not at Hon bail, France, ye* torday, in which the police commissary was ser ouslj injured. Six of the lio'eis were arrested. It win i umorod yesterday th it Mr. t hhi ers, English Chancellor of the F.vbcqinr, would resign it the Sue/. Canal agreement were abandoned. Cholera lias nppeared at (Ihi/.eh. a suburb i f Cairo, where there have been the death from the disease. A cordon Ins been o.>! d> listed around the town. A •'esputch to the I, union S'rimlaril from Snujliii siystlnt .lupin has declined a proposal of M. Tricon, tlit* Ftench ambusui dor at Shanghai, to form an alliance against China. A slight shock of earthquake was felt at Cairo, I'l., Saturday inorniog. "Fil'ed" twenty dollar gold pieces have appeared in Tennessee and other pail* ot the South. Chae. Ue.\" woo I St iat ton. better k own to the pub'ie as Den. Tom Thumb, died at his icmJuuco at Marlboro, Mass., of apoplexy. Report* from S mora. Mexico, indicate that the Apaches nre on the war path. Twelve pemms are said to have been unit dcied ne ir l>posura. Elizabeth Stcwait, the wif • of a Rending (I'a.) minister, has been a* rested Saturday, eli'rged wrh cruelly beating a liit'e girl named Rout St'aus.i, who was in her employ Tho New Haven M ire Works, at Km t Haven. i'o"n., have been partly destroyed by ti•-%. L"ia about SJO,tXK); fn'lv insured. Throe hundred men are temp mirily thrown out of work. I>r .1 ilin A. Warder, ot North Rend t Miio. hdeid. He was a prominent member of the American forestry congress and tho a thor of e end works on fruit growing and tie" culture. Since October Ist tho sale of le f tobacco in the Lynchburg (Va.) warehouse- have aggregated RJ.7XM7O pounds, an incren eof 3.404,44 1 pounds compared with same months of previous year. Half the business portion of Belleville, Nev., ha- been destroyed by lire. Lo $.V>, iKIO, insureauee $;0,I>00. The factory of the Vermont Shade Roller Company at Vergen nes has been burned. Li s Elijah J. llayej and Hull. Mct'onnell. two young men living near Paris, Tenn , qttar relle I yesterday while swimming. In a scuf tie after they had left the water, McConnell fat illy shot Hayes. He then started f >r borne but fell dead on the way fn in exi dement. The trial of Barbara Miller, colored, fiu the murder of her husband, Daniel Miller, in the Henr co County Court, Va., rcsulte l in a verdict of being an accessory before the fact of murder in the first degree. She \ta sentenced to be hnng d on September 11. At New Lots, N. V., during the thunder shower, a black cloud over the eastern part of the village seein -d to open suddenly, and a huge ball of tire shot through tho air with * terrific report. Every house in the town was shaken. The bolt struck a tree in Ver mont and Fulton avenues and toie it to pieces. The ground around it xvas ploughed up, an ! portions of the tree were fount fifty feet away. Sr. Paul, Minn., July lf>.—A dispatch from Cokalo, Minn., says lightuingsat lire to a hotel there which was full of railroad and traveling men. three of who u, Jaines Wittingham, Richard Kelly, and a young man named Shepherd, all section men. were burned to death before they could escape. A large number of others leceived injuries more or less severe A traveling man named Storm broke his leg by jumping from a window. 'lhe fire spreading burned l?l buildings, or nearly the whole busine s part of the village. The los-s is stated to be Mr.).( 00. (JENERAL NEWS. LONDON, July 13.—At a crowded meeting of merchants and shipowners held at Lloyds yesterday, resolutions were passed strongly objecting to t ie new Suez canal agreement The Lord Mayor of London was asked ti call a meeting, in order that a further pro test agaiyst the agreement can he made. There is no abatement of the cholera scourge in Egypt. Emperor William has given his sanction to the Prussian Church bill. Anarchy exists in Tonquin. The French, iiave hanged several marauders. The American horse Idea has won a sweep stakes and vne thousand crowus at Copen hagen. AJ. Dreyfus, of the France, has been wounded in a duel with M. Judet, of the Lanterne. The London Lancet says there is nothing in the Queen's condition to excite the slight est anxiety. 1 is reported that the Czar has placed the Grand Duke Nicholas Constantinovitch under arrest for interfering in the govern ment of Turkestan. lln fire atColumia, Tenn., destroyed the Williams block and eight store houses; loss $6.1, 000 The postofficeat Baldwin, Ta., was burned on the 11th instant, all mail matter and records being lost. The failure of J. P. Macheca (p G7 OATS—Maryland 40 <* 42 COTTON —Middling 10 Ot 10' 4 Good ordinary ''.U (P HAY—Md. and Pa. Timct'yjn 00 @lB 00 STRAW-Wheat 700 at 8 00 BUTTER—Western prime. 22 (it 23 West Virginia 17 @ 18 CHEESE —New York State choice 1 ! ® W .stern prime 9 (P M EGGS lG ' 7 CATTLE 5 50 @ 6 75 SWINE— 6 (? 8H SHEEP AND LAMBS .. 25 CHEESE —N. Y. factory... 8 Ot 12 OGS State 15 (P 20 l or Turniy-FiTP Years. Even before the war Hon. Kenneth Kayner, Solicitor of the Treasury, wrote: "I have found it to be a most capital remedy in bowel affections. It has acquired an extensive popular ity, so much so ;is to have become a regular family medicine." For a quarter of a century, with the most astounding results, Dr. Worthington's Cholera and Diarrhoea Medicine has been a standard cure for Diarrhoea, Dysentery, Cholera, Cramps, and Pains of the Stomach and Bowels, Dyspepsia, Sick Stomach, Indigestion, Rummer Complaint, Colic, etc. Dr. Devi fc>. Yates, of North Carolina,also endorses it. Sold for 25 ami 50 cents a bottle by druggists and dealers. It costs SIOO to hit a Paris policeman, as 1 ny one who will raise lus hand against one will find out. Frnzer AXIP Orrnnp. One greasing lasts two weeks ; nil others two or three days. Do not be imposed upon by the humbug stuffs offered. Ask your denier for Frazer's, with label on. It snves your horse labor, and you too. It received first modal at the Centennial and Paris ex positions. Hold everywhere. The hot wave took a tumble, but like truth crushed to earth will rise again. fnlnrrli of the Hladder. Stinging irritation, inflammation, Kidney, Urinary complaints, cured hv BuchupaibAsl. The Prince of Wales is said to be engaged in the laudable effort to color a meerschaum pipp. lie will succeed—by smoking. " ICough on Oorni." Ask for Wells' •Bough on Corns.'lsc. Quick relief; complete cine. Corns, warts, bunions. A mob of women took down and removed the shanty of a man who had jumped a widow's claim nt Huron, Dakota. Tlmt If iiwbnnd of Mine Is three times the man ho was before using Wells' Health Renewer. sl. Druggists. "I'm sitting on style, Marv," said Mary's father when ho refused to buy her a new bonnet. Use St Patrick's Salve, nnd learn its great value. One trial convinces. Pantaloons will be worn longer in July than in June—-one day longer. W A I.KINO made easy with Lyon's Heel Stiff, eners; they keep your boots and shoes straight. AH TICK TO ( ONHUMPTITER On the appearance of the first symptoms— as general debility, loss of appetite, pallor, chilly sensations, followed by night-sweats end cough—prompt measures for relief should be taken. Consumption is scrofulous disease of the lungs;-—therefore use the great anti-scrofula, or blood-purifier and strength restorer,—Dr. Pierce's "Golden Medical Discovery." Superior to Cod Liver Oil as a nutritive, and unsurpassed as a pectoral. For weak lungs, spitting of blood, and kin died atlections, it lias no equal. Sold by druggists the world over. For Dr. Pierce's pamphlet 011 Consumption, send two stamps to \\oiu.n's DISI'KNSAUY .MtnicAi. ASSOCIA TION, Buffalo, N. Y. "Pass? Of course I'll pn>s," said one little girl to another; "isn't my brother keeping company with the echoolma'am!" Dr. Pierce'R "Favorite Prescription" is everywhere acknowledged to lie the standard remedy for female complaints and weak nesses. It is sold by druggists. A corner in pork—a pig's ear. DKCLINKOF MAN. Impotency of mind,limb or vital function, nervous weakness, sexual debility, etc., cured by WORLD'S DISPENSARY MEHTAL AS SOCIATION. Buffalo. N. Y Address, with two stamps for pamphlet. Clara Jane thinks that sailing in a yachtis is knotty, but nice. Chrolithion collars are made in different styles, both standing nnd turn down. The cuffs are reversible* Utica, N. has several cases of milk l>oisoning said to have originated from adul teration. It Stnnd* to Raoii That an oil devoid of all irritating properties, that never becomes rancid, should make an excellent Hair Dressing. Such is Carboline. Mad* from puie petroleum; all druggists. A century plant in the grounds of the Rrock House at Enterprise, Fla.. has shot up a flower stalk forty feet high. t;nstrtnr. . , A 1 idy soys: " W hen 1 leol at all distressed after eating, a tnble-poonlul ot GASTRINE gives me nlmost instant- relief. Druggists. San Francisco street lamps have not been lige'iOd in two months, nnd will not be until the city pays n big gas bill. WAirrKßnono, S. C. —Col. A. L. Campbell says: "A member of my family used Brown s Iron Bitters with good results." Since the passage of the Restriction act 7,350 ceitificates have been issued to Chinese leaving San Francisco. Not a drink, not sold in barrooms, but a re liable. non alcoholic tonic medicine, useful in all seasons, is Brown's Iron Bitters. Report is to tho effect that it has become the thing for London girls of ten to learn dres -making. CONYERS. Ga. - Dr. W.H.Lee says: "Brown's Iron Bitters is n good medicine, and many are using it in th.'s place." Archie Reed, of Villnnow, Ga.. killed two rattlesnakes, one of which was trying to swallow a rabbit. ON THIRTY DAYS* TRIAL. THF. VOI.TATO BELT CO., Mars hall.Mich., will.send Dr. Dye's Celebrated Electro-Vol taic Belts and Electric Appliances on trial for 30 days to men, young or old, who are afflicted with nervous debility, lost vitality and kindred troubles, guaranteeing speedy nnd complete restoration of health and manly vigor. Address as above.—N. B.— No risk is incurred, as thirty days' trial is allowed. A Berlin, Germany, bookseller named Borstele has a circulating library of 600,000 volumes. ••Wheat the t.lnd Tidings." Mrs. THOMAS ATKINSON, of No. 23 Ring Street, Providence, R. 1., joins the exultant multitude in glad praise nnd thanksgiving. Mrs. A. says: "A few months ago I was taken seriously 111 and obliged to gi ve np my accustomed household duties, and receive medical treatment, and grew worse continually until I was confined to my bed, in spite of the doctor's prescriptions and the best advice that I could get. My Mifferings were very severe from the excruciating pains in my bsck, and my legs were very badly swollen, nt tended with severe pains, which were supposed to be caused by tho rhouraatism. Alriendof mine who called to-see me nrged mo to try Hunt's Remedy, stating that he knew of the wonderful cures of several parties who hnd taken this medicine, in cases which seemed very much like mine, excepting that they were in much worse condition than 1 was. I consented to try the Remedy, nnd begun to take it as directed, and before I had fin ished taking one bottle the improvement in me was great-, and it continued constantly, so that after I had .ill.en loss than three bottlos I was able to resume my household dut-es and do my work easily, although I had b.--1> confined to the bed several weeks. The swelling my lirn'-s li'S disappeared, and the lameness and p.iins in my bft-k aro gone, all gone. For all of which, under the blessing of a kind Providence, lam indebted (o Hunt's Kemody, and I believe that it is my duty and privilege to inform all who are suffering in like manner if the remarkable curative and restorative powers of tnisremody. which I cheerfully recommend to all who are afflicted with Kidney Disease and Dropsy." "Never Known to Fall." This motto was adopted some years ago for the won '-•rful Kidroj medicine. Hunt's Remedy. It was a bold 'inner to carry, for Ilnut's Remedy is recommended for mine of the most fatal maladies—Bright's disease and all Kidney, bladdr. liver and urinary complaints. Hunt's Itemed/, the great kidney and liver medicine, is indeed a positive cure, and really is ''never known to fail."_ A rt. M-idJen, of Plymouth Coun'y, Town, 110 years o'd, frequently walks two milea to do shopping. PtTRERT AND bf.rt con-Livr.n on,, from selected livors, on tho seashore, by Csswell, Hazard w Orleans, La., writes : I have a son who lias born "irk for two years; he has been attended by our leading physicians, but all to no purpose. This morning he bad his usual spell of coughing, and was ao greatly prostrated in conse quence that death seemed Imminent We had in the house a bottle of Dr. Wm. Hall's Balsam for tho Lungs purchased by my husband, who noticed your advertisement yesterday. We administered It ac cording to directions and he was instantly relieved. Durno'a Catarrh Snuff cures Catarrh and all af fections of the mucous membrane. Baker's Pain Panacea cures pain in Man and Beast. For use externally and internally. Tho Swedes will celebrate this month the onr hundreth iinniverßttry of the first estab lishment of a printing preRR. Dr-Wobthimbton's ——————— fIHOLERA ■RAMP __ AND lIARRHOEAIURE ■ AV wbed OVER U TEARS. Tbr tv-.i rrmeflt for Cholera. Crtapt, Diarrhoea, Dysentery, enmnser CoMtplnlnt, Dyspepsia, and other •/ Ih* ttomaeh and bowels. lolroducfJ Is the Army, IMS, by Surxcou-Ornrral C. 8. A. Recommended by Oes. Warren. Purveyor-General; Hon. Kenneth Rsynrr. Solicitor P. 8 Trossury. sod oilirra. Price, 15 eta. Bold by rroawto be your own lawyer. How to do business correctly ajid successfully. How to act in society and in erery part of life, and contains a gold mine of varied information indispensable to all olasses for constant referenoe. AiiENTS WANTED for all or spare time. To know why this book of REAL value and attraction sells better than any other, apply for terms to DOUf.LASS BROS.. 63 North Seventh Street. Philadelphia, Prnn. AGENTS WANTED.—A RARE CHANCE TO MAKE MO.NET RAPIDLT. Umr oar NEW RCOE NEW YORK, BY SUNLIGHT AND GASLIGHT •jery phase of life in the great city. waste time selling slow Si b tt',' 1 ' chanties, and. in fact fa, us. A NOTED HUT UNTITLED WOMAN# [From tfcwHoston tflovf.J Ifrtert. FA I tori The above Is a good likeness of Mrs. I.ydla E. rtnlr- I,am, of Lynn, Mass., who above all ol her human beings may be truthfully called the "Dear Friend of Woman," (a some of her correspondent* lore to call her. She In zealously devoted to her work, which Is the outcome .f a life-study, and Is obliged t Era LM.6. BNV s hasbeel^ROVED(J . - Th. SUREST OUKX for . I KIDNEY DISEASES. i| Does a lame back or disordered urine lndl-J~ ® cats that you are a victim ? THEN DO NOT I I t HESITATE; use Kidney-Wort at race, (drag-l Jj I •J siata recommend it land it willspeodily over-L | oome the disease and restore healthy action. |g I C I o riinC Toroomplalnm p*ctiHarl£| c hdUICDs toyour eex, rich aspatnLf I " and weaknesses, Kidney-Wort Is unsurpassed,! .! g as it will act promptly and safely. IJJ Either Sex. Incontinence, retenticn ©furlne,!®! J5 brick dust or ropy deposits, snd dull dragging If-1 0 pains, all speedily yield to Its curative power. 2 4 <3- SOLD BY ALL DRUGOIBTB. Price >l. |*| 1 hits pffriW Kidney-Wort with rery great **r era* in a score or more otisiinate cases of Kidney and Liver Troubles, alao for iemale weaaneeaea.—-l'hil p C. ballon, M. P.. M -nkton. Vt "'My v ile haa ix-?n mnrh benefited from the use of Kidney-Wort. She had Kidney and other rompla nta," writes P.rw. A. 11. Coleman, kayettevllle, Tenu. ( IS A SURE CURE j| I for all disoates of tha Kidney* and I * LIVER 1 It has spedflo action on this most Important I organ, enabling It to throw off torpidity and | ' : Inaction, stimulating the healthy secretion of the Bile, snd by keeping tho bowels In fee# 1 condition, effecting its regulsx discharge. llolovSq If you are suffering from IVIBI3I 13 e malaria, have the chills, I Sire bilious, dyspeptic, or constipated, Kidney- Wort will surely relieve and quickly cure. j I I in the Spring to clesmso the System, every i one should take s thorough course of it. i ' tl- SOLD BY DRUOOIBTS. "I am a living advocate of the virtue* of Kidney- Wort. I suffered untold agony from liver disorder- It cored m."—John D. Kevins, Springfield. Ohio. pv^rvwvwvwwrvmrvwvwvuri I I Ti ■ 3H !■ II gl|l B ■ 3|H HwJ A NEW DISCOVERY. ' tRTTor several years we have furnished the Dairymen of America with an excellent arti ficial color tor butter; so meritorious that It met 1 I with great success everywhere receiving the highest and only prises at both International | Dairy Fairs. i IT* But by patient and sdentlfio chemical re search we have Improved In several points, and I I now offer this new color as lAs best in the world. It Will Not Oolorth* Buttermilk, lti I Will Not Turn Rancid. It tg tho ! t Strongest# Brightest and Cheapest Color Made# I 1 tir And, while prepared In oil, Is so compound ed that it is impossible tor It to become rancid. I , I ryBEWARE Of all Imitations, and of all other oil colors, for they are liable to become rancid and spoil the butter, j I jylf you cannot get the "improved" write us to know where and how to get it without extra I expense. (16) WELLS, niCHARBSOX A CO., Rarlisttao, Tt. | _ m*KP ETl'Haa No time should be Nf I rl I l| QV| lost- if the stomach, VAy i organs named beget ot^l ® r, ' ar mor * B ® 1^" weakness, serf A time in using this h p effective and safe |g|gz M agnm medioine. DITVTIU For sals by all I I ■ Druggist# and Deal ■ ■ m era generally. CONSUMPTION My newly discovered Treatment never fails to effect a iptedy and permanent cure. Give full particulars of case- Address Prof. ill. 1„ NOIILE* Santa Clara, Santa C'lara Co., California. EE" NO PAY UNTIL CURED* JaBSBHaHHEIiSi CURES WHERE ALL ELSE FAILS. S - Best Cough Syrup. Tastes good. B Use In lime. Sold by druggists.