FOR THE FARM AND HOME. Cabbage Pest*. Wash the cabbage well with strong soot and water and on the first dry day dust the ground about the cabbage with quick-lime, and pick as many of the caterpillars off as you can find; and during the winter gas lime the land and leave it in ridges to catch the frost, and very few insects will trouble you again. The odors emitted from gas lime are so pungent that neither moth, .butterfly nor mole will remain on land that is dressed with it.— Gardening Il lustrated. Periling Apple* to COTT. Economy may sometimes run wild, when it is a costly substitute for the tame article. It runs wild when one "saves at the spit and wastes at the bung." It is this kind of economy which makes the cow do such scaveng ing work as the gathering of fallen, wormy apples in orchards or the rot ten windfalls. We do not want any worms in ours, however willingly others may take their milk thus flav ored. To put the cow to this business is to put tilth into the milk. There is nothing in an unripe, wormy apple that can add a particle to the raw ma terial from which a cow produces milk; and judging of a cow's stomach by a man's and there is a reasonable physiological analogy between them— it is not probable that a mess of hard, unripe, sour apples will be either aid or comfort to the cow in her daily work. Apples are of questionable use in any way and at any time for a cow's fotider. We have frequently given them to cows, and also fed the pomace from the cider mill, princi pally because the animal evinced a de sire for them, but always and without exception the milk had decreased in consequence, and sometimes very con siderably. There is no doubt "that at times some acid food is heidthful even for a cow. One may generally have confidence, to some extent safely in the instinct of a cow as regards the selection of her food; but we be lieve never in regard to the quantity of it. This the duty of the feeder to regulate. But sometimes the cow's appetite is abnormal and unhealthful and then requires to be controlled, and this control is neces sary in regard to devouring unripe, wormy apples, as much as in regard to over-drinking water from foul pud dles, which is sometimes preferred to clean water. Hogs may, perhaps, safely consume wormy apples which fall from the trees, but the cow must not be treated as hogs are by any means.— Dairy. Storing Potatoes. There are three methods of storing in general use. each of which has its merits and its champions. Three general principles underlie these sev eral methods, viz: Protection against frosts and temperature, freedom from moisture and avoidance of heating caused by storing too deep. The ad vantages claimed for storing in barrels are that the roots are easily handled, do not suffer from abrasion, can be easily examined, and if disease ap pears it can be readily checked and re moved. The chief objection to this method is the time and expense in volved when the crop is a large one. Bins are coming largely into use, es pecially in localities near large cities, for the potatoes can at any time be readily reached and prepared for mar ket. A cool, dry. well ventilated cellar, with the light excluded, is an admi rable place in which to store potatoes. The argument in favor of storing po tatoes under ground is that there is little if any loss by evaporation. Ob jections to the plan are the labor in volved in opening the banks when the roots are required and the risk in volved from the extremes of too close or insufficient covering. When pits are employed it is important that ar rangements be made for vjentilation. AVhen stored in cellars, barns or root houses it is a safe plan not to fill the bins with roots to a depth exceeding three or four feet. It has been claimed that lime sprinkled in barrels or bins at that rate, say one pound to each barrel, tends to prevent decay by act ing as an absorbent and neutralizing the earthly odors. The importance of excluding light from potatoes and keeping them as cool as possible with out freezing, cannot be over-estimat ed. — Farmer and Manufacturer. Recipes. Sally Lunn— Three eggs, one pint of sweet milk, salt, two table-spoonfuls of lard or butter, or one table-spoonful of each melted, three pints of flour, half a pint of hop yeast. Separate the yelks and whites of the eggs and beat them very light. Add the milk of the yelks, then the salt and flour and whites. Stir in the yeast and beat all together until very light. Butter the cake or bread pan, pour in the batter, anil let it rise over night. Bake an hour or ionger in a moderate oven andseive it hot for breakfast. Green Pea Souj) —Boil one pint of green peas in water with salt, a slice of onion, a sprig of parsley and a few leaves of mint. When cooked drain * off the water and past the peas through a hair sieve. Dilute the puree to the proper consistency with some good stock perfectly free from fat. At the the time of serving make it quite hot, put a piece of fresh butter the size of walnut into it and serve with smal dice of bread fried in butter; add a few drops of spinach greening if the color is not bright enough. Stewed Chicken rrith Tomatoes -Cut up a chichen and fry it. slightly; take out the pieces of chicken and dredge a little flour into the fat they were fried in; add sufficient water to make the sauce, and one pound of skinned and cut tip tomatoes, with a medium-sized onion also cut up. and a little chopped parsley, cayenne and black pepper; season to taste with salt, and stew un til all is xx'll amalgamated. Put in the chicken with three ounces of but ter, and stew for a couple of more hours; then put in a pint of well washed rice and stew another hour; serve with the sauce. .1 J.iyht Desert Take a half up of tapioca or sago and a quart of water; boil until it is soft, sweeten it to your taste; beat the yelks of three eggs to a stitt froth, healing in a tablespoonful of pulverized sugar; put on top of the pudding and set in the oven to brow n. Another way is to cover the bottom of a pudding dish with apples which have been peeled and cut in quarters. pour tho tapioca and water over them, bake an hour in a slow oven and serve with sugar and sweet cream. ■■ CLIPPINGS FOR THE ITKIOU*. Monkeys follow leopards on their way through the forest, shaking branches at them, chattering loudly, and even making faces at them. A lady on Staten Island who "col lects" them writes to a New York newspaper that it takes exactly forty sparrows to make a presentable pie. The tumble-weed derives its name from the circumstance that when ripe the wind tears it by the roots and sends it over the fields rolling hither and thither, so that its seed is soon thrashed out. It is sometimes seen piled fence high on the prairie farms. According to the census the army of Man appears to consist of thirty-one officers (effective and retired) and twenty-three non-com missioned officers and men. Militia, yeomanry and volunteers include four individuals, xvhile there are thirty-one army pen sioners. A "canina" recently exhibited in London, is an instrument called musi cal by courtesy, and producing its tones by dogs who sit in a box and v O growl or howl or bark, as 'tis their nature to, when struck on the head by a wire connected with a key manipu lated by a player. Different tribes of Indians use dif ferent sorts of poison for their arrow points. The Comanches use the juice of the Spanish bayonet; the Apaches bruise the heads of rattlesnakes with bits of deer liver, allow it to putrefy and dip their arrows in it. The Moquis irritates a rattlesnake until he bites himself, and moisten their darts in the blood. Poisons made from the stings of bees and from ants are used by other tribes. The following curious sign is kept before the eyes of the public at the foot of a steamboat landing in Port land. Me.: "Xopasses given to tramps* Do not take the trouble to ask for them. In those days were no passes given. iSeareh the Scriptures. Thou shall not pass.—N'umb.,xx.. 18. Suffer not a man to pass.—Judges, iii.. 28. The wicked shall no more pass.- Xahum, i, 15. None shall pass.— Isaiah, xxxiv., 10. This generation shall not pass.— Mark, xiii., 30. Though they roar jet can they not pass.—Jeremiah, v., 22. So he paid the fare thereof and went.—Jonah, i., 3." Great men, whose lives are spent in the study of color, will not paint a flower! Anything but that—a furred mantle, a jeweled zone, a silken gown, a brazen corslet, nay, an old leather chair, or a wall-paper if you will, with utmost care and delight: but a flower by no manner of means, if avoidable. Titian, in his early work, sometimes carries a blossom or two out with affection, as the columbines in our Bacchus and Ariadne. In his portrait of Lavinia, the roses are just touched finely enough to till their place, with the most subdued red possible; while in a later portrait of the same there are no roses at all, but a belt of chased, golden balls, on every stud of which Titian has concentrated his strength, and, it is believed, forgot the face a little, so much has the mind been set on the golden belt.— Buskin. Hangman's Hay. The origin of the custom of execut ing criminals on Friday, now fast going out of vogue, is not certainly known. By some it is said to have originated in the fact that Friday was early considered an unlucky day. Chambers says: "Some portion of its maleficent character is probably due to the character of the Scandinavian Ve nus Frega. wife of Odin, the goddess of fecundity. But we are met, on the other hand, by the fact that among the Brahmins of India a like supersti. tious aversion of Friday exists." The popular aversion to the day may have been the reason for its being selected as the day upon which executions should take place. Others say the cus tom originated from the fact that flit Savior was crucified on that day, bu it is a little difficult to see why that event occurring on Friday should cars ■ it to be selected as a hangman's day gene; ally. LATEST NEWS. London. Sftpt., 14.despatch to Renter a Telegram Company from Hong Kong dated yesterday ttint a battle lias taken pla*o between the French forces and the Black Flags, lasting eight hours. The en i gagement took place between Hanoi and Sontay, near ihe Red rixer. The French forces are reported as having lost two offi cers and fifty men. The loss of the Black Flags is estimated at between 50!) and WO men. The announcement that Mr. Gladstone in tends to visit Copenhagen excites greßt at tention in Berlin. The London correspondent of the Vienna New Free Press ays he has learned from an authentic source that China and France have accepted in principle the meditation of England for the settlement of the Ton quin question. The Madrid* correspondent of the Daily Ne>vs says the Sp m\ *h legation at Washing ton has informed the government that there is a Spain-h exile in Cuba making prepnra i tio.is for a li'in * of the colored people, who i are reported to be discontented. The plot ; however, is destined to fail. | Compulsory quarantine at the capes for Baltimore bound ves cl - has been abolished. A special to the Atlanta. Oa., Constitution pays that Jacksonville. Ala., has been de stroyed by tire. The loss is $50,000. The tire is supposed to have been of incendiary origin* Milton C. Keeunn. treasurer of Jackson county,. Ohio, has disappeared. He is a de faulter in a sura not less than SB,OOO. He is married an 1 lias a family, but it is thought he eloped with a young girl. A case of leprosy was brought to San Fran cisco by the last steamer from Honolulu The sufferer is a native of the Sandwich Isl ands, of French descent. The quarantine l officers refused permission for him to land. A writ of habeas corpus has been issue 1, and the matter will come up in the Suppi""' Court. ThoGriole Pageant of IS6J at Bultimore has come and gone. Mouths of anxious preparation, many thousands of dollars spent, for the evuuesocut glories of a • igh:' Rut the result was splendid, magnificent and astonishing, far surpassing any previous pa geant of the kind There were the usual drawbacks of such huge pageants here and elsewhere; the old trouble about lighting re curred. and the delays were tedious, but, nevertheless the Order ' Oriole achieved a bi ifii tut success. Captain George E. Tyson, of the War l)e part men t watch, who was a member of the Polaris expedition, recently submitted a let ter to the Secretary of War volunteering to go in search of the Greely party eaily next spring iu a schooner to be manned by a crew of his own selection. Lieut. Danenhauer, formerly of the Jeannette, also expresses his willingness to take part in a relief expedi tion. William Banyan, a farmer, and his wife were found dead in bed at their residence, at Millville, Columbia county. Pa.,with their throats cut from ear to ear. They had itp parentlv been dead about a week. Some of the neighbors believe that Runyan killed his wife and then committed suicide, while oth ers are of opinion thnt the couple were mur dered by a party of tramps. A knife was found in the bed. There were no signs of struggle having taken place. The couple had lived happily together. Runyan was 2." vears of age and his wife '2O. CFAKUAL NEWS. London, Sept., 13.—The difficulty between France and China remains unadjusted. The French Cabinet will consider the subjoct at their meeting to-day. The Luther Quart re Centenary' cele brated at "Wittenberg, Germany, yesterday. Prince Bismarck's condition is reported worse, and a consultation of physicians is to take place nt Gastein. The Paris Patrie reports that the police frustrated a plot to kill King Alfonso during the latter's recent stay in Paris." A Norwegian vessel, name as yet unknown, was suuk in the English Channel to-day by collison. Twelve persons were drowned. The steamer Proteus, which lmd been sent out to relieve the Grely exploring expedi tion in the Arctic Seas has been crashed by ice, and the expedition is a failure, the crew of the Proceue were all saved. At Pittsburg, a balloon in which Prof. G. | A Warner has been making ascensions col ' 'apsed when 8,000 feet above the earth. Mr. Warner held on to t' "• ropes, and the balloon came down bo slo* s *o land him on the ground uninjured. The Democrats of New Jersey have nomi nated Leon Abbott for Governor. Fire at Olympia, W. T., destroyed the sur veyor general's office m.d other buildings. All the land records were burned. Loss, si>o,ooo. The business men of Norfolk and Ports mouth, Va., have resolved to aid the Seney syndicate to bring the Richmond and Dan ville system into Norfolk. London, Sept. 12— The police have sur r lisod some secret societies at Agram, Croa tiu, wliich have been endeavoring to direct riots against the Jews. Several officers of the societies have been arrested. The remains of Admiral Pierre, the late commander of the French in Madagascar, will be honored with a state funeral. The quarter-centennary of Martin Luther will be commemorated at Wittenberg Prussia, to-day. Over 1,000 clergyman from ell parts of Protestant Germany will assist in the ceremonies. Hicks Pasha, who left Khartoum on the 9th instant with 5,090 men for a campaign on the left banks of the Whi'e Nile against El Mahdi, the false prophet, has forwarded a despatch to the Khedive stating that El Mahdi's religious influence is broken. Senator Vest and Representative Magin nis, of the Indian commission, have returned to Missoula, Mont., from St. Mary's mission, at the Flat Head Agency. The Indians re fused to sell any part of their reservation. All the members of tho Villard Northern Pacific excursion party arrived at Portland. Oregon, September 12. The procession in their honor was two miles long, and repre sented all branches of industry. David L. Pryne, president; J. B. Cooper, treasurer; C. B. Calvert, secretary, and A. W. Harris, assistant secretary—the officers of the Oklahoma Company, an organization for the purpose of the locating and entering lands in the Indian Territory—have been arrested at Wichita. Kansas. A proposed gigantic land steal, enveloping several millions dollars' worth of United States redeemed timber lands in the north ern part of California, has been brought to light in San Francisco. It is alleged that government officials are acting in collusion with the parties engineering the scheme. Margaret Carman, who was tried in the Queens County (N. Y.) Court of Sessions on the charge of causing the death of Mrs. Sidney Smith, of Freeport, Long Island, in April last by malprr ice, was found guilty of manslaughter in ihe first degree. She is married, and the mother of seven children. Hugh .T. Hastings, proprietor of the New York Commercial Advertiser, died nt Mon mouth Beach, N. J. Yellow fever is providing ilt Hermosilln Sonora, Mex., as well as at Gunymns, Ma zntland, and n number of other Pacific towns. Seven of the old defenders answered the call of names nt tho reunion of the celo hration at Baltimore. September 12. There was a general holiday. Naval Cadets Trapnell. Campbell, Bertliolf and Moeller have been dismissed the service on aooount of "hazing," from the Naval Academy at Annapolis. There were many vessels in the harbor, only two of which hold their anchorages through nut the gale. None of them, however, wore wrecked. The Norwegian bark Sulitjelma, bound for Liverpool, and the schooner Rover, for Baltimore, after colliding, went ashore on Big Rock, and both will return to this city for repairs. The oldest pilots say that, fti duration and violence, the storm at Smithville exceeded any they ever witnessed. A destructive fire occurred in tho business portion of Fort Smith, Ark. Tho heaviest losers are: F. \V. Boas, building and stock, $lo,ooo; John Vaughn, building aud stock, *lo,ooo; Devlin t Sparks, boots and shoos, f1,5oo; Kennedy A Tate, $4,500; A. Haglin, dry goods, $7,ooo; Guler A Brunoldi, confec tioners, $8,ooo; P. Herman, clothing, $5,000. All the buildings are a total lo s. Customs Collector Hartrauft, of Philadol phia, has boon requested by Becrrtary Folge r to apprise shipping masters that France ha declared the Gulf of Tonquin under surveil unce, aud that any attempt to laud urms or munitions at Aunnm would be treated ns blockade-running, the vessels confiscated nud the crows treated as prisoners of war. At Wilmington, N. C., the wires are still down between there and Snxithville, and the steamers which run daily between that point and this city did not leave their wharves. They went down, but had to return, bringing the first details of the ravages of the storm. At Siuithvilte tho storm reached the propor tions of a hurricane, the wind reaching a maximum velocity of umet(y-three miles per hour. For seven hours consecutively it, averaged eighty-one miles por hour. Many houses were unroofed, a number of wharves were washed away, aud the fisheries were seriously damaged. All the pilot boat-s were hlown ashore, and one of tliein was sunk. LONDON, Sept. 11 -A Chinese mob has pillaged tho property of European mer chants in Canton. The riot was caused by Portuguese sailors killing a Chinaman in an affray, and the news created a flutter in London and Paris. The alarm fcas been sounded from Berlin in regard to Rnssian interference in Bui garia. It is reiterated that England will officiate jn determining the Tonquin question be tween France and China. The Austrian government has signified the purpose to use extreme measures with the Croats in rebellion. United States Minister Wallace has re ceived a definitive explanation from the Porte in regard to the new Turkish license laws. The prevailing storm on the Atlantic coast has been extraordinary severe, and damAge to shipping is probable. A steam fire engine company went from Miffintown, Pa., toLewistown by rail, at their own expense, to extinguish a fire, and were compelled to pay toll on crossing the bridge. A special telegram from Vincennes, lud., says J. C. Bedell, who represented the com mission house of McGonnick A Beebe, of Chicago, has disappeared, leaving an indebt edness of ?2.7, 000. Wasiungtc ri Notes. Surgeon-General Hamilton, of the marine hospital service, has received a report from Dr. Main, at Browmsvifle, Texas, in which the latter states that locista are in Huusticn. State of Vera Crnz, it Tamaulipas, near Tampico, Rio Verde, Eastern and St. Lois Potosi. At the last-mentioned place, he says, the locusts occupy a parallelogram seven leagues long by two leagues wide, in a solid rank, and are traveling northward, lenving no verdure behiaid them. Postmaster-General Gresham WAS Rskrd recently to explain whyrmyment of new pos tal notes had been refu£d in several instan cee. He said that a graft many persons did not seem to understand fhat postal notee are payable only at the offer© upon which they are drawn and at the cjffice where they are issued, and that merchants and other busi uese men are not obliged to accept them when thev ar drawn in favor of other par ties. A communication from the Utah commis sion has been received at the Interior De partment reporting that tho "Edmunds act" has been rigidly enforced. No polygamist lias been permitted to vote or be voted for. and nearly fifteen thousand persons have been disfranchised through the operation of the law. Secretary Folger has returned and will re lieve assistant-secretary John C. New, who has been in charge of the Treasury Depart' uaent since First-Assistant Secretary French went West. It is understood that Mr. New will leave for his home in Indiana, and that lie does not intend to return again. I'llfc: MARKKT^. KALTL.M'JKK. pi J CU—City Mill> extra $4 AO 0* WHEAT—Southern Fulu 1 OS m 1 11 C< iR N— Southern white .. Do yellow f,) ' ' RYE -Good *) Ot 18 00 STRAW Wheat • 00 (n * H) HI 'i'TF.R—Western prime.. 28 (" 25 M est Virginia 15 (a 17 CUEF.SE -New York Htnb* choice 11 Ot 11 We-tern prime 0 Oi • ' EGGS 20 Oi VR CATTLE 5 51 G SWINE 8 (if 8i SHEEP AND LAMBS :* Ot TPBACf'(> LEAF—lnferior. ) 0 Ot 500 Good common R 00 (h 7> n't Middling "no 00 Good to fine red 8 . r "71 20 RYE—State 00 (<£ 78 CORN—Southern Yeilow ,; 2 p) 01 OATS—White State ... 4 fa) 4", BUTTER —State 20 Ot 22 CHEESE—ftite ! (" •' EGGS 2 '(rf 1 21 PHILADELPHIA. El.OUß—Penna. fancv "1 '5 ("5 21 WHEAT—Pa. and Southern 1 20 (■'" I 21 red 1 18 Ot 1 I'J RYE—Pennsylvania 0' 08 GORN —Southern yellow ... * r 'B Oi) 00 (pTs . . :sfl pj BUT rEß—State ".7.7.. 20 v) 27 EeffS—State . ®) 18 An Infn.'inatlon Club. A number o' ladies met nno day for purposes of social improvement. One of their number proposed that each member of the party should in form the company of tho last new thing she had learned. Amid much laughter the plan was agreed upon. A young married lady began by telling how to make a new kind of fancy bread. Then Mrs. Smith spoke: "1 had two holes in my brown cashmere dress. I could not darn them, nor patch them, nor take a piece out to look well, and I was bound not to make a bad job of if. 1 don't mind a mended place on a calico dress, hut a good cashmere would look so like an obi one, darn if never so nicely, and press it never so well. A friend showed me her black merina that she had mended charmingly by wetting a pieceoi court plaster of exactly the same shade as the goods, and putting it on the wrong side, pressing down every frayed edge and every thread, and lay dig a weight on it until it was thoroughly dry." Mrs. tireeu then stated that deodorized sulphur brushed well into the scalp with a stiff brush was excellent for making the hair grow. The little school teacher gave her method for crimping hair; she dampened it a little at night, then put in closely, one after another, some pieces of those long combs that little girls wear. The broken pieees put in closely at the sides made nice, large ripples that remained in for a day or two, it the front hair was handled carefully and not drawn tightly. And so on through the entire circle. Every lady gave some bit of useful informa tion to her interested listeners. Don't you think this plan of entertainment a good one, ladies? Aihtinocsti'ii in Prntifttry. HAVANA, , I IT>. FIT*. .tocos'.fully treated by World's Dispensary .Mcd>oil Association. Address with stamp for painplilet, Buffalo. N. Y. The paradox of paradoxes is that in the marriage ceremony the woman does not get •ii any more talk than the man. AUYH'E TO CONSUMPTIVES. < in the appearance of the first symptoms us general debility, loss of apatite, pallor, chilly sensations, followed by night-sweats and cough—prompt measures for relief should be taken. Consumption is scrofulous disease of tie lungs:—therefore use the great anti-scrofula, or blood purifier and strength restorer, — Dr. Pierces "Golden Medical Discovery." Superior to Cod liver oil ns a nutritive, and unsurpassed as a jeetoral. Cor weak lungs, spitting of blood, and kin dred affections it has no equal. Sold by druggists the world over. For Dr. Pierce's pamphlet on Consumption, send two stamps to WORLD'S DISPENSARY MEDICAL ASSOCIA TION, Buffalo, N. Y, A brilliant wedding—the marriage of a red headed couple. Krmrr Axle (Irpant < hie greasing lasts two weeks : all others •wo or three days. Do not be imposed upon by the humbug stuffs offered. Ask your Center for Frazer's. with label on. It saves your horse labor, and you too. It received first medal nt the Centennial and Paris ex positions. Sold everywhere. The watering cart saves many a man from fating the dust- Catarrh oTthe Illndder. Stinging irritation, inflammation. liidney, Urinary complaints, curod hv Buchupaibas 1. The yellow fever—the love of gold. '* IIOIIRII on Corns." Ask for W ells' 'Rough on Corns.'lsc. Quick lelief: complete cure. Corns, warts, bunions. Over candid—a sugar-coated pill. Tlint Husband •Oiltie is three times the man he was before using Wells' Health Renewer. #l. Druggists. In the past forty years four million dollars lias been spent in building and restoring churches iti Wales. The only scientific iron medicine that does not produce headache, etc., but gives to the system all the benefits of iron without its bad effects, is Brown's Iron Bitters. Leave discontent alone and she Will shut he mouth and let you sing I qunrrel not with destiny. OTTAWA, 111. —Dr.T.A.Smurrsays: "Brown's Tron Bitters give entire satisfaction." Queen Victoria is said to have entrusted the task of writing her life to Miss Keddie, i Scotch womam. The frost has killed the crop of summer resort guests. FRONT ROYAL, Va.—Dr. G. H. Hill says: "Brown's Iron Bitters seems to give general satisfaction. I recommend it strongly." Missouri catches murderers and lets them go. Connecticut don't catch 'em—but lets them go. ITHFST AND PEST COP-MVEROIL, from selected livers, on the seashore, by Caswell, Hazard A Co.. N. Y. Absolutely pure and sweet. Patients who have once taken it prefer it to all others. Physicians declare it superior to all other oils. CHAPPED NANPS. face, pimples and rough t-kin cured by using Juniper Tar Soap, made by Caswell, Hazard A Co., New York. It's a yawl sorrow when a jolly boat cap sizes. Dr. Stites, Brooklyn, N. Y.. was cured by Dr. Elmore's Rheumatic-GoutaUne of very severe Rheumatism and kidney disease of several years' standing, after trying every thing else without benefit. The dark green two-cent portraits of "Old Hickory" will be flying through the domestic mail in three weeks. Unstrlnc. The increasing demand for this prepare t on as a household remedy for indigestion iud dyspepsia is sufficient proof of its efficacy. Tennessee papers are appealing to the leg islature to enact a dog tax law and a fence law at its next session. The North American Indians, especially the Seneca tribe, made such frequent use of petroleum that fo many years it was only krown as Seneca 01. Now it is known as Catboline, the Wonderful Hair Renewer. A priftonor mide n rash attempt to break out in t'ie Tombs the other day. lie had the scarlet fever. Get Lyon's Patent Hell St iffeners applied to j new boots or shoe* before you run them over. Governor Blackburn, of Kentucky, intends to found nn institution in Ixinisviile for the cure of inebriates and opium enters. fits Son's Advice. I have been troubled for over twelve years with a weakness of the kidneys and bladder, which the doctors said was diabetes. I could oot at times stand np, nnd would have to continually use the urinal both day and nijsrht with intense pains in my back and sides there was brio-c dust deposits in my water; could not rest well or lie ersily in bed In any nosture. I was at that time employed by the Mnine Centra l Railroad, nnd lmd toyjive up work for n time. Fearing that it would sooner or later tuin to Hint dreaded Hright's di ea-e, I called in my son in I ewiston. who is in the drug business, nnd after consulting with him as to my ra e, he advised me to no Hunt's Remedv. as he know of so mnny successful cures tha' it had made in Lewis!on and vicinity. lat once eonniieired using it, and began to impio e. 1 h d less pain in my back nnd si te, my water was pissed natur illy with le*s color and no pain, and after u: in r several liott'ei found that mv pairs were all g'n nnd ilio weakness of the kidneys and bladder were cured, and I have no trouble with ihem now, nn 1 ran attend to my busi ness: nnd for one of my years I am enjoying good health, nnd thanks to Hunt's L'euriedy for it, and I consider it a duty and pleasure to recommend so good a medicine ns Hunt's Remedy, and 1 I ave taken pains to recom mend it to othr. rs in this vicinity. You are nt liberty to pub'hh this acknowl edgment, hoping it may te the means of helping suffeiing humanity. K. R. Clahk, Furniture Dealer, Former'y with Maine Central Railroad. Newport* Me., May 17, 1883. Influenced by a temperance leader, a rich English miller has destroyed a cellar of port wine. How to Secure Health. It ie strange any one will suffer from derangement brought on by Impure blood when Bosadalis will restore health to tha physical organization. It is a strengthening syrup, pleasant to take, and the bost Blood Punhor ever diaoevered, curing Scrofula, Syphilitic disorders Weak nets of the Kidneva, Er> sipelsa, Malaria, Nervous disorders. Debility, Bilious complaints and Diseases of the Blood, Diver, Kidneys, Stoiuach, Skin, etc. Dr. Roger's Vegetable Worm Syrup instantly de stroys Worms and removss the Secretions which cause them. The Northern Pacific people am now re mind Proctor Knott that "he laughs best who laughs last.'' wi'""""""""*'™" |f THE GREAT GERMAN Liuiimiimi 11 REMEDY fcaf FOR PAIN. !fe: ;i:l iKiuura. HfflL!! Neuralgia. : M™' " Sciatica, Lumbago, Itll i tli' iiic 1 Iguwiii. uH.timum.uiH ji BACKACHE, SI M ' M: 3J HEADACHE, TOOTHACHE, % :IF!FFL,!M J SORE THROAT, i' 111' ''.'"iif'T'll QUINSY. SWELLINGS. I IPll, 1 MPBAINIi, j |ilj^iipntNtMsMHiSlyl Soreness. Cuts, Bruises. FROSTBITES. II'ilm;!li,. J2lh.' M Bl'ItXN, hCAI.DK. u|l And all other bodily aches ' lIBCJ F,FTT * BOTTLE. 111 l I(iin.™nl iljlir"!. Sold by all Druggists and I wj& jj J' PjJ Baltimore, Id., C. S. A. SOMETHING EVERY LADY OUGHT TO KNOW. There exists a means of se curing a soft and brilliant Complexion, no matter how foor it may naturally be. lagan's Magnolia Balm is a delicate and harmless arti cle, which instantly removes Freckles, Tan, Redness, Roughness, Eruptions, Yul irar Flushings, etc., etc. So flelieate and natural are its effects that its use is not suspected by anybody. No lady has the right to present a disfigured face in society when the Magnolia • Balm is sold by all druggists for 75 cents. >JS!O.WORFS / R. CI. to the quickest, pleasant est, burst nnd best remedy lor kidney livt-r. st mscli, bladder and blood diseases, and only real curat!re ever discovered for acute and chroaio rheumati-in gout, lumbago, sciat ica, neuralgia, etc. Haacnet hope lens casus Bngnt's disease and dyspepsia in 8 weeks—all forma of rheumatic disorders in 2 to 12 weeks—relieves inflammatory in I day. Can refer to httndrt ds of re'ia- Me poop's cured v ho had tried in vain everything else. Purely rotanio, harmlees, and nice to drink. Ask your drcggat to get it; if he declines send to us for it—take nothing else, K'm.re, Adams A 00., Ida Will jam at-. N. Y To fSpeculators. R. Lindblom & Co., N. G. Miller & Co. 6 and 7 Chamber of bi> Broadway. Commerce, Chicago New York- GRAIN & PROVISION BROKERS. JVlember* r>f all prominent Produce Exchanges tu New York, Chicago, St. Louis and Milwaukee We have exclusive private telegraph wire between Chicago and New York. Will osecute orders on oar Judgment when requested. Send for circulars con taining particulars, ROBT. LINDBLOM A CO.. Chicago- OPIUM HABIT Cured Painlessly. The Medicine sold for a small margin above the coet o, compounding. AH eases treated by special prescrip tion." For tull particulars address the Discoverer, OR. S. B. COLLINS, La Porte, Ind. cms whKi.ii Eis™iSr!P NN Beat Cough Syrun. Tastee good. fc£J khj Use in liuie. Sold by dn"""" M T NATIONAL TYPE CO c Y Latent Styles. Largest Catalogue. • * Full information for 3-cent stamp. Z, " Lowest Prices. Best Assortment. T E PHILADELPHIA PA S EMPLOYMENTasS Newark, N J- Terms only S4O. Write for Circulars. MAIIftIA Over TOO different kinds best sheet ■Ma 1 l\|l a mnsic t c.copyby mail. Cataloguefree. I*l MOI VAddressMoored SinithWatertown, N Y fITH T\Y\B Y RETVRy MA Full description P K P P .UoiHly'a New Tailor Nystem Of Jl Cut ting JIOOD* kCO tlnaiaaaU, 0- c~j O a week. sl2 a day at homeeasily made- Costly 4> • A. outfit free. Address TRUE & Co., Augusta, Me, Cfifi 8 wßkin your own town, Tp>rmsand s>outfit frea (C t. (On per day at home. Samples worth 5 free vOO Address 11. Ilallett iV t'o— Portland. Maine- wtO Add res Stinioii& t'o.. Port! in 1, Me. Three Particular Points. Point the First.— BßOWN'S IRON BITTERS is not an intoxicating com pound. It is a tonic medicine, not a drink. It is a ski'lfully compounded preparation made to restore strength and health; not a beverage to be sold in bar-rooms and taverns. Point the Second.— BßOWN'S IRON BITTERS is free from everything injurious. The most delicate ladies and the most enfeebled infants mav use it with perfect safety and with great advantage. While it is powerful in its remedial agency, it is gentle in its operation, restoring wasted strength and imparting robust health in the most efficient manner." Point the Third.— BßOWN'S IRON BITTERS is made by the Brown Chemical Company of Baltimore, a long-established house, whose r<-outa tion is well-known to the business world and the general community There is no risk in buying such a medicine, A .' ILri* nnd Gn'n. rnATTE* t. i *'l wafc taken sick a year g I With btlions fever." , j "My doctor pronounced me enred, but I fot sick again, with terrible prina in my back and s'de?, pnd I got so bad I Conld not move! I shrunk! From 228 lb. to 120! I had been doctoring for my liver, but it did me no good. I did not expect to live more thAn three months. I i began to use Hop Bitters. Directly my appe tite returned, my pains left mol my entire system seemed renewed as if by magic, and after using several bottles I hm not only a" sound as a sovereign but weigh more than I did before. To Hop Bitters I owe my life." Dublin, Junefi, 'Bl. R. Fitzpatrtok. rHAPrr.ii if. " Mnldan, Maaa.. Fab. 1. IWO. Gentlemen- I suffered with attacks of sick headache." Neuralgia, female trouble, for years in th most terrible und excruciating manner. No medicine or doctor could give me relief or cure until I used Hop Bitters. " The first bottle Nearly cured me;'' The second made me as well nnd strong as when a child. "And I have been so to this da£." My husband was an invalid for twenty years with a serious "Kidney, liver and urinary complaint. " Pronounced by Boston's best physicians— "lncurable!" Seven bottles of your bitters cored him, and I know of the " Lives of eight persons" In my neighborhood that have been by your bitters. And many more are using them with gror.t benefit. " They almost Do miracles!" —Mrs. E. D. Slack. How TO GET SlCK.— Expose yourself day and night; eat too much without exercise: *ork too hard without rest; doctor a'l tie time: take all the vile nostrums advertised, and then you wil' want to know hoic to rjc f well, which id auswered in three word - Take Hop Bitteral __ BND 38 _ jl LYDIA E. PINKHAM'B VEGETABLE COMPOUND. Is a Positive Cure Fvr all those Painful Complaints and Weaknesses ae eiaaon to our best female popalatlea. A Medicine for Woman. Invented by a Womam. Prepared by a Woman. The Grealm! Helical Eueotcrr S>am the Daws sf Hlafory. ryit revivm the drooping spirits, invigorates and harmonizes the organic functions, gives elasticity and firmness to the step, restores the natural lustre to the eye and plants on the pale cheek of woman the fresh roses of life's spring and early summT time. Use It and Prescribe It Freely It removes falntness, flatulency, destroys all craving for stlmalant, and relieves weakness of the stomach. IF at feeling of bearing down, causing pain, weight and backache, is always permanently cured by its nse. For tho cure or Kidney Complaints of either aez this Compound Is ansurpassed. I, TBI A F„ riNKIIAirS BLOOD PURIFIER will eradicate every vestige of Humors from the Blood, and give tone and strength to the system, of man w oman or child. Insist on having it. Both the Compound and Blood Purifier are prepared at 233 and 235 Western Avenue, Lynn, Mass. Price of either, $L Six bottles for $5. Bent by mall in the form of pills, or of 1 ox;-ages, on receipt of price, fl per box for either. Mrs. Pinkham freely answers all letters of Inquiry Enclose Set. stamp. Bead for pamphlet. No fusil; should be without LYDIA E. PtNKHAkTS LIVER PILLS. They cure constipation, bliiousnct-s and torpidity of the liver. cents per box. CTBoldby allDßranista.fi 01 ~~ DIAMOND PYES - Best Dyes Ever Bade. r?-FOR BILK. WOOL, OK COTTON."KfI DRESSES, COATS, SCARFS, HOODC, YARN, STOCKINCS. CARPET RACS, RIBBONS, FEATHERB, cr any fabric er fancy article easily ard perfectly cclcrrd to ar.y Shado. Black. Brovrn, Green, Blue. Beevlct, Cardinal Bed, Navy Blue, Scul Brows, ©Uve Green, Terrs Cottu and 20 other best colcrs. Warranted F=st and Durable. Each package will oolor ono to four lbs. of goods. If you have r ever used Dyes try these once. You will be delighted. Bold by druggists, or send us 10 cents tnd any oolor wanted sentport-yviid. 2-1 colored samples and a set of flmcy cards sent for a 3c. stamp. WELLS, RICB AIIDBOX A- CO., Burlington,Yt, GOLD and SILVER PAINT. Bronze Paint. Artists' Black. For gilding Fancy Baskets, Frames, Lamps, Chandeliers, and for all kinds of ornamental work. Equal to any of tho high priced kinds and only lOcts. a package,at the druggists .or post-paid frcci WELLS. RICHARDSON A- CO., Burlington,Vt. In ,l * Ter anl a *' J ® I P I I St districts, in tropicjJ UilA#■ ■■ ■I an v &nd ° tber P W HHIRATEI vitiited by epidemics, bHiooraew,' itw K|llKiipo3 For sale by all y l p It relieves at on< Burns, Piles. Chapped Hand* or Lips. Corns.Bunions.Scalds.Bruises,Soreness of feet.hsnils. eyes,etc. , ltchingfromnny cause. sr. Askyotirdrug gist, or send to 02 Fulton Street. N. V mi bVKF'S BKtri) gSHCi Ul-l lm,r ,M V u.Wh" SB-f.,1. 1 |li| " 2.1 K N. Ifjery. ril, H. 1 -i / \ JTJ tk. we--t i . i ph r do. MM a-*a rk. Will pre., *, f„,f. , Pile- |,ir.'ki|. - ,h —1- Heed p. ,o„ .a . , . w-. ■Uk.-ii-o. y, *. 1,, sun H it P.. Al'slstlse. 111. A" GENTS WANTED tor the Best and Fastest-,,11- ing Pictorial Books and Bibles. Prices reduce! !! per cent. NATIONAL PußUsaisa Co.. Pnilv Pt. Vflllivfi MPM learn steam engineering, and earn , I UUI'U IHCIk >;| per month. Send your rmt and Kle in stamps toF. K KPPY, Engineer, Bridgep jTtt.t