FOR THE FARM AND nOME. Beet Fertilizing Clover. A very Interesting experiment is given by Prof. W. J. Beal, in his re port of the Michigan state farm. Two finebnnches of clover, apparently alike in thrift and size, were covered with mosquito netting. When the plants were in blossom bumble bees were in troduced under the netting and set to work, the other being left unvisited. July 31 ripe heads were selected from each plant and the seeds carefully counted. The fifty heads of the plant from which the bees were excluded yielded twenty-five seeds, forty yield ing none at all. The fifty heads vis ited by bees, on which they were seen to work, yielded ninety-four seeds, twenty-five yielding none at all. The Curcullo. A horticulturist writes the Massa chusetts Ploughman that air slacked lime will destroy the curculio. He says : "Attach to a long pole that will reach the top of the tree a fine sieve, or a large sized cornpopper will an swer, fill with the lime, and commence using when the blossoms fall, and con tinue using at intervals of ten days; about six applications will be enough. A half dozen plum trees have been served with this remedy for the past five years, and the result has been full crops and no stings. Apply the lime when the dew is on the trees." Valne of Hrn Manure We saw on the premises of a first class farmer, some time ago, a well constructed henhouse, though not at n'.l complying with the conditions which hen fanciers would impose. It was designed only for laying and roosting in; and it at first seemed strange to find, at midday, with a cooj atmosphere, turkeys and chickens oc cupying it. They had free egress and ingress and were not fed or watered in ft; yet the chickens always went there to lay. The secret was revealed, however, when the proprietor informed ns that he had it cleaned out every week. All the droppings of the fowls were scraped from the floor, which was an inclined plane, into a trough or receiver, from which they were shov eled and heaped up, and the place whitewashed frequently. This required hut little over half an hour, and the manure from last season was estimated at $l2O, and quite sufficient in quan tity as an application to his entire hrop of com. As a rule we do not think farmers pay as much attention to their henhouses and the manurial product as their importance demands. Here was a most valuable amount of fertil izing material, obtained with little la bor, upon the premises, ready for use when needed, which would have cost a heavy sum to provide; beside, from the excellent arrangement of the house, which ivas by no means expen sive, an increase of eggs was obtained which more than covered all the ad ditional expense in labor.—Oerman toici Telegraph. Hot Water Treatment for Planta. . A correspondent calls our attention to the following from The Garden , and inquires whether there is anything in it: "The Florist asks, Has any one tried hot water as a restorative for sickly plants? and then proceeds to say that M. Willerraozsometime since related that plants in pots may be re stored to health by means of hot water. 111-health, he maintains, ensues from acid substances in the soil, which, be ing absorbed by the roots, act as foison. The small roots wither and cease to act, and the upper and young er shoots turn yellow and become spotted, indicative of their morbid state. In such cases the usual remedy is to transplant into fresh soil, in clean pots, with good drainage, and often with the best results. But his experi ence of several years has proved the unfailing efficacy of the simpler treat ment, which consists in watering abundantly with hot water at a tem perature of about 125 Fahrenheit having previously stirred the soil of the pots so far as may be done with out injury to the roots. Water is then given until it runs freely from the pots. In his experiments the water at first came out clear, afterward it was sensibly tinged with brown, and gave an appreciable acid reaction. After this thorough washing, the pots were kept warm, and the plants very soon made new rDots, immediately followed by vigorous growth." To our mind there is a great deal in it. We know to a certainty that sick ly peach trees are often restored to vigorous health by the old-fashioned German farmers of Pennsylvania, by pouring boiling water on the ground about the peach trees. It cools, of course, somewhat, before reaching many of the roots. Here, however, it is believed to be beneficial by destroy ing parasitic insects and parasitic fun gi, rather than chemically, as suggest ed by the extract. But let the reason ing be what it may, we are will to indorse it as good practice.—Garden ers' Monthly. Household Hints. Keep salt in a dry place. Keep yeast in wood or glass. Keep fresh laid in tin vessels. Keep preserves and jellies in glass- A greasy stove is more easily pol ished if, before applying the blacking it is rubbed off with a little hot water and soap. Apples sliced very thin, fried in butter and sprinkled with pulverized sugar, make a very nice dish for tea or luncheon. Stale bread should be toasted in the oven, grated and put in a wooden box It is useful for frying fish, oysters, clams, croquettes, etc. ' ■ , . >n _J --. i' PEARLS OF THOUGHT. He who lives to no purpose lives to a bad purpose. A man's ruling passion is the key to his character. To rule one's anger is well; to pre vent it is better. Make your enemies transient, and your friendships immortal. Practice flows from principle, for as a man thinks, so he will act. There is a certain dignity to be kept up in pleasure as in business. Lose not thy own for lack of asking for it. It will bring thee no thanks. The best education in the world, is that got by struggling to got a living. Ilave the courage to wear your old clothes until you can pay for your new ones. Let us have faith that right makes might, and in that faith let us to the end daro to do our duty as we under stand it. It is not until we have passed through the furnace that we are made to know how much dross there is in our composition. A man never knows what a weak, fickle and uncertain master he has in himself until he is at liberty to govern his own life as he pleases. Some people carry their hearts in their heads; very many carry their heads in their hearts. The difficulty is to keep them apart, yet both actively working together. The truly great and good in afflic tion bear a countenance more princely than their wont; for it is the temper of the highest heart to strive most upward when it is most burdened. PYRAMIDS AND OBELISKS. Are the <>reat Kvyptlan Monuments Mass of Stone or Concrete. It would be a singular outcome if it be eventually demonstrated that the pyramids and obelisks of Egypt are only masses of concrete. A writer in the Scientific American asserts that the obelisk in New York is composed of concrete, the coarse portions being pulverized granite. The idea that the mass might be concrete was first sug gested by a peculiarity of the hiero glyphics which have the appearance of being moulded instead of being cut. The column was then tested and found to be composed of hydraulic cement and powdered granite. It is the opinion of the correspondent, who has a practical knowledge of cements, that the obelisk was moulded in an upright position, the moulds producing the heiroglyphics being cut in wood and forming part of the retaining box, as the concrete was laid up layer after layer, as rapidly as it set. A recent writer claims that the vast stones of the pyramid are blocks of concrete. If this is true it settles the vexed question in mechanics as to the method of raising such cnom/ous stones to the height of the great pyra mid. A company of hod carriers by a single journey could carry to the sum mit sufficient to make one of the im mense blocks. Taking this view of the matter the vast inclined planes which have been constructed in the imagina tion of engineers to carry aloft the huge stones would be unnecessary. It is a fact that the ancient world made a building cement which was as hard and durable as stone. The cement in the structure of ancient Rome suffi ciently indicates the superior skill of the ancient masons. No cement equal to that of the ancient times has yet been manufactured. The hydraulic cement of ancient times, stiffened with pounded and sift ed granite, would prove very durable under the rainless skies of Egypt. In no other country have ancient monu ments such a lease of existence as in Egypt. Rain water is a corrosive force and it slowly disintegrates the hardest rocks. When frost is added, the force of disintegration becomes so potent that the destruction is very marked. Jn Egypt there is neither rain nor frost, andthe monuments are only worn away by storms of sand. The impact of sand will eventually level the monuments of Egypt, if they are not first burned by it. The pyra mids show the waste of the ages, and whether they be built up of concrete or fashioned from granite blocks, they must eventually crumble. Changes in flic Earth's Surface. Attention has been called by M. J. Girard to the supposed changes of level of the earth's surface in certain parts of Europe. Villages in the Jura which were hidden from each other no longer than forty years ago have gradually risen in sight, while in a village in Bohemia the inhabitants now see half of a distant church spire of which only the top was visible thirty years ago. The apparent rising of these places must, it is thought, be a result of the warping of the solid crust of the earth. To detect further changes in the Bohemian locality a line of levels has been run. LA IKS I NEWS. LOUDON, NOV. 2.— Toe Duke nnd DUCHESS of Connaught left London last night for j India. In consequence of anonymous reports that the train on which they were to leave London would be blown up. extraordinary measures were taken by the authorities to guard against disaster. Preparations for action seem to be going j on in l'onqnin. The report of the defeat of the False j Prophet is denied. The government and the railroad company have offered a joint reward of £5,000 for the arrest of the perpetrators of the outrages on ! the underground railways on Saturday. Goitau's ghost, it is reported, hnunt* the i Washington jnil. Heavy and destructive frosts are reported at Memphis, Teun., and Vicksburg, Miss., Nov. lt. The West Boylstou (Mass.) schools have been closed on account of diphtheria Fifty cases and five deaths have been reported within n week. The annual report of the Paymaster Gen eral of the Army to the Secretary of War j shows that the receipts for the last fiscal year amounted to $l.". 490.310, and the disburse ments $13,3*?, 164. On October 2>th Secretary Folger received from a New York bank a communication, stating that a large amount of 8 per cent, bonds embraced in the 122 d and 123 d calls were accumulating there, and asking if the department would redeem $1,000.(<0 of said bonds at par and interest to the date of pre sentation. The Secretary said: "I have to say that you may present any of the bonds included in those calls for pay meat prior to their maturity, and they will be redeemed and interest allowed thereon up to the date of their presentation-" At Huntington, Ind., tharlotto Epps was found guilty of murdering her husband last June by administration of poison. Epps was an old and wealthy bachelor, and was married to the murderess two months preceding his death, she previously having served him in tie capacity of house-keeper. Her punish ment was fixed at imprisonment for life. Pi his report to the Secretary of the Inte rior upon the condition of affairs in I)akota ( Governor N. G. Ordway says the progress and development of the territory during the past year has been almost phenomenal. He estimates the increase in population during that time at 100 OM, while the assessable property has increased in a still greater pro portion. Agricultural pursuits and stock raising have prospered exceedingly. GENERAL NEWS. LONDON, Nov. I —Orangemen took pos. session of the City Hall in Londonderry, Ire land, yesterday, to prevent the Lord Mayor of Dublin from delivering a lectnrenpon the frnushise. In the rioting which followed one man was fatally wounded and others were injured. The lecture was delivered in the-evening in the National Institute, i The Hovas have opened negotiations with the French authorities. French troops have arrived on the west j const of Africa bent on conquest. A Paris correspondent says that war is in evitable if the Frei ch attack Bach-Ninh. The liabilities of Morris Itanger, the insol vent cotton merchant of Liverpool, are re ported to be £l,O 0 0 Ki. A fire at New York on a lighter loaded with .NK) bales of cotton, taken from one of the steamers of the Ocenn Steamship Company, of Savannah, caused n damage of twenty thousand dollars. It is reported that the team H. B. Winship and Hiram Bruce, trotting against the team Frank and John May, at Providence, made i i the second mile heat the extraordinary time 0f2.10. i 4. "Pete" Emerson, convicted of being an o (omplioe of ex-policeman Nugent, of New Y o. k, in the attempt to rob the cashier of the Orange National Bank of Jersey City of $lO,. C 0, has been sentenced to ten years in State urison. Snow fell in Western Maryland on let inst. The Shenandoah Railroad Company has bjught the franchises of the Washington road, with the view of making a feeder to their road. The entire business portion of Garfield, Col., has been destroyed by lire; IOBS over S.'O.OJ). One person was fatally injured. Many persons are left destitute. "Steve" Raymond, the English forger, convicted of pnssing forged coupons of the Union Pacific Railroad, has been sentenced to State prison for life in New York. The loss by the recent fire at Savannah, Ge„ will exceed $1,000,C00, the insurance not being moro than one-third. James Cash, white, and 7 colored persons were burned to death. The debt statement just issued shows the reduction of the pnblic debt during the month of October to be $10,304,798.88. Decrease of public debt since June GO, 1883, $39,584,470.- 1 43. Cash in the treasury, $364,347,501.93. Gold certificates outstanding, $83,328,940- Silver certificates outstanding, $99,579,141. Certificates of deposit outstanding, $12,620,- J 0 Refunding certificates outstanding, $:125,8f0 Legal tenders outstanding, $346,- 781,011. Fractional currency outstanding, $6,990,303.31. United States Marshal R. S. Foster, with a posse of detectives, went to Pike county. Ind., in pursuit of a gang of counterfeiters supposed to be located in that portion of the State. They succeeded in arresting nine of the gang this morning at Steinville, a small village about twenty-five miles from Evans ville, after a desperate fight. The gang had been operating in Southern Indiana, with headquarters near Now Albany. The coins manufactured by them are half dollars and dollars in silver and $2.50 and $5 gold pieces. The business was a large one, the operations ?f the gang extending to adjoining States. The Freethinhers of Montreal are much dissatisfied with the judge's decision in the case of the customs seizure of works of Paine and Voltaire. They intend importing books of the same character again and forcing a decision on the merits of the case. Ex-Sheriff Oscar McKenzie, of Morgan county, Ky., was called to his door by Ben Reesencr and two of his brothers on a pre text of making up an old feud, and was fa tally beaten with clubs and left for dead. The Reeseners escaped, but are pursued by the sheriff and his posse- Capt. Adams, of the schooner Henry Den nison, reports at Key West, Fla., that on passing Swan Island, October 24. his vessel was boarded by a boat seeking provisions. The Island people, fourteen in number, had nothing to subsist upon but cocoannts. The people were expecting a vessel from Balti more with provisions, but she was very wutfh overdue. If no sail passed since the Denui son left the Island, Uapt. Adams says the people must be nearly starving. LONDON, Oct. 81.—The excitement over the explosions in the underground railway tun nel in London continued very great yester ! day. Many persons were injured, but only four seriously. It is said that the London police gave warning three months ago of !• such an attempt to blow np the tunnels. The fisheries exhibition in I>ondon was formally declared closed yesterday by the Prince of Wales. The debate In the French Chamber of I>ep ; ntiea on the Tonquin nffair ended last night in a vote expressing confidence in the firm uessand prudence of the government. | L Fight shells of glass filled with nitro-glve erine have been found iu the debris made the explosion on Tuesday in the office of tin chief of polico in Frankfort-on-the-Muin. The steamer Holyhead collided with a | German vessel soon after leaving Dublin Tuesday night, and two of the Holyhead's crew and thirteen of the German vessel wero lost. Excitement continued in the Liverpool cotton market yesterday over the failure on Tuesday of Morris Ranger. It is reported that they made heavy losses 111 New York. Other firms of cotton brokers in Liverpool suspended yesterday. t Gen. Sherman retires from the command of the army Nov. Ist, and G< n. Sheridan as ! snmes command. The Dumber of bales of cotton burnt d in i the fire at the South Carolina Railroad yard, j Charleston, S. 0., was '2,1 1.1, valued at $lO7. 270. ! Justice L'Orange decided that a ion b - I lievor in future rewards and punishment wav not competent as a witness under the stat utes of Canada. Geo, Mearkle, who conftssel to being identified with a gang of horse-thieves m Western Maryland, has been sentenced to 1 ten years in the penitentiary. A Cincinnati shoe firm has determined to remove its factory to Massachusetts, because the trades unionists have becomo so trouble some. The firm has tried arbitration, but while that plan has some good features, it does not reliovo manufacturers from the ty ranny of the union, and the members of this firm say they will be masters of their own j business or they will cense to do business. I The removal of the firm from that city will throw about 1.10 men out of work. A company consisting i nine persons, who are citizens of the Cherokee Indian na tion, Ims been organized to establish a na tional bank at Vinita, Indian Territory. The Cleveland lender stated that three nuns of the Order of St. Vincent de Paul had decamped, taking with them SOO,OOO. Bishop Gilmour says threo Sisters have left St. Jo seph's Hospital and returned to their fami lies. The State of North Carolina sold 20.0 XJ acres of land, known as the Big Swnmp, and situated in Robinson county, on the Carolina Central Railroad, to O. 11. Blocker, of North 'Carolina, and Geo. 8. White and W. N. Jen nings, of Pennsylvania, for cents per acre. The buyers intend to clear it at once for agricultural purposes. The Old Dominion Creosoting Works, near Norfolk, Va., have been des'royed by lire. A boiler exploded nnd set fire to I,< 0. and the whole stock on hand went with the de struction of the works. The loss is estimated t $75,030; partially insureJ. The explosion shook the houses of this city. Tarts of ten ton cast-iron cylinders were hurled a qußrt-r of a mile. ix?NDON, Oct. W.—Porty persons are bo lieved to have been injured ly A mysteriom explosion at an underground station of the Metropolitan Railway in London, A new expedition, including three Swedish officers, will start for the Congo country in Africa. John D. Walters, a London broker, charged with stealing bonds, was arraigned in Guild hall Police Court yesterday. A severe shock of earthquake, accompanied with subterranean rumblings, was felt at Kamieniec, the capital of the government of I'odolia, Russia, Monday evening. The shock lasted thirty seconds. The steamer St. frauds sank in Lachine rnpids, near Montreal, and is a total loss. The 70 passengers on board spent the night on one of the island?. Washington Notes. The War Department has issued an order directing the appointment of a court of in quiry to investigate the organization and fit ting out of the Greely relief expedition and the general conduct of the expedition. The Secretary of War, in a communication to the chief of the signal service, comments with some severity upon Lieut. Garlington's con duct of the expedition. The United States geological survey ha? endorsed the recommendation of the Secre tary of the Navy to adopt the 7.1 meridian time as the local time of Washington. The change will go into effect November 1. THE MARKETS. BALTIMORE. I'LOUR-City Mills, extra. ?4on © $4 75 \V HEAT— Southern Fultz— 105© 107 CORN— Southern White .... f4 © 67 do. —Yellow 61 (5, 62 RYE— Good 63® 65 OATS— Maryland 35 © 3H COTTON— Middling 10}* © 10K do. — Good ordinary.. © 9}J MAY— Md. and Pa. Timot'ylSoo © 1700 STRAW— Wheat 700 © 800 BUTTER— Western prime. 24 © 26 do. —West Virginia... 18© 20 CH EESE—N. Y. State ch'EO 12 © 12>4 do. —Western prime. . 7 © 8 EGGS 22 @ 25 CATTLE 575 @ 600 SWINE 6 @ 7U MI EEP AND LAMBS 3 © 5 TOBACCO LEAF— lnferior 250 @ 400 Good common 200 @ 300 Middling 700 @ 750 Good to fine red 800 @ 10 00 Fancy 10 00 © 1500 NEW YOBK. COTTON— Middling upland 10 © FLOUR— Southern com. to fair extra 500 © 600 WHEAT— No. 1 white 116 @ 118 RYE—State 63 © 64 CORN— Southern Yellow—. 56 @ 57 , OATS— White State 36 @ 37 BUTTER— State 17 @ '3O ! CHEESE— State 10 © 11 j EGGS 20 @ 24 PHILADELPHIA. ! FLOUR—Penna. "fancy 500 @ 563 WHEAT— Pa. and Southern RYE — Pennsylvania 60 @ 65 CORN — Southern yellow—. 55 @ 58 OATS 36 © 38 BUTTER— State 20 @ 3J CHEESE—N. Y. factory 8 @ 12 EGGS— State 1 ® ffapp.r aud Unhappy Women. Some few women may enjoy being knocked about in the world—may even find relish in scrambling, elbow to el bow, with men for places in the front ranks of workers; but these few stand in the same relation to their sisters as does a man of genius to his ordinary brother; an unnatural thing, an anom aly. The few women who enjoy such a life as It is known that a woman of the working world must live, have, by their injudicious over-enthusiasm, done more harm than they dreamed they were remedying. The independence of woman has cast such n light upon their natural pleasing dependence that it must be admitted it is now terribly unprepossessing. Woman's suffering is very closely allied to woman's suf frage; woman's wrongs overlap wo man's rights. Fifty women are unhap pily at. work whero there is one hap - pily jiot; and there are just about fifty women working where one needs to be, or rather ought ought to be, or would be, if women had let women alone. A woman is not fhtod for a working life. Physically sho may be able to stand it; mentally she may flash and brighten,' at heart the true woman quivers, and dreads the fist as well a- tlie tongue of the world. of the most unhappy women I know is a brilliant woman of semi-Bohemian* literary society. Envied, but not en viable; admired, but not loved. The wittiest woman of her city, her ban mots are the cleverest at the clubs. A clever and thinking woman, her work is as clever and thoughtful. Sho says: "I would rather bo the weakest, the least talented woman in the world, the honest wife.of an honest man who would love me, and let me love him, than the most beautiful, successful wo man of the world. I would rather be the slave of a household than a queen usurping masculine rights." Sliain Elopements. "Half the elopements we hear about nowadays are shams," said our man of the wosld, with his air of portentious wisdom. "Now that runaway match in our own town, for instance. The girl's father is a sharp man, but this is one of the sharpest tricks he has ever played since I knew him. That elope ment was all a sham. It's as simple as can be, The girl's father is one of the best known men in this section of the town and is a polititician beside. He has, necessarily, a large acquaintance with the element who are always ex pecting him to stand treat upon the slightest pretext, and, what with this and the wedding festivities, supper and other etceteras, his daughter's mar miage, if solemnized in the ordinary manner, would have cost him a great deal of money. An elopement*saved all this, so he opposed his daughter's wishes strongly enough to give a pre text for the two to run over to the next town, where the expenses of the wed ding, all told, didn't amount to more than live or ten dollars. There were no fine dresses, flowers, gifts or any thing of that sort, and \x hen they re turned home they had a chance to go to housekeeping quietly and unosten tatiously. It was a shrewd plan and a sensible one for all parties concerned. 1 have known a number of runaway matches which had no other reason than economy. Parents, relatives and all were willing for the young people to commit matrimony, but the expeuse was a serious consideration, and a little timely opposition which caused an elopement smoothed out the crooked channel in which the course of true love was running. The cost of the wedding was saved for housekeeping, (he young couple were forgiven, and all went as merrily as if there had been any amount of marriage bells ringing." No trait of character is more valua ble to a female than the possession of r. sweet temper. Home can never be made happy without it. It is like the flowers that spring up in our pathway, reviving and cheering us. Let a man go home at night, wearied and worn by the toil* of the day, and how soothing is a word dictated by a good disposi tion! It is sunshine failing on his heart. He is happy, and the cares of life are forgotten. IlnMon Illonds. Mr. U.S. Hollis, Veterinary Surgeon; Boston, Mass., certifies that he has made the great pain-cure, St. Jacob's Oil, the sole remedy in his practice for horse ailments, and considers it supe rior to any cure he has known in forty years. He tried the same great pain banisher on himself for rheumatism and by which he was completely cured. The net that is most popular with blonde youth—brunette. Good will, like a good name, is got by many actions, and lost by one. A FORTUNE may be made by hnrd work, but can neither be made nor enjoyed without health. To those leading sedentary lives Dr. R. V. Pierce's "Golden Medical Discovery" is a real friend. It stimulates the liver, purifies the blood, nnd is the best remedy for con sumption, which is scrofulous disease of the lungs. By all druggists. Strict honesty is the crown of one's early day. I>r. Pierce's ••Favorite Prescription" always becomes the favorite remedy of those who try it. It is a specific for all female "weaknesses" and dernngements, bringing strength to the limbs nnd back, and color to the face. Of all druggists. If you deal with a vulgar mind, life is re duced to beggary. Being entirely vegetable, no particular care is required while using Dr. Pierce's "Pleas ant Purgative Pellets " Tuey operate with out disturbance to the constitution, diet, or occupation. For sick headache, constipa tion, impure blood, dizziness, sour eructa tions from the stomach, bad taste in mouth, bilious attacks, pain in region of kidneys, internal fever, bloated feeling about stomach, rush of blood to head, take Dr. PiereeV "pellets." By druggists. Charity is one of the noblest virtues that links earth with perfection. COBBEOT your habits of crooked walking by using Lyon's Patent Metalic Heel Stiffeners. ON TIIIKTY DAYS' TRIAE. THE VOLTAIC BELT Co., Marshall, Mich., will send Dr. Dye's Celebrated Electro.Voitaic Belts and Electric Appliances on trial for 30 days to men,young or old.whoare affiicted with nervous debility, lost vitality and kin dred troubles, guaranteeing speedy and com plete restoration of health aud manly vigor. Address as above.— N. 8.--N0 risk is'in curred, as thirty days' trial is allowed. The button holes of Chrolithion collars and cuffs are made so they will not tear out like other kinds. For burns, scalds, bruises, chapped hauls sores or piles, use St. Patrick's Salve. The PracerAxle Grease. Ir the best in the market. It i the most economical and cheapest, one box lasting as long as two of any other. One greasing will Inst two weeks. It received first premium at the Centennial and Paris Expositions, and medals at varions State Fairs. Buy no other. Nature is the great teacher, sheclothee the fowls and animals with wnrmeT clothing for winter; helps them to cast it off in summer; makes the best Hair Oil, Carboline. which is Petroleum perfumed, and cold at $1 a bottle, Menbman'b Peptonized beep tonic, the only preparation of beef containing its entire nutnr tiout properties. It contains blood-making, force generating and life-sustaining properties; invaluable for indigestion, dyspepsia, nervous prostration, and nil forms of general debility; also, in nil enfeebled conditions, whether the result of exhaustion, nervous prostration, over work or acute disease, particularly if resulting from pulmonary complaints. Ciswell, Hazard A Co., Proprietors, New York. Sold by (lruggtats. C. Farley, city marshal, 243 Broadway, N. y„ saya: "I had rheumatic gout 20 years; tried everything; now take Dr. Elmore e R.-G. It hna cured my orippled feet, and to its nil other medicines and treatments in the world." After Three Dnya. Mr. Ohatu.ks W. Morhih, "Eagle" office, Pittsfield, Mass., writes, May 25, IP83: "For several months my wife's mother (Mrs. Amy Boyce) had been in a very precarione condi tion with dropsy or Bright'a disease of the kidneys, and having u.-od all methods and measures for her restoration in the line of treatment by onr loading physicians, and having faded to bonefit her, her family de spaired of rowing her relieved, and gave her up to die. Happening to inn across the tes timonyof a Mrs. Paw ley, who had beencurod of similar sickness by uing Hunt's Remedy, e at once procure J n bottle of it, and com menced giving it as directed. Alter using it three days she was so far improved that eho cbuld gel from hei bed to her chair without assistance (a circumstance that had not hap pened for months). Previous to taking it site wis troubled more or le c s with short breath, requiring a continuous fanning to keep her nine. This gradually improved as we continued the use of Hunt's Remedy, and on the fourth bottlo she was able to setup all day. She was bloated terribly in both limbs aud body upwnrd to the lungs. The tenth day the bloating left her bowels, and now she is not swollen aoove the kuoes. Her kidneys were very bad nt the time, dischargos being of a bloody character and emitting a ficken ing odor. I can say that the change in her cote has beon wonderful, and Hunt's Remedy has worked a miracle in her." To cure a sore throat, gargle with Pise's Cure for consumption. 25 cents. GERMAN REMkOY for. paiiv. CURES Rheumatism, Neuralgia, Sciatica, Lumbago Backache. Headache. Toothache. Sore Th rol. *we 111 n*. *P rajn. Bru le. Hum*. Mrnlitv Frost llitea, ASD A I.L OlllLll DOOILt PAIMI AM AtWIX. So'lbr Urut£iu ol IVilfrietffttbfM. Fifty Cfuu bclU# tnrociU m In 11 LansuafSS. ~ TflE (TI %BI.CS A. % OUELEK CO. lo CijKM-rr, to A. VOOIXLE A CO.> lUluiurr. Mil.. C. A A. ■ ■T'lr - Though shaken in tfOSmT t&V xc JP CIIt&HATID or bilious reuaittsnt, ' the fptetn may yet fur t h e r more asn " st!ustin. P dyspepsia, debility, rheumatism, biii cM A iy#iC s-rr 811,5 OPIUM HABIT Cured Painlessly. The Medicine Bald for a small margin above the eost o compounding. A 1 ca#i-s treated by special prescnp For lull particulars address the Itlacovrrer, OR. S. B. COLLINS, La Porte, Ind. fll 17DT1 prixting PKKSBBS. I Y M Hi NATIONAL TYPE CO Phii.a Pa inn PT*E ROOK INC. TlflllT, H't return mil. lull iterrlptlcit LUL L Roori.v'a New Tailor System of £ 11. 11 111 tress ('illliny BOODY k l\,• inrjaaatl,O. PAINLESS CHILDBIRTH. r „,, r „„ on; ,„ free. Address .!■ 11. IK, Box 1(H. Buffalo. X. V. TJ7O * *eek. #l2 a day at homeeasily made- Co3sy 9 I fc (i it nt free. Address ThCE A Co., Augusts, Me, Hnhber Stamp*. Your name, 90e- , cards, etc. Agents • lit Free. Thai man M'rO. Co.. Baltimore, Md. ccc a week iu you rown tow u, 1 wui> -mats, out nt ires vUO Address 11. Ilnlletl v Co.. Portland. Maine \ GENTS wnnieil for twonew fast selling articles. Simples free- C. E. MARSHALL. Lackport.y Y. c. [l% I ■% fl fl fl ■■■ ■% ■ ■ CROrP, ASTHMA. BRONCHITIS, I BH Nrurelgia, Rheumatism. B■ ■ B■ I n JOHN SON'S ANODYNE LINIMENT W0 Vfl H Pi Hi IMf 1 II (for Internal and External Vie) will in- 1 ■ M ■ ■ H stantly relieve these terrible diseases, and I ■ will positively cure nine cases out of ten. I WUB fl fl Bfl ME B B MLb 818 ■ ■ Intormation that will save many lives sent| ! ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■■MRBS n■ m ■ free bv mail. Don't delay a moment. Pre- H vention is better than cure. JOHNSON'S ANODYNE LINIMENT CURES intluenza. Hoarse- fl ncss, Hacking Cough. Whoring Cough, Diarrhoea, Dysenterv. Cholera Morbus, Kidney Troubles, and! [_Lanie_Hack l sent FREE. I. S. JOHNSON ft CO.. Boston. Mass. H is btriKe at tiic ±>ou ic. A nervous and disease-stricken old gentleman was sitting in his room on an easv-chair, his physician being at his side. Said the old gentleman, " Now, doctor, you have been treating me for a long time, and haven't done me much good. I'm tired of all this. I want you to strike at the root of all my disorders." > Said the doctor, "Do you mean exactly what you say?" •'To be sure I do," said the venerable invalid. "Well, here goes!" said the doctor; —and with one whack of his cane he broke to pieces the brandy-bottle which stood on the mantel. The old gentleman was angry and excited, but he had a good answer ready for the doctor. " Doctor, if it hadn't been for vour doctrine, I never would have got into the habit of drinking." In Brown's Iron Bitters there is strength for the debilitated, refresh ment for the nervous, and new life for the broken-dow ftN OPTICAL WONDER and busine^a A NEW. original, cheap lantern, for projecting and en larging photographs, chromo cards, opaque picturesand objects. Win ks like magic, and delights and mystifies everybody. Send torourfull and free descriptive circular MI KHAY HILL TUB. CO., BOX TSS, N. Y. City, N. Y. To Speculators. R. Lindblom & Co., N. G. Miller & Co. u and i Chamber of o5 Bnidway, Commerce, Chicago New Yort* GRAIN & PROVISION BROKERS. Members of all prominent Produce Exchanges in New York, Chicago, St. Louis aud Milwaukee- We have exclusive private telegraph wire between Chicago and New York. Will execute orders on our judgment when requested. Send for circulars con taining particulars, liOBT. LINDBLOM A CO.. Chicago- quickest, pleasanteat, JvX SCZSIL, surest and best remedy for kidne.v, liveij, stomach, bladder and blooa JXjtWXT diseases# and only real curative ever discovered for acute and chronic rheumatism, gout, lumbago, sciat ic/ S.HK, ica, neuralgia, etc. Has cmed hope less cases Bright s disease ana dyspepsia In 3 weeks—all forms of rheumatic disorders in 2 to 12 weeks—relieve, intlammatory in 1 day. Can refer to bandrtds of relia hie people cured who liad tried in vain everything else. Purely botanie, harmlew, and nice to irink. Ask your druggist to get it; if be declines send to ns for it—take nothing else. Elmore. Adams A00.,105 William st,, N. Y AGENTS WANTED everywhere to 9J i ™ , - th 3 best Family Knit ting Machine ever invented. Will knit a pair of ■stockings with fIHEL and TOE complete in 20 minutes. It will also knit a great ariety of fancy work forwhich there is always a ready market- Seud for circular ami terms to the Tvvomblv Knitting .Machine Co., )o.< Tremont Street. Boston. Mass. M SHEETS line writing paper, in blotter, "with calendar, by mail for SiiJc: Agents W anted. ECONOMY PAINTING CO., Newburyport, Mass' LYDIA E. PINKHAM'B vticttabt.t: oompoijnd. Ib s Positive Cars Fey ell tfcoee Painful Complaints Bed WeakaSMf se ronunoß to ear beat female ysyaUtlsß. A Medlf ine for Woman . Invented by a Woman. Prepared by n Woman. Tbs Oraetset Isdles! Dlassrsry Sms tha Din ef Hlatery. Grit re vires the drooping spirits, Invigorate* and harmonizes tha 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 roues of life's spring and early summer time. Physicians Us# It and Pretcrlbo It Fr#gfy.-i It removes faintness, flatulency, destroys all craving for stlmnlant, and relieves weakness of the stomach. Hat feeling of bearing down, causing pain, weight and backache, Is always permanently cored by Its osa. Far the core ef Kidney Complaint# ef either se* this Cempeaad I* unsurpassed. I.TDIA E. PIN KIIA ITS BLOOD PtTBITIZB will eradicate every vestige of Humor# the Blood, and jfiv© ton© and to the lystem, of man woman or childL Insist on having IC Both the Compound andßlood Parlfler are prepared at 233 and 1 35 Western Avenue, Lynn, Mass. Price of either, $L 61* botUcs for fft. Bent by mall In the form of pills, or of lozenges, on receipt of price, $1 per boa for either. Mrs. Pink ham freely enswem all lettars fl* Inquiry Enclose Set stamp. Bend for pamphlet. Wo family should be without LTD LA E. PINK HA ITS TJVi u FILLS. They euro constipation, biliousness and torpidity of the liver. 15 cents per bo*. gSTSoM by all Draiiisu.fi 0) BN U 4ft A PILL AN f T) CONCI.se theater —ON THE— HORSE - ~ jKSKfcfc' I'IiACTICALLY ILLUbI'IiATED —L Y A— LEADING TRAIN EH —AND—- Veterinary Surgeon, CONTAINING An "index of di-fnes." which gives the symptoms, cau.e. and the let treatment of each: n table giving all the principal drugs used for the horse, with the ordinary dose, effects, and antidote when a poison ; a table with an engraving of the horse's t'-eth at different nge*. with rules for tel ling the age of the horse; a valuable collec tion of receipts, and much other VALUABLE INFORMATION. o Sent postpaid on receipt of 25 cents. Baltimore Newspaper Union, No. 28 N. Hollklay Street. Baltimore. Engines, Reliable, Durable and EconviirucsL trill fvrnOA m horn poirtr vl'A % less fu*i an 1 water than any other Kngint fruit/, net btu-d with an Auiomauc Cutoff. Bend for Illustrated CataUsrje "J," lor Information and Pncea. U. W. pAVJtr t Bone. Boi Sti, Corning. N.Y. H MtCS WHWI \u11**Is^B H Best Cough Syrup. Tastes good. B ■ L seintlme. Bofd by druggists. E 111 I'll ki\ li Mi \\T ANTE D—LADIES" TO I"AKE~OUR NF W "J *" n Sl^l' rl l s *V ,be ' r ho .™'. In City or country, and earn Sf to Sl2 per week, making goods for our Fall and viator trade. Send 15c. for sample and partienlare Hudson M'fg. Co-. 2fift Sixth Ave., N. Y. CCPHL' f Can be read only by those holding key! wkWllk I CMpable of endless changes! For sample WRITING " n " directions send 3o. LOR AN VVnll HVb A SCOTT* Wntrrrille. Cona" OPIUM "^ d WHSIKY HABITS cured" ■ ■V# IVlat home without pain. Book of par- Uculars went tree. HMWOOLLET. MP. At I antatia . (.'asi J'HOK .Milk is tfie best Linimeuk. Price 25 cente. MUSTANG] Survival of the Fittest! A FAMILY MEDICINE THAT HAS HEALHDI MILLIONS DURING 35 TEARS I IIIMBIIHEITJ A BALM FOR EVERY WOUND OFI MAN AND BEAST! THE OLDEST&BEST LiNl MENTI EVER MADE IN AMERICA. SALES LARGER THAN EVER. I The Mexican Mustang Liniment hasl been known for more than thirty-flveM years as the best of all Liniments, for® Man and Beast. Its saleatoday arcH larger than ever. It cures when al'H others fail, and penetrates skin, tendopH and muscle, to the very bono, fcoidH everywhere. -