ene TrAT success inspires envy and dis- honest competition is well known, The force of this must often have occurred to a Baltimore house which is known everywher», he Charles A. Vogeler yompany, tb’; excellence of whose ana the integrity of whose business dealings are recogmzed throigu ut the commercial world, Time ».d again have they defended their nights against those who sought to wrest from them the legittms te fruits of their labor and enterprise. Last year 12 London, England, an unscrupulous “dealer sought to place a so-called St, Davids’ Oil on the market on the strength of the great popularity of St. Jacobs’ Oil. The High Uourt of Jus- tice promptly issued a perpetual injunc- tion and imposed heavy damages. This decision indorsed the action of the Unite States Court at Cleveland, Ohio, and ths Oireui’ Chari of Baltimore City. Referring to the men's Jf another s aluable remedial agent placed upon she market by this enterprising house a Medical Journal says: We admire the stand taken by numerous eminent physicians and members of the Board of Health of such cities as Brooklyn, Philadelphia and Baltimore, in publicly endorsing and adopting Red Star Gough Cure because it 1s eflicacious, free from dangerom without worpbia or opium, Another feature | thic h commends .. 8 its popu- lar price, ~ twenty-five os nts, cure for throat and lung diseases. hn fh oi HOUSEHOLD. BRANDIED PEACHES OR PEARS. —Four pounds of fruit, four pounds of sugar, one pound of best white brandy. Make a syrup of t=» sugar and a quart of pure ‘sater. Jet them come to a boil, ther ~at the pared fruit into it, removed the fruit carefully with a per. forated ladle, let the syrup boil fifteen minntes longer, or until it thickens well, thor cake the kettle at once from the fire. Pour the hot syrup over the fru* put in glass bottles with wide mouths and seal up tight, If after taking fruit from the fire the first time a red- before adding the clear syrup, Choose always toe fairest, firmest specimens of fruit for brandying if you would be re- warded for your pains, Well-made brandied fruit should keep good for 7 ars CasvresaaM Caxe. —ane weight of six eggs in sugar, four in flour and we in butter, Cream the butter, add ‘ho sugar and the six beaten yolks, lightly stir in the frothy whites and contrive to add the sifted flour without at all heav- ily beating the cake batter, This maxes a good mixture for layer cake, but is quite rish enough to serve alone. With a soft icing of loaf sugar, which has been rubbed ove: the skinof one orange ana mixed with or ange juice, it is de- hicicas, Simply glaze the cake after it is done, with the flavored sugar, and let it dry with the oven door open, i’ the juice does not make the glaze whir to the sugar. made into a tender and delicate dish by letting itcook in its own juices in the oven wiihout narticle of water. flavor a=A juices, and {he ough fibres and grist.e are softened by the mild heat, it must be put in three or four hours before dinner time, The heat that comes through the stone is very different from that of hot iron, and it is the slow action of the steady heat that makes a rich dish ont of a cheap joint, Uorrer Cake. —1wo cups of brown sugar, one cup votter, five eggs, one- half cup molasses one nutmeg grated, two taspoonfuis cinnamon, one fea spoon! sloves, one-half eup made cof- fee, three heaping cups flour, one cup rai- sins, one cup currants, one teaspoonful saleratus disolved in warm water, one- ~marter pound of citron, one teaspoon- fruit before stirring it in; bake in a moderately fast oven, Pras Lemon Pm —To the grated two eggs two cups of sugar, and place over tue fire, Blend two large table- spoonfuls of corn starch in a very little brirkly for a few mowents, aati, i. be- somes thickened. Pourinto 1 700d undercrust, This amount makes two medium-sized pies, and may be enriched by adding a little butter, Sova Bmovrr.—One pint of sweet milk, three pints of flour, a pinch of salt, half a cup of butter and lard mixed, one teaspoonful of soda and two of cream of tartar. Mix soda in the milk and ores of tartsr in the flour. Bab the shortening fn the flour, then add the milk; mux Zid roll Yehtly, handling as little as possible Nake into small cakes and bake in o quick oven, Veuver Onzas,—Dissolve one ounce or half a box of gelatine in a coffee cup of wine over the fire; add the juice and grated rind of one lemon. When the gelatine has dissolved add one coffee cup of white =ngar; cook slowly, strain one and ones-ha't pints of milk, Btir notil coz! pour ins mold and set iv a cool place, Bren Caxe.—Two cups of sugar, two thirds of a cup of butter, two and one-half cups of flour, two teaspoonfals of cream of tartar, whites of five eggs, one cup of milk, one teaspoonful of so- da. Brown part—two tabl of the white dough, one-half eup of treacle, one-half enp of flour, one-half cup of each ~f currants snd raisins, Bake in layres « ud spread with jelly. Tre deer Escnxous are coming great. into use tor their **handiness” in got- up gravies, stews and other dish. i os. Lexon Cusranps.—The yolks of four egge, the whites of two, one cup of su- gar, one cup of cold water, one spoon- ful of butter and one spoonful of corn starch, blended in a little cold water, and the grated peel aud juice of a large lemon, Bake in cups and frost with the whites, Coxrosirion Caxm.—One pound of sugar, one pound of butter, eight eggs, one oup of rich milk, one and one-half grated nutmegs, one teaspoonful of powdered cinnamon, one pound of flour, one pound of raisins seeded, one-half pound of citron out thin, one teaspoon- ful of soda, two of cream of tartar, Sweer Poraro Poxs.—Wash well six good-sized sweet potatoes, scrape the skins off and grate on a potato-grater, mix in one tablespoonful of butter, one cup of molasses, one of sugar, three eggs, pineh of salt, pounded orange peel, nutmeg and ginger to suit taste; put in a pan, sprinkle sugar over the top, and bake, Beer Ouererrs.—Pour half a pint of rich beef stock, or half a teaspoonful of beef extract mixed with a cup of boil- ing water, over a cup of bread rubbed to small crumbs, Neason highly and let | it stand in a warm oven for fifteen min- utes, Make an omelette of six well beaten eggs ; add the soaked crumbs and fry as usual, A Hor Sanap,— Lettuce is more easi- ly digested and makes a delicate salad when boiled for fifteen minutes, Make a dressing of a raw egg, & teaspoonful of dry mustard, a dash of cayenne, two table spoonfuls of vinegar and a smal cup of cream which may be slightly sour, the salad, — one egg beaten to a stiff froth, beat in | dered sugar, with not quite half a tes- it, flavor to taste, any baked pudding, — I ——————. A Ratlroad Man's Views i | Toronto, Canadas, of the New York, | pany, | Dominion. | weeks his little girl was ill with bron- | chitis, He used different preparations | and also had her treated by a physician, | but without effect. Finally, he tried | Red Star Cough Cure, and before one | bottle was finished she was perfectly | well, is well-known throughout att Stick to your owa opinion if you have | to stick to theirs, house, it prevents headache and kidney troubles, | man to be ready for his opportunity | when it comes, A Barberous Hhyme. | Lather me lightly and speak to me low, Ob, interrogative barber mine; And I will forgive if to make my hair grow, You use magic Carboline, Don't plane too much importance on the things of this life, they are all pass- ing, : — that eats away life’s energies so rapidly | as that of worms, which are the out- | natural appetite for food, hollow, | sunken eyes, and a general bodily un- easiness, Parents should note these symptoms, and relieve the little ones by the use of Vixgcan Brirers. Any man who puts his life in peril in danng of all men, CONSUMPTION CURED, An old physician, retired from practice, having bad piaced in his hands by an East India mission. ary the formulas of a simpie vegetable remedy for the speedy and permanent cure of Consumption, Lung Affections, also a positive and radical cure for Netvous Debility and all Nervous Complaints, afier having tested 8 wonde curative powers in thousands of cases, has fel it known to his suffering 7 { motive and a deslre 0 Te wii send free of charge, ! r Human saforing. y #li who desire it, this directions for preparing and using. Sent by mall by adaressng with stamp, naming this paper, W. i A. Novas, 148 Power's Block, Rochester, N, Y. Good manners is the art of making those people easy with whom you con- yerse, Frazer Axle Grease, One greasing with Frazer Axle Grease days, Try it. 18 received first premium at the Centennial and Paris Exposition. —— A WD I A. The latest fashion in pérsonal jewelry in California is a secaripin made of a ten inches long, set in gold. MEREMANS LEPTONIZED BEEF TONIC, the onl JRepazation of bee! containing Hs entire rr properties, It containabiood-making foree gendrt and jife-sustaining properties; invaius. a vous prostration, for | in all en and all forms of y yi feebled conditions, whether the result of exhaos. over-work or acute dis. tion, nervous complaint, © New York, Seid by A collossal bronze bust of Washing. ton Irving by Frederick Beer, of Brunn, Austria, is to be ted to Central Park, New York, a citizen of Ger. man extraction. Impormne, When von visit or jeave New York Oity, save ® ox and $8 carriage i sop er ET a Sr ual WL Dont. on) rooms. fited up at a cost of one on eat #1 and upwards supplied w Tiorse cars, stages and elevated raiiroad to al depots, “Vutnlies can better for iss money at Grand Union than at anv other Hret-olas hotel in the city. EI ata mm Bailing lovers is the next neighbor Po wns. Boon If a cough disturbs i tak Pino's Cure for Connon and rest well, “SAY dear,” said an Evansville wife to her husband, ‘that dime you gave me for milk this morning was no good,” “Didn't give you no bad dime,” growled Jones. “You did too, I guess I know,” “No, I never. You've been get- ting some danged ribbons or something down town, and they gave it to you in change, Women ain’t got no sense no how.” “But you handed it to me yourself." “Didn't.” “Yes you did and I want you to take it back.” “I won't." *Yes you will, you old wretch, ™ “Won't.” ‘Well you just will now ; you see if youdon’t, I'll show you if women haven't got any sense.” At noon Mrs, Jones was all smiles, and waited on her husband so nicely that he felt like telling her that he had given her the dime, and was sorry, and would give her another, but concluded i he woull wait till evening. As she handed him a nice piece of ple, she re- marked: William, you'll have to eat this in a burry; its nearly time to go to the office.” William bolted it down, but all of a sudden gagged, and then swallowed something as if it hurt him, lowed something that didn't feel right, | what do you suppese could have got in- | to that pie?” | How did it feel, William?” | Ob, sorter hard and round,” “Well, guess it was that dime. You sald I couldn't make you take it back, { but I guess you have got it now. You may keep it.”? | Jones is still keeping it. ep Can consumption be cured? Yes man only, discovered the laws of gravita. | tion. One man only, discovered the virtue of vaccination. And one man afler years of study and reflection, has discovered the cure for consumption. Dr. Plerce's "Gold. { en Medical Discovery’ is its specific. Send two letter stamps and get Dr. | pamphlet treatise on consumption, | dress, World's Dispensary Medical Associ tion, Buffalo, N. ¥. A IAI A Discontent is the want of self-reli- ance ; it 12 infirmity of will. ss———— “Sweet Mand Maller,” Whittier's beautiful ballad contains a touching allusion to the many cures and sorrows which wear upon the “heart and brain’ of a wife and mother. Thousands of weary suffering women have found Dr. Plerce's "Favorite Prescription” a marvel- lous recuperator of wasted strength, and of | sovereign efficacy in all thosederangements son of which the vitality is gradually | sapped, and the check robbed prematurely of ita bloom. By druggists, . --— mess | Riches are good in their way, but a | rloh man with s howling toothache fails to see much use in money. . » & Young or middle-aged men, suffering from premature decline of power, however induced, speedily and radically { cured. Illustrated wk for 10 cents in { stampa. World's Dispensary Medical As- i sociation, Buffalo, N. Y. | A comprehensive monument to all the | combatants on the French sidein the | war with Germany is proposed for Paris, AX ITEM OF I STEREST. —" Beeson's Aro- mati | and heals skin diseases, softens and beanti- fles face and hands. 25c., by Droggists, or mail, Address Wm. Dreydoppel, Philadelphia, Pa nnsenmm————— > In the last ten years the erzment has spent more than §2,500,- | ing artiste, We depart from our usual practice {and recommend Hunt's Remedy as & {sure care for gil kidney discases,— Medical Gazette, ts PREVENT croeked boots and biistered eners. Force yourself to reflect upon what | you read, paragraph upon paragraph. ANAKESIS. | AREER ! e is am in. i fallible THE for P11, : “ANA RSL8 or sold by — : PAID, mail Ramples | sent PERE ur 2 i STARTER 0, No. £3 i Mercere, NowY ork, Role | - Pod manuf, of "ANA CURES ALL DISEASES OF THE KIDNEYS, LIVER, BLADDER, AXD URINARY ORGANS, DROPEY, GRAVEL, DIABETES, BRIGHTS DISEASE, PAINS IN THE BACK, LOINS OR SIDE, KERVOUSR DISRARER, TONIC AND BITTER, It is Unequalled in Results and Per. manent In its Care. LIVING TESTIMONY. Bisoksmith, “Having had occasion to use a remedy for kidney troubles 1 purchased a bottle of Huwr's (Kidney and Liver] Remedy, and it compiétely cured me—-have no indigestion, and am heart and healthy for one of my years (65). ~J, F. Wood bury, Bi Ith, Manchester, N, £1, S—— “Small beginnings lend to large endings.” Carpenter, “1 was troubled with a weakness of the Kidneys, nad to Wy Water as many as fifteen mes After ha used the second a. hy all my Cae wan liven) Bau o e. "Joseph Miller, Carpenter, Xotla, ontor “hie & friend to yourself, and others will” Fireman, GAR ETE Feeney ai ive]. Snes somaretny cured me", A. Glass, ambas, Ohio, “To the #000, might 8 not dark.” A Sailor, Captain dohn Kimbal A London, aot SELLE St TT Sl and botiles entirely oured me. FARM NOTES, Ice Pox ps. —Almost every farm with a stream could have an ice-pond. A dam with a gata built across a stream and a flat meadow alongside would in- close half an acre or more of water which could be let down after the ice had been cut. Half an acre of Ice six inches thick equals 300 tons ; enough to supply ten families and dairies, At twenty-five cents a ton for the Ice in the pond here would be $75; equal to five per cent. on $1.500, and making that half acre the most productive on the farm, If this is to be done it should be begun soon. For an easy construct- ed dam stakes are driven down on the line and a furrow turned up against the stakes from the inside, Planks are firmly bedded in the soft earth and are supported by stakes on each side. This protects the bottom and prevents leak- ing. The plow-—a side-hill one—is then run back and forth in the furrow and the soil turned up against the planks. This is done on both sides. The earth is well trodden, and as the furrow i8 widened and deepened the material for the dam is shoveled out until the embankment is high enough. The gateis built in the stream with care that water does not work out on | the sides, The dam will become firm before winter, when the gate can be closed and the pond filled. The earlier the 1ce is cut the better. It is well to sod the dam on both sides, and to do this I would first cut the sod where the dam is to be built, and save it for covering the bank. It would be fun to ure of using the ice for skating. HS Mn. George Simpson, an English | to sixteen quarts daily, does not an- swer at all, t dry cows glving milk, { oats straw. | milk is reduced, and gradually they dry | themselves, and without any evil ef- fects following. The practice of sud- denly checking the flow of milk of good | milkers, by the ordinary method, has —— A visitor who Introduced himself as the Son of Man called at the White House recently and was ordered off the premises without being allowed to make known his errand. And has it come to pass that hungry Democrats have been allowed to ruin the reputa- tion of the Son of Man with the re form administration by filing charges of offensive partisanship against Him? It must be a fine thing to get into the swim of London society. Au old Eng- lish paper contains an advertisement in which a lady of good position offers for the sum of $3,000 to take charge of a young lady of good family and present her to a wide circle of the best society during the month of July, As we are imitating the English perhaps it would be well to introduce the kink into our own country, “WiLL you miss me when I am gone?’ sang Alfonso in the parlor. *No!” fiendishly whispered the old man to himself around the cormer of the house ; “and I'll not miss you while you are going,” he replied, cocking his gun, “No, YOU can’t have any of my mon- “You are not worth your salt.” “Ohyes, I am. You forget, | I aaa part of the Commonwealth.” i | Purify i i A IPI OTE the Blood We do not claim that Hood's Barsaparilis is the onl | medicine doservin ifidenoces, but we believe | that to purify th i whole system, I oann i public that this fact cannot | that s trial will not fully substantiate it. The inf Heen's SA RSAPARILLA estimated. If § becomes contaminated, the train w sreasaraide s, Dyspepsia, Debility, N 1 (Y) allments™ sre the prem serions and of ten fatal results i parilis, the reliable blood purifier, and remove the i cause. Made only by C 1. HOOD & OO, | Mase Price $LO0, six for $5.25 804 by Druggiets snd Dealers in Madicines } i i nly Temperance SITlers Knowl | had begun. | gans became inflamed, { find it highly important to pay particu | those of the Jersey and Guernsey breed, which are great milkers, | Soxe of the popular ideas with re- | gard to milk and butter are erroneous. | A sample of milk at the New York ex- { perimental station | showed 12.53 per cent. of fat. One | sample, with 5.90 per cent, of fat, gave | three pounds and four ounces of butter, against two pounds and seven ounces | from a sample with 8.58 per cent. of | fat, It is conceded that the amount of ! butter to be | upon an analysis of the fat. The test { of churning is the only reliable method. glass of pure water. If the promptly milk is rot with calf, but if it sinks to the bottom of the glass as it fails upoa the water, and does not produce bul little of a milky cloud, the cow is preg- nant. The specific gravity and viscid- | ity of the albuminous milk being heav- i milk and causes it to sink. | give it a test. If reliable the informa- | tion may be of great value to them. ——————————— | To keep flies out of the stable noth- | ing 18 better than soft soap and carbolic | acid thrown on the floor once or twice ‘a day. The mixture may be made of | tained very cheap, and ordinary soft | soap. The amount of the acid depends | on the strength of the soap. This can | thoroughly mixing for an hour or two. Then mix a little with soft water. | by particles of oil floating on the sur- Two or three tablespoonfuls of acid to a quart of soap will usually suf- | fice, | tached to most of the agricultural col- | Jeges where girls as well as boys could | attend and learn how to make bulter and cheese, Why should not the wo- men of the land have a chance tZ get | some of the abundance of information to be had at our agricultural colleges ? ‘ Surely the women have to work on | farms, and hard too. Two valuable colts were lately poi- | soned by snake root, ex palorium agera- | toides, The disease known formerly as | *s the trembles,” an affection of cattle, | was caused by this weed, When eaten by milech cows the poison, to some ex- tent, passts off with the milk, even when the cows have not been notice bly ill, and drink it have sickened a sometimes died. The weed ought to be mote generally known Bo inl it should be shunned or exterm- in ‘ Lise is not only essential to the soll but also to stock, and should the food supplied be deficient in that element the k will be deficient in bone. For there SET] Grateful Thousands pusiained the aking yyetem, * trom Alcololie Stimulaste. A Purgative and Tonic, vers, Blood, Liver and Kidney Diseases, Pain in the Ehoulders, Coughs, T Chest, Dizviness, Sour Stomach, Furred Tongue, Billous Attacks, Paipitation of the Heart, Poe. are cured by the use of the Bitters, For Skin Diseases, Eruptions, Dol Erysipeias, Scrofula, Discolorations, H “or diseases of the Ekin of whalever na ture, are Hlerally J gysiem in 8 sb time by the use of Lhe Bitters or na BERMAN REMEDY i | utates the torpid Liver and Bowels, which ren. der it of unequaled efficiency in cleansing the blood of all impurities, and Luparting new life and vigor 10 the whole svetem long unwell Pin, Ta and other Worms, are destroyed and removed from the system Cleanse the Vitinted Blood whenever it is foul ; your feelings will tell you when. Keep the blood pure, acd the health of the system will follow, In conclusion : “ive the Bitters a trial. Tt will speak for fieeif. One bots will prove a bet- ter guarantee of its merits thas a lengthy ad- wv p t H. McDonald Prag Co,, Proprietors, Ban Francisoo, Osi. and 68, HN 05 Washington a s & st, x. Sold by ali Dealers and Drageists. CONTAGIOUS! 1 am a pative of England, and while I wan in that oountry 1 contracted a terrible hiood poison. and for two years was under treatment ss an ouldoor pa. | thend at ¥otinehsmm Hospital, England, bul was not eared, | suflered the most agonizing pains in my bones, and was coversd with sores all over my body limbs. Finally I completely lost all hope in | that country, and sailed for Amerion, snd was { treated a1 Roosevelt in this city. ss well ne by a | prosuinent physician in New York baviog no oon. nection with the hospitals 1 saw the advertisement of Reift's Specific, and I (etormined to give it a trial, 1 took siz bottles and 1 catisay with grest Joy thet they have cured me entirely. 18m ss sound and wellas | ever was in my life Le. Fred, Harronn, Now York City, June 12th. 1885 i and Treatise on Blood and Skin Diseases mailed free, Tae Bwirr Sppciric Jo, Drawer 8 Atlanta, Ga. KY. Bw. Sam This remedy CONLAINSE NO Dgurions arugs. GATAR R Ely’s Cream Balm Ti I His, will be al ueing healthy secretions alaye Inflammation, 1 rotects the membrane From trem colds, OOH. riety heals the sores and HAY And the best every . Hor Pras. 25¢C. |i oom, the To or to ure For Pain ici ae, Foraiaes, wha. PRICE, VIFTY CENTS. AT DRUGGINTS AND DEALERS. THE CHARLES 4. YOUELER 00. BALY be Pale els per go's Food ratids, snd is read ways with ssthefac. Lo the directions Mothers aud nurses, send 10 ni Sadres when taken SOOO PEL YINE SR0L CRY e method ¢ only one that i per f in cases of " v i FITS dlepsy. Two tris Bottles sent free. PTIC REMEDY 00... 478 Rt # DY ©9.. 4 road Bt. N.Y. R. U. AWARE THAT Plug # ; that Lorillard’ ; that Lorfllardys prio Lgl Vis } ny $a situations fa BIG OFFER, ws vi" 2 cE 5 VE AWAY Lo Beil. Operating Washing Macotines If you wagt ons send ne your name, Po cent. more made in k p. Also POWER MILLS » FEED MILLS. Circulars and Tes d 7 "et inis sens on applicstion. WILSON BROS. Easton, Pa. PENNYROYAL "CHICHESTER'S ENGLISH" The Original and Only Genuine. Fat and Liweys redighie, Beware of Worthless lolintons, “Chichester’s Fagiish” se the bert ends. Indispensubie LADIES, Tncios ss ioamps’ for pardiesiars oth » Boosie. vbr, en ielier seni Ten vf Pil ! kL ¥ rom turn mall. NAME PAPER, Chichester Chemionl Ue. 22307 Madison Sg, Phileds, Fa. TE ¥ ary B36. por Bouth snd Expenses. Expenses in ad- venoe. Canvassing outfit FREE Pertioders free. Standard Silver. ware Co. Boston, Mass. MORPHINE Guerin Opium Habits EASILY CURED, BOOK FREE. PR. LC. HOFFMAN. Jeferson, Wisconsin PIUN M 2m Sure cure m 10 to — ae An wetive Man sousty to sel! our gous. sal days, Samarium treatmen medicines CXpreng, ee rn LL ,,™P Marsh. ory tablished Books Tree . Quincy, Mich nee, Hands Feet, and all their tm. perfections, ponding ad r, Moles, Wi \ jos, Bod N Acme. B71 > i i treatment . 3 a g SCHAYE Duy, N.Y. Beha 1 “ WANTED, Send Joe GOINS for Ostslogue of ; wid. CHARLES J. AYER 12 Lambert Ave, Be Mass, QEDERICK'S HAY, PRESSES. ® the customer on Highlan . A, or Seron trisl, address for circular and locstio eslern snd Southern Storebonses and Apes P K.DEDERICK & CO... Albany. N. ¥- TONS PEA Hi Terth eth Perfe. nnd Gums irs Pi (ut POWDER eatthy