ARM NOTES Braxpinag Carrie.--The range bus- iness, it would seem, has another sin to answer for, and it 18 ene which af- fects everybody. It appears that by improper branding thousands of hides are so mjured that they are compara tively worthless, It is estimated that the loss from this source at Chicago alone is $2,000,000 a year, and that throughout the entire country it will reach $5,000,000, But considerable leather that is damaged in this way gets into the leather articles that we use, and, of course, is not so serviceable, The cattle men say that they cannot remedy the evil, They must brand and brand practicably as they now do it to protect their property, They cannot, they say, use smaller brands, for they could not be distinguished in rounding up. They can not brandon a less val. uable part of the hide, for the brand would pot be prominent enough. That may all be true, but that does not help the tanners, or the purchaser of an im- perfect leather article. Five millions of dollars, too, is a pretty high cost for a method, and to save that ought to be sufficient "motive to attempt to devise some less objectionable means to reach the desired end. But there is one fact that 1s plain enough to anybody who will examine these branded hides, Many of them are not properly done. They show that they have been done aither by somebody who did not care how he did it, or by somebody who was mad when he did it. The depth of the brand is often powerfully suggestive that the brute who did the work be. came angry with the animal for some reason, and branded it for punishment, In one conclusion all will #gree and that 18 there is no necessity of burning the animal clear through. A little sense and humane feeling would do much to modify the evil complained of. CrLeaNiNG Ciper BArreLs.—The best time for cleaning a cider barrel Is immediately after its been drawn off. When the sediment formed a crust in the barrels it it suitable for first-class cider. The to take out one of the heads, and scrub all the inner-side of the barrel thorough- ly with boiling water, and after the head is replaced to burn some sulphur tape in it. With musty casks no use to spend any time; they can The best use is for swill or fire will spoil vinegar even, to make of them wood. Tue apple crop in Southeastern New York is so large that farmers are feed- ing good fruit to their pigs. First-class apples are selling at 50 cents a barrel. Great quantities of cider are being made and it sells at 5 cents a gallon, to market and the other third has been placel in cold storage. nage exceeds that of last year by 1600 tons, gathered and saved, however low the price, since they are at least worth gathering for their feeding value, If left on the ground they are positively injurious, the acid of the fruit poison- ing the soil and destroying ail vegeta- tion beneath them. A dressing of lime will correct this acidity and restore fer- tility. CLAY is perhaps the most difficult of all soils to work. If cultivated when too wet it becomes lumpy and hard when dry. If plowed when very dry a considerable power is needed, and then the work is poorly performed. For this reason if for no other, clay lands should be thoroughly under-drained tlizt they may be kept in proper condi- tion to work at nearly all seasons. CLEANLY cared for milk, an even, rather low temperature for the dairy. room, churning when the cream is ripe {not too sour), light salting (no crystals of salt in the butter), not too much working, and attractive packages will always command the highest price in the market if the cows have been fed on well- flavored food. food. IN choosing ; trees trees to , plant look more to the root than to the top. Small trees always have the best roots in pro. portion to size, and on this account are comparatively the best. Quick growth and large size are more certain to be realized in trees four to six feet high, than from those twice as large to begin with, Wi AT asparagus and what an amount of it, too, our fathers used to grow on a small bed, for his family use, by put. ting on the bed in the fall, six inches to a foot of manure, and 1n the spring take it off and scatter it over the gar- den ! And by the way, there is no Det- ter way to enrich the soil of a flower bed than this. — Tue eggs laid aid by an active, healthy hen, supplied with good, fresh food, are much superior to those laid vy the common scavengers of alleys, back- yards and pig-pens. The difference in color, smell and taste is very evident to one who has given the matter a little suis DIARRHOEA in caives is successfully : treated by giving the whites of eggs beaten up with water into an emulsion, sight being used to a pint of water, and half a teaspoonful being given at a dose, and repeated every two hours, OpsERYByour horse when he is drink- ing at a brook, is an Arab maxim, If in bringing down his head he remains square without bending his limbs he possesses Jlesing du ualities and all parts of his body are © bullt symmetrically. Tue cuttings for ings for basket-willow should be about nine inches long, They should be stuck down ia soft earth in a slanting position, leaving two inches above the ground. They will grow on pearly all sorts of land, but do best in damp places, Ix selecting Joung Brahmas an indi- cation of what the plumage will be 1s ven by the bills. When the bill basa stripe down the upper mandible the hackle snd tail will be dark, HOUSEHOLD, LET us ses what amount of ran water three inches of rainfall repre- sents on an acre of ground, 6,272 640 square inches in an acre, One inch of | rain would represent the same number | of square inches, In a eubie foot there are 1,728 inches. An inch of rain fall ing upon one acre is equivalent to 3,630 cubic feet. The weight of a cu- bic foot of water is 62} pounds, Two thousand pounds make a! ton. It follows from the premises, that an inch of rain falling upon an acre of ground will welgh 226.975 pounds, which is the equivalent of | 113 tons and 875 pounds js to the acre. | Three times this amount gives 246 tons | Ww hat we must do is to make the aoc- tual possibilities of life our ideal. It lies 1n human power not to construct the godlike, but to recognize it, and thus gain it. Laconic patient to physician : Caught cold. Physician : Take Red Star Cough Cure ; no morphia, no polsons, Only twenty-five cents. bt. Jacobs Oil Boccia A BSS Never retire at night without being wiser than when you rose in the morn. ing, by having learned something use- ————————— The Doctor's Endorsement, Dr. W. D. Wright, Cincinnati, O., sends S———— It 1s easier to find a score of men wise enough to discover the truth, | than one intrepid enough, in the face { of all opposition, to stand up for the | same, . A Pitiful Sight, What sadder sight can be imagined than that of a noble man, whom the world ean lil-afford to spare, stricken down in the prime of a useful life by consumption. | Thousands are yearly filling consumptives’ | graves who might be saved by the timely use of Dr. Pierce's “Golden Medical Dis. covery,” which is a positive cure for con. sumption in its early stages. It is the best alterative and pectoral in the world. All druggists, saemamtii—— There are errors that no wise man will treat with rudeness, while there is Fiusrt Buffalo Detective we COMPA fon): 1 ray, Jack, that was a splendid plece of work done by Barnes to-day, wasn’t it? Becond Buffalo Detective: You don’t mean to say that he caught the derer? First than that, Becond Buffalo Detective say so? First Buffalo Detective: the murderer's brother, I tell you. Buffalo Detective: Yes, he got Great case RI 35.50 ASTRONOMER (at the dinner toble): I read a beantiful thing this morni ng. Astronomer’s wife: Tell it to us dear, and 625 pounds to the acre. In some hard rainstorms an inch of rain will fall in two or three hours, We have known an inch to fall in ap hour. The impact of 113 tons of water on an acre, falling suddenly, is very great. That is what packs the land so hard. A gen- tle rain or mere drizzle is always more beneficial to the land. If makes mud- dy streets, while a hard rain washes them clean. The farmer is glad to get twenty inches of rain for the season. But this more than 2,500 ton to the acre. 1t is this quantity which fills up the springs and the sources of the rivers and keeps them alive during the long dry summer. There will be thirty | inches or moreln an extreme wet win- | ter. Any one can figure out on thedata | and speak little ; for the tongue 1s the here given what proportion that will | instrument of the greatest good and } cians and quacks. Naturally modest she give to an acre of ground. the greatest evil that is done in the | Siang. ane guns Kew ally mode "a. | don’t know nothin z. world. | cian regarding some female difficulty which | €xact words, she well knows Is sapping her strength. Brown-—Robinson 1s mistaken. All this embarassment can be avoided and | I said to him was, vou do know a care effectsd by purch wing Dr. Pierce's You mustn't believe all * Favorite Prescription” of ¥e our druggist, etn and taking as directed. Price redoced w . i one doll AT. — Maus, Das —*My pet, 1 wi ish would not go with those girls,’ Miss Dash-——**Why not, mamma a probability that they may be the re- fraction of some great truth below the horizon. the subjoined professional endorse ment: ‘I have prescribed DR, WM, HALL'S BAL- BAM FOR THE LUNGS in a great num- Ber of cases and always with success. One case in particular was given up by several physicians who had been called in for con sultation with myself. The patient had all the symptoms of confirmed Consump- tion—cold night sweats, hectic fever, har- rassing coughs, ete, He commenced im- mediately to get better and was soon re- stored to his usual health, I found DI. WM. HALL'S BALSAM FOR THE LUNGS the most valuable expectoraut for breaking up distressing coughs and colds. smn A Restrain thy choler, hearken much Astronomer: templation of celestial make a man both speak and think more sublimely and magnificently when he desends to human affairs, I’ve often noticed it in my own case. | En- ter astronomer’s son.] Now, see Lere, | young man, if you haven't walk shoveled when night, I'll lick your life, things Confidential advice, to either sex, on delicate diseases, Hook 10 cents in stamps. Address, World's Dispensary Medical Association, 663 Main Street, | Buffalo, N. Y. » - . * The worst slander often has some truth, from which we may learn a lesson that may make us wiser, and, if we will, better, when the first smart | { of 1t is over. i i § I come home to- in it you within an inch of on——— A ——— Duryrey (with an injured airj—How | is it, Brown, that you are reporting Man's inhumanity to woman makes | about that I don’t know pothing? | countless thousands mourn, would be an | Brown—I have never reported | applicable rendering of Pope’ line, in view | thing of the kind. | of the indignities she has suffered and patos | Dumley—Its very | undergone at the hands of unskilifal physi- | oon t01d ‘me you said a ———— strang last Those were a ss Tre introduc ) ) raphone : . ntroduction of the megaphone THE CHARMING little girl's face on shipboard—a sort of telescope for | come out so beautifully on Hood's House the ear, or machine for magnifying | hold Calendar, is sweet enough to kiss, sound-—is said to be a boon in prospect | We have seldom seen anything so attrac for mariners. Its design is to enable | tive in lithography. The Calendar a person to hear or carry on a conver another happy hit by the enterprising pro- | sation with people at a distance and it [Priors al ood . RARIMpAT) Lay wha ROVE: is constructed of two huge cone-shaped | tery Lest tn whatever a Tle aes tubes, eight feet longand three in di- | Their Calendar is a beautiful ornament for ameter at the large end, which diminisa | any home. If you cannot get acopy of your | They are real nice.” SE to an apex in the form of rubber tubes , send six cents for one, or ten Mrs. Dashi—*1 hear their father hes we x . . Kingdom known 10 tnedics sents for tv alendars, to OC. I. Hood & %ang gan ro wo Salaars, L Hood | been arrested for stealing pennies from | Blood Par tween these tubes are two smaller ones ’ 8}, JAA, manner, but creams i A —es—— | a money drawer. is, Yellow : Every event that a wan would mas- | Miss Dash—*It’s a mean, misera- Bok Hore thaw halt the Sismeber. . By ter must be mounted on the run, and | ble slander. He had some legal papers placing the rubber tubes in the ear and no man ever caught the reins of a {served on him, and has been sleeping speaking through the smaller cones the person can hear and can be heard at a which ing. you hear, is Io Hood’ s s Sarsaparilla This success! refally prepared dies of the vegetable seience as Albersid fiers, Diuretics, and Tonics, such Dock, Btillingia, Dandel Mandrake, Wid Cherry Bark barks and berbe A ke anything else, can We 4 Tie 4 an the keart % of tha ¢ personally or indirectly been which all ether id by all droggists, C. 1 HOOD & OO, extract of the best ves, ne asap om, niige and © Berries, ther selocied roots, snedicine, | be fairly Judged only by its resuils ih satisfaction to the glorio int wi thought except as it galloped by him, | in ace Il because it 18 cooler there.” Mrs, Dash-——*"And he didn’t steal Any penn Miss Dash-—-*"No, not descend to such a th merely diverted five hundred dollars, that's all.’ Mrs, Dash—**Oh, in that right, I feared he was thief.” man suffering, 1 h ¢ he | B44 | Frenen or x ian, with fai “Mn LIMBURGERSTEIN av t 114 ; health, hows vor dome onan, which causes it to adhere tO the | sire ” » for pr e paring and ani ng. : by Ina a eonnundrum for : y i - % inegar Bitters te the surfaces, the figures being afterward | by sdaresung wilh samp, nam ng ins Papel, We | tm hi reamimP t y overed for filled out with enamel. This is the art | & Moves 14 Power's Block. Rochester, N CORS 148 Inns! it saln9 Os known as cleisonne, the method pur : on x r hs ; Ce wr Sch ed,” s id a sued being to bake the article in a| 1f our eyes wate opin, ve Should al np wasrabaln. tT a jg 1 furnace until the enamel exhibits a lustre | that this oval globe is but an egy ; that | Lim urgerstein. : Rive dot ou t. or glossy surface, which is an indication | What we call time is but an incutation Bocaire they wear brass Lancs that it is melted. The process has to | of eternity. around Pu i neck. “= hand ' be conducted with care, but if it is Ach pe Ciuse--bhrass bans. FOUL.» overbaked the enamel burns and falls der heck: dot B C01 pas 1 Sr head, off, it may also happen that, in places 1 AA LAC on Joel: "HUMES «Ms Kidneys, and 8 hundred other painful disorders. where the enamel burps it thinner, it | Cold in the Head had . 1%" cob, 1 conundrum Sand for sither of our yatustie Feforenos 3 7 ” When cool Lhe TU igh Ihe lout Snaing 3 we) i of E Ae {ream you. : Vy does loaf music?" de ie Rp Ss are) ar is removed by careful hand polishing, | Balm, It is applied with the Hager. | JO! ho : rh mest + | on intemperance and Tobacco, which last should ith a fine sandstone, and lastly the | Being pleasant and safe, it supersedes ‘I gives dot oudt prelly quick. VY | bein the hands of every child and youth in the polish, the use of all liquids and snuffs, Its | doe 2 dogs loaf music? uiked Jacoby i oogsiry Swe. of Dis above bool satied Ere os Woot i ral ¢ liaves 3 rion | “lUecause —pPaCanse "ah ere Ar. elfest ia magica i Ro ievey in) hve Lamburgerstein almost exploded with reosigh of Sour cenit Sorregiseution fam a sum gf aes Whe Co . phy. i lagghter-""pecause dey we of brass RH. McDonaid Drag Co., $38 Washington Fi. sicians, rice 50 cents at druggists, | ‘8URKNWET== A Tw Se————— " dark! dey has Succeeded in Prepas. | 60 cents by mail. Ely Bros.’ { collars round der neck.” ing plates which are sensitive to the | N.Y. rays lying beyond the red end of the | 3 . —— - spectrum —the dark heat rays—and A handsome woman pleases the eye, with such plates used with a rock salt | but a good woman pleases the heart, | lens there should be a possibility of phot | The ous 1s a jewel Lhe other a treasure, ographing bodies which possess a high | w————— - temperature, although that rompera- | Bvery day 844s to the great am onnt of evidenos ture may be far below that needed tO | 1: tu ua cosied puwatial Basiy Secsspars. render them self-luminous. It 18 even | 04 pl ey trace of scroluls OF possible that such a plan may SOME | other impurity. Now is the time to take it. Sold day be so perfected as to give us infor- | uy ar gists. mation about the “dark suns’ that are | remem believed to crowd the firmament—or | rather heavenly bodies which once | were seen, but have now cooled down | 80 as to be invisible, 48 TOOOT tered for i pt relieved of remedies fal Fl; six for gs Apothe fon, Lowe i, Mas 100 Doses One Dollar — nn ————— tell ug CONSUMPTION CURED, jes?" pie who hav ferribl su od to r h, § ade only % ers in listening for the sound of break- fering ers or carrying on conversation with per- | sons on shore or on other vessels at a we distance. i would He ousand indeed, ha in ti th on OXNE of the most beautiful processes @ afte ing tested it wonderful curative powers | case it Is pin Of as fe a VYuigar 4 sullening fell a desire 0 releve B 1 free of « ia Gerinan, ¥ neg car FRitters £ 4 tonic, purifies Lhe ng bens the ver I resicre it known to bi ted Ly Lhis ina tive and Ind. Zeitung, is accomplished by using | mw gold thread rubbed with the juice of an | Wii ses it ng C gent) f ll adache and’ nc Mr. TEE) vis powers. a a Vinegar Bitters assim. ates the foul regulates the stomach and bow els, giving healthy and natural seep Vinegar Bitters is the gr cat disease pre venter, and stands at the bead of all family rem- adler. No house should ever be without iL Vinegar Bitters cu res Malarial, Billions apd other fevers, (ise ares of the Heart, Liver and Fie ressng one Sh - RED YEARS might be spent for Catarrh, and Hay Fever, with- A Huxp in search of a remedy hel a for cogs wo 14 : galt it With a lens made of rock : N.Y. might be possible to photograph in the | ——————————— . Te Saxe Op Svupiecrt.-'*Hub- by, Brother Charlie is going away, I aud I feel that we Should give him | | some little Keepsake, So we shoul d, | my dear.’ OR 88 B § Can Be Cured! «HALLS lend it to him. +5 i Cares Ng er Colds, Paecumeon a, | wena. Hrenchial RE Pimecuitios, Hen chits. | anreenes Craw hoe 1 © sug had all Bi oR of the Reonthime on and henist ¢ Membrane of - —— yn nod poleaned by the dine bead and preveais the night sweats aad Pavinens G6s oes the of which sceampany ernvamption ls rot an Incarable maindy, Hal a BALSAM will esre though pr fe sionn aid Tails | “Just it longer. ELy Bros, I have used two bottles | of your Cream Palm for Catarrh since December, A sore in my nostril—toe cause of much suffering —has entirely healed ; have used no other medicine, This spring I feel better, can walk and work with more ease than I have in any spring since 1861. ~Mary E. Ware, Hopeful, Va. one act of 1s worth all the ab- One act of benelicence, real usefulness, stract sentiment in the world. REET EY : T Sins FREE lasane Persons Restored Dr. ELINE'S GREAT NenveResT ORER Sor all Brat fe Nexva DISRASRS. Only # vwre fov Newvew Afwtvons, Fis, FPiepey, oF fupasLisin if taken as dvected. No Fis a Swat day # wee. Trestise snd $a trial heatie free Fit patients. Oey prymg exprev durges on bos whom peeved, Send nsmes, P.O. ond exteess 24 ws off afiered 1 DL KLINE ant Arch St Phitadetebis Pa Deuggists. BLIWWARE OF IMITATING FR 5 $5. 4 IN Dn GOODS a &AS SH. sent free of Pox or of th 5 PERE & my comity to pay for this sdveriaaes Certain satisfaction Order pow. as this NIAGARA SUPPLY OO, Drawer 108, BUFFALO, XN. Y. Eco Pie.—Make two very thin cakes of Indian meal, flour and soda, just as | for corn bread, and wet it with sour | to any of the other ofis if MATKS milk, and bake them in a quick oven. | I, Hazard & Co., New York, Make a gravy of one teaspoonful of | butter, the same of flour, a cup of milk | and salt and pepper. When it is boil- ing, drop in cold, sliced, hard-boiled ! It is absolutely pare and sweet. Patients who have once taken It prefer it to all others. Physicians tave decided it superior Male by Cas There are men who no more grasp the truth they seem to hold than a spar row grasps the message through the electric wire on which it perches, Thay are sold on their merits, That they cure Lame Back, Stitches, Pieurisy, Kid- | ney Affections, Sore Chest, Crick, Eheu- matisin and strengthen weak parts is an- | ply proven by the testimony of thousands {| Ask for a Hop Purous Plaster, —— i CHarrap HANDS, tase, “pimp es ani rough skin | pd by umag Janiper Tar Soap, made by Cas ell, Hazard & Co, New Yorx, i — “ i row Benefit your friends, that they may | love you still more dearly ; benefit your | enemies, that they may become your | friends, i eggs: leave them in long enough to heat but don’t let them boil up or they will fall to pieces. Butter one of the hot Indian cakes, Izy it ina round pan or | dish, pour on the gravy and eggs and | lay on the other cake, buttering it on the top and sprinkling on pepper and | salt, i n———— sddresurs of aba and shoes iffeners, and wear them BTRAIGHTEN your old boots with Lyon's Heel St again, ol ings whe offer 3 Jom od _—— —__ Fo de- | 1f military glory is a sun which is | A him | Sometimes veiled with clouds, the glory | of civilization. Is a sun which never ° : i | ceases to shine. | Lt 0 how “Well, my young gentleman, would you like your hair cut * “Oh, like papa's, please ; with a little round bare place on top.’’ Moral to papas— use Carboline, the great Natural Hair renewer, If you would not have a person Tue investigations of M. Ballaud in. | c®i¥® you, be careful not to let dicate that flour becomes unwhole- | X0OW You mistrust him. some after long keeping in sacks, al- | Frazer Axle yrease, kalouds being formed In consequence | Don't work your horses to death with poor of the acidity of the old flour during | axle grease; the Frazer is the only rei fable the transformation of gluten under the | make. Use it once, and you will have no influence of the natural ferment of | other. wheat, Traces of the alkaloids are found in flour a year or a year and a half old, but are more marked in that SERA ure ATED BELLA D 22 Jus LT Prarol AL ITCH ELL'S PrLasTE ns a 5 - } hetaeds k or that “ ii hy Drs i “4 URE_ FIT 1do not moan merely to: a ne ¥ 14 8! Free Botte of A Post Siffion. warrant my remedy to cure the w others hare falied fa no reason for cure. Bend at once Tar fg ¥ infallible remedy, oth Thor ms and 1 will gure WAN 5 a ROGT, Pearl St. x — EE ——— He is richest who is content with the least ; for content is the wealth of na- ture, — Soerates, No matter how purely and randly we live to-day, there is no denying that we may live more purely, more grandly to-morrow. An active Man or ie Pg DA to well mat goods por Mouth and Faproses Lx Baines ih le NTE Canvasing outfit FREE! Partoninm A Handard Silver. ware Co. Boston. Mass, a 454 por wr I AM on my second bottle of Ely’s Cream Balm, being a sufferer from catarrh since I was a child, but with this medicine I am being cured, — Wm. L, Dayton, Brooklyn. is III. Where you must watch, where you must see that you maintain power, Is MeAasurMeSNTS of the heights of the clouds have been made at the Upsala Observatory during the past summer, The results are approximately as fol lows: Stratus, 2000 feet; nimbus, or rain cloud, from 8.600 to 7.200 feet; Waex a Dose of Vixecar Brrrens is taken into the stomach, all diseases of the blood, liver, heart, kidneys, stom- ach, and body generally, begin to pack Ea we i Omer 21 Ares Se. os A Mo. wo Pr TE wor Fn 0 Snr A Bes we. Donders lero cumulus, from 4.300 to 18,000 foot; cirrus, 22.400, Cloud measurements are alwa s somewhat difficult and un- el ut these figures are consider er fairly exact, Provessor V, C. Bley, the well. known entomologist, has presented to the National Museum his collection of insects, which contains over 20,000 species, and more than 15,000 mounted Spelman, A large number of books and pamphlets accompany this gift, which is considered one of the most valuable ever received by the Gov. ernment. ExtreEr yor Roast Ponrg.—Peel as many potatoes as will cover the bot tom ny a og ple dish. Sprinkle half a teaspoonful dried sage over Sha, Sub Cut an onion In thin slices and spread them over this, Add salt and pepper and lumps of butter. Cover the bottom of the dish with water or milk, and bake at the sources. EI Im porn, a vinit or wave New York Oty, sa and $3 carriage Hire, and on at on Hotel, opposite Grand Cen ne 4% « finan Sid op up at a costof To m ars, upwards day. Plan. WB, Rewtanrant supplied with the best. lorse jages and sievated raliroad 10 all de better for jess m a Grand Xion iota than at anv other ass hotel in the elite Neand U Wersn Ranpir.—Toast thin slices of bread with crust removed. While hot, butter slightly, then dip for an 1n- stant in a pan containing hot water to half eover the slices: go on a bot plate, allowing oue slice for oath pots son; sprinkle over a little salt and on enough melted cheese to cover new cheese is best. Serve imme. Sometimes a little mustard up, preparatory to leaving the system. And it doesn’t take them long to pack, either. Like the guests that Mrs. Mac- beth dispersed, they ‘‘stand not upon the order of their going, but go at once.” —————— IP RI No man can be free unless he governs himself, Children are the strongest pillars of the temple of wedded love, Bronchitis is cured frequent small doses of Piso’s Care for MOR CURED, INE: FRER. OR. J. C. HOFFMAN, Jefferson, Wisconsin naw, Patent Lawyer, Wi 3 0UGHEURE Abpolwutel Free from Opiates, Emel ana Polson. Bits. AF Dnvoowrs avn Desiens THE CHARLES A. YOOELER 00, BALTIMORE, XD. res ed » Cures Rs cursigla, a Toothurhs, oF uber TH 0h ela, ole vi FC CENTHR, STS AND DEA LERS, Srey wi Piso's Remedy for Ostnreh is the Best, Easiest 10 Use, aud Cheapest, CATARRH He Eo in the Head, » @e. 80 osuts, Porfeqt spd Gums Healthy Great cogiish Gout and Aeumalic Fomedy. t round HKeeaping Teeth Sy era « DEBILITATED You are allowed a free trial oc af ihirty a # of the us of Dr. Dyes Celebrated Voliaic B Yiectric Sus pensory Appliances, ! r the speed manent cure of Nervous Debility, loss of Yitaiit > aod Manhood, and ali Kind red tr Gbies. Also for Ina) other diseases, Complete restora m to BH *alth, vi oh and Manhood gue ran tem No risk is incurred trated pamohist in seo tod envelope mulled fro, 7d dressing VOLTA IC BELT CO. Marshall, BAUGH’S ie? and per PHOSPHATE Oustains the Lite aed Essence of Animel Bones We sre selling Maegh's strictly Pure Haw Hone Mend, vivo Huugh's Heady Disnolved Pare Antal Bones, st very Low Prices. It would enrprise farmers to know how very low they can pro- eure these brands direct eit, us Bend your oamme and address, snd we will msl i ong Five ie ulda. Sicn & SONNE, 20 Se. Tel. “Ave. Ph 1.000,000 READERS Fad MONTH, 1,000 PICTURES! 1.500 PAGES! FACH YEAR 1 ant § WrTHEM NTHLIE-" A PERATUTIFUL ID SIT 1 EVERY {i COLORED 1C | L 4 NUMBER ‘The !opular Monthly for 18886. | Will be full of ATTRACTIVE PERATURES, which i piace it FAR ABOVE ALL COMPETITION The snooss of the POPULAR MO > »THLY has been gnprecaientod, 80d 8 our to the exoslienoe of the 1 terary and Artstie Prep riments snd the vast emount of Tutercating, Entertainme snd Instructive | Matter if ¢ mtnins, Postpaid, $3 per Fear: & A Taen oops, 5 cents : re FRARK L¥YSLIE. Publisher, N. ¥. DRS. J. N. & J. B. HOBENSACK. THOSE APFLICTED WITH THE | or SEMINAL WEAKNESS AND MERCI | ALIZATI ION should not hesitate to consult J. NK, | and J. B. BOBENSACK, of #08 North Seocoad | street, Philadelphia divans from § A.M. 00 2 B I ML. and fom 60 8 P.M Advice free. fiead our pew book, “The Mrs tery, ®1c.” Price, 10. Alsn tregtment hy mail The Largest, Uh 3p AR o EFFECTS Hi- pt from mischief A Pp 510 Ll BIO. Tome, to ville, Now 4 eey, thwalk and k any Walking whnts bv ma "6. CO Groen ABT 8S TADGH! by the Piten | jutsly esis Fe od {IGATE wu Pensians OLD COINS’ { SORA YER, La abert Ave, to Raidiem & ——— Bendstamp fr Circalars QOL. L. RING. HAM .tt'v. Washington. D. C. WANTED, Send be Ostalogae of pros CHARLES J, mds, Yam, ior aid avon Hizgh-en 2 | prime asin em Cotloge, " Cals phis Terms only 8 Kitastion raja rita Tarmir talars HR “CHICHESTER'S ENGLISH" ferent Original and nd Only & Shop Tees es fing! Bopha ie PILLS! fos Ark a RE)
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers