Farm, Guidon and Household. The CarnlTorliim In an Uproar. Wlmt t lo on the Farm. Killing weeds is the grunt labor of the tuonth. And let it bet understood Hint unless the pasou is unusually wet the fnrmer wl,0 does not keep- down the weeds deserves all the evils that flow from foul lnnd and poor crops. good cultivator, aided by our dry winds and hot win, will kill ycung weed plants by the million. The main thing is to commence early before the weeds get possession of the soil, and continue to stir tho soil as often as any new weeds appear. In com and potatoes we have used the Thomas harrow with decided advantage. It may pull up or smother a few lulls of ' corn, but such a loss is nothing as com pared with the saving in hoeing. We are not sure that a light harrow, with fine, straight teeth would be equally effective. Corn will probably be much higher next year than at present, nud it will be well to take good care of the growing crcp. All that can now bo dono is to cultivate it thoroughly. Stirring tho soil, unless it is very light sand, tends to keep it moist. It develops plant food, and makes the land rich. It kills weeds, and it is now well known that so far from "shading the ground and keeping it moist," all grow ing plants pump up and evaporate large quantities of water. Summer-fallows are rarely necessary ou ugiit., sandy soils. We cnu kill the weeds by the frequent use of the culti vator in corn, potatoes, beans, and other noeu crops. On Henry Clv laud, a cood summer fallow will often prove one of thfl best means of cleaning the soil nud enrich ing it nt the same time. On such land it is usually better to plow two or three rimes man to plow only once, amide pena on tne cultivator to Keep down weeds and mellow tho surface. It is true that many good farmers adopt the latter practice with decided advantage for the time being. Whatever plan is adopted, make as many weeds grow as possible, and then kill' them. Get ready for haying. See that the mower is in complete repair, and if any extras are required order nt once. Look to the rnkes, hay-rucks, uuloading-forks and tackle. Early cut hay is confessedly better for milk-giving animals than ripe hay. For new milch-cows and ewes with Limbs it is very desirable to cut a few tons of clover just before it gets into full blossom. It will not yield as much per acre as if allowed to stand until the blossoms begin to turn brown, and the hay may not be so nutritious for fatten ing slock, but it is more succulent and more easily digested, and when fed in connection with a little meal will pro duce more milk. Keep the implements under cover, or if this cannot bo done wash or paint them with petroleum. Saturate all the wood work. The moro you can get it to absorb the better. Animals in the hurry of a busy season ! are npt to be neglected. Do 'not fall1 iuto this error. The success of a orood I farmer depends more on his skill and judgment in the management of his live stock than on tho mere raising of CIWM. Horses should not be taxed beyond their strength. Heavy plowing should be done with three horses abreast. It is a very effective team. We keep horses too long in the field. They would accomplish more by working steadily while at work, and being allowed longer to feed and rest in the stable. Grooming is of great importance. It is to a horse what a good bath is to a man. It is absolutely essential to'high health. Xver leave a horse for the night uutil ho is thoroughly cleaued. A little meal in the water is a capital thing for horses at noon, and night when they come home tired say a pint of meal in a pail of water. Agriculturist. Iron II list in Stocking. Wet the spot with milk, and then cover it with common sail. This will do if the article has not been washed. Another plan is to take an ounce of powdered oxalic acid, and mix it with four ounces of cream tartar. Keep this in a box. To use this, wet tle linger in clean water, dip it in the above now th. Animal lu C, f, haven In a T..itler.5torn . A Correspondent of ft New Vork tinner happened to be iu tho Carnivorium at Central Pntk just as a thunder-storm set. in, and it was very interesting to observe the various ways iu which tho animals were affected by it. For sometime pre vious to the first flash of lightning, and while tho rain was falling, many of the wnu ucasts snowed signs oi restless ness, nearly all of them turning their heads towards the window? and gazing out at Uib weather with an anxious ex pression on their faces. The birds in the wired enclosures behaved according to their several dispositions and in stincts. Not one of tho storks or her ons moved fram the position in Which it stood most of them With one leg tucked up pud their long necks sunk down upon their scapulars. The storm appeared to haveneitherterror for them nor joy, though it is probable that the sensation caused by the cool roin trick ling down their backs must have been rather agreeable than otherwise. Ou the contrary, the pelicans were all alive, plunging in and out of their tank, flap ping their wings in the clumsy, ungrace ful manner peculiar to theso birds, and gaping with their wide beaks as if ex pecting that tho rain might bring with it tho tsnditioual shower of fishes an nually imagined by barron reporters upon the rural press. At tho first flash of lightning nearly all tho savage beasts that were lying down stood up aud walked about in their cages. An Asiatic leopard, urged apparently by some iu stinct of tho famine which sometimes follows great convulsions of nature, took up in its teeth a large piece of raw meat, aud set to work furiously scratch ing with its paws in a corner of the cnge, as if to dig a holo in which to bury the precious morsel. At the first growl of the distant thunder the lions put their noses to the floor and took up the growl, which they probably imagined to be a note of defiauce from some dis tant lion on his way to attack them. Invariably, when the lions roar, the lit tle black wolf in his cage below chimes iu with his howls, making a din that fully realizes one's idea of a howling wilderness. Y ith lus snout elevated in .. iHiiiiiiiiiifirifirt' ' ... to the snVject in competition with tho little black fellow under the lion's den. A Monster Anvil, Probably the blggesi anvil ever made will eoon be iu use iu tho new rolling mills at Woolwich, England. For n long time past the engineers have bc'n busy nt the royal gun factories of the arsenal in constructing of this Titanic piece of ironmongery; and they are now depositing in its place the enormous plate which is to form the bed of the anvil block. This plate weighs of itself one hundred and seven tons, and had to be cast of necessity in an open mould. Tho surface which is to receive the anvil lay, therefore, downward, and when, after many weeks, the colossal casting grew cool, it was needful to turn the huge mass completely over. At the appointed fime an army of sturdy smiths undertook this task with hydraulic jacks and n combination of the strongest tackle ; before' right they had lifted the monstrous lump of solid metal, twenty two feet square, aud Bince then they have laid it on its bed upon the rock like structure of concrete mado to re ceive it. The anvil block to be mount ed on the huge plate will weigh only a trifle short of two hundred tons, and the steam hammer which will strike upon it is made of thirty-five tons of solid metal, tho blow nt its, full force ceing, ot course, tremendous, in lact, it is rather doubtful what will happen to Woolwich nnd vicinity when the mighty piece of mechanism gets to work. That the earth around will shake and the air roll with measured thunder seems probable, for nothing like this stupendous forge has ever been set to work since the bolts of Jove were ham mered. Thor's famous weapon was a driver of tiu tacks contrasted with it ; and, indeed, the old Norse god, for nil his huge strength, would be puzzled to throw this Woolwich tool, which, taking all its metal works together, weighs hard upon five hundred tons. Landing a Mississippi Steamboat. The following is an extract from a Denver letter of tho Danbury Xnws man to his paper: The river is much broader at this point than I expected to ! .p it but we pnnnnt. nlwnva linvp (Liners the air, and his mouth opened crooked- ! 0ur own way in this world. The chan- ly on oue sido, tins persevering little i nel is about three feet deep opposite boast gave vent to a succession of won derful howls howls with ragged edges to them, und jerking staccato passages and cadences which seemed predictive of impending doom. For sheer noise, without anything musical or sublime about it, there is not a beast in tho carnivorium that can compare with this small black wolf. The writer watched the hyenas with close attention, expect ing to hear them laugh, as they some times do when agitated or disturbed. They did not laugh, however, thinking perhaps that a thunder-storm is no laughing matter. When a flash of light- this place ; I don't know the exact width of tho river, but there is no doubt but that tho water is as thick as it is broad. The traveler should turn it over with 1ub foot and so look at both sides of it. All was bustle at the dock when I got there. The boat was taking ou its freight, and about thirty lively colored roustabouts, and one very excited nnd awfully profane white man was doing the business. That whito man was a study. He was the mate of the vessel, and what he didn't know about rhetoric could be held on the point of a knife- blade by a nervous man. Hie thirty Punctuality. We admirrt mmrtiialitv. and we can have but little patience with those por tions who are so regaruien ui u, uvuu in little tlnnt-R. as to coiiuuuhii.y wreim their word, under the impression that "It is of no consequence, it -tut an oe understood, and oinouut to the same thing in the end," as many often say, to exenso their everlasting habit of be ing false to their word. There are some people who seldom or never do as they promise. They habituate themselves to promise anything and everything, without tho least thought of fulfillment. We could nalii6 some persons f this sort, who in other respects nre worthy people ; but they cannot command con fidence, because their word is not re garded. We can mention young men of promise who nre constantly losing ground with their acquaintances, solely by being inattentive to their obligations and Promises in little thinifg. A man will soon ruin himselMn this way. In all business transactions, in all inter course with friends, in all engagements, let all do exactly as they say be punc tual at tho minute. That is the way to make other people po, and to make them trust us. Editorial Notices are so common that it is nlniost impossible for on edi tor to express his honest opinion of the merits of any article without being sus pected of 'interested motives. This fact, however, shall not deter us from saying what we think of a new addition to' the Materia Medica to which our at tention has been recently directed. We refer to Dn. .T. Walkeb's California Vinegar Bitters, a remedy which is making its way fntoiuare families just now than all the other advertised medi cines put together. Its popularity, as tar as we can judge, is not based on empty pretention. There seems to be no question about the potency of its tonic and alterative properties, while it possesses the' great negative recommen dation of containing neither alcohol nor mineral poison. That it is a specific for Indigestion, Biliousness, Constipa tion, and many complaints of nervous origin, we have reason to know ; aud we are assured on good authority that ns a general invigorant, regulating and purifying medicine, it has no equal. It is stated that its ingredients, (obtained from the wilds of California,) are new to the medical world : and its extraor dinary effects certainly warrant the con clusion that it is a compound of agents hitherto unknown. If popularity is any criterion, tltere can be no doubt of the efficiency of the Vinegar Bitters, for thd sale of the article is immense and continually increasing. Com. uiug came they threw their heads back j negroes had all they could well attend and looked intently at the sky, as if to ( to to keep up with the new oaths, and see whether it would open and send t ron 0I1 the casks. Without any cessation some other kind of horrible beast to chastise them for the sacreligious out rages committed by them eistwhile iu the cemeteries of their native Egypt. All the lesser cats, including the pumas and lynxes, showed many signs of d.s turbance during the continuance of the storm. Sometimes they would leap high up agaiust the sides of their dens, oue or two of them falling on their backs as they came down aud lying there as if they bobbed from the boat to the shore, and from the shore back to the boat, and all the while that Mississippi elocutionist danced around nnd swore. When I got on the boat I sat down on my baggage and watched thot man. Being aresidentof Danbury I thought I knew something of wickedness, but I was mistaken. The negroes were uni formly dressed in pants, shirt and hat. Some of the hats were ornamented with Dn. J. STAtMER, organist of St. Paul's Cathedral, London, has written a note to tho agent for the Mason & Hamlin Cabinet Organs, iu London, expressing his great satisfaction with them, find especially commending their tones ns 'remarkably pure and free from reedi ness. " Com. Some Ray that the uso of tobacco is mother form of liitcmpnrntice. b"t no man is intemperate that wear the Elmwood Collar. For sale at all furnishiug store. Com. Tub Bnowsa and Blacks produced by that sterliiiR preparation. Cjiistaporo's Excel tog Ham Dye, cannot be excelled by Nature ; it tint challenge eompariHOti with Nature's moet favored production, and doty detection. Com. Uolibed of Health. The richest of us li poor Indeed. The summer, pleasant and et Joynble as it Is, tt very apt to lay n open to this kind ff deprcd itton. The liitih temperature wenkeni the body and impair! it" vitality, and as the itrengih and energy of the tj tern decline, disease following lu the trail of do b Tty, obtxii a a ft-O'hold somewhere in thefrsine, lii tha stomach, perhaps, or the liver, or the bead, or the bowt'U, or the nerves. In summer, there- (nre, it is of great importance to keep tho body strong, and nil ill function in healthy actMly To promote, or rather to Insure this condition of the human machine, Moetctter'i Btomarh Hitters, the standard tonic of the age, Is the one thing need' fill. As a wholesome Invigorant It stand at the hi'nJ of all medicines of the d iss to which it be longs. But this is only oue cf its many valuable prop-rtirs. I'B mill and painless cathartic action Its anti-bilious properties, and the certainty with which It eliminates from the blood and other animal fluids all acrid matter that tends to produce or fi ster diseas", almost entitle this wonderful prrvnutive nnd curative, to the much abused ap pilliiion, a universal mecicirie. It is so harmless that the most delicate female invalid may take It with safety, yet sn pnwenut that no frm of bilious or nervous diseas, no phase of Ind'geBtton, no case of chronic constipation, no type ft Intermittent fever, can resist its sanitary operation. l MOTHERS stricken by the thunderbolt. Again j different colored ribbons : others no-din they would fasten their gleaming eyes 1 contained but a simple brass plate tne traue-marit oi a retired iruit can, upan some rosy, succulent child iu the throng, and crouch as if for a spring, but would immediately return to their feverish walk up and down the cage and their scrutiny of the weather with out. With the great sea-lion it was a joy ous time. What care these huge, slip pery creatures of the sea about the thunderbolt, from the wrath of which they can ebcape by merely plunging down in the bottom of the tank and staying there ? Before the rain came on these animals were reposing upon ! Beauty uuadorned is adorned tho most. i They were driven like sheep, first to the Serious Railroad AcciuVnt. Railroads, nud particularly the Great Western Railroad, are getting more and more careless every day of the lives of the unfortunate passengers entrusted to their charge. Recently a train on the Great Western R. R. went oft" the track at a switch at Copetown, and fully thir ty passengers were seriously injured. We trust that a carefnl examination of the matter will be made, and that the officers of the Great Western Company, who appear to be so careless of the lives of their passengers, will be made to suf fer as they deserve to. Toothnche proceeds from ague in the face, operating upon the exposed uerve of a decayod tooth. Hub the puru thoroughly with 'he linger, wet with Jnhnsnn' x Annilyne l.ini nunt, heat the face well, and lap a limine wet with the liniment on the face. iUko put a little nr tne unimont into the cavity oi tuo tooth on cotton. Com. The Markets. NEW YORK. Boef Cattle Prime to Kxtra HullockB$ First quality Second quality Ordinary thin Cattle.... Inferior or loweat tirade Wich Con 6 lIogB Live Dred Sheep Cottou Middling Flour K-tra We-tem State Extra Wheat lied Western I State No. 3 Sprint! Rye Barley Malt Oats Mixed We-tern Corn Mixed We-tern Hny traw Hops "ia, .as a .45 "TOs, Pork Mchb i t.arrt Petroleum Crude H'ta 9 Butter State Ohio Fancy lellow. .13 .ViM .11 X .i .12 V .ii .11 a in a .10 40.no a85.ot) .06 v .MS .ofa .07 x .05(a .07 .l'.i;a .sol 40 a 6.75 7.00 a l.M) a I.e. a 1."8 a l.oii a l.SO 43 ,f6 C.fO 1.00 l.f.5 I.R3 1.10 1.10 .Ml 1.10 1.40 .SO a 1.10 .10 .1 14.00 al0.7S .nava .OS Refined 10J,' ,50 .17 Western Ordinary 15 a .41f a .41 .84 The system frequently gets out of or der and Hxoukt bo at once regulated, cl-o other troubled win ensue : when phyxic i needed tnke Parson't J'urgalire Pilte : they are a safe, shore, then back to the boat. The least hesitation, the slightest misBtep, was wholesome, and natural medicine. Com, noted uy the orator und promptly in corporated into his discourse. He couldn't have been wore familiar were they his own fathers, which it is not likely they were. Eating Without an Appetite. It is wrong to eat without an appe- their platforms, oue at either end of the 1 Me, tor it shows there is no gastric tank. Immediately ou the bursting of ;Jmc m the stomach, and that nature the storm, however, they plunged him- j (lops not .nee(1 foo,ll. ail'l not needing it, ultuneously into the water, rolling about I tliere .bfi.'g no fluid to receive and act in it with 'apparent glee, and passing i P lt jt remains there only to putrily, j and repassing each other ot regular iu pow flpr nnd vnl, it nil til tnot nonilr. luan innr it. rntlinr iimitr until tlio ctniti .Ua- torvals, appears. Then wash the spot out with Vutr "J c-ut j. Ki iriui-i, line very iiiongni oi which snon d ui as it in a Kind ot dance; and ! ;mlr"' --ii ". '"" num cumuu pure water. Another plan is to wet the mark with yellow siilphiue ot am monium, which will blacken it. After a minute or two wash out the spot with clean water, and then treat the spot with cold dilute muriatic acid. After wards wash with dean water again. liLci'OMCiie l.niiiis. " I use kerosene lumps, and one of my best has become nujoiuted at the point where the glass and china come together. Give mo a recipe for a ce ment that will enable me to unite the parts. Auswi;r: In the first place you must remember that, to make a cement adhere to glass aud metal, both the glass nnd metal must bo oarefnlly heut ed. When they are very well heated indeed, common sealing-wax thinly ap plied will unite tho glass aud the metal, and when cooled the union will be uer- i without nu appetite for tho remainder : of his nle. Jt a tonic is taken to whet ' tlm mi, trtt it1 it ic n miutnl'an dmii.iiii 4'ii its only result is to cause one to eat more, when already an amount has been vorium, intensifying the thunder of the ' n beyond what tho gsstno juice is clouds and lions aud the aggravating ' ft,,p to prepare. howls of that irrepressible little black The obect to be obtained is a larger ,vif Vc-t 4i.. ,..wo, -i,;i. , snnwlv of trastric mice, not a laree i stupid little beast lay coiled up fast , npp'y of f"od ' lul whatever fails to in the lines ond curves made by the poor, half-finished creatures. boine times they would contribute their pecu liar harsh roar to the din of the carni- FlaGo's Instant Relief. Wan-anted to relieve all ltlieumatio Afllictions, HpruiiiH, Neinulyia. etc. The hent, the surest, and the uickeHt remedy for all Bowel Complaint, lie hof guaranteed or the money refunded. Com. Pennsylvania hue 2. Cheese State Factory 14 41 Skimmed 05 Ohio 12 Egh'S State 19 BCTFALC. Beef Cattle 5.T5 heep ft 3ri Ho Live 4.50 Flour 7.50 Wheat No. 1 Biirluit l.SK Corn Oota . Rye ttarley Laid ALIUKT. Wheat 1.00 P.ve St.tj HO eirn Mixed 60 Burley Stute H4 Oats State 64 riIILADET,PHIA. K'our-Penn. Extra R.fO Wheat Weatern III t J.C5 Corn Yellow 52 Mixed t.2 Pet70liim Crude Href dttle 05 Clover Heed 7.00 .:: Tiiuothy 3.7S EALTIMOUK, Ootton Low Middlings 1 Flour Kxiia 6.H) Wheat 1.50 Corn Yellow (3 Oiln 44 .90 .18 .28 a .Y a .lu a .12 a ,2j .f.2i a a 4 87 alo.oo a 1.41 .46 .40 . .85 1.00 For Loss op Appetite, Dyspepsia, Indigestion, Dcpres.-iou of Spirits and Gener al Debility, in tlicirvarious forniH, Fekro-I'iioh poitATKD KLixntof Calisava made by Caswell, Hazaud & Co., New York, aud Hold by all drag iriHtu, is the bent tonic. As a stimulant tonic for patients, recovering from fover or other sickness, it has no equal. If taken during the sea.on it prevents fever and ague aud other in termittent fevers. Coin. a 210 a .00 a .M a l.io a .50 a 9 25 a 1.70 a 2 ,.13) Reflnedl9?i a .oi a 8.00 a 8.75 a .18 a i.ir a 1 '.'3 a .'":! a (0 asleep through all tho racket and up roar, tho most imperturbable brute iu tho place was the Malayan tapir that has lately been added to tho collection. This tapir, while resembling the South American species in many respects, differs from it iu several. It is much larger than any tapir heretofore exhib ited here. The ordinary tapir, of the eastern and western hemispheres alike, is cf u uniform sooty-black color, lint this one is marked in a curious and beautiful manner, its forepart and ex- fect. The union must bo made, recol- ' treme hind-quarter being of a glossy i:.n. i.i-i.i-'i. . i-i i-..i i ! i.i. l ii. iccl, iiu very nine was, unci me tuner must bo applied to very hot surfaces. Iho ProlHs of Ocean Travel. It is estimated that 21,000 first class passengers will cross tho Atlantic this summer. The steamer go crowded on every day of departure, and iu some of the lines all the passages available have been sold up to the la.t of June. It is mortifying to think that all the profits of this very profitable aud incrsasing business go into the hands of foreigners of those very foreigners whom it is the pretended object of our protective tariff to discriminate against. The 21, 000 first class passengers who go across tho ocean and return this bummer will pay $(5,300,000 in passage money, and the whole Bum paid for passage this year by American tourists in Europe will uot be less than $8,000,000. These Americans will go in European steam ers there are no American steamers to take them and their passage money will go to build up the Euglish, Ger man and French lines that have driven our commerce from the ocean. Scarcity of Quinine. There was some time ago an outcry that quinine was becoming very scarce, that the trees from which it is prepared were being recklessly cut down, and that no adequate steps were being taken for ensuring a continued supply. Great attention has, in consequence, been paid to the cultivation of the cinchonas, aud many facts about them have been learnt. A paper on the cinchona was read before the London Liuuroau So ciety the other day, from the facts stattfd iu which it would appear that of a number of plants reared from seed from the 6ame . pod, some will produce an abundance of excellent quinine, while others will yield a bark which is quite worthless for medicinal purposes. black, while a little behind the shoulder a large patch of white extends along ! the hack nearly to the tail, and down ! the sides to a lino below the ribs, pre i seuting the exact appearance of a saddle cloth. The nose, or rudimentary pro boscis, of this great pachyderm is long er, too, aud more flexible than that of its American congener, than which it is in every respect a much finer and more interesting animal. It had been walk ing about its pen, catching up straws with its probocis, until the rain came on. Then it threw itself down upon its side with a lazy grunt, and streatching itself out to its full length, slept all through the hubbub of the elements and wild beasts, flapping its white-tipped ears occasionally when tickled by the flies. The manatee, or sea-cow, disappointed visiters greatly by declin ing to come to the surface in its tank, the water of which is covered with weeds and grasses, to resemble as much as possible the Florida lagoons in which the creature has its hubitat. Once iu awhile it would slowly proirude its broad nose, which looks somewhat like that of a hippopotamus, from among the reeds, probably to take in a fresh supply of air ; but of its general ap peuruuee no idea could be formed by the persons who kept assiduously watch ing for it to come up and be criticised. As for the bears especially the grizzly they are always imperturbable brutes, and the storm did not 6eem to affect their stolid nature in the least. Some of them were to be seen at rough pluy while the lightning was flashing and the thunder pealing, while others rolled themselves up into creat, heavy bolsters and slept through it all. The roars and howls from the carnivorium sometimes broucht responsive screeches from tho monkeys and parrots in the smaller buildings. It appeaped strange that the gray wolves did not howl. Perhaps they felt themselves incompetent .to do have any efficiency toward the cure of dyspeptio diseases. Tho formation of gastric juice is directly proportioned to tho wear and tear of the system, which is to bo the means of supplying, and this wear and tear can only bj the result of exercise. The efficient remedy for dyspepsia is work out-door work beneficial and successful iu direct pro portion as it is agreeable, interesting and profitable. JIall's Journal of Jlcaltt. Not ; Had a Itargaln After All. Two small, rocky islands in the Beh- ring Sea, says the London Globe, will soon have paid buck to the United States Treasury the whole sura expend ed for the purchase of Alaska. When the cession of this territory was grant ed by Russia, people bmiled nt the bargain made by the Americans. It was osserted that Yankee shrewdness had deserted Mr. Seward in the matter. He knew better, aud did not bny with his eyes shut. St. Paul and St. George s Islands, belonging to the Aleutian chain, have since been leused to the Alaska Commercial Company for seal .fishing, at a yearly rental of 55,000. A tax of nearly S3 on each fur seal skin taken and shipped from the island is also im posed. As one hundred thousand skins are exported yearly now to San Fran cisco and New York, a fruitful source of revenue is obtained from these two barren rocks. This territorial enter prise of the United States is therefore a great success, and will probably help to develop the idea so rapidly growing in America, that colonial possessions are us.'f ul for many national points of view. A Stave to Drink. Says the Provi dence Press : "A young womun whose unfortunate appetite for liquor has sent her to the State workhouse, was released on the probation which her good conduct justified, and appeared at the police headquarters to obtain some articles left there five months ago. She said she had obtained a chance to work in a good place in the country, and was only anxious to escape from the city and return no more. Fortified by a good resolution she yet distrusted her power to keep it, and besought the janitor to make haste that she might place herself beyond temptation. Said she, ' I didn't look to the right or left coming here, lest I should be enticed by the craving of my appetite and fall bads again to my lormer misery." Sergeant Bates is so poor that he can not publish a book, and is at present engaged at manual labor in the effort to scrape up bread for his sorrowing family- . .-' . '. . - i . PAIN! PAIN!! PAIN!!! WHERE IS Tnf BELIEVER Reader, you will find It in that f.ivoiite Home Kt-rardy, PKRUV DAVIS" 1'AIS-KIU.EK. It hat heen tested in evry vatiety ofelimntc. and by uliti-"t every nati'ju known tn Aiueile.ois. It is tite nl-nost coiiftiint companion and inestimable f. iend of tlio niis-ionmy und travt'lur. on sea und lnnd, and no aue sliould dame on oar lakegor rii-ert without it. Its Merits abe TJxstjhpa-fed. If yeu are sufleiinir from 1NTF.KNAL TAIN, Twenty to Thirty 7rnps in a Little II urer vwll ut most instantly eure you. There i nothing eqiud to it. lu a few moments it cures tVie, Cramps, Spaw.1, Heart-burn, Dinrrltohi, Dysentery, Flux, Wind in the It'tweU, mr Stomach, Vynpeitaiu, Sick Hcn'tat he. Cures CHOLERA, wheu all utucr Remedies Fail. Jt gives Jnstant Helief from Aching Teeth. In sections of the country where Fkver akd Auub prevails, there is lit remedy held in ifituter esteem. Fok Ff.vf.rawd Aoce. Tnke three tnblesnoon fult of the Pain-Killer in "bout hulfa pint ul het wutr. well sweetened with motisses us tlieutt.tck is cuminif on. BHtllinif freely the chest bat k and bowel with the Puin-Kitler ut the sulne tune. Re pent the dose in twenty minutes if the hist does noi su'li em i mil. ouuuiu 11 jn ouuee voiniiinir (ana it probably will- if the S'omuch is very tuull, take a iittle l'am-Ktller in toll water sweetened with duuar after each spuirn. Perseverance in the nbove treatment has cuied many Severn aud obstinate uases cf this disease. OBFAT " CnOl.BHA" EF.MEDT PAIN-KILLER. It is an Fxterna and Internnl Remedy. For Sum mer complaint or any other form f bowel disease in children nradults.it is an almost eei4ain cure, and has without d ubt. been moe successful 111 eu'tni the vuiicus kinds ff CiioLKR than anv other known remedy, or the most skillful puyfllcian. in mala. AI ica ana rniiiR. wnere tins ai eat ml dis ease is inure or less prevalent, the Pain-Killer is -onsiUered by the natives us well ns by European residents in those climates. A tHK HEMKDY; and while it is . most eiUi lent remedy fur pain it is a perfectly snfe medicine in the most u skillful lianas. It lias become a household remedy, f om the fact that it wives immediate and permanei t ri li-i. It is a purely vKetaMe preparation, made f oni the best and purest matei i. ijs. safe to keep and use in every f iniily. It is recommended by physicians and pel sons of all cl ii3 s. and to-day. utter u public ti iul oi ihiity ycuis-.the aveialfe life ff man it sta.nc.8 umivalled nnd u excelled, spreading- lis usefulness over the wide world. Dirnetifins accompany each Bottle. Price 25 ct., 60 cts., aud 1 1 per Dottle. FERRY DAVIS SOX, Proprietors, Providence, R. I. J H. HARHIB 4 Co., Cincinnati. O., Proprietor! for th Western aud Sooth Western States. For sale by all Uedtoiiia Dealers. TOB SAL! WBOLE3ALI BT JOHN P. HKNKY, New Yora il.O. C. GOOIl W IN t CO., Boston. JOHNSON, HOI.OWA 4 CO.. Hhilailelphia. KIDNEY MiEA-E, DR PcY. and nil iseasrs i f the Hi .neys anu 1 1 mue 1 , can be 1 ut ei by th ue of UUXT'S RtMtDY. Thfusunos that buTe 'een g vu "p ly iheir Phytic! ri 10 die, ba been spee iily u ed by the ueo' Host s kimeut- Sent t any .ddress a cur ly paced Ou reeeipt Oi "lie e lUr and twenty-rive ( -I.2.M chiiis bend f-r illus trated pamphlet 10 ILLIAM t'LAuas, sole Fiu pnelor, e . o v i.ienee, K 1. lies aud Ulilest Keinlly Meilicliie.-SiH ora's Liver Invigorator- purely Vetfetuble Catltar tie and Jume-fur Ovsiiepsia.Coi.stiputiou, Deuilny Blek Heartache, Bilious Attacks, and all derange ments ii Liver, etiiin.eh aud Bowels. Ask. your Druynist for It. IScuart oj itiiitutionn. Da 8HAU.BBKi'OKa'i il are not a puma iva. They 1 ure every f,,, m nr Fever and Aaueimmeui' at.ly, without any siekne.a or dieenjiori. "Foe Blotchb. prfPLES. Tkt-bb, Salt Rheum and si Skin Dis act Jiyne'a Alter-tiye is a sure remeuy. It m tries the blood, and remove! all tibsuuctiobi iu th, jmjim of the sluu. TEE GHEAT ALTERATIVE AND EL00D rXTJEIER. It is ret a quack nrfstrum, jTLo irgrcdirnts ere published (tneech tottio 01 irriiieine. It !is UFcd and rrcoir mended by riiyfucians wnerevir it cos 1 teen introduced. Jt will pcFitirrly cure PCI2CFVLA in ilax ariovn stages, 1111 EV MA Tl&M, "WHITE iS WF.L- 1.1ZG, UVIT, COlTIiE, I1EOKCIUT1S, Fi ll 1 O IS DELHI TY, JXC1PIEKI C'OAo T JufTlCA, andall dis enres pribirgficm rn impure Irrndith n cf the Llrt.d. Kend Ta for curI.csADALis Almanac, in E' tJ 1 1 . a: 1. - a . I a nicu ycu tn ui i;iiu ci mucHies il. .1 .... u.w . . . ,.uDbnvi.ij rhysicitris, Ministers cf the Gcppel rd ethers. Ir. B. Uilrcn Carr, of rsU'trore, rrve rc 1 ee iml it iu 1 1 stm cf P toiula 11. rt olLir d.tittia with. iLuiusatuuao ticn. Dr. T.C. Pngh, of Pslt'rrore, recom xrebda it to a.i lereotB ftiiflerino; with diFeaFCd Elooil, tsyire it is superior to arv jrijci alien 1 e I as ever tired. Eev. latney Ball, of Uie Baltimore 31. K. tthidtnie touth, rrya lie baa 1 fen fo n iiili It ntfitud ly lis ure, that ho cheeifully rcrrn niri s it to all bis lrici:0ssi d scrjus'utaucee. Crgycn tc., ru-fista, t ttoraotiF vilic, Yr.., i ryHl-ecrts failed to give .atiffsctirn. Bam'l O. Kcradaen, siiirrreerroro-, Tci i.i ixr, luvs it cured liim of Iiheu-o-atitm v he n all else failed. THE BOSADAXIS IN CONNECTION WITH OUll wtll cure Chills and Fever, Mver Complaint, Dys pepsia, ate. We (rnar-ntee Rofadams superior to all other Blond purifiers, baud fur lacscrlptlva Circular or Almanac. Address CLEMENTS A CO., 6 8. Commerce St., Eoltimort, Jif. Hem ember to ask your Drvse'st for rQSAPAj.t. Sr. Pierce's Flebaut I'urirative Follofs, or Sugax-CoatctiVLonGcntraied Hoot and ller'e.rl Jukc, Anti-biuviis Graniilo&ihe "Little Giant" Cathartic, or ullum in parti Physic, scurct'ly larfrerltbac. iiium tard BCC1, yet rcpr wining h much cathartic port'er as larcrcpuUive pills, b.g vioiitnrthiug and thorough, yd gentty a'Jkitti!y vfirmting. Ueliigeutlrely vcVtablo, no partic ular care is reo,uireJ riio using tlicm. For Jaundice, IJalr.c1ict Impure) Illood, Consfiiputiou Pal is. In (Shoulders, 'Jfigbtiickit of Cliel, Itizziucstu Stliii JUi ik tallon-i, ISad laste In loiihf 1-llloua uttacUt-. lutemal t'evr, llimii of Illoocl to Head, HloaVd Moiuach, lllpli Colored I'riiM'jVloomy Fureboil luga, take Air. PierVJ's reneis. Dr. J. Walker's tftlUornia Vin egar Bitters aro a purely Vegetable preparation, mado chiefly from tho na tive herbs found on tho lower rniiRea of the Sierra Nevada mountains of Califor nia, tho medicinal properties of which are extracted therefrom without tho uso of Alcohol. Tho question is almost dally asked. "What is tho caujo of tho unparalleled success of Vinegar Bit tersI" Our answer is, that thoy remove the cause of disease, and tho patient re covers his health. They aro the great blood purifier and a lifc-givinp; principle, a perfect Renovator nud lnvigorator of tho system. Kevcr beforo iu tho history of tho world has a medicine heen compounded possessing tho rcinnrknblo qualities of Vikeoab Dittkrs in healiue tho sick of every disease ninn is heir to. They nrn n. irnntln PurirfttiVO a3 Well as a Touic, relieving; Conircstion or Inflammation of the Liver and Visceral Organs, iu Bilious Diseases. The properties of Dn. Walker's Vinegar IIittkrs nio Aperient, Diaphoretic, Carminative, Nutrition, Laxative, Diuretic, Sedative, Counter-irritant, Sudorific, Altera tive, and Anti-Bilious. .i::irr-nil I litiiiSUUUN li ociniui w.v rr.Ai; Hitters the most wonderful lu- viffnraut that ever bii-tuined tho finking avMtrmi. No Person can take these Kilters according to directions, and remain Ion? unwell, provided their bones are not ie Rtinred bv mineral ljoteon or other means, aud vital organs wasted beyond repair. Bilious. Remittent and Inter inittent Fevers, which are so preva lent in tho vallevs of our great rivers throughout tho United States, especially those ot tue Mississippi, unio, iiissomi Illinois, Tennessee, Cumberland, Arkan sas. Red. Colorado. Hrazos, Xo Grande Pearl, Alabama, Mobile, Savannah, Ko anoke, James, aud many others, with their vast tributaries, throughout our entire country during tho Summer and Autumn, and remarkably so during sea sons of unusual heat and dryness, are invariably accompanied by extensive tle rancemcnts of tho stomach and liver, and other abdominal viscera. la their treatment, a purgative, exerting a. pow erful iutlucuco upou theso various or- gnns, is essentially necessary, lucre is no cathartic for the purpose equal to Dr. J. Walker i s iskgar hitters as tliev will speedily remove the dark Colored viscid uattcr with which the bewcls are loaded, at the same time stimulating tho secretions of the liver, and generally restoring tho healthy functions of the digestive organs. Fortify the body against disease by purifying all its fluids with Vixeaar Hitters. No epidemic can tako hold ol a system tuus lore-armeu. Dvsneitsia or Indigestion, Head ache, Pain in. the Shoulders, Coughs, Tightness of the Chest, DizzineBS, Sour Eructations of tho Stomach, Bad Taste iu the Moutu. Bilious Attacks, Palpita tation of tho Heart, Inflammation of the Lung, Pain m the region ot the Kid nevs, and a hundred other painful symp toms, are the offsprings of Dyspepsia, Oue bottle will prove a better guarantee ot its merits than a lengthy auveitiso ineut. Scrofula, or King's Evil, White Swelliin:-". L ifers. Ervsiprlns, Swelled Neck, Goitre, Scrofulous Inflaiiiiimlioin, Indolent Inflammations, Mercurial Affections, Old Sores, Liuplions of the Skin, Soro Eyes, etc, iu these, ;is m all other constitutional un eases. "Walker's Vineuaa Bitters hav shown their irieat curative powers iu tha most (.ihstinalii and intructalilB cusps. For lnliannnatory and Chronic Rheumatism. Gout, Bilious. Kemit tent and Intermittent Fevers, Diseases of the Blood, Liver, Kidneys and Bladder, these Bitters have no ruiiul. Such Diseases inn caused by Vitiated Blood. Mechanical Diseases. Persons en gaged in Paints and Minerals, such aa Phunliers, Tyvo-setters, Oold-huaters, and Miners, as they advance iu life, aro subject to purulysU of the Bowels. To guard api'iMt this, tuke a dose of AValkk.h's Vis KOAit ISittrrs occasionally. For Skin Diseases, Eruptions, Tet- ti-r. fNilt-Khimm, Blotches, fepots, nmpies, Pustules, Boils, Carbuncles, King-worms, Scald-head, Soro Eyes. Erysipelas, Itch, Sifini's. Hisiolonitioiis of tho Skin, Humors and Diseases of the Skin of whutever name or nature, aro literally dug up and earned out of the Kvsteui iu a bhoi t time by tho use of these Bittern. Tin, Tape, and other "Worms, lurking in the system of so many thousands, nre eU'cctually destroyed and reuiovtd. No svstem of medicine, no vevmil'uges, no an ilielmiiiitii s will free the system from worms like theso Bitters. For Female Complaints, in young sr old, married or ingle, at the dawn of wo manhood, or tho turn of life, theso Tonic Bitten display so decided an iuilmmeo that improvement is soon perceptible .Cleanse the Vitiated Blood when ever you lind its impurities bursting through the skiu in Pimples, Eruptions, or Sores: cleause it wheu you lind it obstructed nud 8lii(rjfish iu tho veins; cleauso it wheu it i foul ; your feelings will tell vou when. Keep the blood pure, and tho health uf the system will follow. IS. II. M l0I.J i- CO.. Drv.fririiiU ruulii.-n. Al-is., S.iii ri:,:n-iicM, t'.iUfiirnla, mid V'r. ot' W'a: tii!:';t(.:i ulnl 'ti:!lit":: M.-.. N. V. MoM l v till " i.it.t IV itl-rs. MOTHERS! MOTHERS: Don I fnil to rrrcnre MRS. WINSLOW SOOTH1NO SYRUP FOR CHILDREN TEETH lh'(J. Ttits valnnMe fir-pnratlnn tins hp-n rtsi'it wob NP.VRR-PA1L1NO BtCCKtS 1M THOUSANDS u( CASKS. It lint only rnTC titerniin rrnin pain, un( rformfs lie "Uimtl-n 'iu di.wpi. i nrr''' -riniry it iivi'S tdite-MU cttf-ri.; tu ine whole svsidoi. I ill a!$" instantly mlit rn Oilplng of the 12owls nn.) V'in:l O-ilic. We bell-T-ttth-UKRT Bull BUIlt'.ST r.RVl'.nY IK THK WORW ill "II ''" l DISKS! t.UY AND DIARHHOXA IN CTUU.Rl'N, wlinllur ft.ln m In, in teething; or any other rauee. UPpenn llpnii it, ujuiuoi-, i. win ititv rest 10 yourselves and Belief and Hoalth to Tour Infanta. snra and call for "MRS. WIKSLOW'S SOOTHING SYRUP." Bsylns? the fac-stmlle of " CVBT1S I KUKIN'3 ou the outside wrapper. Sold by Druggists tiirouehnut the World, Hrntltlfitl t'ltrnmn- rr" lied frfp for 'B Ms O AHdits viantca. HOLES A on., Mt'dfnru, Mass. Dr. Whittier, 8ttePFtSITrK,EET LonffcBt enpHRpa na moat sncfi RBini phyKirtpn fthee. Comultatton or parnplilot free. Cull cr to. H Y N LT No $10 TO $20 per rtav. Aiffntfl wontpd evpi vwlu-rr Piirtfn1:ir fico A H.H1:i(i (' Ht. lincMn TTrite fur Tricrj List to J. GREAT WESTERN ii. joti.-vsto.-y. 179 Fmltlir.cM Et., rtttilmrph. Pa. Brl-eph-l.oa, inir Print tlniip, 40 t' JfCOO. tiliblo hot (Inns. 8 to 150. H"itle nnn-. S3 in s'ln Hlfl.,. $b to 7'i. Revnlvi-rs. G tn -lii. Visxil. 1 tu 58. Hun M-itHrlal. FI-lilliK Ta- kip. I arqe itircolnita lo ttealcvt or dub. Ainiy nut s. H -iVim. i-ic , in UKhi or tradi'r fur. Omuls put by eaiii i-es C.O.IJ. to oh t-xamlned b.lore puiil fur. 1IOXEY ilnrit rupi'llu with St. tx il ,t Ki y Cheilc .11. llutflts ratiiliuiiis. siimiilfs aim lull niirtii - lll'i- 1. .iin-i,r. UT liiiiii.vor St . Mi..ti.ii. IJ TC I TV 1 EiiterprisiiiK yoittiK and BUlnli I-iklf". mlildlt'-aui'ii mt-u mill n. inttii aniliitinus to nnike a sih-cs-ihI turt in biiHi ness. are offered suin-rlor f-irllltu. i.r in rpni ii-i; tnrmflTps at toe sriiNUEKlA.N Ul fclNUSS COL LEGE, Milwanki e, Wis. CHICACO, MILWAUKEE & ST. PAUL RAILWAY. (Milwaukee & St. Panl KaiWay Co.) Extendttit? 1Vo?ii C'liirni-'O to ?f il wnnkre. I. a ClOMIfs V lllllllH. HllHt ill M, St . 111 111 All MlimenpiillM. Alan to MhiHnoii, linlii l 11 Clileiif AtiHlin OwittfimtH lmil H 'ly .Tin Mil viiyaiiu aiiiiiui Hit tii,iaiittvuie Alniiioet itlpoii- Iferliit una (KIiIionIi. Smbracina more uiihIiivhii i'eiit ren ami I'lvns ure Heiorlfl than any N rlhwt-bttu n lino. CHlCAiiW l)KI'OT-( inner t iii.nl niul MntllHit tlier1r-j (with PittHiiui. Fi i Way tie 4 PentisvlvHiiia.and thirHKn. AITdii A St. LmiiB It'yu.) MIIAV AI KImO OKI'OT- Coiner lieetl mid hionth Hnter Hlreei-. Coiiiiecttiitf lu Ht. Paul with all ReiiIwats diverff- ititf thence. New Yonif OrrrcE 319 Broadway. Ronton OrricK 1 Cmirt strt-ut. Okmkbali Offices Milwaukee, Wis. 8. 8. MF KHll.L. (i.'ii. Mnnfltpr JKO. C. OAUI-T, Ans't oeii. M:uiaKtr. A. V. il. CAHI'EN I KR. O. 1'. and T. Affrnt. WATERS' COM KKTO 1 laZ are the Ntyle ai er .st 1c.ij(i!ul in pcrlttt tn (one jute. ' A- ,HTt S'l OI" u the hent tver pluctfl iu uuy Uli It Jt j V'KitKrii tij a Our i tt of ten.-- ;U-tu-Jf.trly v((4ttl, the -TTaftCifcT 4 il v : V 1 a MAA 0.1. ' !M - A GREAT K-'J, OFFER. I-aii: sraAii:i.sA l llroti'l:lv. . 1.. icil ahf-wn of lOO PIAVOS an'l OKCASS'J -rit-class maker, ivcludinrj Hill !'' tremel; low price for cnnli. or '' balance in amnll montlitv .-iii'- vV'. ' Octnre flrsr-clns Il s 1 1 iiu- ?rnv-mriits, f"or8'i75 cwi. (!;" ,T "I" MH BLH.tl!KI OHt.A.VH. Slot i '. 1IO )-TOP, iar,. a,,:eanh. 11.1.1 .- I : 1 .1 CATA tOO UICS MAIIKD form tiamn. A :.,;, count fn Ministers, t'hurchet. iS'nr"'""- .s' 1 .'" ,"r oncs Socitiics, Lodges, etc. AdAiIS VA-T:U. WSr"jW rv ill! One or two. taV-n dailfor PimplcM, ItlOtt'lK Uuilai, NrrofiiluuM (i lent Alloctiou oi and Uoiim. No cheap boxes, but kept fresh and COIlts. by dniTe-ist. or ti turcd at the World's 1)1 80, 82, 84 and 86 W ot Scne a time, will cure urupiloiis. ea and VI ru- U.I11, Thi out it or paMc Doara ble ia vials. 425 iozen. Manufac- ouar', Nov L, Buffalo, N. Y. 'L ""ij 1 m MwrnismmMr 1 1 THE BMT INJME WORWJ5J-- hVILSONlSEWINGMAailNE G $40 Per VVck IS CA-I1 t uu Axilla K4iir- A COULTEM A CO ChHi Inttr.Mifh. llvtr Hull ISuckwIieats vomet)itiir new) Quali'yMiiU ytuU xirw rt iuarv. 86 bn. from 7 lb inw'i tepoiiuu la Awl 0pi. 4 111 by in ml 1. Hit. f4. PurticuUri fu ilaiiuii. H 8. Onuualu, ft. Eff. emoitt, Hei k C'n. Mam. HitHwtrei fur 10 on bend illieau I A v amitt"" HitHWt itwiiip. BTUDKNT 44 Y-rli fl ir. H Te'. ct T EA.-TEA AUfcN l'4 wantua i i tuwu uu cuuu ti v tu xt-11 TiA. or ucl uu iub wrilv a. for th Urtfctl Tea Cumpauy iu A uiurli a; impnrttira' prlvti auu uiUut iutjuit w ngttui. Rfif f reiicuUt. Aaaret., hOBEBT WELLb. 48 Vtmy ttuvvl, w York. Mualcal Almanac init free uu application UII.I. VOU KVKll CiO WEST! A wt-airrti NeufcukD ru 'wit inly uiv. tthein fuimAiinn t u wunt. lorf Ukcu rt-uuliti ly . i t ita iitiws wtli Hiipcar both tiiu tfod and tiaj fetittr?a uf which an imMiyratio-pvvr will liot tv. Tha ly it. fltmiU frua. Weekly. year. : l.fo. tlx biui., ri.uj; u liy.unr yttti n.gu, inn ra., tl.'tl REWARD For any cava of Bltnd-Bleedtm in, or Ulcerated flLE KEHKUX futlt M A I.K or FF.M AT.K, f.5n jltttm.p.cymt nt.Hl hon e.dii.'.-nr.tMiii.iK ; nnciipil.tl r trnr. d: iUll I. ;truc! tout ..t.tl V.ilii.ihlf. i;.i-kt-r .i inotlsK -nL -bj uidil. A.iur.'f-a, with : .ijc . -tit rcfiira .ut. $5to$20j?L; y I Auems wanted I All thtsso worlcine noimle ut either B"X. vnitu or old, make more money at win k fur ii lit their pare momenta ur all the tiirn than at auvtliinv lne I'urtU ulaii free. AUdreby Q. BT1NSON & CO., Port land, Me. Dr. Whittier, ".S,"'" Lonceat eiiunucd and meat giuo-H ii il ilivbi( tan of the nut. Couiultatiom or iai;ipbirt free. 6al or write. Thea-Nectar IS A 1'UKR Witu tne Grt'i'ii lua I'iuvi.r. The best Tea liniiiirteil. 'ur cule ever ywhti u. And fur sule wtii'U'H.iln in.ly by Ihu O Ht.AT ATI.AST1P di I'.M-ll'ir tVA ( O No. 1 ! Fultun Bt. & ;i s t Chun h ., New y. rk. P. O. H. x. A.sia 8 iml fur Thi-a-Vi-i-titT f irrnlur' Jills' lKAL'n WKEK AliKNTa WAJSTIiD O I M"Mr huaiiiebi leuituiiatu. 1 rmn tr WIlH'I'M.ht lii'llitj. Mo H- x i PHYSICIANS OPINIONS. Dr. O. Knurr. Auburn. DeKalb Co., lud., a pro tUtng pbyaiciuQ of twenty yuart' tuudlag, Kiihni"i Eerb Bitten Uamedlcioelbat Icaoooiv ftcicntiuualy rcommeod. and know from x,eriencc that tt U a guod reut-Mv. n. a. jiorriaon Aorta fcaf.t. toil Co.. U1 : Our DniRgUta tiere bava a guod demand for MISHLER'S HEKB BITTERS. I hav Uiit-d It Id m nrm- .i.h D,A P..i,. aud do nut be i taw u recomoieud n &a a valuable remedy, par Ikalarlr In atfttctlom of tbe kidiicva. J. T Bilker, M. l., LauoatUT, Pa.: Durln the paat tea Tear I have hA fremit-nt otm.irltitiiii.-k i.t ims.hiiiii the lftot of MlbHLEB'R HERB B1TTEHS. I h known il to prove lucccMful in tnnuy caaea wbt-rc AUopa'bic. Iiou.oatbi and U-rdropatbto treatment bad fatk-d. 1 conider tt the moal Qicaclout remedy ditcovered for lUf-ea aiialng from a DUurdertd Stomach, titer, Kidneri or Boe)i. THI IATI HON, THADDEUt STEVENS, Pronnnocea MISBLEH'S HEKB BITTE11B "tbe nest wonderful combination of Medicinal Hert-aiie evi-r aw." He iuf fered for many veara from an organ la affection of the kidbevi. and hundreda of bia frleuda at Washington ant I.ancucter know that ha attiihutod the iirnlnogutlua of bia life to thia UrotU Dluretifl. KothioR rwltived him. 1011 ONLY U I0TIUS. BEARINQ AIOVE T1ADE HAR1. Great Offirt Prtuii4 Friilmal ttrw B lnnl I'll 24 fa4e l ain lyi.- 6 CIS. J Jil GOULD 20 Brmiitl. Ki St.. B i V BOYS Howard AaoclaiUou FUlludulitlika.. kn. lind-Bleedlcg! ItCa I An luatitutiuu huvtug a high rnit, u,.i foi Uuin.r led tilea cuat ti 1 able cow u ' i ofHrntonal skill. A tuK Bur (ui mrH it ia en I soun. J 8. HOUGHToN, M. D. E-t ve for V"un- and DOtbtua !, i fcfi' ihu fmot (uuige. Auureaa. HOWARD Abbi fared eapreeily to cure the Vil. i and DOtbtua I " Uu 1 ' - tf- Auureaa. HOWARD AHSk OLD SI AtL PftUtiiOlbTS. J'ttlCB 1. 1 tIATlON, Buutk him tit., fkii-mviv