I- f f J r. v I 7 a t t: o ti ti ii w u (1 I c D ia HU in O fa in 'a pa in P n i U ii Jrc t3 ac th CO JO fa i ter FOK THE FAIR SEX. nitnai of Hlo-. Tlie following is ?id to 1)0 thfl lan gimire of gloves: "Yea" is said by lotting one glov fall; the gloves aie rolled in tho'rieht hand to say "No." If you would liavo it understood that you hftvo bcromo inftiffcrent, r-attijr un Klovoyour left hand. rIo indicate that you desire to be followed, strike your left shoulder with the shoves. " 1 do not love you any wore,' ia pronounced by striking the gloves several times against tha chin. For "I. hate you," turn the gloves inside out. " I should wish to be beside you," is said bv smoothing the gloves gentlv. To ask if you arc loved, the left hand is gioved, leaving the thumb uncovered. If you wish to make the charming confession, " I love you." both gloves are let fall at once. To give a warning. "Be attentive we are observd," the gloves are turned round the fingers. If you would show tlmt you are displeased, strike the back of vour hand against your gloves; "furious," you take them away. , A ftnehess' Clothes. A public sale of the personal effects of recent deceased duchess took place lately in London. The catalogue, says the London Queen, describes a vast number of articles of wearing apparel, all of which belonged to the late dowa ger duchess of Somerset, , the second wife of the eleventh duke of that title. A notion of the extensive character of this wardrobe is given when it is stated thatof shawls alone there were no less than 5iH) specimens, while there are 500 lace and other handkerchiefs, 600 pairs of silk hose and 2,000 pairs of gloves, be sides other articles in like proportion. These are divided into no less than 1,600 lots. Most of them appear to have never been in use, and scores upon scores of handkerchiefs remain neatly folded as when they were originally purchased. In almost every case the different effects bear a ducal coronet and initial embroidered upon them, but be yond this there is nothing which can be supposed to give an adventitious in terest to any of them except in two or three instances., Tea (iomii.. Children's Drcitci. The latest novelty in this kind of house dresses is the recently imported " tea gown," a new garment that can be classified neither as a dress or a wrap per, which has been imported from Eng land with the afternoon tea or kettle drum. These gowns are made exactly after the pattern of those worn from the time cf the first empire, when a revival of the classic Greek dress was attempted, which lasted until about 1840. They are made of tinted twilled silks, the waists under the arms, no fullness in the skirts, sleeves close-fitting, with slashes and pus at the shoulders; neck square, and a puff, ruffle or tucks at the edge of the short skirt. The idea origi nated with the iEsthetic club, of Lon don, and has received much adverse criticism outside of artistic circles in England. It is the almost universal custom to keep children in white dresses until they are five or six years old. Their short dresses are made of the finest ma terials and worn over colored slips of silk, flannel or silesia. The neck is high, finished with a lace ruffle, or wide collar and a square yoke, with tucks, lace and embroidery. Th skirt is gathered into this and finished with one or two ruffles. A beautiful dress of real princesse lace i3 made into a plain slip, witli the pattern forming the sleeves, and upper part with a ruffle four inches deep of the same lace. From these through all grades of value, according to the material used, they may be had, finished in the neatest manner, the plain slip of cambric, with tucks and plaits, costing forty-eight cents. Infants' cloaks are made with the double cape of cashmere or matellasse silk, with white silk fringe edging both capes. Handsomely embroidered, they are $38, Long dresses are made with' high neck and long sleeves, witb a square yoke and trimming on the edge ot one or two lace or embroidered ruffles. The handsomest are made of real Valen- ""ciennes lace and linen lawn, and are valued at Those with robe front of lace and puffing are $35. Handsome naineook robes, with fine embroidery, are from? 2.90 to $20. Colored flannel long dresses are a sensible addition to an infant's wardrobe, costing from $1.65 to $5. They are white, pink and blue. Embroidered cashmere shoes are also in pale colors and are made with flexible soles. Some of the handsomest and most durable of children's short dresses are made of serpentine braid, crocheted into strips and made up with cambric or linen. JVcto York Herald. Industrial Secrets. A century ago what a man discovered in the arts ho concealed. Workmen were put upon an oath never to reveal the process wed by their emplovers. Doors were keot closed, artisans going out were searched, visitors were rigor ous y excluded from admission, and false operations blinded the workmen themselves. Tho nwteries f every craft were hedged in by thick-set fences of empirical pretensions and judicial affirmation. Tin royal manufactories of porcelain, for example, were carried on in Europe with a spirit of jealous ex clusivencss. His majesty of Saxony was especially circumdpect. Not con tent with the oath of secrecy imposed upon his work-people, he would not abate his kingly suspicion in favor of a brother monarch Neither king nor kiug's delegate might inter the tabooed v,hh of Mtisson. What is erroneously called the Dres den porcelain that exquibite pottery of which the world has never seen it3 like was produced lor 200 years by a pro cess so secret that neither the bribery of princes norths garrulity of the opera tives revealed it. Other discoveries huve been less successfully guarded for tunately for the world. The manufac ture of tinware in England originated in a stolen secret. Few readera needed be informed that tinwi.ro is simply thin iron plated with tin by 'na tipped into the molten liietaj. In theory it la an easy matter to dean the surface ot iron, dip it into a bath cf boiling tin, remove it enveloped with a suvery metal to a place for cool ing. In practice, however, the process is one oi the most difficult in the arts. It was discovered in Holland, and guarded iroin publicity wiih the utmost vi;ii!H'e lor more than half a century. England tried iu vain to discover tne bccitt untilJsnit-t Sherman, a Cornish miner, insinuated himself maiter of the treitt, uud brought it home. The secret of niiuiufiiciuring i-Hhi Bteel was aldo tUttiiliiiy obtained, and is now within i'.A- iiiu'ii of all artidna. Trade Lut. FAR Tf GARDES AND HOUSEHOLD The Piat Pssstwrs. We always have the best success with breeding sows when they are allowed to feed on grass. This is the only food they require until the young pigs are a week or two old, when milk or meal of some sort may be ci- en to them to increase the flow of milk If they require It. Sows thus manaeed are never uirlv and never destroy their pigs. Why" Because they are in a natural and health? condition. The grass Also increases the flow ot milk and is, quite often, sufficient food for a sow while rearing her young. Young pigs soon learn to eat the grass, which is alike natural and healthful for them. We never have a caso of scours or thumps among young pigs when run ning in pasture. The grass serves to counteract the effect of corn, and many pigs on grass can be fed heavily with this food without the injury which it would do them if confined and deprived of grass. Our experience has convinced us that no farm is complete without a pig pa ture. Clover is the best of all the grasses for this purpose, and next to it we prefer orchard grass for the reason that it starts up promptly alter being eaten off.is the earliest in the spring and is relished by the pigs. It is not necessary to have a special field for the pig pasture, but they may be al lowed to run in any lot if properly in closed . There should be water in the field and planty of grass. A patch of sweet corn sowed in drills will be found convenient to supplement a short pas ture in the late summer. There should also be another patch of turnips or other roots into which the pigs may be turned for fall breeding With the three auxiliaries of pasture, sweet corn stalks and a root patch, the cost of rear ing and feeding pigs may be reduced to less than one-half of their expense when tl ey are confined and fed in pens, to say nothing about their better condition for food. Rural New Yorker. llapld Churulus Undesirable. As a rule the best batter is produced by using a moderate motion in churn ing. The operation at the commence ment should always be slow, in order that the cream shall be well mixed to gether. After thin the motion may be faster, but its rate of speed should be made uniform and adapted to the con struction of the churn. The objection to very fast churning is that the larger butter globules come first and are gather ed into lumps before '.he smaller ones are churned ; hence a loas in quantity if the ciiurning is stopped at tnis point, and if continued under a very rapid motion the butter globules t hat come liist are liable to be injured. We have never seen anv of the so-called " three-minute churns " that uniformlv made pood hnt.tpr lv churning in this short time. Of course there is a difference in creams: that from the milk of Jersey cows will ordi narily churn more quickly than cream from the milk of common cows. But under anv circumstances very rapid motion tends to do injury to the cream, antl especially is this the case when the butter begins to come. In churning, the object sought should be to have ail the cream churned alike and in about the same time, and when the butter appears in a granular form the churning should cease. Ot course we shall not pretend to say that inventions and processes for chnrning very quickly cannot be brought out, and which will make uniformly a first-class butter; we can only say if there be such a churn one that is made to do its work, for instance, in three minutes, and can in that time produce the best butter we have not yet seen it. Dairyman. The Difference, From actual experiments made it is demonstrated beyond a doubt tint the grinding of grain adds one-third to its value lor feeding purposes. This is a matter of a good deal of importance to the agricultural community, and, in fact, to all classes who have animals to feed. As far as dollars' are concerned, terhaps it is not of so much moment in the Northwest, where grain is so cheap and so plenty, as it is in other portions of the country, where less grain is raised, but it is worthy of the consider ation of those who have not full bins of oats and corn. Since the introduction of cheap feel-mills, it is the province of every larmer to own one, with which all grain intended for the stock on the farm could be ground. Hecipea. Good White Cread. Ha.f a pint of nice light bread Eponge, one heaping tablespoonful of sugar, stir in graham flour enough to make a stiff batter; let it rise, then stir it down and put it into ihe baking tins, let it rise again, then bake a little longer than white bread. Use good yeast but no soda in this bread. Cheap. Good Sponge Cake. Whisk together four eggs, a larife cupful of powdered susrar, add lemons to taste; also three tablespoonfuls of water, half a large cupful ot tlo r, with two tea spoonfais of baking powder in it. Thoroughly but lightly mix, adding more water it required. Hake this iu buttered tins or fancy molds. Babxet Soup. Boil one pint of pearl barley in one quart of stock till it is re duced to a pulp, pass it through a sieva and add as much more stock as will be required to make of the consistency of cream; put the soup on the fire; when it boils stir into it, off the tire, the volk of an egg beaten up with a gill of fresh butter, and serve wun small dice ot bread fried in butter. Ikish Potato Pie. One pound mashed potatoes rubbed through a colander; one-half-pound butter, creamed with sugar; six eggs, whit's and yolks separately; one lemon, squeezed into the potatoes while hot ; one cupful of milk one teaspoonful of nutmeg, and the same of mace; two cupsful whita ouaar; bake in open shells of paate; to be eaten cold. C'om iiion Seme in the Ilousehold-Ma,rion. Ambergris. The largest lump of ambergris ever known was in the possession ot the king of Tidore, and purchased ol him by the Dutch East India company. It weighed 182 pounds. Another enormous piece of 13i) pounds weieht was found inside a whale near the W indward islands and sold for $3,5oo. The true anibergrU, which is a morbid secretion of the spermaceti whale, gives out a fragrant smell when a hot needle is thrust into it, and it also melts like fat, but the counterfeit often sold instead of the real thing does not present these features Men engaged in whale fishing are on the lookout lor ambergris, and usually find most of it in the torpid, sick or very kdn fish, consequently it Would appear to be what all medical practitioners say is, the product of a diseased liver . RemnriaMe Instances of Instinct. Muskrats, in their winter excursions under the ice to their feodlng grounds, which are frequently at groat distances from their abodep, take in breath at starting and remain under the water as long as they can. Then they csn riBfl to the ice, nnd breathe out the air in their lungs, which remain in bubbles against the lower Bur face of the ice. They wait till this air recovers oxygen from the water and the ice, and then take it in again and go on till the operation has to be repeated. In this way they can travel almost any distance. This is really an intellectual operation. The fierce dragon fly, with 12,000 lenses in his eye, darts from angle to angle witb the rapidity of a fl ishing sword, and as rapidly darts back, not turning in the air, but with a clash reversing the ac tion of his four wings and instantane ously calculating the distance of the ob jects, or he would dash himself to pieces. We cannot tell how the pupa of this fly came by the instinct that prompts it to leave the water and hang itself up to dry- But we may be able to explain this quite as soon as to un veil the oricin of the hooks by which it hangs itself up. Old song birds teach their tunes to the young by giving them music lessons, which are not paid for by the hour, and hawks drill their offspring in hawking. A sparrow, whose leg was kindly set by a lady, brought another sparrow to undergo the same operation, and spent the winter n ghu for years in the apart ment in which she had. received the kind treatment, flying out every morn ing and returning every evening, exoept during the breeding season. Did you ever observe the behavior of a kitten when it is given its first mouse? Up to that moment kit has been only the gentlest of creatures, and you wouldn't imagine that her purring voice was capable of a harsh sound. But, in possession of that mouse, behold the change! Her eyes snap and burn with lurid fir , and her growls are vengeful. This is real instinct. Some little swallows once built a nest against a lime kiln. But the wall was so warm the clay soon cracked, and the nest fell down. Immediately thev built it over, but again it fell. Not discour aged, they tried it a third time, with no better success. They built a fourth nest, which remained firm, and in it they reared a little brood . They had found and worked up a kind of clay that would stand the heat. They came back the next year and repaired their cottage with the same clay. This they did also the third jea. Can swallows reason? A Common Mispronunciation, "There goes ParneU, the Irish agita tor 1" observed a gentlemen on the seat before me, in a railroad car. "ParneM, is it P" replied his companion. ' That is Mr. ParneW," whispered the lady be hind me to her (laughter. " Mr. Parn eli. Ah!" Now here were four people, educated people evidently, who in the coarse of two minutes mispronounced a plain English name. It is always an noying to heir the accent misplaced on a name, whether local or personal. We Americans seem to have taken a lancy for throwing the accent in family names on the last syllable, if possible in defi ance of all sound rules of good sense or good taste. These two qualities, by-the-bye, are very closely allied. Youcannsver have good taste with out good sense as the foundation. False taste is inevitably absurd. Now this common mispronunciation of all names ending in ell nas neither good sense nor good-taste in its favor. It is opposed to the spirit ot cur mother tongue. Last year I had a nephew in lovo with a charming girl, MissBrownell; of course she was Lily Browned to her lover. For three months I heard Tom mispro nounce her name, or thatof her lamhy, a dozen times a day. A few months later, as ill luck would have it, his sister was courted by Harry Bedell, pronounced . Bedell of course. Now Brownell and Bedell are good English names, and should have a good English pronunciation. Bedell is no doubt the same as Beadle. Many Eng lish names ending in ell were originally connected with the common nouns well or wall. The governor of the State of New York to-day is Governor Cornell. The uni versity in Western New York is Corn ell university. We have known a Judge HubbeJJ. LiddeZJ and WaddeZZ are in stances of the eame fancy. LitteM' magazine travels over hall the country. But the propensity to throw the accent on the last syllable is not confined to names ending in ell. Barnard is fre quently pronounoed Barnard, Tricketts becomes TrickeWa, General Steuben is General Steu&en, in spite of his German birth. That distinguished gentleman, the present secretary of state, is spoken ot, in rustic parlance, as Mr. E-varto. Not long since we were shown a collec tion oi Wcgarth. A year or two since were introduced with a flourish " to an assemblyman from a Western State," the Honorable Mr. Hubbard Oh shadj of old Mother Hubbard. Al' antic Monthly. Extraordinary Case or Fasting. The Pall Mall Oatctte relates the fol lowing extraordinary story: A re markable case of fasting is reported lrom Ipswich. The wife of ai obbing gardener, named Lock wood, it is stated, has not eaten a pound of solid food throughout a year, and for the last three montus has had nothing but a few drops of weak tea, amounting in quan tity to less than a pint per month. She is reduced to a mere skeleton, unable to move her Lend oropen her eyes or mouth, but with her right arm is able to shift lier head from one side to the other. She can moisten her lips with the fingers of her right hand, but beyond this she is unable to move, all the rest of her frame being apparently dead. Sue faints at the least excitement, and lies for hours, and even days, in a state of coma. In one instance she lay so for a fortnight. When not insensible, her mental facul ties are almost unimpaired. A surgeon who has visited her says she suffers from pressure on the brain, and at times en dures intense pain in the right temple. Coal Mines Under the Sea. A number of English coal mines are being worked under the ocean. In Northumberland the net available quantity of coal under tue sea is esti mated at 403.000,000 tons, and on the Durham coast under the sea, including a breadth of three and a ball miles, with an area of sfventy-one square miles, 134 500,000 tons. The latter mine is in a vein of an aggregate thickness of thirty feet, distributed in six seams. Engineers are considering how it can be worked successfully in the future. La Frtte Daily JonrnsXJ Anxtong to Rise. There's plenty of room upsUlrs, as Daniel Webster said to the young law yer anxious to rise, but Respondent c! Lis chance to do so; but no one need injure himself either in climbing the stairs of fame or those of his own house or business place. The following is the point: Mr John A. Hutchinson, Supt. Downer's Kerosene Oil Works, Boston, Mass., writes: Mr. Patton, one of our foremen, in walking upstairs last week sprained bis leg badly. I gave him a bottle of Si. Jacobs Oil to try. Housed it and an almost instantaneous cure tas effected. A very slight declivity suffices to give the running motion to water. Three inches per mile in a smooth, straight channel gives a velocity of about Ihree miles an hour. The Ganges, which gather the waters of the Himalaya mountains, the loftiest in the world, is, at 189 miles from its mouth, only 800 feet above the sea, and to fall these 800 feet in the long course of the river is said to require more than a month. Chldago Tribune. Thomas O. Thompson, Esq., the Mayor's Secretary, who, some few days ago, slipped on a banana peel and sprained his knee, writes that St. Jacobs Oil " acted like a charm." A stock farm in Texas hasben fenced in an original wsy. A man bought a peninsular of 240,000 acres, projecting into the gulf of Mexico, and built a board fence thirty-one miies long across the neck, and in the inclosure has 30,000 head of cattle and sheep securely corraled. It l Worth a Trial. "I wrts troubled lor many years with Kid ney Complaint, (i;nvel, Aa.; my blood be came thin I was dull Hinl inaottve; could hardly ctawl about, and whs an old wornout man all over, and could t notoing to help me, un il I got Ilnp II .iters, and now I am a boy H;uiii. My blood and kidney are all right, and I am as active an a man of th.ii tv, although I am 72, nnd I have no doubt it will do as well for others ot my aj0. It is worth the trial . ( Fmher.) Civilization is slowly creeping West ward. Dead wood, Dakota, a pi ace that had no r xistence a few years ago, now pays $60,000 annual Interest on its city debt. A Care at Tat Siocities without number ior the cure of C'ainirh have been extennively advertised, and douhtlest there is some virtue in all, but the i vidunce is overwhelming that Kly 's Criam lliilin toes inorediieoily than any other to tho neat ol the d.gease, and though it it a com)) natively new dimoveiy it has re sulted in more cuun within the range ot our observation tlnn ul! t lie othorg put together. Wilkrthatrt Pa ) U ioi-Lraler. Having bet-n atllictud with Catarrh and cold in tho bend, 1 tnu.l a grett many remedies without any hem lU-ml etlpi'ts; at lust 1 used Kly'tiCream ilulni. which ilTomnally cured me. 1 consider il a duty I owe pull" 'ring humanity to recommend it to others Buttering lrom the same, almost on' vcifal. American disease. W. H. I. Hillnrd, dent al, Uordentown, N. J. Trice, 50 cents Kly's Cream Balm Co., Owego, N. Y. Will mail it lor 60 cents. A game ot baseball is like a buckwheat cake a great deal depends on the batter. A ohnlUMigtt to Sawing Machiim M.n. Tie ITiiiit-d b'nW- Miiiiulitctu ing Compuiiv, ot Clii cu, 111., tl inn that liitvi- sawing machine v.i 1 nw Ioh irt-ier a 'it lister than any other machine in America, and t ie Premdent ot the company has donosited $1 000 in the bank m Preston, Kvan & Co., ot Chicago, as h chal lenge Rua'uat any other S iwing Machine madti. ami a like deposit. Tiiere are several otln r Sawing Machines, but so tar none ot them have accepted this challenge. wheat no use MEDirinr.. PR. TOUIAS VKMKT1AN nORSE MXIUKN'T In pint bottU-a at 1IO cents; &2 year. esUI'lliel. It la tlis rest lu the world for thecu'e ol folic. OMSorei, Sprains, lirulsen. Sore Throats, tc. TOUIAS' CONDITION POWIIKHS are wairnnted to cure Distemper, Kever Worms, Ii t; Klve a Hub coat; li.ore 'e tho aiipettto mi l r'emigtf the urlnarv orKaus. Ortlfhtl to iy C I. Mi iMnlel, owner of nne of tlie fastest ruimin liorset In the world, ami i.iw others. a5een's. So,d by Uruu- KlsH. I)t 'ol li Murmy street. New mx WWHf 'it7'Hl litlsj.Vpsyf bi.-JliJLjS ..Hill ar, .tmm uHy' CtOO PRESENTS For sVvklatt Bit will Saw a Fast and Easy mm this one. . 'This la the King- of Baw Slaohtnts. X caws off St Toot lor la S .minutes. -0,000 la use. Th cheapest maohin made1; and fully warrants!. Clroniar free. GnJtsd Statss Utnufteturiog Cs., Chisago, IU. QlDOn On U "ten deposited hi tlieUouk SV-1"" " " of Preston, Keaa 4 Co., ot Chicago, 111., as a wager that the above sawing machine will saw usizb and risics than any other machine In America. PNCYCLOPtDIA 1 tTIOUETTEIBUSIHESS This It the cheapest and only complete and reliable Work on Etiquette ttuj liutiuebtt and Sociai Form, it teiU how to perform all tlie varloua dutlea of life, aud how to aitfK'Jir to the tett advantage un all occatiloua. Afcrsftttt Wautt-il Scad fur circular! conuluing ft fun d'BLTip'.kn "t the work and extra term. toA nU. Addrew Natjo.ial Puulisuiau Co., Philadelphia, Pa, CELLULOID EYE-GLASSES. Representing the choicest selected Tortoise Shell and Amber. The lightest, handsomest, and strongest known. 80 d by Optioians and jewelers. Made by 8PKNCER OPTICAL. M F G. CO., 13 Maiden Lane, New York. omplete udanures FOR EVERY CROP. Contalnlnx lust tb plant food and tn the exact pronoiw tlons required for turn crop. BTKlCl'l.V PltlMK ACiHR'l Lll KAL CUKM1CALS. blalOILT PI KK ChoiND Ho.i. tiend fur cuculaia, wlilca mi facta luleiesliiig to Fuiuiera, II. J. 1UK Ell & UR0.. 215 Pearl St..!?.Y. General Merchandise SiSSSf.fSSi other Information is to thSTarluu uaikcla forwarded he repealed. Currespoiideiue solicited. Kl'baaXi. ti. WlltUy.N', 1 13 Bouiu t';..;,l St., i'hi'adelpUU. I f.PL0Yf1 ENT luu prolcrreX 1 i 4ata. Vt A J c. a v v t iraMta. auiiptNita fea-S sMsvr 1 MromjtiT SLOAN 1 a a. cihiss.i. . i'iliAlrtsillsjisMais.Mg,'i, iMMrinlril MrtflrtllMiaslasgsW-.MhrfrfUflsi TTIrTted fur Clersrrmesi. ' "I believe it to lm all wrong and even wioVed lor olfrgfrnen or other public men to be In. I into riving ttimonl!s to qnnnk doctors or vile stnlfs called medieinrs, but ilifln a 1-Pnlly met ittirions article Is marie np of com mon valnnble remedies known to all, and ttm ad phyttioinnsuon and Irvmt. in r'atl.Vi we nIioviU Irnt-ly oominonil it, X thoi ploreoboortnUy and heartily commftid H p DiUors lor tho good they hiye done mo a id my Iriendu, firmly be lieving they have no eiinal lor lainily use. I will not be without them' Rer. , Washinglon, 1. C. According to a statistical roport com piled under the authority of tho board of delegates of American IsmoHtP. there are in the Uni'-'d States 830,867 Hebrews, of whom fJ,648 are connected with 878 religious societies or congrega tions. " tlie IhHdnr Relit I would never lrave my bed. 1 hut was three months ago, and now I weii(lt 190 pounds. 1 cannot wrile ha'f ot what 1 want to say, but V amor's Sitfo Kidney and Liver Cure did it all." H, O. KOlTltK. ltahoay, N. J. In Cuba there is a llttlo insect, the nigua. which enters the human skin. and, building a nest underneath, depos its its eggs. It is so small a' to require a miorosoopo to detect it. They cause intense itching, and, of course, poison the flesh whore they enter : IsniOKSTioif, DYsPKPBTA, Bervtms prostra tion and all lortns ol Keneral debility relieved by taking Mknsman's Peptonized Hiccr Tonio, tbeonly pM-pnratinnot Iwel containing its entire nutritious properties. It oontains blood-making, force-generating and ldo-sustaining properties; is invaluable in all ent'oebled oouditions, whether the rosult ot exhaustion, netvons prostration, overwork, or aoute disease, par ticularly it rcMilling lrom pulmonary ootn plainta. Caswell, Hazard A Co., proprietors, New York. One of the New York tenerr ent-houes contains 167 familfcs, composed of 1,500 people. As a perti ctly reliable and eoonomioat rem. edy, we oordinlly recommend Dr. Bull's Cough Syrup. Price 25 cents a buttle. For sale everywhere Out ol every 100 inhabitants in the United States sixteen Jive in cities. POND'S EXTRACT Subdut Inflammation, Acute and Chrvnia. QmtruU att ttimorrhagtl, Venom and Mueout. LN VALUABLE FOR Burns and InfaatioDS Colds and Coughs, Nasal & Throat Accumulations Discharges, Lungs.Eyes and Tliroat cwibiains. RHEUMATISM AND NEURALGIA. No remedy so readily and effectually arreeta tht irrita tion and discharges from Catarrhal Affections as POND'S EXTRACT. COUGHS, COLDS tn the HEAD, NASAL and TITROAT DISCHARGES, INFLAMMATIONS and ACCtlMULA' TIONS tn the LUNOS, KYKS, EARS and Til HO AT, RHEUMATISM, NEURALGIA, a a., cannot be cured so) easily bj any other medicine. For sensitive and severe cases ot CATARRH use our CATARRH OURK (7.VI. In all ensos use onr NASAL SYRINGE (Uc). Will be sent In lota of 1 worth, on receipt of price. Note that POND'S EXTRACT Is put Bp only In bottles with picture Trade Mark on outside wrapper and words "POND'S EXTRA CT " blown In ftlasa. IW, Onr New Pamphlet with History of our Prepara- ttona, sent free. LADIKS Read pages U, 18, 11 and M. POND'S EXTRACT COMPANY. 14 West 14th Street, If aw York. EIGHT REASONS WHY WK NEVER SELL POND'S EXTRACT IX BULK, HUT ADHERE TO THE RULE OP SELL ING ONLY IN OUR OWN HOTTt.KS, IN OLOSKD IN RUFK WRAPPER, ON WHICH 13 PRINTED OUR LANDSCAPE TRADE-MARK. 1 It Insuiss the purchaser obtaining the uskuikb article. i.-It protects he consumer In buying Pond's Extract not weakened with w.iter, which we fouud was done a few years ago, when we were Induced to furnish dealers with the genuine article in bulk. 3 "It pi- tents the consumer from unscrupu lous parties selling crude, cheap decoctions to him as Pond's Kxtract. for any person can tell the genuine from the bottle and w-upper. 4 --It protects Ihe tonmmer, for It Is aot safe to use any other article according to the directions given In our book, which surrounds each bottle of PuLd s r.xirari. --. iiruKcn ue consumer, for it la ui t .'(treeatiie to be deceived and perhaps Injured by uslna other article! un er the directions fur Pond's Fzlrat-t U .-It'o other at tlule, manufacture or Imitation lias the eRect claimed for and always produced by roiiu s r.xiraci. 7 It U prejudicial to the reputation of Pond's Ext act to have people use a connterMt bellevlug It to be the gebulne, for they will runty h. Uajipuintnt.lt not injured by lu effects. H. Juitlre to one of the best medicines In the world(and the bundreils of thousands using It, demands eveiy precaution against having weak ami injurious preparation palmed off as the genuine. The oi.r ay this can be aucouiullshed la to sell the Gtsums put up in a unilorm manner In op own sottlm, con pk'te with bud wrappers, trade marks, eto HfclMKM it Kit i he genuine Pond's Em ttact Is cheap, because !t is strong, uulfurm and reliable. Our book of directions explains when it can be diluted with water and when to be used full strength. Itlillt-Mlt lilt --That sit other preparations! If colorleni, are mere decoction, polling, or produced simply to obtain the odor and without the scientinc or P'actlial knowledKe of the mutter which many year of labor has given us. HKJtLHHKH.OHKSOW rVQWThatall preparations purporting to be mperior to Pond' tix tract because they Aai aitor, are colored aimp'y because they have crude, aud to unprofessional people using Iheu), perhaps dangerous matter In them, sod ihouUt nevrr be used except under the advice and prtaartptiim ol a ph bician. HHIKMIlI.lt ANIt It IV OW-Tint our Tery expensive machinery 1 the result of thirty year of ex perience ithe most of which was entirely given to this, ui;,mu conaiaiii aueuuou to tne produc tion of a'l I onus of HamameUs, and that therefore we should know what we assert, that Pond' Extract is the best, purest, and contain -nore virtues of the shrub than any other production yet made. Our New History snd Uses of Pood's Ext act and other preparations sent free. VIHES Read pages 13, 18, 21 and 26 In our book, which Is found around each bottle, and will be sent free on application. ' POND'S EXTRACT COMPANY, 14 Wet 14th Street. SEW VOHK. For Sale or fcxchangeforStock of Goods JCIfrhty-ecre Improved Farm, two miles from City ol Rochester, Mini,,, la. Will ell ch.aD. Addresa PHILIP loKWK. Rochester, olwisb-ad Co., Minn. rnfoTTYinffnTI Vliglnls iAnda, Minerals AUlUXlUcttlOJl aud other Properties given by BUREAU OF IMM1URA110N OF VIRGINIA. Kichmoiid, Vav. Morphine Habit tared In 10 UriUl.l itoKi till t ured. .mm u. rf. etJtrUKMa. Lorju,,n in,,,. S350 A MO.MTIIl AGENTS WANTKW ?fi Hest Selling Aiiic.es in the world, s bainplerf. JaT RpuNHow, DtUolt, Mich. AM O's Brain Food cure Nervous Debllltj A Weakness or generative Oiau. SI ail dlUglsta btu.l fur I'll Yr to Allen's Pharmacy, .U .1 First Ave-.N . Y. 777 A YKAR and expense toagenu. (lullll Free. Allien P. o VICKERY, Augusta, Maine. ilTAitlLANIt FIRM!, )7 to Acre. l hoorl winter, brenv summer, hea. thy cliuinte. Cauaosu Ira. U. r. CUAJlJ.ia.iu, l eueiaiAuv, Md. TILJED GREAT 6iT,?:A REL1EDY ton RHEUIATISII, NEURALGIA SCIATICA, LUMBAGO, BACKACHE, , OOTJT, SORENESS or tub CHEST, U.tAmHUfcMttt until' I t (irmT"lt'Mt'fi (Wli un..,, ' 1 istt'M"tM"''t.MM-.M1K V ;,Ui""MiiiiT"" jii Uujifai.tiMAitiiP h ..1S03ETHB0AT, V 1 -IVTTWTCItr Oiilliiuiiuiuulill' mllltlpMnmlimll'i liWiiiLiiitu Alto ErPJHN3, FROSTED FEET EAH3, V n?f. , iiiiniuiuuiii.i.y l r 1 , :ilu!imUl!!lii!;!Iual1'!', t hi. i; .xiTTxxx-ra jjiiimiiimmiilimmnmn, UuUUli , ,:!iii'ii;: t tv pnii liioiuimiti TOOTH, EAR ' AMD HEADACHE, 1 Vr'"""!!!1"'"""'! j U .,! I.aV C (O ALL CTHEB FAiMS AMD VCXIaCtL TV.. .ail . . , M!mmwi rf)HIHIII.bM'lt,:m.Hl,M,iM,.v No Prafiaratlon un earth equals St. J irons Oil as a airs, . Ints, msrl.B and ensue Kxternal Rnincdr. A trial entails bat ths oonpartlvlr tritlinoiilliiy of riOCm.iTS. andavery f eae sufTsrlng a iih pain can hare obeap and positive proof ot Its elalma. DIBEtTIONB IH Sl.iriS UNUDASES. SOLD If All DRUGGISTS AKD DEALtRS IN WlfilCIKt, A. VOGELER & CO. Ttnttir-f. sr- . r. m. A. : M 7 n iin Pricoi"! $22. :yt HHP' ...j li. ST CABINET 01 0AN-NEW BTKXE !i T HI! EE AM) A QrAUl EH OCTAVES, In BLA'iK VI AMiUl CASE, docorswjd with GOLIr BKONZ.-:. Lcng'h, 30 lncbel -. height, SS In. t depth, tl In. ' Tht novel style of tlie MASON HAMLOiJi I.N ST 0I!0AJf?"(ciTrWmUUtaar T.pass and eajwrltr for Uie jiorformance, with fa,, .(arts, of Hrmn Tunes, Anl'iema, Songs, and Popular Sacred and Eecular Music encrUy. It retain to a wonderful extent, for an Instrument so small, th" extraordinary excellence, both as to power snd quality if tone, which has given the MASON ft HAMLIN Cabinet Organ tbelr (Treat reputation and won for thefn the HIGHEST DISTINCTIONS at EVERT ONE of the GKEAT WOItLD'S IXDUBTKIAL EX HIBITIONS for TniltTEEN VEAltS. Evbrt v7Ky WILL BE FCLLT WARItANTKO. CASH f'EAL EX- on receipt of which It will be shipped iUulroied. OKW ON RSCSirr AUD TRIAL XT IKHS SOT SAT1ST Tn aJ, Pl'KCUAIIEIt, IT MAT DS KITVSSID AKD TBS HOMsA WILL US SKFtflTDID. j. EIGHTY BTTLE3 ov" Orjtan are regularly md by the MASON A HAMLIN CO, from the BAI1V CABINET OIS3AN St IS to lurgo CONCEBT Oli- QANS st 1900, snd upward. The great majority are st IhO to IJOOeach. ILLUSTRATED CATALOG CI IB, CIUCULAU3 snd P1UCE LISTS free, MASON & HAMLIN ORCAN CO.. 151 Tremont Bt, ItObTONi 48 East Uth Bt, 'EW TOItK 1 149 W abaah Ate, CHICAGO. 1 If vou are tiuui of l-t- t-rHtolJlnffa If OYWiiml- "J vour niiut work, to rvr tor brniti nrraiul liuiulantBsvnd uit Hop B.ttert. If tou are yountr And I waiUJ, us Hop B sutTorlnff from any In dtBcrctioa or diHiijii riud or rilmrlft. old or fcj fount, mifierliitr from HUH A Jtu w " txorkeaHUorUutUiai(3int oa a bea ox tuctf umw, rely on Hop ki Bittnrsu Whoever you are. wheuver YOU feet that your nyntoiu iK-txls clcannlnt?, toa lntr or utiiiiulutintf. '1 nousanas aie an nually from some mil or Kidney muu tloit miklit 4 buve lien ,reveutfd , 8 by a tliuoly uaeof . HopBittera take HOD Bitters. Hyo yon nv- or vrt nary com- filmut, lliS'.-BHO Of the ttovmrh, bowel, hlood, ttver or You wilt r cured if yuuuih' Hop Eitters !im au fclMOltlt uinl irrtii:ltt- il.le cure for Uiruiikt uneuB , jtih) ot opium, HOP tuoaoc o p or UtUOotiCJL Ifyouarolm Bold by dm if Cuvulstr. bop brrncBa T'O CO., HsciMkUr. tL T. 4 Toronto, OnU ply weak ami Iowsp itlntctl, try NEVER it i it may aveyour life. It has avert hun FAIL dreds. '.vwe ix'iahC. RED RIVER VALLEY 2.000.0C0 Acres Wh oat JT It you if man j Mmmm m m i ssi as si mi if inn I hr the strain of dutiea avoid V M 5?. I af-t lo the world, for &Jebjr tho St. Paul, Minneapolis & Kauitom II. J, y. Three dollar pe.r aorft ttllowoti ttitir (lr for broak lng and oullivauoo. t or (jtriuuUri n V D. A. McKIMLAY. I an! 4 oniniliml4siinrf 1. I'uu', i"ynn. sJ lir Iye nthTs AFKST I auulihM; U Hi le IliBtauU- jr j imtUiiii flunifrt of it k or W4 iruw"( hK- StjT Sl'AlX iil-p.Uii. It i a n'UTKlard !'(-, ta atloii nnd efnvuiite onevery well apfvpintetl tol letor La-tyor CtPiitirtiaii, Sola by Oiu l'i-u an t p-itiir-d bv M.iir Jifhse a Jri:t.:ftU tl ian-St ,N.Y. For iHling (JuiUa. for Amut' Ur 'J heatrlrai, IVniper nce Play, lruwlit-UoMu. PI ay a, Irnwy Pla, Kllifpian Piavs, tiiii'ie litHikg, ISpi'uktfm, Pdutt-miiut , 'iub.t-uu). Light, W.iiifiinu IJhiB, Colore'. Kiu-, Htmii i'-k, Tlieaulcal B'uce Pri-puiatifiig, JurU-y'i Whx Workn, Wte, I'.eanla and1 Musiaclit-a ut rcilutttd nc-H. C-ilMinea, Bofjiery, t'lidfatlt n- icw catai-jguei ttcut fite conLaiuugf full titgc'iii'lii.n mid brUet). &imuu t-'ai-a & Sum, SH E. 14th Street. New York ItsK'.i IjiUV11 "lid brUet). u, t-'bfa A Sum jj E. 141 h Street, h It K PA I R Y Y'S K Ji.ivhm. I will ,cl S,in. any leujill. nil ifus ,l..r i.,t.-,n,. Any ki:m. caa tttflac r .llilv ii.oi.n,., U,(lre., 1 il. rijiUOL,V, J-wpllpr, IU i"tx at , Saltni, II fi order, U biokiui ous T 1HB QnBATKST DIROOTERT OF THB JtOK I writU 11 UK Klt Itllr.l M ISM. a comp ile i-ure xu want el oy usintf one nome. 'l. on n-ieltit of irii.,.$J. AJ ir, w J. 11. UfcCkfcK. Co . M lit h, 7Stl St., .N'ew j'ork. YillliVn MPN Learn Teletrrupliy. Karn m to snm "II-1S nioutil. l,iua,.l. omi.o,o.l.. l)uivll - otfke, AddressVia.Wi.va 1m ., Jji-.u..t, W. t r pioo'o cure: f for Consiiuiptlun is alKt 5 pi SH -Sr-J I i A ;