I.1 "A 1 t I 1 1 f e i e 1 t c r t d u a c t t( U a I M FAR.lf, HARDEN AND HOUSEHOLD, tirM Culture The empe oxwht to be as wldclv Ala serainated astheupplo, and there Js no ffooa reason wiiy it should not bo. Tho larjre vineyards can supply our city population, but to supply the agricul tural districts, prapea must be prown at Dome, Almoin bo done at so small cost t hat no man who owns ahome with a half-acre of land has any apology for depriving his fnmily of grapes. An eighth of an acre in vinps will supply a iarouy ana leave a surplus to sell. Any well-drained land that will produce sixty bushels of corn to the acre may be expected to produce irood cranes. We 11 prepared bordrrs, with a eood supply of uuuw, re ufsimoie, out oy no means essential. A dressing of wood ashes is an excel'ent fertilizer, but any manure gown lor corn will bo good far the vines. The varieties which do well under the greatest variety of circumstances, ana bear neglect best. are sucn as the Concord, the Hartford Prolifio and tho Ives Seedling. There are grapes of much better quality than these, but they aro good enough to suit the popular taste, and are nardy. They can do renea upon to bear lruit every season in generous quantity. The Ives has a thick skin, and is particularly de- siraDic 10 pacK in boxes for winter use. They have been for ytirs before the public, are thoroughly "tested and can be furnished very cheaply by any nurseryman. A cheap trellis of chest, nut posta and wire wil be all tho sup port they need. A four months' supply of grapes will promote health in the family, save doctors' bills and prove an important part of the food eupply. American AgricuUnrUt. About Horse. The stomach of a horse has a capacity of about sixteen quarts, while that of the ox has 250. In the intestines this proportion is reduced, the horse having a capacity of 190 uartii against 100 of the ox. The ox, and rmrly all other animals, have a gall-bladder for the re tention of a part of the Sile, secreted during digestion. The hone has none, and tho bile flows directly Into the in testines as fast as secreted. This con Btruo.ti.in of tho digestive apparatus in dicates that the horse was formed to eat slowly, and digest continually bulky and innutritious food ; when fed on hay. it passes verv ranidlv thrmiith thai stomach in'-o the intestines. The horse can eat but hve pounds of hay an Hour, during mastication, with iour times us weight of saliva, ,7 .lDe stomach, to digest i Well, Will Contain hut fthnnr. tpn nnirti and when the animal eats one-third of uiouauy rations, or seven pounds, in uiic anu one-nan iioura, lie nas swal lowed at least two stomnehfnla nf hns and saliva, one of these having passed to tho intestines. Observation has shown that the food is passed to the in testines by mo stomach in the order in which it is received. If we feed a horse with six quarts of oats, it will just fill ms Bioniaen ; and if, as soon as he fin ishes this, we feed him the above ration ot seven pounds of hay, be will eat sufceient in threo-quarters of an hour to uava iorcea tne oats entirely out of his DLuuini u inLo me intestines, as it is me omce oi tne stomach to digest tho nitrogenous parts of the feed, and as a Bwmacuiui oi oats contains four v " umes as mucn or tneso as tue same amount of hay. it is cer tain mat either the stomach must on crete the gastric iuice rive timps hq tw or it must retain this food five times as long. By feeding the oats first, it can only be retained long enough for the proper digestion of the hay; conse quent y it seems logical, when feeding a concentrated food like oats with a bulky uuo way, to ieea tne latter first, giving te grain the whole time between tlie repasts to be digested. The digestion pf the horse is governed by tho samo iaw j as mat oi man; and we know it i3 not best for a man to go at hard work the moment a hearty meal is eaten, so wo should remember that a Horse ought to 'nave a little rest after Tiis meal, -'while tlie stomach is most active in the processes ot digestion. Planter and warmer. It eel net. Lemon Cake. One cup cf butter.two cups of sugar, three and a half cups of nour, one scant cup ot milk, two whole eggs and yolks of two, two te8 spoonfuls of cream of tartar, one ti spoonful of soa a, grated rind of two hi . lemons. Bake in layer cakes. Icing for the cakes wnites of three eggs beaten to a stiff irotn, one pound of powdered sugar, juiu ui iwu lemons. FOUKCHETTE. Bits of nice suit-. about one- third of an inch thick, two or three inches square; bits of calf s liver me same size, rut these alternate v on a long 6kewer, beginning and ending with pork: lav it in the oven hpm dripping-pan, and roast as you would a bird, basting occasionally. When done slide the pieces from the skewer, and et'i v on a not piaie. To Keep Tomatoes Wirm.it. vs. l large stone jar with ripe tomatoes, then add a few whole cloves and a little sugar; cover them well with one-half coia vinegar and half water: nlann piece of flannel over the jar, well down In the vinegar; then tie down with paper, in tLia way tomatoes can be kept a year. Should mildew collect on the flannel it will not hurt them in the least. Stuffed Ego Plant. Cut them in half, lengthwise, and parboil them in saitca water ; scoop out most of the in- siae, and pound this to a paste in tho mortar, with a little fat bacon and some mushrooms, previously chopped up, a iuue onion, also cnoppea, pepper and salt to taste, and a little crumb of bread soaked in stock. Fill each half with this mixture, lay them in a well-but tered tin, and bake tor about a quarter vi an iiour The qualities that make a great or tor are tnus stated by Wendell Phillips: A man may be a stammerer and yet a great orator, a man may have a poor voice and yet be a great orator, a man may epeak incorrectly and ungrammati cally, and still be a very great orator; all that id needed is to have an earnest cajisa thoroughly at heart, and have heart and cause so truly wedded that they are one with his innermost nature, bo that when he speaks he pours out his own self, exalted by that with which ho is filled. An Italian scientist has invented a j new gauge, by means of which lie not only teiia how much ruin has fallen, but au)o the hour in which it tell, and how long tite fall lasted. An Io w.4 t leigytntn regulates Ira mar rinee Iws by w right, tlie rate being lour 'v.: a pouud tor the groom and two TLttELY TOriCvS. The inquirion of Professor Cohn, of isresiau, indicate that short-sightedness is rarely or never born with those sub ject to it, and that it is almost always the result ot strains sustained by 1 he eye curing study in early youth. Ten pounds of tobacco out ot every eleven that used in this country is grown here. We grow about 391, ono.OOO pounds, import about 7,000,000, export about 321,000,000, leaving 77,000,000 for consumption. It is estimated that there are about 7,Q0Q,C00 smokers in the United States; thus the yearly average per smoker is eleven pounds. A number of English coal mines are being worked under tho ocean. In Northumberland the net available quan tity of coal under tho sea is estimated at 403,000.000 tons, and on the Durham coast under the sea, including a breadth of three and a half miles, witli an area of seventy-one square miles, 734,500.000 tons. The latter mine is in a vein of an agureu ate thickness of thirty feet, dis tributed in six seams. Engineers are considering how it can bo worked suc cessfully in the future. It 13 Borne consolation tn know Hint. the prophets of disaster to our steady- 5 1 .1 1 foiag oia pianet oo not agree among themselves. Two of them have de. duced frcm the Bible the conclusion that things will go on as they are til 1887. Then people must look out for r, tremendoua cataclysm; the Star of uctmchem will reappear, and moral, physical and mundance convulsions will I0110W. Others, however, eouallv en titled to credence also, have set tho date oi tne event as November 12, 1881. It cive3 one a vivid idea of the inonl- culablo loss to the country in material wealth from the wanton or accidental destruction of our forests that the dam nie from forest fires in but three States, New York. Michigan and Wisconsin ana in dui a single year, 1871. is estima ted at the enormous sum of 215.000.000. As a conseauence of similar riesimctinn settlers in Minnesota have been com pelled this winter to burn their furni ture, farm implements, outhouses and even the doors oi their dwellings tn keep Jrom lreezing. Others have naid from $17 to $20 a cord for firewood. No wonder the Minnesota Foresters' asso ciation is pressing so energetically the need of renewing their woodlands. " Murder,' according to the San Ber nardino Timet, 'still stalks red-handed through the Pacific coast." The record of violent deaths for a single week is given as a sample : At Cucamonga a man undertook to shoot another; his hand was struck up, the pistol dis charged, and a young man entirely in nocent of the row now lies at the point of death; at El Monte, Hunt, who is known to have murdered one or more men in Utah and others in Arizona.and was allowed to elude the law, butchered one of the best citizens of Tajs Aneelrp, and came within a hair's breadth of killing a citizen of the Monte at the samo time ; in Reno, on the seventeenth, a man shot another over a game of cards; at Bodie the people arose in their indignation and lynched a murderer who had bee n ar rested and allowed to escape; at San Diego, a day or two since, a saloon keeper shot two men in self-defense, and they are now in a dying condition." Tho Timet says this record is repeated week after week, and thinks it about time that jurors should begin to convict murderers, and that a severe penalty should be imposed upon carrying a deadly weapon of anv kind. A Japanese Railroad Station. A correspondent of tho New York Hcra'd, writing from Yokohama, Japan, thus describes tho scene at a railroad station: Ye gods! what a motley crowd! Japanese of all classes, from the govern ment official with Ws foreign uni orm. to the coolie with his very scanty cloth ing despite the cold weather, awaiting for the start of the train. Native swells of thb shopkeeping order, with their wadded Japanese kimonos as coats, tight-fitting foreign diawers as trousers and the toy bag, about six inches long and three inches high, that the J apanese consider the very height of the fashion, they have done their best to copy from the foreign residents of their country. Then there are the young girls, car r lng their own as well as their lovers' luggage, if they tire in hopes of soon enjoying the happy state ot matrimony, cr taking the burden of their worldly goods, made heavier by the tad thought that they are still likely to remain in a state of "single blessedness." The married women hobble along loaded down with bugs and parcels, and with a squalling brat strapped to each one's back, who by way of revenge pulls its mother's hair in the excels of its dis comfort. In manv chrph nnrlr-r rim unci of their husband (more terrible in Japan iuuu uiose oi tne jaw; me poor women bear with an outward good grace the indignities Leaned imnn timm The Japs are all perched on high wooden shoes, and the author of the "Clamnno-nf th Wnnrffn Shoon" would certainly have changed his mind about the music made by them could he have heard five hundred Japa nese walking over the stonn flnnr nf i h railway station at Yokohama. TLe train leaves every hour and a Quarter, and when tho gates are thrown open to ad mit passengers an cUirial (for tho rail way is government property), stands in his foreign clothes and with a pair of foreign station master's pincers, as at home, Bnips a piece out of each one's ticket as he passes through. Tha train itself is a miniature affair (as indeed is everything in Japan), and is divided Into first, second and third classes. The carriages of tho first remind one very much of the street cars in New York. except that they are in co apartments, each section being large enough to seat eight people. The second cluss differs in no respect from the first. except in the absenoa of the divisions, and in that they are, perhaps, not quite bo comfortable, though in Bummer, owing to their being so very much cooler, foreigners invariably nrefer tn ride in them. The third-class carriages are Bueh as no European would deign to bo seen in. They are as tear beine prison ceiis on wheels except that thev are ineffably dirtier as it is nossible to imagine any structure that id not actu ally a priaoa. The windows arc barred with iron, aufl Beats aro conspicuous bv thrir ahsrned. As feion hi the cativc-d pet in (and riiey are crowded together hkearlock f theep ia a cattle train) tho doors are locked, only to be re opened when the train Hops at some why station! The engineers are uearlv all foreign, $s, with asdirstact native firemen. i Wanted II 1m to Keslgu. A capital story is told of one of our publio men a man who hhd ft,r many years he:d a lucrative office, which many other Rpalous workers in the political field greatly desired to fill. The office of judicial character, and requir ing considerable capacity in lis incuin bent was not only an excellent paying m-Tiii, dus lii wjis nonorame, ana nnn considerable patronago connected with it. Once upon a time, when the anxious waiters had fully made ud their minds that old Hartwell had held the office long enough, one of their nmmbcr was deputed to wait upon him, and request mm io resign, i ne man found tho o rt judge in his office, with his coat off. and surrounded bv nancrs of all sorts and descriptions. The usual greetings were exchanged, ana the visitor opened ms ousiness. win in me open court an orcrn grinder was discoursing a very excel icnt selection ot Strauss' waltzes ' Want me to rcsicn. do thpvf" nntd Hartwell, throwing back his head, and passing his fingers through his nlcnte- ous silver locks. " And lor what reason, prayr" 111 tell vou. ludge: wo think vou have been here long enough. You are growing old altogether too old for the manifold duties and resnonsibilitics of me place." f Jhrvt TV.r 01 a,vt T 9 XT- 1 Y. you: Just you get up here, and spin a waltz with me! Hi! There goes the Blue Danube! Just the thing; cornel' And he seized his visiter by tho two arms, intea mm to his leet, and began to whirl him about the room, keeping step himself to the notes of the distant organ . But the man, breathless and dizzv. broke away and begged off. He didn't know how to dance. jor Not dancer Then try the gloves." We must have cxerci.e in some fashion." And old Hartwell went to a urnnll locker, and brought forth two pairs of Dozing gioves, ono oi wnich no put on, and offered the other to his visitor. But the man would not take them. He de clared he had never boxed in his life "Never boxed? Then it is time you had a lesson. And i' faith, I'll give you one. inowi atana by. Hero is the po sition. One, two, three ! " And ho tapped the messenger, first on the forehead; then on the chin; then on tho breast; and then, with a blow ptraight Irrm tho shoulder, he knocked him clean across the room, and against uiewan. " Ho! I'll soon teach, vou the rudi ments . Let me now show vou the true knock-down blow. It is given in this manner." But the breathless, bewildered and utterly demoralized visitor did not wait for the finish. He caught his hat and made his escape, and later reported to ins associates that Judge llavtwell was not disposed to relinquish his office at present. Unman Force. In the lives of most ncrsons there are periods in which everything is at stake. Home, honor, competency and happi ness all hang on the balance. They may Imj almost ours, or even be in our posses sion, while the events will shortly tell whether they shall bo ours for life or be lost forever. No matter how dark it is ahead, we must go into the contest or lose ail without a strucrirle. it is upon himself that a man must de pend in such emergencies. His friends nave their own bittles to tight or victo ries to enjoy. Tho Quality that will help him most is aggressive force the persisting nnd indomitable energy that oears ciown au opposition. Tho man filled with this combative spirit is tho hero, the master spirit of the world in which he moves. Impedimenta which would dishearten weaker men causo in him the most vigorous exertions. Diffi culties are swept out of his path, and mouen borne aown time alter time he struggles on and wins. lhevare fortunate who are thus en dowed. But we all need what we can or strength of action. We must have the desire and the dt termination to nush our way through the worla. Going resolutely on our way, thrusting ob stacles aside as they are met, gives us me power or conquering. To bo self- reliant keep m sight the motto " God will not crush me and no man can." A Wonderful Wood. The Virginia City (Nev.) Enterprise soys: We have in this State a wonder. ful wood known as "mountain ma hogany." The trees do not grow large. A treo with a trunk a toot in diameter Is much above the average. When dry the wood is about as hard as box wood. and being of a very tine grain might, no aouot, do usea lor the same purposes. It h of a red rich color and very heavy. When well seasoned it would be a fine material for tho wood carver. In the early days .it was used in making boxes lor shafting, anu in a few instances for shoes and dies in a quartz battery. Used as fuel it creates intense heat. It burns with a blaaa as long as ordinary wood would last, and is then lound (almost unchanged in form) converted to a charcoal that lasts about twice as long as ordinary wood. For fuel it sells much higher than any kind of wood ; indeed, a cord of it always brings the same price as a ton of coal. The only objection to it as a fuel is that it ci-eates such an intense heat as to burn out stoves more rapidly than any kind of ooal, however bad. Words of S . lorn. lie who is never guilty of fo liy is not bo wiso as he imagines. Prosperity unmasks' the vices; adver sity reveals the virtues. An indiscreet man is like an unsealed letter every one can read it. Some persona mistake noise for argu ment. They that govern most make least noise. He that too much fears hatred is unfit to ruie. Tho first ingredient in conversation is truth, the next good sense, the third, tfooa numor, ana meiourtn wit. Envy is a passion bo full of cowardice and sham that nobody ever had the con fidence to own its possession. The time for reasoning is before we have approached near enough to the forbidden fruit to look at and admire. He who is false to the present duty breaks a thread in the loom, and will see the effects when the weaving of a lifetime is unraveled. (mcernin:r the cauaa of Umtnn intra itiinow suggested that they are largely au-f u me ruining oi sulphur, iiuu tons of this bubstance being daily burned in dou. A Tough Toad fctorj. " Yps," spoko up a soldier, who had been listening with approving silence to his comrade's reoital of tho habits of snakes; but even tbo toad knows how to defend itself against the voracity of a rattlesnake. A rattlesnake never bites anything it swallows, and bo it will cram a toad down its throat whole. I once saw a rattlesnake about Bix feet long, trying to capture a large toad. The toad adopted a novel method to thwart the reptile's intentions. Tho snake had come upon the toad unawares, and it could not turn tail and jump, elso the snake would spring nnd catch it in his jaws. So tho tond took up a small stick, about six inches lonir. holding it at the center in Its mouth. The snake's mouth could not bo distended to a width of six inches, and so facing tbo snake with the Btick in its mouth, the toad wearied its woulo.be destroyer out of all patience and finally ho gave ud his efforts and crawled away. The toad dropped the stick and hopped to a safer retreat." Uhuxifo Irtbvne. Keokuk Constitution. Ever Time. A man, oreven a piece of machinery that does its work riant everv tlmn. ia we hum, very correctly judged " vala able." And certainly none the lees valuable la any article designed to re neve the iiu of mankind, and which ooes bo every time. Messrs. Jones uoot a uo.. liay btato Brewerv. Most. Mass., write : Wo have used St. .Twnh Oilamongour men aid find that it helps neartuv recommend it as a nnln.hnAXno r At the Castle of Simonetta. about wenuy miles from Milan, a sumrisini- echo is produced between the two wings of tho building. The report of a pistol is repeated by this echo sixty times ; and rtuuipun, wuo visitca me place on a somewhat foggy day, when the air was untavorable to the experiment, counted htty-sfx repetitions. It is stated that the sound of one musical instrument in this place resembles a great number playing m concert. Cairo (III.) Radical Republican.) What We Know About It. " What do VOU knownbont Rt JTannKa Oil f" said one of our oldest subscribers, lhis was a fair question, and wn n. swer, that we are reliably informed that genueman oi mis city who has suffer ed untold agony, and spent a mint of money to get renet irom Kheumatisna, u c?p:iauun ooueut some ana tried '.t ana neciares that it is tho best remedv wi xkucuuiaiiaiu uu ever ueara oi. Tho Scientific American estimates that morp than f S5,000,000 was brought into mo ijnitea estates last year by foreign immigrants. No roan can do u eooj ioli l work, nrmtoti a good prinon, try a law suit well, doctor a palimt, or write a good article when lie feels mieerabln and dull, with luBirish brain n,l unsteady ni ives, and none should maka tlie Xrmpt in such a condition, when it can bn o easily nd ctiej ly renovated by a little Hon dull-IB oeo "ATinna" and " lroverb." Michigan universitv contains tho greatest number of students of any in stitution in tho country. Messrs. KIT Bros., drnma'a. CYmeon K. V.i About m year siuee a irtjntlHninn f m n Orwell P, called my attention to vouf Cieam Balm as a remedy lor Catimli, Hay Fev?r, etc. 11 1 wan mo enriimi in assorting it to ba a nos t.ivn oure (himscll having been cured by it), tLat I was luauceu 10 nnrclibe a stock. I must av that the Hal .71 lias met my b;st oxpeo ationi, having already efl'ected a immhfr ot cures in ims locality. lesooilully,l F. Hyatt, 51. D., Bordoiitown. N. J. October 2G. 18S0. Mossr'. White & Bunlink. ili-m-uimM Ttlmxu xrv. . i i . . ' . . ' my muiHtiior ami myeeii, great sutlei ers lrom Catarrh, have beeu cured bv Kle' Cream Balm. My sense ol smell ri-stoied and nenitn jsieatly improved. C. 51. Stanley, uurncr iu ihkhh aim ttlioes, IthtCtt, N. Y. Price, 60 CeulS. Elv's Crnnm Hulm r.n Owego, N. Y. Will mail it lor 60 cents. JfURZ Cod Liver Oil mml hmn n,i livers, on the soasnoie. bv Cnawnll. Hur.nl a Co., New York. It is absolutely pure and " xaucuui wuo Dave onoe tacon it pre f. r it to all others. Physicians bave deoided it luperior to any ol tbe other oils in market. GREAT HOUSK HCDICIIIlt. VJL TOBIAS VENETIAN HOUSE I.TNIMKNT In pint bottles at HO cents; It! yari uat.ibl telied. It U tin lt-st lu the wnrlil fnr IK.. uia .r i v,llr mm u.,r.... liruisrs, Sor Turoals, etc. TOUIAS' CONDITION ruwuBKS are warrnnteil to cure Distemper, Keva W Orillti. 11 tin: ffiVP A flllft fVtnt! lniTO iba !., a innl itn cteonso the urinary organs. Certlrluil to U (Jjl. D McDanlel, owner cf some of the fastest rnnnim; horsa In the won.l. aii'l 1 Kit) oilier. -.i,.,.ni hum fcv.lmi. glsta. D.-Dot ia Murray street. New York. .od UttiMiaaw -SSU. NCYCL0PEDIA iTfOUETTEJEUSIHESS work on Kii,U,-iie mi,! llnsiueas an. s.k-1u1 Forms. It te la how to peiiorn, all tlia various duties of life, ami -ima is inn kip.inft -ri nnlv ....,. .i. ..... .h.wl Agent unletl Smu I r.ir .ii.i,.,u - ill .l. mTiutioii i me won ami extra terms to Aleuts A'Wri-M AaTK-NSI. t"uBU-UINO Co.. l'hllHfl..h.l,i P. CELLULOID EYE-CLASSES. presenting the choicest seleoted Tortoise Shell and Amber. Tho lichtest. handuomiwf.. ana stroncent known. No rl ho n,;.,ic, ..i jewelers. 5Iade by SPJfi.NCEK OPTICA. t, MFG. CO., 13 Maiden Lane, New York. RED RIVER VALLEY 2,000,000 Acres Wheat Lands best la tha world, for sale by tha SL Paul, Miancapalis & Manitolsa R.H. CO. TbrMaoll&rs par aera allowad taeaarilnr for Waak- Ins aad euitnaUca. t i parHtolars iaaii t D. A. McKINLAY. riamUiiatr, . ratal, ill a a. Card Album i '"y pr,,lci bo ma,i. card y . , .ULU boar.l leaf, ojk-u bulb en,la,hoiai Eiu Cards. Sent free hr mail on reeeiut of ti.iin A- BUuultSaa4 heoei St.. Baiein, Mass. fif.FNTS WANTKD-intl,in. Lartlea, OlrlsaiTs MAHtU!ll 'AHMM, 7 to Act. blioit MUile'K. b,t-,-.-.v .-iniiura h...inv .'lln.,u C.laUjaUe flea, ii f CUAlft-tllli, lraa-jla.abUJs-, ill 111 3 Amt Itlronre'l I f-UOh MprwsioM are vni j uoimion amor. llione afTiiomd with a OcmtrIi or t old. Tliry ravei ratno-i on tun ooolor itnl l scribed. They have imcd pon.ly r,. which lias bran reoomti"-n,li 1, tmt. i ter. Hope abandon it m, 1 1 bt-v , rliM.r.iPt upon all mi-,1- . lint i n old lainily namody ihhtii -1 in u which jwxvjBcs trim ni'M-.t. All,,,. Balsara wil) Cnreyour iM ,ir (,,'iih1 ' it, and you, will recoivp ih 't ),r ni t'. loot once. It is pleasnnt t , :iU and ; i.t nre rvl liin.'j i( !(- i U v ,:ii ! Hit j ,- imr i. in;; liT 1 r- "'y harmleiis. Theoity di n- m nil r 1 II Of tlie pBsoenEfif v! o travi i ! sr rail road in tho United t'-i 4, inolt " r om ploycoa on trains, out of everv i ; 1 lion and one-halt person faiTid t ' 1 kill ed and four are injured; or, t i put it differently, out of, tvery forty million of persons carried one mile ono i-i killed and four injured. Ton cn bi mppp It you will atop all you exu urm-niit and wrotiR no).ions in doctoring vonr-: si and lami -lies with erpeiiMive doctors or huuiljai core, alls, that do lisrm always, and use only nature's simple lumodies for all jour ailments you will be wine, well and happy, and va great expense. The greaiett i euiody lor this, the great , wise and good will tell yon, is lion Bitters believe iu other oolnmn. See " Frovorbs " In an- Only one loss occurred out of the 2,770 ,000 registered letters and packages that passed through the postofllcu In New York city during 1880. Sound repose is so essential to good health that we feel surpriood to know any one would risk loss ot rest Irom a Couch or Cold, when a bottle ol Dr. Bull's Cough Syrup would K-ve rotrcsbing slumber. The original estimate of the architects of the suspension bridge betwenn New York and Brooklyn was $3,000,000. The amount spent thui far is $19,000,000. A. Bloatatt Bodr doe not always belong to an iuehriata Kid ney troubles will causo bloat, but Warner's Sale Kidney and Liver Cure has never tailed to re.stove if Blankets are no longer imported into thi country, as they can be manufn,c tured cheaper at home. A GOOD FAMILY BEIEDY! STUICTLY PURE. (Tbli eiigTavinK represents tha Luncs In a healthy sUte.) what The Doctors Say! Pit. n.ETCriKR. of LeTlnpton, Wlasonrl, says commend jour ' llalmmi In nref-r.-nr m .... , medicine for cous'lia anil eol,is." DR. A. C. JOnX.SON'.of Mt. Vernon. Tl'a wri e oir.e wonderful enres of 4'oik-,u-iiti.,n (nhi.7. Ly tbe nse of " Alleu'a I.mtif Uaiaaiu." nil .T n o-lTTilari) ui 1 in- ... rtlivsiclan of twentv-hve vn.r. wrir.. .. t ii .,.1 ..I or an iacaaea nr the Throat. T .. n. . , . - ' . wait Dfl laUUil m mnk ili,ll..iil It........ . . I Piihiii,.pi,o,M... . - WHH,r- At an Expectorant ic has no Equal. it contain! no Opium In any Form. J. N. IIAItRIS & CO., proprietors. V 111 a 11A1U W. Z"r Hule ly ti U Itrmro-l.t. ouiu py aion.-) m winiiiNa, New Tor. .FN Prlc. ts.oo. S1000 00 :N 0A8H u iote4 tn aw machine In America, Tula la the cheapest machine made, and warranted mj saw logra easier and faster "n any uw we are mo oiaest saw machine flrm In America, Any prominent meiw cnanc wiu tell you we are responsible. "6 ware oi lnirln are men ts. Oar clronlan are rxee. Address. Dnltad States Manufacturing Co., C<aga. m. Oar WELL AUGERS wUl bom well 75 feet deep and 2 feet In diameter la a day. This would clear you 960 in a lay. send for our Pictorial Oataloe-ue. D. S. MANF'G CO.. Chicane. III. SURE RIDDANCE RATS, RATS, RATS. Prof. Mitchell's F.1AGIC 17IIEAT. MICE, MICE, MICE. rjrKATL'as'3 remkdy.- Donl Die In tbe House I i . A Magic Hmteirmlnator of ROWS, RATS, MICE, MOLES, CROWS, UKUWS. &c. R0WS.I Price, 23 eta. per Packava. mrcvij rii A1.1. uki (KJISTS OR MAILK0 ON KKfaifl OF tiik rKicis.-ta D. M. Stiger & Co.. sajarclay sl.IT .Agents. Weiatl tin your AiIiIi-cmh UxN A l'OSTAL CARD, wb WILL BKVI) YOU OUR INTEKFSTWfi AND VALtABLK 1'AAIl'ULEr VO K LAmiTs ON "Shopping in IfevYork " i EliRICIl BROTHERS, 285 to 295 Eighth Avenue, NEW YOItK. 'earellaa .raferpeo. ENSES 5LOAH I B .a. J-"i I utHE Jf 1 - ". raptly paid. 6 5350 ; nwiHTiii AGKVia wan Taw .i. .-uot oui,..,if Anic.ea m nie worl'l, JfeAnejlirJia oj.. lietroit, AlKb W iIT 1,rB,, ood-tures Nerroos Dehllltj if a 4 H takntasof Uruernuva organ. SI all diuaalns I Send for (j,--r ta Allen'. V Uarma,. n J ynrt ZVL'K y .. mT A yRAR an4 expenses toueuUk V4JL J O. VU-aKHAiMiu.ta.llalne. FREE ! mils j CHEAT CCn"AM REIIEDY rr.n No Proparalign oa earth e-i,iU St. ,Tirna ciil at a hats snlta, liafLB ami cunf Kmnrnal Rmti-W. 11 :ul n,aili bat th .npir,iMvly trlltinpontUv ol ;CFi', an,l ari oao (Tonus ilti iciu can havs el,"p t ,-.n,ra jnuof ,4 itieUinia, DUtSCXlOH 1.1 KLITLS MMIlaUES. SOIB BY All DRUOaiSTS AND DEAinS III f.'tlCIKt. . A. VttCELEH S. CO. JlnlUmnrp,T't.,r.lt.jL INFLAMMATIONS and HE&10RRHAGI Rheumatism, curalr NooMier urer-n.-jtlii lni onri-d acinar, y c IHeno (lutrofii.i on!n;Uiatsui t!m :xn m (. Jrliiatr ii Invuhuib!,! in t!ic.MliHoa-, Lnml Mmlu llai'ior Si.K d i. O.ir oinlm. C4ntn for whon roinorfll of i-lnMiir,u-w , venlout, la a treat iivlp lu leauvlngluliaiuu eases. , V it i ll. I.,l a! Hemorrhages. jima, or I'oni anv caiPtl spewlllv control I toppod. Our HaiilMriuufa(l'.SreiitM)ii n.nlera ($l.oi.,)aroi,-rca uida lu arraaiiLg- li I)-oediu(f. Diphtheria & Sore Th'rc j ne tea r;t rart protujitly. Itlaascu-ocui lay is uuiirft-roua. 1 nnTorf ri The Kit rnct li t" rrl for line ar-ttrT7VXL '' . ,1. e rtd RC. U-.ir "rjUnprh-TW-.-," HrnHiV.f i iv, r Xa mot r, rar-eo, co:italti nil t!i r-:ratJ prqiwilsof tha Kximrt otirVnui Nvnn iTiv.iluab e f or ufo lu outarral ailocuiua. la ulmi ana utiexooualvo. Sores, Ulcers, Wounds: bprams and Bruises. l.a i:ig. ooollnir ami cteanrtriir. T'ra cur Ulnm r l:i oiniiie,-tion with the rxtrur-t It will mil lieaUug-, soitoniuif and in keeultu? out the air. k Burns and Scalds, ' It la unrlvnlfd. sutl pi;ii!,l Iv, kert In every funilll aoauy mr vm in -.thq n on ldoiita. A drcaeirir o our Olutiueut 1U aid la lioauiur and iiraver at-ara. - 1 Inflamed or Sore Eves It can be iiecl wlthont t!ia :iirhtnet fear of barm qiilj-ltly al aylng nil j.fliuuiuttUon aud aoreuo without mini. . Earache, Toothache and PTPParhfl When the Extract I PllP5 u.ln,, !! lnaj, or Itchlnr W 0, It a the trrenteet known reraedr t rn. . ,n aiuii iv woUllUTlUl. IMiy mnja; nrhen oth.-r medlrtnea have f, l'o' J nl'a l.xtriirt Mrlriu.-, l',.r for do r - rayioMiMo eiiiiri, y null fllf tLWl IHW Of CltJtil..lir 1st IllHulnotir 1 u i-or uroKen Breast And bore NiDDles. Jl.ivv clone that mother who have onna inxwt It will tn?'l!?vi"- (i!'"i 0,"t i tlie beat eiuoUlenil Female Complaints. . mm aw il'I'UCVaa eacUbotUe!C "iM)J" iuiI diiucUoiia mooouij-any CAUTION. 7miinu inrortDS molnrlUr of fmi riin Pond's Extract ?sn!?. a.Vrl A... . . "nu m iOWTl It) tllft PriCAfif Dnnrf'. c..,. -v-m . AZ 2 " "r 0ii rti- aria oji)ciames, IVS KXTItA J'T .. o.... H .io and 'I'ollrt J'ealllMce lt naive v. rulleLHuan lltr!ta ... kJl.-iMier. loiK.i,-,- l.om J anal Mvi-liie a l Aletllcuted ai.ik Oluliuout &o Prepared only by POND'S EXTRACT 00-, NEW YORK AND LONDON'. cu are raau If you are a t IlWU if h'b - tvrtoilliitroftrni!r ened by the istmiii of A it our aulied avoui uiulAuUand usa uirftit work, to re- H tul tj brain iiiii-vjt a.,i i H nop tiittars. waate, um Hop B. If yoq aro younjr and j dloorvliuQ or uirajoai sufTerlr.g from any In. t lii,u i if y,m innr. bud of aluk- rllitf mm never 7 o n are. " I t mer you feel II V 15 nut. your t-yatem 'I -JJ im rleansllit;, ton- "V'liseJ anda die an. that nuUly from aouia nu or ona lug or MimuUtiinr, without intorioathiUt e tloit mu.ir. hae Ijeeii irn,e,,tej by timely una of j n w n o d Bitters. HopBltters HaT vr Aim. Xia, kidney i ovMrinaru vttm-t D. I. C. Is an ktMolula pUimt, liiheatsui or lli0 tfoimwti battel $, blood, Uvar ur fieiuea t You will be cured if ruuiu Hop Bitters If roa are lm iud lirralrta lileeure fr ,lnuikenneaa, Uue Of l)l,l,n tobacco, or uu-ootica. RoldtiydriKr. i-Uta. heuUXor CircuLu-. 1)1 jr weak and DwapinUKi, ti-y It may laveyour life. It hat NEVER ! FAIL HOP BiTflafl IU.ko.Ur, a. x, a Totuiito, (itt. saved hurt cJrodo. Ilnlr lyntlieAr'KS'. -" I M:si : it a.:i. Iniaiii4 neoMM. -lirotluflin; Ilie l-i,.a n.Tlur.ii tlia-li-a of 11 1 liioani ,i.,ia Siit bl A! tbe h(vt;, ai,i !- i j..,:-;i)-p.t i. it . a miiii'ia i vrri-a-aM,,,, an l a i-.'m iRISTADORO r wf opt very weii at'jv.uitr-l tot J ktfor La iyor r,,.-utieiiuin b.-i-l by JJiu.KibU an.t ui y pileil by lUir 1, reuse r l.,,i,t.1 W"-.i l.itust -.Y V. ti. W illi, Ai t YUUNli riltra '-" 'feleurapny. Karn fu to IKU offives. Address Viii,mk tluanuiUred ivn Jdli.-avij.e, VV lo. k . . . . - , -"TSrcw oj f ' r- c- 3 i C Ti:;ax, ' i , - ' rifniT id cvir-.T, ' "" 7 . i v ; - . ..Jk,Ai ! v.. vj I : r a. n ' . t , -jp I; ' - rr.r.rLO feet ;- r jli'm-'"; v- fi Cv- T.rjc,, 'f:r. :. ( " , r -ir !;ivpMn ' I .! ". . ...ft, f - i .luuil :"'h '-; 'l:' " ti '-' : j '-.Mill litllill.,11, V -: ' - . . . .;:! ! : It 31 M, EAR i!""""v;;i.,. ' i :ln"i:i ;J HEADACHE y;):i:-.!i,,,:,-.r.)..fe,j.i.i.":!.i!- I ACIII2S. ' fl i.u lit. (I I ron I J. ; - ,unro iraiie-uiiuK on aurroiiniliuir huir 1 wraP1r. None other is (renuine. AlwayaValM 1 paraUou. lt tweer told i,t bulk, ur h ,,,....1 I ror saie dj au urugtlata and Fanojr Goola Dealr rs rir i' '!!ir"f IF wrU'. carrlnae free, on rci i-ii.ior id Or. i-i f,.r $4 worth, ,arria,- free, on re,eli t of aililreascu to 14 IV. 1-tlii &treet, JJew i e k -A ; HOP ! PEE S A Iffi 1 f"4""") a. Ni.y li., s J.V t J I