farm, (unnr.v ami jiorsniou). Too Much llnr. rilling a lionw' rack with h, aa norao persons do, and prrmitiinflc ft crn etiitit Biipply to rorawa before the ani mal, in ono of tli most probable mrnns of producing diHoase, anil most positive in rendering animals nnfitfor fast work. Lai -gei supplies of hay liave the effect of milking the stomach large and weak, the belly in course of time becoming pendulous. Not only does the stomach increase in capacity, Irat the largo intes tines become enlarged. Frrcllng Pig". Tigs that are to be marketed this year should bo pushed hard from the beginning. If allowed to stand still for a day there will be a loss. Ground oats and corn mixed, or gronnd corn with wheat middlings, will make a good slop for the pigs ; soaked corn will also be highly relished, and will bo found well adapted to keeping the pigs in high flesh ; but as goon as the new corn is fairly in milk that will be found the best of all fattening foods. On the other hand, if pigs aro to be kept over the winter there should bo no stimulating or forcing. Give them the run of a clover field the first summer, with a small allowance of grain. Hvlnv Mnnnrr. A young man, eighteen years of age, who has been his father's main help in cultivating an eighty-acre farm, said : "Our principal business this summer has been the saving of manure, one Item of which has been to supply bed ding for eight calves that were kept ux 3 or a bhed during tho entire summer Early in the season sawdust was used daily, in Buflicient quantities to absorb the liquids and keep the calves dry, and later, dry earth, leaves or anything that could be obtained most readily. In the fall thirty-one horse-cart loads of manure were drawn from this shed. Since manure is the one article most needed on a farm, the farmer never should cease laying plans for making it, and, if successful, he may look for large re turns in produce." Exchaiige. A Hint for Orchardlatn. One of the worst enemies the apple orchard has to contend with is the cod ling mcth, which, unless dealt with in a vigorous manner, is very apt to destroy the fruit of the orchard. The pasturing sheep in the orchard, when the fruit ap proaches the ripening stage, appropriate to themselves the early decayed fruit that falls, and thus keep in check the worm which does all the damage. A. R. Whit ney, of Franklin Grove, Lee county, Ills., tho largest orchard ist in the United States, having 45,000 bearing trees, re marked at the recent meeting of the American Nurserymen's Association at Dayton, that he could not get along at all in his orchard without sheep. "While the fruit of his neigbors, who do not keep sheep, suffers badly, his apples are smooth, sound and uninjured by his mode of preserving them from the enemy. Mistake la Mllkinc. "We have frequent communications," says the A merican Cultivator, "from our subscribers concerning the fact of their cows giving bloody milk. No one would be surprised at cows giving bloody milk if they were fully aware of what a network of blood vessels the udder of a cow is composed. No person should over make an attempt to niiik a cow till they have obtained some know ledge of its fctructure ; then we perhaps should dispense with a large number of those double-fisted men who do not seem to have any knowledge of the purposes or anatomy of a cow's hag, ex cept for them to squeeze and drag it as though it were a piece of dead hide. There is no objection to the strong handed man as a milker, the stronger tho better, but it should be accompanied by a touch as delicate as a woman's. Whenever the cow manifests the slight est sensitiveness the udder should be thoroughly examined. Milking is a pleasure to the cow when everything is all right, and whenever it ceases to afford gratification to the cow there is evidently something wrong. Never fail to wash with warm water the bag of a young heifer, both before and after milking." Halt Tor the Throat. In these days when diseases of the throat aro so universally prevalent, and la so many cases fatal, we feel it our duty to say a word in behal of a most , effectual, if not positive, cure for sore throat. For many years past, indeed, we may Bay during the whole of a life of more than forty years, we have been subject to sore throat, and more particularly to a dry hacking cough, which is not only distressing to ourselves, but to our fmnds and those with whom wo are brought into business contact. Last fall we were induced to try what virtue there was in common salt. We commenced by using it three times a day morning, noon and night. We dissolved a large tablespoonful of pure table salt in about a half small tumbler full of water. With this we gargle the throat most thoroughly just before meal time. The result has been that during the entire winter we were not only free irom cougns ana colds, but the dry, naeking cougu nas entirely disappeared, We attribute these satisfactory results solely to the use of salt gargle, and most cordially recommend a trial of it ot those who are subject to diseases of the throat. Many persons who have never tried the tali gargle have the impression that it is unpleasant. Such is not the case. On the contrary, it is pleasant, and after a few days' use no person who loves a nice c J win mouth and a first-rate sharp ener of the appetite will abandon it.-Jus, . How lu liaise TurU- a. Two to four hens and one gobbler are "Utlieient, and two to three-year-old fow ls bettor than younger or older ones. When they begin to lay watch them and liud thtir iit-bts, which are generally ins do in tuiuo obscure place. Kemovo t!i cgg as fuM, us they are dejosited in tl.om.ht, and put a chicken hen's egg . f..mnt.Ml?. WLen U lays out pinuUr, wlurh- is usually from fif- t a i My, Hud biias to bvt remove her fit Slight to a point near the dwell ing, having prepared a setting-place in a but) -l turned down on the side and straw therein. Fasten the month up for a day and night, so she cannot got out. The following day remove tho fastening,' and if she goes back to l.rr old nest, take her at night and fasttn her up again for twenty-four or thirty hours. By this time she will become ac customed to her new and convenient quarters and yon will not suffer from t he depredations of crows or egg thieves. Never put more than seventeen turkey eggs with a turkey hen nor more than twelve turkey eggs with a chicken hen. Some poultry raisers prefer to have all their turkeys hatched with chicken hens, but my experience is that the young do better when reared by th'eir natural mother. While' your eggs are accumu lating keep them in a box or basket in a dark place with an old woolen cloth under and over them. Ilandle them very gently and turn them over in the basket every few days. Last year I had forty-nine out of fifty eggs to hatch when managed as above stated, and raised forty-three of them. When tho eggs are all hatched, fasten the hen up in a sheltered pen so the little things can get in and out at pleasure, and where the wind and rain cannot reach them on the west and north sides. Keep them in this way until they are three or four weeks old, and then they and shift for themselves and will be as hardy as any fowl. Until they are about a month old they are the tenderest of all domestic birds. Feed them on curds and let them have plenty of buttermilk to drink, with now and then cooked corn bread, with a little salt and some cayenne pepper added before cooking, and give them wheat screenings occa sionally. Feed them regularly night and morning, and they will always come home to roost, after feeding in the fields for a quarter of a mile around the house all day. When one-third grown, noth ing is better to feed them than whole grains of corn ; but generally this is not necessary, as grasshoppers and other insects aro their choice food. Corre spondence Farmer's Home Journal. Kecipea. Peach Butter. Pare ripe peaches and put them in a preserving kettle, with sufficient water to boil th5m soft ; then sift through a cullendar, removing the stones. To each quart of peach put one and one-half pound sugar, and boil very slowly one hour. Stir often, and do not let them burn. Put in stone or glass jars and keep in a cool place. Raspberbx Jam. To every quart of ripe raspberries, allow a pound of the best loaf sugar. Put sugar and berries into a pan, and let them stand two or three hours. Then boil them in a por celain kettle, taking off the scum care fully. When no more scum rises, mash them and boil them to smooth marmalade. When cold, put them in glass tumblers. Stewed Cucumbers. Out the cucum bers fully half an inch thick right throuch : nnt them in a Ranee-nan inaf. covering them with hot water, and let them boil slowly for a quarter of an hour, or until tender, but not so as to break them ; then drain them ; you want now ft ninr. of ctnni cronm nn your cream, with a teaspoonful of bat ter, m a Buuctj-pnu, auu wnen it is warm pop in tho cucumbers ; season with a little salt and white pepper, cook five minutes, shaking the saucepan all the time, and servo hot. It is iust as deli cate as asparagus, and a very nice dish indeed. Tomato Pie Meat Take the remains of roast meats, (roast beef or other meats will answer,) chop as for hash, and chop three times as much bread. Have peeled some tomatoes. Take a broad iron or tin basin and grease it, then pro ceed to make your pie. First put a layer of crumbs, then a thin layer of the meat, slice a layer of tomatoes over the meat, season with salt and pepper. then add other layers aa before, and lastly, cover tho top with the bread, and press all down smoothly to form the upper crust. If yon have the gravy, pour it over the pie to moisten the bread, but avoid using too much fat; or melt a piece of butter in two cups of water and a little salt, if you have no gravy. Bake until the crust is brown and the tomatoes cooked, in a moderately hot oven, and let it stand to cool awhile before turning it out. If rightly done you will be surprised to have so nice a dish from remnants. The canned tomatoes are good in winter. The Line of Beauty. Professor Muller, in a course of lec tures in Berlin, offered a simple and mechanical explanation of the univer sal admiration bestowed on circles. The eye is moved in its socket by six muscles, of which four are respectively employed to raise, depress, turn to the right and to the left. The other two have an action contrary to each other, and roll the eye on its axis, or from the outside downward, and inside Upward. When, therefore, an object is presented for inspection, the first act is that of ciroumvision, or going round tho bonu sary lines, so as to bring consecutively every individual portion of the circum ference upon the most delicate and sen sitive portions of the retina. Now. if figures bounded by straight lines be presented for inspection, it is obvious that but two of these muscles cau be called into action: and it in annul lv evi dent that in curves of a circle or ellipse all must alternately be brought into na tion. The effect then is that if two only be employed, as in rectillinear fig ures, those two have an undue share of labor; and by repeating the experiment frequently, as we do in childhood, the notion of tedium is instilled, a dis taste for straight lines is gradually formed, and we are led to prefer those curves which supply a moro general and equable share of work to the muscles. A lady writes: " I have often noticed that most newspaper reporters are young men. I never hear them spoken about after they become aged. The question that troubles mo id what bo comes of them ?" Some are in Con- ress, and several in tho Cabinet, but a ew met with reverses and are edit ng New York and Chicago papers. hiladelphia JSews, A German Villnjre. The little village of Gross Tnhnrz lies on the northern slope of tho long ridge of the Tlmringian mountains, about ten miles from it northwestern end. Its economic state, which is only a typo of many others in the district, is decidedly primitive. Every well-to-do family has its little strip of ground, or sometimes several such strips have been accumu lated in ono family by inheritance bt intermarriage. The village bntchor, wih whoso family ours was soon in tol erably intimate terms, was the owner, or at least the cultivator with perpetual rights, of many little fields situated in almost as many parishes. On these fields they raise the corn of which their bread it made, the potatoes, turnips, beet root, etc., which help to provide them with food, aud the flax which forms the raw material of their linen underclothing. The flax is spun at homo by the women during tho winter months when field-work is impossible, and is woven into long pieces of linen by village weavers in old-fashioned looms, such as could bo eeen fifty or sixty years ago in the homes of manu facturing villages in England. Each family also has its cow and its three or four geese. The latter, in addition to the profit derived by selling or eating their flesh, furnish a perennial source of revenue from their feathers, which are plucked at regular intervals from the living breasts, and sold for the pur pose of making pillows and feather-beds for tho inhabitants of moro luxurious climes. After the second crop of hay has been all gathered in, which is supposed to be achieved by the beginning of Septem ber, and for tho gathering in of which the village schools have a special holi day, tho meadows aro open to the cattle and geese of all the inhabitants, and the Ilirten have no longer Buch an ar duous task. The pasture-land becomes again for tho time the property of the commune, the "common land" which it originally was, and is dotted with red oxen or snow-white geese. During the tonths of July and August tho whole population, male and female, is for the most part occupied in getting iu the crops of different kinds, which seem to form aeontinuous series, beginning wilh the first crop of Lay, at the beginning of July, and ending with the Grummet, or second crop, early in September. The women are by no means behind the men in the severity of their labors. Dur ing this time work begins at 4 a. m., and lasts till dusk. The cropR aro gath ered without the assistance of tho ma chinery which an Americau or English farmer woula consider essential. A very short scythe, of primitive shape and make, is used for the grass and corn. The men employ a great cart of their evenings in hammering their scythes, bo as to give them a harder and sharper edge, and the continuous clang of the hammers is by no means an attractive yr soothing feature of lifo in a German peasant-proprietor village to a stranger in search of quiet. Mowing, we may notice, appears to be the one dignified agricultural work which a woman can not do. Occasionally I have seen a woman use the scythe for a few minutes, but it was always with a sort of apolugy on the part of tho woman for intruding on masculine functions, and seemed to be regarded by the men with compas sionate toleration. Women , and girls are competent in Thnringia to carry burdens of sixty, eighty, or even a hun dred pounds weight, in great baskets, for miles, to the nearest market town, but they cannot mow, or at least pub lic opinion decrees that they shall not. The produce of tho small strips of land is taken to the poorer homes either in curious baskets suspended like a knapsack by two straps passed over the shoulders, and carri ed always by women or children, or on wheelbarrows, which have the advantage of taking a rather larger quantity at once. The wealthier inhabitants employ rudely constructed wagons, and generally in this case the men superintend the operation. The whole process of gathering in the liar vest is carried on by each family for it- sell. A few lured laborers there are, but very few, and those cannot bo got to work for so long hours or so ener getically as the farmers themselves. Of course any volunteer assistance is eagerly welcomed. During our stay in the village a regiment of infantry pass ing through on its way to some autumn maneuvers was einquartirt in the village, Each house owner had to entertain with tied and board bo many Manner, and sometimes a Pferd as well, tho number of each being chalked up ostentatiously on the doors of the houses a day or two previously by a commissariat officer who had come on in advance. There was some grumbling at the prospect on the part of the villagers, many of whom thought sixpence a day scarcely sum cient remuneration for feeding and housing a stalwart soldier. However, the day was fine, and the soldiers, as soon as their military duty was done, set to work to assist their hosts in getting the harvest in. There was little grum bling in the village the next day, but only regrets that the regiment could not stop still longer. Single vs. Married Soldiers. It has long been a mooted point whether single or married men make the best soldiers. Some maintain that the lack of wife and family tends to make a man more reckless of his life therefore a good soldier. Others say that the married man is almost a veteran when he enters the ranks, being inured to combat there fore a good soldier. In the recent Tunisian campaign a colonel was questioned upon this point. " Both are right," said he. " Look yonder do you see that battalion of happy, devil-may-care fellows? They are all single men, and they would take their lives in their hands. But look again do you Bee those taciturn, som ber, gloomy-looking men there? They are all married, and in a hand-to hand fight they are terrors." " What's the name of the battalion V" ubLed tho inquirer. " They are enlled," said the colonel, gravely, " the ' Children of Despair. ' " JJt tter breuk thy word tbua do woite ia lyepiiig; it. N&Rhvilla Puil? Nows.J Tctrlbl. 4 Snch is the term Mr. 0. W. J'urcell. of tho National Stock Yards, Chicago, 111., applies to his Bufferings. 1I says: I, for ono, wish to speak a word of praiso for St.- Jacobs Oil. I suffered with a pain in my shoulder and arm for some six months and at times it was terrible. One bottle of St. Jacobs Oil, however, cured me thoroughly." Richard Grant White fainted when a friend whose grammar he was correcting told him of an Ohio girl whose com panion asked her at a party, "Shall I skin your apple for yon?" "No, I thank you, she replied, "I have one already skun." Brooklyn Theater. Harrisburg (fa.) Independent. For five years, says Mr. J. Echter, this city, I have been allliotod with rheumatism, "lid for two years have had a sore 'eg the size of a silver dollar, wh nothing would heal. St. Jacobs Oil cured the rheumatism and healed the sore. Thackeray's idea of a dandy is given in the following note : My Dear Edward A 'dandy is an individual who would be a lady if he could, but, as he can't,. does all he can to show the world he s nto a man." It la Worth it Trial. " I was troubled lor many veurn with Kidney Complaint, Gravel, etc.; my blood boennio thin; I was dull and innctive; could hardly crawl tie-out, and was an old worn out niau all over, and could get nothing to hulp me, until I pit Hop Hitter, and now 1 am a boy n cam. My blood and kidneys aro all ritjht, and I am as active, as a man of thirty, although I am seventy-two, and I have no doubt it will do as well for others of uiy age. It is worth the triaL" (bather.) The Western game laws never inter fere with draw poker. If they did there wouldn't be any game laws. A Tnlrnted T.ndT'a Views. Mrs. C. i Hemming, tstnte Lecturer of Mis souri, and also an artist of rare merit, whoso picture of Adelaide Iseilson is pronounce..; by tho press to be the most beautiful portrait in the United States, in a recent lecture, said: "I hsvo boeu troubled with kidney disease since my child hood, and it finally culminated in chronic catarrh of the bladder. It would be impossible for mo to describe how much I have Buffered, and I had abandoned all hopo of ever beinu cured. I was, however, recunniended to try Warner's Safo Itemody and Liver Cure, and it lias doiio mo moro good than tho combined sliill of all tho physicians I liavo ever tried during my entiro life." 8uch testimony is lieywul question, and proves the value to all ladies of the remedy it advocates. Man wants but little here below and he can get that quickest by advertising, Indmestiox, dyspepsia, nervous prostration and all forms of general debility relieved by taking Mkxsman's I'kitonizki) Hkf.f Tonic, tho only preparation of beef continuing its entiro nutritious properties. It contains blood-making, loree-generating ami lito-suHtaining properties; is invaluable in all enfeeblod conditions, whether tho result of exhaustion, nervous prostration. overwork, or acuto disease, particularly if rosumng trom pulmonary complaints. Caswell, Hazard & Co., proprietors, Now York. !M CVnlfTwili Buy a Treatise upon the J torso and his Diseases. Book of 100 pages. Valuable to every owner of horses. Tostago stamps taken. Hciit post paid by New York Newspaper Union, 150 orth btreet, Now York. Vkoetine is composed of the best vegetable inrediouta tho dispensary of nature furnUhos. The juices are extracted iu a way which pro serves their undiminished medical properties, making it ono of the greatest cleansers of tho blood that can bo put together. ISed-nniiH, ltoachen. Mats, cats, mice, ants, ilies, insects, cleared ont by "ltough on llats 15c.,tlruggists. Que-rious that tho Chincso men should have such long hair. Ladies, if you would have your hair as long as tho Uhmeso, and as bcautilul as an houri's, usa Cahholixk, tho deodorized pe troleum hair renewcr and dresser. HOW TO HECIJUE HEALTH. It la 8tram:e any one will suffer from UcranRfnicnti l.rnUL'lit on by Impure blood, when BOOVH.L'S SAKS A. PAKIU.A ANDSTll.l.INCilA.or BLOOD AM) I.IVKK SYIU'P will restore health to tho physical orKitiilziitlnn. It In a streiiKthenlnii syrup, pleasant to take, and thellKST III.OOU Pl'KIFlKH ever discovered, curing Scrofula, Syphilitic disorders, Weakness of the Kidneys. Kryslpelas, Malaria, Nervous disorders, Ueb'llty, llillous complaints and Diseases ot the Wood, Liver, Kidneys, Stomach, Skin, etc. - Tanner's (.erintia Ointment cures Burns, Cuts, Wounds, Sores, Sprains, Chilblains, etc., soothes liillammatloii, and relieves pain in the side, chest, shoulders, etc WA It 11 ANTED l'OIt 31 YEARS ASD SEVKR FAILED To CTTtE Croup. Spasms, Diarrlirea, Dysentery and Sea Kn-kueim, taken internally, and OUAKAXTKKD perfectly hartuloHH; also externally, (Mils, IJriiiM', ('limine ltlii'UiimtiHin. old Soros, Pains in the linilm, hack and client. Knelt a remedy is l)U. XUlilAS' VKXKT1AN UNIMKNT. trNo one once trying it will evor be without it; ovrrlloo phyHiciaiiH !me it. 25 C'euls will Iluy a Treatise upon the Horse aud his Diseases. Book of 10(1 ut;ca. Valuable to every owner of horses. Fostauo stamps taken, Bent postpaid by NEW YORK NEWSPAPER UNION, 150 Worth Street, New York. Vegetine For Chills, Shakes, Fever and Ague. Taeuouo, N. C, 1878. Dr. H. R. Hthvisns! Dear Sir 1 feel very frratnful for what your valua ble medicine, Vkoetink, has done iu my family. I wmli toexpreHs my tliauks by iiifnrmiuK you of the wniiilerlul euro of my koii; also to let you know that Vkoktink Ik the best medicine 1 ever saw tor Chill, btiuirx, t'rrtr unit Aunt. My son was sirk with iiir.tnlrHiii lh7J, which lett him with Jiii-juiiU diKeaso. My hoii Hiulrred a Kreat deal of paiu allot the time; the nam whh ao urrut ho did ruitliiiiL but crv. The diK'tiii did not help him a particle, he could not iilt ti is toot trom tho floor; ho eould not move, without crutclu-H. 1 read your advert moment iu tho Louis ville cuurtri'-juurtt'it that vkoeiink was a rrria jilooit I'urinrr and lilooil r-ootl. 1 triad ono bottle, which was a u' real bciieht. lie kept oil with tliemrtli, rine. L'raduallv uainim?. lie haK taken eighteen Dot. tlen, and ho is completely restored to health, walks without rmtrbea or cane. He. it twenty years of size. I have a vomiKrr son, hitoen years of age, who is aub Jeet to t hill. W henever he frels one eouiinir ou he comes in, takes a dobe of Vkoktink aud that ia the l&ht ot the thill. KuETiNK leaves uobad etlect upon the m Kteui, like moHt of the medicines recommended tut Chill. I cheerfully recommend Veuktinb for such complaint. I think it In the ureatoet medicine m me world. uospeuuuov, MRS. J. W. LLOYD. Veoetisk. When the blood becomes lifeless and stagnant, either trom change of weather or ot climate, want of exercise, irregular diet, or from any other runse, the YifOKTiMC will renew the blood, carry otf the putrid humors. cle&nae the stoinarh, retfulatethe bow els, auu imparl a lone ot viger to me w noiu oody. Druggists' Testimony. i!a. H. R. STF.vr.NB: Hear Sir We have been Bi lling' your remedy, he VhoMisr.. for about three carH, and take pleasure ill rernmill'-lltlillt! It to OUT CUstollierH, and in no iu- htauco w In t.. a blood puritier would reach theeatie, has it ever billed to r-fturt a cure to our knowledge. It ccrtami is the ne t'tu-s ultra of renovator. lleleciful)v, E. M. SHEPHERD, DnliTpiids. Mount Veruoo, 111. j Vcgotino i IS SOLD BY ALL, DRUGGISTS. Tim Unatrln Jnlr-x When vitiated, as it always is in dyspepsia, poisons instead of acting as a solvent of the food, which decomposes in the stomach, giving birth to an acid, that rising in the throat, slings the palate, ami rnuses the exceeding unpleasant sensation railed heartburn, ('arbomita of Hoda aud other means aro often resorted to for the purposo of remodyingthis, but with no per manent good effect. Tho wiser way is to erad icate the atrocious disease which originates this and a hundi-od other harrasing symptoms. Palpitations of the heart, wind on tiie stomach. oppression in that organ after rating, and a sinking sensation in it at other times, ia short, all the indicia of chronlo indigestion are re moved hy llostettor'a Stomach Hitters, fore most of stomachics and invlgorants. Appetito and nerve tranquillity are imparted by its nso. In its food supply the United States lias a surplus of 870,000,000 bushels of pram and 1,070,000 tons of moat, (iront Britain has a deficit of 280,000.000 bushels of grain and 602,000 tons of meat. WIcIiimI for Clrmyinci!. "I believe it to bo all wrong and even wicked for clergymen or other public men to bo led into giving testimonials to quack doctors for vile stuffs called medicines, but when a really meritorious article is niuilo up of common valu able remedies known to all, and that nil phy sicians use and trust in daily, wo should freely commend it. I thereforo cheerfully and heart ily commend Hop liitters for tho good they have done mo aud my lriemis, llrmly believing they havo no equal for family use. I will not bo without them." liev , Washington, D. 0. For some time after the Noininn in vasion slaves comprised part of .tho ex ports frcm Euglaud to foreign ports. T1IJ3 :!iiii!;!iii!i!iii,iiiiiii!!!i:;i:;.'iIi::ti !!!,ii!!i!i!iil!!ili!!,il!il.i!:!lii;li; " hi GREAT GERMAN RFMFTW iniii'iMii"'tlims!tifmni, (l:l "iia- a !i!yji!iijiiiaa.iiiiiii3-!il ron RHEUMATISM, NEURALGIA, SCIATICA, LUMBAGO BACKACHE, OOITT, SORENESS or THE CHEST, SORE THROAT, QUINSY, SWELLINGS SPRAINS, II I '!( 'iiUtllltillUJUliiilltililllllK ..ir.ii JlljJDtMMlllll'lHIIJIIIJj ill ac,;rais j!!piJPilin"''mi!ii j 'l'""imtitM"iil!! t!lll!lliiil!iil!!!:!l) I I I II! 'i;iiiii!iui,iiiii;;lili: I .11 1 l".t! FHCSTED FEET EARS, rOTTXlISj-JEJ AND ocAz,ns, General Bodily Pains, TOOTH, EAR AND HEADACHE, mm pairs ACHES. IE A.;Ilil!!!l!;!li ;i!iii:i!liiiui!!il!liii!uii;!!! mml ll:.:.e" No Trapa ration on tartli iiali Sr. JicnM Oil, af lkTT., cxk. fllMei.t and chkap Kxiornal Heutedy. A trial .iitaila but the comparatively trilling outlay of .MiCknt.!. anil uvery one eulTuriuK with paiucan have choap aud positive pr'fcjfuf iU claim. unm-rioM IN KITTEN LAXOl'AUES. SOLD BT All DHUQQISTS AKB DEALERS IN MEEICINE. A. VOGCLE71 & CO. PIBLinSEVrsiON U CONTRASTED EDITIONS. t'ontaitilnir the OIil nn.l New Vert Um. In lmrnllel - 1 11 III lit.. Tile lusl hi.,1 rliril! est illiiKtnitcl cUlllon Ot Hie KevisedNewTeMtHllli'lil. M ill itillH 1 leiipleare wniiimtfurit. Do nut lie ilnt-ivril lit the nii-rnii ii ItniM imlilixlii'rs l iulrriereilitioiiH. Sr. thai the ruin on lmy eiiniuiiiH I till line einiiaviiejH mm nlrel iu.,1 wood. I'liiH in the only Jnrve t lie ri.nlr.iM. il li. V?".' v''1"'' i" ctiiiiina inniie" u lliiiif it. A.fcNTS V. TK.I1. S-mitorriiviih.i mul ex tratiTiiiH. AililW N VI l( iNAIrrn. CO., l'iiihi.,J':,. Cyclopedia War. Tho (rreat I.lbrnry of I'nlvemal Knowlediin new completed, hirtfe tyjie edition, nearly 4i,:ki0 toplcR lu every depart incut of human knowledge, about 4(1 percent, liiiyer than CliHinliem' Kiicvcln dla, IU per cent, lamer than Aiipletun'fi, '2(1 ier cent, laruertlian JoluiHiin'ii, at a mere fraction of their cost. Fifteen l:irne Octavo Volumes nearly I:i,(i0 pane", complete ill clot li liiiidiuif, H15i in half Uiih ia. X-Uh in full lihrury hunp, inarblud educ, Hieeial terms to chilis. $10,000 REWARD MlfutW SC and August. Send utiick tor Hiwimen pa;m ami full particulars to AMKKIt'AV HOOK KXCHAN'tlK, John It. Aldkw, Mauaxer, 7 til Broadway, New York. $5 to S20 V'rdav at home. Sam pies worth fflfren. y AdrircHKSTiNKiiN AC'ii.,l'ortlaiiil.Maino. AMERICAN AND FOREIGN PATH GEORGE E. LEMON, Att'y at Law, WASHINGTON. I). ('. iii ierences K'lven to actual ciicuu lu nearly every County in the II. 8. t'oriespoinh uee inili i. hi nd Kkt tch or modi 1 for opinion as to I atrniiilil,tv. No chllive lol'HervleeH linli'HSHUeeeSNtiil, r.Ht lili: h d 1HI 70 AWKKK. l'.ftday at home easily made, rustle Outlit tree. Add' TuliK It Co.. Aiiniinta.M.iinu. ii W Iff fill Pt n Dr. nrETTAtirS TIK.VDACTTE rn.r.SI cure .ni.st v.'on.'.crrnlly In a very jhort time both 81CK mid NKKVOl'S UKADAt Hi:; arid v. I il-i actinir on the nervous system, cleanse the stoinai'ii of i-.tcsi if Irilc, proUuciu.' a regular licultliy actiou of tho bowels. r " oo A full hIzo box of thcHo vitlimblo ril.T.S, with full llrertlon for a com llete cure, luuiled to nny ndilresa oi. revvlfit t:f l ino t!irec-cjut poataico aUiiiipa. buIo by all lru.'Kita at S5e. bolo 1'ioi.riotors, KliOWTf CaiiiUCAX CO?IPANy, UulUmore, Md. o o pETROLEUH L8ea and approved by the leadinj P1IYSI- U1AK3 of EUROPE and AMERICA. The most Valuable Family Remedy Known. B0BES. f f CATASSH. IIFMORTJUnTno v.- ji. ' Conpha, Coldj, 6ore Threat Crono rTry them. 25 and SO ceat ize of e'.l our goods, ' tunAMj siv.:i:.i. Aa- vli: 1's.iladi.lhiu a i'i"oM'iii.jj ir-rT' TTw ft A SATE AND 81) Rf, REMEDY FOR ' Rheumatism, Neuralgia, Hi 2 PH. Cramps, Cholera, Diarrhoea, Dysentery. Sprains AND Bruises, Bums AND Scalds, Toothacha AND roit HAi.r. nv am. iit i caasTs. N Y N u ;. ll'ure. t mul iiest Meillrino cv. r Undo, Acolmlilnatlnn of Hops, Bucbu, Man drnklea'i'tDanctcllon.witiiailtiiebcitaiid rnoMt 0 ura live pru(iei'tiri of all other Hitter, mnk TA tlioni-eau'si Blood Purifier, Liver RBK M ln tor, " l'1'1' and Health Itoetorlntf Avent oil!M""'eartl1 Kn .n-x,. V mi noiwttilv lonft elt where nop lilt tern are tiHVcau varied and perf vet aro thulr onorattonn.1 Tier eiTi mw 11 V m1 'Iforto the tgel in! lnina. To all whom ,ViijniMiui irreirolarl tyoftliotMiwolor"lnry "irans, or who re quire an AppetlwrV"10"10 '"'"'"l Stimulant, llopllittora are lnmlVul"ei Without intOX- IcatinKt No nuitter what your feW'Hnr o" nymptomt, are what the disease or ailwneiit le use Hop Hit ters. Ii.in't weituullly.mii' 'Irk hut If yon only f eel had or nilsernhle,B11,H'tliem at one. It may save yourllfe.lt has!' avod hundreds. $SOO will bepald foraeaS' they will not cure r help. Ho not sulfur ' 1, 4 your frlenda ulter.hut use, and urire tliem UM Hop B KeinenilKT, Hop Wttcni Is noL"''. druinr,l drunken nostrum, but the rurerW' n ( liest Medicine ever made i the "INVALIIlfck. ITU1WU and HuTE" and no peraon or family r In should be without them. P. I.O. I an absolute and lrniistllile. cure fTiilirunkenni'ss.u-e of opium, I'lhuceo allu liareoties. Aileolllil nr.'lMK, Bend for Circular. Mop niiur unr. uo., r l?, e,-.-TiT 7 Y nli'l I n "I"". ' I 'T. J3aT5CT MHTTTTPArfPnwV w lUiiiiuriiuiuui - ij im.l i. rt..i A3Q wsais uepsi, 465 FULTON ST., BROOKLYN. Imuortant to the MaMs of America. The MOHT MAUVl'.I.oi:H JNVENTIOX in the TVour.H is tho "HI1.KOMA" niAiiNETlU IJAK.MKVI'M. Thev core KVl'.HY FOJtM OF PIRKAHK known to man, wil hout medicine, changes of diet, or occupa tiim. sihi.iks) l'KIIMINS, once II I l.fl.l HS INVA LIDS, are now n-JniciiiK lu the, blcaliitt ot KE bTOKKll IIKAI.TH. All cheeks and iKistotlice order for " WII.HONIA " mills mihl he made I :! Millu to NV.M. WILSON, 10, J i'Ul.TON ST., llKOOKI.VN. Kind tor eii-.iil.il'-. price listand other memoranda rcL'ardiui: Hin "Wll.riONl.V." We pi ve I Mm t he list ol tUousatiilH of " WILSONIA" Patients t lie tiiilow leir iil l'HKsl.Nl ATIVK RKFKKF.NCF.K: Hon. ll nutin So miiiir. I'tica, N. V.: Hon. Peter Oooi-cr. linn. Tliurlow Weed, (NiiniiMnlon' ('. K. (iar riKnii, (ii neral S. (ir.ihuui, JuiIki' I.evi rdixiii of N. V. t'itv: J. II. lin t dm ivlmui). Si rnce St., N. Y.: Ii. V. ! airwc.it her, (nn reliant), K nice St., N. Y.: I' ll. Stimiiiiii Inicivlianl), Siiruce Si., N. Y.: 'i'homaH Hall, 1h (Minion Ave., llrooklwi: Colonel llaiard t'luiii, K. C.llh St., N.Y.: llon.-loliii Mil. lu ll Ureas, iin ii, lii'oukbn; Mrs. it. Kolin.H'.iK Wyekoll st.,1; XI; u. A psmianert prartiral lead vehicle, with which a peiw-n euu nlc iliree min i as easily at he rmild walk on. Scud 3-cent itaiun tur 24-pase catar ioue. TUB POPt K'F'Q CO.. r, l Vishiugton St., Hontoii. Mala. SIX WHY WAHTR WONFTI Twee ata m all. ' 1 II fo wl k l.murlkia maiuMcl.. tol..f ffl Q elil.kMi or a 1,-a., ciowit. f hair on twld e w h.J, or u tlill KKIf, srHKMiTIIK.V ond I N VIOOKA IK Iho HAIR n, purr don't bo luimt.'igf ..I. Tr, Ihofian, Hponnh diaruv.r, wlnoh fan, MkVKK IKt MIU.U. K.ndll.NI.J SIX CIMS lo IH. J. OOMZA, LKZ, Ifi win, Booton, Unao. Uuonro ol nil lultoOuoo. uuly u ru. I . H A NHATTAM BOOK CO., U W. 14th Bt., XT. P.O. Box I HO, ltlAI'l,K.VV4MM tNSTITI'TF., 1 QQ1 JOll. Kor Yoiiiiifljidiis.PiilBtield, Mass. loOl. Itnre lialviintiniea l.ociillun of unrlvnled ben uiy and snlubllty. Itey.U.V. KVKAK, Priiiciiial. 1,1,KN'H It nil n FiiiMl-curoaNenrouB Debility e.iknessol Oeneriitiviiiivuiis. tjl alldnii-fists. Send lori'ireular. Allen V Pliainiiuy.llKI l'irstav..N.Y'. A,;KNTH VANTKI lor the BeirandTriiHt.'st; helluiK Pictorial lliuihsaiid liibles. Pricea reduced a.l p. ret. National Publishing Co., Philadelphia, Pa. YniINn MFN I-ciiiiiTcleirrunliy. Earn4(Jtolii) a month, liraduattia Ruaraiiti ea liayiiiBOftlcca. Add's Valentine broa., JaneHVilie.Wig. tCfin week in your own town. Teruie aud jr oiitrlt 'ou free. Add'e H. Hallbtt A Oo., Portland, Maine. JELLY ThaToll S-4- ArticleifroiB pur Yaaeline auch aej Pomade Vaselina, Vaseline Cold Cream, Vaseline Camphor loe. VaacLue Xoilot Boaps, are iuerier to auj iWlar eaeew VASELINE CONFECTIONS. An airreeable form of tak ing Veline int'jraally. 25 Cr-i s A EOT. for the Treatment nf XfOTTWTlS PFPW9 CUTS. rTTTTHY atns' I II I II f Hiil I P 111 - f lKEAPEST TlOOKi? IN THE TTTORLD a iluciiulu ' Ills- If TiiliuCa IllsUiry eflll tutldt I .airyut kiiiiiiiuil. CuK. Utermuie I I'o Ull xr.iji.o I I i lVe lsuiu vols. I I i-:iiiu vul. bsiiilsoinely 1 1 ruleooiie v cliitu ; uul v ia.iMi bouud. fur Hi MlJMIifft A -51 - 3 I 1 t i I 4o in l i is e e - jaev , it i m mt i mm DISEASES Twi.:rmirT:w' and Bii htneria cnriiATiim.Tj y.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers