" 1 lot Juetnodiats Bare mrnia amn- bentg to celebrate the one htrndredth nniTPMary of the organization of their first eonferonoe by a general conference in Baltimors in December, 18,34. In honor of the oonaion tbej will raise a fund of (2,003,000 to be applied equally to o baron extension, education and foreign missions. Tha chances are that America will nave to supply the whole- of the Egyp tian deficiency in cotton. The old stock of cotton Is very light in Gieat Bri'a'n, while Eist India cotton cannot oome into th English market before he end of January, even trnnld the 8ub canal remain open. When the East India cotton does oome, it requires an almn'.Tire of aiz'y per cent, of American o it ton to be made available for the English machiniry. Altogether, me outlook is Terr promising for rn mnnerativ-t prices for the American cot ton crop of the current year. The silk association of America re ports the products of the year endinir June 80. which amounted in value to about $35,00i,000, are triple the value ol the products of the lactones ten years ago. Since 1870 the product and the productive capaoity of the industry cave very greatly increased. Within the decade the number of factories en gaged in silk manufacture basinoreased from eighty-six to 383, while the looms . . . r r. . ft nnl 4 . , I EJ&fJ'Et &2:,d" hands employed from 6.GU0 to'Sl.SOO The wanes paid rnse in ten years from 82,000,000 to 89,000,000, and many new States not previously engaged in the industry began to manufacture silk and now have factories at work. These States are Maine, Rhode Inland, Cali fornia, Illinois, Kansas and Missouri. The salmon .fisheries of the United States have increased more than twenty fold within ten years, and last year's product was nearly a million cases, worth five million dollars. Bat the result of this vast business is that the Southerly and more accessible rivers ars becoming fished out, as the greed of the fishermen has extended to tlie cap- ure of the salmon which are on the way to their spawning places. The Bacramento eai even tho seemingly in exhaustible Columbia are snfLring from this came. The more distant iters of British Columbia and Alaska Ire still bountiful, but they will be ruined in their turn by such methods of fishing. The experience of the Atlantic 5' ast should toaoh the Pacific to retard its treasures by appropriate laws regulating the time and manner of fish ing, lest it be compelled to go through the process of restocking. The 13'h day of next Dacember will be the fiftieth annivarsary of the first Section of Mr. Gladstone, England's hrimA miniatA frt navHamunt. anil time of the more enthusiastic admirers f the grand old man" propose to hold I jubilee on that occasion. Mr. Glad- tcone was tnen as rabia a tory as ne is tow an uncompromising liberal. Hi? tddress to the electors was dated from Ihe Clinton Arms, Newark, on the O.h f October, 1832, and the nomination look place on the following 11th of Deoember. Two days afterward Mr. Gladstone was returned at the head of (he poll, and from that day to this no parliament has met in which be has not bad a seat. It was in 1815 that he changed his politios, at the time of the lorn laws. The liberals wish to make Ihe celebration a national affair, one enthusiast describing Mr. Gladstone as the member for "all Engloni V In the Ream d Anthropologic Dr. Be renger Ferand describes in a paper entitled "Lies Griotu" those peculiar Itinerant musicians who wander all over Central Africa from shore to shore. Toey belong to different low castes, but are uoder one chief of great power, Who takes what he needs from the gen eral reoeipts. "Griots" is a French bcrruption of ihe Oaolove word ."Gvewonal.' This euild is both feared and bated by the natives. The members of it are considered impure. The bodies of the dead are thought to make sterile .the land in which they may be interred. Bat it seems these people are skilled in feomposing without previous study, and in piaying on the guitar and the violin. The least giftel among tbeoa beat the tam-tam or operate on some other rude instrument. They carry Den's from place to place, and it is said tbey also exoite wars. Bat whether there is peaoe or war in a locality, they have the peculiar privilege of coming and going as they please. A gentleman who has reoently taken Tip bis residence in Salt Lake City writes of one of the means employed by the Mormons to raornit their ranks with emigrants from Europe. He says : We had quite a sight here last week 900 emigrants from Denmark and Sweden arriving in one day. I went to "the ofloe" to see them. Those who have friends are cared for, but those having none stay in "the office" until they find employment They know nothing about polygamy until they get here, and are made to believe that it they will oome and be good Mormons they will be healed, physically as well as spiritually. There are a great many cripples among them, but I have not Been any "healed" physically yet There is one poor fel low among their number who is minus a leg. They told him in the old oonntrv they could give him another good leg if be wonld just come to Salt Lake ; so he came fall of hope. Now that he is here, they tell him they can Rive him another sound limb, bat if they do he will have three legs in the next world. and as he cannot live very long in this world wonld it not be best for him to continue as he is, rather than go stump ing around paradise with an extra limb f The Chinese colony of Boston rer formed a strange and elaborate funeral ceremony over the body of Moy Dick Gam, who died of pneumonia. Thirty or forty mourners clad in full native costume and wearing the white silk aprons of the Chinese Masonio order, wita a taca oi mania at their bead, marohe't through the principal streetl t j Ashburton place a quiet and retire! locality. There on to stools in tbi mid lie of the street was placed tht On (Do, and at each end of It was a tabl( covered with a white cloth- On one. table wore a roait pig and the carcast of a sheep and a bowl of rice containing a nnmber of small lighted torches, anl on the other a large bowl of rice aod several small cups with chopsticks. Sil Chinese priests appeared and chanted prayers and the tables were loaded with other viands. The prayers were thou resumed, and lasted nearly half an hour. Afterward the company, two by two, knelt and bowed their beads to the ground several times. The preces sion then mure bo. I to Mount Hope cemetery, whore the burial took place. The grave was covered wi'h t'ie viands used at the funeral and with oountlesi slips of paper containing prayers for tne dead. Lawyer John II. B. La'robe. Jr.. of Baltimore, was drowned inthePatapsoo river recently. He was soaroely thirty- live years old, bnt his career has beon a romuutio one, and it recalls an inter esting performance of Grant's adminis tration. Soon aftor graduating from the University of Maryland, in 1873, Latrobe went with A. B. Steinberger on that famous expedition to the Samoan or Navigator's Islands in the South Pacifio ocean, intending to consolidate tne islands into one government, tinder the protectorate of this country. Snme sanction had been given to the scheme junta wucu kiwi, .u iuo nuucuiQ ?' Washington. . Each island was ruled by a single chief, and they all wel comed the expedition and aereed to the plans. Latrobe had drafted a constitution and code of laws on the voyage, and they wero at once adopted. The government was reorganized, with the chief who had the largest following as kiu?. lie was crowned Hiwaii 1., king of the Samoan Islands, and made Steinberger prime minister and. young Latrobe minister of war ia command of the army, which was soon uniformed in wmte pints, blue coats und good rifles while Latftbe far outshone the king in the splendor of his raiment The king was made a mere figure-head, being unable to sanction a law or enforce an order without his prime minister's con sent, while Latrobe controlled the treasury. Things wont on smoothly until Sir Edward Thornton, British minister to the United States, had a little correspondonoe with his borne government, and as a result a British man-of-war anchored one day off the Samoan group, lauded a boat, load of men and assumed oontrol of af fairs. Steinberger put the captain in irons, but when, a few hours later, a second man-of-war sailed up, the prime minister saw that he had been rather hasty and accordingly surrendered. Latrobe was finally sent back to the United States, and Steinberger was left, against his will, on one of the many islands of the South Pacific. S3 ended the kingdom of Simoa, whioh was making too much progress to suit the government of England, and Latrobe returned to the practice of law in his native city. An Extraordinary Story. Another remarkable story has to bo added to the long list of curious and exciting narratives connected with the Nihilist cause. The St. Petersburg cor respondent of the Voltaire guarantees the authenticity of the following facts which are said to have materially in creased the aoxiety felt in the Russian capital for the czar's safety. Saortly after the opening of the Moscow exhibi tion, which was recently iuaugurated by the Duke Vladimir, a young man de manded au audienoe of the chief of police at St. Petersburg. He refused co state hiserratd to any of the subor dinate (ffijials, so after being care fully searooed he was admitted to the presence of the general. Here he stated at once that he was sent by the revolutionary party, and explained his mission on the following terms: "The emperor is prevented from going to Moscow through his fear of our schemes. His dread will cease to be justified when he grants a constitution. Then he need fe.r no oonpirao, and can go with safety where vez he pleases. It has fallen to my lot to inform y ou that if the emperor persists iu his reactionary policy nothing can save him. Neither my friends nor myself wish to murder him treacherously. Alexander III. is warned as was Alexander II. We do Dot assassinate, but we render jas tice." At this point of the in terview the polioe effioer seemed anxious to call in assistance, but the young Nihilist stopped him and added : i do not wish to be subjected to the indignity of torture. I could have killed you, but we do not commit murders uselessly." With these words the youth stepped back a few paces, and knooKea two large buttons with wbich his cuffa were fastened against his fore head. The buttons being full of violent explosive substance, burst, and inflicted such wounds on the young man that he expired in a few moments, leaving no trace as to his identity. The sensa tional incident has reminded the public that the murder of Alexander II. was preceded by similar warnings Lencton Jdrgrapt. Sad End of a Sad Story. Our Vienna correspondent referring to the lute painful case of suicide by two young girls, observes : The poor girl's account of her lover's indiffer ence and his father's hardness of heart might be deemed exaggerated h -d not subsequent circumstances shown them to be true to the letter. Old Count Oondenhoven was so shocked at the whole event that he left the castle the same day on whioh the corpses were found. The young counts ordered a decent funeral for the girls, and made the gardener cut all the flowers to bk found in hot-house and gardens to decs their coffins and their grave. The old oonnt, on returning to Ottenheim, heard of this, and immediately gave orders the very reverse of those given by his sons. The girls were buried outside the churchyard wall in tha early morning, when no one knew ol the ceremony, and when no friendlj hand oonli throw earth upon thorn with a pitying heart Xsnion JVe. FOR TITE LADIES. CTesrlnc the ITalr. The styles of wearing the hair are various, and. indicate a desire on the part of the hairdressers to do away with the graceful simplicity that has been in vogue for some time past. Looped braids falling on the Deck re plaoe the compact Grecian knot The old-fashioned "French twist" of our mothers' days has been revived ; also the large bows formed of hair, whioh were fashionable some twenty years bro, and whioh preceded the chignon. Fin ger puffs on the top of the head are also worn; so too are the two long drooping ringlets, falling on the neck, which the Princess of Wales brought into favor at the time of her marriage. An Ecyptlna Laity. She wore, first a chemise of some thin white material, with loose sleeves, embroidered round the edge, hanging over her hands; then a large pair of crimson silk trousers, so long and wide that they entirely concealed her bare feet; then came a garment like the Turkish anteree, descending to the feet before, hanging in a train behind and opening at the sides, with long sleeves open from the wrist to the elbow and falling back so as to expose those of the chemise beneath. Tho dress was made of crimson damask and embroid ered all round tho edge with black braiding, and was confined Dot at the waist but over the hips with an In dian shawl wound two or three times round and knotted before. The last gar ment was a jacket, reaching only to the waist with half sleeves, made of an exceedingly rich stuff of dark blue silk, embroidered all over in mnniDg pattern with gold and eded with gold braiding and buttons. Three large sil ver amulet cases, containing charms, were hung over the shawl girdle. The bea Idress is the prettiest part of the Egyptian costume and Sofia's was ex ceedingly rich. Her hair was divided into twenty or thirty small braids hang ing over her shoulders, to the end of each of whioh was affixed three silk cords strung with gold coins of various sizes. Two rows of gold coins, as large as a half crown pieoe, laid olose together, enoircled her forehead; and at each temple depended a cluster oi small er ones, with an agate ornament in the middle. The back of her head was cov ered with a small Egyptian fez, orna mented with a large piece of solid gold and bound on by a handkerchief of embroidered crape. She wore two necklaces of gold coins, thickly strung together, and eaoh individual pieoe of money depending from a massive orna ment in the form of a fish; one of these necklaces was long, and the other just enoircled her throat; and between them was a string of beads of Egyptian agates, as large as birds' eggs, and strung together with golden links. Her Barrines were of cold filio- in t.lm lhape of flowers, and her bracelets, of wnioa sue wore several, oi massive gold and silver. Wa computed that she carried about 350 on her person in coin alone, without including other orna ments. Mrs. Pomtr'i Pilgrimage, F&abton Moles Woolen dresses, to be tasteful, should be made as plain as possible. Chemises are made with a V front, to be worn with V front dress bodies. The lace fichu so popular this sum mer will be reauccd to a full ruohe by tall. Lace and embroidery remain the favorite trimming for all kinds of dresses. Ficelle oet will cover the collars and coffj of many dressy costumes in the fall. The wraps adopted by youog Ameri can girls abroad are of masculine cut and tailor finish. Pompons and ostrioh feathers form the trimmings of the largest number of summer dress hats. White blouse waists are worn under long, loose jackets for seaside and mountain fatigue costumes. Immense hats of drawn or shirred crape, mull and veiling are worn at European seaside resorts. The half-fitting princesse dress, with its superimposed draperies, flonnoes aud trimmings, holds its ground for children's toilets. Tulle and other soft, gauzy stuffs showing chenille dots on the surface are fashionable material for ball-dresses worn at watering places this season. Bonnets made of india rubber and trimmed with flowers, recently intro duced by Paris modistes, resemble wil low baskets filled with flowers. Seaside hats are many of them lined with dark blue mull or Turkey relcalioo and trimmed on the outside with a gay handkerchief. Old-fashioned palm-leaf fans, orna mented with hand-painting in showy designs in oil or water colors, are in demand. The costliest costumes are invariably combinations of two or more materials, with lace, embroidery and other trim mings thrown in ad libitum. The favorite linings for seaside hats of m anil a and palmetto straws are of dark blue mull or Turkey red oalioo, while a gay handkerchief trims the out side.' The daughters of the Prince of Wales wear wash prints for morning and white muclin for evening toilet in summer, and plain gray serge for day dress in Winter. The present simple and becoming style of hair dressing is made to look charming by the addition of diamond pins stuck here and there in the low chignon and amid the fluff waves. Corsage bouquets of natural flowers are worn high on the lelt side and as large as ever. Hoses remain the favorite flower several kinds in various shades of oolor forming the most admired bouquets. Moire this season very seldom forms the wholo of a costume. It is only used Id combination with other ma terials, snch as satin, foulurd, faffelas, lawn silk or cashmere. It quite fre quently forms the skirt or bodioe alone, the other portions of the toilet being of a contrasting material, or it is fre. quently employed for faoings, collar,, sash, pelerine, cuffs and vest, in tho formation of a new costume or the reno vation of one of a past season, IL ....I. . j.l ii x AMONG THE LEPERS. A Ghasttr Slant Is bs Whitened la tha Handnrleh Islands. A correspondent writes from Hono lulu, Sandwich Islands! I went with Dr. Fitoh to the branoh settlement for lepers. It is an inolosnr of several acres on what is culled Fishermen's point, on Honolulu bay. Scattered over the gronnds are sooresof cottages, some connected, others detached, aud the i fllces and buildings used by Dr. Fitch's assistants. Imagine, if you oan, a settlement of Anlo-Saxons, or people of any otlmr hUhly civilized race, all of them affiioted with, and all more or less deformed, by an inourable aod horrible disease -knowing it to be inourable, and seeing themselves and each other dropping to piooes from its dread effects. I cannot imagine such a picture, because I honestly believe that suioide would make a settlement im possible among any other than a people still barbarians, or else in the child hood of civilization. Such was the settlement I visited. There were men, women and children living in a world apart from ours, having nothing worth living for save mere existence, a suc cession of days, marked only by slow consummation of the death that had already seized upon their bodies, and had already deprived them of poitions, wmon were already returned to dast. There weTe in that stransre and unna'ural community marriages, births, deaths. I would not attempt to de scribe ia detail the unrelieved ghastli ness of tho sights there, yet Dot one of the inmates who helped to makeup the absoluto dreadfulness of the scene failed to greet us with a smile and cordial aloha. That only served to emnhasizn tha darkness of the pioture. I said not one; yet there was one. On a bed in a little cottage room, whose open door faced the dark, cool canons back of the city, and whose window looked out upon tho 1 a . s . . - loveiy Day ana let in tlie lazy murmur of waves bieaking over the coral reefs, lay a native woman, dying. Nearly all of her right hand had dropped off. but in the remnants of her fingers she held a feather fan, whioh she faintly waved across her distorted face, to cool the hot, aching eyes that had not been closed for months, the palsied muscles oi ner eyelids reiusmg their duty. As the doctor spoke pleasantly to her she turned her glaring eyes toward us, but did not speak. "Her mouth is af ftcted, too," the doctor said. We stood aside from her door to admit a oooliDg breath of air that just then came down from the mountains. The swollen face rested and the feebly moving hand fell, in gratitude for the mountain breeze. yet, when it died away the hand did not move again; it was her last moment. The mountain's gentle breath had com forted her, and when it died away her breathing ceased, too. In one cottneo we saw a little trirl whose fingers bad been drawn up until her hand was half closed. She bad ex perimented with a novel cure by calmly stepping on the bent lingers until she had straightened them out She ex hibited the result with pride: four fingers straight and stiff, and as useful a so many wooden pegs would have been. Oat on what is called the playground wero seme boys playing ball, one with a useless hand, another with a palsied leg, another with a foot partly gone, and others with swollen, senseless faces. On the veranda of a cottage sat two old Datives, both with useless legs, but neither of whom showed any trace of leprosy, in face or hands. As I watohod them one of them began chanting a hnlu hulu. aooompanying it with appropriate movements of his hands. Possibly, observing the look of astonishment on my face, the old man's companion, with a meaning wink at me, joined in the chant, and soon both the old lepers were ohanting and waving their hands in the sensuous measures of the hulu hnlu. It was s dance of death, indeed ; Punchinello's mask over a molding skull ; a rollick ing revelry in a charnel house; life mocking a gamng tomb. The medical profession here in Hon olulu is iu t emtio dispute about what leprosy is (I; and whether or not it ii contagions. This, of course, is an old, old dispute, but it has been revived with great violence by the assertion of Dr. Fitch that it is, if not curable, amenable in a large degree to treat ment, and that it is not contagious from ordinary contact such as would demand the transportation of lepers into isola tion. Dr. litah has been here two years, and naturally his youthful but dogmatical contradiction of the theories of the old and and experienced practi tioners has raised a discussion of a rather warm nature. However, his practice appeals to the sympathies oi Datives, aiid he has a large, if rather ignorant, following. Sin Francisco Call. A Monster Timepiece. The large clock at the English house of parliament is the largest one in the world. The four dials in this clock are twenty-two feet in diameter. Every half minute the minute hand movei nearly seven inches. The dock will go eight davs and a btlf, thus indicating any neglect in winding it up. The winding up of the striking apparatus takes two hours. The pendulum is fif teen feet long; the wheels are cast iron; the hour bell is eight feet high and nine feet in diameter, weighing nearly fifteen ton?, and the hummer alone weighs more than four hundred pounds. This clock strikes the quarter hours and by its striking the bhorthand re-, porters regulate tbeir labors. At every strike a new reporter takes the place of the old one, while the first retires to write out the notes that he has taken Juries the previous fifteen. minutes. A Land of the Narkawasnee tribe of Indiana, numbering about forty, live on one of tho tributaries of the Kissimmee rivr a distance of twenty miles from Fort Dade, Fla. It is said that out of a total of 2,000, 000,000 acres of land in Australia fit for tillage but about 9,000,000 have been brought under it. Otfiateat IlreTrT1ni'S 1 4 fl'J. For coughn, oolcls, re throat, bronchitis, laryngitis ainl ennsu iptlou in Itn sailys'siri's, nothing cqnaln Dr. rioroo's "Golden Meilical Discovery." It ii also a prest bluod-pnrillnr in) MronRth-ro-toror or tonlo, and fur lWor complaint and co-tire conditions of the bowelj It has no ei'il. Pold by dnignint. AxnFNs, Oa., has four cotton factor, (? croL'Ktinu 25,1)00 gpindlcs, and a capital of tiOU.OOU. Whiil'a "svrilU Unlneit. WorkiiiRnv n mill icornmizn hy employing fr. I'irrce a Modicinr. IIin "rif-n I'lirRH tive Te lute" mid "(toldcn Medical Discovery" rlennne the t lood ami iytoin, thin preventing feveis and oiliorwiioimdim awes andcnrinR all tcrotulous aud other liumurs. Hold by drug gists. W. T. Travis, of Edwards, Miss, has matri monial pollcii'hon himself amounting to ovor t'JOO.UOO. YomifT, middle-aged or old men snfTering from nervous debility or kindred affoctioiiH. hm1d aMrrun ith two stamp-, tor large treaties, Woiti.D's IItspensaht Mkdical Asso ciation, DnffHlo, N. Y. A rtEsrsiiATK fight botwoon a sturgeon and a pornoie at Havannah, Ga., ended in the doath of the lattery Blslnrlel Fever, Kiiik, l'a.. July IS, 1SS1. H. II. WARNF.n h Co.: Sir Your Halo Kid ney and Liver Cure hae cn'ircly cured me ol malarial fever of iwo years' standing for whioh 1 could never find any relief. Hiss Kaik Kiso. Tnie largest poach orchard iu the world is in Alabama. Great improvements have recently lien mads In CarboliDe, a rinodortxed extract cf petrols am, the Rreat natural hair renewer. perfect a an nquisiiely perfumed hair dressing aud re storer. Bold by all druggists. Mexsuan's rwToNiiirn nr.Kt to.mio, the only preparation ofboef containing its rutin nut rt tioiupnpertirx. Ii contains blood-making, foroe generating and life-sustaining properties ; in valuable for Indigestion, dynpopaia, nervous prostration, and all forms of goueral riobiljtv; also, In all enf. eblod conditions, whether the result of exhaustion, nervous prostration, over work or acute disease, particularly if reuniting from pulmonary complaints, Caswell, Hazard t Co., proprietors, New York. Bold by druggists. T TUe Kroner A ale tirrnse Is tlie beat iu tlie untikut it is tio moei economical and cheapest, one box lasting as long as two of any other. One groaning will last two weeks. It received thai premium i tho Centennial and I'aris Expositions, al-n njodala at v-r;. n st-t,, i,r4 nv no 0(Ut,r- " Mound on Kara." Clears out rata, mice, reaches, flics, ant, bedbug, skunks, chipmuuks, gophers. 15c. Druggia:e. t'eni Will Huy a Treatise upon tha Horse and bis Diseases. Book of 100 pages. Valuable, to every owner of horses. Postage stamps takeu. 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Doao, oue ti-a)HHu!iil to one plut ol food. 8old everywhere, or aeut by mail for s letter nUiiiia. I. 8, JOMNHON AUG., button, Max,, turmerly Bauttor.Me. THRESHERS 7J Mil U llu reapoJf. Illua ratrdprlnn ll.L (reo. THK Al'l.'I'MAN ATA VI OH 111 . l Yfl 1 1 N R MFIU It '"U want to learuTeleifrajiliylu uunu iiiuii s law moiitha, aud be crri.un ol a aliiialloii. aihliena Valentine bnm., Jaueavuie, Win. o LDColna Wanted. Send Wo. In atnnn for eata. loyiifiii prii'ru. n. ai. luuroiT. i;. w nn-witer, N.i , 1 fi - SI If IT ass V Z 'M S3 rrr 25 CENTS, Postpaid; A. TREATISE ON THE AND HIS DISEASES. Containing; an Index of Diseases, which rites the Symptoms, Ganae and the Beet Treatment of each. A Table Kiviua all the principal drugs uaed for the Home, with the ordinary doae, etlecta, aud antidote whan a iKjiBon. A Table with au Euirravluii of the Horae'a Teeth at difloreut sitea. with rules for talliun the awe. A valuable oolioctlou ol Kooeipta aud much other valuable luforu.atiuu. , 100-PAGE BOOKgT-Ayfflgti 25 CENTS. OTjTJI3 IXTina, KITE COPIES ji 00 I TWENTY COPIES IS 00 TEN COl'ltS i 70 ONE HUMMED CXriE3 10 00 One, Two snd Three-Cent Stamps received. Address HORSE BOOK COMPANY, 104 WORTH STREET. NEW YORK. .Morchmritn. p.flmwittift' tLllVllML-MV" for human, fowl and animal fleah, wa? i flrat prepared and Introdtieed br Inr. (led. V. Mevf hant, In lclirt, si. X., V. H. A., 1H33, lines whleh lln It has ateadilr grown In public "nr. and Is now acknowledged and admitted bT lbs trade 10 be the atandard liniment of ths conntry. When w maka thla announce, nirnt ws do o without feiu of contra diction, notwitlialandlnit ws ars aware .rn man who ars more or leas prrjtirtlrerl anlnt proprietary remedies eam'clally on account of the many buro 1u'r on the maiket; however, we ars "pleaaed toatatn that anrh at airainat OAltOl.ING OIL. in inn pin m a.-, j uv.v not ex! We oo sot claim wonders or iniraclea for our liniment, bnt ws do claim It la wltnotn an eqiiai. im "; Ilea or inrre i.ir..Ta, .u n aati la that yon (five I a fair trial, renicmberlnir that the Oil .nk vklla avrartri' l?trAr7j2d(aniali)ls for human and fowl WoM4--. heah, and that with yellow tHJLSdja wrnpucr (three stars) fat ani mal riVali. Try s bottle. . Aa iheaecuta Indicate, lbs Oil la used sneeses. fnlly fur all dnoe of the nnmn,w ana sntme Hlinko well hefore llilng. Cannot be Disputed. One of the principal reaaona or the wonderful success of Mer chant's (JarillnR Oil la that it Is manufactured airlotly on honor, ita iinmnetora do not. aa la ths . rae with Ion many, aftermaklng liar for thetr medicine a name, dlmln- lah n c.iauve propertlea by ualng l"flor com pound, but nae tne ery heat (pn.Ua .10 be bought In r Jer the market, regardleaaof coat For half a century aierenani a "ar. Una- till b-a been a synonym for . I .it 1.,,., .a ha ' fa noneaty, aim wn. - iiifisii I""1 aa time endures. For . jr hv sll reapeetahle dealers throunhoiit the L'nltcd States and other wnntrles. our teatliuonlala oats from 1HM if' mv "upto the preaent Try Merchant's I JT usrullng Oil Liniment for Internal li.ajavey.jRi, and external tire, and tell your tjK-- nelKhbor what Rood It has dous. Hun t rail to follow dlrsctlona. Keep ths bottle well corked. CURES a ,nd Chllblatna, Froat llltes. Berati hea or Oreaae, Chaiilct llanila. F.iternal I'oiaoiia. Band Cracka, 1M1I Evil. Oal'a of all kin. la, ?welllpa. Tnmora, liwh Wounda. Hitfaat. BlunlMine, Foul I'll era, Oarv't In Com, Farcy. Orai-krxl Teata, Calloua, Ijiinennaa, Horn DiateDiiK-r, Orownaeab, gmttnr. Abaceaa of the tldder, Rnralna and nnitaea, Htrtimlialt, Win.iga.Qs, FiMit Rot In Kheep,' Foimdered Feet, ltoupln "oultrr, Bore Nipples. Curb. Cracked H.M.la, Old Sores, Kpianotle, Umo Hark, llen oorhoiila or Piles. Tootnwlie, Hheumatlsm, Hpavina, Sweeney, n.nia, Whltlcwa, WeaUneaa of the Joints, Cent raei Ion of Mueeles, Crainiw, Swelled Jjuku, Flat ills, Malice, Thrush. Caked it re aa ta. Dolls, ke. $1,000 JtEU'Anv fwior ence in ., V.,, "Merchant's Ueriillmi Oil," or tv.it... v.rm medicine than "Merchant's Worm Tablets." Wan. ufuctured by M. O. O. t o., port, iN. i., t. H. A. JOHN HOOOE. 8cy. Blood, ami will completely elmnae the blood fn lbs entire svatm tu three moiitha. Any raon who n. . Y nl.a 1111. mxkf, Ne will take una pill each nlithi from 1 in uwceaaniay te reatxred toaoutnt heallfi. If such a tiiinu be neible. Sold evervwhen. or aeol by mai' Iir a letter atanipe. I. H. JOIINKON Sc CO., Uoalon, ftlafMka furinerly llnngor, frle1, tFC" flnin sbnn.UneeM.'i Million pounds I IL 11 T linuoited laat yearI'rlci-a lower 1 f IS thau ever.-Agenis wuntedDool 9 L f (l waste lime. bend lor circular. lO lb, tiooi n!clc or J?"! f J 10 Ibn. fine Wlck or Wlxed, jor t'i. IO lbs.CI.olce KUrkoririUtwl, for fata pend r-T pound sample, 17 rt. extra for potas. Then net up a e.lu:. i;holcet Ti lu the world. Laiveat variety .-I'lcnaes e verylmdv.-O deat Te llouae In Aineitea.-No chroitMiNo Uuiutma. StraiRht bmuncea.-Valuo for uioucy. ROH'l' Wr.l l.S. 4 Vetve M.. N V.- ' Tot i17. 3QQ A Bent t ii ui ii. :aaia4tlve, aota-r amenta to wwwtr.ivel sud aell territory lor my Autoiiiatie Wacon ltralce. An opportunity fnrH or 10 encnirtto tnen in each Htnte to obtatu lucrtitive emplovment. Kach nireut will be fumiNlied a brake and outfit at s reaa.. liable price, A Roml aurety ImuiiI reipiired. For lurtlior iuf.iruiation a.hln-Mi, with incluaed atauip. II. V.. Jin k. on, liiKh 8hoala, 1 ultoq Co., Ga. '. rrof. BABTmsa. -rs. a.4 r,,ablarvjl. will, far S3 a.a alia ar. h.ui, I of tal,r f ,m aa4 teak hat,. Mai a CuaKatT "0.1 a. f TuaK a laar fatur, lau.band ar vlfa. aiU aaaia. Hal y f A . .J at ataeunt, a data rfaiartiat. m,m4uo. U U all, p,,4H-k1. aTn,i ,,lura,4 I, ,11 aal aaiMBed. t&Jx'jJ uMUrealSaaauaSMi. AHMliar f raX Fnonogrnphy, e lfarn'lio taHorihnari Catalrtene of worka, with l'lienouraphlo alphal'St and illiiHtrationa, i..r iHsiiuuem, aeut on aiplics tlnn. AdMreea, Henn Pltiuan, Cinclutiati, O. ef Kcr rn ' that h-i AND KOT CflT TI')V Wairhmakern. Hy mall, 'ii eta. Clrvul OUljAi I HKH. J. b. UlliOU it CO.. Us Doy Bt.. ii T. lara Bt.. . ONE MILLION COFIES SOLD. EYEBYBODY WANTS FT! EVERYBODY NEEDS IT I KKOW THYSELFiad ths BcinrrK of tiFrt on, self- PREMERTATION, Is s mvdlead tnstlse oa Exhausted Vitality. Karroos sad rhyaJesl Detarltr, prsmstura Dsallns la Man; ia sa iBdlautHisabls trestles for stsit aua, whether yeunc, middle aered or old. TUE KC1ENCF. OP MFFl Oat. SKX.F. FKEHERTATION. Ia beyond all emrMrlaon the most ertraaaMtnary work os Vhvaiolotry STavpnbllahed. There la Dothlng wUatever that the married or alnirls can either ra. quire sr wlab t lonrntm (Vista. mresrwlab leksow but what la lulty aapuuiiad. TUB KC1K1XCK OF MFK OB, 8KX.F. FQ ENERVATION, Inatnets those Id health bow to remain so, and ths iuraild how to beoome well. Contents one hundred and twenty-uveinraluahle preecrt pilous tot all forms sf acuta and rhronto dlaaea, for each of which a trt-rlue phTsiciaa would charge lroia 3 to til). Londom Larncn, TOE SCIENCE OF T,IFE OB, SELF. PKEHEKTATIOff, Contains S00 pases, fine steel enTTtiurs, Is eurmrbly bound in i reuch mnalia, euboaoed, full silt. It to s narval of art and beauty, warranted to bea baiter medleal bonk tu every aenae thau can be obtained elsewhere for double the price, or the mousy will bs refunded la every iuatanoe. Jiuuutr, THK 8CIENCE OF LIFEi OS, BKLF. FRKMKRTATION, la so mncb aassrtor to all ether treatises on medteal auhjaeu that conuauisou ia sbaolutel UcpoaaiUa. Anion Utrutd, TUB bCIENCE OF LIFE, OR, SELF. rREMEKVATlON, Is sent by man. sacunly sealed, postpaid, oo receipt of prioe. only tl.'ia (new edition). Small Illustrated aampttw. so. Bead now. Ths sutbor can bs consultant on an rltiossf rs qtUrlnc skill sad sxptuienos. Address PEABODY MEDICAL INSTITUTE, r W. H. PACKER, M. D., 4 Balrlsrok Ptrset, Baaten. Irfaaa. mi a. a. 1 u r r KIOD ffr&Stntcr$ CaJ V
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers