WORDS. Do not waste time in useless regrets over losses. I A nod from a millionaire la a break fast for a fool. Adversity borrows its sharpest sting from impatience. A wise man makes more opportuni ties than ho finds. One forgives everything to him who forgives himself nothing. Ad. hour of triumph comes at last to thoe who watch and wait. To be happy in heaven it Is Sot necessary to be miserable on earth. ' Recollection is the only paradise from which we cannot be turned out. If ws could read the secret history of our enemies we should find in eacli man's life sorrow and suffering enough to disarm all hostility. 1 A happiness that is quite undis turbed becomes tiresome ; we must have ups and downs ; the difficulties which are mingled with love awaken passion and increase pleasure, i Every increase of knowledge may possibly render depravity more de praved, as well as it may increase the strength of virtue. It is in itself only power, and its value depends on its ap plication. Condensing a Telegram. ,' There was a big smash on the rail t road at Dallas Center, Iowa. To an ' nounce his escape from a horrible death one of the passengers, a tall man with a thin neck, handed the telegraph ope rator the following message: Mrs. Sarah H. Foi.linsbkb, Valla Cxntrr, Iowa. yDear Wife: I left tho city earlv this morning, after eatlue breakfast with Professor Morton, a live man in the temperance came I ex pected to eat dinner with you at home. Hut we were delayed by a terrible railroad accident on tbe railroad, and I narrowly escaprd beine killed ; one passenger waa terribly mangled, and has since died ; lint I am alive. The conductor sayt I cannot make connection so as to coma to Dallas Center this morning, but I can get there by 8 o'clock this even Ins. 1 bate to disappoint yon, but cannot help It. AN 1th love for mother and the children, I am your loving husband, Kouer K. Folunsbib. The operator read it, smiled, and eaid: "You can save considerable ex pense and tell all that is really neces sary, I presume, by shortening this message down to ten words. "We have no wire directly into Dalla3, and will have to Bend this message part of the way over another line, which adds largely to the cost of transmission. Shall I shorten this for you ?" "No, oh, no," the man with the shawl replied, " I'll fix it myself." The tall man with the short panta loons went back to the desk with his message. It was a stunner, for a fact, and tho man heaved a de spairing sigh as he prepared to boil his "letter" down to ten words. Ho aighed again after reading it through once or twice, and then scratched out "Dallas Center, Iowa," as though everybody knew where he lived. Tliun he erased " early," and drew his pen slowly through " breakfast with " and "in the temperance." Then he scratched over "dinner with," and went on to erase " and narrowly es caped." And so ho went on through the dispatch. Occasionally he would hold it from him at arm's length, after making an erasure, to get at the gen eral effect. And at last, after much scratching and erasing and with many sighs, he came to the window and said: " Here is this telegraphic dispatch to my wife. I have not been able to con dense it into ten words, and do not see how it can be done without garbling the sense of tl dispatch, but if you can do it you will oblige me greatly, as I do not wish to incur any really un necessary expense." And with that he handed the opera tor the following expunged edition of his original message: Mrs. Sarah H. Foixinsbeb My Dear Wife : I left the city this morning after eating Professor Morton alive cause I expected to eat you at home, liut we were delayed by a terrible railroad accident on the railroad. I being killed terribly mangled and since died; the conductor cannot Dallas Cauter but I can. I hate mother and children. Kooeb K. Foixikbbeb. The operator smiled once more, and in Ids quick, nervous way that grows oui or nis raminar association with the lightning, made a few quick dashes with his pencil, and without adding or changing a letter in the original message, shriveled it down to its very sinews, like this: lft telly 'sraorulug; delayed by accident; home evening. Kuobh K. Fou.in.k. " There, that is all right," he said, in the cheery, magnetic way theso opera tors have. "Fifty cents, sir; only twenty-five cent3 if we had our own wire into Dallas, sir; we'll have one next spring, too; saves fou several dollars, sir. That's right, thank you." And the man with the thin neck and thin hair went and sat down on a chair by tho stove, anil stared at that operator until the rescuing train came along a3 though he was a worker of "miracles. The World's Letters. Tho international postal bureau at Berne has issued its statistics for the year 187y, covering the twenty-five principal countries belonging to the postal union. Dunne the veitr 8 9ii . 000,000 pieces were sent by post of which 4,900,000,000 were letters and postal cards. Of the enormous total a.o.uuu.uuu pieces are credited to Europe, 2,3(30,000,000 to America, 20v 000,000 to Asia, 73,000,000 to Austra lia and 12,000,000 to Africa, lleckon Ing the population of the jlobe at 1,400,000,000, the total would allow 5.9 pieces of mail master per capita. Among the nations England sent the largest number, 1,587,000,000 pieces, and Germany the next largest, 1,200, 900,000. In the use of postal cards Germany came first, with 123,000,000, and England followed.with 114,000,000. : In 1870 tho value of -all tho men's clothing manufactured in the United 'States was $147,000,000. In 1880 $125,000,000 worth was made in the live cities of Ntw York, Philadelphia, Chicago, Bostoa and Cincinnati. 1R11MXG FOB THE NATT. The 1,1 fr Hint Apprentice Iter Ted the United Mr lea Rrfcnol Ship. The United States training ship Minnesota returned to New York from Newport, where she had been for the last fifteen months, and where tho recruits received were few in number. Boys entering tho service are required to be over fourteen years of age and under eight een, and must agree to serve until they are' twenty-one. They have to under go a searching medical examination, and must be free from all physical de fects. The minimum standard is as follows: Age, fourteen to fifteen years; height, four foot nine Inches; weight, seventy pounds; chest meas urement, twenty-six inches; fifteen to sixteen four feet and eleven inches, eighty pounds, twenty-seven inches; sixteen to seventeen five feet one inch, ninety pounds, twenty-eight inches; seventeen to eighteen five feet two inches, 100 pounds, twenty-nine inches. On entering, a recruit, what ever his age, is rated third-class boy, with a salary of $9.50 per month. On attaining the ratine: of seamcn-anDren- tice his pay is increased from $17.50 to ?31.50. 13y the time the apprentices reach the age of eighteen they are con sidered fit to be sent abroad in a prac tice vessel, finishing their term of ser vice in a regular man-of-war. Tho Portsmouth and Saratoga, at present in Naples, have 300 such boys on board. In no case are they discharged in a foreign port. "When twenty-one years of ago they receive a discharge stating their qualifications. Tho course of in struction they have received generally fits them to pass an examination for second mate in the merchant service, though the object of the system is specially that of educating a superior class of men for the navy. If they re- enlist in the navy within ninety days from tho date of their discharge they are granted a bonus of three months' full pay. At twenty-four an appren tice may, by passing an examination, become seaman gunner, from which position he may rise to tho rank of warrant officer, becoming boatswain or gunner at a salary of $1,200 to $1,800 a year. Tho boys receive instruction in all the branches of a plain English educa tion and are in addition taught the dillerent subjects necessary to a sea man, such as seamanship, great gun and small arms drill, rowing, sailing, swimming, fencing and boxing. They may also join a volunteer class of nav igation, held during tho winter. They are not required to stand watch, men being specially retained for that pur pose, but are for tho sake of conven ience nominally divided into two watches. The reveille sounds at 5 A. m., when they turn out and receive hot coffee and biscuit. Clearing decks generally occupies them till six bells, when they go to breakfast. They re turn to duty at 9 o'clock, at which time all hands are mustered at quar ters. Their studies engage their atten tion during the remainder of the day. Dinner is served at noon and supper at 5 p. m. The boys are allowed a full ration of provisions, but this they gen erally commute when in harbor for its money value thirty cents for each ration with which they purchase food themselves. At sundown all tho boys are sent to tho masthead, to afford healthy exercise to accustom them to going aloft. Pensions are allowed in tho case of those disabled by illness or injuries con tracted while on duty. The boys are al lowed a reasonable amount of liberty and to draw from their pay a certain amount of pocket money. If not ab sent on foreign cruises the boys are permitted to visit their homes twice a year if their conduct and the state of their accounts warrant it. Their parents may also visit them on board the vessels. New York is considered a good place for recruits, five or six a day sometimes making application. A number of applicants are constantly rejected because of physical or moral disability. There are at present on board the Minnesota 414 boys, eighty men and thirty officers and a sergeant's guard of twenty marines. Captain J. II. Gillis is in command. The Minnesota is a wooden steam frigate of 3,000 tons. She is pierced for sixty-four guns, but at present mounts only twenty-four. She was first used as a training ship in 1875, and has been stationed in different places since that time. The Highland "Warriors. The appearance of the Highland reg iments winch England hurried to the front from both sides of Egypt was as great a surprise to the Bedouins of Arabi Pasha as to their grandfathers in 1798. "When the Highlanders of Sir Ralph Abercromby's army landed at Alexandria in that year the Arabs of the town, after a wondering survey of the stalwart Celts, ran to announce to their friends- the arrival of a host of giants, so huge that the clothes which they wore were all too short for them. In the sepoy mutiny of 1857 the Highland regiments did priceless service both at Lucknow and Cawnpore, storming on one occasion a high-walled garden defended by five times their number of sepoys and lit erally annihilating the whole garrison, "When NanaSahib's soldiers first caught sight or the plaids ana kilts they ex claimed joyfully that all the English soldiers must have been killed and that the sirkar (government) had had to call out the women. But after their first taste of a Hiirhland bavonet charge they abandoned this belief once for all, and foil back upon the theory that these terrible fighters had deliber ately adopted this female garb in order to remind them of the wrong which they came to revenge, viz., the massa cre of tho English ladies by Nana Sahib. JT&klnff Shoes. Manufacturers of shoes at Lynn, Mass., do not buy more machines than they need because few havo stood tht test of many years, and it is expenslva to keep replacing unperfected machines with those valuably improved. Most machines are labor-saving, and econo my prompts a manufacturer to give machine workers the benefit in the dull season. In tho heeling of shoes a great doal is done by machinery, s great deal by hand, according to the grade of tho heel, and the wages are from twelvo to eighteen dollars. Those who finish tho soles tarn about the same as the heelers. Boys' wages in all departments are from three to eight dollars, and they can often be em ployed quito profitably to do the work of a man. The lasters, who fit the shoo to tho hist, havo always made excellent pay, earning from twelve tc twenty dollars per week, according tc tho rapidity with which they handle tho work. No machine has yet been invented which can do more work and better work than a cnpablo luster, although there is one which will do a very good day'B work on the cheaper grades. When it is considered that one man can sew, an other beat out, another set tho edges, and so on, for the work of ten lasters, there is no disputing the advisability of a lasting machine. It Is as likely to be invented as the machine which sews a pair of shoes in a minute, although the difficulty to overcome is to find some machine which will read ily adapt itself to the inaccuracies of the fitters and the different degrees of pliability of all kinds of stock. Tho feasibility of lasting shoes by machin ery will no doubt have to come from the accuracies of other departments, such as extra care in the making of patterns, in selection of Btock and gauges on stitching machines, which will make every shoo of a size, the same in every particular. Most of the seams in fitting a shoe, taken by tht, guidance of an operator, necessarily vary, and shoes cannot bo mado exact in large quantities until there is some arbitrary guido which will not allow of any variation. Tho use of the needle is very esseiv tial in the manufacture of shoes, and no small proportion of those employed are tho " girls" who are always called " girls," irrespective of age, as long as they work on shoes. In departments where they are employed reduc tions have been made so often that they do not earn one-half what they did ten years ago. Very few earn more than ten or twelve dollars a week on work which once paid them eighteen or twenty dollars, and tho average earnings are not more than seven or eight dollars. The reduc tions have not been, in proportion, more severe than in other depart ments, but stitching machines were always capable of as much work as they are now, and there is no chance to do enough extra work to make the aggregate wages as much as formerly. Just at this season of the year good help in the stitching-room is quite scarce, and if this continued it would have a tenden cy to make prices better, or oblige manufacturers to demand a longer time to fill their orders. An unusual scarcity this year is caused largely be cause the demand has changed from lace to button boots, in which there is more work, and, latterly, because worked buttonholes havo gained such popularity that tho eirls who work them have been drawn largely from the recular force of stitchers. Large numbers of tho stitchers who spend the summer months with friends or service at the summer hotels, will no doubt return in time to supply tho de- ficiency for the next trade. Their ab sence has been especially noticeable this season, because these additional features hare required a larger force of operatives. Progeny in Whose Veins Flows tho Blood of the Five Races. " Now. if I told you tho cold fact that I saw human beings in whose veins flow the blood of all the five races into which mankind is divided, you wouldn't believe it, would you? And you would say I never carried a little hatchet, using mud language, wouum i you?" said a well-known histrionic irentleman. lust returned irom mo Sandwich islands, to a reporter. " No, I would not believe it," was the frank reply. " Well, here s the case, ana it is a Eonuine one: The present Mrs. urown. of Honolulu, was born in the Hawaiian kiriffdom. Her father was part negro and tart American Indian, and her mother a native Hawaiian woman. In Mrs. Brown's veins, therefore, flowed the blood of three races the negro, the Indian and tho Malay. So far so good eh? Mrs. Brown's first husband was a Chinaman; and a daughter by that marriage, now the wife of the ltev Dr. Lyman, a clergyman at lino, united in her veins the blood of four races tho yellow or Mongoliari being added to her mother's mixed life blood. Now Mrs. Lyman is the mother of children by a Caucasian father, and doesn't that make these innocent little ones carry a very mixed kind of blood, uniting, so to speak, all the colors white, black, red, yellow and brown?" Han Fran cisco Chronicle. Conditions of Health. The conditions of health are few but imperative. 1. Pure air. 2. Pure and nutritious food. 8. Proper exercise. 4. Undisturbed sleep. 5. Regularity. 6. Temperance in all things. 7. Pleasant and active mental, moral and social conditions. 8. Ilight bodily positions. 9. Cleanliness. 10. Sunlight. Jlera Id of Utalth. SCIENTIFIC X0TES. (scientific men in Japan are discuss lng the possibility of utilizing the In tcrnal heat of the earth. A Belgian engineer is said to havo invented a process by which ho can weld steel at a red heat. He keeps an essential portion of his method a Bocret. There are 112 species of woods in North Carolina In tho entire South em States thero nro only fourteen other varieties which aro not found in that St ate. Mr. Villiers Stuart records that when tho mummy of tho great warrior Tliothmes lit. was unswathed tho body was found to bo unusually short and slight. Hardly had a rapid photograph been taken of the figure than tho fra gile remains, as if in protest against the violation of their rest, vanished Into dust Coronations. . Tho present czar of Russia, after having announced that his coronation would take place with great pomp at Moscow, in tho middlo of August, sud denly postponed tho ceremony to an indefinite period. Several reasons wero alleged for this singular decision. It was said that tho hwilth of tho czarina was such as to make it necessary to postpone it. It was declared that tho czar was unwilling to mark tho occa sion with concessions as to ltussian land, which tho peasants expected and demanded. Finally it was gravely .whispered that tho czar feared to bo crowned, lest such an event would give the Nihilists an opportunity to attempt his life. Tho latter surmise is a very likely one. It is known that the author ities of Moscow have plainly told the czar that if ho was crowned in that city they could not answer for tho preser vation of order or for his personal safety. Preparations to attempt tho czar's life have been detected in tho ancient capital of Muscovy ; and mora than one plot to murder him on the day of coronation has been unenrthed. It may be that tho Czar Alexander III. will never bo crowned. But this is merely tho omission of a traditional, but after all. an empty ceremony. It does not add at all to a monarch's au thority to rulo to be crowned. It is merely a matter of historic pomp and pageantry; it confers no new right or prerogative. Many sovereigns havo reigned through long periods and havo died uncrowned. Coronation is, indeed, a very ancient as well as a very imposing rite. It is known, for instance, that Solomon was crowned with great display; and it is probable that the Assyrian and Egyp tian kings were all crowned. Corona tion, too, in almost every country and period has been a sacred as well as a political ceremony. The head of tho sovereign haa been anointed with oil. which signifies his consecration to tho scrvico of God as well as of tho state. Tho old Saxon kings of England were wont to be crowned, not at Eon don, but in the ancient and august cathedral of inchester, or in that lovely riverside town, Kingston-on Thames. Since the time of the Nor man kings, however, tho sovereigns of England have always been crowned in Westminster Abbey ; and since tho time of Edward tho First each sov ereign has been crowned on tho same throne, beneath which rests the "Stone of Destiny" brought from Scotland by the great Edward. It was formerly the custom in Eng land to date the reign or a king from the day, not of his accession, but ot Ids coronation. Between these two events the sovereign was called "Lord of England, not king, which title he only assumed after he had been duly crowned. This was the case both with Itichard the Lion Hearted and his brother John. Various reasons havo served to cause from time to time the omission of the ceremony of coronation. It is said that Napoleon III. never dared to be crowned, for fear of some ca tastrophe similar to that which tho present czar is now threatened. Na poleon I. had no such fear, and was crowned with great magnificence at Notre Dame. The ceremony of coronation is still kept up with much state and grandeur in nearly every monarchy in Christendom j but a king Is just as much a king with out it as with it. It is the oath which every Boyereign takes at tho moment of his accession which endows him with the right and the responsibility of ruling over his subjects. Youths Companion. Ontonagon county, Michigan, tho largest and richest county in the State, has no telegraph communication with the outside world. Largo treatise for three stumps, rfving means of Buecessf ul 8 Mf-treatment Address ni.u.u .f nTamail. Womb's I-ihmbabt Mudioai. AsaooUTiu, Buffalo, N.Jf; , The Paris municipal council has purchased 200 portraits of Washington to be jfivea as prizus in the city schools. Young and middle-aged men suffering from nervous debility, premature old age, loss of memory and kindred symptoms, Ehould send three stamps for Tart VIL of pamphlets issued by World's Dispensary Medical Association, Buffalo, N. Y. Twenty men can stand on the big toe of Bartholdi's statue of liberty, to be erected in New York harbor. EpHepay (Fits) ' successfully treated. Pamphlet of particu lars one stamp, address Wobuj's DibpembABT MuDiOaUt. Association, Buffalo, N. Y. A hoo owned by a farmer living near Pe tersburg Va., weighed 1.3U0 pounds. "A Fortuaate Iay. Cob. Wahhinotun and Wauukn Sts., 1 Tkknton, N. J., Kept, 2, f H. II. W ahnkb A Co.: Sirs It was a for tuuute day for my wife whim she commenced the use of your Safe Kidney and Liver Cure after suffering from kidney disease for seven years, bhe is now perfectly well and healthy from its use; 4k"5a Kslt. Kn.kt oultura has become an established in duutry in Houlh Carolina. Vmr Ali JSrrnsa. OnetrrPncinn lt twowi'oks; nil others two or throe tlnju. l)o not lm imposr-d on by tit, hnmbnir stuffs offprod. ARk your dotiler forl'Vn ner'a, with Inbol on. Nnvps your horso Inbnr and yon too. It npt'ived first mortal nttheOenton nidi and l'nrls KnpositiniiSi Sold averywh.ro. Vrrns! rvm-i.t-cirn on- fmm AfllocMl liver. on th gpnnhoro, by Cnawoll, Hiunrd fc Co., N. Y. Absolutely imrn nnd aweut. rationta who lmve onco taken it. tirnfor it to all other, l'hysicinniidoclnre it anperior to nil other oilB. f!nrritn tiantmi. fnoe. niintilea Rnu roncli akin cured bv wiuu Juniper Tnr Ronp, mtule by Cnswell, llaznrd A Co., New York. Hklnnv Men. , , 'V11' TTenllli H.-iimver" restores Jirmlth nnd viuor, cures -8piiiiR.TinpiUnee, Sexual Debility. $1. Drui;itJ. Send for pamphlet to K. S. Wkixr, Jersey City, N. J. . Those who nso Cnrbolino, n. now improved nnd perfected, the jreat petroleum hair re newer, are iilwnys iliNliiiiruiHliixl by the beauti ful soft texture of thelmirnrmtured hy thenso of that most exquisite of all toilet preparations. B.l f'riila Will nnv ft Treatise upon tho Horse and his Diseases, llook of 100 paj:es. Valuable to every owner of horses, l'ostuno stamps taken. Bent postpaid by New York Newspapor Union, 160 Worth Street. New York. 1 lie orient o in June, ui wu I iwtjr mum. 11 medical work for every man youni;, middlo BBed or old. V2!i invaluable proscriptions. rtM n ' T? O.I T 1 1 - 85 Tenls will llur a TrealUe upon Ihn Uom ind his DfaniMis. Bixik of lwpti. VslusbW o orr ownur of linrsKS. IVtJiie tnip Ukn. Sunt 0o.tpi.l by NKW YOUK NEWSPAPER UNION, Merchant's. for hnmsn, fowl sad salmsl flesh, wst first liropnroil nnd Introduced br br. tleo. W. Merchant, in l,ockiort, N. Y., t'. 8. A., 1s;i;h, since which time It hss steadily grown In public fsvur, and Is now acknowlvilKcd and admitted bjr tha trade 10 be the standard liniment of the country. When we make this announce ment we do so without fear of contra diction, notwithstanding; wo aro aware there are nianr who are more or less prejudiced apalnst proprietary remedies especially on account of the many luim- tmjs on ine niariu'i; nowt'Ttr, wo aro iilciMcd to state thitt such prejudice does not exist aiaiiist UA Hill. 1 Nil Oil.. Ws no not claim wonders or miracles for our liniment, hut wa do claim It is without an equal. It is put UD In bot tles or three sizes, ami an wa ask Is that you Ktre li a fair trinl, reuicniberlni; that the Oil nut tin with white wrapper CH Mf in' (small) la for human and fowl Wi nesn, ana mai wun ycmiw T)i i u, in wrapper (three sixes) for ani mal flesh. Try a bottle. As thSKecuts Inillcate. the Oil Is used surcess- fnllv for all diseases of the Ama ,oirf and animal fltth. Shake well before using. Cannot be Disputed. One of the principal reasons of the wonderful success ef Mer chant's darkling oil Is that It Is manufactured strictly on honor, lis proprietors do not, as Is the rase with too many, after making for their medicine a name, dimin ish us cuianve properties by iisliiR Inferior com pounds, but use ine very best Roods to be bouirht ia the market, reRardlessof cost. For half a century Merchant's uartf- j- liuir Oil has been a synonym tor Ti honesty, and wi S(J,s), long as tin !$' sale by all re will continue 10 oe me endures, ror tiv all respectable dealers throiiKhoiit the United States and other countries. Our testimonials umo inim inoa to the present. Try Merchant's OarijliiiK Oil Liniment for internal nrl external use. nnd tell vour 4tVil neighbor what goou it nasaone. Don't fall to follow directions. Keep the bottla well corked. CURES r Md Chilblains, Frost llltos, Scratches or (Ireaso, Chapped Hands. Kxiernal Poimiiis, Sand I'rackK, Poll Evil, (lulls. if all klu'la, SwelltliKS. Tumors, Floxb Wounds, Hitfaat. ll'nKbniie. Foul Ulcers, (Inryot In Cows. Farcy, Cracked Testa. Callous, Lameness, Horn Distemper. ("rowncab, Ouittor, Abscess of tho Udder, Sprains and Bruises, 'As. Htrnik-iinlt. mmmai Foot Hot in Hlieep, F'oUUdered Feet, Uoiin in Poultry. Sore Nipples. Curb, Cracked lleels. Old Rorui, Fplr.ootlc, iAinellvk, llt'inoorholdK or l'iiea. Toothache, Rheumatism, Spavins, Hweeuey, Corns, Whitlows, Weakness of the Joints, Contraction of Muscloa, Cranili, Hwnlled Iits. Fistula, Mamie, Thrush, Caked breasts. Boils, ic. $1,000 It KW A 11 It for proof of tho exist ence 01 a ueuei iiiiuiiriit tiiiiu "Merchant's Uarijlin Oil," or a better worm medicine than 'Merchant's Worm Tablets." Man ufactured by M. U. O. Co., Lock- .8. A. JOHN HODCE. Seo'y. N Y N U 35 That terrible ooarge fever and affue, nd its congener, bilious remlttHUt, besides af. loctiont of the stom ach, liver and bowels, produced bjr miaaiua" tie sir and water, are buth aradloated and lrvtniHl l,y the use of ll'antutter's btoin avh Hitters, a purely veeubla eliiir, lu. doraed b physicians, and more eitetikivoljr used as a remedy for the above clam uf die. orders, as wtill as for many .!licrB,lhnny mtH.u-ine of the akh, I'Witaltt by all Drug KietN and Deaiers gen erally. TEASi abundance. fill Million nonnds Imported last year. i'ricca lower thsu ever. Atrcuts wanted. Don't waste ume. Buna lor circular. IO )bn. (iood RIark or mixed, for 1U lbs. fine itiarit or I'liiro, sur IO lb. CUolc lilurk or Plixcd, for Bend for pound sample, 17 ets. extra Tor poatan. Then get up a cluh. t'holcent Tea Id tlie world. Largest ysrtety. Pleaws liutiM to America." No evervbodr. OUU-st Tea America.'-No chrome No BtraiKht basiucsa. Value fur money llduibug. JtOU'T Wbl.l.4"tcySL.,n.lf .o.rtox ier. H ASTHMA CURED MtJsrsiss Asthma 4 'ure never uiU to ki ve t diafr4i'la the wort c&nuM.insuree comfort I iis sieep ; snocis cares wnereai 1 ouivrs rail. 3 1 .OO.of misvlata or by maiL Bamiilo Fit KF j ernrsisinp J'R. It. fit M 1 ri M A N. Kl. I'm!. Ml tin t TDIITUlllll,Tr' MUitnn, "v I IIU I n SiUnu ibIS Ami, im.lHir fc lS eijvkwlftit, vim, f., 10 ...M. vuk .fa, Li, k . -M mi m, hMt.r..tr, h4 . cuaa.cr rio- ya; I Tuaa.f T-uh.t.u.ti Phoiinsn-Hliliv. or Phnntlr Klmrr lm nA. ntAl.Ml j.f u.irU uilh Pl, ...,.....,... li,l,u I .. niuatratioua, for beg in no ra, sent on applicuituu Ad umw wsuu riiiuan, wiuciuuaii. V, YftllMft Uril If 700 want to learn Telegraphy In m I U Villi IYian few mouths, and i nin ui situation, address Valentinw lin.. Jauesvillij, Wis 14 t enta bny a 3 I.oirlr Ad. Tarda and a Wone pucimtw. puua, U.S.;. Illliloril. traeuse, li. port, N. k.t O BITTER5 25 CENTS, Postpaid. .A. TIMATISI3 OIV TII1 AND HIS DISEASES. Contalnltur an Indsi of Dlsoaaea, which alTea tha Bymiitoros. Causs and tha Best Treatment of each. A Table Kiviug all the rriii-lial druiis used fur tha Hona, with tlia ordinary dona, i-jtwtji, i,.l auildotu when a iHjikun. A Tiible with an ICnuruvluit of the Horse's Teeth at ilifleient anus, with fuloa for telliuu the aa. A valuable ooUeotiou of lteceiou aud much other valuable luforiuatiou. 100-PAGE BOOKa?.'.' 25 CEWTS. OXjTT23 rrvE copies 11 oo IKN COl'ltS l 70 One, Two aad Three-Cent Stamp received. Addroaa HOllSII. BOOK oo:ftrivivY. IB4 WORTH STRCET, HEW YORK, LYBIA E. PINKHAr.VO VEGETABLE COMPOUND. ' Is a I'nsltlve t'uro ror all t liese Painful Complaints and WeakaeaaoJ so eoramoa to our et female f opalaUeou A Medicine ftir WomanT"lnTcnted ujr Woman, rrspartd jr a Woman. Th OrMtMl Bolltsl Bl.sii7 Sls ths Dm sf Wslory tyitreTlTcs the drooplnn spirit!, Invigorates and harmonises ths ornanlo functions, eIvss elasticity and flrmnew to the stop, restores the natural lustre to the eye, and plants on the pal check of woman the tresh row of llfo's sprlne and early summer time. Hf-Physlclan Uso It and Protcribs It Frtelf.J It romoros falntness, flntnleney, doatroj s all oralns; for stimulant, and relloesoakni-BB of the stomsoh. That fooling orboarlnR down, cautn pain, wolghl and backache. Is always permnnently cored hy Its use, For the cure or Kidney Complaints of either sea this Compound Is ansurpassco. irni a. r.. riirnAM7 it rcwTriFit will rillrits ernry vetliro of Humors, from ins Hlood, and kivo toiio and strength In lht4a.ysU.-in, Ot wan woman or ouiid. limlKt oa oavhig tu Both the Compound anTuiood Purifier are preparaAl at 333 and X Weston. Avenue, Lynn, llama Prtj-oot either, It Sli bottlos for 16. Sent by mall In tha form of pills, or of losenires, on receipt of pries, per boa for either. Mrs. Plnkham freely answers all loiters of Inquiry. Enclose Set. stomp. Band for pamphlet. No family "houtd ho without I.TTtlA. . Flint All MVKa l'll.l.H. They cure constipation, biliousness, and torpidity of the llror. V oents per box, aj-old by all rugwta.-fc 0) "HA PIANOS ARE USFn ANO TNTV lltSITt BY TTTR GREAT. 1.ST AKTIISTS IN XIIK WOIU.D. y PATTI! , GERSTER t MARIMONt VALLERIA! KELLOGG! LABLACHE I CAIWPANINI! GALLASSI! RAVELLI ! BRIGN0LI I ABBOTT I MARIE ROZE! OLE BULL I PEASE I CASTLE I WAUKltOOiUSi 07 FIFTH AVEXUE. NEW YOKE. For Hals by LOUUKrl MAll 11 learfine Pl.no II mi via. OATA Lh.U KKlili OF Lit A HUH. UUUO NEWS 10 Get up Ctubt far oar CKLa- UK A I F U 1KAM, ttiirl Pfrurr it twaaUful "ia'r.i Ec: cr Odd Eacl Tea Sot,'' (41 1 im ,i utir own lmnn tutloa. Una Of Ibmr- bf KUllfltl '1 n Molfl fttvan I tn p. t ..'it 11 in; ft CluW.ir jvoo, llowai ul tit .wlld " i.Hh.41' 1 hAS " Ittkt ar bt-lnic n.lvt-t ttfc it -tl.y r d-it)rnua anI (! trim nut t hitli l-w lvt ,.n.y ltb rvlUbls ll'Uf tnit with flrai liantta if p-.a-IM. Km iitmitiB. TI10 Great Amuricau Tea Co., Jmportrr, f. U JtosSkS, HAD Vr-tV bl.t .w Toih. E HENS LAY. An KnhHh Vtttorinarjr tSurftmin and t'Ucni.Ht. nnr trtivttluiK in thitt 1'i uiit iy, tvtva that th ttafl ot tha lliirne and Can 1 IViwtlrm mIJ hrrttnrt' wurthlfaatniAU. ltitnriyn that IMiMhtUti'it Cmtitif in I't'wiiora ir ala. luffly purti htmI iimiM-nm-ly vrtltMll, Noihinit n tmrtri Mill iiiakt ht-iiH iny (tku hhtTHlan m t'oixlitiuii J'wlni, U.w, (tn li'n:piHnf n t nn pint of Ikm1. riuiU mIh'H' ir tnit hy tnnil fr H lttr Maihim. JOHNSON A I t..HiMon,MaHa., Ixnn.irly Itancor. Mo, HULLERS' He Th AUi.rMA.1i k i AVlj For pamphleta daanrtV ilull ti,! Attachment grj 1 akcy fj that 1-4 AND NOT CSV W I"' Watehmaliers. Ily mall, Meta. Olreulsia OUAsJJ rxj, J. s. liinuii A (JOSB i)oy BU, KNOWLEDGE IS POWER f KNOW THYSELF, THE SCIENf F OP T-IPFt OK, 8EIF iui:si;i.vation. It a medical treat ins on Kxhaiifitod Vitality, Nnrooa and Pbjitical Lability, Premature Ifoclioa Id Man ; li an lndiienablo trenti fr every man, whethet youn, midille-awJ or old, THE NUENfR OP iJFPi OR, 8 ELF 1'K KNEUVATlONt Ta byonrl all cwmiiuirlkiim the moat extraordinary work on 1'hyaiol.tKv VHr piihlinhmt. T hr ia uothiitK whatever tlmt thu marriftl or finl) run either rmiuire or wuti to know but what ia Cully explained. Turunta THE SCIENf'K OP T.IPPi Oil, VU ESEKVATION, Inntmcta thoae n hwalth how t- ntnnin so, and tha 'In valid h iw to ln'i'iinifl wtrll. ()ntiiiua tinu hiiijdrtid and! twAnty-tlva invahiuhl) iirnscriptinna fur ail ft.ruia o at'utti and rhronio diHeutuHH, fir each of which a first clans phyaiuiau would cluujfe from 3 to ftlif. London TIE 8CIENCP OP .rv. Olt, 8 ELF I'll EsEKVATltt Oontnina B0 pnices, tine attl entrravtniTH, Is iuirflrhly bound iu l reiuii ninnlin, eiuhorttl, lull gilt. It is a umrvol of art and bianty, wMrrauUnl to lie a better mtMlii'al btNik in every Mtnae than oan t MtitAiued whore for doublo thi prico or tUt niouey will t rl unti ed iu every iuatauue. Author, THE 8CJETK OP LTFKt Olt, SELF ritE.LUVATlON, Is so murh autMtrior to alt othir treatities on mt-itaa aubjeota that votuLiunaun ia absolutely miyuamblu, iimtan Utrald, THE SCIENCE OP LITE. OR SELF- FKEhEUVATIOX, Is aent by mail, aecurvly aealud, pout pud, on receipt of price, only$l.'2&(uew edition). buialliiluBtr6tdaatiipia, Oo. beud now. The author can be oonaulted on all !dikeaei requiring kill and experience. Addreas PEABODY MEDICAL INSTITUTE, or W 11. F Alt HI K, M. 4 DulAuch Street, Huston, Moaai. mm mkATI QJzsJL t3 Y nATES, twkm rr cui'iKS $3 00 ON IS UUNDltliD COl'IKa 10 00
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers