FOR THE FARM AM) HOME. Halt for Slock. An authority on cuttle says that half the saline matter of tlioHood ( seventy live per cent. J consists of common salt, and as this Is partly dissolved every day through the skin nnd kidneys the necessity of continued supplies of it to the healthy hotly issullieiently ohvious. The bile also contains soda (one of the ingredients of salt ) as ft special and in dispensable constituent, and so do nil the cartilage of the body. St int the supply of salt and neither will the bile be able properly to assist, digestion nor the cartilages to be built tip again as fast as they naturally wast e. It is better to place salt where stock can have free access to it than to give it occasionally In small quantities. They will help themselven to what they'need if al lowed to do so at pleasure ; otherwise when they become salt-hungry, they may take more than is wholesome. Saving Poulrrv IHnnnrc. Poultry manure is well worth saving. It contains when dry in 1,000 pounds about forty pounds of nitrogen, twenty pounds of potash, two and a half pounds of soda, sixty pounds of lime, seventeen pounds of magnesia, thirty six pounds of phosphoric acid and ten . pounds of sulphuric acid. These are worth nt the market prices of fertil izers about 15, equal to $30 a ton. This, however, is much less than is popularly supposed to lie the value of this manure, which some persons think to be eqjial to guano, or $00 a ton at the above valuation. But to preserve all its fertilizing value the droppings should be carefully saved each day and mixed with a small quan tity of plaster and put into a dry place where they may not become subjected to any injurious fermentation. The best way to keep it is in close barrels, in which it may slowly decompose without loss of ammonia. The mix ture of plaster adds nothing to its value, but preserves all its elements, and especially the nitrogen, from waste by absorbing the ammonia produced by its decomposition. Putting A why Tool. The wearing out of farm implements is, as a rule, due more to neglect than to use. If tools can be well taken care of it will pay to buy those made of the best steel and finished in the 1 iest manner; but in common hands and with common care such are of little advantage. Iron and steel parts should be cleaned with dry sand and a cob, or scraped with a piece of soft iron, waslied and oiled if necessary, and in a day or two cleaned off with the corn-cob and dry sand. Finidly, paint the iron part with rosin and beeswax, in the proportion of four of rosin to one of wax, melted together and appliediot. This is good for the iron or steel parts of every sort of tool. 'Woodwork should be painted with good, boiled linseed oil, white lead and turpentine, colored of any desired tint; red is probably the best color. Keep the cattle away until the paint is dry and hard, or they will lick, with death as the result. If it is not desired to use paint on hand tools the boiled oil with turpentine and liquid dryer" does just as well. Many prefer to saturate the woodwork of farm implements with crude petroleum. iins cannot he used with color, but is applied by itself, so long as any is al sorbed by the pores of the wood Anierivun Agriculturist. Fall Plowing. W. A. Armstrong says, as reported in the Husbandman: A very forcible argument in favor of fall plowing may be found in the improvement of heavy soils, as Mr. Lewis has said. lie finds color and texture changed by the opera tion of frost. He can deepen his soil also by judicious fall plowing a gain by no means inconsiderable. Deepen ing heavy soils is giving them drain age, an improvement usually needed where clay predominates, because its close texture tends to arrest the How of water, and the land is, therefore, kept wet long after the proper season for plowing in spring for oats and barley. But after all the advantages of fall plowing visible in my practice I know there are farmers who work land of similar compositions who say that fall plowing wastes fertility. I do not know how, yet they say after trial that their lands run down under the treat ment. The facts may be as stated, but I must think there are other causes. In some cases fall plowing leads to con tinued cropping by the facilities it af fords for extending work. This is the temptation to get just one more grain crop, with preparations completed in fall sowing to stimulate desire. If it be true that fall plowing in itself brings impoverishment of soil 1 should be glad to know how, for I cannot con ceive why it can have that effect. Farm autd urln Nip. Water and suit your live stock regu larly. Don't waste too much grain in har vesting. Cows generally do not "let down" their milk readily to those who tlo not treat them kindly. Feed fowls systematically two or three times a day, and allow them to take plenty of exercise. A farmer should so arrange his kitchen garden that he can use both plow and cultivator in its manage ment. One cow, horse, shrep or pig well fed is more profitable than two kept on the same amount necessary to keep one well. Fowls like cabbage in winter. In fact, if they have the run of the cab bage patch in summer there will be none left for winter use. It is thirty per cent, more protitable to premature and dispose (if fattening cattle at two year old than to keep them up to three years. ImMilovtrous Men. One of the Xew.Tork papers not long ago had nn article on right and left-handed people, or ambidexters, in which several remarkable instances of persons possessing this faculty were given. .Slratige to say, however, no mention was made of Ben Lusby or (ieorge Tiffany. Lusby is famous the country over, and is known as the lightning ticket-seller, lie traveled for many years with the largest cir cuses, and received almost fabulous pay, being ns great a curiosity as any thing to be see in the tents, lie used both hands in selling tickets, taking in money, handing out tickets and making change more rapidly with each than an ordinary ticket seller could with both. It was no unusual thing to see him se lect six or eight full-price and chil dren's tickets, receive a $10 or $20 bill and pick out and return the change with one hand, while he was selling one or two tickets at a time and mak ing change at the same time with the other hand. George Tiffany, who had always had a large acquaintance with theatrical and show people, and who was a friend of Lusby, possessed the same faculty to a considerable extent, and on several occasions gave exhibitions to his friends of his ability to imitate Lusby, having probably practiced under his direction, lie was scarcely a fourth as rapid as Lusby, but wa acknowledged "in the profession" to be, with the exception of Lusby, the ony two-handed ticket -seller in the world. Instances of people who write and make figures with both hands are by no means rare. In the old St. Louis Democrat olllce. before the partnership was dissolved, two accountants were employed who, in posting the books, generally made figures with one hand and posted the items with the right. A bookkeeper in one and a cashier in another large wholesale house in St. Louis now work in the same way, and a reporter on a morning paper writes with either hand, and it is impossible to distinguish any difference in the for mation of the letters. A more remarkable instance of dual faculties than any mentioned is that of a gentleman well known in St. Louis, Mr. V. Lackland. Mr. Lackland was for some time treasurer of the Fair association, and excited no little attention and remark among those who saw him using alternately either hand in writing letters or messages. The on-loOlfers were, however, still more astonished to see him when in a hurry grasp a pen or pencil and write rapidly with both hands, and would have been yet more amazed had they known that the messages he was at work on at the same time were ad dressed to different people and entirely different in character. When not busy enough to employ both hands, he gen erally uses the left, but the character of the chirography is the same, and it is doubtful if he himself knows the difference. He does not seem to con sider himself possessed of an unusual gift or talent, and would, no doubt, have been much amused had he heard the remark made by an acquaintance, who, after seeing him write two let ters at once, confidentially informed a friend that he must have his brains parted in the middle or be possessed of two sets. The science of medicine teaches that unusual mental strain or activity correspondingly depresses the system physically, but the rule evi dently does not apply to Mr. Lackland. Afraid of a Letter. It was not long ago that I happened to be in a part of Central Africa where no white man had been before. I was separated from my companions 100 miles distant. "War was raging around me; the road was difficult. I wished to communicate with those whom I had left behind. "Who will return," I asked of the naked savages, "to the white men and carry them something from me?" Numbers vol unteered, glad to earn a yard of cloth for the job. A letter was written and offered to a man, and he was told that this piece of paper would inform my friends of all that it would speak to them, lie dropped the letter on the ground and ran away. Others were tried, but it was useless. A great crowd assembled, and at a saf e distance from the little bit of paper fluttering on the ground. "It i medicine," thev said. "It is charmed." In vitin I tried to reason them out of thajr terror. None would touch it. "Will no one," I said, "keep it and give it to the white men as they pass this way?" A yell of refusal and excited gesticulations answered my request. "Then I shall j dace it here in this tree," I said, mov ing toward it, while the crowd dis persed in llight, "and you can point it out to the white men when they come.' Even this they refused to do. My friends passed close under the tree, but no one dared show them the charmed tiling, and there it is probably to this day, fluttering on the branch of that stunted iig tree like an evil spirit, the awe and terror of the tribe. 11, Ji. Cotterlll. A Terrible Misfortune. Colonel Folsom was reading the morning papers yesterday at the break fast table, when he exclaimed in a hor rified tone of voice, " What a terrible misfortune!" " What is it somebody got married i his wile asked in an in- different manner. " No, but a married woman in New York, in a lit of rage, threw a coffee cup at her husband The cup was shivered into fragments, and one of them cutting his jugular artery, he died on the spot. The re porter says the grief of the unfortunate woman was dreadful to witness. She was frantic with remorse, and made several attempts to put an end to her existence." " Boor creature," said Mrs. Folsom, with a sigh, "I reckon the broken cup must have belonged to her wne china, set. ISiimgn. Recreation is only valuable as it un ends us; the idle know nothing of it. LADIES' DEPARTMENT. Wbnt Color to Vrnr. rjMost women look well in plain black, relieved by a dash of color here and there. To the fair-skinned Euro pean races, indeed, black and white tlress Is naturally becoming, for the delicate tones of the skin form a middle tint between the two. On the other band, if we come upon a negro dressed in black, the features and the pupils of the eyes, which we wish particularly to see, have vanished; we cannot get rid of the whites of the eyes, which are forced into startling and unpleas ant forwardness, nnd which, under a normal state of circumstances, are in tended only to enhance the dark pupil and iris. A light dress, which brings out the dark features and tones down the white of the eye, is the proper wear for dark races. In fair races tin? rule with individual exceptions, of course is that the dark eye harmo nizes the fair skin with the dark dress, or is a telling point of color w hen a light dress is worn. To my mind people of beautiful coloring look best attired with equal attention to the tinting and the light and shade of the complexion; but the effect can never be complete withotit the mediation of some neutral color white is the best between the face nnd hands and the dress. The white may be slightly toned, like old lace. We want the sug gestion of clean linen, as well as the actual color of the white. A pale dress generally needs the accentuation of a darker color. Patch Work. Annie Wakemnn w rites irom New York to the Chicago Horning Journal : Old-fashioned industries are coming into vague. The latest is the patch work mania. One day last week 1 took a Hying trip to Fort Lee. Seated on the broad'piazza of its fine hotel, And listening to the afternoon concert by the band, I amused myself by studying the people seated about me, most of them, regular boarders at the hotel, who were plying their lingers over various kinds of fancy work. There is always one kind which is the rage for the summer. Last summer the prefer ence was given to serpentine braid "ric-rac" work, consequently every other woman you met had her muslin gown elaborately decorated with this showy trimming. This year the rage is for the M Oscar crazy quilt." On a piece ot cambric half a yard square there is basted in the center a suntlower made of either yellow broadcloth, silk or velvet, or a lily, a daisy, of pansy of one of the same materials. The square is then Idled in with bits of silk and velvet of all colors, arranged belter skelter, a sort of artistic confusion of colors. The bits are of irregular pat tern, just as your friends give them to you squares, triangles, circles, jags and tags. After basting these on the edges are neatly turned in, and the piece is sewed down lirmly with chain stitch of old gold, alternating with cardinal sewing silk. hen the cambric squares are completely filled out, and enough of them have been made for a bedquilt or sofa comforter, they are joined together with narrow black velvet riblxm, which is orna mented with chain and herring-bone stitches in shaded silk floss, to suit the artistic taste of the worker. The sunflower, giv the name of " Oscar," and heaven knaws the patches are " crazv " enough in shape. Such is fame. Oscar Wilde is immortalized himself in silk quilts, to be handed down to generations vet unborn as heirlooms of what " grand mamma did when she was a girl." Spirits of former gmndmamas, how you must fume ns you haunt the gar rets where are iarnominiouslv packed iwav your favorite calico quilts, the much-treasured " spider-web, "fox ind geese," nnd " log-cabin " patterns 'What is this folly ?" you ask in sepul chral tones; "the ' Oscar crazy ' young women, you are all clean daft along with your trumpery quilts. Never mind, this serves to revive the homely industry of quilt-making, and a prominent society lady tells me that one of the novelties next season here will be the sociable quiltinglfcee, in order to quilt and silk-line the sum mer-work of Dame Fashion's daugh ters. Fashion Not on. ' Handsome Spunisn lace black or white is now used surah for evening jackets. in either over silk Ecru-colored silks, covered with shaded "begonia" leaves, and flnishei with Irish point, make showy and sty lish costumes. lute nnu black satine piping, braided in floral designs and deep pointed edges, is sometimes used for the heading of Iringes. The " Gros do Londres " is a ribbed like a " rep," very rich rare; particularly preferred by " bon-ton " fa.shior-seekers. Instead of the combinations of silk ant the two or three fabrics, it is announced that single fabric for the entire dress will be the prevalent autumn fashion. The most expensive of the floral sat ines are found in pale-tinted and black ground, profuse with sprays of fuchsia chrysanthemums, roses, lilies of the valley, etc. Plain basques are losing favor, for we now see the rich corsnge made with a plastron of velvet, or, if lighter goods be preferred, it is shirred to please the fancy. Large single flowers are in favor on satines, foulards and surahs, and thei size is so great that only one blossom can be seen on a sleeve and five on the back of a dress corsage. Red is the favorite color at present for children s Irocks. It rivals th white dresses formerly used for little girls, and appears in some guise in al most every toilet of the season. ivory white is in such great vogue that satin dresses of this shade are no longer confined to full dress entertain ments, but are imported for visitjng costumes. The garniture is lace ami natural flowers. (ircen nnd cobalt-blue redingotes of loth, with velvet collar and .cuffs, are sent over from Paris to ladies at New port, where they are worn over dresses of satine muslin or foulard, Why Egyptians Lark Patriotism. During my visit to Egypt some seven or eight years ago there was ertainlv no national .feeling among the Kvrvptians. Neither thev nor their ancestors for nearly two thou- and years , had known native rulers. During all these long centuries thev had been the spoil of Itoman. Arab. rurk and Mameluke in turn; from none, since the Boman time, had they received protection of life and proi- ny or anv national benefits, and it was impossible that patriotism should xist among them, for there is no patriotism save in a country worth loving. The conduct of the Egyptian troops in the late Russian Avar is a proof of this. The few battalions I saw in Egvpt were llne- lookinn troops well armed, instruct- d and equipped, with intelligent faces and excellent physique ; yet thev proved utterly wort hless, ius it seems to me, because they were destitute of that pride which is inspired by patriotism ; for them their flag had no meaning, its honor was no concern of theirs. 1 heir conduct in Abvssinia nnd the Soudan was similar, and no doubt from the same cause. How can valor nnd patriotism be expected from men whose only knowledge of their government is that derived from the tax-gatherer, the bastinado and lorcod labor? The ichievenients of that great soldier. Ibrahim Pasha, are not in contradic tion with this conclusion, because few of his troops were Fellaheen. His conquering armies were mainly coin posed of Arabs. Svrians, Nubians, Ar nauts in fact, of lighting men from all the neighboring parts of the East, who were reduced to discipline by his stern will nnd guided to victory by his great military genius. Ueneral Utoni Ji. McL'lillan, in the Century. A Half Hollar Trial. Mr. Ernest Kine. editor of tlioFall River lMa."R.)Siin, thus dim-ourees upon the nit-rile of St.J;icib'Oil : "SuflbrinR with rheum stir paina 1 ws DniTniunao tortinediea I rend of St.Jncoba Oil and aid here goes for a half dolUr ti i d I bmi x tit a bottle and before ii was lin If uxt'd the acrew-wrrncli pains had gone unii troubled nie no longer." The oldest stove probably in the United Mates is the one that warms the half of Virginia's capitol in Rich mond. It was made in England nnd sent to Richmond in 1770, and warmed the house of burgesses for sixty years before it was removel to its present lo cation, where it has remained for thirty years. Col. C. W. Herbert, of the Forest Park R-'iHurnt, St Ixiuin, Mo , was entir.lv cured of rluuruatium by St. Jacobs Oil, nay the St. Louis IW-Dinpatch. We have often read remarkable stories of motherless squirrels and rats being raisijd by female cats, but in Tarrant county, Texas, an eagle raised a young pig which weighed forty pounds. -The eagles wings measured nearly eight feet from tip to tip. Siftins. A Total Kcflpee of all other medicines by Lr. R. V. Piorce's "Golden Medical Discovery" is nptiroachinp;. Unrivaled iu bilious disorders, impure blood and consumption, which is scrofulous diucuHe of the luiitfs. Thk biirtrest slnte ouarrv in the United Rtntes lias been developed at Little Kock, Ark. Young men or middle-aged ones, suffering from nervous debility or kindred weHknexsea, should send three stamps for Part VII. of World's Dispensary Dime Series of books. Address Woulo's Dibpknsabt Hedioal As sociation, Buffalo, N. Y. ALLlftATntl hillafl llflvA liomma in cmnK Aa nuind that alligator farms are being started m r lot lua. Get the Orlcfnal. Dr. Pierce's "Pellet" the original"Little Liver Pills" (sugar-coated) cure sick and bilious headache, sour stomach and bilious attacks. ISy druggists. It is asserted that 12,ri00,000 of false teeth tire made every year in Philadelphia. What at Learned Doctor Sn. Ooil. xJliOADWAX AND PuATT ISl KKKTS, I Baltiuooe, Mil., Aug. 6, lbhl. I II. II. W'AKNKttA, Co.: Sirs A publication appended in the Mitltimore papers some months ago, purporting among other things to set forth the particulars of my cure from Uritjlit's disease by the use of your Snfe Kid ney und Liver cure. That card represented only on outline of the facts in the chp. i A. MoManub, M. D. Tiik proposition to disqualify married liulies'from teaching iu the public schools of Chicago was defeated. Mensmam'k I'kftoniekd hkef tonio, theonl) preparation of beef containing its entire nu tritious properties. It contains blood-making, forco-Kenerating and life-sustaining proper ties; invaluable for indigestion, dyspepsia, ner vous prostration, and all forms of general de bility ;nlso,in all enfeebled conditions, whet hei the result of exhaustion, nervous prostration, overwork or acute disease, particularly if re gulling from pulmonary complaints. Caswell, Hazard 4Co.,prop'rs.,N.Y. Soldby druggists ii Cents Will Buy a Treatise upon the Horse and his Diseases. Book of 100 pages. Valuable to every owner of horses. Postage stamps taken. Sent postpaid by New York Newspaper Union, 150 Worth Street, New York. Don't lle In the Heuae. "Bough ou Rata." Clears out rats, mice, roaches, bedbugs, flies, ants, moles, chip monks, gophfers. l."c. Murder will out, to will the fact that Carbo line, a deodorized extract of petroleum, the natural hair reuewer and restorer, is the best preparation and excellb all other hair dressings as UiouBattdsjjf genuine certificates prove. The Science of Life, or Self -Preservation, a modicul work for every man young, middle aged or old. 125 iiivalnnble prescriptions. AIM.TWH lilt AIN FOOI!-Mit rliliU tonie for the liritiii Hitd ii enrl-H live Organ. It positively cuiuii Nervuui lMulily mid rt-Mur.. lnt vinl uowars. Sold lr druKKiatit. ftll O l'r Ire y niil ud rut-iit of prira. .IOJIN 11, ALl-hN, Chemiitt, Ulj Firat Avenua, NcwVurk. i.j ( t-nta will Uuy u Treatise upon the lloiao aud Uili OiwMts. Hook of luo p&km- Valuibla to t,vry owner of hnrwtm. FnbUi6 utampti t&ken. Sunt poMpaiJ by N1W YOUK KhWiiPAfKH UNION, f r,Q Worth lr.-ft. Ni- Voik Phonomrniihr r Phonetic Mhrl.iod, Oltlnu vt vvuiki, )tb A'UuuiAitr-vpliio alphabet n4 fllufelrfttnaift. lor bjriituers, teiil uia apUvaU'Wl, Ad dittM iicuu rituiku. (Juicuinali, U, WBDSBlf- - 1 V . . si -i THE GREAT 'l ff jj J 13 0 fa ii i ii run fJeuralgia, Sciatica, Lumbago, Backache, Soreness of the Chest, Gout, Quinsy, Sore Throat, Swell ings and Sprains, Burns and Scalds, General Bodily Pains, Tooth, Ear and Headache, Frosted . Foot and Cars, and all other Pains and Aches. No Preparation od earth eqitali St. J a mm Ott m ft (', nr, nrt and cheap Eitrrnal Hrmeljr A trial en tni It ml th comparatiroly irttling outlay of 60 (Vnta. and ervry on autTcrtitR with pain run liato ckoap and podlir proof of !( clninia. 0 MrectJona In KlYn Lftngnag. 80LD BT ALL DRUGGISTS AND DEALERS IN MEDICINE. A. VOGELER & CO., Italtimore, JUti., U.H.A. Tlmt torritdp ncourB IVvur and ajtu. and IU cmitfenpr, Mlioup remittent, boaidna af ftH'tiona of tha atom ach, 1 Ivor find bowoln, tinxlurod by mianma' tiuftirand watar, &m both eradicated and pa?vintd hjr tha uhs of Hofttvtter'a IS torn ach BitUra, a purely Vcftetabl sliiir, in domed bjr pliyaJcijii.ii, and mora eitenW l utMd aa a remody foe thn fttiv cUm of di ttrdtri, an well aa for limit j, ntlnr, t Itnunuy merttrineof t tit nm. l or hh) by all Dri'K ("tinud Dealer gou- PIANOS are usrn ano iNPousrn by thf oreat- LSI AKTISl'ti IN THIS WOltU). PATTI ! VALLERIA! CAMPANINI! BRIQNOLI 1 OLE BULL t GERSTF.R 1 KELLOGG 1 GALLASSt ! ABBOTT 1 PEASE! MARIM0N! LABLACKE! RAVELLI 1 MARIE R0ZE! CASTLE ! WAUKjJOO.IISi 07 FIFTH AVENUE, NEW YOUK, For Hile by all lea-lint Piano Homos. CATA Looui:s : I MAIL ll.tOr KLKOK CIIAKtiK. Payne's Automatic Engines. U.V1 Rolmhltt. F) iir.it l and Kcnnrtmlual. tritt furnUh hr )irr vt'h lets jful and nuter thnn any other r.ttytnr rtutH, nut ill tod wun an Automatic uut-nn. ouna for llluMrtd CutnlofEiie ".I," for Informntion and Prices. 1I.W. Pay Nit A SoNi, Boi 8iO, Corning, Ii.Y, .IP ESiiJi Z 3E5 1EI R at III thm wnrld. fJil lliat ft n ulna). Kvr? n-rK v l.nw ni Mttdf-mnrli nni marked Krnrer'B. tSIM.lt k V LK K l W 1 1 1. K K In abnndanoo. 85 Million pound Imported laat year. Prlca lower man ever. Aveuia wttniea.- uou i ki . . . -i .. i ... i lO Mood Glnrk or nixed, for fl. 10 Vine Wlwete or Mixed, for id ib.Cliolcoilti-UorfIiJt.ed, for 13. . H n myjm wui hhjo, dcuu iw cuiuur p.nd fir pound aampi. 17 ru. extra for poiUc. 1 it n iot Ui a club C'hoiCKHt Tea lu the world. iKieet yui!Hj. Mcara everylodr. U'drat Tea liO'iVii in America. inruu.w.-aw uuuuiu.- : rut immtoj-H. vaiao ittv wouty. VrllVftv.r M..W..P.O.K01 !7. Pu rnnm Puririi livffj PUIa tniki HlaH anrl will Minu.lMLtl v elutrut- ilia blood in tha en tire nyrttin in turna months. Auy nmn who will taka one pill each mlit from 1 to 13 waulvw iumjf ba reuttorttd V BOUUU IlttaiKl II UCII a II1IIIM l pinwiiiio. OUIU 0101 wltera or ant ur man for cgm iiur aiaiupa. . l.H. JOHNSON & CU.9iSoaivntMaM.Bfor nirriy inuiaoi GOOD NEWS IjADIES! Get up Clubs r cil.E- BKAifcl) 'lEAtf, and ncuit a tw.uliful "tf3Bi Ecu or Odd B&sA Tta 8tt," (4 . it t, 1 our ba ItupurUlloa. Vmt f ILtt fetiutlful 'to bats civea ivai t I. ( l u 111.1 a CUb tut tit M. Etwaift ( tt - 1 14 Hi:riAr 'I K AH " ihfcl .11MI11 dvrtlitit thy ara iiiau inn lUuliiieDlal to h!lh alu w potana. Dral ott if villi rlUi fnum and with ant bania ll puaaihi. auMr.Kf. Tha Orent Amaricn Tea Co- Jinportara. r. aatoala. U M VatlkT tn, ttw York. CIV VT WAIT! BtaaiTI Tmh aa m U. Ol A If al Lauurtaal aMuataahaa, ) fTO bUca w ft ka crwDi f Lair an ftaJl W W k.at f w TttK RkS, HTktHOlUtX a4 lAVlGORA'Jk iha UAIE ttuMi a fc-..ut. .f k.. Tij il (!. hiit aicM.r, '-k ftaa Nt.V.)L TLT rMlJ. KunJuM.T blX UIMM ta Pf J. UUNZA Lk.. If - iw, Hoaui. Mam. Uavare at ail MnUaMoua. 1,1k A U M M AN A 1A1LOK OO., Mauifiald. Ohio. UnW TO MAKR A FORTUNE, only 10 T. B nUlf Till KHl It. Ilni 1 1. Hay Sliorr. N. V (OSTEITE STOMACH f& BITTER MHAIN eft WT'-WM u mora n n II l F xi U M El II BLOOD ! New Kioh 3 4 Mi 25 CEWTS, Postpaid. A. TIMHA-TISIS ON THE AND HIS Containing an Index of Dtaeaaee, which (rirea tha Bymi'toma, Canae and the Beat Treatment of each. A Tallin Kluliit all Hie (niiri.U ilruifa uwd for tha lloree, with Din ilrdluary doae, etfucta, anil antidnle ahea a piiiauu. A Titlile with an Engraving of the llorae'a Teeth at iliffrnit aMoa, with rulca for tulliug the ana. A valuable collection ot Ubcmpls aua lxiucli othor valuable luforu.atlori. 100-PAGE BODKgwTOrWfflggJ 25 CEflTS. 1TVE COPIE9 tl 001 TWENTY (XlPIKa i CO 1EU COPIK3 1 70 I ONE UUNDUED COP1Z3 10 00 One, Two and Three-Cent Hiauipii receivtj. Addreaa IlOIiJSli: BOOK COIIPxvIVY, 104 WORTH STREET. NEW YORK. ', . ttnJi HAS BEEN PHOVfcU Tkaanerar CURC for ICSDNCY DISEAGEG. Trc4 lnmn bok er rttMrrtnrwl pHna Inill. 0111 Oint yon wo Tlntlm Til M u drurTTl.tarooommflv.dil) and It ""f l ovarooma Uo maeaiie anw twwit a. a. aaiinar olfalal flnr n'l nicirARES of tho LIVCR. t t.u .ntlnn on tlila moet Imtxrrtiint L OTRn, nabllnit H fc throw otr tnrpldlty rt In. k lllln, ind by koojilnir tho bowola In fre mmdi tlon, aoUi it w"lr ol mluirif. rlUlOriD malart. h" tha ohllla, rbtllma, dvap'PO'. or onnntti-tud, Kldny- Wort wlllaurolyrjllov- utdqnli-klj oiira. In tha BpHn, to elwuia Uia Byatom, ruj one aliould tk thomn. i iuiirs of 1 r 1 Por ooinplaint !nillrt WcIUICSa Tonr, auoh aa pain nd Trmknotom, K1DNIT-WOKT la uuaurpoaaoa, j all wilt oi promptly And afoly. ElthorSox. InnoiHinaTioa, rrtntlon or nrtna, brink dnt or ropy drponlta, and dull draecln i paln.,allapxtllyyloldtolt 0irUripowr. yr-It ArtJi at thr aama Utt on tha RIDHkib, I.IVF.RAND BUWIlJ.XI For Oontlpon, ; IMlaa. or Hhnimatliim It la A parmnnant our, i mm B DRUOOI8TG. Prior) l. f1 i hMaf ant4kx'pavaw n wyr,aaaaa" M aiJfcVYWJaiWwWaFrKg",tfJ- f.ir hnmnn, fowl and nlml floah, r llrKt liroparcd And Introtlurrd by lr. Urn. W. Mi-reliant, lit l.w.lnort, N. Y., II, B. A., 1KM, alnre which tuna It haa alvndlly crown In pohllc fayor. and ta now ckmwlntirl and admlllrd by tba trnrtd o be the atnnilard llnlinrnt of the country. When we niaha ihla announrfl mcnt e do ao without feat of contra, ilii-ilon, notwltlialandlnn w ara awaro n.TO (in- Biany who are more or Iraa '4)7 vrcjnilicrd anlnat proprlrlary nrmrairm 114 i-nin-rlally on account of the many bm- IAm.i'1 on the niarkrt; howerrr, wa ar iaa ..i.jj i .i.t- th.i nrh nn-udoeaiM n.t cxlut anlnt UAKOMNO OIU We oo not claim wo-i'l-ri" or nilnKlea for our liniment, put wa do clBlm It U wllhont an ,nal. it la put up In not- jm, IIPB 01 litres i Tfi.7!ak l that you give I a fair trial, remrmlwrlng thai the Oil K ? jlel (amall) Ii for human and fowl 'vTj.W-'Bt'T,.- flfh. that witn yeiiow V)6jaZUR' wrapper (three ilr.ee) for anU mal fii-alt. Try a hnllle. Aa theaeruta Indicate, the UU te naeci ec .w fullr for aU dlaeawe of the AMman,'eieJ and wul fifth, t-hake well before tialng. Cannot be Dlaputed. One or the principal reaaona 01 the wonderful mcceaa of Mer- C"tO cliant i Uarilinff Oil la that It la i iw--'3'if '-iv propni-tor do not, aa la the Jj- v '-, .,.f.r.ii,r,.,l .irlrtlr on honor. Jt. :'-. rrtrf Willi too many, aiiormaain - llAJfcaiiLff f' their medicine a namo. dimin i.l. itrcTvTlitoiwrllea by n.li.R '"f"'"' -jH-ntKla, hut ne me vety beat K.i to be booeht ha Hie inni i-ul, - - half a century Merchant are r,- line Oil hee been a aynouym lor r-( honeBty, ana win commuo JtI!o, onij as time ennnree. i-ot .. .11 ila doalera throni;hoiit the I'nlted Slatca and other countrlea. ia Onr leatin-niaja u" rto tno ' prexeni. j., ............ -linriilliiK O.I Liniment for Internal jWAaf 1, and external ue, ana ten your AUjwetilWH neighbor what good it n Don't fall to follow direction. KoOjf m oum well corked. , CURES "d t'hillilalna, Vroet itlfee, R- ratchea or Omaw, Spralna And nrnlaaa, Sirinchalt, WiulKallV rnotltot In 8liep, rouooerea e -(, Roup in Poultry. 1 happe-l naun Kllerual Poiaona. , ' , ..re Nlppjee. Curb. siil i racka. P,.U Krll. i;'r'kl rleela. Old Sorea, utile of all klmui l,' 1 .mill t. 1 ..... Utk Iwellll Ba, Ttimora. Ki.-h Wounda, Httfait. U liRlione, Foul I'leera, ti.iV't In 0oa, Farcy, -bracked Teali. Citlluua, Ijiniisneaa, II, Til Diateniix-r, i-mwneab, Qnittor, Toothache. IthoilkiattEta, HpaTina. rlweeney, (Nirna, A hltlnwa. kknrwiof tha Jolnl', Contmclinn ot Mnaelns, rrmi. Swelled lta. rJl"l .H!!,.", I,,,".", Caked llreaala. Dotla, Ac. Abareaant tne Luuer, 91,000 KfCinnU for proof of the cxlat. Merchant ' llnllnir Oil," e a belter worm medicine the "Mcrchiwt'i Worm Tablrta." Man ufactured by At. O. O. Co.. Lock- pcit, .N. i., C. f. A. JOHN KODCE, Seo'y. N Y N II :i 1 . TflMVft ITII Tf yon want to learn teWrephy hi I UUIIU lrit.ll Irw moDlha and be certain of a aitua Hon, aiidreaa Vwlrntlne Brow.. JamHillef Wla. m 10 lent buy a S IelT Ad, rerrtaanda Nnaa t buuhCuuk uiok.ti. V. llRliforHhyracu.., N.V. KHOYMGE ISPOVEB HEAD! KNGV; THYSELF. tub isciENrr of riFKt on, bei-Fw I'KEHlCItVATIONa la a medio traatiaa on Kxhaaatad Vitality, lfamaa and Phyaical Uabilltr. Prematura Iaolina In Man; If an inditpenaabla traatiaa for arary man, whaUaav roanff, ndddlaacad or old. THE Ht'IENCK OF T-1FF OU, SELF- i'UK(si:UTATJON, la beyond all eompariaon tha mo't axtraordinary work on Phrnioloity avar publiltad. Thara ia nothing whatar tbftt thn marnad or ainala Mtn aithar n-(inra orwiftn to know bub what la fullj axplaiuad, jTVraaM TIIK SCIENCE OF l.TFEt OR, 8EIF- I'UKSIUVATION, Inatrnota thoaa In haalth how to ramain an. aad tha In valid how to baooma well. Uontatiu una hundradandf twanty tiva invaluabla praacriptiona fur all forma aw acuta and cbrouio diaueuwa, for aaoh of which a firal oluw phyaioian would chaff a from to $10. L4 the ociencf of i.1ff ou, 8 elf ik Enervation, Oontalna KlO p-fi, flna atal aujrravinara, la tuMrbly bound in French inuahn. mboAiMdt (nil cilt. It ta a mnrval of art and beauty, warranted to lia a tmttar mdual book in awry awnaa than can ba obtained elua wbara for double tha price, or tha money will ba refund ed in every iuatanoa. Author, TUB SCIENCE OF MFFi OR ELF FUKsERVATlON. ta ao mnoh au parlor to aU other treat! tea on media anhjecta that oontparieju ia abaululaly inipuaaibla, Boston Hruld, THE SCIENCE OF fJFFt OH SELF FRESERVATION, Ia aent by mail, teouraly aualad, pout paid, on reoaipt of price, only (Lltttnaw edition). BuiailUluatratadaaAlea. tto. Send now. The author oan ba consulted en aU disaaaaa raquirlnc akill and aipaiienoe. Addreaa PEABOOY MEDICAL INSTITUTE, r W. II. rAUHEll, Ifl. Im 4 Ilulflncb Hlrert, Hoaton, Maae, 1 CaMaWaajatMlaS DISEASES. iiaiCi
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers