FOR THE LADIES. Kmti aad Notre Tor Women. It Is said thnt tlie rrinorss Louise, wife of Lord Lome, lias hi r favorite French nnd German authors in her bedroom whore she can always put lier hands on tlieni. President Eliot, of Harvard, is a pro nounced supporter of the medical edu cation of women, and Huxley, in Eng land, firmly indorses woman suffrage in the modified form in which it prevails thero. At n special merlins? of tho Ladies' Land league, in Dublin, the league was dissolved, and a recommendation was passed tliat leagues bo established throughout tho country to teach the rising generation the national history. ' A Philadelphia dancing master in troduced n new style of waltzing, the hands of the couple being joined as in roller skating, doing away with the arm encircling the lady's waist, which has by some been considered as objec tionable familiarity. Miss Mary Merger, of Portland, Ore gon, on returning from a picnic, found j the timbers of the Pile creek bridge on lire. She disrobed, dipped her clothes in the creek, wrapped them about the burning timbers, and thus kept the fire in check until help arrived. In Bayou Chicot, La,, a full grown wild cat leaped upon Mrs. Griffith Thompson, fastening bis teeth in her left arm. She grasped the savage beast by tho throat, and held it until it was choked to death, although it was biting and scratching her all'the time. A year ago the princess of Wales ap peared at an entertainment at Buck ingham palace with simple wild white clover as floral ornaments, and it is needless to say that tho clover imme diately thereafter came into fashion. Now it is all the rage in London. Tho sending of medical women from England to India is likely to bo an es tablished custom. Tho Indian women are averse to treatment by physicians not of their own sex. The 'statistics of the British medical service injlndia show that the women have rarely availed themselves of prescriptions or attendance. A staff of Mined women is proposed as a part of the public ser vice in India, a department co-ordinate and not subordinate to the existing medical bureau'. In Germany tho sofa is the seat of honor, and to omit offering its privi leges to an invited guest, is to condemn oneself as being ignorant of the usages of polite society. But a gen tleman may not sit upon the sofa; to take a seat there uninvited is very pre sumptuous; and to ask even an inti mate acquaintance to sit beside her on that sacred" resting-placo wo.uld be highly indecorous in a young lady. Such is tho custom of the country. Fnshton Notes. Cardinal red velvet basques are worn with black skirts. "White Danish kid gloves of exagger ated length are worn by bridemaiils. New French promenade dresses of dark green cloth are trimmed with several rows of very fine gold braid, put on straight. Much of what is called ficelle lace is merely white Spanish lace colored in the flax gray and ecru shades that arc called ficelle colors. Feather turbans and straw hats, with velvet crowns, worn with cheviot or cashmere suits, are admirably adapted for the cool days of fall. At present the preference is for plain goods for now dresses, but there will be many combination dresses that will be partly made of striped goods or of large figured fabrics. "Watteau overdresses are in great favor with young ladies. The large fold at the back, which is the princi pal feature of tho dress, is caught up below tho waist to form drapery. The new Pompadour lace is similar to Breton laces, with tho addition of flowers in relief made of muslin, and worked in button-holo stitch ; a single flower i3 in each point or scallop of the lace. Short round basques are becoming fashionable, instead of the long cuir asses that turn up at the edges when the wearer is sitting. These are in 6quare battlements, or in leaf points or slender curves, and the edges are heavily corded. Military styles are in vogue, such as braiding in cross-way rows on jackets, and there are military collars of white linen worn high around the neck, and fastened by a ring and ball that is passed through the button-holes on each side of the front. Ginghams are a feature of the sea sou. In those tho bust choice are tho honest Scotch ginghams, which stand any amount of washing without in jury ; and next come tho American goods warranted to wash, and which may usually bo relied on to do so with out fading. Chisclo velvets, with figures in bold relief, are made into dress skirts t o wear with velvet polonaises. Spanish lace, passementerie, and chenille flings trim with overdress, but the skirt is rh h enough to dispense with trimmings, and even the narrow balayeuso finish will bo unnecessary. Novel French mantels are made of black merveilhi ux, or cam as grena dine, cut as a rather long shoulder-cape, with a border of chenille fringe glit tering with jet, silver, or a mixture of colored beads. Tho cape forms a V 6haped opening in front, followed by two (inely-pl.iited scarfs of fancy silk starting from the shoulder-gores, aad contracted at tho waist by a number of close shirrings ; thence these scarfs cross and fall over the tapered ends of tho capo. Browns of erery shade, and greens ranging from tho "gror-ncry-yalhry"of the testhctiu to tho darkest and iiU'.1 invisible greens, will undoubtedly bo tbe reigning favorites during the ap proaching season ; ana ns regards stvie, the present indications are that but few, if any, dresses will be worn with llaljtrimm'ings tho more bouffant tho better. Dressmakers, by means of panniers, puffs, .full-scarf draperies, ruches and other resources nt their command, contrive to make fashion able costumes as intricate and impos sible to follow as possible; nnd the fuller the effect the greater the tri umph. An Exciting1 Scene In M id-Ocenn. A correspondent who was a passen ger by the steamship Daeea, which left Madras for London, semis from Aden an interesting account of an exciting scene which he witnessed during a storm in the Indian ocean. The ves sel encountered the monsoon a few days after leaving Oolomlk and had a rough timo cf it for several days. P- nally tlie gale became so violent that canvas had to be taken in, awnings furled and things made as snug as pos sible. The correspondent describes what followed : " I came on deck at 6 A. M. ; it was blowing fiercely, and the spray coming over the sheets. There wire three of us on deck when the bell struck a Miss, a Mr. and myself. "Ve were hold ing on to our chairs, which were firmly lashed to the inner cabin skylights, under tho lee of tlie ladies saloon. Part of the crew were working hard to get the starboard life-boat in-board, when a bigger roll to tho windward warned us of what was coming. 'Hold on!' some one shouted. We bold on. The chairs rushed fcrward on their lashings. The deck stood upright. In came the sea over tho gunwale, over the taffrail, up to our waists, lifted the lifeboat out of its shackles, carried it overboard, smashing away stanchions and davits, and out to sea. Then came the horrid cry of ' Man overboard 1' Tho helm yas put down, the engine reversed, and back we went on a search all the more so us sharks had been seen round the ship earlier in tlie morning. The boat was presently seen some 200 yards off, keel uppermost. Soon after the two men were observed clinging on to it. Then came an excit ing two hours, during which we steamed after the boat, which was drifting rap- idly toward the cast. But turning a" ship like the Dacca is a very slow busi ness, and as she hung in the wind's eyo a jib was hoisted to bring her round. By tho time this was done the boat, with its pitiful-looking crew, was away two miles and more to leeward, and wc were rolling heavily and unmanageable. At last the captain decided to lower a boat, and the order was given ' Stand by the boat,' and soon after 4 lower.' ' Who is going in her?' he shouted. "The first officer, Mr. Ingram, sprang over the side, caught hold of the davit ropes and slipped down, but just as he got near her a great roll of the ship lifted him clear of the boat twenty feet in the air. As he came down again the boat had drifted for ward, and he was plunged down in the boiling sea for live or six seconds. Up ho came again as the ship heeled over, still hanging on, and missed by an aco having his skull mashed against the small boat's side. It was really a ter rible sight, and wo shuddered as wo looked on, the boat all tho while being lashed up and down by tho vio lence of the waves. But at last ;hls opportunity came, and he dropped into the stern. At once he was followed by the boatswain, two firemen and two European sailors, the native crew hanging shamefully back. One of the passengers, a young Eng lish officer, Lieutenant Wolff, of the Seventh Fusiliers, a 3on of Sir Druin moiul Wolff, volunteered at once. But tho officer in charge would not accept a passenger's services whilo men of tho crew could be got. At last the boat shoved off and the oars were got out, and in a terrible sea they set out for the missing boat. Directed by the motions of a man aloft they got alongside her, and took the men aboard. Then began a hard row back. "Wo lost sight of her again and again wondering how she could live in such a sea. But still sho held on nnd got at la:-t under our lee. By the help of a case of oil scattered over tho waves they were comparatively stilled, a lad der was let down and when tho last man stepped on board such a cheer greeted him as told him what we thought of his pluck and that of the gallant fellows with him. Captain Burkitt was perfectly cool the whole time, and managed his ship with great skill. When tlie first officer got a change of clothes and camo down to the cabin, lie received all kinds of con gratulations, and his health was drunk in bumpers of champagne. On Satur unlay morning we got "under the lee of Cape (Juardafui, and "so ended our brush with the southwest monsoon." Highest Tunnel la the World. The Denver and South Park railroad has just completed an extension to Pitkin, (iunnisuii county, Colorado. In tlie course of the work r. tunnel had to he made through the main chain of tho Rockies. It is the highest railroad tunnel in tlie world, being 11,500 feet above the sea level. Tho length is 1,700 feet, and the approaches on either side arc said to be marvels of engineer ing skill. At its eastern end thetunnel lias a sharp curve, but so nicely were the calculations of the engineer made, and so exactly were they carried out, that when the two "bores" met in the inferior of the mountain there was only about one inch variation. Ameri can engineering has more than one famous triumph of this sort to boast of. The sides of tho great lloosac tunnel, though there were four 44 heads " one from each side and two in tho middle varied in all less than an inoh. No such exact work, has yet been done ii Murope. FACTS AM) COMMENTS. St. Louis does a big baby Insurance tiusiness. A company begun operations laet January, and now has several thousand policies in force. Tho premium is live cents n week, and in case of death the parents get f 14 if tho child is less than a year old, $19 if morn than that and less than two years, and so on up to $123 at eleven years. Tho idea is to provide for funeral expenses. The trafllc in meat is assuming a new phase with the rapid increase in the exportation of dressed meat from the West to the East. The butchers in New York. Baltimore and Boston have already taken the alarm, and their fears of sharp competition from this source appear to lie well founded. Already one establishment at Hamilton, Ind., is killing over oOC cntllo a day and shipping the moat in refrigerator car:?, while elaborate pre parations are makingat various point? for extending this business. A gentleman writing on tho habits sf some western snakes tells how the rattlesnakes worry the prairie dogs and destroy their young. It seems it is not an unusual occurrence to tlnd whip, racer and bullsnakes with the entire Contents of fowls' nest in t.belr num. cious stomachs. This observer has seen a puff adder attached to the hind foot of a turtle, suckincr its blood nml disrestinir off its toes. I In found rminv box-turtles deformed in their hind feet, probably from this cause. Dr. Foote's Health Monthly. Although the making of a new nose for a person deprived of his natural organ of smelling has been repeatedly undertaken with success, it is a nice and difficult operation; and an attempt just made in Vienna by Professor Bill- nun, one of the most distinguished surgeons in Austria, to supply a sol dier who had been frightfully muti lated in Bosnia with an artificial nose, has attracted much attention. Tlie material for the new organ was taken from tho skin of the forehead. The operation is reported to have been en tirely successful, and with a supple mentary shaping process, is expected to result in a nose that cannot bo dis tinguished from a natural one. A novel expedient for trivintr strength to an alibi was adopted recently by a Massachusetts lawyer. His client was an Italian, and several unimpeachable witnesses had testified that the prisoner w.n in a certain place at a certain time. On the second day of the trial the lawyer put a friend'of the accused man in the dock, and sent his client to a seat unong the spectators. The substitution was not discovered for some time, when the lawyer claimed that the witnesses l; r the prosecution, who had identified tho prisoner as the man they had seen at a certain time, might easily have een inistaKcn, since tho learned and ibservant court did not detect the sub stitution. The prisoner was acquitted. During the vt:ir ended .Innn an 1882, tho total number of acres of United States public land disposed of was 15,01)9,818, an increase over last year of about 5,000,000 acres. Tho cash received for this land amounts to about $8,301,091, as against $5,1)00,000 during tlie last fiscal year. The num ber of acres entereJ for agricultural purposes as "cash sales" during the year amounted to 3,099,899 acres ; for mineral purposes, vuu,siu acres ; tor desert lands. 100.055 nrr for pnnl lands, 7,191 acres ; 0,347,729 acres were entered under ttie homestead laws, while 2,210,244 acres wero "proved up " under tho same laws ; under the limber culture acts, 2,009,797 acres were entered and 44 proved lip ;" under the various land warrant!, railroad grant, school, and Stato selection acts (including various kinds of s$ip). 015,800 acres were disposed of. Tho great increase in tho disposition of public lands during the past fiscal year is said to be owing to the largo emigration in the Northwest. In Dakota the increase is more noticeable than in any other Stato or Territory. The area of cash sales in Dakota alono was 098,(194 acres, and the homestead entries in the same Territory were more than 2,000,000 acres. Secretary Teller has written a lettei on Indian education in which he says: "The Indian requires education in tho practical affairs of life ; he must bo taught to work as well as read; his hand must be educated as well as his head. AVith additional labor schools estal lished within easy communication with the tribe, yet not near enough to allow the influences of savage life to coun teract and undo the work of the school, we may hope to repeat on it largo scale what Captain Pratt and Mr. Armstrong have so successfully done at Carlisle and Hampton. Labor is and ever lias -been the great civil izer of the human race, and whenever tho Indian becomes a laborer he is not far from civilization and usefulness to society. Heretofore we have confined our efforts to the education of a few, hoping to make such persons teachers and exemplars to their savage brethren ; but experience has demonstrated that a few educated youths could not with stand tho baneful influences of savage life with which they were at once sur rounded on their return to their tribe. We cannot hope for the speedy civili zation of the Indian unless we can ex tend our educational efforts so as to include the great mass of Indian chil dren. To do this now, as the Indians may be located on reservations easy of access, is only a question of appro priation and tlie cordial support of the administrative authorities." There is said to be a largo percentage of very young soldiers in tho British forces recently sent to Egypt. Some 9,000 men are known t average little more than two or l.)iroe-anii-twnt' years of ajfvt WISE WOKDS. No rank can shield us from tho tin partiality of death. If you would succeed in life, rise eariy ami ne an economist of time. The qualities we possess never make us ,so ridiculous as those we pretend to nave. One Who Is never Inisv rest, forgone implies relief from pre- a ions laoor. Those who blow the coals of others' strife may chance to have the sparks uy in i heir own laces. Though charity may tend to make ioiir purse lighter one ilay, yet it will make it heavier another. If a man speaks or acts with a pure thought, happiness follows like a shadow that never leaves him. Every man's vanity ought to be his greatest shame, and every man's folly ought to be his greatest secret. Looking to others for our standard of happiness is a sure way to be miserable. Our business is with our own heart. I know no real worth but that tranquil firmness, whiuh seeks dangers by duty, and braves them without i . rasiincss. If you would find a great many raults be on the lookout, but if you want to find them in unlimited num bers be on the look in. Deceit is the false road to happi ness ; and all the joys we travel through to vice, like fairy banquets, vanish when we touch them. All deception in the course of life is, indeed, nothing else but a lie re duced to practice, and falsehood pass ing from words into things. Perseverance is tho crown of all the other virtues, and the characteristic of heroes. It is a small thing to begin; we must persevere to the end. It takes 800 full blown roses to make a single toaspoonful of the famous perfume, and you can get enough per fume out of an onion to drive a dog on the gallop out of the slaughter house. And yet w e admire the rose more than we do the onion. Kuvb the Prooklyn EaKhv Mr. R. C. Moore of Mcssi-h. Yei num it Uo.,:4 New Btrwt. New York, whs iilmcMt irmUmly relieved by St J aculwOil cf severe pain following; nn attack of pleurisy. Tlie remedy acted like magic Carlyle said Frond w as the best read man he ever met. If he had come to America he would have written that Sitting Bull was the worst red man he ever met. This would have put the two extremes on record. The art cnnnoiiwciir and exhibitor, Prof CiuniHvll, w a cured of rheumm i.-m by St. Jacubs Oil Norfolk Virginian. The decline in the value of land con tinues in England. A Yorkshire farm, for which $00,000 was refused a few years ago, has been sold for $35, 000. A smart .linn 1 one who does his work quickly nud well. This is wlmtDr. K. V. Pierce's "Cioldon Medi cal Discovery" does us ii blood purifier and strenirtliener. It arouse tlie torpid liver, purities the blood, and is the best remedy foi consumption, which is scrofulous disease ol the lungs. Some !)i;i,000 enses of canned salmon were packed on the Pacific coast last year, the value lieiiiK $.r,0l0,(Al0. This year tho catch has fallen off fifty per cent. Ilrnuttrtil Women are mndo pallid and unattractive by func tional irregularities, which Dr. l'ierce's "Favorite Prescription" will infallibly cure. Thousands of testimonials. By druggists. The number of fires on Cuba Biinar estate.. daring the past crop was !!!), of which lii7 wero accidental, twenty intentional nud the causes of the rest unknown. Kxrrnvn entire is ft crime; and ladies cud not afford to do without Dr. Pierce's "Favorite Prescription," which, by preserving and restoring health, preserves and restores that beauty which de pends on health. r It is nsserted that nearly every American author sends his book to Dr. Oliver Wendell Holmes. Profeiwinnnl Know If dap; Okkbe Cut, N. J.. Sept. 1C, 18S1. II. II. Wabnuu & Co.: Sirs I have been cured of Bl ight's Disease by using the reme dy known us Warner' Safe Kidney and Livei Cure. Hufch W. pEtrocE, M. D. Pineapple growing is becoming one of the most important and prolitable industries of Florida. Fi'DE cod-i.iver on,, from selected livers, on the seashore, by Caswell, Hazard & Co., N. Y. Absolutely pure nnd sweet. Patients who have once taken it prefer it to all othor-s. Physicians declare it superior to all oilier oils. CuAPrED hands, face, pimples nnd ronirh ekin cured by usinif Juniper Tar Sonp, made by Caswell, Hazard fe Co., New York. I'lillnrli of tlie Illnddrr. Stinging irritation, inflammation and all Kidney and Urinary Complaints cured by "Bu ctmpnibn." $1. lJru;i,'ists. Kend for pam phlet to E. 8. Wm.T.BjjIersey City, N. J, 2!i CennTwill liny a Treatise upon the Horse and his Diseases. Book of 100 panes. Valuable to every owner of horses. Postage stamps taken. Sent postpaid by New York Newspaper Uuion, liX) Worth Street, New York. Mother Shipton's prophecy is about 400 years old. Every prophecy hns been fulfilled except tho end of the world. Buy your Carboline, a deudurized extract of petroleum, the great hait restorer, before the world comes to an end. The Science of Life, or Self-Preservation, a medical work for every man younfj, middie nt;i;d or old. 125 invuluuble prescriptions. ItEKtTKH FHO.1I HEATH. William J. CoiiKliliu, "f Bomerville, Muss., tars: Xu the lull of 1870, I was taken with iilkkdinq or the lunus, followed ly a severs coukQ. I lost my ai'petitu and flesh, aud wasoonftnod to my bod. la 1B77 I was admitted to the Hospital. The doctors said I bad a bole iu my luug as liu as half dollar. At ono timoareiort went around that 1 was dead, 1 nave up hoiw, but a friend told mo of lilt. WIL LIAM liAl.L'H 1JALSA.M FOU THE "LUNGS. I not a bottle, wbeu to my Burprino, I commenced to feel better, and to-day I feel better tban tor three years past. UAKLH'8 PAIN l'ANACEA cures lin in Man or Beast. For UHe exteruully or Internally. A M.EN'N 1III AIN FOOIK-M t reliable tooio il foi llie llrulu ii ud .eiieruliv Orgiinii. It positively euu.-n ervoet IM.iluy mid rehloieu lout yinls iHiwrra. Sold I. drunKiMii. 1 ! lor fcl.i. "" "''iit .,f prio. JOHN I. .U.I.1.N. 4 Im-iiiIhI, Ul.J I'irtl Avenue, Now York. 29 t rills will lluy m. TreolUo upon the lluxse aud Ins Diseases. Book of lou p&gus. Valuable It, uvery owner of nurses, l'uetxe Btainps taken. Hunt postpaid by M:W YORK df.SVal'APLH UNION, ldU Worth stisut, Kw York, - - - - P8 A'Olt Ml fin j & Lun An Neuralgia, Sciatica, Lumbago, Backache, Soreness of the Chest, Gout, Quinsy, Sore Throat, Swe ings and Sprains, Burns and Scalds, General Bodily Pains, Tooth, Ear and Headache, Frosted Feet and Ears, and all other Pains and Aches. No FrcpaisHon on sarth equals St. .Times Oil K Hnfr "'V.' '''"Pi" """I rhrnp K.tcrn.l Kfturdy. A tiinl ,ntails but the eeniparaiirelv Irininit nuilsy ..f i,o I enU. end e.-rr on mitVrn.r cUlms""" ll"0 ClU'1' Ud 'loiu" VTuut of Mrectlons In Kleron UnsMiae;.. 1 SOLD It ALL DRUGGISTS AND DEALEE3 IN Mr.DIOlNE, A. VOGEXJER, &; CO., , Italtitnnr?, Mt.f T7. g. J, .... N Y N r- -3S An Only Daughter Cured of . Consumption. w him dnath wnn hourly nMu-t'1. Wnp,ji0f, hnvin tmliM, . mid lr. II. J.'iin.'H v.iin fiTimtnii,K Willi 1 1. niMiy hKri nf Ciilrniiri, h n.vi,ltntlly iiihi.m ims I'.'int inn whirl, oiirml liiH.mly rhil.l ,f CoilMiiittptlon. .f a i.i i T "iiinry, nun f'ltjot intf tho In-, I limit h. Ilulinn ir-.vtMl t tho world thnt 1 iiiniiiiii. . : - " ' (" " it' i t uriMi, j on . ' V ,i,',tw fn;i only nukm two Hini. . ,N,fl"h" t thn Htomiu-h. nn.l will hnvik up A J'1 tt.ity.!,.nr hour-.. AtMn"M Cra.MiH-k A t o., in j Km- HtriH't, I'hiU.lrlphK,, iiiiiniiiK thiw nor. That terrUdo toaurjr fnvrr ami -UK", ftud its ctMifcner, billuui ivniittrnt, imilef-f(- ticn of thfl Btnnv t'h, livrnnil bowulB, imHhu ud by niiAsma tic air mid watrr, srv both eradicated and VrcvtMitml by the um of lloKt-Mtur's lS(om neb Uitt-urs, a juimly vtt)'tall I'liiir, iu iturt'fHl t'jr ih.vHioiria, an I mors xtrtttYljr upih) au a rMM Jtly for ttin .ibeve eh uf din ntdrtT. nn wi!l n for m.'iiiy A lior, t h.-iii any intilrlli of t)i l'.ir by all ptrtlet mid Ud.llfTt. guu- PIANOS ARE UKFO NO TNMOHSFD BY TllK II MEAT 1ST AKTISTS IS l illi WOULD. PATTI! CERSTERI VALLERIA ! , KELLOGG! CAMPANINI! GALLASSI ! BniGNOLI ! ABBOTT! OLE DULL ! PEASE ! MAP.IIVI0N! LABLACHE ! RAVELLI ! MARIE r.OZE! CASTLE ! WAKi:UillM!.i 97 TUTU AVENUE, NEW VOU1C. For Hule bjr nil lending Plain IIoiujs. OATA I.OUUKS MAll.Kl) KltKli UK till A Ki. K. IMSON&HAfiSLIN Om ft tMC 'ert.llllly I'i'it, hiving- lien Ho I Otll'l.'l 'ITIO. lor MTK!;. MlAliS; iu otlii'i' AtiMTH-nti huiifc hiiviiK lt'i'ti found nii.i nt any. AlHnfHKAri'.NT IMvio it,;i; ;i'4 nctav.M; niftiei.'iit ooiumM4 and imwit, with lit-xt ipuiliiy, fr popular imk'mhI mul Ht'i'iil.-ir uiu ic m ncIii"! i or t;iiilio, nt only I'. NH IH MMM.Il OTMi.lt sTVI IN t ;tO, N.i7 HS, Mi, 7, si OS, Hill, to t-UH Ulld UlW(tIil. lt (ll Irt t ijlr.Mti t II loth un. rifilrif h.J Hi'if ifhrr Itrf-tnr. Al'til I-.r (?iV I) I V llli'llt 1. m: i i.i.i sfit ti:im ata una i: tci;i:. This tJoinpnnr hive r-tuiuienced tlie noiuul.uliiie of I I'ltll.ll T !W tlllAM) PIANOS, iut ioiIiu 1113 ii'o,.i o.,-. nneiii.. .- sliding to iov.r mul l,e iuty ot tone nud iltiialolity. Will u- tr-joir.- 'too',.- 71,0, ,r a. wurh a' oih't .',..,,. ii.i.i sTKA'ri.t) t i it er 1 . 4 It S, vr it Ii foil par! ii'til tm. Kiu.r. Tin: .ti AMoN a 11 tn. in out; AN AMI PI A NO (It.. !." I 'I'l 11110MI si., lio-lon 1 .lit I). 1 llli Ml., N. 01k! I I'J iilmli w.. IiIimKu. H' ft In the world, iirt Iho genuine. Even fnrkesre hn our irnil(-mni'k timi le uiarked frw.er'e. HIM.I) I I 1. It V II Kit E. GOOD NEWS TO XjA.DIES! ' Get up Clubs o"' nn DIIA'l -! iiU.i, n4 mrirt i bckutllul "Kccs Boss cr G:Ii Eiiil Te Sit (41 ; 1 ,! our own Impai Itiim. () o( ttifn .ii(lhil 'lea St 1 rlvrn w l iiir iaiIj iui; Plub loi '-.'i Oft. liu:w ol imr o-clkd ' CHr.Al' IF AH " tiu biiux lvn tliry ttr )n.ii om d (UlrlBiratal to htlth l.-w .uU-iti. llr uii.-y wllii rrlUbl flDKi m ni wilb firm Ituifla II p.li.l-. No lnonioi;. Xhe ireut Ameriimi Tea Co., Iinnirtrr, r. O. Uq ltl. It A 13 V;.S V bl., rww Yuik. f'onittiiMi llitl iiiii'ii lilt, u .iiij ut 1 ior kind of huiaU pM'luiv. Vt w ill Ht-nd lull it'Mt'ril nut Hi prirts oto., to any ri'li.ibli intiiior tvoiiini win will act nn our iiKnt. Tu ttuchu riity woltnr 11 pci'iiiu unit and irulilull buniiii'tiri of thtt InhnKt n'MiMTlnbihty. HhoUe-l.'opying Hfc-ont should ad'hi'hrt uh by let Ut, hinting iitrifiuf , uiihtv of vrovk tli-y Inndlc. and nriitH pnid. I'll K Al ltl ICN C0IVIM; ( O., H.i And 87 Gvuomm hiivel. Auburn, Now Yorl. CURLS WHUt ALL ELSE f AILS. Uhh in Uiiim. Sold v druKisui, CIV WIIT WASTE WoNkT! WimuoroM, m J If qii waul l.utiir.ml iujsirlir. tfjwi'i cts:, Imkira or a lirmy fiuvlb of Lir nn bald l.Wlf.ORM K tli HA1H a(iur dva l fauir.hurt4. Tr j iLe iat hi.eni.ti diaMrj ar.xb baa N.V1.H VKF fAiLkl). HeitJo.Xl.r MX tiMS la lt. 1. OoNZA. is Tllll'h V.S. M'hk.Xi I'll E.N and T5RESEiEE fK Thi 9Bt U th4 lilbi AtLlklAN 4'l'AVLOKCa.MAutild.U vneiMr iru it you wont to li'arn tf lterphy in a I U WliU Ink II luw inonlh nnd i-rinui ot a iiiiua- tioii, addrtmtt Valt'iiliii Itrwn.-Jnuifftvilio, Win, HOW TO MARK A I'ORTUNK, only Mr. Ii. Till itlSKK, lix 4 I, IUy Shorii, N. V. 12 i rntn bn.a 3 l.oiHv Ad. irlNvnd Nona biuli Oook li'Hik. 4. 4 . I Innlui'd sSyraoumi, N. V. lATKMTY HTONKl-IKTFIt-llll-KHY'K M l-'ruil l'.viiMirntr Hit " tlmoaiih. l'ototiv) fudtinoj. Write to .l i-It riile V i '., Ai Inula. 4 a. AaimiU wanted iu evio-y county iu tli United htt'a. kill GREASE CI CnTnnTVDCMACHINERY AND toolstor" type tLtulllUlirt FOUNDERS, PRINTERS, ETC. I H U I I I PRINTING MACHINERY A SPECIALTY. rtTfnrftTimr OSTItANDEIL & HUICE, III III II I W. J I lellhl O 111m HAS UEEN PTROVED The OURCST CURB lor K!DEY DISEASES. I Pom n lml hlMik cr nillsonterert nrlne Inrll. cete l!ut yon ro Tlflim' Tllk'N DO NOT UI-HITATHl Use KII)NB?-WOUT et once, (ilriirKlntsTTiopmmend.il) end it will epeeillly overoome tliedieeaso and restore beeltlgr eutlou. It In ft SURKCUUBfor fill DISEASES of tho LIVEI7. Ikjiiwt speelflo snllort otl tMs most Importunt C ori-un, e:.nuutifr tt vi uimw nn mi " -e'llou, et(:ntilivtlnitt.liehollll.y eoiirrtlon of the nn, S enrt ny eoiipiiiu ine txivve. tion, efTuotlna ite reKulnr UisolniriTO.' MlUrh It yoniUTjinitTnrtrir,rrmo ItilMliUllcle r.mlurln, In.vn the o.MH. eTchlllnns, flysjiepHn, cr constlpsUHl, Klrtu.'T- l Wert will surely r jllcvcnnd q"U lly ouro. , In the Sprlnii, to olennso tho Syntein, eyery i oiiuuhoulU tKo a themuuh oourso of It ' I nrl!n. loroomplnlnU pcenllerto UllUlwSliI ynurnet, cuch no pni'i eml WC 'lnee, K UlNFY-WOll P uiuurpoeevd, e.iltn-111 net pretnptly RndesTely. Ki'hor Plt. JervmTlne?!", rftrtntlrTI Of Wrlne, bi--K ttnst orropy rtrp nt, em fliill dmreclns; li'),HlliipeMlly yield to lie ouratlve peWT. I I ritAein etthe emne timeon the KIONTDTfl, I MVJSAANl) UOWK.lfl.j. 'orJmlllatlfm, ; l'ileu, or li'.ieinurvtism It Is o prrmeueilt ouro. SOLD PV ORUCCIST8. PrlCl. "1 MF.IlCn ANT'S OAUnT.INO OIL is tlir "'ih'-it. mul llio Blunil.irfl liniment nf tli'' IJnili'il Sleti'H. l.urifii 1 .!; nittllum fill t't':its; hmiiiII, tr pout; hiiihII eizti fur ritiullv u-i, ciuitH: Merrliiiiit Worm 'I nliletx, V.U tt'iite, I'lireak-liy ovi'iy tJi uugistuud Ucalt-r in ucnoral iiicrrli.inillsi'. For Family Use. Tho fJnrpllntr Oil Mninipnt with white witAi'l'Kit, in -'nio. fur liiiimtn th-ili,.! put iipln KKinll loiiiioB (oili, mul dwi uut et til ii the" s 1.1 n. I'rioc ' i-i-nli. Tho Gargling: Oil Almanac for 1SS.I Is now In tlio Imnrls of our prlittpr, nnd will 1( ri'rtily for tlislriliiitiiin durinr tlie nmntlie ot Nnvi'iiilM'i' iiikI lu-w iiiIxt. ift-a. TlioAI Pinimi; fur t h ciiiiiIiik ycur will lie- inoro use ful nml iiiKtrtti'tlvn tluin PVfr.pnrt will tir sunt livo tu tiny ud ltvss. Wrlto lor ono. Ask tlio Ncnrcst Druggist. Tf tho iIobUmh In yotir plao Oo not. )ip Mtni'liiint 'ft lii;llnit III for bhIo. iiihW tiKi' thvir HriHlititf to lis, or wliero 1liiyg-(t tticir nie.!irliii-. unil (tct II. lCiei thniiultlo wll foiki-d, an'l nlmko It lifforu nslinr. Yollow v.'iupiiuir lur uuiiual unJ vrliilu lor Luumu Cusu. Special NoUcp. Tim Mcrt-riRnt'e Gnrfrllnir Oil lifH liron In tifo una liniment for iiulf uii ntui v. All wo , r.k l ii fair trial, Imt bo suiu and luliour Ul- ivciioim. Tho Gnrplliis; Oil nnd forrhnnt' Worm Tsblrts nru fur Willi liy nil rti-uiriri(e nml ihnl ei in (jenerul metvuiuidiiio Uiruuebout tiu- Wllllll. MmMtfitctitrrd nt Ixw-ltpoft, N. T., liy ilor cliuiil's Uiirvllnji Oil C'umniliiy. Bccivtaty. Payne's Automatic Engines. ? -i -i I Itt hnlile, DurablH and Konnoiuir.il, vill s'umU m h'tve funrrr trtth lj U urt au-1 tr.itrr tfirtm ung o'hr A.'diif.r on', not ritltil with an AutouiatirUut-olT. bud for illiiftrittod I'atiiloirmi "J," fur InlonuHtion and Pritvi., H. W, 1a SUA Sonb, Ho twin, t Ionium, N.Y. I'll Mint V , 1'iii'Miillve I'ilU in.ikt Nw Bfoh F I mul, and will voiupli'trty chaniiii tHf hlotrd in tlin n ttre Myxtimi in tliroe moiitli. Any pnmon who will tiUo on pill edoh iiiht from I to J wif Un may lm rntor4 to Round ht'riltliil aiii'li a thitiK l) pcxiitildd. Sold verjr where or int by mail fr eiltt lftttr (itmii. I. S. JOH NSON CO., i.OBloit, iUuM., for merly Jlitnuurv Mr, KliOf LEDGE IS POWER READ! KNOW THYSELF, THK SJKfF OF TJPKt OK, HKI.F. 1U KSEUTATION, Ihk mndiral treatise on Kihivuwted Vitality, NnrrooB and IMiymritl Doliilily, Vrumaturo Dot hue in ftlun; in mn indiriMniahlw troattM fur evwry num. whether yoiinjr, uiiddlH-avud or old. THK HC'IKNC I-: OP T.IKPi OR, Si.lA ntKM-iUVATlUN,-In beyond all conirrtma the most if raordmnry work on riiMo.Ky ever publmhed. 'fhnre i uottuutc wlinl4vr tiint the married or MiiKitt can either roiiuuu or wih to know but what ia fully eiulamod. jUufo (i lobe, TIII5 HCIENf'F OF UKFt OR, (SELF- ritirsLUVATlON, Inntrtirta thtwe in health how to remain no, and the hv uhd how to become well. tlonUiu one hundred and! twenty-five invaluuhla prencriptioim for all forma o-bi-ute and chrouiu diaHttrten, for eauh of which a first .-Um, pliy ttiuiaa would charge Xrutu to $1U. London Lunctt, Tllli MllKNCF OF T.1FF OK, SKI.F- J'U F.N-;u VATION, Contain Un.) pHue, fine alel enRravinirii, la in pertly bound in KiHiii h imihlni, mbohtd, full udt. It it a miirvel of art aud beauty, warranted to Ite a bntter mod trill hook in every wuw than uau be ohLaiued eiie w I it-re for douhie Mi price, or the money will be refuud nd iu every iuatauce. A uthor, THK (SCIENCE OF T.TFKt OK, HKI.F i'U KFSlvR VATiON, In no much superior to all "other treat ine on medio fcuhjectH that cuiuparibon ia abaolutely iuipoakible, liuHtoH Herald, THK MlKNrK F IslFFj OR, 8EUa. rKi:i;uvATioN, In neut by mail, aoourely aealed, postpaid, on receipt of price, miy$l.iij(utiw edition), tiinall illustrated aample Oc, St ud uuw. 'i'he author can be ooruiulted on all '.diaeaaea ruQuirixn fkitl aud experirnco. Addreas PEABODY MEDICAL INSTITUTE, or W. 11. 1'AUKUlt, J. I ISullinrliSlnTlt , , Ho.ton, niuee. T,. tsiuUF ll, in n. n irlT. A l.it. Ln. Uti.k. Ui. o( ll-.k. 4 (.. IT Tit &:"' W B EI
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers