WrflKYOMEIU OF LIFE. urza-a cheat uses sstsTxira lowo PERIODS WITHOUT AIB. ACartrxia and Vn.olvcd Problem of Nature TO jratr-rloua Power of the nkinoi India. Responding to a corresnondant'a ohm tion whether science teaches that any unnT creature can exist for any length Of time. MV six months or a. vnnr alien. lutoly without air, the Hartford Time Our correspondent's question touches uuo 01 ma mosi interesting ana wonder ful realms of nature Nothing known to mnn is mora wonderful than tho myste rious principle of life. . Nothing yet re- Tciiieu is more interesting man tue won derful wny in which that principle can be. and in tnanv instances ia. nmanrvnd not for weeks, but for months, and even for years, under conditions which have to it . . . . ju npiwarance aireauy caused actual death. Indeed, nature herself provides, for cer ium nnimnis mat ao not migrate, a win ter condition of torpidity, in which all the bodily functions are lowered, and in some cases seemingly suspended, as in death. Jireathine, like the action of tho heart and the circulation; is for considerable periods in very cold weather actually suspended. The hvhpmati analogous to the full torpidity of some of uio smaiior quadrupeds, as the wood chuck, the bat, tho marmot, the prairie dog, the dormouse, and some others. The birds such as are nnt rilrria nf i-n-nxr can fly away, and follow the summer to warmer climates; but some of the quadrupeds, that live by preying on the smaller creatures of summer, or the veg etation that disappears with warm weather, cannot migrate, and for them nature has provided a state, or condition, that practically serves the purpose of a change of country or climate. It is to be noted that it is not the animals with hoofs that migrate, but certain kinds that have claws. Others, whose claws and instincts enable them to live, as beasts of prey, through our northern winters, f as the panther and lynx and wildcat, neither migrate nor hybernato. Hawks, owls, etc., do not need to migrate. Dr. AVare's "Philosophy of Natural History" says: " Among the lower classes the state of torpidity is more universal and complete, and they are capable under its influence of enduring much greater degrees of cold. Many of them do not breathe, circulate, or digest at all. Some rep tiles, as tortoises and frogs, dive beneath the mud of ponds and rivers, lizards and serpents retire to their holes, to the crevices of rocks and to trunks of trees. If the cold be indefinitely continued, they seem capable of continuing torpid an indefinite time. Spallanzani kept toads and salamanders in an ice-house for three years, during which they ex hibited no signs of life. At the end of this time, on exposure to warmth, they revived." Living frogs and toads have been dis closed, in the work of blasting, securely imbedded in the heart of bed-rock. Ob servations on these phenomena, as yet, lack the fullness and precision which would be required by scientific consider ations, and it does not appear to be posi tively known, in any case, that these creatures, thus living, perhaps for ages in the deep heart of the rock, were ab solutely deprived of air. But the indi cations do seem to point to that marvel. A more scientific method was followed in the case here mentioned by Dr. Ware : "Five specimens of a green toad were once found in the center of a tree nine teen inches in diameter. Every exertion was made to discover a communication between the external air and the cavity, but without success. Every part of it was probed with care, and water kept in each half for a considerable time, with out its passing into the wood." The toads revived from what appeared to be a state of actual death on exposure to the air and sun. Flies, and some other insects, seem to die, in winter, and dry up; but they revivo with warm weather. In Professor Brocklesby's "Views of tho Microscopic "World " we find fully substantiated cases of infusorial ani malcules, smaller than the motes of dust that float athwart a beam of sunshine in an empty garret and revealed only in the compound microscope, and which, after being taken from their drop of water and thoroughly dried up, havo still retained for months, the principle of life, and been restored to activity when restored to their proper conditions. The micro scopic " wheel-animalcule " has thus re mained dried up and dead for four years not a breath, any more than in the Sphinx and yet been restored to life on being restored to water. A fine BDeck of impalpable dust in the air is as visible as a "wheel-animalcule" a creature whose water-wheel nevertheless draws in, by its little vortex, a multitude of still more in finitely minute life for its food. The myterious power of some human beings as a certain few of the fakirs of India to suspend, for an indefinite time by a voluntary effort, the actions of the bodily functions, seems to belong to another and higher class of phenomena. Two or three remarkable cases illustrat ing the reality of this amazing fact have been published within the last thirty or forty years in England, attested by such arrays of military and other names, as witnesses, thut it seemed as difficult to reject as to accept the stories. Of one case, narrated by Sir Claudo Wade, a resident at the court of Kunjeet Singh in Lahore, in 1837, that authority washim self an eye-witness. Tho body was buried three feet below the floor, in a cell under an apartment that was closed up with brick and mortar, and sealed at the keyhole with the prince's private seal. No aperture existed through which food or air could be admitted. Tho place was guarded, night and day, by four sentries, and was daily inspected by the officers of Itunjeet Singh, who was himself skepti cal us to the reality of the phenomena. At tho disinterment, at the end of forty days, "the body, tied up in a linen bag, which had become mildewed, was found in a cell three feet below the level of the floor in a wooden box, upon which was a padlock, sealed like the other. There was no sign of life, except some heat ubout the head. The body was bathed in luck warm water, plugs of cotton and wax, with which the nostrils and ears weie filled, were taken out; and after a variety of other appliances the fakir be gun to revive, and in the course of an hour was able to talk with thoso about him freely, though feebly." Another case, strongly attosted by a dozen or more British military officers in India, was of a fakir who was locked un in a sealed box, buried, and a mound piled over the place, on which barlci was sown. A guard of four was on watch, night and day, at the mound. Tho barlev crrcw. and at the nd nf fit r remember aright) about two months, the mound was opened, tho mnn unearthed, and found to bo somowhat like a mummy in appcaranee, but was soon able to sit up and speak, and soon recovered. A Remarkable Caterpillar. There is a ccnuino case a livinw pn. ture becoming converted into a vegeta ble! It occurs in a caterpillar thatlivcs in New Zealand and in Australia. There are several specimens at the College of Sure-eons. London, nnrt lannr)irn w see a caterpillar as hard as if it was carved out of wood, and from it is growing a Ions stem. The historv of it in na fnl. lows: The caterpillar cats a fungus, or the iporulcs of a fundus, and these immnrli. ately begin to grow in its insido. The insect leeis uncomtortable, and possibly thinking: it is going to turn int.n n. phrvo. alis. buries itself in tho eround ami 1 1mm dies. The fundus eroes on rrowinr and nh. sorbins, the entire contents of th A in taking tho exact form of the creature. iiavmg aone tins, it throws out a shoot, and this always at a certain fixed nn. namely, at tho joint at the back of the head. Several foreign naturalists pos sess specimens which they have kindly shown and explained. This cateqrillar is found also in China, where it is used as food. Nature, freauentlv urono to nrrrln in inanimate substances models of her own living creations, has produced a plant that resembles a snake in a most remark able manner. This is a simnlo hrmsn.wir which in certain stages of its growth re- murKuuiy resemaies a snatce. A hairv viner was rm wn in Al gerian country, near Drariah, which re- Buuioieu an enormous caterpillar. It was of a brownish-red color. unrl it length was about twenty-two inches. The moment it saw that it was observed, it glided into the brushwood, and all attempts to discover it were unavail ing. Cnrlons Facts About Cancer. A writer in London Truth observations in regard to tho causes of cancer of a curious and highly interest-. ma Character. These nhnnrvn.fi based upon certain data furnished hv eminent FrpniVh nlivsinlnna TM.. n-rltn. l"J 'Jyuj, A A,U YVI11GA claims that tho disease haunts low-lyin river sides and ' the mouths of Rfrpnma pail, when in Holland eiguMjen years ago, was struck with the 1 e . i t - .... . prevalence 01 tne disease in tne low-lym"1 districts, and still more along the mouths of the Scheldt and the Rhine. This investigation at first ascribed the fre quency of the malady to the electrical conditions nroduced hv th mnfniiin plates which the women of the different .Netherlandish localties wear on their heads to suDDort their tnll 1 muslin caps; but he also found that in A.1 i! 3 - . 1 . me uuai regions oi tue Seine, where the soil is alluvial, there was a great deal of cancer, although no metal entered into the head gear. Pursuing his observa tions at the mouth of other rivers he was led to believe that conditions nf anil nn,l atmosphere which developed scrofula were also favorable, to cancer, a malady which is apt to first nhow itsnlf in a glandular region. The writer in Truth also cites Trousseau, who used to advise patients with a cancerous tendency to try and live where the soil was dry, the air brisk and the aspect sunny. A number or prominent cases are given of people who havo died in Paris near nnrlnro-rniirirl water courses and along the Seine, and iuo prevalence oi tne disease in such low- lyinff districts as Athlone. Ireland unr! Dartford, the Marshes, Woolwich and Chelsea in corroboration of the ahovn theory. A Crow Roost. The learned men at thn RmitVi Qnmnn Institution, with others intornnWl in migration of tho birds, are studying a crow roost on a oanic oi tne .Potomac, above the Chain bridce. Wnslii Thousands of crows from all parts of the country thereabouts go to and from thu n hi j m . toosi aauv. As it lies direetlv west of Wnshi the consequence is those beneath whose . . .. iL . 1 . i; ii , , jjulu iue city ues are seen nying west In the evening and east in thn mom in it The latter flight occurs in the dawn, and e . .. . i i - oi course is witnessed Dy lew persons, but the returning movement is conspicuous. It begins eaily in the afternoon and con tinues until uai'K. During all those hours a steadv. cease less stream of tho great black birds passes alona. hundreds and thousands of them, not in flocks, but in a continu ous train. On fair days, the crows fly high and firmly ; on windy days there is often much trouble, obliging the birds to tack and shift, until tjiey are some times so heavy that they are lorced to alight on tho housetops to gather strength to proceed. It happens that most of the strong winds, particularly of February and March, come out of the West, thus di rectly opposing the progress of such birds as pass over the city. Such "roosts" are well known in various parts of the eastern United States; but the impulse whfo potency irces such long daily journeys upon tbe birds is a mys tery as yet unexplained. Fox Worship. Among the Japanese, it is said, is a mythical person called Uza. Uza was deified, and honors supposed due him are daily offered to his accredited servants, the foxes. This adoration is accorded in the belief that Uza (sometimes called Inari) discovered and 6ultivated the rice plant, and all through Japan may be seen shrines or temples for fox worship. It is one of the prevailing superstitions, and the priests of fox tempi s bring of ferings every morning to the two foxes or badgers dwelling securely underneath t?ie small building. i At the KhrinftQ lira twn criVlatl fntna Before them is placed a tray, upon which fiu eiiiuu uowis oi nee, ana ioxes molded a sugar, all supposed to be most grate- uuy received. SCIENTIFIC AND INDUSTRIAL. A bureau of commcrcinl science ha been instituted in France. Its purpose is to bring together information bearing uu toiiniierce, iorcign lnaiMtrics, etc. Luminous paint has been applied to harness with desirable fesult3i At night the position of tho horse is clearly 1n dicatedj and it does not appear that the animal is alarmed in the slightest by his bright equipment. Two books formed with shcet-iron leaves have been sent to the Amsterdam exhibition by an English firm, as an illustration of the perfection to which the process of rolling sheets of iron has been brought. The leaves are said to be no thicker than "good-toned paper." Leather wheels are made in France for railroad and other cars. Tho inventor of the process is M iln la nmi.n Tint. buffalo hides are cut into strips, and these j are built up into BQlid disks, which are i.uugijr iiem togetner uy two iron rings aftei they have been subjected to hy draulic pressure. A textile manufacturing firm in Boston has adopted an electrical-work indicator, which records the movements of all the looms and other macliines within the works. The indicator occupies little more space in tho oftico than a common clock would fill, yet a glance at it will tell how all the operations throughout the large works are progressing. From tho observations taken at Colon by the engineers engaged on tho Panama Inter-oceanic canal, M. do Lesseps finds, according to his paper read before the academy of sciences, Paris, that the great earthquake wave caused by the re cent disturbances at Java, would appear to have made its way across tho Indian and Atlantic oceans, round the Cape of Good Hope, to the east coast of Central America in about thirty hours. A company with a capital of $2,500, 000, partly English, bought nearly 1,000,000 acres of swamp land in Louis iana last spring, and had the most com- Srehcnsive system of improvement by raining and cultivating begun. The territory lies in Vermillion, Cameron and Calcasieu parishes, and has a frontage on the Gulf of 100 miles, with a depth of thirty miles. Great quantities of sugar may be raised upon it. SELECT SITTINGS." The "Bay Psalm Book," published at Cambridge in 1640, was tho second book printed in British America. It went through seventy editions. In Franco, until the introduction of postage stamps, and the rulo of double postage for unpaid letters, it was consid ered ill-bred to prepay a letter addressed to a friend. In Paris thero ore men who make a liv ing by collecting linseed plasters from the hospitals, pressing the oil from the lin seed and selling the linen to the paper manufacturers. The ways in which the memory begins to fail are often very curious. There is a case on record of a man who could never remember words beginning with "d," and another person atiached no idea whatever to the fkrure "5." Recent experiments in German schools have shown that the difficulty in reading black letters on a white ground compared to that of reading white on a black ground is as 421 to 490, and, therefore, the slate and the blackboard will probably fall into disuse in tho empire. P According to a recent authority a Jap anese fish, known as Fuku, is so poison ous that death follows almost instantane ously after eating only a moderate piece ji it. it is not unirequently the cause of death among the lower classes, who be lieve it to be possessed of certain marvel ous properties, on account of which they risk the danger of being poisoned. On the top of the Washington monu ment, at a height of four hundred and ten feet, great quantities of bees and wasps luve been seen, and, strange to say, rats even find their way up there after crumbs from the luncheons of the workmen. Three large rats found there made their exit by jumping down the interior of the column, finding sure death at the bottom. Penetrated to the Bone. Alderman John Baxter, Toronto, Can ada, avers that St. Jacobs Oil will pene trate to the bone to drive out pain. I know it, for I have tried it; it hits th mark every time. A man's brain weighs three and a half pounds. A woman's is somewhat lighter, but of finer quality. That is what en ables her to taste lard in her neighbor's pastry. "Voung men, or middle a;ed ones, sufferhie from nervous debility and kindred Weakness es should send throa stamps for Fart VII of World's Dispensary Dima Series of books. Address World's JDispen-iary Medical Associa tion, Buffalo, N. Y. Ohio has fifteen and three-tenth per cent, of the i ailwuy mileage of the country. You have tried everything for your Heart Disease No, sir. Allow me to show you Dr. Graves' Heait Regulator, been in market thirty years, great many good testimonials from its use. Unly H per bottle at druggists. The Crow Indians are worth t'i,-00 each in land. estimated to be may be taken at hvoi- and bilious disorders with Dr. It. V Pierces "Pleasant Purgative Peilitf.' Wild yet certain in oj.eration; aud there is none of the reaction cuu-equent upon taking severe and drastic cathartics. Uy drungista. ' There are 2,r,2! telegraph poles and U1T miles of wire in Washington. Dr.Graves' Heart Regulator cures all forms of Heart Disease, nervousness, sleeplessness. A Chinese joint house, or sacred temple, is to be erectea in Denver, Col. "Woman and her llivraira" is the title of uu interesting treatise (!'6 pages) sent, posti aid, for threo stamps. Addresi, World's Dispell ary Medical Association. buf falo, M . V. A train of Hi) teams recently arrived in I'alouse valley, Wyoming, from Texas. When we say Samaritan Nervine cures rheumatism, we mean it. t'rixeo Journal. 41 Lir. U. F. Ijiughhn, Clide, Kan., writes: "Samaritan Aervine eyres tfts. Prominent Hutlrr .linkers. 1 here is no disseut from tho decision ol candid and caj ub'e dairymen, tliat the im prove I B itter Col. r of W ells, Richardson & Co., Burlington, Vt., is tho best in the world Such men as A. W. Clieever, of Musyani.U' elts, E. D. Mason, Vermont, Francis A. Uofiinau, Wisconsin, use it, aud rtcoiuuieud it as tuiierior to all other. Dr. Sanford's Liver Invijrorut jr-vegetable. Try it when gnlit eulluii Uc action is needed, nirOCIIONDRIA. Tlie Mvntrrlnn Islrment In the Mini! thnl ArniiHf-MVnaiie Apprehension lint Act tHllr Crmmi'i It. Ibe uarmtive below by a prominent scien tist touches a sub.ect of univerwl Impor tance. Few xop! are five from the dis itrsstiiit vll which hypochomlria tirin.n. Thpy ro hie at HU timl mid are fed bv tho Very flame Which they thtmMv(i start. Tlifcykre a drepd of coming ileiangjmirmt caused by present disorder and brm j ntout more suiii'dps than anv ntlir, one thin?. Their first approach 'tltonkt bo carofully enarded. XiMors ITrrttlA: It is seldom I appear In print Rnd I should not do fo now did I not believe myo!f in possession of trul lis, the revelation of which will prove of ineslininhle value to many whu may see these lines. Mine tins been a trying eipericnoo. For many years I was run. scions of a want o( nerve tone, My Iniud wented sltiggkli and 1 felt a C;rtaiil falling oft" hi my natural frtinditirtn Of in tellectual acuteness. activity and vigor, 1 presume this is the same way in which. an in numerable numlier of ot--er ponple feel, who like myself are physically below pnr, but like thousands of others I raid nn attention to these anndyiiig troubles, attributing them to overwork, and resorting to a g.asr. at b 'er nr a milk punch, which would for the time in vigorate ami relieve my wearinass. After awhile the stimulnnts commenced to disagree with my stomach, mv weariness In creased, and I was compelled to resort to bther hleans to flid relief. If a lihysician is suffering he invariably calls another physi cian to prescribe for him, as ho cannot sed himself as he sees others: so I culled a physi cian and he advised me to trv a little clionii cal food, or a bottle, of hypophosphates. I took two or threo bottles of ihe chemi cal food with no apparent benefit. My lassitude and indisposition seemed to increase, my food distressed me. I suffered from neuralgic pains in different parts of mv body, my muscles lierame sorC; mv bowels were constipated, and my prospers for recov ery were not Very flattering, I stated my case to another physician, and be advied me to take five to ton dropsof Magende's solution of morphine, two or three times a day. for the weakness and distress in my stomach, and a blue pill every other night to relieve the con stipation. The morphine produced such a deathly nausea that I eoul i not talte it, and the blue pill failed to relieve my constipation. In this condition I ased nearly a year, wholly unfit for business, while the effort to think was irksome and painful. My blood bocame impoverished, and I suffered from incapacity with an appalling genso of misery and general apprehension of coming eviL I passed sleepless nights and was troubled with irregulnr action of the heart, a constantly feverish condition and the most excruciating tortures in my stomach, living for days on rice water and cruel, and, indeed, tho diges tive functions seemei to !e entirely destroyed. It was natural that whilo in this condition I should become hvpochondrical and fearful suggestions of self-destruction occasionally presented themselves. I experienced nn in fatialde desire for sleep, but on retiring would lie awake for a long time tormented with troubled reflections, and when at last I did fal into an uneasy slumber of short dura tion, it was disturbed'by horrid dreams. In this condition 1 determined to take a trip to Europe, but in spite of all the attent ons of physicians and change of scene and climate, 1 did not improve and so returned home with no earthly hope of ever ajain being able to leave tbe house. Among the numerous friends that railed on me was one who hai been alllieted some what similarly to myelf, but who had been restored to perfect health. Upon his earnest recommendation I beian the fame treatment Via lint uninn,.al li... i:i.l- 1 . .u ...i vuipivjrw. UU u wim utile IlOJW OI being benefited. At first I experienced little, if any, relief, except that it did not distress my stomach as other remedies or even food had done. I continued its use, however, and after the third bottle could see a marked change for the better, and now after the fifteenth bottle I am happy to state that I am again able to attend to my profes festional duties. I sleep well, nothing dis tresses me tl'at I eat, I go from dny to day without a feeling of weariness or pnin, in deed, I am a well man, and wholly through tho influence of H. H. Warner & Co.'s Tipjie tanoe. I consider this remedy as taking tho highest possibe rank in tho treatment of ell disiases marked by debility, loss of appe tite, and all other symptoms of stomach and digestive disorders. It is overwhelming ly superior to tho tones, bittein, and dyspepsia cures of the day, and is certain to be so nck-now lodged by the public univer sally. Thousands of padple to- lay are going to premature graves with these serious dis ease?, that I havo ahive dt-cribad, ami to all such I would say: "Do not let your gocd iudgment be governel by your prejudices, but give the above named reme ly a l air and Latient trial, and I belii ve you wi l not only e rewarded by a pr."ect restoration lo health, but you will ako be convinced Unit the medical profession do s not possess all the knowledge there Is embrace I in medical science." A. (i. Richards. M. D., 468 Tremont street, Boston, Mass. There are eleven ex-govcrnora in tho United States Senate. A Keinrdy for I.nng Dlseaee. Dr. Robert Newton, late president of the Eclectic college, of the city of New York, and formerly of Cincinnati, Ohio, used Dr. Wm. Hall's Balsam very extensively in his practice, as many of his patients, now living and re stored to health by the use of this inva'xablo medicine, can amply testify. He always said, that so good a remedy ought to be prescribed freely by every physician as a tovereign remedy in all cases of lung diseases. It cures consumption, and has no e(pial for all pec toral complaints. Kolld Coin fort. Every one likes t take solid, comfort, and it may be enjoyed by every ore who keepi Kidney-Wort in the house and takes a few doses at the first symptoms of an attack ol Malaria, Rheumatism, Biliousness Jaundict or any atl'i ction of the Diver. Kidneys oi Bowe.s. It is a purely vegetable compound of roots, leaves and berries known to hav special value in kidney troubles. Added tc these are remedies acting directly on tht Liver und Bowels. It removes the caus ol disease and fortifies the system against new attacks. I cheerfully add my testimony to the value of i.ly's Cream Balm as a siccilic in the case of one in our family, who has been seriously debilitated with Catarrh for the i ast eight years, having tried ineffectually oihor me.ii cuies and several specialty doctors in Boston Bhe improved at once under this discovery and has gained her health and ho irin, which has been considered incurable.--liobort W Merrill, Secretary of the PhcKiiix Manufac turing Co., tirand Haven,. Mich. Walnut l.rnf Hair Restorer. Itis eutnely different from all others. It is as clear as water, and as its name indicat e is a perfect Vegetable Hair Restorer. It will immediately free the head from all dandruff, restore gray hair to its natural color, and pro duce a new growth where it has fallen off. It does not in any manner affect the health, which sulphur, hugar of lead and nitrate ot silver preirations have done. It will change light or faded hair in a few days to a beauti ful glossy brown. Ask your druggist for it. Faili Inittle is warranted. Smith, Kline & CO., Wholesale Agents, Phila lelphia. Pa., and C. N. Cbittenton, New York. Tbe Might oftlie Tea. Oh, the orator's voice is a mighty power, As it echoes along the green, ut the fearless j en has more sway o'er men I'o sound the praisos of Carboline. Tuhest and bestood-livehoii., from selected Jvi v lhe Beael,ole. by Caswell, Hazard A to. , N.y. Absolutely pure and sweet. Patients who hve once taken it prtfer it to all others I hysicians declarejt, superior to all other oiia. Chappkd u'anum, face, pmiplcs "and rough skin cured by using Juniper TarBoap, uiado Ij Casweil, Hazard A Co., hew York. ... , Decline of ."VIhii. Weaknew, Dyspepsia, luipotonee. Sexual Debility, cured by Weil sHealth keuewer. f l. J-Ws Cure for Consumption does not dry p a cough; it removes the cause, . (JnflffWfri!lTIM. Mr. Th'nns A. Howard, of Honey Ores"", Fannin county, TAv wider date of April 6, lSH;t, writ s as follows: I have been suffering during fe'ywal years from sovere Illness, and a general breiWus: down of my physical system, and have tried the trotmeut and prescript ions of ninny doe tors far and nenr. and traveled to this Hot fipTings and other mineral springs famous for their remedial qtiAlftim, drinking th waters in fmthing systematically In their healing depths, bvt AR to nrt avail, a I steadily failed in health,' Am! although In formed by my physicians that hly llmnt and viehlrrtesies were the result ot kidAe disease of a danger jWj nharactor, they couli'l give me nothing to cure nif: Daring the past two years my sufferings at timeVwer' dreadful, and I had the most indescribable1 pains in the regions about the kidneys, the paroxysms of which were so severe as to render it impossible for me to sleep. bile In this deplorable and discouraged condition 1 Was persuaded to try Hunt's Remedy, and fcfVr fesins; less than hnlf a bottle my great sufferings and armrysms of pain were en tirely relieved, and I could Sleep better and longer than I had In two yearn before, and although 1 am now on my third bottle only my improvement ii very remarkable, and I regret that I did not know of the wonderful ttrratlve lowers of Hunt's Remedy before, as it would bate saved me years of suffering. 1 heartily recommend It to Ktl atllicted with any kidney disease or disease Ot ihe fcrmai y organs." "inrMVeVTiwiTrT Please allow me to speak in the highest terms Pf "Hunt s Remedy," for it hit my case exactly. I bad kidney and urinary trouble pretty bad. I wa recommended Hunts Remedy. I took one ttfaspmniltft ai directe J. 1 felt a decided change at the first dose. I took two bottlos, and have felt like a new man ever since. Please receive the sincere thanks of myself for the benefits which I sought vainly for and found only in Hunts Rcmudy. 1 will cbmrfully give this same opinion of Hunts Remedy to any one who wishes it, by addressing ROBERT D. ARCH Kit, 811 I.lnuard street, I'hiladelphlai March 14, 18J. , In IS! 0 tho F'nglish-speaking population of the globe wi'l lie l.lKXl.OtXyiQO, Tliat Trri-lhle TrnsedT ! onk or tbk emir cau or sumM jbiahtct. ILI.CrrMATKD. As details ot the Rathbone wife murder af received they ad 1 to its horror. Colonel Rathbone, the murderer, was with President Lincoln when Booth shot him, and was hira lelf stabbed by the assassin. The event was followed by nervous prostration, which caused, says Senator Harris, of Albnny, painful dyspepsia, which growing constantly worse in tho last ten yenrs finally produced "blues" and periodical brain disordors. Dysjiepsia made this man a monster) Ksperts tell us that the brain is the sound est ot all organs, and they credit the alarming increaso of insanity to derangement of the stomach. Wliat the stomach is the blood will be, and bad blood has an especially evil ef fect uiKin the brain. Dvs(epsia is a dangerous disorder, aud yet it is far too often neglected when it might ba checked or cured. H. S Benedict, for thirtv-flve years express agent up in Troyt has often related how for a long time his life was an unbearable burden. Ho fays he would rather die than go through his old dyspeptic experiences. And John Kiting, the widely-known Odd Fellow of Hudson, informs us that what began in sour stomach, heartburn, lumpy sensations, nud occasional constipation, resulted in con firmed dyspepsia, intense heat and distress in the stomach, belching of wind, hard and bloated bowels, loss of appetite, constant con stipation, sick headache, and a despondent, Irritable condition ot mind. These gentlemen can realize, as can thous ands of others, to what violence confirmed dyspepsia may drive a man I Happily for them they escaied mental frenry by the timely use of Dr. l'avid Kennedy's Favorite Ketnedy, of Rondout, N. Y., a pure vegeta ble, non-alcoholic preparation which in the post twenty years lias cured in IKJ per cent, of cases. It has a very large sale and is re garded by physicians as most valuable for ttomach, malarial, liver, kidney, urinary, fe male, and blood disorders. If we would escape tbe full fenalties of dys pepsia, we must arrest it before it becomes chronic and tets the blood and brain on fire. Kimjston (X. Y.) freeman. " Uoi'jli on Cmialia." Ask for "Rough on Coughs," for Coughs, Colds, Sore Ihroiit, Hoerseness. Troches 15o Tretty as a picture. Twenty-four beautifu' colors of the Diamond Dyos, lor fcJilk, Wool, Cotton, etc., 10c. each. A child can use witb I erlect succes-s. (jet at once at vour drug gists. Wills, Richardson & Co. Burling ton, Vt. Mother Nwrm'm Warm fivrnn. Infallible, tasleless, haruiloss.eathartic; for feverish uess, restlessness, worms, constipa tion, "lie. AFTER DIPHTHERIA Th terrible prostration which iullowt Diphtheria, indthe pewi.Unoy with which it clinit to th. patient uomarano leatuna. Tiupuworof Hood's fjiasipi Hi' la to dilm out the doUdb left in Mm iratm. and tellers the ooueoqueut diatreu, was nerer mora ligntll " """ louowing remarkable statement: LOWFI.L, Man.. Feb. . tfss Mu .:-n'- i t'o -lionlleman: My litsle F. ' .I?"'. n.un'"- hd th iiphthiiaaud sot well ol I ,a . tl'.r I1!"' "h" w" P"rf"l ck m her bowHi anil bad leerlul huitmii in the utiall ol hor back. Hue wal lnr.atpaiuildlitre. We clle I the doctor, who T .-..i - .. ; . , , H " ",iiii una arew wuree BU.LA, and ibat night I the little iirl the first doae aud aaain m the momma-. Before the il.j waaout eh Jr.im that day till now aha hna been well, and ia whollt rticovered llr llrsh baa come bark, aba ia f.t aa erer and aa nmthiul and hreljr aa before the waa aiok-fuU oi , V " Ior "Ottl-i o( hood'u HA Mia . Jamps Bniws, W Market street. Hood's Sarsaparilla Tlia neeeiBity for prompt od efficient household remediei U daily crowing mure imperative, bi tj of thene H oete t ter Stomach Hit ten In the chief in merit and t he in out popular, Irreculmritj of the toruaoh and b ownla, maianal teveie. liver rumj ltint, debility, rheumatiam and minor ailmenta. are thonnijrh jr ounijuer. I f tin incompnra bletiitnily ruiUiraliTa and medic ul afe Ktiard. and it justly rvKtrdtKl aa the pur er land niont O'lnitire hf nriive rmiec1y of iti rlatta. For sale bj all lruKffieta and IeJ ertt generally. ITTER c mu aru ii! PATENTS ii! Vwrtbe yuur invention, hend If lUfflpi tor Hvvk on iWrni. i. HIM.HAV. lot. L(tnwr. V uhinuiuH. DC. IMKK'tt KKAtt D KMX 9lt J m b.,. . ta.. (mala ia aV M aw out, is loi art. turn aaavl. work. Wii r,, h ' L. A. U 11111 A l OeiatarkU,' alalia. 11U FAYS for a Life Scholarship in tilt ol riii nn JiiiHinrvM ( oIIccip. Newark, Nrw Jnj. Pmutiuns fur grOulea. National pntrwUHva. Write lor Circular toll. VOLKM Ls k CO. AGhTS WANTtD """ "'t wai. i Ti 7 i I tU oanvaranra (or tbe m .at S !10HT-HAN1 INSri'lUTE, - Ithaca. N. V bituatli na procured ; bleuoifrnphera auipliud, with out chnri-. StuU'lanl Tipn-W riL-raahd auppliea. Uu " Cal ail a." Addrena, W. O. WlcaoKr. tjtXtTHKION PAKTIKMta KI'HOPK. J oin- I J lll't Wild I'.fUllf.lllV. Ciri ul.M ill Inu, Ali.l. can iiuitiuu uv tuiiiuN '1'auvax, Albany,' N. y. Yf!!!Nf5 r?r"N I- lraphf here and we will I yuiiu niLn " yu a biiu,ti. f'ir-nlii. free. i ii.i I. imon., jnucavlllei la. FAR;.! llHLNKV UAY.'w.l:aileu P. O . N. j. Phcxnu Pecioeal will cure your eouttu. TnceSac. Mrnln Wnntrd for the Boat and Faateat aelling iU.rinl hooke and Hililea. 1'ruea raJuced im iiex eut.a;iiuNal. Pt'uuauiMU I'o., Pkiiadelpbia, Pa. Uajiiuou Uilm u Uie Liuiiunui.-i"ruatootua (5) (3) mm Mm nmf ailMt $40 THE GREAT GERMAft REMEDY FOR PAUL Kall.vM and cure RHEUMATISM, NauralaTla, Solatioa, Lumbago, - BAiHtrnn, EEa!DACH8,T0OTH10E S0?5 THROaT, QUINSY, t'WKLLINOa, rt A $orne, Girt), Cmlia, FROSTBITE), nrntii, ai'iinv And all othfrhodlly ache, ami palua. fin? CENTS X BOTTLF. Sold fry all DniMlita n4 Iralera. Attractions la U lalitua(ia. 13 Tht Chirle A. Voaal.r Cpa naawn M A. Tonll.tS a -0 BalUeure, tf.a4 "-mmass. tjaa.CS3E!iKn: if1 ..I'llulaJI 'X imnraniUliHift MM Cata n n H elt's cream bah Mi. when applied by the fin er Into th. noerrtla will ba abaorhed, .llact ually eleanainc the head nf catarrhal rime, eana (n.' healthy aeflretlona. It altera Inflammation. 9Af cur cCO 3 O jpTntecUth. mambrano f& T f lof ibt B.W paaaace. vKjT r S rrom itMuJonal eoldiL 'Sf-'seoinplatri' heal. th. ,rfft I Jt .oral and r t.it vtVftaVnd .mell. A l ap. r A ' r-ertinifi rurt. Acreew MAY-FEVER 8""i"" PBIOK norrNTs, by mail ok At'DRnooisTS. HKtlTllr.Hnt uin.uup a. h specie roa Epilepsy, Spatmt, Convul--Ions, Falling ,SiVliw,8Vltu Dance, Alcohol .Urn, Opium F.afy lng, Syphlllitf Scrofula, Sine HERVE Evil, Ugly Blootf Dlscues, Puipep ii. i a-ia. St C0filQiUEiRlOlR);''.t tia. ervouneaL Headachy imttlim. Kervovt Weahum, Brain Worry, Flood Sorm, DillouRDfsi, Coativtne, Nerrous ProRtrntlon, jLianey Troubla ana Irremuamxa. f l.ou. riampla TMlOn.ninl. ,. "Samaritan Nervine la doing woridcm." I)r. J. O. MrLpmoln, Alexander City, Ala. "1 feel It my duty lo recommend It." Dr. 1). F. Laughlln. Clyde, Kanaaa, "Itenred where phralqiaua failed." Htr. J. A. Kdie, Bearer, Pa. AT-C.rrespeairlenc. freelr wiawereal. -V The Dr. 8. A. Richmona Med. Co., St JepK Me. For teatlmonlala and elrrulara lend ftamp. (v AtDratflaU. C. K. ( rllleatoa, Aire.it. N. T O LI A 13 d I Crick, gpraina, Wrenohaa, Rhea.' aa Ii A IX B maUexa, Kfuralaui, aeiaUca, PAINS lleuHny Falne, Stitch la all. Side, Backache, Swollen Joints, Heart DlaeaM. Htm HiwIh rata ia the CTiaaa, and all pal na and ache either local or deep-Mated are Uulaatly relMved and apeedlly eared ba th, well-kaowa Hop Flatter. Compounded, aa It la, ef tk. medicinal rlrtoeaof (reah Ilopa, Oama, llalwma aa4 Kttracia, It 1 Indeed (A tut pain-kllllng, atimulaUBa-. aoothlnf and atrana-thenina; Poroiia rUetrr erer marfe. He PtaMm are aold br all druarlAta ajad con ntry ivorv. m nan or are ieriw. mm m aeaa. Mailed oa receipt of H f SmW nrlea. Boa ntiMrrOa I "r a rVopcieton and Maao factnrere, Boaton.klaaa. PLASTER HTUoau-d tongme, bad breath, aouratomacb and llrer dlai-aae eared by Hawlcr'a Htomaeh and UrerPllla, WrtaV t'oro. Buillom. Bonlaia. B mls. Sorrupes of fert. havndt.l 1 1 relleTM at ttnrm pTims. Pllre.rhenned R&ndeor Llm.l if joe.eic. . iichincrrtinieiij-rmuwt. tr. AiKyruraru i Rent In the world, (irt Ihn genuine. Er Pncknae bus our trnilr-iunrk iiml ia utaraiea raxer't. Kt l.ll lv V K It W H K 11 L. 1NFOUMATION 1NI1EGAKDTU EXCURSION Rates to Texas, Arkansas and California. Pamphlcta, .to., describing: landi hn aale can be had) b a-ldie-in J. J. FaWLKR. Kat. Paa. Ag't.Utica. if. Y. ; .ITI). McHKATH. N. E. Paaa. A-T, Boeti.n; U. W. JAKUW1TZ, S. ii. !. Ag't. Baltimore, Md. II. H..1li( l.ll LAN. Uen. Eaat.Paaa. Ag't M.i. I'ac. K. It , 'j-VS U'dway.M.Y. ESTABLISHED 1873. . HO AGEJTS,f3,ENTS' New Sewing Machines for $20 Guaranteed pnniiively new end thorfintrhl; firei-claM In evry particular. tirrn-iteii Ut hv yfara. Cau Le ruturned at our ripeiini it u it aa ruprtttitiuitid, Krulffhta paid bs me to all vo.Dtn, A. C.JOHNSON, 37 North Pearl St., Albany, N. Y GOOD NEWS 12 LADIES , iirefttrtt iiiUui-eitir-iiU evor of. fervid. Nuw'i your tim- to ct up onleie fnr our coletr tad t1h ucl CuftPKsand secure a beauti ful (iold llaiiu or Mtiadt H.tw iJlnua Tna SmI nr HaDi.KOMita I tmu -T itaul nda kin.ua Si.-rw iCoee Diuner Set. or iiold Baud Mum ierruieu lent'l r-t. r r lull purtuulura adOreaa T11K t.liKAT AMI KU AN TKA O., JPjjO. ltoi i-CK bl aud ai;, Vtary ht., ISew York. TO SPECUL ATOHS . R. LINDBL0M & CO., N. C. WILLErt 1C0. . Chamber of U Broadway Oommeroo, ChicAlro. sew York GRAIN a PROVISION BROKERS Member of all prominent Pmduoe Kiohanfeain tje.r Ifork. UutAj.1, bt. Lou ia aud Milwaukee. V e have oAiilu.ive private Lil,iraii wire between OhU taao aud New York. Will riecute ordora on ourjudf. aient wben rruuiieted . ri. n.1 lor c.rculia c.iDt.miu aarticulara. liUUT. LlNlJULuM A (JO., (.bicaao. ' awaw w K M aa - . . F-amiPloiuwy for Ida RtHtVtl UlBftt ; by ttfl ...ndlnj h... beenr.' indeed . ' "on . .."mv r.E tn lie elllcacj, that 1 will aenil TW11 I01Tl.afa KKEK to father with aVALliabl.B TKKAT1HK on tlila diaeaae, t. aa.uJIier. One fcipn-.a and 1-. o. addraaa. . DIi- A. bLOtl 11, 131 Tcail !., NewTork. 30 DAYS' TRIAL (BkruuitJ (Al'Ifc.lfjJ TT'I ECTRO VOLTAIO BIXT and othi-r Fi.Errmo '.jlAi'l'' ianikk r- mt on uo Uaye' j'ril TOMI-.N OM,Y. Vui'Mi UK Ol.l). who are a inuring lno NKRVoua UeuiMTY. Lost Vitaliiv, Haniinu lAKNKSKt!i. and all kindial dineaat-a. rijiecdy re. lief an 1 in pl.-tii r -Mturatiun u IIkai.th, Vliion and Manhooh (Iuahani i t n. Bond al ouco lor Illustrated I'muplilol Iree. Addreaa Voltaio 13p1t Co,, Mnrehall. Mich. l.-.-. -".' Amiaiiiinre. iin txftv usivr. '1 lire U. tb. il,a,i. HimZZuZZWJfiZr cuij nun, ji. en 111 ok ;IMS. or by mail. K- T. liil-.L f i.Nt, Wunvo, pa. My FHAZEH AXLE GREASE FREE H J
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers