LIFE AMOXG THE YAKUTS. BBSCXIFTIOIf OP TRAVEL 0 THE UFPbH LENA. Among-thtt XntlTPo( 'ortlirrn Mhrrin Ciirlnns llnitim nnil Cimionix Betrothals in ihi Hig-li orlh. I had a thousand miles to po before I should reach the Arctic ocean. 1 found lomt dillieulty in first cramming myself into my deer sled, and a few hours alter ward quite as great in getting out of it. The deer sled is a long narrow nlhiir, placed on hifjii wooden runners; it is made extremely light, of a frame work of slender buftli, and is covered with a hood iii order to protect the head and face of the orcupunt from the biting blasts. It is, in fact, in appearance a lengthened out cradle and I think about as comfortable. At night one sleeps in it very comfortably. I remember the first night wo were in the forest, the moon shone brightly, the road was good and Yakut horses are trained to follow one another faithfully, and only the leading driver has any serious work to do. When I was awake, however, I found the journey strangely weird and interesting. Von see before you nothing but a mass if trees and slender under wood no opening in which you can imagine that a road exists. Hut the leader enters the gloom of the forest fear lessly; he darts on first to the right and then to the left, between trunks of trees scarcely more than a foot wider apart than is needed through which your sled is to pass. Now and then you lose sight of the sled in advance of you. but your horse knows the road, if you do not at tempt to drive, and ho follows. Strange forms then the sled takes on in the whitened gloom. The Yakuts do not put sleigh bells on the harness, and you pass on so silently, and the fitting things in front of you, of which you catch glimpses occasionally, seem to form par; of some strange, weird and ghostly pro cession. So you pass on for hours through the forest. Then a white, bleak space opens in front of you, over which you pass in the moonlight. It is the frozen surface of a lake, of which there are scores among the forests. Suddenly, when you have passed the crest of a hill, you look down toward the valley that seems a mile away. You imagine that rockets are being fired high into the sky by some unknown friends. They teem to be shot up one after the other with great regu larity, and you can imagine for the moment that a company of Cossacks has ! been sent in advance to point out your resting or camping place. But this is an Illusion. The valley is not a hundred yards away, and the rockets are nothing more than the sparks from the bla.ing hearth of a Y'akut yourte. A welcome sight, nevertheless, and you are glad to narana frnm 1 1-wi rrA rt'i t,t ..not oni n warm yourself at the bFazinrr tire. The 1 ev stacked Teamster Poore, killed accommodations offered by the Yakuts I "n a.n burned up his cart - Aa fin lnrlnmnitv fi rliA via are not very grand, but the people share with you all they have, and I would quite as soon sleep inside the hut of a Yakut or a Tonguse as in the fetid atmosphere and on the uncleanly lounges of a Russian hrr future Ufa are settled and sealed. Ten or a dozen years later they pilgrim nge together to the nearest Greek church, which may bo fifty or a hundred miloi away, and are mairied. For all these Yakuts are Clirstians, though I should not like to assert thai they understand very well the mysteries of the faith t.- which they were intro duced in such a summary fashion. ) noticed when we started on our journey! that the mounted vemschick in front ol my sled invariably took oil his fur cap j immediately alter starting out, ana wud a long series of crosses commended him self and the party intru-ted to his care and guidance to the god of the Greek church. Hut all along the road on the trees were tufts of horse hair and bits ol rn there bv to propitiate their old divinity, Shama ana to induce him to give them good weather and good roads. But neithei horse hair nor rags were of any avail ai regards speed. Seip York Telegram. A Quaint Old House. The most remarkable and interesting private residence in America, saysalcttei to the Chicago Inter-Ocean, is that ol Major Hen: i'erlcy Poore, the veteran au thor, raconteur and correspondent, at Indian Hill, four miles from this place. There arc few ancestral or historic houses in the new world, and scarcely any, be side Mount Vernon and tho Hermitage oi Andrew Jackson, that are familiar to the people, where an attempt has been mnd to preserve tho frame in which the do mestic picture was once embraced,- or re tain the relics of past customs and man ners, which often change, and are soon forgotten. Around Major Poore's country home cluster not only the family traditions, which are as precious to him as they are romantic to others, but ho has pre served in permanent and vivid form a picture of home-life as it was jn the colonies more than two hundred years ago. "The family mansion itself, in cjuaint ncss and antiquity, has no rival in the United States. It had commenced to crumble before tho declaration of inde pendence was framed, and four genera tions had been born, lived and died under its roof before the gallant Dr. Poore strapped his medicine bags and case of surgical instruments upon the old mare's saddle and rode down to Boston to dress the wounds of the heroic rebels who fell at Bunker Hill. It was away back in 1600 and some thing early, that a certain man by the name of Poore, a recent refugee from political persecution, came over to New England and engaged in driving a team, half stage and half express wagon, be tween tho colonies below Boston and those on tho Piscataqua river, where Portsmouth now stands. The Indians were frequent and troublesome then, and WISE WORDS. Scholars are frequently to be met with who are ignorant of nothing saving their own ignorance. Education begins the gentleman, but reading, good company and reflection must finish him. Who could live surrounded bv calam ities did not smiling hope choer him with expectation of deliverance. , Weakness works more ill than wicked ness ; it is easier, between the hand which strikes and the reed which gives way, tc defend ourselves against the assaults of tho former than to guard nirainst tho untrust worthiness of the latter. gs,ar.d these I learned had been place,!; , 1 r!,B Pi"-icy not cons.si n ere by the Yakut yemschiks in ordei ' ,nF every impulse of humanity in ionowing diiihi passion ior our guiue, and impairing our circumstances by pres ent benefactions, so as to render us incapa ble of future ones. That every day has its pains and sor rows is universally experienced and most universally confessed; but let us not attend only to mournful truths; if we look impartially about us, we shall find that every day has likewise its pleasures and its joys. Be cheerful. It is better to live in sunshine than in gloom. If a cloud rests upon your heart, turn its silver lining to your friends, and the glow of cheer it will enst upon them will bo re flected on you, and the cloud will give way before tho brightness and joy its own light has begotten. When amiability descends to weakness, it loses all claims to respect or admira tion. To bo worthy of regard it must be strong, and to be strotig it must stand upon a solid foundation. He who is able and witling to say "No" firmly whenever the case of right requires it will say "YesM with a fu.lcr and richer meaning at all other times. A man passes for what he is worth. v ery idle Is all curiosity concerning otner people's estimate of us, and idle is all fear ot remaining unknown. If a man knows that he can do anything that ho can do it better than anyone else he has a pledge of the acknowledgment, of tho fact by all persons. Tho world is full of judgment days, and into every assembly that man enters, in every action ho attempts, he is gauged and stamped. SCIENTIFIC AND INDUSTRIAL. ' A new process in shot making will do away with tho tull towers. A strong current of air is forced on tho lead as it falls into the water. It is not generally known, but appears to bo true, that the tkvect spirits of ni tre when kept for a long while is con verted from a harmless remedy into a deadly poison. Druggists should print on their labols "use only when newly made." The organ of hearing is generally double, but not always located in the head. In tho clam it is found at the base of tho foot; some grasshoppers havo it in the forelegs, and in many insects it is on the wing. Lobsters and crabs havo the auditory sacs at thebasoof tho anten na?. A writer in the Popular Science Monthly attributes sea-sickness to an ir ritation to tho semi circular canals of llm car or the abdominal viscera, or both, which become full of blood and cause vomiting, and illustrates the theory by a detail of interesting facts and experi ments. Bricks made of cork now constitute one of the new German industries. Tho usual sizo is ten by four and threo fourths and two and a half inches. They are prepared from small corks, re fuse and cement, and have not only been used for certain building purposes, on account of their lightness and isolating properties, but are also employed as a covering tor boiler, in preventing the ra diation of heat. Setting anart differences of muscular capacity ana adaptation, a man, tays Mr. Richard A. Proctor, in order to fly would need wings bearing the same pro portion to his body as we observe in the sparrow or the pigeon. In fact tho wings commonly assigned to angels by sculp tors and painters would not be so dis proportioned to the requirements of flight as has been commonly supposed, if only the muscular power of the human frame were well adapted to act upon wings so placed and shaped and there wero no actual inferiority in the power of human muscles (cross section for cross section) as compared with those of birds. NtcmusKA has nenriy tT.0,000 aero of planted forests in Eood condition. 100 Doses Ono Dollar Cm b uppllml truthfully tm HonrTa Haranparllla only, and It 1 an nnanawnrxtilfi and cnmlm-lnt Hrnnmnnl na tothoatrwna-th and nl economy of thin nat mi-dliiim. Hnod'aHaraaparllla In marl of runt a, hxrbii, larlt, tn., Inn nd fatornlilr known fur ttintr pcraar In araitinatina diaeaaa from tlia iylm and purifying tha lilnori. Restored to Hoalth "Pnrln- the aummnr months I hare lfon nmwhat debilitated or rundown. I ha?e taken Hood'a Ama panlla, whloh (tara me new life and retired me in my wonted health and trenath." William u. ulouuh, Tdton, N. U. Civcn an Appetite Within a week after tnking ll'od' MnreaparllU my appetite began to Itnprnve, my hpatlnhi l'-ft me, my atrength aeemi-d to be renewed, and 1 felt better in very part of my body. I rejotee when t think or the pood Hood'a Karipnrll1a haa dona me." UllAHIJca L, BanniTT, Syracuna, N. Y, Hood's Sarsaparilla Mold by all drnggit.. f 1 : all for tf.. Prepared only by U. 1. HOOD A CO., Apothecaries, Lowell, M ia. l00 Doses One Dollar. Iffi SPY ,7, REBELLION BY ALLAN PINK ERTON, Who lias Unmf ot the II. R. K.-. ret Kervlra. TriW Tear ivroord. - I Ml Will " " 2 ';..-v. ' vv , v..i,-U,a , .. - .' "i.Vv !i,i-r, a post house on the Siberian post road. The Yakut is at least kindly and respect ful, which cannot always be said of the Russian post station keeper. Outside the Yakut youret looks a very insignificant affair. It is very low, covered with a layer of mud and in win ter of snow, and has slabs of ice prop ped up from the outside for windows, and a doorway just large enough for a cow to squeeze through, and much too low for a man. Enter the hut and vou feel the grateful warmth of the blazinir As an indemnity for the violation oi the rights of common carriers, even in those early days the Indians were com pelled to grant Mr. Poore a ccrtant tract of land on the Merrimac river, and with in sight of the sea; known as Indian hill. It was the highest point of laud along tho coast, and was famous as the rendezvous for Massachusetts tribes, whose signal tires, when blazing there, lit up the whole sky from the White mountains to that tip end of tho Yankee land known as Cape Cod. The docu ment, written in quaint style and signed by several of the Indian chiefs, is Major Poore's tit le to Jiis home, and it has nevei been questioned. It was in 1C50 that the residence ol tiun.iui " ill JULU , IUG Ulil.lU Tj -- 1.1 Ti l -tl logs piled upon the raised hearth, and ur; ! ?mlR. KU n ;l. feel at once well disposed to the inhabi- ! an1 t(?ok hl,3 f?T v there t0 dwell" tants, whoever they may be. Once inside and you see that the yourte is built of Stems of larch trees, the sides sloping up ward toward tho roof, which latter "is also made of larch stems laid side by side and supported by pillars rising from the floor. In the centre of the yourte is the huge raised hearth, slender stems of trees plastered wiih mud forming the smoke conductor or chimney. The logj for the fire are placed in an upright po sition, so that they burn quickly and throw out a comfortable warmth around the room, which may be fifteen to twen ty yards square; close beneath the slop ing sides are built rude benched, divided off into compartments, each about six feet long. These are the sleeping bunks, Erivacy being only possible when you ave a shawl or rug to hang up before your division. On these benches you all sleep, Yakuts nnd travelers, tho yem schiks taking the floor, and you sleep comfortably enough in the blaze and warmth of the tire. There is an inner apartment to the yourte, a kind of annex or dependence. This is not given up to the family, or even the ladies of the house, but is an unrestricted domain of and they havo dwelt there continuously eight generations of them, tho property improved b each successive possessor, until it is now a great mansion of sixty rooms, covered with clematis and honey suckles which have fed upon the frost and sunshine of more than two centuries. Trapping a Tigress. She was captured about nine monhta ago, in obedience to an order sent to India by Mr. Keiche for one of her kind. A tiger track was found in the jungle leading to the reedy banks of a river. A pit about twenty feet deep was dug in the path and covered over with branches of trees and brushwood. Tho natives then concealed themselves, and at night the tigress, going down to the water, crashed through the covering, and lay. half stunned and wholly helpless, at the ' bottom of the pit. i?he was allowed to' lie there for a week. The mouth of the ) pit was again closed, and for seven days i .she lived in darkness, without food ox water. Such treatment very often kills a tiger, but it is tho only known mode of reducing them from the savage frenzy the cows, which, however have to nass i jo throucrh the Hvino- denartmcnt to n-et n I , n " i - - i their own. But they are well trained, these Yakut cows, and know where they ! belong. In such a Yakut youret family affairs ! are made very apparent to the traveler. ; The curtained partition in the corner i cannot prevent you from hearing the puny cry of tho newly-born Yakut, and if the curtain is opened for a moment i and another female member of tho family , carries off a young two ycar-old who has just been en:oying his natural supper, 1 and the cry still continues, you cannot but come to the conclusion that the Yakut mother has a busy time on hand in providing for the late.-t b -fore the one preceding litis been weaned from the natural mode of gaining ils food. Then there are the belles of the family. These are nothing if not ugly. In one yourte there were three Yakut damsels," their ages ranging from twelve to twenty. They possessed but u hingie pipe, which was parsed round from one to the other. If their brothers, the yemschiks. are just going out on a journey, they allow each to take a few eneri't t'.c whiffs before their departure, and then go at the work themselves again, chatting und looking alter the boling of the sour milk at the same time. The pipe is kept going almost ince-tantly from morning till nitfht. The girls are not, as I said be fore, handsome. Their faces have too much cheekbone, their noses are too flat, their eyes too straight slit, and their habits in general too peculiar for appreciation. Such a Yakut maiden is not long fancy free. She is betrothed by her parents at a very early age, nay When at last the coverings were again removed, the then un named Fanny was found to be anything but subdued. She was, however, weak, and her furious bounds to reach the mouth of the pit ! wero short at first, and grew shorter with j every effort. Then the natives began to i angle for her. It was hard and danger- ous fishing, but slowly noose after noose was dropped around her body, her fore- legs wcrt drawn tightly to her sides, and , ste was pulled up at last, firmly bound and power ess. Other cords were thrown around her, und with her feet in tho ail and her back down, she was lashed to bamboo poles and carried by a score oi men to a place of embarkation. She had very little life left in her vt hen she was pui on board ship and dispatched to Ger iii my. When hho landed in Europe, however, she had quite recovered, and Mr. Keiche, who is living in Germany, was de'ighted with her appearance, lie gave her the name of Fanny, and secured her passage I to America. She is now worth perhaps I $3, SOU. Xr-ic York Sun. The Fearless Widow. A New York widow was taking tht fresh air in Central park with her two children, when she met a former lover, ! with whom she entered into conversa j tion. "I am completely broken up, Amelia," I lie said, seizing her hand. "There is no i telling what I might not say and do if it were not for these children." "Children," eaid the fond mother, pushing them away, "run ovef yondei w beie the coat carriages are, nun tla A Monkey Girl. Recently a reporter called at the resi dence of Alexander A. Baldwin, at New Orleans, where a curious child was said to have lately arrived. "This curious, child," said Mr. Bald win, "was in the house, but being ac customed to live in the open air, the room seemed too closo for her and we have placed, her whero sho can have plenty of space." Preceding tho reporter, lie passed through the garden into nn outhouse, where a sort of bed had been arranged upon tue ground, and upon it lay what appeared to be a bundle of clothes. "She is sleeping," said Mr. jiald win. " and is not well. Not know- i ing yesterday whether she required a special food, I gave her a piece of ham and it made her sick." lie approached softly and removed the cohering. There lay, gathered in a bun dle, this curious being, with her knee9 drawn up against her chest and an unus ually small head, with large ears bent forward and resting against the knees, in a position usually taken by quadru peds when cold. Mr. Baldwin gently cried out "Kose, Rose!" Hearing her name cried out the child opened her eyes aud looked around. She finally aroused herself, and, being stood up by Mr. Baldwiiv, gave the writer a full op portunity of examining her. She is about thirty inches in height, with no noticeable deformity in the for mation of her body, with the ono excep tion of having the right leg larger and longer thun the left, and her breast pro truding somewhat like that of a chicken. The striking feature is tho extraordinary small size of the neck and head and its shape. It, is formed more like that of an ape than a human being, and is only ten inches in circumference. At the summit of the head there appears to exist no bone, and a constant pulsation is visible. In stature she is very small, and Mr. Baldwin thinks sho is about ten years old. All her movements are quick and monkey-like, and she is particularly fond of biting and pinching. She appears to enjoy caresses, and when Mr. Baldwin speaks to her she clings to his neck and tries to climb into his lap and hug him closely, as if seeking protection. She also appears very fond of music, and when any one begins to sing her face brightens up, and hhe at once dances and jumps around on one leg. Her eyes are very black and unnaturally brignt, aud her teeth remarkably hno and strong. She delights in biting at everything looking like flesh, and once, when un observed, seized a little puppy near her, and almost bit a largo piece of its skin off. This strancre beinz was born in the piney woods in the rear of Kay St. Louis, her parents being Indians. Her mothei died when she was an infant, aud shortly afterward her father again married. Some months ago her father and mother died, and Mr. Bour geois, of Bay St. Louis, took her undei his care. Kose for such is her name is mute, but understands: when spoken to, and without hesitation obeyed Mr. Baldwin and did all she was told to do. vj oer parents ar. a very eany age, Kay w here me goal carriages are, i ix or seven, when ell the coutr.C:t for j until 1 aend for you." SJ'tinyt. Oysters Four Feet Lonj. In the Bad Lands of the West a late expedition of geologists sent out by the government came upon a bed of extinct oysters whose eize was almost beyond be lief, says the Cincinnati Jiwuirar. Many were four feet in length, and the animal, when alive, must have been a curious spectacle. Imagine a dozen of these on the half shell 1 The shells in this local ity were strewn about over the plain aa if the feast of some Titanic race had sud- I denly been broken up. Somo were part ly buried, and rapidly disintegrating , uuder the influence of wind aud weather, j On tho northwestern coast a clam hag re I cently been discovered very similar t I the soft clam of the East, with the ex ' ception that the new finds weigh about ! two pounds apiece and are a foot or more I in length. They are called geoducks by ' the nutives, and are said to be fine eat ' jng. tho meat rather resembling that oi a crab or lobster than the rest of tht clain familv. " It Knnflia tho Spot," and everythiiiK in the natine of eruptions, blotches, piniiiles, ulcers, scrofulous humors, and incipient consumption, which is nothing more nor less than scrofula of the lungs, com pletely out of the system. It stimulnU. nnd invigorates the liver, tones up the stomach, regulates the bowels, purities the blood, and builds up the we ik plnccs of the Itody. It is a purely vegetable compound, and will do more than is claimed for it. We refer to Dr. l'iereo's "Golden Medical Discovery." Germany expiuls ? ;0,t'0n nnnually for tho maintenance of exijerimenUil forest "stations. Lydia E. PinkhanVg Vegetable Compound is to lie had at tho nearest drug store for a di l lar. It is not claimed that this reined V w ill cure every disease undor the sun, but that it does all that it claims to do, thousands of good women know ami declare. j The New York horso cars last year killed ' twenty-four persons and injured eiglity-uino. "AalicodmNrw," are tho words used by a lady, who was at one time given up by the most eminent physicians, and left to die. Reducud to a mere skeleton, pale and haggard, not able to leave her bed, from all those distressing diseases peculiar to sullering females, such as displacements, leu corrhuia, inllaiintiation, etc., eti-. 8he began taking Dr. Pierce's "Favorite I'roseription," and ulso using the local treatments recom mended by him, and is now, site says, "as good as new." Price reduced to one dollur. By druggists. Nitrk beds are being found in Nevada rivaling in productiveness those of Peru. Throw Away TriinfN when our new method is guaranU'cd to per manently cure the worst ca.ses of nurture without the use of knife. Send two idler stamps for pamphlet and references. World' DisiH-nsnrv Medical Association, Ota Main street, Buffalo, N. Y. The electric light on Washington monu ment can be seen seventeen miles away. An Undoubted meaning. About thirty years ago, a prominent physician by the name of Dr. William Hall, dis -overed, or produced after long experi mental research, a remedy for diseases of t'.ie throat, chet and lungs, which was of such wonderful efficacy that it soon gainod a wide reputation in this country. The name of the Biedicine is Dr. Wm. Hall's Balsim for tho Lungs, aid may be lafoly relied on as a ipeedy an ! positive cure for coughs, colds tore throat; etc "IloiiKh on Patn." Cures colic, cramps, diurrlupa; externally for aches, pains, sprains, headache, neuralgia, rheumatism. Kor mun or boaat. 20 anil iju . Young Men! It end Thia. The Voltaic Jielt Co., of Marshall, Mich., offer to send thei.-celelirated Klkctko Voltaic Helt ami other Ki.kctkio Appli ances on trial for thirty days, to men (voutig or old) alllicted with nervous debility, lo- of vitality and manhood.andall kindred troul pies. Also for rheumatism, neuralgia, paralysis, and many other diseases. Complete restoration to health, vigor and manhood guaranteed. No risk is incurred as thirty days trial is allowed. Write them at once for illustrated pamphlet free. "KimikIi on 1'nln" PlnMer. Porous and strengthening, improved, the best for backache, paiits in chest or side, rheu matism, neuralgia. 'Jbt; Druggists or mail. 1 be llrot flutter Color. The great unanimity with which dairymen of high reputation have ai'o.ited, in preference to anything else, the Improved Butter Color inane by wells, liieliarilson Co., or Uurlliig ton, Vt., is remarkable. It shows that the claims of imitative eoli ts ore baseless ; wise dairymen will use no other. The Hope oil lie Niitlnn. Children, blow in development , puny, scrawny and delicate, use "Wells' Jleakh Iteuower." IIay-Fevr is a tyrio of catarrh having pt culior symptoms. It is attended by an in flamed condition of the lining membrane of the nostrils, tear-ducts and throat, att'octin the lungs. An acri i mucus is secreted discharge is accompanied with a burning l satioii. I Here, are severe spa-sms ot sneezing ! frequent attacks of headache, watery and in ' flamed eyes. Ely's Cream Balm is a remo'ly i founded on a coi rejt diagnosis of this disease, ' an 1 cun be depended upon. M cts. ut drug gists; ou cts. by mail. (Sample bot tle by mail r.M ,.tu l.'Wr 1 r. .I.,.. I 1... V V Agents Wanted for cur hew nook. The is now wllinit by tbn Tr "f ThnuanrUt No enmvp.it. an. 'lnnr torrid iiy. Otilv Icok nf itn kind. Th "M'V" reTpnln ninny rrrf ' ,h Murnmrrbfv. fon pubHnhfM), Thrillm imrrntives of I'inkphton'b Hl'IKfl, Ihtit tr, ttnl the action nf nur fit't ut ir nrmtr , irTHphir account of tliH connpliary to naoHNfliitnt" I n coin, iVrihmn eiporicni PH of nur 1' kim it . Srir.s in th Rfh'l Cnnitnl: tn.-ir lurlnr i h.nn-a ami lu.r.n.i I lirTfry fully r u-nuntn'1 in thunn vivid kt-:i- ; it in the in oh i iniiiiiujr nrnnnlt cvrr fiiinli-lii'd. I.n iKrhi'it bv hiimli'Mln oi io- nn i Abmih' ton! nuinials, A lnr;o, riiinIi.m Ihm.Ic ; mhi ptt , ,xt ilhinl rat nn. I "Snlil niil v Itv oiir Aut'iilM I'mi Im lonnil In btolhn'K, HIs lonipn hmim, fnnntrf, mri-h-mic nil tv rybiuiti, V Wuit on n'tMit in I'vory rn.i Army Post nml (n nverv ootmty in tint V . S Vor full part icn In rs nml ' ' nit'lr 'ss i. W. f'AKl.KTnX .V O ., I'ubbhhTi, .Ver York. I'll'S '.lvnrttsiiifnr will :iiipfnr tint Mticr rut i! out, AOKXTS WAXTKD iwni.. utm BLAINE & I CLEVELAND & , v LOGAN. HENDRICKS, In 1 Vnl. I.v T. W. K niii I IntVol li I Ion. A. Hakm.ii. Authorixrd, Atitlifiitir Imtmrti.l Conn Icte, xhe . imrl VKti-t. The Ir ullnn CBmiiiiiini lioukk ot 1SJ-4. Oiiturll nil othrn llltn 1. T7Mli thoii.ainl In iin. Knrh Tol. p-ra, tl.r.O. bo pi-rriir I.. A.'rm.. Ontlli fn. 'ii-ifAr. ! pni't. 0 Ain-nti r.rn tt'i to f 'JA . dir. Now in the lim to I mnki- inoncT tut 8,-nil tor AVfm "7rm. at once, to UlUII'OUU riliLIMIINO CO., Ilurllvird, l.aiu ll IK I s m illicit .1.1 lmr 1 r.iii.Hti-iiniiii, I'a. HAY I c l it. 1 cun rocnimiond Kly'n Cream U.tliu tuall Hnjr fiivtir 8iitTi;rni, it iin In ray opinion, fnaiitli-d upon etperirm-e anil a -.urn curs, I wna uflliutod with II ay -l-'avnr for tHfenty-rtvn ytnt, and noviir bpforn found pir iimtivnt rt'Ii if. Web-ti-r 11. llanmni, Mawh liold, Vt. ('ream Itiilm la a rt-meily founded on a t'orrfct diftirnoainof lienr0 nnd can be do- peuilel upon. 6tlo. at drtiKtf rtta; fi, k-. Iiy niiil. hnrapio huttlti by mail, lile. CTTHE8 ALU HIDRA8BS or trsn XTDN7UY9 UVETl BLADDER AND TTRINAnT OROANS DROPSY ORAVKIi DIAHFTRS BRIOHT'B DISKABB PATN8 Tn BACK LOINS oa BTDH flfERVOUD DIBEABB9 BETENTIOlf Oil WON-B KTENTIOTr 4 UJUNK. HUNT'S (Kidney and Liver) Ki hu mtkiI trom lint(T.iiK diM'jw-j ami it who hmve betn ivuti up by pliyhKi tu t" I Rr ftfth tren blood U hnndreii rtoftom tr t Ti Y Ol'H kindttoi K: It U pnr"i tnltl. and on other it?d; It i prrj prfwly i owtfl, and I One tvifi by a MI'lllH it uteri fur tllH Itowt mil I-' 'itl nJ l.tKikt nnd H l.h-K. ln. i ru Catarrh HAY-FEVER tLIC Hltint.. Uriik-Kiam, Oiv,.,, N. Y. DR. DAVID KENNEDY'S REMEDY Forth Cure of Kidney and I.lver Crim plalnta. Conat Ipatloti, nnd nil .dieorurj-a ariHinff from nn impure ptntn of the llLOOT). To women who autTer fioia nnj of tho ille pecu liar to their it la an unf.iilinf( friend. All Druirni-U. One Dollar n bottle, or dUroa lJr. DaTid Kennedy, buudout, N. Y. COWSTIPATIOW. "I inffored from rarnlyula of thnHoweli! and Mvpr "omilaint. 1 Hnnlly na. d Dlt D.VMIJ KliSNKUV S KAVOKll S HKMKl)V,unaio my opinion It Kavcd iiiylite. Yours, etc A. J . UlKfoHU." Mr. Clifford la the Maatcr Mechanic of the Lowell Itvlelon of the ltueton & Lowell Kstlroa 1, aud hn illnt'i-e and recovery are known to many. mm Goto Le.i GOOD NEWS to LAjmgsj Otvait'ttt indiuiiu I'tKtjvHr of. 1ttf d. Nuw'i yuiir t im l Kt up OrdfrM lor our fltl r. teml 'IVllt nd i 'olli'f Htftinl rwuuru m ban ut i 111 Km. in It r in I or NdmM Uohh hill Yen S-t, trT landsoiu 1 Trtld li'U .in.r-B Kom IJluniT hit, uriiold linnd .d fntd Toilft Set. J". r iull I'Hidruirirs uddrrw III". OKKAT A.il ltH AN TKA ('II., O. iiox -VJ. SI and :-l Voa.iv M. , Nw York. iUctii. A balilheailud mun, who has hcanl that the J huiin of a man's head are lmtnbeml, wants to i know if there is not some place whi're he can obtain tho bai-k numljeiu Curboline wiil iujijily the dfiiiand. j Nlfflit NwealH, 1 Heailache, fevt-r, chills, malaria, dyspepsia, cured by "Wells' Health itcnewer." 1. Will buy a TRKATisii on hie Hoksb and His i 1HKEAHKS HiKik ut Ml pa-es, valuable to every owner ot hurstw. lJijsta,;obt!iiiii taken, rient pobtpaid. New Vohk lioiistc Book Co., 1M Leonuid .Street New York city. Beware of the incipient stages of couiump tion. Take Piso's Cure in tuue. N Y N D M NO AGEMTSm,, m bave AgnU New Machines for S20. Guarfinttted positively nw ann inoroiiKiiiy nrt-oiaait id every nrut-uhtr. Witri itilt rd fr a yrit. (Jn lmr t tin. id At onrx.M,iH if ixit Htt j,irn. y .. fcentn.l, Kr-f iaiit iiid t- illI. poiiiU. IOM ultlmiirU 1 H7 S A. C. JOHNSON, 37 North Pearl St., Albany.N. Y. HOPE S DEAF. irluHm;r linprovKd rtrtimnal l.ur ilitiiiin. 'I'ne only nirt, iiy aud uii-tii (Ihii-b u--e 1 to triuHiinntly ro.-.t rn h. iiii. Kmc iniiiHiidH'1 dy i-,en itit-n l l .ui'opH nnd America. Wntu mr ft illnttt r ) u"-orii- h-iok t .. II. lctlflli40H. 7 Aluri Hy M . ,.' YTK. HVPV ItFM'Ors 1IAIK, MolfNt W urtM, I ti-rklo, Iolh I'ulrlifM. LrupiioiiH, NtHiB. ai.d all i" I'KoruniHntti and J mpiii im-t ions ut' tti mmit. y lr. lhn U. 'Wi"dhur.y, IWN. 1'wrl St.,AIIany,N.Y. hem.iiuturlMiiik- T ' J i' k cN t I.llrj iV llnldl-lillliU l.W , tlw : C1 I mu coifuiuH Kiim,. rsl.'4f. 5- ITlfcl0,B JLJf radium a. National pitroiim-. Writ 'IllfJ, ( iurCircuUr.toli.CUi.l-JJANitCU. PATENTS I Mmnfarj'tr; I UVr nd stitini Pensions!! r our Nf w 11. k (m I,, lit (. II AM P t- er, Bliiiik'i'-ii, 1. O. r Sliorl Iliiml and Type ft. I Urttlniia 1 in UlhtitMi. tl., JaueaVille, Wo. il-litii-M A iteira. Send xtnnip AM, Ally, WuiiiKton, L. T iilriinonT All wnpontiiijlepirtifi rlnsirliiff Cirr 11 pindt n'it for m tm inHiit r mat nn mil, M'U I 1 lor v etiumg Ufiis. r. j. i. L.-, uuiiuu, .hum. opy lav-ra--k iS. Y.)CA torn; rooilt. tTM- U -8. pj'-'i) a yenr: Alono Fttuk, ItiHt rue Vias't. -ry a rPT,TTTlQ 1 Ttloa. P. Kiinp4on. WaaliiDtoq. X X U. C. Nopiy askMil t.ir pit- nt, I olitaiur.. Writ, lur INVt.MltKS liLII),: Nervous Debility o ft (Juii-k firmnnt rnr. Honk ;ilUlt AiUCJpllW JfUiWl Ai., l? CbRCS HHikl ALL llli FAUS. P3 J ihiufiy nip. 'I a--U"i t"n n1. PkS" P J Hm- in iKji. rMiit' . .:.-iii! " r m LYD1A E. VEGETABLE C: I3 ArotiiTivr: ( AH thot pultiT' ami enaiM"''- ! , FKM A) " Trlf $1 In Jt$ purr 4b toltly for t Alarnm ami tht rtlitf of it pdi'mi Co !, '''. It will euro ontiu'ly nil -. tlnn and Ulfrrntion, r'vdlH f- COIIMMpUMlt Hp t lllll 'Willi; In ad:iptt-d to tlio clinnffHof liiiv It rpinovo Kattit nvf( Klni ii for tttiiitulnuts nml i-ciii-v It run1 ltiom iiiu, M'ad--''1-()nnU IVhtlHy, Hlw-pl.-Mn. fftMLMn. That t.H'llinf of Imii a ; 1 1 1 bftt'VvTht. tflavluKyM pnrnr H nd Btttiiin to l.nn, Mrv.i,, i impury ronpilt'iitiady aimwcf Health and L Are your Kidneys di Klimi-y nr brouirht me Trout i apro. allur 1 liad tM-i'n u-ivi-n un liv ' I bulruiL" M. W. ivvraux, Utcuai.. Are yotir nerves w "k-l,lll. V VVi.i t , ,,i1 I,,., (mm nun I fl..attiT I WIIH lint iVtMlCtflt to lll'O." I Uootlwiu, Ed, t'Arfliu Monitor CIht. I Have you Bright's 7 I ''klilnpy Wo t fiiml iim wtion my Uko cluUk aua then like 1IikI." tiii'iH V.lljn, Sufferintr from Din1 Kidn-T-Wirl l. liio tnont t,uo'-f i , eTur luuti. (.UvtM lmt lnmi'Vii .1 ITavo von Liver Cor "Kidm'T-Vort ciiml mo vt ehronic i I aftisr 1 pray oil to die." Homy Ward, lato Col. Bta rua. t Is your Baok lame and i "Kidhfv-Wort, 1 bottle) vumA ua iaiua 1 iiad to roll out of (.' KJ, Jt. J aUtuAtf O, Mti r Have you Kidney ID "kidn fA urt mud a nit ttouiid InN'v nftiT years uiwtii,f,ful (!iwt-"r1iM 9l0abux."-baiu'l JiudjfHis WiiiiauurVow Are you Oonstipat "Kldwy-Wort rauses ewy vvucuadoii ma aXUir 10 yearn ui of othvr m dn u Mclhon I tiiroluldf bu ITave you Malaria V TCMtiMr-Wort ha done britor tUau . rbiuudy 1 hav0 vr umd tn toy pnu Dr. U. K. Clark, tvui Are you Bilious? "Ivldpey-Vort has done me moro g-uco thor rciuedjr I havo evor taki-ii." Hi-. J. T. uaUuway, Klk I Are pilua Vre you tormented wit ; kidnoy-Wirl imminent lj nimi ilua. hr.w. . Ki1np'itM-oiumend'd it ' UOO. 11 lUlHb,A -Will"- W AMUiA, l- Are you Rheumatism r "Kidn- y-Wort run-u mo, air i die by plij'aiciiiii and I htn sutTi-red t KlbridtfO Jdalouiiu WubL ; Ladies, are yu suf U .. KidiifT-Wort rurtw 1110 of peculiar Heverui yeara blinding N.auy fra-biin it," Alia, 1' L-iiuoi-eaiiX, i If you would Banish L l ana (?ain iieaitu, xtu j f Li ikiSa i jr jja.L?ffliwlr.'i-r 1 Tht dlood Cleanser. LfiDYftGENTSfi?- , timpitiyuifiiL auu goo., 'ht-liinif Oiiien t'ltv- plo mitiii Address City buspcudcrCo-iCu. Every Farmer and Horse should own a book descri; of the Norse, aud the Dim-.. to which the noble unimul liable, that sickness may be 1 ogni.ed in its incijiicucy : relief promptly atlorded. book should bo in the han.i every Horse owiicr.usthe km edtre it contains .may be v. hundreds of dullurs nt unv meat. If you want to kuo about your Horse, how to his Age, how to Shoe him, send 25c. in stamps, and 1 the book, post-paid, from KEW Y03K C33X ' 134 LaonarJ St., N. Y