r " r 7 1 ut OCEAN." V ELivnri. A ftntnrnllat in a. Ilrr Ilovr Flattest wlml hair Ioinrallc l.tfo Won dnrful Shnpee Tli Pelican llah. 'ilkina; a collection for the museum f" sited a l incioonti Enquirer writer of a sclent ilio ma who u orerhauling a curious-looking armor. Not exactly, " was the reply. "I'm repairing my diving armor. I have taken up diving to study tho habita of aome animals uudcr water. I have made fishes , rather a speciality, and lost fall it oc curred to me as I was going South that as tho water was extremely clear I could use a diver's nrmor to advantage, to 1 got a complete outfit and had very good results. The water there is so clear that you Can see sixty or sercnty feet without any diflkulty, and for a number of years I have used a boat with a glass bottom. I bought a small sloop that had a well in her to hold fisn, took out tho bottom and inserted asveral panes of heavy glass, nnd there I hod a perfect window in tho bottom of the boat to that even in tho roughest weather I could lie and look down through it, ' and see the smallest objects on the bottom, and so make my collections. By this means I mndo some valuable finds of rare shells and corals, and perhaps you know that there are num bers of small fish that follow boats, keep ing cloao up under tho bottom; these I could see and watch their motions. Curiously enough, they did not appear to see mo, and 1 would watch their every movement : but this only made ma eagor to get a nearer view, and so I began to tliink of the diver's armor, and I bought this and had the helmet altered so that I could soe perfectly well, and as I was not going to visit any wrecks there was no danger of breakage and I was perfect ly safe. I made my first experiment on the Florida reef. " Ono of the most remarkable features of this life under water is the fact that tho fishes were not afraid of me, but swam about when I did not move, evi dently taking me for an old wreck ; and when I raised my arm they would dart away for a few moments, then suddenly return, and were as curious as some peo ple, their great eyes staring, ever open, presenting oftentimes a ludicrous specta cle. I have even had fishes rub up against my armor, as you often see them against the bottom, probably to rid themselves of some obnoxious parasite. Tho way I made my observations of fish and their movements' was to recline upon the bottom among the coral and have upply of cray-fish bait that they are very fond of, and in this way I often had a perfect school of fish hovering over me, and so could observe their every move ment. Did you ever watch a fish in tho water? Take the common unfishu As it poises in mid-wr.ter you will see the side or pectoral fins moving in a Kina oi side motion, just the same movement that you intuitively try to make with your hands when you try to tread water or keep yourself motion less; in short, tho pectoral fins are the arms of the fish, its fore limbs. In the flying-fish tho arm-fins are wings; in some of tho sculpins there are regular fingers by which the fish crawls over tho bottom ; in tho Periapthalmus they are used to walk on dry land." "Hold on, professor," cried a listener, "we've heard f the fish out of the frying-pan, but draw the lino on their leaving the water." "It's no fish yarn," replied tho scientist, with a laugh, "but actual fact, and, in deed, I have observed it myself." "In observations of this kind," con tinued tho speaker, "you notice things that can not eveu be seen in a good aquarium, as there tho fish are under certain restraint. While I have boen ly ing low, literally, with all thesa fishes hovering over me, I bavo seen perform ances that were exactly akin to our games "and sports. When a lot of young fishes were about they were continually engaged in games of chase. Now ono would dart, and, followed by half a dozen others, the pursued dodging here and there be hind bits of coral until some other fish in turn seemed to attract attention, and tho- entire crowd would rush pell-mell iter it. One day I saw two fishes, called smelts, approach each other in a solemn way, open their mouths as wide as pos sible until their lips met. Then they would slowly draw or back o2 and then repeat the operation. You may call it what you like, but judging from our fat&nd-point I assumed that they were kissing each other. They were certainly not fighting, as I repeatedly saw encoun ters, and they were always characterized by rapidity- of motion and display of temper natural to the occasion. " One of the most remarkable eight that I observed," continued the amateur diver, "wcro tho coral beds. From a boat they present nothing unusual a brown mass of pointed stems or branches ; but one day I had the boat placed on the edge of a channel, and gradually walked down into it until 1 attained the bottom, in about thirty-five or forty feet of water.andl tell you the scene was im pressive. I seemed to be in the rtreets of a city. The bottom upon which I stood was a pure white sand, hard and firm. and perfectly free of coral; but on either side rose a perpendicular wall of the branch coral nearly forty feet high, all the points extending directly outward or toward me, and presenting a magnificent unbroken surface of a rich olive brown hue. "II id Jen and only noticed when the coral was broken away, were myriads of sea eggs or Echini of all shapes and colors. Some were jet black with spines like needles. Another kind had short spines, and were albinos,- or perfectly white. They are eaten in some parts of Italy, and considered a great luxury; but they are not used in Florida. They have no lobsters there," continued the natu ralist, "but their place is taken by what they call crazy fish. It looks like a lob ster, only is a yellow hue, and instead of having two large claws, has two enor mous whips or feelers. This great mass of coral was perfectly undermined by these creatures, their whips projecting and waving to and fro continually. "How alKHit that tish that crawls out on dry landK" a.3Ucd s me one. "Tho fish," continued the naturalist, "is a little ftMow that looks very much like what -us cull a sculfin, although it but none of the buibls and curious sp Windages that charseteri.e thorns fieh. I first noticed thffla in th Ppico islands when I was there in 1872. I was walk ing by th shore, one day at low tide where the beach was formed of dark mud and weed-covered rocks, when my com panion said, pointing to some small objects that were hopping along shore near the water: 'Is a t it rather queer for frogs to go with salt water?' I replied, 'perhaps it is something new.' So we determined to find out what thoy were, and, taking off our shoes, we waded in and along the beach so as to drive the supposed frogs ashore. But all at once one started right up under my eyes and gave a hop of about ft foot, and to my as- toniHhmcnt it was a fish; and so I an nounced to my friend who was behind. He wouldn't believe mo; but when he came up, there the little creature was, high and dry, resting on a stone, with its head somewhat raised, on its promi nent iectoral fins. I made a jump for it. and my friend did tho same, but away it went, bopping just Idee a toad, and for several moments there was a race between man and fish. We soon hemmed it in. however, and I have It in my cabinet now. the side tins are almost arms, and are strong and powerful, and on them the fish rests and jumps. In Australia some years ago some geologists found some fossil bones that were pronounced lo uciong to a large nan. in lS.o some one discovered the identical fish alive. The way they did so is somewhat curious. They were on a hunting trip up tho country, and one night camped near a small stream. In the middle of the sight one of the partv was awakened by a curious barking sound, and think ing it might be some wild animal after their horses, he slipped on his clothes, took a rifle and went out. The noise came at regular intervals from tho river below, and, taking a narrow path he started after it The moon was bright, and when he got down to the level of the water he heard the bark, and saw a largo glistening object, and then saw it leap along or Bounder through the grass. Upon this he fired, and, to his amaze ment, found that he had shot a fish. The shot awakened the rest, and the creature was brought into camp. ' It was about six feet long, had a small head and enor mous scales, while the body ended not in a fin. but in a point It was found that they breathed both air and water with perfect case, and that when hungry the great fish, which was a vegetable feeder, would come to the shore, expel the air that it held in its air-bladder, thus making the barking sound, ana wunder over the fiats in search of food. "The other day they dredged a rish that was all head, and its mouth had a pouch large enough to contain seven or eight bodies of its own size. It had no eyes or fins, and its gills were more or less upon the inside. It was taken from water a mile or more deep. Another fish found, and related to the cod, had a stomach that was so like rubber that it could swallow fishes over three times its own size. Its jaws worked exactly like those of a snake, and in swallowing this monster pulled itself over its prey like a glove." Wonderful Sleepers. A wonderf ul case is on record of a snail which went to sleep on March 25, 1840, and did not wake up until March 7, 1850. It seems that this snail was picked up in the Egyptian desert, and as he had retired to tho topmost recesses of the whorls of his (hell he was gummed on a piece of cardboard as though dead, labeled with the date and sent to the British museum, ne slept unconcern edly for nearly four years, when, show ing some signs of life, the authorities or dered him a tepid bath, and at the first touch of the welcome moisture the snail thrust forth his head very cautiously and began to walk to tho top of the baain. The West African mudfish affords anoth er instance of long-continued existence in a state of torpor. The fish known as the Lapidosiren lives among the shal lows of the river Gambia, which are completely dry during the tropical sum mer. But before the drought comes the mudfish is wise enough to hide deep down in the soft clay at the bottom of the jiools, and there it lias in a torpid state for months together, while the sur rounding mud hardens Into a cake. While in this state the natives dig them up and prize them as a great delicacy for the table. That he docs not live with out breathing the mudfish proves by leaving a small pipe open from his cell leadiug through the bard mud to the open air.- Tokio Streets. The streets of Tokio, Japan, are so narrow and crowded that it is an annoy ance to ride through them. Every driver carries a horn, in order to warn people to get out of the way, vet such is the crush of stages, cars and ginrekahas that the blockades are frequent and some times disastrous. A correspondent of the San Francisco Bulletin narrates his experience in a Tokia horse-car, as fol lows: The other day I was riding In from Asakusa on one of the oars, when sud denly we came to a halt. Looking out of the car, what should prove to be the cause oi tne interruption but a monster pine tree, of the dwarf species so com mon in Japan, which was being trans ported on a wagon, evidently construct ed for that purpose, from one part of the city to another. At the base the trunk must have been six feet in circumfer ence, but it was only about fifteen feet high, terminating in a flat, broad canopy of branches. The blockade lasted sev eral hours, during which time street-cars ceased running and everybody took the whole thing as a matter of course. The motive power in transporting the tree was a long string of oxen and scores of street coolies, who put their shoulders to the hugh, canvas wrapped wheels, and chorused the usual customary gruut ol Japanese coolies. A Santa Barbara (Cal.) f herman hat found near San Miguel Ioiand a little island about three acres in extent, which was so covered with sea-fowls' nests that it was difficult to walk without treading on the eggs. The man says it would be easy to load a ship with eggs from that island. The real owneia of them were gulls, shags, and a small bird called the salt-water duck. Though so close neighbors, they appeared to live in per fect jce. Don't you think it strange that each bird could know her own neat J ABOUT TRUCK FARMING. BOW XT 29 Caiaitrr.O 0 AV.OVU9 IW HOKE, Tito JInr VnrnrtnlmUr of h fliia) nrtm and the Profit It Citings- IV hat la Urawu by the) larmera. Many persons who observe the beauty of the vegetablo gardens near New York, and see the advantage of having them on the outskirts of a largo city, also soe a great deal of available land in the sub urbs which appears to bo admirably suit ed for the same purposes, and they won der that more of it is not under tho same high stato of cultivation. A truck farmer was asked by a New ark (N. J.) ijundag Call reporter why more land was not used in growing gar den truck, and he answered: "For sev eral reasons, and the chief one is that truck farming is a lottery, and people who want to gamble with their niouey can find easier ways of doing it than spending it in manure and employing their bodily strength and hired labor dig ging it into the ground." 'What are tho other reasons?" "Well, taxes are too high in the neigh borhood of towns, and competition is al together too lively in New York, where the local truck gardeners are' obliged to contend, first against the shipments from the South, and later against the immense truck farmer on the cheap lands of Long Island. "A score of years ago," he oontinued, "a few men accumulated fortunes by truck farming, but they did not do it without the most diligent labor and at tention, and at that time the competition was comparatively light. Market gar dening is hard and steady work, ana to make a living at it a man "must work early and late, and watch every item of expenso closely. At times favorable cir cumstancos may permit a man to save a few hundred dollars, but he must always expect to meet with a spell of bad luck, when he will bo obliged to spend all ha has made. Sometimes his bad luck will lie in poor crops, but oftener it will re sult from an ovor-production and conse quent glut in the market which forces him to sell his truck for less than the cost of raising. There is no such thing as holding back the stuff he raises, for when it is ready it must go upon tho market for what it will bring. Cab bages, which are a great reliance of the gardeners, grew too plenjifid last spring, and lots of money was lost through them. It is' only by using tho same ground two or three times in a year that any money can be made, and this is only possible when manure is plenti fully applied. Most of us use manure on every inch of cultivated ground twice a year, and this is one of the heaviest items of expense. Labor also is very ex pensive, although tho very chenpeet 'kind is employed. We take men from Castla Garden, give the bed, board and wash ing and pay them ten to fifteen dol lars a month, all the year round. At certain seasons we have help from women living in our neighbor hood. They come to -work in the gnrdeus'for one dollar per day, and thus help their husbands to make both ends meet. We employ them mostly in weeding, and they work on all fours as they creep to and fro between the rows, and sometimes they use a putty-knifa for weeding, and sometimes they just pull up tho weeds with their fingers." The variety grown by tho market gardeners is very great, and comprises almost ail of. tho spring vegetables, as well as a great deal that is known to produce dealers as "heavy stuff," such as potatoes, turnips, beats, sweet corn, cabbages and melons. Their chief reliance, however, is the more neriahable creen stuff, in 'which they have little competition from tne larmers or tne State. Larly spring greens and vegetables offer advantages for market gardening, and only find competition in the shipments from Ber muda and the South. The home-grown truck presents a fresher appearance, and consequently secures a better price, which is the only margin upon which the gardener can depend for profits. He commences operations as soon as the frost is out of the ground, and plants radish, lettuce, onion, spinach and other seeds in frames covered with sashes. The soil in the frames is warmed by a liberal use of stable manure, and the plants are, in a measure, forced, so that they are on the market as early as the same kinds which come from remote Southern ports. The life of a market gardener is a hard one; he must be up before the sun every day, and upon market days he begins to load at about midnight He works as long as there is light to distinguish plant from weed, and often spends hours of lamp light in assorting and bunching. His wife and children must share his toil if they wish to succeed, and while the working season lasts they must not expect much leisure for amusement. How Much Sleep. The only rule is , tako enough. Old Mother Means in tggleston's " Hoosier Schoolmaster" advised her husband when buying cheap land, "While yer a-gcttin', get a plenty." So say we in regard to sleep, a full quantity of which is more valuable than the grandest prairie farms the sun ever shone upon. It is during the wakeful hours that the muscles and the nervous system and brain expend their energies.. " Muscles are partially recruited during tho day by nourishment taken, but the greatest re cuperating work of the nerves and brain is done during sleep. Such recuperation must at least eijual the expenditure made through the day, or else the brain is ill nourished, wastes, withers. Fersons who, in early English history, were condemned to death by being prevented from sleep ing, always died raving maniacs. Fer sons who are starved .to death suffer brain starvation also, and pass into halu emotions and then into insanity. lludth and Home. The American Girl on Her Dignity "Absolute dignity of manner is un known to the Ameriean girl," says tho London World. This was written by a chump who never attained the distinc ion of standing on the train of an American girl's party dress at the pre cise moment when its fair wearer is taken with a tpusmodic impulse to rush across the room. If it isn't absolute dignity of manner that she exhibits when she turns upon her hvlplttss offender perhaps some body will Hy what -it is. rhiUuL-l phi Vrtts. s The Host Jledlcine. FpffcMnrr generally it is not to thelaba ratory of the chemist that we should go for our potash salts, but to the laborato ry of nature, and mora especially to that of tho vcjretable kingdom. Tbey exist in the greon parts of all vegetables. This is illustrated by the manufacture of com mercial potash from ,the ashes of the twijjs and leaves of timber trees. The more succulent the vegetable the greater the quantity of poUsh It contains, though there are some minor exceptions to this. As I have already stated, we extract and waste a considerable proportion of thesa ! salts when wa boil vegetables and throw I away the potnge, which our wiser and mora thrifty neighbors add to their every day menu. When we eat raw vegetabloa, as in salads, wa obtain all their potash. Fruits generally contain important quantities of potash salts, and it is upon these especially that the possible victims of lithic acid should rely. Lemons and grapes contain them most abundantly, Those who cannot afford to buy thesa as articles of daily food may use cream of tartar, wrftch, whoa genuine, is the natural salt of the grape. Pipular Sci tnct Monthly. ITandel, the composer, was a grreat eater. Ho would efts a ardor a dtnnat for three, and then frighten the waiten half to death by calmly eating ia tripls dinner himself. In thirty years' successful experience in th manufacture of 150,000 instrument, the Maaon & Hamlin ootrsjiany hare arvrtmtilated facilities for manufacture without which they could wither produce as Rood organs as they now make, nor with as great economy. HniJ an experienced manufacturer in witrtPiwing the oieration of a single machine in thoir fac tory recently: "One boy with that machine does as much work as ten skilled workmen could do without it, and does it better at that" There accumulated facllitiee, including ex perienced and skilled workmen, are the secret of their producing organs which are unques tionably the best, yet con be gold at prices which are little more than those of the poor est Boston Traveller. Bismarck is a xeafeus pisciculturist, and every stream and lake near bis estate is well stocked. Composed of genuine French Grape Brandy, Extract of Kmart "Weed and Ja maica Ginger, with Camphor Water, Dr. Pierce's Compound Extract of Smart-Weed excels as a remedy for colic, cholera morbus, diarrhepa, dysentery or bloody-flux, or to break up colds, fevers or inflammatory at tacks. The anci-int city of Nuremlierg i is to have next year an exhibition of goldsmiths' work. Lyflia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound is highly praised by those who are obliged to stand all day in stores, and is a genuine bless ing in every such case, as well as to the tired put housekeeper who must be on her feet all day. Forty thousand persons in Switzerland are employed in the watch making industry. ' Delicate diseases of either sex, however induced, speedily and jiermanently cured. Book of particulars 9 cents. In stamps. Consultation free. Address, World's Dispen sary Medical Association, Buffalo, N. Y. El Mahdi, the false prophet, sleeps during the day and transacts business at night " Isn't that Mrs. Holmes? I thought th doctors gave her up. She looks well now." " bhe mwell. After the doctors gave up her case she tried Dr. Pierce's ' Favorite Pre scription.' and began to get better right away. I heard her say not long ago that she hadn't felt bo well in twonty years. (She does he own work and says that life seems worth liv ing, at last ' Why,' said she. I feel as if I had been raised from the dead, almost" Thus do thousands attest the marvelous erH cacy of this God-given remedy for female weakness, prolapsus, ulceration, leucorrhoea, morning sickneu, weakness of stomach, ten dency to cancerous disease, nervous prostra tion, general debility nnd kindred affections. It is estimated that one voter in seven can not write. . "Itnua-b en Pain" Plnnter. Porous and strengthening, improved, the best for backache, pains in client or side, rheu matism, neuralgia. 25c. Druggists or niaiL Menbm aw's Peptonized beef tokio, the only preparation ofbeef contaiuingits entire nutri tious properties. It contains blood-making force generating and life-sustaining properties; invaluable for indigestion, dyspepsia, nervous prostration, tnd all forms of general debility; also, in all enfeebled conditions, whether tha result of exhaustion, nervous prostration, over work or acute disease, particularly if resulting from pulmonary complaints. Caswell, Hazard 4 Co., Proprietors, New York. Bold by druggists. Catarrh of the Bladder. StingliiE, irritation, inflammation, all Kidney and Urinary Complaints, cured by "Bucbu Faiba." $1. ' Yonna- IHen!-Raad Thla Tb Voltaic Hclt Co., of Marshall, Mich., offer to send their celebrated Electro Voltaic Belt and other Electrio Appli ances on trial for thirty days, to men (young or old) afflicted with nervous debility, loss of vitality and manhood, and all kindred troubles. Also for rheumatism, neuralgia, paralysis, and many other diseases. Complete restoration to health, vigor and manhood guaranteed. He risk is incurred as thirty days trial is allowed. Write them at onoe for illustrated pamphlet free. The Hope orihe Nation. Children, blow ui develo)meiit,puuy,Berawny and delicate, use "Wells" Health Renewer." Petroleum is a natural production, and at nature never makes a mistake Carboline, madt from pure petroleum, is a certain invigoratoi for diseased and sickly hair, and where ono used will never be substituted by any other. 85 Cents Will buy a Treatise on the Horse and His Diseases Book of 100 pages, valuable to every owner of horses. Postage stani taken. Bent, postpaid. New York Uorse Book Co., 134 Leonard Street New York city. "Rough on Coughs." Ask for " Rough on Coughs," for Coughs, Colds, Bore Throat Hoarseness. Troches, 15c. Liquid, 25c. Seaweed tea is an anti-fat Sufferers From Scrofula Too can bo eund if yon will tak Hood's Buupa lilla, tha treat blood pariaer. Wbother tht dlmH U heradltarj oi ocqaired, thuunodlcinxxpeU nrj irooo of impuntjr, and tiUUzm and ennchtu the blood, wail It Ifto tonoo od trenftaent the system. 'l hd lour scrofulous sores oome on nay feet, which grew so bed that I eould not wear a shoe. Notbinc. wnlch I took did ma sdj food till one day I saw liood's BersspahU advertised in a paper and decided to try it. 1 have taken two bottles and tb sores are almost en tirely healed." Has. Audik Pitts, South Potsdam, K. V. Clarence Johnson, Erie, Pa. , had scrofulous sores on his face and head, lie waa entirely on red by flood's tiarsaparilla. "1 have been troubled with scrofula a great deal, and was advised to use Hood's Baiaapariils. I have now taken three bottles and have nearly eradioaUid the scrofula from my system." W- A. Pansr, Bourne, llaas. Hood's Sarsaparilla Sold by all dructUts. tl;aix for ts. Uade only by U. 1. HOOD A CO., Apothecaries, Lowell, Haai. IOO Doses jOno Dollar NYU V-u 1 At Mil ) C- s in " k ti tii Health andjlappin:. . Atv your Ividnpys disordered? 'Kidney Wnrt htwiBltt me from my itrave, salt wr. arierl had htm alvten up hy 1 twin d--Mn in IMtrolt." M. W. Devii ram, fesolianio, leaia, sUoh. Are your nerves 'weak? IMnsrWiiit cured me fiwn nervonn vreartei ..ri-r I wan not ix-t-il to llr."-llr ) L a. Uoodwia, Ed. thrt,Ua Hanitcr. UoTeUad, U. Have you BrTJrht's Disease? .it s"l",T ort cam me w hen my- water wee lust Ui uaik and then like blond." Fink Wilson, Peabody, Mass. Buff ering from Diabetea ? Kliin.y-VVort. I the snort iUMf nful remedy I have ever uaoa, Utvee almost ImmniifH rHr." Dr. 1 lump U. Kallun, M oak ton, Yl Hay you Liver Complaint? viunr7vv,Yor cur after I praved tn die. la your Hack lame nnd aching? "Kidney-Wort, (1 bottle) cured mo when I wasso a U. TaUmase, Milwaukee, WU. I Have "you Kidney Disease? 'Kldn y-Wort made me ountllnllver and kldneyi aftr ypere cf nusiH-vtscfut 1tv-torlnr. It v.orih ti a bux."-8an'l Hodges, WUliamstowa, West Va. Are you Constipated? a"lrinpy-Wort call set tnry evacuatione and Ottred roe after IS years u of oiher medirinea" ' r. niton Kalroiuld, St. Albans, Yl ' Have you Malaria? milney-woi-i has done better tbaa any other famed I have over uard In my prartlr." Dr. ILK. Clark, South Bare, VI. Are you Bilious P TCIdewv-Wort has done me more good thaa 110 other remedy 1 havo ever taken." . Mra J. T. Galloway, Ek TUX. Orofoa. Are you tormented with Piles? '"Ktdrw.T-Wort pnnannttv evrtd mo f blfwdinf ptattv. Ir. w. O. k'lin rtftiT,rn1-d t t wm.m Qa 8, Hum., Cuiuor ti. JtoJkk. Xwttovtt, P. Are you Rheumatism racked? "k'fdiwy-Wort cum. me, aa'trr t wuj b1th up to d bj iwoytksiAni". and S hud aufTertM) thirty Mtm.4 stiaM-itigo Malcolm, Vst jfetli, Maim. "Kidney-Wort eurtv m of prouliitr trmiblm ''Kldnworteiird ia of Oaarcmlo Lift rmwH. tn ait." u; Want, late Cot th Nat Gor4, H, T. frTwarsai T Astra Standi nr Mart V f T-tnH naa mmei m-alsa It" Mra. r Lamoraaux, lala JU MotU, Ta It you -would Banish Disease i and t?ain Health, Take Tm Blood Clbanbbr. 1 and qtv- ""with otraia and The Che-r--- flmeticcm. DICTIONARY. 1232 rafs. Price (1.60. Nw Gitttttcatt POCKET-DICTIONARY. 024 l'sfes. rrico Jl.OQ. for Sale by all Book-aad Nws-lealera. TAKE NO OTHER. MorwiU Co., rtiiladelphia. Pa, n JPlASTERf This Plssfer Acts directly apon the muscle and tbs nerves of the back, the seat of ail pain- o"No oiedUine 10 throw your system out order. For all Lung Trouble, whf-ther lo,al or eernly ratrd this plaairr will be found to flvs Instant re lief. Por Kidney Trenbls, rllirumstltm. KeurslBla. Pal ll in tUe Hide and itaeK Ache, thry are a veruln ami speedy cure. Bold by DrtiKii.li for I centa, or five for St. Halted on receipt o itricehy Hmllrt, anolIt lie efc. iiiitlft. (nal Aijeula, Bveiou. MASON & HAMLIN STYLES ORGANS S0OO. H1???,8,'o.15?Ni)RS T' AM. ORKAT WORU' hXHlfllTluNa POH bVKTKJi.M TKARo. Oaly Aaicrlraa Organs Awarded (achat any. Fcr Cash, Esty Paymsnt or Rsnlad. UPRIGHT PIANOS ftraeentllW Trv hlshrt csrallrnre y attained tnsuab liutrumeuu; addiu to all previoua improve, men! one of creator value than any ; nmrtnir most pure, retlned, niuaicai tuuee aad increased durability; especially avoiding liability to get out oi suae, llln voted Catalogues free. Mason & Hamlin Organ and Hano Co., WE WANT 1000 HOOK AGENTS tor the new booh THI K t' V-1'UHKK YEAK9 A MO) OUR WILD INDIANS By Gen. LIllDaE.nd Uvo. hiiRHVUN. The luUtt MlUsg ooos out lndorved by Pre t Arthur, iirmot. hhtrmmi, JtltndMi, and thouundi of luais-nt Juitrvs, Clergymen, Mlloni. etc aa T.U Jlttl amj UnrM Hiutmud Altua boot Hir PWUMtd." It uke like wilillrv. and Arntten lUIOZOadav. SHP-T&.OOO sola. lU llrral AMkonltop and SoM Mrri$ mike II Me ? ennir far AryM. sy8end forClrrtllar. Krwi-imfn Plate. A'rrra Terms. etcte A. II. WOMI ill.SU 1U.H 4t C, UertferCoaa. Agents Wanted for the Beet and Fasteet-aelllng Pii lurial hookt and BiLlee. Pn-e retiuoed Si per sent. Katiukal f l ui.inHiMi Cu., Puiladnlpliia. Pa. Raaia! to Soldiers Heirs. I t l,M'?lflHC '"r t.lroulare. COL. lellvPleilid 11AV1, Alt , Wejjhm, Bead stamp UiMii. ngtoo, 1 mi CTTBPiJ AI..I, DI8RA8.W OP Tti a KIBNFT9 uvjrn ULAPnrtt AND TOIMABir OR9AJa BOJKT OBAVKT, HTAMTTM JVIHWAR lATlf8 IW THS BACH Xoma on auua HUNT'H has saved tmm I who have b--tv t- aaaoooeev for tho c i plaint, arising fro a?, i To women v liar to their DruirvUta. (' layl4 &uauy, . IT) , Dr. David 7Vniu.li : In tho full fv NKDY'S FAVOKITX , ported to patent metiu ; makes !on' story gh,i.i In my opinion, ervrd u , . bet preparation Id 0 tin. as well as the Liver glad to ear it 's m genera! i In tins vicinity. ICC fevr.l or1 -sunt . folc. Cold Hind Moss Anne l'm Ue- rted Toilnt h-t. 1 T1IK (illEAT AM s P. O. Bos Will. 81 . ALL. , of the Fao, 1 Hair, Moio. V Noee. Kruuti.'n traaUuni. .. .North i'ei ; Kstabiiahei.1 i avAniSr sflfcs'".J-iSiXV''i V eM-,laaievr ulvvt. L.1.L i i fjwwTn svw M.i. V loaa Button V v - -agents' terras, b '1 -. lal Add anal TVI;r MUil WritiiiM AUKNTH WAN I ) ii ele. hampion ti.. fm a) shs aa e n-- MsrvousDeL:;: o. y' 00K 0 This valuable) work, by a thoroughly competent Vet erinary Surgeon, ahould be In the hand of every HORSEMAN and FARMER, as it contains Informally how to cure a Horse when ill. How to Tell Its Age, an -a Good Horse when you see one. Send 20c, In ic. and have this lOO-page book forwarded by return NEW YORK HORSE BOOK 134 Leonard Street, ... w. -i.. i.