SOME PECULIAR DISHES. A TALK WITH AV INSECTIVOROUS XTICUBB. rating Fried l.nriinli-An rtfort In Amrrlrn and 1 niUnd to Utit l'cople to I at Iiisrcts). rrofca9or Riley, of Washington, in vited some friend to breakfast with him Terentlv. Ho placed before them a dish of fried cicada, or seventeen-year locusts. The professor is in tho habit of eating locusts and grasshoppers, and evidently relishes them. 1 1 is guests were a lit tlo doubtful at first, but after eating them agreed that there was no exception to bo taken to them, cither in fluvor or deli cacy of taste. Mr. John Sutherland said: "I rend the rcp.irt of Professor Kilcy's break fast, and I agreo with him that cicada are de licious. They cat tho tendcrcst of veg etables, the choicest and youngest ten drils, and are tho cssenco of pure vego tablo matter. Prejudice against certain kinds of food is tho work of the imngin nrion, aud founded almost entirely on tho looks of things. There are crabs and lobsters, which aro infinitely moro un clean than either the cicada or tho grass hopper, and yet few food lish are prized more highly. Snails aro tho scavengers of tho sea, and are never so fat and juicy ns when caught in proximity to a dead horso or human body. Then thero aro snails. Thero is nothing 1 enjoy moro. They aro perfectly clean. People will cat periwinkles, and like them. They aro just the same things as periwinkles. Often I make a salad of them. People ask what they are, I say periwinkles, and they aro perfectly satisfied. If I should say snails, &s they are, they would perhaps becomo sick. They should be caught and put in clean sand, and then allowed to wrigglo around. This process takes away all tho slime and leaves them neat and clean. They should then be parboiled. "Peoplo are prcdjuaicca against lam preys. They are very good and equal to an ordinary eel. There are many other kinds of fish that persons object to. This Becms unreasonable to me. They all come from the suino water, and vir tually live on tho same kinds of food. Of course thero are some sorts of lish far superior to others, but all fish is good. I know persons who will not touch frogs, yet they livo on just the same things as trout, and are equally as tender and toothsome. Of birds, too, there is much discrimination. A hawk is good, so is the crow. A young blue heron is as good as tho most favored birds, but very lew peoplo can one find who will cat them. Not long ago some gentlemen came here and asked mo to get them up something that couldn't bo gotten anywhere else. All right,' said I. I went and got somo ox pallets and fixed them up. They were corrugated and looked like snakes. I twisted them up and served them with Italian sauce. They ato them and were much pleased. "When about half through, Mr. Peyton, ono of tho party, wanted to know what the dish was. I said, 'rattle makes. Tom Placide, the old actor, sent me some the other day, and as you wanted something you couldn't get any where else, I gave them to you.' The knives and forks dropped with a clatter on the floor. Two of tho party were frightfully sick. . 'Now, see here,' said one, 'don't tell mo that I've been eating rattlesnakes. I'll never be able to eat again.' When I saw they wero about as sick as they well could be, I told them them they were beef pallets. Immediately every man got well, re sumed eating, and all wero wonderfully happy, Tom Waeido and I wero groat friends, lie was really very fond of rattle snakes. One day ho brought me one; we skinned it nicely, fried it and ate it. Tom smacked his mouth, but I muBt confess I didn't fancy it as much as I do other things. liattlesDake eggs are, however, very nice. They have a faint musky flavor, and are delicious. There are many other things that people will not eat now, but tho day will come wlieu all these things will be regarded along with white bait, trout and other things of this class. , "Iu the cast, locusts the insects as well as tho vegetable are highly es teemed as food." Fried in butter, these destructive creatures form a popular dish and this is the only good point about the 'locusts migrutoria.' Uricd lucosts are exported in quantities, and are a staple food in Arabia, Syria, and other Orien tal countries. It is, unfortunately, an indisputable fact that human beings have in various ages and different parts of the world been, far from dainty in their domestic dietary. They have sup ped and breakfasted, too ou horrors. There is an African race for example, which consumes ants and pretends to like them. The Andaman islanders habitually live on rats, guanas, lizards and snakes, adding a few shellfish when they can get them. People who do not object to consuming caterpillars would probably soon pass on to serpents. Mrs. Colin Mackenzie, the wife of an Indian missionary, has related how she was cured of an intermittent fover by eating cobwebs. In some parts of Hindostau the natives prescribe cobweb pills us a 'sure antidote to fever; and tho lady whose case wo have mentioned found them far more effective thau quinine. Tho pills, sho tells us, are 'mudo of com mon cobwebs and taken in doses often grains three times a day.' If, however, cobwebs can bo eaten, why not spiders? The fact is that man in his civil ized stato has forgotten a thousand arti cles of food which are known to thesav nge. Ho has no faith iu 'simples,' though half tho best medicines are made up of roots aud leaves which he could pick fur hiukiulf iu the woods and fields if he liked, ytrsons who have unfortu nately been in a besieged town have proved before now that nobody need starve so long tut there is a piece of old hoe leather uboui. At the gicgo of Haarlem by tho Spaniards, Mr. Motley tolls how tho inhabitants ato first linseed and rapeseed, and then cats, doga, rats and mice. When these huniblo friends of man wero exhausted, they took to boiling tho hides of oxen and horses, and devouring them, and shoo leather was in constant uleinaii.l for dinner tables. Finally, they weie reduced to feeding on nettles uud t'l'ass found between the duties iu churchyard, but at thii latter point, of course, many succumbed to starvation. It is highly probable that clvili.'ed communities cmsuma without kuowiDg it things 'fur mor? objectionable than either nettles or spiders. Has any statistician jjiven us the probable quau titios of animal fat which a single per son cats as butter in the course of s twolvpmnnth nr the amount of acetio acid and vitriol which is found In tin vinegar used to form an ordinary salad? The dinner tablo is surrounded by mys. teries, into which tho boldest may bt afraid of prying too far." Xew Yortt Commercial. , An Army Konted by Locusts. Of all destructive foes none are more dreaded in most casttrn lands than tho locusts, whoso diro visitations may well bo national calamities. In point of fact, the lands which aro exempt from theii occasional presence nro the favored few. A very few details of their invasion in Southern Russia in the years 1879 and 18S0, will give us some idea of their multi tude. Thy fell upon tho province of Caucasus, utterly destroying vineyard and gardens, blockading tho streets so that traffic was suspended, filling the ovens so that for several days baking wai quito out of the question, and so choking tho water courses that not a cup of water could bo drunk until filtered. In Georgia they fairly routed a detach ment of Russian troops, who, not liking to turn aside on their march repelled by mere insects attempted to faco tho locust army, although reports said it covered twenty square miles of the country. So tho soldiers advanced, but soon found themselves literally covered by the ding ing, creeping insects, which crawled all over them, until finally tho men fairly turned and fled, slipping and sliding a. they ran over the crushed and oily bodies of their martyred foes. For forty-oighl hours they wero were detained, taking refuge in a village, and assisting the in habitants to kill millions of the invaders, whose corpses they cartod off to manure tho fields, which, however, were in the meantime stripped of every blade of grass or corn, and tho trees shorn of every green leaf. On tuo road from urns to roti tne locusts lay so thick on the lino that tho trains were obstructed. Larsro districts of Southern Russia wero swept as bare of all vegetation as if a fire had raged over the land, and hundreds of peasants, utterly beggared, abandoned their homes to seek bread wherever it might be found. In the provinco of Chersom alone, 50,000 roubles was voted by government for expenditure in tho effort to free tho land of this plague ; in another district 20.000 persons were employed daily for three months in the same work ; the government expenditure on tho whole organization was estimated at 200,000 roubles, without nny calculation of tha los3 on crops of all descriptions. Another notable sceno of lecust plague was Algeria in the year 18C6, when the damage done by theso insects was esti mated at 50,000,000 francs, and resulted in a famine so appalling that 200,000 natives died of starvation. All the Year Hound. Oil on the Water. A correspondent sends to tho Scientifu American the following lotter relative to the effects of pouring oil on a rough sea: On the evening of August 1, 1883, I and two companions in adventure were thrown on one of the Santa Barbara islands, about one hundred and fifty miles northwestward from San Diego oil the California coast. Two days later we were picked up by an Italian fisherman, and carried to Santa Barbara. Iu our passage across tho channel which sepa rates 15ucna Vcrtura from the island of Santa Cruz, wo encountered a gale, and tho white caps ran pretty high. Out boat was pretty small, and the flying spray drenched everything on board. In the midst of this the old fisherman called our attention to smoother sea ahead, aud went on to explain that it was due to oil on tha water, and that the oil came up from natural wells in the bottom of the ocean. By this timo the boat was gliding through the calmer sea. I noticed that tho waves were running as high as ever, but tho crests of them rcmaiued unbro ken, and no white caps wero to bo seen. Tho tumbling and roaring of the white caps, the flying of tho spray before the wind, and the crests of tho waves blown oil, were no longer t3 bo seen or heard; but the size of the billows was not other wise diminished. Tho waves wore now huge swells of the ocean, following each other regularly and silently, ana the wind appeared to glide smoothly along the surface of the sea, unable to ruffle or disturb the water. The oiled water was only a narrovr strip, running nearly east and west. 1 should judgo that it was less than one half mile. I could not observe iti length. The oil field is just fourteen miles north of Santa Cruz Island. Per haps tho attention of the public has been called to it long ago, but I did not know of its existence until I saw it, and have not heard of it since. A Great Inventor's Income How much iB Fdison worth? I do not know. lie certainly does not own him self, for ho bus been public property now, lo! these many years. One of these hydra-headed correspondents of half a dozen newspapers declures that he ii "worth nothing;" that he has lost "s pile of money" lately; that his stocks are of no value, whereas they were formerly worth two millions, and that he is "dis appointed and depressed." Now, ths fact is that Fdison is what most people would call a rich man, even in these modern days. Ho has a regular annual income from tho Western Union Telegraph company of $20,000 in royallies on old " patents. lie il tho principal stockholder in five manufacturing companies that bear his name, with an aggregate of $'J00,000 capital, and all of them pay largo divi dends every 6ix mouths. He has put $80,000 in cash into tho Downtown Electrical Illuminating company, which has earned a dividend, notwithstanding the large expenditures which experiments required. Since the death of Mrs. Fdi son he has moved with the threo chil dren into a fiat on Fighteenth street, near Broadway, where the inquisitive could probably ascertain that he pays his reut witli scrupulous regularity. In fact, Fdison has a very practical Sale, and I suppose ho receives an inconm of from $7.1,000 to $100,000. IK. A. O.-of-J'ut, in A io Yui k W orld. Tho Egyptians believed in a bird feed ing its young with its blood, and this bird was non other thau the vulture. SELECT RIFTINUS. Formerly coffins were msdo of cypress wood. Tho giraffe has never been known to. utter a sound. A leper was once classed with idiots, madmen and outlaws, and was not al lowed to inherit. Hamilton Colo, tho well-known Now York lawyer, who bought a copy of tho Uuttcnburg bible in 1881 at tho Brinloy ealo for $8,000, sold it recently for $15, 000. Tho electrical conditions consequent on the earthquakes in tho provinces of Malaga, Spain, have, it is said, given vi tality to vineyards that were given up as dead. . a twicer Rat. Among the many strange pots which Frank Buckland, that strango man and ardent naturalist, kept in his house, a rat or two were always included. "Rats" formed the subject of his lirst magazine article. Ono special rat he saved from an ant cater in the Zoological gardens, and carried it in his hat to his home, where the rat was given a cago on tho mantel piece opposite tho cage of Judy, a mar moset. Both Judy and tho rat would stay all day coiled up in their own cages. When the gas was lighted, however, both slowly roused up, and ventured out. Judy would wander over'to the rat's quarters, and, when his back was turned, would steal his food. Thc'rat, on tha other hand, would sneak into Judy's cage, and pick up forbidden titbits. One day the rat came homo and found Judy steal ing. Whereupon ho pitched into her, and would perhaps have killed her had not Mr. Buckland, hearing her screams, como in time to save her life. One characteristic of the rat was its curiosity. Ho would get upon his owner's writing tablo and cautiously examine every object in hopo of finding some thing worth carrying off. A sugar basin stood there, and its contents were greatly to the little animal's liking. His plan was to stand up on tho hind legs,steady him self, tripod fashion, by tho help of his tail, tip the basin over, and then, pick ing up a lump, mako off with it. This rat would never cat whoro ho could be seen; ho always carried away his food to his house. To do this with the sugar ho had to get upon the mantelpiece, eigh teen inches abovo the table; and a little ladder was set up for hiiccommodation. After Mr. Buckland liad shown him once or twioo he soon learned how to climb it, and would carry pretty heavy weights. Ho would steal a whole red herring, for instance,' and, after several trials to get it well balanced in his teeth would scramblo up tho ladder with it, waving his tail from side to side like a balancing pole. Tho herring was too long to go through the round door of his house, so ho would drop it,nnd then, going inside, would reach out,, catch the fish by the head, and drag it in length wise withVreat ease. The first time he encountered this difficulty, however, it puzzled him for a few moments. This rat made its nest of old envelopes, whlcb he tore into small 'pieces. Manchester (England) T'Untt. Health has a beauty of its own. Nc eruptions, sores or discoloratious disfig ure or annoy the man or womnn whose Ktomach, liver and bowels do their duty thoroughly. To compel them to their work, it is only necessary to take a dose of Dn. Wai.kkh's Yinegak Bittkhs twice or thrice a day. This potent vege table specific controls every disordered function. The actual number of persons engaged in agriculture in the United States, in cluding their families, is placed at 25, 000,000, an increase of 3,000,000 since the last census. The Hot I Yendome, of Boston, is unsurpassed in location aud appoint ments. Tourists wishing to stop at a hotel which offers the comforts of their own homes should not fail to visit it. Five hundred policemen in citizens' clothes are still employed in guarding the public offices of London against dyna miters. An liniiorlniil Arrrat. The arrest of a suspicious character upon liis Kunerul appearanco, movements or com panionship, wit lion t waiting until he ha rolilied a traveler, tired a house, or mtmlerej a fellow-man, is an important function of a shrewd detective. Even more iintortuiit is the arrest of a disease whi. li, if not checked, will blight unit destroy a human life. lha dequeue cough, loss of appetite generul languor or debility, pallid skin, and buddy aehes and pains, announce the approach ol pulmonnry consumption, which is promptly arrested and permanently cured by Dr. Tierce's " Uolden Medical Discovery." Bold by druggists. DriiiNG last yenr there were u',13,483 kegi of steel nails manufactured. Those Red Top Boots. Don't you remember them tho pair vou ever wore? You can close vou eyes and see them again still and black aud heavy soled. And what points of beauty in your eyes were those red tops and bright copper toesl Tho memory ol them briugb you back to that period in your life where infancy passed into boy hood, and where dreams came to you ol being a big man. 1 hey marked the be ginning of your independence, of youi strength, of your recognition ns one ol earth s creatures. Better fur.they brought surcease of ridicule, so galling to a boy'i pride, for they came with pants aud horl hair, in place of dresses and curls. How often have you gone sobbing to youi mother, your heart full of grief and mor titication, because a bigger boy hao pulled jour hair und called you a girl The changes came ull at once. Mothei made the pants, and one evening six brought home the red top boots. Thei she put the scissors iu'.o your soft curls cut them olT, kissed tlieni, mid laid then away. She was sorry to see tho baby bo cornea boy; but how your soul swcllet How you longed for the morning, tha you might wear them! How joyful!; you cried out to little Billy Biown across tho street, that you had "punt and boots!" And Hilly probably an swercd, sullenly : '! don't rare;" whilt all the time ho was tilled with envy. Dear little boots! We revere you memory. You are to the boy what th. sweetheart is to the youth; what th bride is to the m.u. Shoe and JLeatie Jicvietc. ) BARTHOLIN'S Bid (JIM die I'rrlmllrra Mel tn rsnmsarr lor inn IVileatnl l'iind. Ths Pnrtholdi pedestal fund Is nearly mm iloto. The statue has arrived Hnd soon New i ork harbor will 1 graced by tho most mnn lilleent colossal statue the woi ui Ivisevor s -on. "Liberty KiiliphteniiiR the World!" What t priceless blessing personal liberty is. It is he shrine at. which lieoplo, ground under tho leel of tyranny in the older worlds, worship villi a fervency Hint Americans can scarcely vnlize; it is n principle for which Nihilists villingly die the de'ith of dogs; and lit nnd iropcr it is that at the very entrnneo of tlio Bay of New York this emhleinntto statue iliould flash a welcome to tho world. The press is entitled to the credit of this leliievenient. Mr. Thilip Hoers, who has leen making a circuit of the country on be mlf of tho l'edcstal fund, says that the fund n-ill certainly be rnisixl, as tho n orld does lot know the word fail. Mr. Honrs says that lie has found the most jronounced generosity among thoso of for ip.ii bit-Mi They seem more appreciative of iherty than do our native born. Moreover, imong somo a strange prejudice seems to ex 's t. "Prejudice! In what lwrtiritlnrr" "I have ever found that however merito rious a thing may le, thousands of peoplo will inevitably bo prejudiced against it. I lave spent most of my life on the road and 1 know 1 ho American people 'like a book.' In ISi'.l a personal misfortune illustrated this prevailing prejudice. I was veiy ill, had suf fered tor several years with headache, fickle npH-tite, dreadful backache, cramps, hot hrad,cold hands and feet and a general break down of the svstem. 1 draggml myself back to New York, seeking the best professional treatment. It so happens that among my relatives is a dis tinguished physician who upbraided me roundly for preaching so much about my own cae. I' inolly, with some spirit, I re marked to him: ' "Sir, you know that mtr.-h of your pro fessional wisdom is pretense. You are con trolled by prejudice. You cannot reach a case like mine anil you know it, can youf " "I had him; and ho finally conoedod tho point, for it was bright's disease of the kid neys which had prostratod me, and the school men admit they cannot cure it. Having cured myself, however, in 1N70. and not having seen a sick day since, my relative finally admitted that Warner's safe cure, which accomplished this result, was really a wonderful prepara tion; Had 1 "resilient Hotter, of the Central Hudson used it. 1 am certain he would bo alive to-day, for he could not have been in a worse condition than 1 was." "I have found similar prejudices among all classes concerning even so laudable a schema as this (HwUwtal fund." Mr. lsoers's exnerioni-e and the recent death of President lluttor. of the I'entrnl-Hudson railroad, of an extreme kidney disorder, proves that the physicians have no real ower over such diseases, and Indicates the only course one should pursue if, as the lato br. Millard l'arker says, head ache, sickness of the stomach, dropsi cal swellings, back ache, dark and oirensive fluids, prematurely impaired eye sight, loss of strength and energy occur, fir they unmistakably indicato a fatal tesult, if not promptly nrrested. "Yes, sir-ee, every cent needed for tho pe destal will be raised. Of course it will lnj a great triumph for tho M'orif, but would it not have been an eternal disgrace had our people failed to provideforthis pedestal f" Over 307,000 widows have applied for pen sions. "I Don t Wont Keller, but Cure." is the exclamation of thousands suffering from catarrh. To all such we say: Catarrh can be cured by Dr. iSage's Catarrh Itemedy. It has been done in thousands of cases; why not in yours Y'our danger is in delay. En close a stamp to World's Dispensary Medical Association, Buffalo, N. Y., for pamphlet on this disease. A $'),000 bull-poo was lately exhibited at Toronto. Weak lungs, spitting of blood, consump tion, and kindred affections, cured without physician. Address for treatise, with two stamps, World's Dispensary Medical Associa tion, tlultalo, IN. x. Thb annual income of Queen Victoria Is fi,i;i5,cuo. ti Cents Will buy a Treatise on the Hoksr ad His Diseases, Book of lO pages, valuable to every ownerof horses. Postage stamps taken. Sent postpaid. New York Horse Hook Co., .... l .-.1 X- V-.. ..I. ...... lo-i ijeoiiaru nuwi, now iuiii i-iij.. The purest, sweetest and liest Cod Liver Oil in the world, manufactured from fresh, healthy livers, upon the seashore. It is abso lutely pure and sweet l'atients who have once taken it prefer it to all others. Thysi cians have decided it suiierior to any of the other oils in market. Made by Caswell, Haz ard & Co., New York. Chapped hands, lace, pimples aud rough fkin cured by using Juniper Tar Soap, made by Caswell, Hazard 4 Co., New York. An Only I)nliter :urel oft'onnnmptlon. When death was hourly expected from Con sumption, all remedies having failed and Dr. H. James was experimenting, he accidentally made a preparation of Indian Hemp, which cured his only child, and now gives this recipe on receipt of stomps to pay expenses. Hemp also cures night sweats, nausea at the stom ach, and will break a fresh cold in 24 hours. Address Craddock & Co., 103J Kace street, I'hiladelpliiHra. .jiaming thiispaper. S Cents Will buy a Treatise on the Horse and His Diseases Book of UK) pae.s, valuable to evory owner of horses. Postage stonis taken. Kent postpaid. New York Horse Book Co., 134 Leonard Street. New York city. The hand-organ has seen 108 years since its inventur died. EASY CHILD-BIRTH Frtfiid. t ouplfd with this entunty I will f.M thai durliiK a Iumk ot tfiiir nntctire M yr) 1 have m-ver knnv, n it lo fall to ii-'mIuc' a saO, qnlfk ilrilvt rjr. II. J. II'ii Mi , I. !., At'Hiita. Ua. Trr ' "V iiinaii" niaUd frn TiiuhUKi i Rkui i.tir i'o., Atlanta, tor wilt ly all l'rur'K.t. . LUSE Copyrightail. bl' it'.l dioul lilers of tl.e. ISIooil, ue 4k Ayer's Sarsaparilla, cd I- Ur. J. C. Aysr .". Co., Lswall, U Frarrr Asln 4ren. Don't work your horso to death with poor axlo grens"; the Krawr Is tho only reliable make. Use it once, and you will have no other. - tmpnrtftttt. whnfmi TtMt.nr la Nw V.irli OUT, hhtMy ts, f tprpn nml $;l orrlr hirw, m l t.op iu thl (Irani VntmHotl, nppnitlh' (Imntl OitiHril dnprit. fiuHrjr int rxms, rttl.-rtupM m o'W nl om mill! "1 lHIra, $1 anri up-r1 pnhT. KtirpAu plan. El lor. KHMOKiimnt npplil wit h thh-it. Ilortietrt, tncH and HMTiUnd rftilni'! t. nil riitprta. PVnili run lln bMtwr lur Um m-n.tf at th UrtiiA Uoiua lintel than at anr oltiar Hrat-tilasa hotal lti tha oitr. LoflstANA is assuming prominence as an Iron producing state, Vcak and Weary Peaerlties the romlltlnn of nisnv poopla Jnat now. The warm weather, tsto in rominc, ipm mere rte tiilitstiiiR than over. Vou majr be weak and tlrod in i ur iiitiriiiiiK. wirnnm appetite ami without enenry. If an. VOIl nnArl MnnA'm Hat..-m Irt Imil.t .. .. 1 atreiiKtheD your body, purify and quicken tha linr- pnii niooa, ana feature ins lost appetite. Thla med icine win no you good. "I was almont completely run down, and was for four yearn under medical treatment, being (tlran tip to diebv llhValAlHflfl. ThlV H.P Bnl.!n- whtch Rave nie as nv.ieh bnrnt as Itood'i Haraapa- nim, wun n n-siorea ma to nraltb and vlRor. I rrnmmtii1 II I n mnw invall.l u It f.. ......n, i- . trntr.l. It will rebuild the ayatnra and Rive new life." nr.i.ia ivuiLK, reoria, iu. "PnrlnK the summer monthi I bars been some what debilitated or run down. I hare taken Hood's Baraaparuia, wuieu ctvoa ma new rigor aud restored mo to mv wonted linalth and atrnvth Wi it Ci.omiH, lllton, N. H. Hood's Sarsaparilla Hold by all driia-KisK 1; alx for W. Made only by C. 1. HOOD ft CO.. Apothecaries, Lowell. Maaa. lOO Do s e sp ne Doll ar Thit rrmttty cmUainn no fiiiinoim tlrui. ELY'S CREAM BALM.RATARRH wt,,n ".ll (..... II.- ' tril. will Im-almorbcil, eftee f '" '5riv',' tllilllv I'lcarnum; tho linn, 1 1 rrs- ' --V.., ol catarrhal virua, (-attaint healthv accretiona. It al lnyn inflaniniatton, protect the membrane from frculi cohla, roniphiti'ly heal t, anrc and real ore t he acnaiu H la"'"' "niB" heariim Not a Lianid or Snuff. A few application rn Hrve. A fA'trHtftfA trmtmn trill eurr, Au'rei alilo to un ' " " conm iv mail or.. . . a. dn-KKl.., ed lorcir II IV . ECU CD EbY lUtOTIIKltS. DruJ?,.... Oweloi, nT. SUMMER Can be cured by the old reliable home remedy, MOLD'S BALSAM. Only 33 ar.d SO cents a bottle. Ull.MANBROH. ,Wh,laalaPriwtlf.Proq'a, Boaton MlftUllirDV Send for our ew I SNA FRFC IflACmKtHT t vrAi.tnin: nmii.-n rncc Uoacut-rt St Ho cr I'rem l'.t Byracuae, N. V. R. U. AWARE THAT Lorillard'a Climax Plug hearing a rrrf tin v ; that Lorlllard't Hambuf fine cut: that Lorlllard't Nayy Clippings, and that Lorillard'a M nulla, ara lha heat and ohaajieat, quality conaldgrad Fnrr, Manila, Feet, and all their lm. Hrr.cthuiK, lnclui!lni( Fachil llevi'lop- llil'ni, mriii marRn, niut-i. nmw, mini,, Krei klex. Km1 None, Acne. Ill'k Heada, Hrara. Pitting nnd their treatment. Kr. John WixHllnirr. Si fi.l-earll..Aina. nr.N.V. Kat'tcd ISTII. Send inc. for nook. LSQUID GLUEm la ntrd hr Itinawidl of Int elaM Vanafifrnrm CTerJ and Mfi-nantr, on tlifir oral work. Krcclv4 COLD MtOAL.IXHidon.K1. mmiiuiiMMif Over fjy. Hcndcnlofrtriifrwhodc .nnfci 1600 U,wiUi art Uampa fat SAM PL CAn Bti-f!, fim.nt fn r.lnnnHlMi Win flltt tlNOrO laaraaaJ rtl.!J. Dill Great Engllih Goulini Ultill S lIllSi Rheumatic Remidy. Oval Ko, Sl.tMlt round, 61) eta. ORPMINES liASU.V 1 1 lti:i). BOOK FREE OR. J. C. HOFFMAN, Jefferson, Wisconsin. Wa will aand ion our FOR NOTHING Inatruelion Honk nt' I'niit.v II nrk It leneliea llie allleliea. romiiin ann arrofn Knihriinli-ry. I.tiatre and Kriialimlon 1'nlnlins. IIoit to do hi urn etna. ote. Snd ,tampnto pa iioalafl. T. E. I'AltliliK, Lynn, Jlaa. Y SIOTO 920 A PAY made with outnt Inr uianiifaetiiTins Htoncila' ivnv uecaa ana uiinnor rttanina, Cataloifiia Tree. S. M. HPKNi 'KK, 111 TVaihinKion St., Hoaton. Iliu. V to Holiiiem lleim. Hendatamp l0nCinn6 "r l'ln'ii!ara. I'OU L.B1M1. I GlidlUEld HAM, Att'y. WaahiUKtoiOL). O. THDRSTOH'S rITOOTH POWDER Keeping Teeth rr PATENTS! Keeping Teeth rerfect and Gains Healthy. oHTAiNKD for lnrantora. Oir ciilaralw. If. 8. Know k Co.. Patat Att'ra. WmliinKtop.lJ Q n a mm a mm mmm r Olnalnoil. Send atanm for rA I His I 5 lnveiitom'Oiiida. L. llixu. nam, uii'ni iriinjri, ,,wmut,tu, u. lorphnir ilnblt itrrd In 10 a io -u ii n 7 vnJ tin enrra, IBM J. briti'UKNa, lbauoa, Ublg. ThU InvalimMo prt'pnratlon in truly triumph of aoUMitlilu akill, and no muro lnPHtlnmtlo boon was ever hi-ntowed u.miii tho mother of tho world. I WU not only nhorteua the Uino of lnlxr and li'rwens the Intnilty of pain, but, bttr than all. it Kivatly diniinlKhes thfMlaniTT to life of both mothi-r ami child. I moat eurnttly entreat rvory ffinalA exptH'tlnjc to be confined to una Mother mi 5iP MOTHERS FRIEND." If You are Driven Wild "With itching, take the advice of a friend, (though he calls you aside at an evening party to give it ), and rid yourself of the trouble by the use of Ayer's Sarsaparilla. A few week since I was attaekecl with S nevcro and distressing form of Kczcma. Tho eruptions tpread very generally over my body, causing im Intense itching and burning sensation, especially at night. AVith greut faith in tho virtues of Ayer'a uraparll!a, I commenced taking it, and, aflcr having used less than two bottles of this iv.eiliclno, am entirely cured. Henry K. Keardflt -y, of the JIupo "Nine," AVest I'hiladelphia, Ta. Mr. I). AV. Call, the well known journal. 1st, writes from Rochester, X. II. : Ilaviti-r suffered severely, for some time, with I'.czeuia, and failing to find relief from other remedies, I have mado use, clii:hr the v.::st threo mouths, of Ayer's Sarsaparilla, which has effected acompleta cure. I coutider thU iuedieino a luujuiu t ent reined v for all blood diseases. gold ty Druggists. Tries $1; six battles, i. Ouly Temperance J Utters Known. Oratrfnl Tlionarvnd proclaim Vmiaia Dittkhs the moat wonderful 111 vlgorant that erer sustained the ainklnp; system. Plaile Irom California roots and herbs, fre from Alcoholic BUmulauta. A I"urgnllv and Tonic. 'I'hlia Hitters euros Femnln Complaint, Inflammatory and Chronlo Itlmnmntlam. Gout, bilious, Komlttcnt and Intermittent Fe vers, Illnod, I.Ivor and Kidney Diseases. Dyapopaia or liidlireatlon, Headache, Tain In the Nhoulders, Coughs. TiEhlneaa of tha Chest, Hir.glneaa, Hour BUmiaeh, Furred Tongue, Ulllous Attacks, Palpitation of the Heart, Pneu monia, and Pain in tho rcirinns of tlx Kidneys, are cured by the use of the Hitters, For Skin IXaeaaea, Krttptlons, Foils, Frystpelas, Scrofula, plKoolurations, Huniorsand diseases of the Skin of whatever .iame or na ture, are literally tin tip and carried out of tha iyatem in a short time by tl use of the Bitters. t Invigorate llio fcloiiiach, and stim ulates the torpid Liver and Bowels, which ren der It of uutiiiialed efficiency in cleansing jha blood of all Impurities, and Imparting new iifs and vlpnr to the whole svstein. No I'rraou cau take the Bitters and remain !ong unwell. 1'lu, Tape and other Worms, ara destroyed and removed from the system. Cleans the Vitiated lllood whenever It Is foul ; your fi-ellng will tell yon when. Keep the blood pure, and tho health of the system will follow. In ronrlnslon ; Olve the Bitters atrial. It will SH'ak for itself. One bottle will prove a bet ter guarantee ot Its merits than a lengthy ad vertisement. It. II. UleDonald Irnr Co., Proprietors, Ban Fraud' vi, 'l , and (-. Mi Ka WaauuurUm HI. Cor. Charlton rit.. New York. Sold by all Dealers and Druggists. NTH A Skin of Beauty Is Joy Foraver. DR. T. FELIX GOURAUD'S CRIEKTAL CREAM, OR MAGICAL BEAUTIFIER fimplfK, Fmos Ian, Mntk. riitch), Rsh And Mttn dift pe. and rtj bUmiith on beauty-, inrl r1s ftf detection. It hfm Blood thit Mt of Ht yrn, and t m haroilfMMi w tt it to b ur th pr Duration it 4P n. 8 KJ v y rfii, f I Apt BO ii'LV'V tmilar nam. A.. Kayrnaud ton lady of th hnt ttm fa patient): "A pot taii will Ihem, I rrommn4 GoHtauW $ Crtnm m l Itart hnmif'ul nf nil th prrpatm'innu" On hottlwwill ImI ais UK-nth. m it rverr day. Alao Pou4r ftutilil rmivft mimTiluoua hair witmuit in jnrylothfak.n. Mmb. M. K. T. li(MTRAlJl, 8ol rrnp., 48 Bond Ht.. N. T. Knr ulrby all Druniriat nd Fant r (ioorla rlm t hrnuriitit ttm V. H., (-antvdat and ICuropo. at Bwa.n of but imitations. SI.OUUR Wftrd for arrest and proof of any out el It of tho Mm. At this aenefin of tlm year thn hi artly of the ohilfiren la(ten stupfwd hjf fumin inrtiacretlon tm the part of tha arnt ir child ; and, an arMitlt, dysentery, rholera in intum. or o( htr cnmplainta of nlmiach r bownla en tita, in all ouch cne, lirdee't ' it the lMt diet etic. It is iterfeotly Bate, bfliiK netitral In iti action up on the bowela, ana in nJ way interfere with action ot medicine. ALARI A. As an antl-maiarlal mediciua DK. UATIII KEN.NKDVH FAVORITE REMEDY baa won golden opinions. No traveler should eon a tiler bis outfit complete nnlrss it Incliuloa a bottle of Ihla nic!rine. If you are eipnaej to frequent chanci a of climate, fooil and tviiter, h svorilu Koine. dy abould aiwaya be within vottr reach. Uexp'la malarial poinnnt.amt is the beat preventative or cullla and malaria', fever In the world. It is raperlallr of fered ai a IruMwor. hr ppecinc for the cure of kid ney and l.lver complaints. C onstipation tt.d a'l Ols nrtlers ariain? from en in.piuo atatu t the blond. To women who anffrr from any of the i:ia peculiar to their sex Kavon'.e Heinedy la constantly proving itself an unfail.nz friend a real blrninp. Address the prorrietor, lr. I. Kennedy, houdout, N. Y. $1 bottle, for.", by all driigKlste Paynss' Automatic Engines and Saw-Mill, .VIiT-ttai3lii .Haw" Ot'R I.EaDER, Waotrnranlto lull. P. uiounwd Kndne with Mill, IO.Id. aolid Maw, 60 (t. bltina. oant-hnitka, rif rAmplfla toroperatlon, en otrn, (t.ltsi. Knrma on nlcM. Cl'S In. Bead for circular I bl. II. V. PAVNK c 4IK, Stanufaolurra of all styiaa Autoiimtlr Kll finra, from to JMi H. P. : alao Pullfya, llangera and UaUna, Klmira, W. Y. Bm I Hot). . GLUTEN So j-J a .a : a J" t a S s r I f F Aa m r tft p-a S a 1 e x. b. c z j -o FL0URJ: sssi psst "jasj "ot c-3 DC J W iv r Alea, and 900 per ft and women with nui pmnt maaa ny mm litlorttvina luven tion. A ln.tljr elenrei Itiiinone ntreet. Ai en lit Hrit4a: " Voui MMhu hrine) monei I iniikeet of nny I aver tried. "Any man or worn at niakinte leiwt thnn wvJ er week tihould try out aaay tnoney-uiAHiiiii iHiMnena. Va((uaranM) it the beat puyiiift in the Imwl. f I Kuinidei quii'k tvellinif rnuin frin ioHnj litdy orKnt who will deyote a fw houra daily. Ki peneiKW unnereatvurv ; no talking. Write quick Hiul m cure your county, AdUruaa, b. 1 Merrill t CjO. CUicuna AIL TaVTttTTT Srti-Kt-rd MTU AW A i ii A v n w .- u The beat in thai w.rld. Knlfa II Htcl, Umprrrd, tori fasUat-j hi mer wnn ihti ooiia ; il car. Dt Saal iiit.1. Th blsfr r is hioh hftliY I raitaa ifasj n cirruisr snsiii r K K n . itaaUp. B.s. U.a. H- . . V K ftur relief mmm KIBCER'8 PASTILLES.r.rwr,,ti COODWAGfiS rilfvM f.S rwful bleamn. x trrma adilms T. P. JK. HINfe, Nurorrnii Uaeheaier, . V. PENNYROYAL 'CHICHESTER'S ENGLISH" 'I lie OriKtiiHl and Only iVeuuiiie. Hate aud aiwat it Ua'lf. H aue wl H ortswIt-saM llUHf.liuna i 'hU'heater'si Kntfllali" are Liic x-t uat-ti.-. lii'ii.pcusatil Oiuiili, tl.:., in Irttrr sen I u bv rw- TO LAUItSi litthi-t u (oLAuip" ir Hrii uiais). test I PILLS! tur.iuukl. NAME PAPER tBU ! U dtawn -i.,lfaiMiiu, Itt a hi. lint nr laemlCMI t u.. iniuwvvfc.hla Wrtall Urult aaasr, ut'altaa M..I. T pwwwiwiiwfiLuaiawwiiiiitiiiaiuattlMi'''i"i"awiii Mil IP mm MsiniirsTssfMfss7 iMirn iiVv i iiniwn mi 1 - J Vj, V j,- ,.w a A I s S SUsV