SCIENTIFIC ASD INDUSTRIAL. The flartholdi statue of New Tork Ja to bo lighted nt night by a shaft-light from torrh uhich will bo seen ninety miles out to sea, and thereforo lortfr bo rne any lighthouse on the coast, and nlso by four large lights at the bnso of tho Itntuo. After months of search Trofessor Jonathan Emorick, of William and Mary Collepe,has discovered tho aerolite which fell in Washington County, l'enn., Sep tember Mth, 1885. It -was found deeply imbedded in the soil, Professor Emi-rick says it is the largest aerolite, on record, and weighs fully 200 tons. Its composi tion is chromium, nickel, aluminum, copper, magnesium, and tin. Trofessor Stamford, tho English Edi son, has discovered a new substance which promises to become a popular ai ti de of commerce "Algine, a residuum of macerated fucus (sea-tang) combines the qualities of a mordant, an esculent, and a superlative adhesive. It fixes a variety of colors used by cotton-dyers. In certain combinations it is as nutritious us grape-sugar, while in one of its forms its adhesiveness exceeds that of gum arabic not less than twenty-six times. "Tho great Lick telescope," says the Boston llrrall, "when mounted and swung against tho sky, will have a focusof fifly-hve icet length nearly fifteen feet longer than the largest one ever nindo. It will be a refractor, which means that tho imago is formed directly to tho eye by the object glass, as contradistin guished from tho Gregorian and llcr schelian telescopes.The largest instrument ever known of tho latter style was Dr. Hersehcl's. The tube lacked but eight inches of being forty feet iu length." Meteorologists have found that thero can be no thunder and lightning without rain. When thunder is heard beneath a clear sky, the roports must cither come from distant cleuda or be the result of some other cause than a dischargo of electricity. Harvest or heat lightning is jiro3uccd by a distant storm. Thunder ecldom accompanies heat lightning, the sound reaching only about twelve miles, whilo lightning is often seen, by reflec tion upon nearer clouds, at a much greater distance. Professor Bell is confident that tele phonic communication may bo established between passing vessels at sea. He believes a wire a mile in length, trailed behind a nhip, will so charge the water with elec tricity that a vessel coming within half a milo of another thus equipped may com municate with it. ''Tho principle," he says, "is not new; it is old, with a new use waiting for commerce, to utilize it. I have experimented in the Potomac, and marveled at the simplicity of "the ap paratus and the stupendous importance of tho results." The results of experiments made thus far in the purification of water by nera tion have attracted much notice. This method is well known to be based on the discovery that tho action of air in purifying water is greatly increased by mixing the air and water under pressure. A Fairmount, Philadelphia, turbine en gine, was converted iuto an air-pump, which delivered twenty per cent., by volume, of free air into the water main, this being the proportion found neces sary to surcharge the water. Analysis showed that 'the quantity of free oxygen in the aerated watervas seventeen per cent, greater than before aeration, while tho quantity of carbonic acid was fifty-three per cent, greater, nnd that of the total dissolved gases was sixteen per cent, greater. A Building: With a History. Among all the buildings in New York city to-day there is not uuother that has so ancient and eventful a history as the Hall of Records, or Register's Ollice, in tho City Hall Park. It was erected about the middlo of tho lust century, when Broadway was a country road, when the only theatre stood on the site of the present World establishment, when Centre street was a lake, William street a swamp, Canal street a river, and the Bowery a lonely lane, running up through nucKierjerry ousnes. During tho Revolutionary war this building was the chief British prison for distinguished patriots. Here Captain Nathan Hale, the intrepid Yankee, was confined after his capture with a plan of the British defenses of Long Island in his shoes, and in the public common adjoining, exactly where tho City Hall now stands, he was hanged as a spy. Hero that tough old rebel, Ethan Allen, of Ticonderoga fame, was imprisoned after his capture while trying to take Montreal with thirty men, and his treat ment and that of others caused the building, which now stands near the City Hull station of the elevated road, to bo regarded by the patriots with abhorrence. "When the British evacuated New York, in November, 1783, the jailer, Cunning ham, bavin? won an infamous reputa tion, was asked by his patriot prisoners: "What is to become of us?'' ' 'You can go to the deuce!" shouted Cunningham, as he flung the keys into tbe middle ot tne floor and made oil. It was forty or fifty years after that be fore the bastile of the Revolution was remodeled and the bell t:ansferre;l to the bridewell. It now rins prisoners to rations and prayers over on Lluck w ell's Island. ; Japanese Lae. The mysteries of tho Japan lac have never been mastered by European artists. These men were craftsmen of untiring patience, and placed by the conditi us of feudal life above the needs of mere money making. They were often ennoble 1 and always esteemed. They were (he com panions of Princes. They did not hesi tate to lavi-.li on a sword guard, or ;in ivory toggle, a seroi n, or a minute deco ration of a sword hilt, all their artistic genius in design and pit-tori;, 1 clT ct. The modern lac is an ephemeral produc tion thin in texture, with overlaid gild jug of effective but not 6 lid chur u tcr Jts panels and cabinets, rich with ircrus t.itioiis, are gaudy and ill-drawn. There is nothing in which the collector to often jioes astray. The ol 1 Japanese lac resists heat and cold alike. Submersion beneath the i;e:i for months do h not spoil it. It is bit It tl ) Iv. and defies rendu la of wear. This (jii;il 'ty of la : is littl-i known in l'.ng'an.l, and no icpreseiitath e, uil tlientu a'ed and signed collection such as this lifts eer bi for j b: en brought to gether here. ZoWcn Aca leaiy. JHJDMIST CAMP MEETING. Jl EELIQIOUS GATHEniNO ON THE ISLAND OF CEYLON. An Army 'Willi Itnnnern. Marching to the Place of Assemblage An Oriental Priest's Wav. Anna Ballard, writing from tho Island of Ceylon in the Indian Ocean, describes a Buddhist camp meeting. Sho says: We saw a procession start on tho other side of the lake, from Dalada Maligawa, our chief temple of Buddha in tho town. It was tho point of rendezvous. In quick pursuit wo followed on wheels behind a fleet Indian-Arab horso. The graceful Oriental must do everything brilliantly. In presenting religious offer ings these were for the clergy they must go in form, all together, not strag gling along us we would to a donation p.irty under tho cover of night, but in broadest daylight; not with, tho gift smuggled under cloak and waterproof, but borne aloft on the head, drums beat ing, youths dancing, banners flying. They must do it with pageant, displaying their utmost good will and even joy ia the doing. They marched through a long princi pal stecct ("Trincoraalce street") and then took a sudden retracing climbiug turn up one of tho beautifully laid-out and well-built roads that wind over the wild mountains that hedgo in and prac tically are a part of Kandi. First went the banner-bearers. Some banners wero shield shaped and had only a silver cres cent and stars, on a blue ground. An other was a pure color banner; several colors in different shades, and striped liko a rainbow. Another banner had a huge and long-tailed lion, tho emblem of the Cingalese, tho "lion race." Their legendary genealogy tells of a lion among their ancestors. The reverse side of the same banner had a grand peacock. The peacock and tho goose are their religious birds. The sacred poos?, in stucco and fresco, embellishes tho drawing-room of tho Kandian Old Palace, now tho residence of an English high official. The tallest and largest banners have the lion and tho feacock. Leading the procession was a arge "bandy" vehicle drawn by bul locks, hump-shouldered, small, and do cile (our regular, old-style animal for carriage use horses now numerous, being a European introduction). Tho band-wagon held gifts. There were drummers and pipers and a corps of dancers, young meu, who each held two bamboo sticks about as long as carving knives. Very sonorous were these sticks, as they knocked them together at every step, making tho whole march in very high, conspicuous dancing steps really on agile single-foot jump in perfect, de liberate time, nnd crossing lack vad forth, somewhat like a modem dance. Women were in the procession beating upon their he;.ds in wide, shallow bask ets their womanly gifts of cakes for tho priests. Lastly went another wagon, which was prettily canopied and decked. It contained stores of food, rico being the staple. All were dressed better than ordinary, and thus have everybody been attired ever since the New Year's festal period began. The procession left tho "Lady Horton TkOad," turned into tho jungle woods, and came to an improvised retreat, which, while it was built out of tropical material, and surrounded by palms and i'ungle, tho throng exclusively oriental, ad yet tho tone of a Western camp ground, a religious and sylvan improvi sation in Illinois or on Long Iblancl. A large pavilion, square and plumb, the place for congregations, was constructed out of bamboo poles, tho roof being a strong, tight thatch of palm leaves. In the middlo was a square plat form, three steps high, and inclosed by three rails. It had a desk and behind that a chair; both were cov ered with a luxurious effect, as we also would improvise a tab'e and great chair with a preacner s dess ana seat. Jiut over this platform a lofty construction a circular dome, dagoba-like, with elaborations in shape, reaching up with its conical peak, neared the roof. This preacher's sounding board, thi3 "pun kha" fan and ventilator, was painted or papered in marvelous manner, lions with 6hiuiug eyes, etc. ; also the cupola was in constant revolution, exhibiting it3 inter esting rough pictures. A young priest robed in yellow, as are all and always Bud Ilia's ministers, as cended the bteps, seated himself, and Booii began to read a leaf, and then an other leaf from a palm-book. So con venient it is to (dip down on the string, one leaf to hold in your hand, and let the whole heavy book lie on the table. This is their "preaching," or reading bana. "Buna" is the sacred Scriptures, the pre cepts of Buddha. This preacher intoned very like, only more so, the bana reading which I heard lately in St. Paul's highly "ritual" church in Kandi, and not more so than tones which I have heard before the Roman Catholic altar. After a time a man in tho audience, who was intently watching for tho proper moment, called loudly out along, monosyllabic "holx!" which corresponded to the responses in both the English and the Roman Church, aud also to the rc-pousivo "Amen!" used by nil Christians. Tho men were standing all around, moving or even speaking at will, with semi-quietn"ss uuile in tho regular fashion of a grove meeting, or at the street preaching of a city. They who had open ears heard the word ; aud the priest preached on, all the same, "whether men would hotr, or would for bear." A great many yards of matting carpet were unrolled, on which gradually the men scut ml themselves, in long rows, of course. The women had been all the time grouped upon the carpet at one side of the platform, where they had waited for the youthful preacher to begin, lie held the regulation huge round fan as a shield before his face. Every tuiest of Buddha lias a fan when hs is e iuiiioed, which I nt first mistook for a weather i weapon and defence from tho great I world of light. 1 learn that it is to keet I him from tho greater danger than sun- stroke, the glance, of women 1 The I priestly vows prohibit their even looking J tit one of us. But they do not adhere to tho letter of the law, and quite welcomed me to tin interior view ot their large commodious monasterial quarter during their .New Year festival, Buddha's camp meeting beason. Miss Nellie Bright man is leading edi rial writer of the Duiuth daily A'cus. HOUSEHOLD AITAIKS. Seven Trifle "Worth ltememborinsr. For tho disagreeable, sensation known as heartburn, which so often accompa nies indigestion, a naltspoonful of com mon salt, dissolved in half a wine glass of water, and drank, is as effective a rem edy as a dose of saleratus water, and a much plcasantcr nnd safer one. Rubbing a bruise in sweet -oil and then in spirits of turpentine, will usually pre vent the unsightly black and bluo spot, which not only tells tales but deforms. When thero is an unpleasant odor about tho feet, a small quantity of a weak solu tion of salicylic acid in the foot-bnth is a sure destroyer of the offense. Many of tho patent extracts nnd bitters aro compounded of nn alcohol derived from wood, and this is said to bo a pecu liarly dangerous form of alcohol, capable of producing very serious brain disorder. Ono of tho most treacherous medicines in nil pharmacopoeia is the hydrate of chloral which is so commonly used; cases nre reported where 200 grains have been taken in safety, and other cases where ten grains havo proved fatal or afforded only a narrow escape from death by timely aid and effort; this drug should never be taken but with tho advico aud attendance of a physician. Iron articles will seldom rust if they have been cleansed from oil by hot foda water, and afterward dipped in hot limo water and dried. Collodion, spirits of turpentine, and the common salvo called oxide of zinc, are each an invaluablo remedy to ap ply to burns and scalds before a physi cian can arrive to do better, if better is to be done, and sweet oil and limo water beaten up together make a cooling nnd healing ointment for them as good as nny medicament known. llarer'a Bazar. Keclpp. Stewed Veal. Wash well a knuckle of veal, put on to boil with water enough to cover it and add two blades of mace, salt and a little whole popper; when ten der lay it in a dish nnd strain the broth over it. .-; MrsitnooMS. Cut off the lower part of the stems, peel aud put them into a sauce-pan, with just enough water to keep them from burning; put in a little salt nnd shake occasionally. When ten der flavor them with butter, pepper aud salt. Serve on buttered toast. Br:EF Broth. Take a leg of beef, cut it in pieces; put it into a gallon of water; skim it; put iu two or threo blades of rqacc, some parsley, nnd a crust of bread; boil it until the beef and sinews are ten der. Toast bread and cut into slices; put it in a dish; lay iu beef and pour on tho broth. GixoEtt SNArs. One cup of sugar,one of butter, one of molasses, two eggs, threo pints of flour, one teaspoonful soda, one tablespoonful ginger. Rub the soda into ono pint of flour, nnd mix with tho other ingredients.; thctj add tho rest of tho flour, mold intotikcs the size of marbles, and bake in a moderate oven. Rich Chocolate Pudding. Beat to a cream six ounces of butter, add a quar ter of a pound of grated chocolate, three ounces of sugar and by degrees the yolks of eight eggs, with a quarter of a pound of grated brown bread. Pound together to a powder a quarter of a stick of anilhi nnd eight cloves; add these to tho pud ding, stirring in at the last the whites of the eight eggs beaten to a froth. Butter a mold well, pour in tho pudding and boil an hour and a half. Serve with sauce. Soup Stock. Bone a leg or 6hin of beef weighing ten pounds, saw tho bone in three parts and take out the marrow. Set tho bone to boil in six quarts of water. Put the marrow iuto another snucc-pan with meat, cut up small, add a pound of bacon; turn it well about till it is fried a nico brown, then add the liquor of tho bones, cover up and simmer two hours. Strain it through a sieve nnd set away to cool. The fat mny then be taken off, and it will be reudy for any soup that may be required. Suet Pudding. Three-quarter.'; of a pound of suet, three-quarters of a pound of lino bread crumbs, four ounces of sugar, a pinch of salt, three eggs, ono lemon. Chop the suet up until very liue and add the bread crumbs, the sugar, tho salt, the grated zest of the lemon together with its juice (strained) ana tne eggs, beaten. Mix all the ingredients well to gether and tie in a cloth, allowing suffi cient room for the pudding to swell. Then plunge it into boiling water and let it boil briskly for from four aud a half to five hours or until done. Junket. A plain junket is mnde by warming two quarts of fresh milk until a very little wanner than when just from the cow; pour the milk into a large orna mental bowl or uisu in which it can be brought to tho table, and while tho milk is warm, stir into it two tablespoonfuls of prepared rennet; btir gently for two minutes, then set away in a cold place. It will soon become a solid, sweet curd. Serve by dipping tho curd out in large slices with a small, flat ladle or broad spoon. It may be eaten with rich cream alone, or with cream and powdered sugar. Fortunes in Books. "There is a great deal of money made in books," i-aid a printer, "and a great deal lost. I could name for you a half- dozen persons in Chicago who have made from ijS iO.OiiO to fiiUO.OOtl in a few years publishing or handling books for tho sub scription trade. If a book "catches on,' and the agents who tirst try it are able to make good earnings, tho thing goes liko wildiiro. Agent; bv the hundred then take hold of it, and tho sales in a few months reach tin enormous aggregate. Books which cost but forty or fifty cents to manufacture in quantities nre sold at $ l..riO to $1 to bub.cribers, about one-half ot this going to the agent, ihe tub seriptiou book business has one great ad vantage over the tiy-Ju business. In the latter the lirst edit' jii must be published as a venture, i" ro jurntly the best of judgments on the t-alabilily of a book will ho at fault, and in case of no sale there is an euormons loss. The subscription publi. her prints no more books than are needed, and need never go further than the manufacturer of a few prospectuses if tho workfrhould fall Hat on his La ids. Authors of regular trade subscription books ure J t, its a ride, well paid. Many of the mist buci cssiul wotks are mere compilation! or bodge podges, hastily put togetl'-r under an attractive title and with goodriuting and biudiu;;." t't- Tho largest pearl in tho world was sold in London recently for fliiO. It wns two inches long and four inches in circumfrrcncc,nnd weighed three ounces. "Unit's It.'itr Kenrtvor keeps my lialr In rn"d comliticm." Mrs. S. H. Seoit Stoddard, N. 11. Ayer's Airue 1'nrp. is ft purely vrirelnlilo com round, niiiHsfrrp from (innirernn (truss. A iiotkt, Is talked of in Florida, on Ilia Pf. Pcbnitl.vi liiver, which, with its (.'rounds, will cost $Ki,mU. "Illood Will Tell." Yes. the olil nhR Is rlcliLbut tf th liver ia disordered nnd the blood heroines thereby cor rupted, the b:ur'lilood will tell" In diseases o( 1 ho sk in mill tliront. In tumors nnd ulcers, anil in tubercles III the hours (llr;it ulnues of con snmpMoni, even nlllionirli tho suhtoct ho ln. peended ill n straight llnfl from Hie'hnrd Orut lie Lion, or tho noblest Homnn of Ihotn nil! Kor settinit the liver In ordor no oilier meill. rine in the world eipinls lr. Pierce's "Gulden Jledienl Dice. ivory." Try It-, nnd sour "blood will tell" the story of lis wonderful etllcacy. AsnEitnv I. A nf, a necro of Clny ronnty, Oa., killed a rattlesnake which hnd 'fourteen rat. ties, and a button on its tail aud a whole rabbit inside; "Men must work and women weep, So runs the world away 1" Hut lliey need not woep so much if they no Pr. Pierce's "l-'avorilo Prescription," which cures all the painful maladies peculiar to wo men. Sold hy driiuuisis. Sf.vkh at, trained rats attract crowds In front cf a store at. Danville, 111., by catching Hies la a Miow window. Perfection is attained in Dr. Sago's Catarrh Remedy. Miss Irene Hancock, of Hartow, Fla., killed a bhicksnake seven feet lonir, and Is having its skin nindo into a pair of slippers. Hints to Consumptives. Consumptives should use food as nourishing as can be hnd, anil In a sliapo that will best atrreo with tho stomach and tasto of the pa tient. O ut-door exorcise is earnestly reeommonded. If you nre unablo to lake such cxerelso on horseback or on foot, thnt should furnish no excuse for shutting ynursolf in-doors, hut you should take exercise in a carriage, or in some other way bring yourself ia contact with the open nlr. Medicines which causo expectoration must be avoided. For five hundred years phy sicians havo tried to euro Consumption by uing them, and have failed. Whero there is great derangement of the secretions, with engorgement of air-cells, there is always profuse expectoration. Now Plso's Cure re moves tho engorgement and the derangement of the secretions, and consequently (and In this way only) diminishes tho amount of mat ter expectorated. This inedleino does not dry up a cough, but removes the causo of it. When it is impossible from debility or other causes to exercise freely in the open air, apart infills oieupied hy the patient should he sc ventilated a to ensure tho constant accession of fresh air in uhunilanco. The surface of the body should be sponged as often as every third davwith tepid walei and a little soft-soap. (This is preferable to nny other.) Atter thoroughly (Irving, use lriction with tho hand moistened 'with oil, I'od-Livcr or Olive is tho best. This keens the pices of the skin in a soft, pliable condition, which contributes inuteiiaUy to tho unloadiiiH of waste matter from the system through thii organ. You will please recoiled we cure I hit (1 sense by enabling tho organs of the system to perform their I unction in a mrmalway, or, in other wolds, wc remove obstruction, while the recuperative powers of the system tine me uisease. We will here say a word In regsrd to a cough In Hie fencing stage, where there, is no con stitutional or noticeable disease. A" cough may or may not foreshadow serious evil ; tuke it in its mi, dest form, to say the leust, it is a nu bhiico, and should be abated. A cough is unlike any other symptom of dis ease. It stands a conspirator, with threaten ing voice, menacing the health and vxistenci of a vital organ. Its first approach is In whis pers unintelligible, and at first too often un heeded, but in lime it never fails to mao itaell understood never fails to claim tho attention of those on whom it calls. If you have a rough without disease of th lungs or serious constitutional disturbance, so much the belter, as a few do cs of Piso's Cure will be all you may need, whilo if you ro fat ndvnm-cd in Consumption, several hotties may bo required to effect a permanent euro. Kemni'knble Escape. John Kuhn. of Lafayette, Ind., had a very narrow escape from death. This Is his own story: " One year ago I was In tho last stages of Consumption. Our best physicians gavo my case up. 1 finally got so low that our doc tor said 1 could not live twenty-four hours. My friend then purchased a bottloof l)n. Wm. Haix'b Balsam fou th$ Lunos, which bene filed me. I continued until I am now-In per fect health, having used no other medicine." The farmers, in their swamps, we're sure. Could find the roots and plants that cure; If by their knowledge they only knew For just the disease each ono grew. Take courage now and "Swamp-Hoot" try (for kidney, liver and bladder compluints), As on tills remedy you can rely, Mknsman's I'kitonizki) nKKr TONic.the only preparation of beef containing ils entire tnifru timu iimixrtu. It contains blood-making force.generating and life-sustaining properties; invaluable for indigestion, dyspepsia, nervous 1 roctralion, and nil forms of general debility; aiso, in all enfeebled conditions, whether tho result of exhaustion, nervous prostration, over workor acute disease, particularly if resulting from pulmonary complaints. Caxwell.llH.nrdt Co., Proprietors. New York. So d by druggists. A .lost I.ilieial O llerl The Voltaic Uki.t Co., Marshall, Mich., offer to send their Celebrated Voltaic Hki.ts mid Klectrie Appliances mi thirty days' trial to any man attllcled with Nervous Debility, Loss of Vitality, Manhood, A-c. Illustrated pamphlet ill sealed envelopo with full parlicll lais, mailed free. Wrlle them at once. Hel cf is immediate, and a cure sure. Piso's Remedy for Catarrh. .Mie. So thoroughly litentilled wltli lloixl'i Karsuuarlllu. Is not a catch line only, but Is absolutely true of thle preparation ; and It lt aulolutcly true that It call in neslly be applied only lo Hojii's fiarsaparllla which la the very best tonlo nieillelna and blood puritlcr. Now, reaitpr, prove It. Take a bottle home and measure It contents. You will find ft to hold lot tca-poonfuls Now read the directions, aii'l you will find that the averane dime for persons of dllfer out as'cs ts le a than a teaiMnfnl. Thua econ miy and htrciiKth are peculiar to Hood's Santai urllla. "I l:ae been In pocr health several year, suffer liik' from Indigestion, restlck-ueu lu the nlxht, aud In th morning I would K' t up with a very tired feel liiK. Afn riaklng enly a part ( f the first bottle ol Hood' Karsuparilia I could rest well all nlt,'lit and feel refreshed when 1 woke up. I must say that 11. bill's fer.-aparllla Is all It ii loeomnn nded to be.1' .Mas. II. 1. WiKi.xa, ijiu Kasi Mason blrect, Jack kju. Ml n. Hood's Sarsaparilla Sold liy all drufrg'Ms. (: ; alx for Prepared on'y by C. 1. HUUJ a CO., Apothecaries, LjwkII, Mass. IOO Doses One Dollar hook ACSEvrs waxttkd rr PLATFORM ECHOES r utfu jut, i us ruu head a.vi kkaut, Jit John B. (ioiifh. Ilii !nt and erownin? life work, brim full of thrillinjr lutein tbl. Mimnr and pttuuB. Lin. 'tit, jjure, md good, full of 4 liiL'litt-r ind tt-art ' it ut fAMn aU, To it it fcUtled the I.ifr ari'l Deulh of Mr. (iuuti, .t UrT. I VMAS A Ji lt Ol I . loot A(-inU Wm:lt d.-Meu mid Women. IOO UitVltOft inutllU n nide. Qj'Dxttanct tit Jtimiranff ti w (ire I ftra 't'-r. and J'v rrt'ijhiM, V nt Jul circular to A. 1. WO it I'SllNUiON Ai tO., ilurlturd, louu. Pros Farms SiHK rltio iiitifct H'umiwjul Aui u ullurU I Vi k In A im-rirjfc. rMii-riuiiulftl 1 jiKisiH-i.nu ininlUjf and ii';inufat'tur ln' (ivwt-. rmf h lltruUt.tr .' M.i4;illHi t'nt crop iui.-eilh 1 '. ThoiiMHtifU ot Acrf ul (Mivri n IIM'lll IsH Illl Mil.j'-fl lo (TtM'Ui;,. jkll fill'l h'imftlt-H,t. i-i til f.r uU' ti aduitl tK(ili-r at $;.tn j.r Afi. 1-oiiK t iiuf. i'ui li 1 1 nii U'i l Injr elis cana l. ( lif.tp ruiiroatl ruU . I viy ttitfiuliui t hovvu icttl.-iH. Kur liiitpv f amj'dit l-., -ic , uililn . k t ij.t ill A In 1. M fc LOAN t u., Oj.t-iM Moii-r UtiK-K. iiril vcr.( 'nl. li.ix ,.Jll, CIVEN AWAY ! a in m llt lUrls ti. lat Ufc.Hl.tf Mio IfcliatJ, Uip in bow la v-nr i, i- ti. ut wtiltutf i 'nT..f M 111 "ULU 1-Kfcttll'l. H ; " au I7 "" m:mm lut mTmcj at Urf Ms M1UU Ih mi Uubl 1. "Th Ljft fcM4 tirttM of OM HMntdlk " HuudACU f w Ollbert Mfg. Co., 316-3 IS Broadway, V. V trW. 'l-rtr-'pr.lvliv--' TM flit. V.l,Sti jM-1"- thm H.a,OilnHi..l itrlnta Ti plnlnly on tho ki'Ivhrh on V "I ivronuRiiiP if inir l)nNM I.ltilnirM oniprmy oil J1 I'vorv yiwii t.f"Hoo!fl wp make. We nnTinMim'(l forthchfMiffu of tho (trfasninkern nml liiiilonof thl country an oxint of thlrliM'ii t houmiml (lollant in Tor Oils iniu hliwM hut they mnv know how to tell irnnulno kooiIh from th Imitation. Wo linvr run In tho buy Moaim, nkht and ilnv. five of lhro mn-hiii'A, an.i one nor tht-n.Mtmrhln.'Hcan print AS aid pir niimito. Now, wo nhniiht llkotoknow liow mam nohool kitIh and hnvn thoro ar In tho IT. M. and ( aiinilu, undor 17 vonra of ao, who ran toll n ontly In v iimuv yril those tlvo mi.clHnoB ran iTint In tho A nv.lrkinn tiavn in A yonr. For every loy or k'lrl who will until u tho rorroot answer, with 4ontfl in Mnmp to pay pmtiw MM parkuiK. wo will niiiil kii lU 0110 oloant linportitl rtlzo IMtntoKraph, worth 2.V., of tho Thror l.lttlr Mnlrift from Srlinnl. Wo will nl -o mall fro to nny addrrxH, on roci-lpt of U ., a Mis huy ok tmk I'nitkd ntatk. oontalninfi: 'i'A pKfrt, hv Kim-ry F. I'hthU, hIvIiir nil Importunt ovi nu from MM to ms ami well worth niHiiy tmina llio prim. Thin hook kIiouMI o thott-xt lunik ftr Rohoold ami In the tlamlK of all tonoht'ra nnd lu overv llhrary In tho Ian I. I'lonnu show this to your frhool mntos ami frlohtl. pot HELICAL VICTCEYI Curra Iirlirhts' Dlsrnso, rntnrrli of thn III111M1T. Torpid I.Ivor. It dissolves (Jnll-Htonpsnrid tiruvcl. SYMPTOMS and CONDITIONS of Urlno for wlileh thin ltuiuudy alio 11 Id be taken. Penldlnir Plotpntro Illorid-tlnfrod I)iilstio Allninieii tri'k-liiKt Itropslcnl lirihlilinir Milky-plnl; lloadueho Vreotient Costivem Itoneaeho Nervous ltelish-diirKl ITrlr-neid rVltllnpn Cntnrrhnctir Itnekneho S(rveiieho rhosphntiv Itud-tusto 'otil-Urrath (Inll-colo-ITISASPKCII'IC. Evtry dot fott to I A spof . ltellevea and CurosfnfrrnnI Pllmffever! jt'unkor.Dyspeiwiu. Anivtnin, Mnlnrin, Fever jiiim (rue,fseiirniKin,i(neiimntlKin, Knlnriro- tneutot tno I'rostuto tiliind, Hoxual tVrak ticss, Ppprmutorrlm-annd (iout. 1 1 Kllinliintos Illood linpurltlos, Pomfuln. Rrysimdas, Suit-It Ileum, Syphilis, IMinpluH. llloU-ltes, Kover-sores, nnd Citneor-liilnta. It la n most Wonderful Appetizer. Huil(Uiip luiekly a Knn-Uewn (tiKtltiitlon. t tifTell yiui p nelirllbors nil n limit, it- Pricr 25c, $1.000 bottles $5.00.i lirl'repnrnd nt Pr. K llmpr'n Dispensary, iiiiKiuiinu)ii,i. ., u. f. i. Invalltltf (iuiile tit Health (Scut lYrt.) All letters of lnfnlrv promptly snswereil. soi.n iiv ai.Is tun ;ciis rs. ASK FOR THE L. DOUGLAS It pit material, perfect fit, equals any 15 or i6 ihoe. every pair warranted. Take none nnloif nampeil " W. h. DihikUa' $3. nu Shoe, Warranted.' CongreM. ituiion ami Luce. j;oy rrk for the Vt J.. Dtniglna' frvj.OO Shoe, tame lyu-i h Ik,, fttlkl If Villi r.utu.t ?H tlione ihooi from dal frs.Binri aihlreaton nottal rurrt tn W 1 .. llniluliul. .V1 IX ' I Numan's Lawn Pump, Paieutc-l Julr !t0, 18TH, August 19. mod January 19, 1HN1 A jwrlect Pump; uaril by Kkrnri, Uftrdeurri, Hootkffprt, Hbore-keepert. LlTcrvnieD, UruxxUu, Hot Um, iUetniiUU, plunibert, ko. Par a blf pro til aod till! evcrTwhrrm on Itn mrriu. Aitcnti wntrJ Id rry enunty. tt ari'l couoiT rich It for Prlr $!.(, prcM eharfa prilit by ui. For mcrptre rlrruiar and urina to ffrnu. aJ-iroi, KLBKL & CO., Clinton. ). I'lmiiles. niolrhes, Senly or Oily HUln, llleinlslies nml nil Skin IH.enses ure:l ami I oiiiiilexloii llcnutlfled by Beeson's Aromatic Alum Sulphur Soap. ftoldtiy DruKidsls or ""nt hj mall on reeelpt or iiSceuu Ijy V.I. Hit KYIIOI'TKI., Mhihi Im liirer, -MS Nonli I'rontst., l'hlladolplda. Pa. J A M Svl!'.Ee:rJME L L Y inritur, I'iUnuii, Piesei ves, C'unniiiK and H ritiii-tiiiiliiiiK o" fanners' wives, inuileu Free witheverv dune p ek of rail Turnip Seedtuliv kmil.l ir-l'APtlt Or' WINTKH HKl'.iS TliKutV.N IN. AIKs HAS LEV, Keed uruwer, Madlnon, Ark. Salary and Expenses! M HttV 1-OltTAlll.K I'UKI'K PI BP. It putnotlt flirii, wnNhtMl f"HK, window, U'., irtiikleti laiviM, rtrtU, viulfiia, kll H buift. in-M'ts in plant, tnt, I !, Uui out btmU, hit Hh(-n hn-liouwi. Tlmmn water M ftyt (ia ralluiia a inmutt', it lifttlt'tt). I'rlt-t, $i. lo inirudint it will mhh li'i'lpl. AftLM TfcD on Milm v ami i-kiu'Mwh. Kjun plf itt-e tii uk I,- A- 1" til'tlli4. Jrlti Wiiidhiuii, Uaiue. (UHt wntat all tiat rAii. In lime. Hold l aaiw pfMMi. uh hv dnik'triatB, . - - ..n.--. u..a. ,-... ri iAl'l., HA.MIS, t'fctl, CST'M' nJ ll ll.elr lnip.rt-liuiii, Includlor Farld, l,vl,.r.n,ia, Supctltuodi H". "" '', l..l w.ru. Mutk. v.-k)M. Hid nod, Acn., !"1 Blf i 11,-,.. S.-.r, Dill" ar.il IhctP IrfS'mMI, Dr. JOHN H. WOOOBURV, . a7 K. r,iHl. llli.nT, . t. Ert'bM 1". fcfl. fPbo- 2P0M.ARS earh for Arm and ler'f ttV. I .Mi Jl Mill VS. Virant.-t livn tr. bri.ton In.lil it-. Mrrd. itii vdirm lKiid Mi 4 ' 9 Orn,i..l''ve" - ( n Miium. W rile I'll I Itr. h. rlr rnlr itU l'-' leiilnioiiiKl- r..iil fwtry -.(. IpfcAI. l'AVt k eo. ,4 n.nunruHI(hWa. 'ivoRYTr.nTnDMin.rD PEARL1UU1UI UIIJJUll Keep inn Teeili Pei'leel and (iiinis llrnhliy. rtl to SS n ilny. Samples worth l.g) FREE. tJin-K n. t un(t-r the hors's feet. Atldrvhi 111 UP Illltw 'H.tl'jSsKiTV I'.KIN liot.PUll, Holly, Mleh. o a ip mm rx ohtalned. .Send staniiifor LI A I KiSM ro Invent ir' Oulde. U Lmi- HAM, Patent lawyer, WaaliillKtou, 1). C. 1)alms' SiisiuessColleuf-l'ldlailclplila. Ternil only Hi. .iilualU'U luruifilu-d. V rite for circulars CI V V II P- A kl K gl'im fur Tror. UowlT'I N llluatrabril 1 ' H'k u lri Mal.ms. Se Dulm.ii. Di Mauits kLuiuiiS, tic. tuu iivll IU adaf. l'rf.XUUUl,t la.lanaii.U. Tt.ZjOITLTjTX'Z' Magazine B ri- & 7 .a "V V VI I "STTA STEP IN AOVANCC p-yyy y of all others. A apOOry Ilower prices. wAiTEtf0 . K2&)L2L full PAfiTicuiartt.iwaT yA2cyr1 BEIN BROS. A CO. (vl"''a-d NEWARK, N.J. SMr I ti l'..r larL-a or mtall z'rr all slaaa. Tha atroiin.t .hwllcjr rllta nada. Fartact acrM-y cjaranlci, a:id ll.e oaly alMlulvl al rilla uu li. Uiarktl. I!AI.I.Ai;l GALLLHV, SIHIITINd AM TH1KT HIKI tx. worlj ranowocH. BnJ for lii,.,.jun..tu.. MAUI. IN llltri Jl cm;u unless j)n't waste yr.ur money on I ' i., . .! au it. a uw.i; . tM.lut-ly tf.ii. r an.l r tkuik VIHI. 1 Ak lnr tho "F1MI H KAMI" it'RaSway's 11 0 Si. UI. Relief In from on to twentr minutes, nsrer falls to re lieve PA 1 N wllh one thorounh apnlleatlnn. No terhnw violent orpxenieintlnn llio pain, tn ltiimi rustle, neilrldilen. llillrm, Crippled, Nervill, Nu ralL'le. or prolrsl''(l with (lies niay suffer, Kw It It 1 I IV f . A nr.m.r mil anwiu.-" BOWEL COMPLAINTS, DYSENTERY, Diarrhoea, Cholera Morbus. It will. In a few minutes, when taken Internally, aeeonllnn ttidlrertlous, t'flrai Crumps, Kpaania, Hour Ntomiieli, llelirlhlini, Mc'k lleailaelie. HUMMhl COMPLAINT, Ulnrrlm-n. Hysfillry, CoUo, Wlud In the Uowela, aud all Internal pains. THE TRUE RELIEF. RADWAY'R nKanVKFt.lRFlH th only remf1ti1 !Tviit In vniriiA that will In-lantly ptn rain. It In- miiiiii,t rrni'Tra nnii bimui rurrn iini'iii' ' lrk or ticrvmiH, TiMtharh, NouralRln, Nrrvoiina nnt Nlrei.lnHAnt'HrV KliciinintNm, l.unl'R'0, l'fttna and Vr Aknpnn In tbt Ha k, Siilnn or K ilm-ys, P.ilnt artinml tin Mvcr, l'ltMirlnv. Kwrllln of the Joint. Unrulm, Hrulacii. TUtra nT InaiM'ta, and Tain ot all klmlM, HA DW A Y'H HKADY kKMKK will atTirl lm. int'tlialo osi ami lt coittUiut'tl ua fur f ew dajt rtt(H't a pcrmrnt euro, MALARIA IN ITS VARIOUS FORKS. FEVER AND AGUE. Thw In not a rmodlnl a iron t In the world that will cme fever ond Akup ami nil other Walftrhma, Ifnif. Scarlet and ot Imr l'i vrrn inUU 1 by KAI'WAY'S l'JULSJuo quirk as RAILWAY'S HhAKV hKLIEK. I'ricr l'lflr Crnta. Hold by Dragslaia. DR. RADWAY'S (The Only (irnnlnc) EARSAPARILLIAH RESOLVENT I The Great Blood Purifier. For (Mirror nil rhronlo dlaoas, Borofula, Plood Tnlnta, S.vplitlltlcCuinplalnti, (.Nuirtmnptloii, Gland ular lUst'iiho, Vli'ers, ('hroiilc Rncumutlxm, Kryiilp pla. Kl.tin'V, lUaddiT and I.ivor I'omidalnU. lya-i- jh-Ih, Atlw-tloiia of tlicl.unuH and Throat, purl tie . tho UiocmI, rt'urlng liealth aud vlgoiv . o'liia hiciiv, Aftrr a fow rtavn' wo of tho Farnaparilllan. bffiwiM rltnrand hraut iful. riniplra, ItlntrhcH, IWiu-b Kpotg and skin KruiMtrn nr removed j Hit re a and Ulcer aHn cured, l entous auflerlim from Kernfiila, Kriip tivo lim iiea of thr ryra, mouth, rnra, leg, throat and (tlanda, thnt have accumulated nnd nproad, elihrr fnnn uncured dlHraa or mercury, may ret f upon a cure If thn hnriqiiai llllnn in continued a fcuflicient limo to make Ha linprcoalou on thKyslein. Knld by Druuulrtta. 91 per Bottle. DR. RADWAY'S PILLS The Great Liver and Stomach Rem 3d? For the euro of all dlnordera of Hie Rtomaeli, T,lTr, Pewela. KldneVH. Itlaitder. Nervou. I)iieae, Luhh (if Appeltte, IP-ailaelie, (.'trntlveneiia, lmliL-entinn, 111 ImiNiifaa. revel-, Intlatlilnatien of Din llnweln. Pile, and all deraiiKeineiitH ot Hie Internal Viaeera. Tnrw Iv veis- lalile. cniilHtiilnu no nivrcury, inlncrali or deleterious dru'.. l'l leii HA cent er box. Bold liy all drurel.ta. Il-Seiid a letter .tamp to l It . It A 1) V A Y ('llnNiiilla linen firert, New 1 ork, for "X'aUo aud True." IK Hl ltK TO OF.T RAIIWAY'S. N Y N V-'iS 1 5 TONi '9 tafAratal enm r-o WAGON SCALES, Iron Lavrrt, fttl IVaHaf( Bum mm Jo.N M fc pti taa tVlaVt ftw tf PHc Llit mniiM.vthU PT"r aildr.. JONES OP IINQHAMT&Hfl Jl. No Rope to CutOff Horses' Manes Ut'tonri-e I 'Kl' lit KK' II Ij TKIt nnu ii it 1 if E r. :oiiininotl cjumt b all MK'd br any (iomw. Smpla ii'iinT to any ptiri or ). is. rrt, on r-HM'i'iorji. is n i ira..HaMit'rr ii irawarn ana iiarni ienitrs, Bpkclal di. ount to Ui iradw. be ml for I'rloo 1.1-1 Korlie?tr N. V CQIMSUiV3PT10rj 1 harm a poaltlv. raiuedy for th. abor. dlaaaa. ; br It. na. thoDaanil.crc.aAaol tho wmac kind and of leaf landing ha v. bpf n t-uif d. In (load, .oatronata mr fauft In lla.mcarr, that t will aandTIVO HOTT1.K8 (HUH. KKlhorwllha VAI UAHI.GTKEATlKKon HllBdlMU. Ul fcu.uffaror. tllrnireaaand P. O. addn aa. Ull. T. A. ULOCl'H, Ul 1'otrlSu, tiaw Tork. your own Bona, Mp.l. ,lr,lt. Itha.ll. lO R A HAM Flour nun I'nra !m iuet J lyviv r ivt rijij tK. IMlanu'. 1'uieiil). V1M aa rant, mum maitM In lrntnir trv.K fli.o rowitt Mll.l.H and FAIIM Kl-m MI1.1.N. Clrciilnra and Teal Inionlalt ami uuapiillraliua. WIL.NOM II UOM., Kualoa, linn orpiiihe Ulll HABIT CURED. A NKW III K i ll OI mi. j. v, 1IOFIOIAN. Jen.rou, WlM'oua.u AXLE BEST IN THE WOULD I irOM th o-nHn. Sol I Rvrrrvrli're. a month ivc'AMVAtui ana fako raeri for Ho wet FaTcxt ai.jlt abi.i Hlidino Window tScasRxa. Heat aeliniit goods over offered to Acnu Ifrina and Outfit raaa. U UK I.N t llOWI M CO.. AUKUJIA, Mtf. Hcilnlilo Kalfauien to Travt und rtfll t thn trade our OI l)i'atd CiKiirn. Tiibnrcn iuiiri'llra, iVc. Idbi-ral arrniiK -uicuta. halnrr 01 C'uiMinlKHlim. Addn a liniiicdiutily, NF.W YOltfv II A V A N A ( KiAU 4 .. Nit. 1 Fourth Av.,N.V. !U Ilabtt, Qalrkly and Ptnln- ly curodai Uouie. CurrcBpotidetica hul lulled and fi4 trtut of cure eut h'turat tnveatiatora, TiizllruiHi Uimiht CorrAXir, Lafayette, lud. Pensions toSoldlnraAHalra. Send.raTS for Clreulara. COL. U lUXia. HAM. AU, WaalllUiiluu. IX a SURE CURE for PYHPKPSIA A I.NDI. (IKSTION. Addrena J. JIL. KlibLLV.CIiarlutti;, N. U Olty'c DsBI Great Goul and EJlcSlI S rlBlSi Rheumatic Remedy. Oval Hun KI.IIOI l-uund, 30 et. PENHYROVAL PILLS "CH ICH ESTER'S ENGLISH." The Original untl Only Genuine. life an4 alwayi KftlaMp. nnaraof worthleM lioituoaa loiPnvM4i u LADIES. Aak Jur irQA;ifUt fut ( 'hloheal.'r'a Fncltu ud tan mo ihr, or ii.cioif 4a, (lami'-iku u fr (.artit.ulr .i(r b riura Mali NAME PAPER, hlchvat.-ribrmi.ttl u., MiUiourVur,l'kUad., Pa. laid by OrucuUta fTcry where. Atk for "Chlrkr f. Kit ""inTroyHl rIP-. mo oilier. ii hat taken th l-ad in the salri ui llut cls of remedici, and ha yivrM Imuit uaivcual wti.Uc tlwB, MURPHY BROS., ftii. Jet Ohm won tlic Uvor of the public and now ranks uioii; the leading Wdl- cine (j( the oilii"m. a. iu. bMi nr. llradjord. Pa, Sold by Ini, KliU. I TO ft F ATS. aaaa ncrieuira. rv Cincinnati,! WlAWa iVCL'' A llfocitttritaca. Iirwarkable and qutck ooraa. Trial paV ach. be lid Mrr,p tur atatvled paMleuir. A44r. Dr. WARD A. CO., Lonsu-VA, mo. BEST IN THE WORLD. Rifle. A 11 .11 (4 CO., Sew ilaven, Conn. a irnm or r'H iwr mat. Tlia Flsll UKAM) hLirKEia ckuov, anil will a.ep you Ui v in the lianlc.st atenu lUiitl alul l.lf no oilier. If ' your aort aepper do to A .1 -lnWMt V" na Si K.. mwm Kllatav OP m umM-nka its ran if? a ri IV nn ( LM nj -k. m $10Q OFP Wft... Is Tiio Best Will f i Waterproof Coat m ia tJid Era Mate.- 1
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers