CURIOSITIES IX CRIMES. THE WEIGHT OF IXDIHECT PROOFS CONSIDERED. Far More Convincing in Soino Cnses I linn That Which I Direct Xo-tr-tl Insiancps Uocallcil. It is a common error, said it lawyer to ft reporter for tin: Jeruld, to suppose tint circumstantial eriilencc is of an in ferior niulity to direct evidence. This falhicy is nuich insisted upon in criniinnl (kfrnsL's, and there are innumerable cases in tl.e book which apparently sustain the idea. Vet the idea is wroncr, a' n very slight consideration of the nature of the testimony will show. Indirect proofs of crimo have been far more convincim; in f nnc cases than diret t proof in others. Take the case of Professor Webster in 5 iston thirty-six years ao, tried for the murder of J)r. I'arkman. Webster was n urofcsor in the medical departing nt l Harvard University, and whs indelited to I'arkman, who was a Shylock and a mofit persistent and annoying creditor. V,e!sti'r was extravagant and lived be yond his means, lie could not pay, but he made an appointment for I'arkm.in to c;Ul at his roo:ns in the college. The latter wa seen poinar, to the college, but was never seen alive afterward. A week Inter there was found in the furnace con nected with the prisoner's laboratory in the college fused with the sla and cin ders a great number of human bones, n block of mineral teeth and a small quan tity of melted gold. Other bones were discovered in a vault under the prisoner's rooms, and the entire trunk of a human body was found in a tea-chest, imbeddpd in a quantity of tea which bad belonged to Webster. These different parts, when put together by anatomists, went to make up the body of a person of Dr. Parkman's ago, sixty years, and the form of the re constructed body had the peculiarities shown to bo possessed by him. Jvo duplicate bones were found, over and above what was necessary to compose one body. The remains were further shown to have been separated by a por ;son possessed of anatomical skill, but not for anatomical purposes. Three dentists testified to the mineral teeth as being made for Dr. Purkman, and that the amount of gold found was about the quantity used in a plate. Webster made solemn assertion of his innocence, state ! that Parkman had called and that he had paid him und he had cone awav. But the jury convicted him, and he wa sen tenced to bu hanged. On the eve of his execution he confessed his crime. In another case of a murder by a pis tol shot it was proved that the wadding of the pistol found in the wound was a portion of a letter belonging to tlio per son accused, of which tho other part was found in his pocket, and that some prop erty of the murdered person was found on the prisoner, lliese circumstances clearly proved and unexplained are just f .1 i . . . . ! e as convincing as mc uireci luswmuiiy 01 a person who saw the murder. There are instances where accusin g cir cumstances envelope an innocent man, and plenty of cases occur where testi mony has been fabricated, both direct and indirect, to convict tho innocent. The administration of justice is not per fect, and the occasional condemnation of the innocent is an evil that will happen under all systems. Uut by the safe' guards thrown about a prisoner wo have reduced the chances of such an event to the minimum. Lord Brougham was once asked if circumstances could lie. "Yes," nc replied, "it tJw witnesses lie." A young man was accused of a crime, Three wituesses swore positively that they saw him commit it at a particular place and time, lie did not cross-examine them, and ho introduced no wit nesses, lie asked the Judge to turn to the court's record of tho day on which the alleged crime was committed. The record showed that on that day tho prisoner was being tried for another crime concerning which he had proven an alibi. He was acquitted. That was a case where one circumstance, tho fact of hi presence in court, overturned the . ciroct testimony of three witnesses. There is a grim old story told in the ancient law books of 11 murder commit ted at an inn. Three guests were enter wined one wintry night. Two were friends traveling together; the other was an elderly gentleman of wealth, accom panicd by his servant. The two friend occupied one room, and the other gen tleinan an adjoining room. In tho nigh tue two menus were aroused by groans in tho adjoining chamber. Striking a light and hastening to the ro' mthcy saw the landlord standing by tho bedside with a bloody knife iu his hand, and on the bed lay tho elderly gentleman leu with a wound in his throat. 'lhe land lord was arrested for the murder. lie declared his innocence, and said that he h id heard groans, and, fearing robbers he had armed himself with a knife, und had just reached the room when tho two gentlemen entered. 1 lis assertions proved of no avail, and he was finally convicted of lhe murder ami executed. Prior to his execution he asserted his innocence, but said that he had gone to th room fo tlio purpose of committing? the murdc ai;d robbing his guest, but leached there just as some one else had perpetrated tho crime ana escaped, btrange at this con li .ssion was, it turned out to be true Yens aiterwarU the servant of tho mur (len d man confessed on his deathbed tha he had murdered his master and robbed h'm. The old law repoiter sums up th ca e with tho formula: "Thus the inno cen e of tho other man was completely v nan utcj." One of lialn: s stories tun.s upon incidents of a similar kind In that ery ancient case where Uenja nun wys arrested for ovine in possessio of his brother Joseph's silver cup, th brethren might have had a hard time of it in explaining away tho ugly circum stance had not Jos-eph revealed himself But such circumstances, striking a1- they are, do not militate against the valuo of circumstantial evidence. They are sim ply warnings not to draw too large an in lercnco l:om single facts. ( ircuinstanc nr.: f icti which sla id around the fact w S'.-ck to prove, and are more or less con nectfd wish it. When these are prove dearly aiid unmistakably, as in the Web ster cao and in innumerable others, thi Ijeco.ne ronlirni it'u.n strong as proof of holy writ. It worse than folly to sa that such evidence i not of the ver highest character. L'hianjo JLrald. A slove must be Ions or it is nottii SCIENTIFIC AM) INDUSTRIAL. A botanist has attempted to estimate the numocr of seods found upon singlo specimens of wmc of tho most obnoxious weeds of this country. l"or shepherd-", purse lie makes the number 37,500 per phut; dandelion, l.l(H; wild pepper gras, 1,400; wheat thief, 7.000; com mon thistle, C5,:!'iii; camomile, 15,020; butter weed, 8,587; rag weed, 4,:!G(i; common purslane, 3Sy,800; common plantain, 42,200; burdock, 33,00. The latest advance in astronomical pho tography is a seric of surprising photo graphs of the planet Saturn, made by tho Henry brothers of Paris. They show the two principal rings with the division be tween them, and their marked contrast in brightness. Th? "crape" ring is also perceptible, and on the ball of the planet itself the belts and dark polar cap. The planet is now in almost the best possible position for observation, with the rings open to tho wide-t, po thnt all the features of the splendid system are fully dis played. On the eastern coast of tho Caspian Sea a curious phenomenon is in progress. The Kaia Bogha. is an estuary nearly separated from the main body of the sea v a bank through which there is an ulet. The evaporation from this gulf is so great that a current continually sets in .oin the t aspian: and as there is no re- urn current the water of the gulf becomes more and more saliferous, and a deposit f t-alt is in course of formation. In time this gulf will be cut off from the Cas pian, and will then be dried up and be come an extensive salt-bed. Recent experiments have been made with a view of recovering tho tin from waste and scrap tin plates by means of an electric proceR, which u also said to be applicable to the treatment Ojf tailings, ag and many kinds ot rctuse. Uvna- mos are used to generate the electric cur rent, which is passed through the solu tion in which the tin cuttings or mining tuffs are deposited. These are con nected with the po-itive pole and tho tin withdrawn from the tin cuttings, or tho gold withdrawn from other substances which may be under treatment. In Guatemala the alligator pear is the most highly prized of all their fruits, and tastes somewhat like an exquisite pear and cantelopo combined. Plums grow n endless quantities upon trees without leaves, the red fruit sticking on tho bare wood as if pinned on. Oranges, lemons and limes bear all tho year. The guava, from which a rich jelly is made in the West Indies, grows wild. There is a tree which bear a vegetable ego; in great irolusion, the substitute lor hen labor being about tho size of a genuine article and answering the same pui pose in many forms of cookery. The sea is the tomb of moulds and of all aerial germs. Near continents the land-winds always drive before them an atmosphere laden with microscopic life, but at lifty or eventy-tive miles lrom the coasts this impurity has disappeared, ac cording to M. M. Jlorcau and Miqucl. Pestilential atmospheres are rapidly puri fied by the sea, every expanse of water of a certain breadth thus forming art im passable obstacle to the spread of epi demics, bea winds sensibly cleanse tne air of the land over which they pass, this purification being recognized in France as far as Paris. It is well understood that Great Britain and other parts of northern Europe owe mucti to tne warming influence ot the LJulf Stream. The extent of the effect has been given in the calculations of Dr. James Croll, who has found that the amount of ho it conveyed northward in the Atlantic by this stream is equiva lent to 77,470,5"i0,O!)0,O0O,OOO,O0O foot pounds of energy per eiay, which is equal to all the heat received by I,5ii0,ti:i5 square miles at the equator, and more heat than is conveyed by all the air cur rents. The heat of the Arctic seas and North Atlantic would be diminished that much by the stoppage or diversion of the great ocean river. A Marvelous Escape. A curious adventure, as well as a mar velous escape, was that of Mr. Gerald McCarthy, of this city, who was recently carried to the bottom of the Atlantic in the hold of a capsicd vessel. Mr. Mc Carthy, who is a member of the senior class at the Deaf Mute College at Ken dall Green, and who has already attained a considerable reputation and standing as a botanist, has been collecting plants on the pine barrens and banks of North Carolina. Wishing to visit Roanoke Island in order to carry on his work there, ho recently took passage in a schooner thither bound. The schooner, a small vessel in the ser vice of a picnic party from Roanoke, was to have sailed homeward nt 7 o'clock in the evening, but it was 11 before the crew came ou board, when they appeared to be highly intoxicated. They set sail in the teeth of a JIatteras storm, and when well out from land they began to quarrel over the contents of a jug they had brought with them. Meanwhile the vessel was struck by a gust from the cape, and, from want of proper manage ment, capsized completely, and tank to the bottom when about two miles oil the coast. Ir W119 ubout midnight, and thi cabin having been given up to the gay party, Mr. McCarthy had gone down into the hold for shelter, lie was doz ing there on a box, and, being deaf, was not aware of any disaster until he sud denly found himself pitched headlong to tho opposite side of the hold. Instantly compretiending the situation, ho jumped for the hatchway and succeeded in grasp ing tho casing, but was torn away by the inrushing torrent and carried to" the depth of tho hold, where ho was bunged against the side of the vessel with such force as to nearly dislocate his shoulder. Thanks to h'u familiarity with water, being a man of teiii eriuiee principles and an expert swimmer, ho realized the fu tility of attempting to e-cape before the stoppage of the current, and so remain ing quiet where he had been dashed, he caiefully husbindid the little air in his lungs until he judged the inrush of w.der had ceased. By this time he was r.ear.y st i angled, but with no little presence of mind ho gioped his way to the hatch way, and, diving through, rose to the suifacj none too soon to cat;h tho air. .Many of the party were drowned. After swimiiiin',' about and clinging to the wreckage for half nil 1 our, ho was picked up in a siiiaU boat and taken to Ko.ii.oke Island, where he was hospitably enter tained. Washiit'j'on Slur, i SELECT SIFTINGS. Among English sovereigns the title of Majesty was first assumed by IIcnr VIII. The Medical School of Japan, whicl last year had 972 students, is 1,1H yi ars old. Criminals were sometimes placed un der a hurdle in lioinc, and crushed b the weight of stones thrown upon it. The ancient Romans spent enormous sums in biiaging pure water to their towns and making delightful baths. They were also great travelers, and made some of the lincst roads the world has ever seen. The crater was a capacious bowl or vessel, containing win? and wa'er mixed together, out of which the drinking gob lets were filled and banded round to each individual at a Roman table, for the ancients very Seldom dranl: their wine w ith meat. Probably the largest city on record i Henderson, X. C. It was intended to extend tlio limits 1,00 ) yards in each direction from the depot, but the printer male the bill iad 1,000 miles, and the bill passed the Legislature without the error being noticed. In olden times bells were supposed to have certain supernatural powers. They were ued to disarm Satan wheu he vis ited pious communities on earth. On their holy sounds the souls of the dead were wafted to heaven. When the French took Zweibrucken in 1077, we read that they tried to melt one of the local church bells, when it sweat drops of blood, which one of thcolliccrs wiped oil with a hand kerchief so that he could show the stains to King Louis in proof of his assertions. In the reign of Edward IV., of Eng land, a law was passed beginning this way: "The commons, as well men as women, have worn and daily do wear excessive and inordinate array and ap parel, to the great lispleasure of Hod, and impoverishing of this realm of Eng land." It goes on to command that common laborers and servants and their wives are never to wear clothes costing more than two shillings a yard; nor were they to wear girdles of silver. Another law was passed forbidding wives to get their veils and handerchiefs too line. Diseases Due to Occupation. Among the finest specimens of our race in lorm, proportion, agility, keen ness of sight and hearing, vigor and health, are the tent dwellers of Arabia. Civilization, with the aid of !-cience,may gain greaii triumphs over diseases, but a large number of disease are its own pro duct. We call attention to a few. One of the needs of civilization is luci fer matches. The old sulpher match is now a relic of the past. But the manu facture of the former makes large &Tr mands on the health of the employes. The phosphorus tends to cause in many cases a decay of the bones of the jaw! A physician in London, whoso practice in tho neighborhood of threo mate! factories, had threo cases of the kind within six months. One young woman who had been employed simply in put ting matches in the boxes.said that five of her mates were similarly affect' d. If it is true, as generally thought, that the poison reaches the jaw through a decayed tooth, stringent legislation should en force a frequent medical examination of the teeth of the operatives. (Jive us .good matches, but don't let us feel every time we scratch ono that our convenience costs the health of girls in their teens. We need white lead to protect and beautify our dwellings. 15ut to say nothing of painter's colic, tho manufac ture of ihi pigment ruins the health ol tho workmen, as a rule, in about six years. Lead is a cumulative poison; i.e., being with dilliculty eliminated, its ef fects steadily accumulate in the sy-tem, and occasion most painful and intricate ailments. A fresh set successively pa-ses through the same process of physical ruin. Since facts seem to show that a milk diet renders the business safe, leg islation should provide that the employes have this benefit of this knowledge. In mills for the manufacture of woolen and cotton goods, and for the grinding of bark (fortanningi, and of tobacco (for snuff), and in establishments for filing copper and iron, lloating particles enter and irritate the bronchial tubes and the lungs, causing grave pulmonary diseases. Tna employes should bo taught to breathe only through tho nose, and to wear over the latter an efficient air strainer. All sedentary employments tend to cause constipation, headaches, dyspepsia, internal congestions and to lower the health generally. Tho most should bo made of opportunities for exercise in leisure hours, holidays, and vacations in such a way as ;o purify tho blood and invigorate tho system. Youth's Cum yaniun. Extraordinary Intoxication. mere are people who imagine that a man can only get intoxicated on spiritu- i: ..... i ? ? . ous liquors, out una is a great error, The Saunterer is acquainted with a mem ber of the dramatic profession who is i sti let temperance man as lar as tho im bibing of tiro water is concerned. Ho tastes not and handles not. eve:thc less he is often seen in a state of exhila ration which the suspicious would cer tainly say was the result of looking upon the wine when it. was red, or of touching his lips to a tumbler when tho smell was on the rye. When he finds himself in a party of friends who are paitaking of in. toxicating beverages he drinks nothing but water, but as the talk becomes ani mated and somewhat incoherent he finds himself in the condition of his fel lows, and his utterances are not a whit more sober than theirs. llo actually gets tight on conversation. How would the prohibitionists go to work to cure an evil of this kind? JSoalon Budget, ' Imunrinnl to Merrliuut Tuilnrs. M. von kulU-rdr Co., mk et-s.-ors lo Ki ller 4 Kiilil, at tlie old Cloth House-, corner Aim ul V illiain Sis., New York l ilv, are ilniint un ex tensive tiuMiit-Hs by means of lurnisliiiiK to the Merchant 'J'uiluriiiK liaiie tluoiitjhiiiit lhe. fni. ii t,.li'teii,' complete sample collections of their Woolens in mjusou, and receiving and eiocutniK orders received through the sum. plcji. Whenever a style lias been wild out iney notify their ciisioincis to that, diet t, bo that the parties holding their samples are al ways properly informed as to wmch stvlct I iiev can oiler to their patrons. The Merchant lailori thus placed iu u xiitiou to show a laruo variety of styles without cncii mbcriiiK himself with a large stock. We understand that any Merchant Tailor desiring such collec tion of ftamplcs can have same sent free of charge. Address Messrs. M. von Keller b Co. HOUSEHOLD AFFAIRS. He-Warmed Dinheo. Cold meats and fish, in the opinion oi many people, may be made more accept able on their second appearance upon tin table than when first served, but the cost of properly preparing palatable dishes from such material is a great one, and constitutes one of tho chief excellences of French cooking. The cook should know that dark meats and game should always be warmed with brown gravy, and that fKh, poultry and white meats require white sauces. All warmed-over dishes should bo quickly cooked and promptly served. Meats are best re warmed as croquettes, patties, salmis, curries, hash, scollops and fricasscs. Game and poultry can bo re-warmed in auy of the above ways, and are especially flciptable hi-hly seasoned and broiled. Vegetables may also bo made a second time by re-warming in gravy, frying in butter or minced with meat. Cold pud ding may be sliced, dipped in beaten ccrg, fried and sprinkled with sugar. Cold rice, oatmeal or hominy may be re dressed in many ways, as can many other articles for family dessert. ltccipes and Hints. A piece of zinc put on the live coals in the stove will clean out the stove pipe. If roses are w ilted before they can be placi d in water, immerse the ends of the stalks in very hot water for a minute or two and they will regain their pristine freshness. The best way to brighten a carpet is to put a half tumbler of spirits of turpen- Uzio in a basin of water and dip your broom in it and sweep over the carpet once or twice. Prettv lamp shades are mado of lace, wide enough to cover the globe. Draw tho lace at the top around a wire ring of the proper size and lino it with colored silk of thin quality. When your red tablecloth is too much worn in snots to use any lonccr on tne table cut the good parts in tho shape of napkins; lringo them out for about an inch; if inclined to ravel easily, overcast them, and it will be many a long day be fore any member of your family will dis cover that they arc not regular 'Doughten" fruit napkins. Mrs. M. E. T. gives tho following recipe for okra soup: Make the stock Tor the soup from a shin ot bcei the day before it is to be used. While boiling put in an onion, half a green pepper and a small piece of boiled ham. Strain the soup and Bet it in n cool place. The next day set the stock on tho lire and add thirty-six okra pods cut in thin slices and six tomatoes. Let all simmer for three hours and serve. A delicious omelette may bo made by this recipe: Into a quarter of a pound of dry sifted flour mix one tablespoonful of herbs so finely minced as to be almost powder, a little salt, cayenne pepper and a saltspoonful of powdered sutrar. Beat three eggs very light, and add to them one tablespoonlul of mushroom catsup, the juice of two large tomatoes and a cup of warm milk; stir in tho Hour by degrees and fry a delicate brown. ' This amount will make two omelettes. To clean windows, wash -with luke warm water, rub with any clean, dry cloth to take eff the first dampness, then finish with a piece of chamois. A large one can be purchased for lifty cents, and it will last a lifetime and save so much hard work. When soiled wash in soap suds, rinse well and dry, then rub it in the hands to make it soft. For silver it is unequaled. Also wring it in tepid water, and use it to rub off tho finger marks ou the piano, then rub with a dry one. Mrs. T. gives this recipe for pigs' feet, which has been in use iu her lamily.Jor years: Put four feet in a saucepan with cold water, pepper corns, wdiole 'cloves and allspice, adding salt, and boil them until the bones are loose. Remove al the bones and put the meat in a stone jar. Strain ono quart of the wr.ter in which the feet were boiled, add one pint of vinegar and boil for five minutes. At the end of this time turn tho vinegar and water over the meat from the pigs' feet, completely covering it, and keep in a cool place. The mass will be like jelly, and is cut as needed. If desired, it may be put in bowls and turned out on the dish before serving. The Scalp of a Finger. A surgeon of Tours, Dr. Thomas, ha recently communicated a very interesting fact concerning the surgery ot' the lingers. A man, while passing over a gate, lost the whole skin of one of hi fingers, a ling around one of them having got cauglr between tho gate and an irm bar, hh, the weight of tho man while jumping having forcibly dragged the finei through the ring. Th.- ring and the lin ger remained an entire hour on the gate. Dr. Thomas secured both, and intro duced the scalped finger into its normal envelope. Although the whole skin did not adhere a good part of it was restored to life; and it is possible that, if the op eration could have been performed ear lier, the result might have been quite satisfactory. The virtues of fit. Jacobs Oil, as proclaim hy millions of restored sufferers, should indue everyone to supply his household with this (great specific, it conquers pain. A New London oyster dealer has Invented adredL-e with which starfish, the einicsof the oyster, can he taken from a bed without disturhiiiu the oysters. "It Is as harmless as it is etrcctive," Is what lssuidof Hed Slur CoukIi Cure by Dr. 8. K ( 'ox, 1). I)., Analytical chemist. Washington. li. C. I'l ice, 'i cents. Tim Hisliop of London is the L'realesi tfa drinker known in Knt'laiid sim e the death of lr. Johiibou. A Itrnieily fur l.uilif liisrnsra. Dr. lioht. Newton, into I'l esitlent of the Ec lectic College, ot the Cily of New York, and formerly of Cincinnati, Ohio, used Dit. Wm. Hai.i.'h Hai.sau very extensively in his prac tice, as many of his patients, now living and restored to health by tho use nf this invalua ble medicine, can umply testify. e always said t hat so good a remedy ounht not to be con sidered merely us a patent medicine, but that ilouht to lie prescribed froely by every pliysi. eian as a soveiein remedy in all cases of Lum: diseases. It cures consumption and all pectoral eo.nplaiiits. One kind of medicine will ii,,t cure all kinds if discuses. Dr. Kilmers Preparations am ,-pecile s a remedy loreacli di.-wa.se. Theyaio the result of a saccc.-tul practice since lav.i UuuleUi lliaUh (.Vnt 1VI JtmyhamUn, A'. 1'. Piir.VKNT crooked boots and blistered heels by weuriiii; Lj oil's 1'ateiit, Heel Stttfeners. Rest, easiest to use and cheapest. Ho's Xemedy for Catarrh. By drugfciau. Forrmovln flsntlrtilt antl curing- tl scalp fiieape, nnn Hall's Hair Henewor. Ayrr'n Ague Cure is acknowledged to be the etanderd remedy fnr frvrr and ague. The pnrest, Kweetest and best Cod Liver Oil In the world, manufactured from fresh, healthy livere, upon the eesf hore. It Is absolutely pure and fweet. l'atienta who have once taken it prefer It to all others. Physicians have de elded It superior to any of the other oils In market. Made by Caawell, Hazard & Co., Now York. CHAPPrn hawd, face, pimples and roofrh kin cured by using Juniper Tar Hoap, made by Caswell, Hazard & Co.. isew York. Can t sumption be Cured. We have so often seen fatal results follow the declaration that It can bs cured, that we have unconsciously settled down In the belief that this disease must necessarily prove fatal. It Is true that occasionally a community has witnessed an isolated case of what may ap propriately be termed spontaneous recovery, but to what combination of favorable clrcum ftances this result was due none have hitherto been found able to determine. We have now the gratifying fact to announce that the process by which nature affects this wonderful change Is no longer a mystery to the medical profession, and that the changes brought about In the system under favorable circumstances by lntrlnsio causes may be made as certainly and more expeditiously by ! the use of the proper remedy. In other words, nature Is Imitated and assisted. Tuberculous matter Is nothing more or less than nourishment imperfectly organized. Kow, if we can procure the organization of this food material so that through the process of elective adlnity it may take its place in the system, we can cure the disease. This is Just what Piso's Cure for Consumption does. It ar rests at once the progress of the disease by preventing the further supply of tuberculous mater,for while the system is under lis influ ence all nourishment is organized and assimi laied. It thus controls couch, expectoration, niKht-sweats, hectic fever, and all other char acteristic symptoms of Consumption. Many physicians are now using this medi cine, and all write that it comes fully up to its recommendations and makes Consumption one of the diseases they can readily cure. The forming tage of a disease is always the most auspicious for treatment. This fact should induce persons to resort to the use of Piso's Cure when the cough is first noticed, whether it has a consumptive diathesis for its cause or not, for this remedy cures all kindsof coughs with unequaled facility and prompt ness. In coughs from a simple cold, two or three doses of the medicine have been found sufficient to remove the trouble. So in all dis eases of the throat and lungs, with symptoms simulating those of Consumption, Piso's Cure is tho only infallible remedy. The following letter recommending Piso's Cure for Consumption, is a fair sample of the certificates received daily by the proprietor of this medicine. Albion, N. Y., Dec. 29, 1885. I had a terrible cough, and two physicians said I would never get well. I then went to a drug si ore and asked for a good cough medi cine. Tho druggist gave me Piso's Cure, and it has done me more good than anything I ever Used. I do not believe I could live without it. LEON OKA VERMILYEA. Peculiar To Itself In many Important particulars. Hood's Bariaparllla Is different from and superior to any other medicine. Peculiar In comblna'lon, proportion and prepara tion of Ingredients, Hood's Sarsaparllla possesses the full curative value of the bait known remedies of the vegetable kingdom. Peculiar In Its medicinal merit, Hood's Sarsapa rllla accomplices cures hitherto unknown. Peculiar In strength and eoonomy Hood's Sarsa parllla Is the only medicine of which can truly be said, "100 doBes one dollar." Medicines la larger and smaller tottles require larger doses, and do not pro duce as good results as Hood's Sarsaparllla, Tecullar In Its "good name at home" there Is more of Hood's Sarsaparllla sold ln'Lowell, where It Is made, than of all other blood purifiers. Peculiar In Its phenomenal record ot sales abroad, no other preparation has ever attalnel such popu larity In so short a time. He sure to get Hood's Sarsaparllla Bold by all druggists, tl ; six for 3. Prepared only by C L HOOD & CO., Apothecaries, Lowell, Mass. I OO Doses One Dollar ely's catarrH CREAM BMl.Mesn ties of Ely Creant I I?"rfffiJK lit An Balm and consider my f 5VCOirt'Z t nUDj " c wort mv g lkV(UKlV'wT.l aelf cured. I sv fTe rtv Wll ar r r r r STY 20 vears fwm catarrlTjy' ,ffcr, and. rntnrrh nl hend i 1 4 aejte, and this is th- Jlrst remedy that aj forded lasting relief.- D. T. Jltaginson, li. Lake St., Chicago, III A Dftrtlole Is Ann! let Into each nostril and U atrre;iilo to im. Prlf HAY-FEVER SO Cta. b? mall or at dmutflstB. Send for rirt ular. KLY BKOTUEKii, DrugfKUtu, Owego, N. T. KILMER'S One of every five yrc moot has somo form of Heart Disease, and lsi n con stant danger of Apoplexy, Bboi'k or Sudden Death 1 Tuis ltcmedy regulates, re lieves, correct and cures. t frl'repared at Iir. Kilmer's MkhikHiur lllntrhnnitm N V Ofor. ltt4Toriniiiry answered. $5. tiulileto IIealth(Kent Kreel. Bold by Uracalsts. AOS. ' Via llirj L. DOUGLAS ASK FOB THE "i niaienai. prriL-rim, equtut mnj or o uoe, every pair warrant(i. Take none unlesii stamped N. L. ltuuglaa' 3i0Shoe. Warranted." Congri-Rii, Button and Lace. Kova aak jsm U ...4 '..A. , A - , for th w. Is. Ijouffltia' tt'.CH) Shoe, bame iiyTi-t aft the .,.uu bhoe. If you cauoot irettlu-se Bhoee from deal- ern, send addreMOu postal yy. Can) tn W 1. Dmitrlita .vW1 mj. ut Pfc tUIl, MBM il A J BEST TANNl ERMAN 5SHHL2 FOR ONE DOLLAR. A Aral-oil!, Dictionary gotten out at Rmatl Tire to eucourHKe the study of the (ieruian Jilimiuife. If irivp V iiir-l I sh won I it wlrh fhn German ftulvulentK, uud t.ennan wonin with KimUhb definition.. A v-rv che;ip book. Send &1.00 to JiOOK 1M li. IIOK, llil 1'ttouurd M., N. 1 C ily. und t't unts ot ti-Hr hook by return mall. BEST IN THE WORLD U Bl k b O C tsr-Uet tlm i-.t'iiulue. bold fcvcrjr where. CRDMC ""i!". Ktorra, Mills. AllklmWof iteal iMfliflv l.Mute for Sule or hjtrhuuge. .neliue si imp lor Urn. W ,S. Iluli likiu.f unit Jt ExclmuKe Ki in y, UIM-II.UI lo.N, X. V. Mi utmn lliu paper THURSTON'SiEARlTOOTH POWDER Keepinc Teeth Ierlcrl and Oiuns Healthy. DATE MTQ obtained. Send sump for I HAM, I'atcut Lawyer, V aauiuulou, Jj. C S5 lo UN a day. Samples worth S1.&J KItKE LlUf. Uut uudur lliu lioraa' feel. Address llKWrklt'bbAFkT It KIM HoLUh.ll, Holly, Jllun. I )hoto4 for Ki'iitu only. Sure to milt. ) for iu: 42$$, Kona f-numa vulaa. iLeVUij'fd with the LrwJ Don't wasts your mnotv TKlfiB liHI, Asklo tiie"rl ! Mimui'iieijr vwr aim irmi , t i '"n-!J lain" htt1 ut Ar vrtptiv i mi nivinu" IaM Mm DR. .oo 'V" KIT r-m tc':-7 iisM BEST TANNtRW"" k 1 $1 Railway's Ready . i Rell3l i.i.ii In from one to twnty mlmitM. "Tr ',,!I JfL!!t lirvr PAIN with one tWouirh application. oro niatle, Bfslrldil'n, Inflrm, Cripple. N I7,"""'N.',r! rsiKlc. or prmtratcil with 1Ir mT mn", " A i B tt.AU l rvn.Lar-r wiuiuiu" ' BOWEL WPLAIHTS, DYSENTERY, Diarrhoea, Cholera Morbus. ooordii htom I'OM P the bowel, and all Internai pains. THE TRUE RELIEF. RADWAT'fi RF.APT RELIEF Is the only remedial snt In roRiie that will instantly stop pain. It in Untly relieves and soon currs Hfadat-h. wti.tner Irk or nerrous, Toothache, Neuralgia, NrrToum and hlepplessness. Itheumntlmn, Eumbaeo, . and Wraknru In th Ha.-k, Spine or Kidneys, rains around the I.lver. Pleurisy. Swrllins of the Joints. Sprains, Bruises. Bites of Inserts, and Pains of all kinds, KADWAY'S HEADY KKMKK will afford Im mediate ease, and IU continued use for a tew oay effect a perment cure. MALARIA IN ITS VARIOUS FORMS. FEVER AND AGUE. There Is not a remedial agent In the world that will cure ver and Amis and all other Malarious, Bil ious. Scarlet and other Keyers (aided by RADWAY 1 1'Il.LS.Iso quick as RAILWAY'S KKADY KELIEF. I'l ice Filly Cents. Hold by DrunRlsts. DR. RADWAY'S (The Only Genuine) SARSAPAR1LUAH RESOLVENT I The Great Blood Purifier, For cure of all ehronlo diseases, Scrofula, Blotv' Taints, Syphilitic Complaints, Consumption. Gland ular Disease, Ulcers, Chronic KnoumatUm. Ery.lp elas. Kidney, Jflaudcr and Lfvor Complaints. Drs- f rpala. Affections of the Lungs and Throat, purlnef he Blood, restoring beallb and vlgoa THE SIvIN, After a few days' use of the Sarsaparllllan, becomei clrarand beautiful. Pimples, Motches, Black Spot, and skin Eruptions are rmoved t Bores and Ulcers soon cured. Persons suffering frcJm Scrofula, Krnp tiTe Diseases of the eyes, mouth, ears, les, throat and slaadi, that have accumulated and spread, either from uncured dlseanes or mercury, may rely upon a cure If the Sarsauarllllan Is continued a sufficient time to make Its Impression on the system. Hold by Druggists. 81 per Bottle. DR. RADWAY'S PILLS Tho Great Liver and Stomach Remedy For ths cure of all disorders of he Stomach, Mrer, Bowels. Kidnevs. Illadder, Nervous Diseases. Loss ot Appetite, Headache, Oostivsness, Indigostiou, Bil iousness, Fever, Inflammation of the liowsls. Piles aud all derangements of the Internal Viscera. Pura- lv vegetable, containing no mercury, mluerals or deleterious drugs. .Trice 25 cents per box. Sold by all druggist. rr-8end a letterstamp to nil. RADWAVA CO., Nn.,U Warren Htieet, New V.rk, for "False and True." VBE SIRE TO GET KAPWAY'X. 25 mal. Do no cts. BUYS A HORSE Book telline yon bow to DETECT sad CUKE DI8KA8K in this valuable anl- Do not run the risk ef losiug vour Horse for want of knowledge to cure him, when Wo. wll ipar for a Treatise. Buy one and inform yoarselr. Remedies for all Rorse Diseases. Pistes showln; bow to Tell the Age of Borsos. fent postpaid toi U cents In stanipt. N. T. HORSK BOOK CO., 13 Leonard Bl, N. Y. City. NTK U-35 N ADVANCE OF ALL OTHERS. Brrrca Instbumcnts. LOWER PRICES. EabicrTcn WITC ron Plan. BEST Full PARTICULARS TO '4 VEIN BROS. CO. NEWARK, N.J. JOSHES UK PAYSthe FREIGHT S Tod Wftcon Hcalrn, jra l.ert. But I Ueariagi, jlrMt Tar nfl Beam S.i ft J5GO. trtrr ft it ScU. rr frr prtwt tit Alloi thi pTT ftiid Ktdrg JONCS OF IN8NAMTflN. B I N 1 1 A 1)1 T O . . N. V. The Greatest Curiosity in Nature. The Mexlcnn Resurrection l'lnnt, apparent ly dead, when placed In water soon comes to life, showlngall the tints of the rainbow. $1 to 4 per day easily inadn, as It sells to four out of five per. sons at sluht. Send Mo. for 8. or Wc. for 7 samples (sell for h.'k!. each). Low prices by tbe lOOandl.OuO, A yenr's subscription to one of six papers given to first 50c. order from each county and to first order mentioning this paper. 11. m.F.nsoE, 313 Bin In Street, Vurt Won li, Torn a. No Rope to Cut Off Horses' Manes Ueleliri e 1 'ki; i, psK' 114 I.TKII and Hill IH.E Combined, cannot ue Alli(ea tiy any horse. Ksmple natter to any part or u.h. rree, o receltitoftl. Sold brall.Saddlnry, Hardware, and riarnen ue:tler. Special discount to the irude. beud for Price l.lst j. r. i.itiii tii(M'"e, It oc heater, N. V'. -3 CUHtS YrHLRE ALL Hit (AILS. in nine, rvui nv nnipanii. a a UUNSUMPTIUrJ. 1 have a positive reiusdy fur tha toTdl-i ; bj It tue thousands of ctiai ol the woi.t kind ant. of (one taaulDR tiave been cured, ludfffl, -o it ror.R t m r falii la li-etBcucy, thnt 1 will wnrlTWO HOT! l.KH r'KK H, together with VAf UA UI.KTKB ATIKK on tlill dlMMt tu muj afiTtirer. GiToexura.sanJ 1. O. addrr.L UH. T. A. BLuOUU. Ul lWLlL, Trk. FACK, 1IAM)S, i Ktl. aod all tbttr tnipr(ctlM. laein.tuf aktUt, Llo)wrnnt, Supcrfluoui Hair, Hirili Uwsi, MoIm, Wrl( Wolli, FrptklM, Hs4 lHma, Aia Ulaili J lN'1a. fWn, ritlin mtsi trr irHimMt, Dr. JOHN H. WOODBURT, 37 I. PH St. AlbaeTs K V. .IVI M. b.4 Ut. lor keek. RUPTURE 8 riC'KI.Y (i'KEII KINK'S UUl'Tt'liK KKM- unntul- freo. AtldicbH O. Kuink, lui liroatlway, N. Y. allosfV Dillcs Great English Goul and lilall 5 rlllSa Rheumatio Romsdy. Oval iiox ai.uui round, 60 cla. to Soldiers Heirs. Sendttamo rPisf,lfi?1t'r -'iroular. t'OL. L, lil.Mi I Uil imii5 11AM, Att'y, Washington, U c. rias ua en ti.e Irad la tllC follfl ut Ihil tl-it vi teuicihci, and hat ijiveo a J m oi univcr&al t.tiaLM. MURPHY BROS . Int, Ter d hat won the favor ol the public and now rank 1 TO & UAXH caUM btrlctuxt. Wf dooly by tae ClnolnnaU.ftaf ?3 ainoiiLf me leading UcvU uuabufthe oiMoik. A. L, bMl 1.. SoMhy Iin., gisu, Ohio. P r??. ... is Tne Best wati erprooiGoat iiU nyer Mane. on a iruro or ru hirer coat. The FISH BRAND 8LICKFI rmmr. anj wm arfp you dry in ttie liarUeht aiuuii ratad - eiii. tn A J ilicekh a nil take no other. If y our torkeper doe