BILL NYE ON EXTLORERS. THE HUMORIST TACKLES THE SUB JECT OF ABCTIO DISCOVEBIES. gome Ulstorlo Information From the Time of Krik the Ketl Down to IJr-utennnt Grocly. Lot us for a moment look back across the bleak waste of years and sees what wonderful progress hns been mado in the discovery of the polo. We may then ask ourselves who will be first to tack his location notice on tho gnaweil and season-cracked surface of the polo itself, and what will he do with it after he has so filed upon it. Iceland, I presume, was discovered about Mil) A. D., or 1,020 yenrs ajjo, but tho stampede to Iceland has always been under control, and you can get corner lots in the most desirable cities of Ire land and wear a long, ricketty name with links in it like a rosewood sausage, to day, at a low price. Naddodr, a .Nor wegian viking, discovered Iceland A. D. 8(i0, but he. did not live to meet Lieuten ant Greely, or any of our most celclrat?d northern tourists. Why Naddodr yearned to go north and discover a colder country than his own, why he should seek to wet his feet and cot icicles down his back in order to bring to light more snow banks and chilblains, I cannot at this time understand. Why should a robust viking roam around in tho cold trying to nose out more frost-bltien Esquimaux, when he could remain at home and vike But I lcavo this to the thinking mind. Let tho thinking mind grapple with it. It has no charms for me. Moreover, I haven't that kind of a mind. Other, another Norweigian gentle man, sailed around Korth Cape and crowd tho Arctic circle in tf'JO A. 1)., but be crossed It in the night, and didn't not.ico it at the time. Tyo or three years after, Erik the Red took largo snow-shovel and discovered tho east coast of Greenlaud. Erik the lied "was a Northman, and ha flourished along about the ninth century and be fore tho war. lie sailed around in that .lountry for several years, drinking bay rum and bear's oil and having a good time. He wore fur uudcrckthes all the time, winter and summer, and evaded tho poll tax for a long time. Erik also established a settlement on the south east coast of Greenland in about latitude sixty degrees north. These people re mained here for some time, subsisting on shrimp salad, sea-moss farina, and ncat's-foot oil. But finally they became so bored with the quiet country life and the backward springs that they removed from there to a land that is lairer than day, to use the words of another. Thev removed during tho holidays, leaving the axle grease and all they hold dear, including their remains. From that on down to 1380 we hear or read varying and disconnected accounts of people who have been up tliat way, acquired a large red chilblain, made an observation, and died. Representatives from almost every quarter of the globe have been to the far North, eaten their little hunch of jerked polar le;.r, and then the polar bear has eaten his little hunch of jerked explorer, and bo the good work went on. The polar bear, with his wonderful retentive faculties, has succeeded in retaining his great se cret regarding the pole, together with the man who came out there to lind out about it. So up to 1M0 a large number of nameless explorers went to this cele brated watering place, shot a few pom mican, ate a jerked whale, shuddered a couple of times, and died. It has been the hiBtory of Arctic exploration from tho earliest ages. Men have tuken their lives and a few doughnuts in their hands, wandered away into the uncertain light of the frozen North, made a few observa tions to each other regarding the back ward spring and then cached their skeletons forover. In 13H0 two Italians named Lem took a load of sun-kissed buniums and made a voyage to the extreme North, but the historian says that the accounts are so conticting, and as tho stories told by the two brothers did not agree and neither ever told it the same on two separate oc casions, the history of their voyage is not usdd very much. Years rolled on. Boys continued to go to school and see in their geographies enticing pictures of men in expensive fur clothing running sharp iron spears and long, dangerous stab-knives into fero cious white bears. audsuorting around on large cakes of cold ice and having a good time. The-c inspired the growing youih to rise up and do likewise, to every natiun 'neath the sun has contributed its assort ments of choice, white skeletons and second-hand clothes to the remorseless maw of tho hungry and ravenous North. And still the great pole continued to squeak ou through days that were six months long and nights that made break fast seem almost useless. In 1477 Columbus went up that way but did not auecced in starving to death, lie got a bird's-epe view of a large de posit of dark-blue ice, got hungry, and came home. During tnenrtccntn ana sixteenth ten- I turies, the northern nations of Europ i and especially the Dutch, kept the Uis- ; covery business red-hot, but they did not i get any fragments of the true pole. Tho 1 maritime nations of Europe, together with , other foreign powers, dynasties, and hu- I man beings, for some time hud spells of I visiting the polar seas and neglecting to comeback. It was tho custom then, as j it is now, to gr twenty rods farther than ! any other man hadever been, eut a deviled i boot leg, curl up, and perish. Thou- sands of the be-t and brightest minds of ' all ages have yielded to this wild desire t live on sperm oil. pain killer,and jerked walrus, keep a little blue diary for thir teen weeks, and then feed it to a tall, white bear wiih red gmus. JSlU X'jt, in Chicago Ifeitt. It is related that an Ohio widow owned a large gravel bank which a certain rail road company was very anxious to secure. Several propositions were made and re jected, and the President finally sent his Private Secretary down with intttucl ions to offer up to $14,000. The young man returned after a couple of days and. when asked how the bu-iness had turned out, leplied: "I will accept your oiler." "Vouf "Exactly. 1 married the widow and own the bu-ik.'' An invention has been perfected fo, concentrating the heat of the fcun and lining it instead of. fuel to warm rooms, WISE WORDS. Actions outweigh profusions. He must be blind indeed who cannot sco through a sicvo. A clear head and a clear conscience are the attributes of victory. It is a good thing to learn caution by the misfortune of others. Love of reading enables a man to exchange tho wearisome hours of life, which como to every one, for hours of delight. It is the easiest thing in the world to train up a child in the way ho should go; all you have to do is to go that way yourself. Remember that servants are mado of the samo material as you arc; a littlo coarser-grained, perhaps, but the same in essentials. Regrets, toward the evening of life, will occur to neatly all, even tho happiest; wo mourn the departure of the luminary, though his setting be glorious. Ho is tho greatest man who choose? the light with invincible resolution, who bear he heaviest burdens cheerfully, and whose reliance on truth and virtue is the most unfaltering. The glory of man consists not in look ing up to what is above him, but in lift ing up what is below him. Tho noblest and most exalted character is also tho tendcrest and most hopeful. He who is truly biavc will not only spring to encounter outward obstacles and to do daring deeds; he will also be bold in attacking wrong and misery whenever they appear, and strong iu resisting his own desires and impulses whenever they conflict with a higher law. As the magnificent river, rolling in the pride of its mighty waters, owes its greatness to the hidden springs of the mountain nook, so does tho wide-sweeping influence of distinguished men date its origin from hours of privacy resolutely employed in eliprts after self-development. HEALTH HINTS. A standing antidote for poison by poison-oak, ivy. etc., is to take a handful of quicklime, dissolve in water, let it stand half an hour, then paint the parts with it. Three or four applications,it is said, will cure the most aggravated cases. Tho highly injurious caustic effect of lime accidently introduced into the eye, as frequently occurs to those engaged in building, may be entirely neutraliz.ed by the use of cold sugar water, owing to the formation of a compound of the lime and sugar, which is without any action upon tho eye. Biting the nails is a custom founded oh tho superstition that a child whose nails were cut before it was a year old would bo n thief. It was found neces sary to get ria or the nail, hence they were bitten oil. A singularly stupid custom surely. Continue to cut the nails whenever they are too long. They will, of course, grow, and they will naturally become harder. It is proper that they should be so. If tho feet are tonder and painful after long standing or walking, great relief may be obtained by bathing them in warm salt and water. A large handful of suit to a gallon of water as warm as can be borne is the proper proportion. The feet should be immersed and the water thrown over them with the hand, and also over the legs as far as the knees. When tho water becomes too cool, dry the feet and legs, rubbing with a rough towel upward. Neuralgia of the feet has been cured by perseverance in this method night and morning. Alligators as Pets. Alligators as pets are getting to be more and more the thing, and the trade in theso queer reptiles has grown to bo quite an important industry among North William street dealers in zoological curios. When tho young alligators are born in Southern swamps in tho spring the natives go and gather them in. The warm months find them in New York, where an alligator eight inches long and probably five months old may bo pur chasedif you go.to the proper place for from $1 to 3. The increased demand began about two years ago. Tho World's Fair in New Orleans taught Northern visitors to the French quarters to look with kindly eyes upon the lizard's big brother. There is a littlo old bird store in the Ruo Royale where they were sold by dozens at fifty ami seventy-five cents each, and a neat littlo box furnished, so that the pets could be carried away. Of course, some of them came to New York and aroused the interest of that growingclais of peo ple who are always on tho lookout for something new to care-s or to talk about. The inevitable result was a brisk trade in infant amphibians by the William street folk. A Lexington avenue girl enjoys pat ting the expansive brow of a lourteen inch alligator that is over two yeurs old. j She has u silver collar around its throat and a chain attached to it, and the wcll ! bred saurian follows her like a pet dog. I The baby alligator is usually kept in a large globe acquarium with a gravel bank I rising out of the water on which it rests. Its food is raw meat, and it requires only a small quantity. One meal every two days is enough. It develops slowly and is very easily tamed. leu) I'vrk In the tropics the finest orchids are often found in tho tops of the highest trees at such an elevation that they can only be reached by tutting down the tree, while few are seen in the lower : shades of tho forest, which are singular i ly bare of bloom. Perched high in air : and shaded by the foliage of the tree j upon which it grows, tho orchid mukes ; its home, and the perilous experiences of : collectors iu their attempts to tlnd some i new and rare species would fill volumes, j Instances are not uncommon of expert i collectors having been .-ent thousands ol ' miles across the. ocean to some remote j part of South AmeiicH, India jot the Malayan Archipelago to secure some ' orchids of which a t.peciineu or two may have lieeu previously b; ought home. Tho dimoiisions of the Chinese quar- t'T of Shu 1 I'unciseo have in reaped enor- jnou-ly iu 1 h j lu'ttilteeu years. It now occupies a section nearly or quite a mile i in leiif'lh, and between three find four ce jir j square m width. SCIENTIFIC AND INDUSTRIAL. The eyes of poisonous snakes have been found by Dr. Benjamin Sharp to have elliptical pupils, wliilo in the harm less species they ore circular. It is said that only about one-third of the buried city of Pompeii has yet been unearthed. The Italian Government is pushing the excavations with great vigor, and very interesting remains are being constantly brought to light. It is a familiar and yet it always striko one as a marvellous fact that worlds may have been for years in existence, the light of which has not yet had tiino to reach our cavth, and that wo may con tinue to sco the light of tho tt;rs that have been for a long time extinct. To distinguish wrought iron from steel produce a bright surface by polishing or tilling, and apply a drop of nitric ncid, which should bo allowed to remain thcro for ono or two minutes; then wash oil with water, and the spot will look a palo gray on wrought iron, a brownish black on stoel. a deep black on cast iron. It is tho carbon present in various propor tions which produces tho diil'orcnt ap pearance. Some ono suggests that trees after transplanting may bo kept alive by bury ing a row of flower pots tilled with water oround tho body and over the roots of the trees. Tho moisture which will pcr colato through the bottom and sides of the pots will be bo gradual that two-gallon ones will hold enough so as not to requiro refilling for somo time, and tho roots will bo kept moist till such time as they begin to sprout afresh. A French entomologist has described the bird-spider of tropical America, tho largest of the several hundred known species of spiders, as a formidable crea ture having a body four and a quarter inches long, or a diameter of seven inches with the legs extended. Its nest, in the center of which its 1,500 or 2.O0O eggs are deposited, is so strengthened ns to be capable of arresting a small bird; and tho spider is sufllciently powerful to destroy not only young birds and adult humming birds, but large lizards and reptiles. Captain McGregor, of tho Eng'ish steamer Albano, reports that ho used oil on a recent passago from Baltimore to Dublin. Experienced very heavy gales and seas from westward in latitude forty- four degrees ten minutes north, longitudo twenty-nine degrees twelve ni'nutes west. Placea two oil bags astern, filled with linseed oil and oakum. Previous to placing the bags over the stem, had taken heavy seas aboard, flooding the decks; but after towing the bags no more water came aboard. Tho gale lasted three days, with very heavy seas, but, owing to the oil, ran quite easily and took no water. 1'sed about seven gallons of oil all together. Accounts are given in tho Gorman)tech nical journals of some interesting experi ments which have been made, and it appear with success, in the employment of paper in piano construction. Tho case is made entirely of paper, as a sub stitute, for wood, tho material being so compressed as to be' susceptable of the high polish which is required for such Instruments. As described the color is a creamy white; the tone is reported to bo characterized by sweetness rather than loudness the sound emitted, unlike tho short broken note of the ordinary piano, being soft, full, and slightly continuous, somewhat resembling that of tho organ. This modification of tone, which must bo considered an attractive feature, is at tributed to the evenness of texture of the compressed paper. An Electric Mountain. A very peculiar property has recently been discovered in the rock of a moun tain seven miles from the town of Santa Cruz. This rock is heavily charged with electricity and when applied to a battery was found to produce strong electric currents. A small handful of this rock applied in a battery generated sufficient electric force to operate tho battery for three weeks and appeared not to bo the least exhausted of its powers. This rock has very much the appearance of ordinary soapstone and exists iu immense quanti ties, constituting the principal mass of tho mountain. Its strange property was accidently discovered by a man who was experimenting with mineral water on the mountain, and having occasion to u-e some of this rock, placed it in contact with the battery. The man who made this wonderful discovery kept it a pro found 6ecret from tho world until ho and o e or two of his confidential friends had obtained a title to tho portion of the land, paying $13,000 therefor. The pres ent owners are now experimenting with this rock, with a view to thoroughly testing its properties. The result of such investigation we can only surmise, but are very anxious to learn. Tulare Free Pros. A Successful Dramatist's Profits. Reporter "Could you give me some idea of the profits of a successful druma, from your own experience i" Dion Boucicault "Well, I suppose it is pretty well known that Mr. Theodore Morse offered me $230,000 for tho profits of "The Shaughraun," and I declined the offer. A successful play should be worth nearly $1,000,000. "Hip Van Winkle," which 1 wrote for Mr. Jeffer son, I ohould presume has yielded him moro than $300,000. I have made as much as !-.'00,0o0 in ono year, ns tho profits of my pen. At Walluck's New York liaise "Tho Shaughraun'' drew $230,000 in one hundred and forty fort nights. It drew more money in that time than any other play ever drew into the treasury of a theatre, either in this Or any other country." Reporter "The piofits of a popular play or a successful actor are larger now than they have been, ire they not:" Boucicault "Well, a first-class star should bo able to mako up Si, 000 a week on un average. I have received $7,0( 0 in a week. I suppo.-.e among the stars now on tho stage it is a question between ! Mr. Booth and Mr. Jefferson, as to which 1 of them commands tho best iucom;. A'cw l'vrk .Mirror Statisticians estimate that in Fram e one-half the population live upon agri culture, one-quarter live by var ous inuii tincturing industries, one tenth by com merce. four-hundredth a by tho liberal j professions, and six-huudredths aro lei. j tiers of various kind. ' HOUSEHOLD AFFAIRS. Hints and Recipes. A little petroleum added to the water with which waxed or polished floors are washed improvo their looks. reaches, cut in thin slices ond dropped into boiled custard before it is sorved, make a palatable addition. Theso Graham puffs are nice for break fast. Sift together a pint and a half of Graham flour, ono tcaspoonful of salt snd threo teaspoonfuls of baking pow der. Mix with this one pint of milk and two well-beaten eggs until a smooth batter is obtaiucd. Fill cold, well greased gem pans half full with tho bat ter, and bako in a hot oven for ten min utes. Sometimes tho lamp wick obstinately refuses to bo turned up in an orderly manner. It will seem firmly wedged at ono sido while the other runs up in a point, causing weariness and vexation of spirit. To overcome this depravity take a new wick, draw out a single thread near tho selvedge and tho wick will be found quite tractable when introduced into tho burner. The cogs will tako it up properly and it will appear in good form and give an even flame when lighted. Mrs. T. writes that she has found bran water excellent for cleaning matting. For nn ordinary sized room infuso two handfuls of bran, put in a bog in half a gallon of boiling water, pressing tho bag to that all tho goodness of the bran will be in tho water. Dilute this water and wash the matting with a woolen or crash cloth, drying with another cloth imme diately. By repeating this process every fortnight for a room that is much used the matting retains its good appearance ind is kept perfectly clean. Mrs. S. F., of Norfolk, Va., sends this recipe for lemon jelly cake: One cup of lugar, mixed with butter the sizo of an egg, ono cup of milk, one egg well beaten and flour enough to make rather stiff, sifted with a heaping tcaspoonful of baking powder and bako in three jelly cake tins. For tho jelly take tho juice and gtated rind of ono lemon, ono small cup of sugar, threo teaspoonfuls of corn starch, mixed smoothly with a little water and one cup of hot water. Let all boil together until thick and spread on the cakes. This quantity makes two layers. A correspondent sends this recipo fot cooking beefsteak: Have tho steak cut very thick, with two ounces of fat to each pound of lean and set it on a dish that may bo sent to tablo. If liked well done, set it before a clear hot'fire for au hour and a quarter beforo dinner. Turn tho steak onco and turn tho dish once, so that each sido of the steak may bo turned to tho fire. Before sending it to table put a piece of butter the sizo of ahickorv nut in tho middle of it; sprinkle it with a little pepper and a Jew drops of any de sired sauce. Pour over It a pint of but ton mushrooms that have been cooked in their own sauce, and servo hot. This layer cake will bo found delicious : Cream four table-spoonfuls of butter with two cups of sugar; add threo full cups of flour sifted with two heaping teaspoon fuls of baking powder, one cup of milk, the yolks of four eggs, well beaten, and tho four whites whipped to a still froth. Bake in two jelly cake pans. Mince a cup and a half of figs very fine and a third of a cup each of pistachio nuts, wal nuts, and blanched almonds, adding the frothed whites of two eggs, a little sugar and enough rose water to moisten all. Mix thoroughly and place ns a layer be tween the two lakes. Cover tho take with thick icing mado with white of egg, lemon juice and confectioners' or XXX. sugar. It is well to remember that too much blueing renders clothes yellow after a time. Inexperienced or caroless servants think the moro blueing iu tho water the better for the wash; und it is a difficult matter to convince them that the clothes will look far better if only a small quan tity be used. As blueing varies so much in intensity, experience only can teach tho required quantity. Usually half a tablespoonful to a tub of water is sutli cient. It should always be diluted before it is put in the tub; as, if not thoroughly mixed before the clothes arc put in. un sightly streaks will be-tho result. If the clothes are soaked over night one table spoonful of pure water ammonia in each tub of water will materially lessen tho labor of washing. Neu York Commer cial. Some BIjj Watermelons. "How big v4is tho largest watermelon I ever saw? Well, now, let me see. I have been in the business siuce 1M0," said Mr. Hanson P. Barnes, the commis sion merchant, "and I have seen melons on this wharf which weighed as high as seventy-five pounds, but there have been authentic reports of some which went as high as eighty pounds. Tho largest melons are not always the best. "There aro various ways of judging a watermelon. 'I hose who have to handle them are edujrat d by experience to know a ripe tirclon on sight, but if the skin breaks crisply when cut into with the thumb nail, or a peculiar hollow sound is emitted when tapped with the knuckle, or if the meat is heard to break with a brittle sound when the fruit is squeezed, tho melon is generally ripo. The 'scaly bark' does not respond kindly to the squeezing or rapping test, as a two-hundred-pound man might sit upon one without crushing the meat; yet when cut tho melon might prove a prime ono by its dark red meat and black seed. "The general tendency in improving the melon is to get round fruit and thin rinds, thus obtaining a greater amount of meat in tho spaco handled and obvi ating crumpled fruit, which may be ripe at ono end while the long, thin ends are useless. Tho 'ice rinds' fill the bill iu this respect, but tough rinds are nilti vated for shipping purposes !,: Balti more Sun. lrmporlnnt to Mercliniit Tailors. wm u!FeUlTiLYK,'e!or!10 Keller A " ihattlieoldrioth House, corner Aim ad William Ms., .ew Vc.rk iiu, are domy an ex tensive lmsiii.-Mi by means i f urniHiiiiiK to tlie Mitcliaiit latlnriiiKtimletluoiiKliouitlio l ted Mates complete- sample collations 0f their Woolens m mumih, uiel re.-eivimj and executing orders received tlir.iu.;!, the. fam ilies. W henever a style has been sold out. they many tlic ir customers to that ellurl Bd tnat the panics IioI.Iuik i heir samples are al ways, properly inlorme.l us to whirl, styles ViTiLVuV r to,1"",r l",tr"""- Merchant tailor is thus placed in a poMlion lo slio a lailio variety uf styles without, . eiunbrrina l.IioBelt will, a lari:a Hock. We unUerslaud I . , wf' J,"r,l"anl luiKTuesiniii; seen rollec lion of samples cioi have sam sent free of j ehAiije. Addreaa ilessr. M. voa Keller ii - The Spring Chicken of History. Few people have any idea of the lon gevity of that noble, although hysterf lcky, domestic fowl, the common hen o commorco. By a late agricultural papor wo rco that a hen, residing with a farmer near Macon, Mo., soized a rat by tho back, carried him to a tub of water, dropped him into it "with a revengeful cluck." and thus taved her brood from further depredations. Now, when in boyhood's happy days we read tho "Boys' Own Book of Natural History," this ven crablo hen, at that time residing on nn English farm, was sponding most of her time dropping that same predatory rat into tho tub of water with tho s.imo old "revengeful cluck." And now sho is at it again, nway out in far away Missouri, where they call us to deliver their land from error's chain. Fifty years is a good ripe ago for a brood hen, but we do not look to seo her pass away in this genera tion. No. So long as there is a rat alive In this world of suffering and wrong, so long will that noblo old hen contiuuo to pick him up and drop him into a tub of water "with a revengeful cluck." Hons, unreal mockery, honsl We begin to fear that the hen of our boyhood was perhaps only a feeble imitation of the real hen of to-day. Burdctte. Whito woodchucks have boon seen tho past summer in Bedding township, Ind. A huge derrick-pole fell and soverfly injurpd the foot of Mechanical Knglnoor K. IL lloyt at the New Orleans Exposition, and after only throe applications of St. Jnrobs OU, all the pain and swcllinn disappeared. Among the workmen specially occupied with tar In the Paris lias Works only three were sick in the course of seven yenrs. WAttTEn The name of the goldsmith who made the welkin riiiR. The most astonishingly beneficial resnlts have followed the use of Hod Star Cough Cure by those affected with throat and lung troubles. Price, twenty-five cents. Cot.OR-iu.iNnNKss 1b said to have been first roported iu 1777. Tnnni are 14,000 licensed drivers of cabs in London. "Wlint Every One Should Know." Among the 150 kinds of Cloth Bound Dollar Volumes given away by the Rochester (N. Y.) American Rural Hmne for every $1 subscription to that great 8-page, 48-col., ln-year-old weekly, (all 5x7 inches, from 300 to 900 pages, bound in cloth) are: Law Without Law yers. Family Cyclopedia. Farm Cyclopedia. Farmers and Stock breeders' Guido. Common Sense In Poultry Yard. World Cyclopedia. What any one should know. Danelson's (Medical Counselor. Hoys'Usoful Pastimes. Five Years Before the Mast. Peoplo's History of United States. Universal History of all Nations. Popular His. of Civil War (both sides). Any on book and paper one year, postpaid $1.15 only! Satisfaction guaranteed. Refer ence: Hon. C. U. Parsons, Mayor Rochester. Sample Ruhal Home Co., Ltd, Rochester, N. Y. A professional beguar died recently In Rio Janeiro and left a fortune of .1X1,000, We Appeal to Experience. For a long time we steadily refused to pub lish testimonials, believing that, in the opinion of the publio generally, the great majority were manufactured to order by unprincipled parties as a means of disposing of their worth less preparations. That this view of tho case is to a certain ex tent true, there can be no doubt. At last, several years ago, we came to the conclusion that every intelligent person ran readily discriminate between spurious and bona lido testimonials, nnd determined to use as advertise menuia few of the many hundreds of unsolicited certificates iu our posHes sion. In doing this we published them as nearly as possible in the exact language used by our cor respondents, only changing the phraseology, in some cases, so as to compress them into a smaller space titan they would otherwise occu py, but without Iu theleastexaKgeratingor de stroying the meaning of the writers. Weai OKlad to say that our linal conclusion was a correct one that a letter recommending an article having true merit Ilnds favor with the people. Tho original of every testimonial published by us is on tile in our oflice, an inspection of which will prove lo the most skept leal that our assertion mado above, that only the facts are given as they appear therein, is true. But as it would be very inconvenient. If not impoRsihlo, for ail of our friends to call on us for that purpose, we invite those who doubt (it there be such), to correspond with any of tho parties whose names are signed to our tes timonials, and ask them if we have made any misstatements, bo far as their knowledge ex tends, in this article. In other words, if wo have not published their letters as nearly ver batim as possible. Very respectfully, E.T. HAELTINE, Proprlotor Plso's Cure for ( Jonsumpt ion and Vuo't Remedy lor Catarrh. We append a recent letter, which came to us entirely unsolicited, with permissiou to publish it: DayTos, Ohio, Jan. 12, 1888. You may add my testimony as to tho merits of Piso's Cure for Consumption. I took a severe cold last February, which settled on lny lungs. They became ulcerated and Were so painful that I bad no rest for two days and nights. I got a bottle of Piso's Cure for Con sumption, and wa relieved by the time I had taken half ol it. Since that time I have kept Piso's Cure In the house, and use it as a pre ventive, both for lung troubles and croup, tor which 1 can recommend it us the boil medicine lever used: and that is saying a great dcsl, for 1 have used at least twenty others, beside aliout as many physicians' prescriptions. Pio'sCure for t onsuiuptiou has never failed to give relief in my family. A..T. (i)tl'HH, it Springfield St. No lady should live in perpetual fear, and suffer from the more serious troubles that so often appear, when Dr. Kilmer's Compi.etk Kkmai.k lfKMKOY is certain to prevent and cure Tumor and Cancer there. The habit of running over boots orshoes corrected with Lyon's Patent Heel Stiffenors. A'o Opfiim in Piso's Cure for Consumption Cures where other remedies fall. y."c. An l'.litoi's Testimonial. A. M. Vaughau, editor of the Greenwich Review," Greenwich. (., writes: "Last January 1 met with a very severe accident, caused by a runaway horae. I used alino t every kind of salve to heal the woundt. which turned to running sores, but found nothing to do me any Rood till I was recommended Henry's Carbolic Hai.ms. 1 bought a box, and It helped me at once, and at the end of two months I was com pletely well. It Is the best salve In the niarnct, and I never fall of telling my friends about It, and urge them to use It whenever in need." ERMAN ffiBHPJ FOR ONE DOLLAR. A flrnt-claftM iMctimmry gotten out at small rk' ii eucoui-HKti ih t u ly of the Orrmun anKLiairo. It irivos hnifllsh word wiih the German t'tuivU atri, ami Uerman word with knlittti dt-fliilMon. A vi-rv cheap book. St-nU 1 .OU to HOOK 1M II. HOI 131 l.ruiiHi-U rM.. N. iH umk Rt't outs or latitc book ii b return uiaiL THISTOH'SSTOOTH POWDER Kerpjns; Teeth Perlcci and limns Healthy. PATENTS I Ham, Pau-ut Lawyer, VV uiutoa, it, C. i Jn Fp - t a A 1 lib brlfv tor ra. "'fl As (tmy lmtr, however osii'pd, f rest, ored to It orlirinal color bv llnlls's llairHflnrwer. Persons stiffprinn -from Anne of Ions standing will nnd a specific In Ayer's ague Pure Fortnvsi'Ki'SiA, tNpiotssTioN, depression of splrtlA, general debility, in their various forms, bIho rs a preventive at(int foverand sgneand oilier Intermittent fevers.tho "Kcrro-rhosphof aled Kllxlrof CallsHya," made by Caswell, lli- r.l A- I'n New York. nnd sold bvall 1 truffsris!. is the best tonio; and for patient recovering from fever or other sickness It has no equal. Water Runs Down Mill, and just as naturally life, eneriry and strflnnth are gained by tnkinf? Hood's fiarsnnarllla. Ths pecut lartonlnir, purlfylmr, nnd vltallr.lnnqualltlesof this ueeesifnl medicine aro felt throughout the entire system, expelling disease, and giving quick, health action to every organ. If you suffer from any disease of the blood, stomach disorder, or difficulty with the llrer and kidneys, try the peculiar medicine, Hood's Rarsnparllla. He sure to get Hood's. Take no other. "I hnvo taken Hood's Sarsrparllla for dyspepsia and as a tonic alterative, with tho most beneficial results. I have also used It for rheumatism with the good effect. I regard It as one of the very best fan, lly medicines, and would not willingly be without It." A. B. Ciisar, Providence, B. I. "I have been uslm Hood's Sarsaparllla for Indiges tion and liver trouble. It has greatly benefited me, and I think It Is fully ns good a medicine as claimed," E. 8. Ciiesesro, chief englnoer fire dept., Btontng ton, Ct Hood's Sarsaparllla Bold bv all dn,Rlrji. t; six for 15. Prepared only by U. 1. UUODaUO.. Apothecaries. Lowell, Hut, IOO Doses Ono Dollar Ladles! Thneodull tired looks and locliinrs apptik volumes 1 This Itominly corrects all con tilt Ions, restores vlffor nnd vitality nnd brinirs lincl( youthful bloom nnd bounty. DnioaiKt. Prc,isrca st lr. Kilmer i MS I'Kkhahy, Plnchsmt"n, N. T. ,.cili'n.ai illicitly Uutdcto Health! Bent t'rse. i;ciU Wmtci t BELL THIS r Eagle Steam Washer. Men andWomen of pood character can malce big money at homo. Kzcltislvn territory guaran teed. Sample AVashor sent for one weeks' trial. Ketnrn nt our expense If not sat isfactory. Will wash 15 Shirts in SO minutes, or no sale. Only perfect Washer ever Invented. Sells on ita own merits. Will positively wail, Collars and Cuffs, without rubbing. Clothes aro placed in a hollow tin wheel which revolves In a square covered boiler ; steam penetrates the (toons, thoroughly cleansing them. Write for testimonials and terms O. L. FKHRI3, ratentee, 1 71 C ourt. St.. 11'klTn, Tf. Y. 25 cts. BUYS A HORSE Hook tellinc you how toUKTKI'T sail CUKK DISKASK In this valnabls ant- Ho not run the risk of losing your Hone for want of knowledge to cure him, whan'ysc. wtl Ipay for a Treatise. Buy one and Inform yourself. Itemetites lor all llorso Diseases, nates snowing how In Tell the Age or Horses. Sent postpaid for 116 ceuts in stamps. I T. ITORSK BOOK CO., 1M Leonard BU, N, Y. City. N Y N U-30 STANDARD AWARDED FIRST PREMIUM AT TIIF. WOlfMl'H i;XI'OM HO.V New Orlrm (Four Cold Medals. All oilier itrlnriptU maker c.it.ttiiBit. Teat k Krilli', HnV H.-iiIi-b, Pint form BfU . !.. Itunn.-ia.Ml i.s...at.l lUPIfl.lTUl Ald BEST VALUE for TOUR MONET. fZ KaJnJS BUFFALO SCALE COMPANY, BUFF ALO.H.T. The Greatest Curiosity in Nature. The llexliiin Krani reef Ion Plant, apparent- it ih'hu, ivnt'n placet, in water soon comes lo ore, howlnirall the lints of the rainbow, ii to ft per dav easily made, as It sells to four out of five per. son ut sihdit. send e. for .1. or Sec. for 7 samples (sell for S.V. eachl. Low prices by the 1(10 and l.imo. A year's subscription to one of sir papers Riven to first riUc.order from eaoli county and to first order mentioning tills paper. ir. ni FnsoK, 313Mnln fstreet. Foil Worth, Texee. No Rope to Cut Off Horses' M Ccleliri k I Kt! M l'!K' II IjT and II III UliK Combined, can imj siiiieeu oy unv norse. m.iui H:ilter to anv naft of IJ. S. free, i rneeiptof$l. S ! I byallSiddlery ii trinvare ana iiarutM. pciera Bei-lal dls"ount to the trade. Bend for Price Llt j. . i.ii.u riiorsE, Rochester. N. V. CURE FITS! Whn 1 aav t-uro 1 do not raan mrlT to ftoo them for k time ftiul then have th.-iu n turn mriun, I men radical cure. ) have made tho diut-ane o( FITS, Kl'U J;PSV or KAI.L1NU N1CKNKKS A Ufo-luny tt udy. I Van-ant iny remedy to cure ihuworatraaes. Hooaum othcri havo failed Utio reason for not now receiving cure. Kent! at ome for atroattae and a Free Bottle vt liiy tnfiillil.le remedy. Otre i-xprew and Post Offlo. It co-mvuu nothing- for n trial, and I will cure you. A.l.lr-.-n nt. M I. ItOivr. IhS I t'arl Hi.,, New York. P1o' Btmedy for Catarrh I th Also Rood fnr OoM In thr Head, Ileadaol.e, Hay Fever, ic. 60 cent. kSTHMA CURED ! BU7V Vfrniii Athmn Cure nrm uulo fire tmmrtiiiitt relte in Lb wurU ciiui, Insures oua M Mi't-JuJ cannni'if r mot t'tietU, I'rloe OO rte. ami fl EI.OO, vt Urutnit't or hr tufttl. fitvuipU FlK K for RtUmp. IMC. K. M'H I FF M AN, f. Inul. Ml-a. AXLE GREASE uest in the would 1 ;euol lliu ucmilue. bold livery where. LADIES A new and reliable compila tion of 1,0110 Cooking and receipt ot cents in stumps. Address, iii'.tl. If. Ml.'! I tffcVl'Gl 28 N. Holliuay M.. liakimore. Md. BUS.. F3S1 Great English Gout and mil S rfi.Si Rheumatic Remedy. V.I JKOOi round, 30 els. ES am asms a to Soldiers t Heirs, bend stamp I wiiilll( HAM, Any, Waslitua-um, t. c. Wrl ""d lor,lilno flu bit cured In 10 (j-, j io.siiiny.-i. liefer to luojpml. uis cured II luall part-. Da.AUnsii.uiun . jlu h. t?P- t o fcS i, day. Samples worth tl.W FRES .iiii-s t under tttu horse's feuc ,it.ir... Usvl )""" under tno horse's feeu Address lJKis.ws,i-.u'3.SA'h:,'v hms iioLbta, Holly, Mica f i'.L.M,'l I.1C HKI.f for Kluneys, Pain, N nvd,. ouos. ,ire. n.K lit,, acOo., Cleveland, i. rvous ii has Ukcn lite Ind ,n tlie !ide ( tlx, cl.si o( remedies, sn.l hat give, .line, uuivciisl tsu.uc. tlwa, MURfflY BROS.. I'dii., Te. tsnsswee the is.or ol the public .nd now rsnk. moii the lesdu, Msui. CUM. ut the oiKU.in. A. 1 SMI HI. Ursdlu. J, ft. rue 41. ou. 1 TOI DiYS ' urt. la Uljsrsolead sol u mum atncLufs. Mrs only by the SZtui Cbioictl Co. Cincinnati,!? tudo. TtiR Rpst A Wntnrnnnnf iU Coat. Ti.e Dew V irinnttjj wut-rpiofti, and III kr-ep )vu dry r addla. BrtWAia of Imiuitoc. hu frriiuin wliluil tlia lliuui,,i rtt.l,.Ku fret. A. J.'iowr, busiui,, Usti BUFFALO nn IE anej. IV phi i b.tv FRAZER maf- 11 if h