I HOUSEHOLD AFFAIRS. flow I, noon May Iks Cleaned. 'Tho chenp lncrs, such us Oriental, Fedora and Egyptian, are often cast asido as useless when once soiled, but they may be washed and done up as good as new if a little care is taken," said a dresser to a reporter for the New York Mail and h'xprent recently. "First the lnccs should be carefully remoyed from the garment and put into a basin of hot eonn suds. Use an ordinary soap. After soaking for an hour or so the lace should bo carefully rubbed between the hands, nd after washing in several waters it may be boiled if very much soiled. The laro should not be wrung out in the reu'.nr war, but the water pressed out with the pnlms of the hands. If narrow lace for niching purposes, starch with a little clear starch, allowing one tea spoonful to a pint of water, otherwise take out of clear water. hile still damp, pull the lace gently with tho fingers into proper shape. Dry in the sunshine, then dampen and iron over several thicknesses et flannel. The iron should be moderately. hot. All the points should be nicely pulled into shipe with tho fingers and then ironed. Embroid ered laces should bo ironed on the wrong side 83 that the pattern is not flattened." Recipes and Hints. To make paper stick to a wall thnthnt been whitewashed, wash in vinegar 01 saleratus water. . When clothes are scorched, remove the stain by placing the garment where the sun can shine on it. Always hang a broom up when not in use. Put an ordinary, small-sued screw eye in the end of the handle if no bettei Way suggests itself. Remove the seeds and fill large green peppers with cooked tomato pulps and mixed mushrooms seasoned with buttei and salt, and bake in a hot oven. They are very appetizing. Equal parts of ammonia and turpentine will take paint out of clothing, no mat ter how dry or hard it may bo. Satur ate tho spot two or three times, then wash out in soapsuds. ' For roast turkey make the stuffing of four ounces of finely minced sausage meat, four ounces of slightly dry Vienna bread, soaked in milk and pressed dry. one tablespoonful of minced parsley, one tablespoonful of minced onions, salt, pepper, and grated nutmeg to taste, and two eggs. thoroughly and stuff thi turkey with it. To polish glass and remove slighl scratches rub the surface gently, first with a clean pad of fine cotton wool and afterward with a similar pad cor ered with cotton velvet which has been charged with fine rouge. The surface will, under this treatment, acquire n polish of great brilliancy, quite free from the presence of any scratches. Hominy muffins are nice for breakfast. Beat a pint of cerealine to a smooth paste, adding one-half pint of flour with a heaping teaspoonful of baking pow der and a teaspeonful of salt. Beat the yolks of two eggs and mis them with two cups of warm milk, two ounces ol su?ar and two ounces of butter; mix quickly with the hominy, adding the two whites of eggs beaten to a froth Pour the batter into hot muffin rings 01 pans well buttered and bake in a quick oven. In buying table linen the finer, smaller the pattern the longer it will last. iien taDle clotus are half worn, or past use as such, the best parts may be cut into table napkins, and. if neatly hemmed, few will notice that they arc not of a regular patem, or these pieces may be used to lay under boiled tisd for serv ing; or they will be found very conven ient for wrapping cake before putting away in a tin box, for covering bread and a score of other uses in the kitchen ; for it is never well to leavo food, after it is cold, uncovered and exposed to air, dust and flics. If Mrs. B. will try this South German potato soup she will find it excellent; and as it requires so little time in its preparation it will be a valuable addition to her book of recipes: Cook as many potatoes as are needed in 6altand water; drain them and mash them fine; thin thhm with boiling water and pass the mixture through a sieve; boil a leek and add it to the sonp, as well as some flour browned slightly in butter, and cook for five or ten minutes. Just before serv ing and the yolk of an egg and also some extract of beef if desired. Serve with croutons. Neu Youk Commerced. Crepe. Crepe is made of the finest silk, but the details of its manufacture are a trade secre,. The threo processes of its con struction are kept distinot; the weavei never sees the dyeing, nor the dyer ot weaver the crimping. j-ach h carried on in a dilTerent place. Some facts are known. Thus, the dyeing is the last of the three procses and it is dressed with gum. It is therefore of the utmost im portance that if crepe gots wet it should not be put near tho fire. If wet, it thould be wiped at once, or gummy marks will be apparent wherever tho rain has fallen. But on no ncount should it be placed neir the fire. The best method of removing mud or stains is to damp the crepe with pure cold water, ind dry away from tho fire. The manu facturers could renew tho condition of shabby crepe, but in an amateur way less costly crere may successfully undergo home treatmeut. Crepe is a manufac ture in w hich the English as a nation stand unrhalcd, although thero ate manufactories of crepe iu France, Italy and Germany. Tho im erial crepe as n material for dres-e.-s is used where the ordinary crepe is not required. It is nude of wool and is quite durable. It is often used for trimmings, but thia U by no means its original purpose. A Pound of Cotton. A single pound of cotton, spun with out wusto into Bpoxil thread of No. .IU, would make 32,(100 feet, or say six miles. So the lust year's cotton crop equals a No. 50 tin-cad over l'.'.o i;j million miles long l!i,0.i;:,:s l,!i; milesi ! With tho earth for a spool O.ooo mi".cs around, iuh a thread woul I encircle it 715.1,7.1:5 times! It would run 7!, ')0i threads -tween the earth and the moon, or 207 threads from tho earth to the sun, each thread !J,0OO,0o0 miles long. Olive wood is the fashionable wood hist now. SCIENTIFIC AND INDUSTRIAL. The cave animals of North America, iccording to Professor A. 8. Packard, comprise a total of 172 species of blind creatures, nearly all of which are mostly white in color. A communication to the French Acad emy of Sciences by itons. C. V. Zenger, has called attention to the simultaneous occurrence of brilliant auroras and me teoric showers, suggesting a probable connection. The importance of microbes to the growth of plants has been practically demonstrated by M. Laurent, who ob tained only one-fourth as much buck wheat from sterilied mould as in soil containing bacteria. A new method of cure has been re cently and successfully tried by a physi cian in Thuringia. He made the experi ment of letting several of his phthisical patients pass the night in tho open forest in hammocks, covered with cusnions and plaids. A German engineer named Ilenkcls has invented a ventilating window-pane which admits fresh air while preventing a draught. Each square metro of glass contains five thousand holes, which arc of a conical shape, widening toward the inside. The new device has already been adopted by many of tho German hospitals. In the new organ now being built by Messrs. Willis for Canterbury Cathedial, tho electric current is also employed as a transmitter of power from the" fingers of the organist to the pipes, which will be 120 feet above him. This is no new ap plication of electricity, for the same thing has been done in past years. But the sys tem employed is new, and is the inven tion of the builders of the organ. Mahogany is being rapidly introduced into every part of India, wheie it promi ses to thrive. The seeds sown have ger minated remarkably well, a single pound planted in green-houses in tho southern districts having yielded betwen three and four thousand plants. It is thought to be quite probable that the world may some day look to India instead of to America for its mahogany, as well as for its quinine Tho eastern product of the latter has already become so extensive and of such superior quality that the cinchona bark exports to the United States of Colombia are said to have di minished fifty per cent, within five years. In some of the great sawmill establish ments of the West, six foot circular saws are run 700 revolutions to the min ute. Kunniug at 750 revolutions to the minute, the teeth of the six foot saw are traveling nearly three miles a minute. Six foot saws have been driven at as high rate of speed as 880 revolutions to the minute. In Michigan, a few years ago, a Canadian company geared up its mill to run its six foot saw 650 revolu tions to the minute. A sawmill at Padu cah, Ky., which had a seventy-six inch saw and steam feed, cut one day 10, 571 feet of one inch poplar boards in about seventy minutes. In this trial the saw made no sawdust; each tooth tore out a strip of wood about one-quarter of an inch long. Michigan sawyers have boasted of a mill dropping sixteen one inch sixteen-foot boards a minute, but this seems like an exaggeration. The Largest Hay Market. New York is tho largest hay market in the country, and yet only a few thou sand of the millions of bales which are brought here annually find their way out cf the city. The supply does not exceed the enormous demand for city consump tion. Outside of a few thousand bales which go to Brooklyn to make up the deficiency of the Long Island crop, the 2,500,000 bales which reach New York every year are consumed on Manhattan Island. About a quarter of a century ago the counties along the Hudson River, south of Albany, were able to furnish the city with all the hay it needed, and twenty five barges made weekly trips for forty weeks of the year to fetch the crop to market. Now it comes from every part of the State, and Ohio and Indiana are called upon to help supply the demand. Hay comes from even as far west as Kansas. As the hay-growing district gradually worked farther West the tarrying busi ness fell into the hands of the railroads, and then the commibsion men made their appearance. There are now about twenty live large commission dealers who handle hay exclusively, and a host of smaller dealers who either buy it and bring it here or handle it in connection with other produce. Wben the hay reaches this city it is classified into grade No. 1, grade No. 2, and grade No. 8. The av erage price is if 15 per ton. It is not usu ally weighed at this end, but is sold by the weight marked on each bale at the time of packing. Tho street railway companies insist upon having it weighed hero-before they buy it. Over $18,000 worth comes in every day. Is'ew York Stealing a Cannon. There must bo some clever thieves in Russia. It might bo supposed that a large cannon was about as hard a thing to walk away with as Mark Twain's white elephant; but apparently it is not 4a fe to leave such little articles around loose in the country of the Czir. The Odessa correspondent of tho Lon don JVctfls writes: A singular and uuda cious theft was perpetrated a few days ago at !cbastopol. The time gun, which is fired every day1 at noon and again at sundown, alter which no foreign vessel may leave tho harbor, was stationed on tlie land-spit on w hich 1-ort Paul stood during the Crimean war. Tho time-gun wa-t a brass unnon of considerable weight, und, along with its limber, was tlie other evening carried bodily away by thieves. The police have failod toro eover the gun, the disappearance of which has subjected the port authorities to nn amount of banter on their lax pro tection of the city defences. Financial Ability. 'Do you know, Dumley, if Robinson Is a man of any financial ability (" 'I imagine not, or he would occa. sionolly have money in his pocket. I never asked him for a dollar yet that he didn't say hi. hudut a cent in his pocket." "Then w hat I've heard must be true J" "What's that f" "That he is a in n of remarkable finan cial ability." A York bun. HEALTH HINTS. Tho best promoters of health are fresh air nnd sunlight. A simple remedy for neuralgic head ache is the juice cf a lemon taken in a cup of black coffee. Changes of dress from thick to thin should nlways be mndo in tho morning, as then all tho vital forces are in full play. Almost all bites nnd stings being acid in their nature, the cure is an alkali. Spirits of hartshorn is the best houshold remedy; next comes salcratus or lye from Wood ashes. For warts, corns and other indurations of the cuticle, nothing acts more satis factorily than a mixture of equal parts of tincture of iodine and glacial acetic acid, applied in repeated layers with a brush, night and morning. It has been shown by actual experi ment that the water which streams down the inside of tho window of a closed sleeping-room is so impn gnntcd with tho noxious exhalations of tho sleepers that one drop is suilicient to poison a rabbit. It is said that a solution of pilocarpine, two grains to the ouuee of water, in jected in'0 the tooth cavity will euro neuralgia caused by bad teeth. From an eighth to a quarter of a grain seems suf ficient to check the pain in the course of an hour. Water cannot satisfy the thirst which attends cholera, dysentery, diarrhea and some other forms of disease; in fact, drinking cold water seems to increase tho thirst nnd induce other disagreeable seDsatiocs; but the thirst will be perfectly and pleasantly subdued by eating a com paratively small amount of ice, swallow ing it in as largo pieces as practicable and as much as is wanted. M. Ginjcot states that of all measures applied locally to boils, the best results are 6btaincd from tincture iodine. He paints the boil with a thick coating, and sometimes a single application is sulli cient to cause tho intlammation to sub side; it is better, however, to make the application several times a day for several days. He does not recommend the early opening of boils, but if evacuation of pus bo necessay antiseptics should be used. Dead Beats. There are 10,0 10 boarding houses in this city, writes the New York corre spondent of the Troy 'Times, and yet hardly one out of 100 has got rich at it. Keeping boarders is a slavish life, and those who make a living at it may be considered doing well. One of the great est burdens to which this class is subject is the "dead beats," who abound in that great city. There are probably at the present time 5,000 persons living at boarding houses who nave for years got along without paying. They are very adroit in shifting around, and when driven from one house find some other victim. These dead beats also infest the hotels, and a popular landlord said that he could not get rid of a set of fellows who sneaked in and got their meals. The art of beating is carried to great perfec tion in this city, and is indeed often practiced at the clubs, where, if a man can keep up his dues, he can sponge drinks or get the barkeeper to "hang it up." Amoug the worst beats at the first class hotels are the foreign gentry, who bring letters from tho nobility and who want to get into society in order to marry a fortune, or, if that be impracticable, to play as far as possible the foreign con fidence game. It is said that an English visitor has just got home, leaving every man in tho club (where ho got an intro duction) his creditor. He did not even spare the steward. Another dangerous class to hotels is found in tho elegant and fascinating ladies who come in a dashing way with lavish display of dress and diamonds and are prosecuting claims for imaginary estates. Arsenic for the Complexion. L. T. 8. writes: "Is it safo to take arsenic for the complexion?" It is not at all safe; in fact, arsenic will not improve the complexion, except at the expense of health. For many years the public has been complaining about arsenic in wall papers and dyes used for articles of clothiug. When peo ple are made sick by these causes, now much more terrible must be the illness caused by taking arsenic into the stom ach. Anyone who uses arsenic for the complexion does it at a dendly peril. Some of the physicians of this city re cently have been treating women for some unknown disease, wh ch they were not able to diagnose. Finally they found that their patients were secretly taking arsenic for the complexion. Their eyes were pulled out and their face had a deathly pallor, such as is caused by poi son irom minerals. JSeio lork Hew. The Mania forMc(iiciiie. There are 1, P 10 medicines in the phar macopeia of the United States, and in most communities there is one man who has tried sycry one o:' them before dis covering that there never was anything the matter with him. The taste for strong drink is a mild, innocuous, feeble inclination, co npared with the racing mania for "taking medicine" when once it gains a perniciously active hold upon a man. There are not many really sick people in the world, and if it wasn't for the man who delights in dosing himself with anything that has a long inline and an almanac atta' hment, thero wouldn't be half enough paint on tho rocks of picturesque America to hide the land scape. UvrtifVe. A Boy's Great Grit. Recently two boys, brothers, one of cleren and tho other ten years of ago, were playing on the banks of tho rive at I' res. They proposed to take some wood home to their mother, and while gathering it lifted the dry branch of a tree and uncovered a rattlesnake, which bit the eldest boy in tho finger. Tho youth, feeling tho venom enter ng his veins, called on the younger brother to cut olf the in jurcd member. The latter asked: "With what?" "With this thin fiat stono," replied the intrepid youth, picking up one and placing his finger on another Hat one. The brother took the stone and ham mered away, and after some time suc ceeded in mashing oil the finger, thus saving the life of the heroic boy, who stood the horrible torture with great for titude. Jiruienswlle (Te-tnA Cusmotioli- tan. Sixty feet of solid salt has been struck at Port Huron, Mich. Spreading Eye Diseases. To mention a few of the modes of eye disease contagion, I havo to speak, in tho fir.it place, of towels, says a writer in tho Meilifid and Suryi'td Journal, espe cially of that abominable institution known as the roller-towel, which hns been used so much in asylums where forty, fifty or more children uso the same towel, whether they have granular lids or not. True, in a great many of those cases the existcm e of granular lids was not known; but even in cases in which the cxistenco of tho disease was evident, the ignorance or carelessness of the per sons in charge has allowed transmission by means of towels to be one of tho most fre iicnt sources of contagion. Asa car rier of the contagion, tho house fly plays an important rolo, especially in cases of young children who are not able to pro tect themselves against the visits of this little animal. Attracted by the sweetish odor of the r.isclinr.e, it will fettle upon the eyes of children affected with the disease, especially infants, and carry the contagion m its claws to tlie other eye or the eyes of the sleeping infants. Bicycling1 Extraordinary. An extraordinary bicycling race was recently decided in connection with the South Australian 'Cyclists' Union at Ade laide. It occurred in the final heat of tho Walker handicap and the bicycle ob stacle race. Tho conditions of the ob stacle race were First lap To ride round, lift machines over five hurdles, mounting machines after getting ever hurdles, except the last one, when you run to the centre of the oval, lie on your back and cat a roll. Second lap Crawl through tho bags under tarpaulin and through casks, run one hundred yards with bicycle, mount and finish lap in the saddle, dismounting opposite pavil ion. Third lap Hun to centre of oval, put on coat and bell-topper and ride to the scoring board at the south end, then across the oval and over the water jump, round the flag, on to the track, and fin ish. Enormous crowds witnessed this event, and the obstacle amateur cham pion was tho hero of the hour in Ade laide 'cycling circles. St Jacobs Oil deadens pain and makes the lamo walk. Major Arnold, of tho Occidental Hotel, San Francisco, Cat., was completely cured of rheumatism by Its use. A mink of beryls Is a new find In Connecti cut. The her. is already txken out include tlie variety known as uolden beryls, and rank oh pr clous '.tones only two plaees lower than diamonds. There are alio other brilliant col ors fj nd in this mine. AY hen irritation of the throat causes a tick ling coiitfli, use Hed Star Cough Cure, which will effect immedia e and permanent relief. Ono nf Brooklyn's Board of Health officers recommends it as purely vegetable and per fectly harmless. Price, 25 cents. In the State of Michigan it is claimed there ar- lllii linns engaged in thu mnnu(nclure of salt, operating I hi work and 4,M tolar cov ers. The manufacture for thn e r amounted to l.OyT.uw barrels, an inert-use of 7ltf, 101) oyer leei. - 'II Knocks he Spots," ' and everything; iu tlie nature of eruptions, bloti hen, pimples, ulcers, .crofulous humors, and incipient consumption, which is nothing; more nor less than scrofula of the luuga, com pletely out of the system. U stimulates and invigorate tlie iiver, tones up the htomach, reuulatos tlie bowels, purities the blood and builds ud the weak places of the b'xlv. It ia a purely vegetable compound, and will do more than Is claimed lor It, We refer to Dr. Fiercc'l "Uolden Medical JJiicoveruS Thb Centennial of Columbia College (New York) will be celebrated In April next. "As (Jood as New," are the words used by a lady, who was at one time Riven up by the most eminent physicians, and left to die. Reduced to a mere skeleton, plo and hazard, not able to leave her bed, irom all thu-io tli.Htres-dng diseases peculiar to suffering females, such as displacement, leu corrlicra. inflammation, etc., etc. She began taking Dr. Pierce's "Favorite Prescription," and also using tlie local treatments recom mended by him, and Is now, she says, "as good as new." Price reduced to one dollar. By d niKgists. The "b'ack miid"of (iarland County, Ark., yields forty dollars in silver to the ton. For weak lungs, spitting of blood, shortness nf breath, conniiinptlon. night-sweats, and all linceriug couple", I)r- Pierce's "Golden Medi cal Discovery" is a sovereign remedy. Supe rior to cod liver oil. By druggists. In Fnulaml the demand for American oys ters t ar exceeds the supply. How lo Have Money. AVherever you live, you hould write to Hal lett Ac Co., Portland, Maine, and learn about work i hat you ran do while living at your own home at a profit of hF least from (6 to t'Si and upwards daily. Some huvs made over -'it In a day. All is new. Hither sex. All ai;es. Hallett & Co. will start you. Capital not needed. All particulars free. Send along your address atonce and all of the above will be proved to you. Nothing like it ever known to workiug men. The farmers. In their swamps, we're sure. Could find the roots and plants that care; If by their knowledgethey only knew For just the disease each one grew. Take courage now and "Swamp-Hoot" try (for kidney, liver and bladder complaints). As on tins remedy you can rely, If afflicted with sore eyes use Dr. Isaac Thomp son's Eye- water. Druggists sell at 25c. per bottle If a cough disturbs your fleep, take Plso' Cure for Consumption and rest well. Out cf tho Fire Only those who hare suffered from salt rhenm la the worst form can know the agonies caused by this dreadful dlneau. Hood's BarsaDarllla has had remarkable success In curing salt rheum, as well as all street inns of the blood. "I owe the same gratitude to Hood's Sarsaparllla that one would to his rescuer from a burning build I mk. I was tormented with salt rbeum, and had to leavt off work altOKether. My face, about the eyes, would be swollen and scabbed, my hands and a part or my body would be raw sores for weeks at a time, niy nih would seem so rotted that I conld roll pieces from between my Angers as large as a pea. line physician called It type polfon. and gave me uteillcine accordingly: but salt rbeum cannot be cured In that way. Finally 1 bought a bottle of I'ooil's Sur.aparlUa. It helped me so much that I look a second and third bottle, and was entirely cured. 1 have not been troubled with salt rheum rlnec." A. L. KonBi, Hagar Street, Jamaica Plain, Mali. Hood's Sarsaparllla Sold by all druggists, fl; six fort. Prepared only by C. 1. HOOD a CO., ApoUiecarlas, Lowell, Mass. IOO Doses One Dollar COCKLE'S ANTI-BILIOUS PILLS, rHE QBE AT ENGLISH EEMED Y Fnr Liver. Bile, Indlgeatton, sto. Free (rasa Mer cury ; cuntsias only Pure vegetable Ingr-dlaia, Axenl: li. N. t'HITThNTOfi, Mew ferk. nCIHM llHlt Cured. Treatment seat on trial unvin iiumami KKMEDT CO , l.fjelte, lud fKPIUMHABIT '"rr&SZSk faifi or u ifniai. ray wnncura. nannsoni uoosv free. Jjk. O. JAV hath tnT, KpaCity, Ma IE GUJIRAI.TFF YOU XSLAKi Mil Muiiki, I Ireuliirs l.ellers null I naers PIJPP Ii nran all over We U. a. an I rlll.6 fan&dt it you sen.t ai cent to have your name In new i.ue of Ave-nf ailll llreclrr. AUk- A CU,w ii. knu: V. .V V. PINKHAr.Vd VFCETaBIE r COMPOUND, baFoslttTtCBr ALL of then Painful Delictte Complaint! and Complicated troublaa and Waaknattea to common among our Wivaa, Mothers, and Daughtara. It will aura tntirtly mil orarwin or vaginal t rcuMaa, In la mmm- iion amrf VUra titm. Falling and wmaarvrnt tpinal particularly ThtWomwn'i urg Frtwnd anra e Ifa, tflriRA Ri.aftiNaToovaiiwoiaBi wovr.t. iTnmMOYEa VAiin-KSfla, nATrruR0T, all oauTiif roa artvuLAKra, Ann atusn WBAsTwwaa or tub) aTtaucK. Cirau Led C"ftftatA. at NrrauALraiuoDa famci without riw. VaM fcy lrat(Ut, Prlc 1 . r fcot' Rhenmatism and Catarrh Can be Cttred. CanandAioua, N. Y., May 2S, 1880. Pardee Medicine Co.: Gknti.bmks: Nearly all winter I was con fined to my room with inflammatory rheu matism. I commenced using Dr. Pardee's Khoutnatic Remedy, but aftor taking; it for a time the pain became more intense, and I was alarmed and feared the remedy was making me worse, but rontinued its use and soon the pain left me, and I gradually im proved, the soreness leaving my arms and shoulders and seeming to pass out at my toes. It has completely cured me. At the time I commenced using the remedy, I had a throat difficulty and the catarrh, which I found to be better after taking it, and it oc curred to me to use it as a gargls, which I did, and to my great satisfaction I improved rapidly, and to-day am free from both rheu matism and catarrh. I consider it indispens able as a family medicine. I take one tea spoonful after breakfast, and find it a splen did tonic. I would advise you to recommend it as a gargle for throat troubles and catarrh, for I know it will cure. I have seen some remarkable cures from the use of this rem edy, and it is one I can recommend to all. I am, very truly yours, E. R. McCALL. Less than One-half the Amount Cured Him. John C. Heron, of 40 4th street, Rochester, has been troubled for years with rheumatism in the shoulders and about the heart. He gave a physician ten dollars for an examina tion, and he merely informed him that he had rheumatism of the heart He was cured by Dr. Pardee's Rheumatic Remedy, and for less than one-half the money paid for the ex amination. Ask your druggist for Dr. Pardee's Rem edy, and take no other. Price, $1 per bottle six bottles, $. Pardee Medicine Co., Rochester, N. Y. PWAMPKOOT A KESXCAL VICTCEY! runs Tlrlirhta' Dlseaan. Catarrh H nf the Bladder, Torpid I.Ivor. It 9 i dissolves uau-MoncsQnii u ravel. SYMPTOMS and CONDITIONS of Urine for which this Remedy abould be taken. Bcaldlnir Ftnnnaare Ttlood-tlnirod Plabetio Albumen Hrlck-dust Dropsical Dribbling Milky-pink Headache rrequeut Coattvcnei. Honeache Nervous Rodlsh-dnrk Uric-acid Scttllnirs Catarrhachc Ilnckaohe Ncrveacho Phoanhatee Uad-taste I oui-llreath Gall-colo' ITIS A8PECIFIC. Brtry torn f to f As tpot. Ilel levee and Curfsnf-TU7l KMme-fover Canker, Dyspepsia, Anirmla, Malaria, Kever k;iiiu Affile, iNciiruiKin, imeuraatism, KninrR-e. Iinenioi mo rrosutte i.mnn, rexiuu weak ness, Hpermatorrhtna and Omit, I si .11 minutes mood i mnurltlea. Scrofula I Rrysipelaa, Kalt-Khetim, fcyphilis. Pimples. iinou-iii-s, rover-sores, ana inucer-Tints. It la it moat Wonderful Appetizer. Butl.u up gulckly a kun-down Constitution. tW-Tell your neiirhbora all about It. iPbice 25c, $1.00 6 bottles $5.00.1 spared at Dr. Kilmer's Dlsp llnubamton. N. Y.. U. 8. InmlW (hiide to Health (Sent letters o of Inquiry promptly answered. H1 IV ALL IIKIT.UI i STHMA CURED ! A 4rMan Asthma fie, ww .iu to i1t.B Ifortabla tlel .(fact, cares br ftll ts.rt fell. A m imm.1,11 riiur ib u win iu iiiitm oom- 11.1111,11 Dmifliu .rbrmtll. R.nipl. T St K. V. fori ri mwmuh I, mmn ipticat. met avw els. sna p. IK. It. Nf'IIIF'i 'MN, HU I'.ul. Mli. l riso's Remedy for Catarrh I the Bast, aUal to Use, and Cheapest. Headache, Hay Fever, Ac MceuUk I COOi WE WANT YOUI zr?ZSZl profitable mploymunt t rprovtnt ua in overy county. Halnry $7( pr month nt expert, or Unr commlMiuo on ftv.ea If prafemn.. Good sHApl. Kvery on buy. Outfit and particular Vrr. BTAlSbAKl) 8ILVKUWAKK CO., UobTON, MASS, P EM C IA f J C orlRlnal and Inerease, II O IU W 5. lor.oliller. Ihelr wives nnd children. No fee unless successful. Wrlle forciri ulars. Tuos. B. Hlnuiss, Washington, 1.0. nitiVM D.IIa Crsat English Gout and tllUlT S rlllSi Rheumatic Remedy. Oval liox, ftl.uu I round, SO els. CJF.N'n FOIl 4 0-1 AUK Cntalovueof Farms, n 1'1. Stores. Hotels, etc., for r A I.K anil E -C'HAMh. Mention this paper and enclose stamp. V. M. Ilolchkln, U1M1HAMR1N. N. Y. VFII I'AI.VEH. Ptll'I.TItV, t'INRBI'T. LAI, TKII. A ton a rtuy wanted at ths Wall about llnrkeu ftls profit to shippers. 'or instruu lions ddrci. J. SMITH, i hast Ave., Urocklyn. S.Y. WELL DRILLING ktrtMnvry for nof any depth, (mm to to s t)M foflt. for Writer, Wll or . Our Mount d tMra DrlUtnc nnd lPortAblf Hor Power Maciiineaat't to work In 90 minutr. GuarauWYd to drill fasu-r and with Ira power than any other. .Specially adapted to drill inr Well in wartn or ruck t to l,0uufet- Farm and nihcmar makm tlV to $4o per Jay with our mar-hinvrv and ttola. hp'rndid bu (tineas for Winter or Kiimmrr, We ar the old rat md Larfeut MMiufarburar la thu bualn. Aend 4 cent la Ukntpa lurilhiMiratea Latalotpu H. ABDRim, Pioro W ell Excavator Co.. Rem York FRAZERGAnf.L BEST IN THE WORLD UIILsUuC arUet Uis uenulus. bold fevsrvwhsr. MtTCfJTC Obtained. Send stamp for M I El 1 4 I O lnvealors' UulUa. Bisa I sua, Paieul Uwju, Wasblaaleu, 1). C s .Earn ii m sMfF 1 1 IKS" a nsary, FV.) ired. 'rt. -n limn. rim -A rf, ---p---, rumum CURES ALL HUMORS, from a. common Tllotoli, or Frnpllon, to the -worst Rcrofula. Klt-r lim fti, 'rTr-orca,' fccal y or li(MRh Kb ln In short, all illscnses oaiifcl liy had tilood are) conquered by this powerful, purifying-, and InTlgoratlnir medicine, droit I'.atlns; l i ce re rapidly bral under Its iH-nittn Inllueno. Especially has it niBnlf'-tod Ms potpnrjr la curing 'I'elior, Iloso Itnali, Holla, Car bund, Sore) I-;yr, Mcrofu lotia Stores and NwellltiKB, lllp-.foim lMeensc, White Hwellliiaa, iiollrc, or 'Illicit Nock, and ldilarartl (ilniida. Bond tea cents in stamps for a Innre treatise, -with col ored plates, nn Skin ltiHoasi's, or tho snme amount forafreatise on PerofulouB Affect Ions. "TIIK IIMOI IS Till: I.HK." Thoroughly cleanse It hv using lUr. IMcrce'a t-olden itledlral Ileo very, and fond digestion, a fair akin, buoyant plr Ita, vital atrengtli, and aouiiducaa of couatltutlon, will 1)0 established. COUSULIPTIOrJ, which Is Krrofnloiis) Dlacnan of th Idlings, Is promptly nnd cerlnirily arrestai and cured by this tlod-glven remedy, if tnk befora the last etaifes of t he disease are reaehea From Its wonderful power over this terrilsj fatal disease!, when first offering tills now 09 ebratcd remedy to tho public!. Dr. VlKnti thought seriously of enllltig it Ills tloile' an m pt Ion Vu re," but iibutidoned that name) as too limited for a medicine which, from It wonderful combination ol tonic, or strengthen ing', alterative, or biood-elennslng. anti-bilioua, pectoral, and nutritive properties, is unequnled, not only as a remody lor consumption of the lungs, but for all CHRONIC DISEASES I or TUB Liver, Blood, and Lungs. PTf you feel dull, drowsy, debilitated, hava sallow oolor of skin, or yellowish-brown spot on face or body, frequent hendiH-ho or dizzU ness, bad taste In mouth, liiterniil bent or chills, alternating with hot Hushes, low spirits and gloomy borobodings, irregular nppetite, and coated tongue, you iico suffering from Illdl (eallon, Ityapepaln, nml Torpid I.lver or III I Idleness." Ju many cases only part of tbeso symptoms are experienced. As a remedy for all such cnaca, Ir. lMerce'a Cioldeu Medical lMscovcry hns no equal. Vor Weak Lungs, Spitting of mood, Shortness of Id-eat Ii, liroiichltla Severe f.oiialia, t'oiiNiiinpllon, and kindred affections, It is u sovereign remedy. Send ten cents In stamps for fir. I'lerco's book on Consumption. Sold by Drags lata. PRICE $1.00, ton $a.oo. World's Dispensary Medical Association. Proprietors, 603 Main St., Buffalo, N.T. .V'l v.lliY"si3 2 J" "..VonBawt T.TVITR. BVV FILLS. ANTI-mMOJi and CATHARTIC Sold by llrugglHta. cenU a vial. $500 REWARD la offered by tho proprietors of Dr. Bago's Catarrh Kerned for a case of catarrh -which the? cannot cure. . If you have a discharge from the nose, offensive or other wise, partial loss of smell, taste, r krlnir weak evefl. dill I'Sln r prerwure In head, you have Catarrh, lliou sanda of casee terminate In consumption. Dr. Bage s Catahhh Kkmidt cures tho worst eases of Catarrh, "t old In the Head," and Catarrhal Headache, to ocuta. N Y N V'i 170ND SUCCESS. ECONOMY IS WEALTH. PAT.TERNS FREE! All that you wish to uso during tho year, by subscribing for Demorest's Monthly. Containing Stories, Poems, and ether Literary at traction, comhlulng Artlxtic, Kcicntitic, uuil House hold matters. Illustrated withOrigiiml Steel Engrav ings, Photogravures, Oil Pictures, uud tine Wood cuts, making it tho Model Magazine of America. Ksch number ronuins an order, entitling the holder to the selection of any pattern Illustrated in the fashion department in that number, in any of the slr.es manufactured, making patterns during the rear of the value of over threo dollars. W e also propose to give considerable attention to the Grand Prohibition Party movement as one of tlie most Important and live moral Irenes nf the day. Send twenty cents for the current number with Pattern Coupon and yon will certainly viilisrribe Two Dollars for a year and get ten times its value. W. JENNINGS DKMOKEST, PtiBi.isnER, t 17 K. 14th St., New York. Sold by all Newsdealers and Postmasters. UNRIVALED ORGANS Oa the F. A H Y PA Vll ENT srstem. fiom ,L'i5 per month up. lini stylex, $U to '.". KcuU for Cat alogue with full particulars, mailed free. UPRIGHT PIANOS ConNtruclefd on the new mrthrvl of utrlnu-lnn, on similar terms, i-eml fur deat-riptlve Cat.tlomie, MASON & HAMLIN ORGAN AND PIANO CO. Boston, New York, Chicago. Marvellous Hcmory DISCOVERY. Wholly unlike Art Ifirlal byn terns Cure of Mind Wan dering Any book k'ui ntMt lu cue readinK. Heavy re dtirtions fur postal Classen. Fron-oiLi., with opin ion), of Mr. Proctor, tlie Astronomer, lions. W. W. A Ton, J I'D ah y. Hknjamin, ills uh, Wood ami others, teat pout fkfk, lv PROF. LOISETTE, 2.17 Fifth Avenue, New York. i Docs Vouh Back Ach&t MOP PLASTER." S Th STRONGEST and fiA, i . . BEST Puroua Abutter mii, VV l,..n anni.wl t. i now oraorouew ia any oart, niaLant relief iu ftilt aud the part woiuiarfully atroiiuthtinod. Cou I tains virtuenof Hope, JUurrmiiivPi,Ujhand Ouuia. uhu hi luiiiLiLuuaa. rv vnr iim n..n i'intjin n.n T ...inn, sii'v ssr D Kir It I ,fJ- PENSION CLAIMS 1i K I lK 'ro-rriH . d llllll !'' ii I -- iiprr.Nlii(. TWKNTV.TWO VCA US' K. 1K IJ I K. N ' K. t tfl 'oKUIMiiNDKSi K NoLM'l 1 KD. MILO B. STEVENS & CO. WASHINGTON. D. C. CI.KV LAM). OHIO. CHK A(H). ILL. ULTKDIT. MICH. EHFOL TBP-SSSai "IU W lllil.""S.W'.9.el'll,-IM'UUl!S( CMDEILSEEDS!Sf; Kraurls Hrlll, IIkkti jh, L.imi Ibi.AKD. N. V. ' HUSTON'S. earITOOTH powder KrelaiTerlh leileei uud IJiiiiis lliallliy. TimilF"i and Morphine Habit eured la 10 llfllll I toJJdiijs. Ket rta luuupalleaia eured VI III luall part-. UK. Maiuu.uiii y, Wlcll Pensions to Soldiers lielrs. :i ud stamp lor circulars. fl! . I.. lll.Vl HAM. All y, Wunlii.r.ton, 1. C. S5 laSSa day. Roniples -nrtli l..'iU FKEfe Llues not under ll.e hurse's Ni l. Ail.lrt-u ka-w.TKH's Sara-r kus lloi.iiku.tiiuly Mu-u. PATEHTS Inventory' UssS-SMk frm. 16ra A IW-u. -, Ws.kiiialn. 11 ft
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