4 tl e: 8 ei v a b t( a li ii S' D o I a f , J A GREAT THOROUGHFARE. A GLANCE AT BROADWAT, NBW YORK 8 GREATEST ARTERY. Striking Kvcnta of the Past Thirty Tmm-An KTcr-Shlftlna Pano rama Broadway at Night, "What til the most striking scene yon hnvcucon on Broadway," whs asked of several old New Yorkers the other tiny. Kaoh had looked at the rapidly Kliiftinfr panorama to discover something tliiit the other did not seem to have no ticed. "The most remarkable scene I ever held beheld there," answered one, "was Stephen A. Douglas, speaking from the balcony of the Irving House, at the corner of Broadway and Chambers street, in 1S54, just after the passage of the Kansns-Nclirnska bill. There was the great Republican torchlight proces sion in 1861 in honor of Abe Lincoln, in which 'Wideawakes' from every State participated. Those from Maine were six feet in height. There was a marked contrast ' between that gay spectacle and the gloomy sight at Lincoln's funeral. Never have build ings been so heavily drapped in black as they were then, the parade of the Atlantic t.'ablo celebration in 18 "ill was another notablo sccno on Broadway, and as the crowd moved along they looked up to see the dome of the City Hall atlre from the illuminations. A pro cession two and a hulf miles long moved a'ong Broadway at the World's Fair jMiraile. A storm came up and swept over part of the city. Half of the men in line were drenched to the skin while the other half of the column escaped without having the dust laid on their garments. The funeral cortege that followed the re mains of Fanny Pamell was a weird sight as it moved along Broadway at night, Then thero was the carnival, which'proveda failure. The Bex of the pasreant was a young brewer, who is said to nave paid $1,000 for the privilege of assuming the role as an advertisement of his bus) i AVhcu ae --pcakcr had told of these and other scenes, (-rave and gay, that ho had witnessed .n Broadway, another man was asked what was tho most notable incident that he ever saw there. He said: "It was Lucille Western, walk ing up the street and rehearsing her part ns she went. People who did not know her took her to bo cra?y, and her violent gestures and earnest mutterings were well calculated to create that impression. You would be surprised to note the num ber of persons who talk to themselves as they walk along Broadway. They arc as oblivious to their surroundings and as much alone as if they were in a forest." The student of Broadway walked up the street one forenoon last week looking for striking modern scenes. The side walks have never been so blockaded with boxes and bales and the tver welcome rural visitors. The latter are mentioned advisedly. Y'ou can tell a stranger to New Y'ork by the slow and confused manner in which he makes his way along the street. Y'our New Yorker keeps to the right and goes with a rush, slipping in and out of the crowds with skill born of experience. A stranger will take the wrong side of the walk, stop to look in at a window and impede the progress of a thousand hurrying pe destrians. Owing to one of these blockades the student turned out into the street. A truck loaded with barrels of Prussian blue had been mixed up in a blockade there and a barrel of the powder scattered on the street. The student trod on it and frescoed his boots a gaudy blue. A few blocks farther on a boy carrying a paper of red lead was en countered, lie let it drop on the side walk and some of the stuif decorated tho student's boots, which were thus given a truly startling effect. He stopped to have his boots cleaned at a stand kept by an Italian who wore a cap wit h a tortoise shell forepiece, a head covering, by the way, that certain Italian dudes greatly crave. The Italian had polished only one boot, when he looked up, saw people running in all directions and followed their ex ' ample." A dnjf MfjTfrtisetTTo be mad was lu-liing along the street. The student weut away from there. Miraculously enough, a policeman managed to shoot the dog at the second shot and peace was restored. The student finally got his other shoe polished and continued his march. The ruins of a big toy store ou the north side of the street that recently uuruea witn loss ot lite are being re moved. In front of this place stood 200 Italian women and children. The wo men wore the awning-like head covering of their native costume, and great gold hoops or pendants in their ears. When the workmen would throw a piece of charred wood or a half burned bundle of paper on the street, the women and children would rush forward and scramble for the prize. They completely blockaded the wdewalk. One woman, who was carrying a big bundle of charred wood on her head, collided w ith a man, and her bundle toppled backwards and struck the student ou the feet, ruining the polish on his boots and causing him to hop about with agony. When he had recovered from the acci dent the student continued his march. There is one house on busy Broadway, between the Battery and luion Square. It has steadily resisted the eneroachmeuts of commerce. Great stone pillars extend from foundation to roof of the tall stone mansion. It is said that its blinds are always closed, and, although it is occupied, it looks deserted and grim. The stu'lcnt walked on mile alter milo until he passed One Hundred and Twenty-eighth street. Then he began to en ter the strangest part of Broadway. Quaiut old tumble down buildings flank it, grass is growing in the interstices between the flagging and the sidewalk, great trees that were planted by the Dutch are seen here and there, at one point an old board fence is built cn tire'y across the street. The student stoped at this fence, turned back and took a train for home. Night came on and at midnight he visited that portion of Broadway between (irand and Twelfth streets. The crowds that hail blockaded the sidewalks were gone. At J o'clock a policeman or an occasional strairtiler was abroad. Suddenly a patter of" feet was heard and two men cume rushing along and swept on toward l uion s.iuare. A policeman pursued and arrested them. They tried to explain why they were ruu ning, but he would not believe them. Not untd they had reached the station house were they able to prove the houesty of their intentions and thus gain release. They had made a wager to run a foot rare up Broadway, from the City hall to lnion Square, and were engaged in the contest when arrested. A Matter of Memory. ;Cd you and Johnny run to the gro cer's for me, Frank, and remember to ask for three pounds of cocoa:" "Well, I guess I can remember three TKiunds," answered Master Fruuk de liberately, -if Johuuy will remember I'vx-oa. "Ej'och. The aggregate expert of flour by Ger many has amounted in one year to nearly U, 000,000 barrels. TARM AND GARDEN. Dest met Irenes of Insect. In a recent lecture Professor A. J. Cook, in discussing the rapid increase of injurious insects, said: There are two prominent reasons why insects are so in creasing in numbers, and in their ravages. First, as is true with the cutworms, tho locusts and the curculio, we are des'roy ins their native food plants.and they are rapidly learning year by year that our cul tivated plants are just as wholesome, and even mote too:hsoine, than their old ail ment which we have ruthlessly destroyed. Again, wo arc constantly introducing new insect pests from overthe sea, which prove to be more destructive than in their old homes, and more than rivals for our native insects with like habits. The codling moth, currant slug and clover root-borer are apt illustrations of these unwelcome foreigners. la Fall Plowing Advisable? Opinions of Good farmers differ upon this point. Some argue that because a port. on of the finest of the soil may be blown from the plowed pinions that there is a loss of plant food. This must be very slight, however, and the adjoin ing fields upon which it lodges are cor respondingly benetited. The action of the sun, rain, and frost upou the soil ex posed to the air upon fall-plowed fields will probably liberate and render availa ble a much greater amount of plant food than will be removed by the w ind. Ex cepting mum hillsidrs.whiehare liable to be washed by fall tains, and certain light soils.it will be found much more protita ablc to prepare the ground for wheat and cats in the lull when there is not usu ally such a rush of work as in the spring. The team is generally in much better condition for hard work in the fall than in April or May. Cultirator. Wast lug Fodder. A few days since a neighbor with whom we were tn king concerning cutting the corn before the Irost came, made this remark: "You won't enro so much for fodder this year as you have before, you have so much hay." The com was a little green to cut forgetting tho most and best of the grain, and the very abundant hay crop suggested the though', that the corn-fodder would not be abso lutely necessary to get the stock through the winter ns it had sometimes been be fore, a:d so one need not be as enrcful in saving it. To the careful, prudent farm er there is no need of saying that such a course would be a most unwise and wasteful one 1 he habit of saving should be formed. Save not because one specially needs it at the time or in the near future, but be cause waste is a crime against nature. The lack of care of crops after they are grown is a double waste. Not only has one lost the use of his capital (the use of his land i. but he has lost the labor he has already put into the crop, the manure, the plowing, the planting ar.d hoeing as dence which has given the favorable sea- '1l)w'r should never sutTer for the want son and made the crop possible. No of Wllt,,r- judicious man will be less careful in It is said that while cattle are turned saving all he has raised, or in careful and upon young clover, if only hay is dis judicious feeding, because his harvest j posed where the beasts can get it, they wen, ami is carciess oi me Kind I'rovi has been more abundant thnn usual, or more than his immediate necessities de mand. ermont Watchnum. Water in nutter. While salt will readilv dissolve at fifty degrees, it is not easy to get the butter ' free from the surplus water, and it is by j this needless water that much injury is done to butter r nij-iivc uegrees wouia be better, and salt the butter at sixty de grees. Water is a great solvent of case rne and sugar traces of which will be found in all butter, however well worked but the more water remaining after .Vtlodng E eEiDrr tides of curd orchecse, it becomes rancid by well known chemical aciion. Butter1 should not contain more water than is ! necessary to dissolve w hat salt it w ill re- : tain in the form ol brine, and fourteen ; per cent, seems to be about the amount. : More water than this dilutes the brine, j and defeats by so much the object of tho use of salt in butter to preserve the j cascine from chemical change nor i l.rt -..i:..l.. .1 :.. - . below fifty degrees. In the usual cream- ! .u ut a cum m.-iu'u wi e III ll iciimcraiurc cry butter, and all that made by cold ' is soft, thus allowing it to absorb moist- , having a deep bonier of fur, which is setting, the maker often unintentionally I ure that in wheat or rye stubble falls off. I chosen to mutch the color of the mate leaves more than twenty percent, oi w ater ' The latter also stands up better, giving a I rial. in ouii T, not understanding that butter I made Irom cream slightly acid, retains more moisture than that made from sourer cream. The souriu? breaks un the texture of the creuui, and the butter I separates better from the buttermilk Then all the butter-maker needs to do is to churn the ripened cream at a lower temperature than is needed for sour, to use salt each time in washing it freo I killed on Flint Hiver, near Albany, Ga., from buttermilk, and when the regula- j by the citizens, who never saw a bear in tion amount of salt is used to season the that neighborhood before, butter, let it dissolve, and then by gently Daniel O'Connell, of Stamford, Vt., working and packing, know that the I was attacked by a bear near North butter is free from any excess of water I Adams, Mass., and was being badly above fourteen per cent. Then if kept j worsted, when his dog interfered and he below fifty degrees, and away from the ' mauaged to escape. Tho dog has not influence of the air, butter made from i been seen since. soured milk must keep well. American A man was going over the HockyMount AgriculturUt. ains for pine logs, driving a wagon. I On the top of a large rock by the side of How to Slack hi raw Properly. the road was a young" bear, the mother When it is possible, the armer should stack his own straw, or employ sonic man to stack it for him who will do it well. If hands are secured by changing work, it , is well for two to agree to stack each j other's straw. In any case, one man should be detailed by the owner to stack the straw, and should be provided with enough helpers to enable him to do a good iob. The foreman of the stack should lay out the bottom so as to get us nearly the proper size as po-sible. This is often very hard to do at the s;art, es e cially when threshing from the shock, and it requires practice to judge cor rectly. Old threshing-machine men often acquire a good eye for determining how large the stack should be made, and they should be consulted. If the foundation is made twu. large, the stack will In; flat when it has settled, and if made too small, the stack is run so high that apart must be shoved off at one side, where it is too often allowed to spoil. Iu build ing large stacks, it is preferable to make them quite long rather than too wide, to shed rain well. The foreman should direct where the straw is to be laid, and where the tramping is to be done. In building the outside of the stuck, he should sl:uid at the outer endof thelineof pitchers and place the straw himself. The sides should be run straight up to about one-half, the height the stack is to be wheu complete, und men drawn in at an angle of Irom forly nve xosixivd' -cree Thetramiiing should be donemainlvin the renter under the ridge of the stack, , A New Y'ork drummer in Texas wan , as this part will support the greatest i bragging about the magnitude of the weight, and it is dcsirublu tohave it settle firm he represented. "1 reckon your less than the outside, so as to run the , house in New York is a pretty big estab wuter outward. I' p to toe point where j lihhmeut," said the Texan. "Big? You the topping-out is begun, the sui face can't hnvc any idea of its dimensions, should be kept level. Ik-fore beginning ; l.ustweck we took an inventory of the j to draw the sides in. the center should be employes and found out for the first time rounded Hp. Uamped thoroughly and j that three caahit-rH and four bookkeepers kept iu that shape to tho top. By this were missing. That will give you some method the successive layers ol straw are ! i.K-a of the magnitude of our business." so plated as to lap over each other like 1 HuUr and Furrier. J shingles, and as the stack settles most around the edges they remain in that po sition, shedding the rain much better than if the stack is kept level and tramped tho most around the edges. The stack should bo built up uniformly to the top and not toped out one end at a time. A stack built by system and plan will not settle down in places and let the rain run into holes, making rotten cores reaching to the ground, as is often found to be the case in straw-piles. Farm and Garden Note. Dig potatoes when fully ripened. Promote exercise among the fowls. Let tho water given a milch cow be clear and pure. One good cow is better than two or three medium ones. Fresh and clean mixturesare bettor for hogs than is any sour, fcrmcutcd slop. Sheep and cattle eat readily many weeds and grasses which a hog will not touch. Oat straw is most valuable for stock when fed with clover hay or cotton seed or oil meal. The value of hen manure from a single bird for one year has been estimated at fifteen cents. Turnips, carrots and other roots are very beneficial to sheep in winter to pro mote digestion. Quickly-grown, shade-cured hay is the best thing to make yellow butter, says the (iuernnei Breeder. Grasses and clover do best on rather a firm soil having a fine surface. So do the cereals for that matter. Sunflower seeds should be fed to poultiy in moderate quantities, otherwise they will cause early moulting and make the feathers fly off. President Philips, of tho West Michi gan Horticultural Society, regards un leached wood ashes as the best fertilizer know n for vineyards. It is recommended to spade the poultry yards frequently, and then sprinkle them with lime, as the best mode of cleaning sweetening them up as it were. It is recommended to plow the garden plot as soon as the crop is removed, and thus prevent the invasion of weeds, thus preventing garden work next season. Wind-mills and artesian wells are very satisfactory substitutes for running streams, without which it was formerly supposed pastures could not be kept up. John Gould, in a Philadelphia paper, says if water could be expelled from butter it would keep as well as lard, whose keeping qualities are due to this fact. The Orchard and Garden aftirmi that the French remedy of sulphate of copper and lime, recommended by the Depart ment of Agriculture, does not prevent mildew. Tho dahli.i is regaining its former i popularity. For fine flowers the branches should be thinned out a little and the will cat enough of it to prevent bloat from the clover. Clean culture on moderately rich land P'irlv in fliA spflsnn anil nn cnltivutimi if the soil after midsummer, is one secret of success with ucaches. according to the Xfr England Farmer. An exchange savs: To train a flock 0f sheep raise a l.mb at the house, teach ,t to come when called, and then put it i with the flock. By calling the petted lamb the others will follow. English authority recommends wad ding in pla-e of bran, paper, shavings. etc., ns the best thing in which to pack I?. " ' b """'"",u or "I"'"' " 18 'lulI " necessary 10 Keep pas- turM "P bJ manuring as it is to apply fertilisers to grain fields. As clover is 1H-I"haps the ouly herbage of which tho growth increases the fertility of the land, 80 " the 8Dt'eP the oul.v animal which ca" pasture on grasst s without absorbing more fertility than it imparts, Attempts to burn out stubble in prep- ..- -l : I j. .... ar.uiim lur inuniui: rureiv Buucceus uu- i less it is very heavy and long. Oat straw i better chance lor the wind to tan the names. tven a stat ic ot oats will not j uum with tne same ncrceness as ot other grain, but it makes a smouldering lire. easier to put out by smothering than by water. A Few Dear Tales, bear weighing 600 pounds having started up the mountain on the approach ot thu team, the cull not moving, the mother came bounding back to it, and giving it a nudge with her nose started up the mountain again, ex pecting the cub to follow. But the lit tle one mado no move. Tho old bear then came back the second time, and taking up the cub in her paws gave him several culls. The cub then obeyed oiders and followed the old bear in a gallop up the side of the mountain. A passenger train on a Florida railroad stopped some fifteen miles from Cedar Keys to prevent a collision with some cat tle, when a black bear cume trotting leisurely out of the woods, climbed upou the platform of a car, and entered tho express room, where he found three strings of fish and some bacon, all of which weut quickly into his maw. When the train started up the swaying of the car shut the door. The bear soon became tired of his ride, and looked about for means of egress. Nothing appeared so vulnerable to attack as the windows in the side of the car, which were protected by iron rods about half an inch in di ameter. He selected oneof these,caught two or three of the iron rods with his paws, and, giving them a hug, broke and twi-ted them oil clean. His body was then forced through the aperture and struck the ground like a rubber ball, lie turned two or three somersaults and ambled otf into the woods. . A Big Establishment. j NEWS AND NOTES FOR WOMEN. Lace on some sort of white finish is worn in neck and sleeves. The jersey Is no more, speaking from the point of ticw of fashion. Cashmere .is a popular fabrio, and it is shown in all the new shades. Earrings are again much worn but they are of an unobtrusive character in size. Green pervades all sorts of fabrics and is ever present in all millinery fabrics for the early fall. Velvet is still the standard material for dressy millinery, and several novel ties are shown. The checks in new colors are nuito stylish and are to bo a fabric much liked by young girls. Thero are many mixed fabrics for outer wraps this season, many of them quito bright and pretty. Embroidered velvet is used for tho corsages of many plain gowns, giving dressy effects simply. Sleeves to cut garments are less tight than usual, and in some stylish garments they are wide at tho wrist. Bonnets of soft, pliable felt are mado on a frame in folds and plaits in a man ner similar to those of cloth. Front bands or draped panels nppcar upon many of the new dresses in place of the side panels so long in vogue. Among the new woolen dress materials arc very dark diagonals of rough surfaces which have various colors blended. Many of the new ostrich tips are changeable. Or else speckled with a daiker shado on a contrasting coior. Wido galloons and braids are generally used. Two colors are sometimes woven iu these trimmings with good effect. An Eckford (Mch.) young lady raked 103 acres of stubble in a week, besides taking lessons iu (locution and music. The new beaded galloons for millinery uses are in open designs, and spangles and tinsel cords re often combined with the beads. ; Young women of Waterbury, Conn., havo organized a pedestrian club, and they take a walk of several miles each morning. Goose quill feathers are used on the sides of round hats and are stylish trim ming. The only other addition is tho velvet band. Coats of fine, sn.ooth cloth are usually mad singlc-brcasUd, but double-breasted fronts are seen upon garments of rough Scotch tweed. Girdles made of passementerie links, ropes of beads or of fur, particularly seal skin, are likely to rival those of silver now so extensively worn. The crowns of tho newest bonnets are longer than of late, and arc not indent ed at the ends. Many have long pointed poke fronts, filled in with a slight face trimming. Mrs. Moore, "tie sweet singer of Michigan," is now a veritable woman of letters, being in charge of a post-o!lice in thu Peninsular District of that State. She is an intelligent woman of mdidlo age. Beads will again be used as a garni ture for bonnets. Galloons and passe menteries in fine jets, and also in all colors, are placed flat along the brim and crown in rows, or else in the space be tween. Hevers of the dress material are seen upon many of the new cloth costumes, and these are partly covered with silk or velvet, the dress goods extending beyond the silk and being stitched in rows or decorated with narrow braid. The late Mrs. Anna Paul Hendricks of Madison, Iowa, was the wife of tho first Governor of that Slate. Ho was at ono time I'nited States Senator, and she rode to Washington ou horseback with him and sat by his side in Congress. According to Parisian fashion rules, the favorite flower of the owner should always decorate her handkerchief. Widows should ouly use lilac muslin ornamented with dark blue scabious blos soms the ciulilem of a mourning bride. For winter house dresses or for street wear under very long cloaks, cloth or camel's hair will ha made up with a round waist and single skirt, the latter Lon-'. stmiirht nolonaises will be afea- lure of the winter street costumes mado of heavy fabrics. These are cut very tun, wit n nat piaiu ueniuu, are not caught tii on the hips, and slope away toward the sides to show the rich mate rial of the skirt beneath. Tailor-made jackets are made of fine corklcrew diagonals or Meltons, and very elaborately braided with the same color as the cloth, or in mixed braids, or with tinsel intermixed with the prevailing color. Geld braid or cord is sometimes used upon vests or revers. Mrs. L. F. Baldy, - of California, who is a member of the Woman's Silk Culture Associaton of tho I'nited Stotes, is about to establish a colony of silk cul turists ia Maryland. A tract of 100 acres near Odenton will be divided among ten colonists, and by next spring spring it isexpected that the experiment will be under way. Short Stories About Animals, A Frenchman rode into Waterville, Me., with a big Newfoundland dog hitched to a two-wheeled cart, which the animal had hauled in three days 130 miles. There is a white horse at Roscommon, Mich., that visits a saloon daily for its glass of Is er and gels it. Another white horse ut Bay City takes trips on a tobog gan slide und enjoys them. A horse at Beading, Penn., stepped upon a little dog that was barking at it in the street, but, immediately bending down his head, began licking the little sufferer, and uttered sounds of genuine i sorrow. j At a fox lunt near Tolona, 111., the , dogs forced a gray fox up a tree, but tho hunters would not shoot, preferring to have him taken by the hounds. A hoy climbed the tiee to force Heynard out, but wheu he dropped he eluded the dogs, and found shelter in a hole. One dog j followed him, got the game by the nose, and pulled him out, but the tox watched his chance, made the dug lose his grip, dashed away, and made good his escape. A young gray squirrel found by a party of children at Ivoryton, Conn., was cared for until it had grown large enough to help itself, when it was set a liberty. The children had no idea it would ever come back, but the tame night the squir rel came to the w indow ami tapped upon the pane. It was admitted, and the next morning whi-ktd aw ly again. It has built two nests, using whicheverit chooses in the night time, except when it rains. Then it always asks for admission to the house. "How did you en lift'?" the youiifr mu H-kcd thu iu:.t until. "1 didn't begiu it," truthfully replied the f,neat luuii. "It won here when I got here." A Child's Hair Toralnf Gray. There lives in Troy, Mo., a little girl about eight years old, whose hair is al most an iron gray, and is rapidly and perceptibly growing grayer, and the presont indications are that long before sho reaches womanhood her once raven black hair will have become snow-white. Some three years ago the child was frightened almost into convulsions by a firo which broke out In the part of the town where she lived. The morning after the Are the mother noticed a change in the child's hair. It had been cut off many times in the vain hope that new hair would come in black. The gray hairs increase all tho time, and she will soon have a venerable-looking head on a pair of young shoulders. When Nights Grow Long. Ths front Rata nml the hammock, The old bench In the prove, Ilnve had their (lay and must give way To the corner near the stove. Wanhington Oritia. Rrown'i Utile Jake. "Wlir, Brown, hnw short ynnr cost ts," saM Jones one rtiry to his frleml Brown, hi w tt'ly rei'lied: "Ve-: lint It will lie lnnr etionffh be fore 1 iret another." Some men spend so much for mnlirtnc that neither heal nor help tlirm, that now clothes la w ith tliem like anfrt'ls' visits fpw and far between. Internal fevers. weak nosa of the lmiff. shortness of breAth and tin irrinn couiitis.fMHin !cltl tothe magic influence of that roj al remedy, Dr. H.V. I'lerce's "Uulden Modieal Discovery." Boston- haa a knife Rrlnder, not nerdv, nat" tleularly, but exceedingly muscular, ao that he Is renowned for his atreiiRth. Oneof his per formances, as handed down by admirera, was pieking un n small ear horse at the tjennx street stablefl and carrying him bodily Into the car house. 300 ltewarl. The former nronrietor of Dr. Kin1 Catarrh Remedy for years made a standing, public of fer in all American newspaier of s-"ou reward foraeaaeof catarrh that, he could no cure. The present proprietors have renewed this of fer. All the drugnlsta sell this Remedy, togeth er with the "Pouehe," and all other appliances advised to be used In connection with It. No catarrh patient is longer nblo to say "I cannot be cured." You got t i in case of failure. To have w hat we want la riches, but to be able to do without la power. Functional derangement of the female ays. tern la quickly cured by the use of lr. R. V. rieree's ''Favorite lrescriitlon." It removes Sain and restores health and strength. Uy all ruggista. Yoc will never have a friend If you must have one without failings. The great stieeess of many agents employed by H. F. Johnson Co.,of Richmond, ts a pret ty good evideuee of the exeellenee and popu larity of the books thev offer to sell through I heir agents. This la a reliable house, and any contrnet made with them you can depend on will be faithfully carried out. RotalGmji' mends anything! Broken ChL Ba, Ulana, Wood. Free Vials at Drngs A Oro Make No Mistake If yoa have made np year mind to bay Hood's Sar apartlla do aot b Induoad to take aay other. Hood's SanaparUla Is a paoullar mdlolae, ponlng, by virtu of Ita peculiar eombtawlon, proportion aad preparation on rail va power superior to any oibar arUola of la kind before the people. Be sue asset Uood'a. "In one store the elark tried to tndoos bm te buy tlirlr own Instead of Head's araapartlla. Bat he eouM not prevail upon n to ehaage. I told him I knew what Hood'i BananarllU waa, I had taken It, waa part eetl; aatlalled with It, aad did aot want any other." Mae. Kixa A. Oorr, tl Tarraot BC, Beaton. Hood's Sarsaparilla Sold by all druntita. $1 ; sis for as. PiapaiaS only by C. I. HOOD a CO, Apotheearlaa, Lowell. Hut, IOO Doses One Dollar ELY'S CREAM BALM 4-lvea relief at fine far COLD IN HEAD. rr RF.M CATARRH. Nol a 1.1. old ar Una 11". Apply Balm Into esch nostril Hy ltn..2B(rernwii'h M . JS.Y. HAY-fEVER AIT NAMMEIIESS. I DALI THREE lASRCl. MANHATTAN NAMMEILtSS. IPICMI IICECHLOAI.lt Bond for Catalogue of Specialties. IIOVKItl,1i, IfAIVr : OA I. KB, M and 80 Chambers Street, Naw York. IADV AI.KNTSwar.tiHl ; In a nI!!dk ami tnmt J ilsWul If'tU't iTi it'll ' it l ivi';. it-il : H.Uurv or oom iKlou. Jv-ott llTgi o,, tiox, j.Yc, Mw iiaveu, t (tun. S5'h 9H a day. aampiea worth 11. 3ft, FKEB Inc. uot iiihhT the horew' rtet Write Hrewitter Safoty Kln Mol.l.-r l o.. Holly. Ml. h Ol.l) I worth $.'. per Ih. Trait' Kye Ralre U M worliifl.ujo, hul is oiU at a box uy dealers W a T ? iI J" T Ohtatned. U O lu.eal.im UuMe. dend stamp for UuMe. L. ItiHa- I hoi, Patent Attoriit-f, U ashliiicton. U REE By return mail. Kail Drarrlpflaa MOODY & CO.. Cincinnati, O lew aiior eMva nrrM I!4 J- fI'IMl J i4 5 I J Tiii- ui.ui wlm has invt Mt-d trotii Uirce to rive dollars In A Hubber Cuat, and at tin ftrt halt hour experience. In , a itorra ttiuU to hit aorrow that It ia hanCy u In iut protection than a nios quilo nctluiK. t"'t only ft-cla chirlned at bciiif; o bmlly Uk n In, hut alio leela li In dm'i not look exactly like Ak tor the FISH HIIAM)" Hi.u kkb WET 1m' ii. rt hrethe rtsu it rand, send for dearrliitiveratslnctie. i i I !" i I 'Itw' v t ''I aT aT HE JOHN ANDERSON, MY JO. John Andersen, my jo John, When first I was your wife. On every washing day, John, I wearied of my life. It made you cross to see, John, Your shirts not white as snow, I washed them with our home-made soap, John Anderson, my jo. A WORD OF WARNING. There are mtny white soaps, each represented to be "just as good as the ' Ivor; they ARE NOT, but like all counterfeits, lack the peculiar and remarkable qualities of the genuine. Atk for "Ivory" Soap and insist upon getting it, t'oorritfbl lata, br Praoua A Gambia. KIDDBIV0 IIIIll A ut' kb, ciins: FOR INDIGESTION and DYSPEPSIA. Ow rvnnn Phyn.clrinB hnr nnt n thi-tr upprrtTal rtf riorsTYLtN, Mvinv that It Is th bol ur-porattoa for InrtlirMtlnn thnt they hard rr iinwl. W hne nfivpr heard of a cane of ITnpep9ta whra DlUESTYMM wm tAhrn that wu not rurml. FOR CHOLERA INFANTUM. IT will ctma tiik most AimiiaVATS.n casks. IT WILL STOP VOMITINO IN rilKilNANCV. IT WILL HKI.IKVK CONSTIPATION. FerSiiTntnnr Complaints .tin Chronlo tllnrrh.i'ti. Wnlrh arr th. direct remit of IniiHirrert dl.MUou, DhiKHTYLl will rtTai'l an Immediate cure. Tat. nYOKsTVI.IN for all pain, and rilwrdan nf Sh. rtomarh ; tlinr all com. from tiillrf.t1ntt. Auk Curdrul.t for PIOKSTVI.IN iprtie SI Pr Inrito ttl.V If h. floes not hava II and on. dollar lo it. and we will amid a bottle to you, eipr.n. prepaid, txi net hmlt.te tn arnd rntlr mon.r. Our aouas 1. tollable. KitMiii.hrd twMtir riva rr.r.. vi. v. HinrtKit rrt. f aaafarlurlm (hernial.. H.IJnhn Hi., ft. V. f WEILS' HA1H BALSAM restores Oral II. Ir to origi nal color, an elegantdrraa. lug. softens anubeauUllfS NogrcaMnor oil. A 'lonlo HeitoraUre. tTeventa hnlr coming out ntrengthena, cleanata and heal scalp. If you art losing your grip on life Try "Walls' Health rf.n.w.r.'MJoes direct to weak anota. For weak men. delicate women. II S II II II SU. Illl J1 I IUCHU-PAIBA Remarkable rnre. nf Catarrh of the Wad dor, Inflammation, Irritation of Kidneys and Bladder, Wore or (travel IMteasos of the Proa tateliland, Pmnaioal Swellings, Incontinrnce Eor ott (Vintlnrnee, Ii.eaaos of the KidnevS and allied Organs In either aex. ft. PniggkU or K. ti bote,, A E. B.Wella, Jersey CltT, N. J. ROPSY n "TREATED FREE. Have ti '.M lrojwy and Ita rnmpllrfttlon with nttMi wmnti rful mui-esa: ukc von table ivme.hra. rntirrlr harmieaa. lira n a t pymptomitnf lr in S to 0 laya. Cure patient (trotioumt hiwio44 It. tho U'nt p'ivlcian. Kmin lri iIimp n.vniim rnnklly .llnapprar, anj In tvn day at (rait iwolhlnU of alt a niptoin are r movt'tl. Noine may rv huinlxiR without fctvwtni( an thinx aistmt It. ltemoinleer it cmta Tn nthini( l ri'nlir fin ri rrit of our treatment for yourself. N e are constantly rtirliiu of loo 'andlntc -ra-i tltut have Ihm'h lappel a number of t maan1 th pnlliMit ilrelartHl unaitt to live A wt'elc. itlva ftil hUlorr of ce, nam. ae. ev, ho lotif aflll'MrJ. etc. H ud for fre' iwimnhU't urmtaintng temiiiioiilfliR, Ten tiny' treat mmi fumlthftt frM hy tout I. If you order trial you mut return thl at vertlsemrnt tn u with lorenttn tvamp to nkf postu ge. Kpllep-riKiU) po-ltivrlv runM, II. II. 4 It K N tV ON. M. Pa.. Ontrnl .oh-I, M tnnul St.. N. V. FRAZER AXLE GREASE UE!T II TIIK WOIt I.I) IF" Hot tiieuciulit -. Bold Kvurywhera. EXHAUSTED VITALITY A Great Medical Work for Young and Middl3-As j Men. KNOW THYSELF. I)M.MHt-l hy the. I'KAHOOY MKI). I A I. I N-TITI 1 K. Sn. I lit. 1 1 ft t.r-1. Itnntnn. tna. WM.II. I'AKKKH, l... i roiiu ti ic rhtuJt'tan More th:in one mil Ion "..- , l' no. It r auu.tou Ncrvnu .m Tre n.u.ir I upline. KJi;tut'd Vltaltr, Impaired v Ivor on. I Inipur l e of in blonj. an.l the untoM m'-frri .- n Htflit fuT.-on. i Mi;a ns :k pant, ii: n:..n;i.tl r:n o l 1 In tin r. full poi. Warrant ! rtit Im-a. p pu..'ir tri' :.! lr-atisie ninHfthel Iti t ie i, u oii Un : i.iiM. I'i )r only i ly mall. noMt I, .nd i-out'ca el In a Uin wrapp r. Hiul rut n l imp f frrr if you ncil'l now. AdUrrt. a above. A it iiir Hnx l-if'i'- I .'hV4l -al 1'f.hl Itr Pensions to BnM1tra A Helm. Send utaitip for circulars. COL. J. niNO. HAM, All y, Waolilunton, D t urcnAun cirri! uucri '"' hut k'l u ' t r, n u in an niii.Lki an I ('sriinuii ki. II I- It lilt A N II . Ktvmoui, u. PEHSIONSHS reaw may lw due. Ad Itd'K.Waxhlnifrn.U.C OR 1 1! RJI Morphtna IlaMt Care ! )J III'. 19 ITI ' VU'nia. No nay till cured. W 1 I U III '- J- u i,bcns, iLrLanoo. Ohio. i "I I "I l v ")b "J ! h We uilcr Uic uimi YkUj wauu htrvica (not atylr) a Kanneiit that wiU keep him dry In the hardest tnrm. It .a called TOtYKU'ri KISH URANli StH'KKK," a name ramlllar to every Cow-boy all over U. laud. With thera the mly perfect Wind and Waterproof Coat it " I owit'i Kih Hrand Mucker." and take nn othi r. If vtur Inrekeenef ill mw3 HEN A. J.T iwm.Hl) Simmon St., Ho.ti.ti. Must. "X X X J1 'I1! I'I'I I X 3E X "a4!" Ah! many a quarrel then, John, Had you and I thegither, But now all that is changed, John, We'll never have anither; For washed with Ivory Soap, John, Your shirts are white as snow, And now I smile on washing day, John Anderson, my jo. R.R.R. Radiay's Ready Reiiei tn frm m. fa twmlr mlnutr. rr fall. o ra ' iI.tc I'oln with ona tliiirnii.li nt.iilti-.tlnn. No tn.l irr hnw Tlnlfiit or rsrruclntliifr tlip pitln. tha Khii ttinllr, IKvlrltlili-n, liitlrni. rrlpplcl. Ni rvon Nmirnl- flo or priLtrntcil with tllvnuo iiiiit .tlfTnr. K.tlw.y'. trn.lv iirllof mil alTord Inrtant rnao. It In.tantljr rrlltTrK nntl aooncuroa Bhrmnntlum, fnuottn. Void in th Head, Anthntn, I'neumnnia, Toothache, Neuralgia, Cold. ftore. Throat, Rronchittm, Hrlatlea, Mnflammntlono, Vongemtlono, DIFFICULT J? It E Till SO. Ra4icav' Keadu Ilelief to a IHm for erem nn, Sprain, Brwlmen, ralnminth Hark, thent of l.Unb. Mt tram the Firnt and In the OnlV I'AIN IIKMKDY Thnl In.tntitlv .1ip, lh mnt' rvrntH.fln. p.ln., liV" Infl.mm.ttnn., and niro. Cniinoi Hon.. a.arr oftlia l.un... st.Mtinoh. Kfl.Mi tfr tilhfr planil. or OrK.M. h i.ii. .ItlilU'.tl'Ul. IN I FltN AI.I.V. a hair to a ton.iiooiifiil tn ti.tt tnmhli'r of wmrr will In a f.w liilnuti'. rlltT Cr.niia, Pra.ni., Hour B1otn.'h, Nmi-it, vtiiitim:. Hr.rt tnirn. Norvmi.tii'.., Mttpln-..tM", Blck Ho'ilarh Piarrhn?a. Colic, Klatnloiu'T anil ail Internal ain.. MALARIA IN ITS VARIOUS FORMS CURED AND PREVENTED. Then t nol ft rcmetlirU nffrrx'. In the worlrt thai will euro FeTer and Ak'uaml all other Malartmiv HIMnna and other lovera. aided Ut It A P 1 A Y'g I'I I.I,. o quickly at It A II W A 'I HtADV K. R. i not only rnre the pMlent nelned with M. larla, Init IT prople eivoo l to the Malarial polnon will ovt-rr morning take iO r HO drop m Bea ly Relief In water, ami cut. nn a cracker, Ut'foff out. they will pre Tent attack. I'lh o jtu-ciiiM per titutic. b"ltl by rtni(rg1sti. RADWAY'S PILLS The Grtal Livor sni Slomu'i Rs niJ fiT the riir. of all A'l.nrn'ar of tn" Rfomarli. Bnwrl.. Rlitnarn, Blartoor. N.rrou. rlviti, Frta.la Complaint. ot Al'i rtlK ll.lrha. Constipa tion. Onatlvanaaa. fnrt ii.liti. nill.iii.niwa. r.rar, Innamni.tlnn of III. H...i Pilot aiM all .ran m.nt.ol Ih. Int.mal Vl..-.ra. l'ur. Tata1ila. oon talning no ui.rcurr. mln.ral. or d.l.t.rinu. ilruca. PERFECT DIGESTION &,ZrES& Pill.. II; ao dolni SICK HEADACHE, pr.pop.ln. Fnnl stomai h. milotinr will baamMaA. and thr IikhI 'hut la ral u eoiitrilaiira It. nourl.hlna proyrrllc. lor tlir .nrporl of Ilia natural waata of te oiwrr. th. f,.llowin .rmpiom. n miltltiafrom dlr.i of Ih. lliifstlvrOri!n.: onll"lion. ijar(i I'tlr.. Fulln... of lha llliHI In tho lltail. AililUrot tho Rt..ni.. h. N.uwa, llaartlmrn, I'laxu.t of took Fullnrmnr Wrleht In thf Motna. h. Soivr Kniotal ra, klnklimor Klitltrrlnaoftlia llonrt. ri"'11"',."'""??. rating srn.ntl .n. honlnalTlnP'l"ro lJmn"or ViMon 1"I or Wan. l'fora tlir Bfuht. rry.ranil IHill p.ln In lha ll-art Drflrlrn. T of lar"P.'ra',S,'l' ) Sy Da., of tha Sk In and Kra. P.tn in tha nlrta.l ha.t.I.lnba and Sud.lan Klll.hr. nf Hani lliinilna III ""J''""- Afawdowiof II a IMVA V'K I'jl.l.w will Iran tha.v.tam of iill tha aimva n.matl ilLnntara. Irle J oant. par not. "old hr all tntl.ln, tw-Sand a lattar.lamp to DR. A l WA Y CO., ti: Warrrn Hira, New ark. for Our ftiM ol Advior. VHK KillK TO ;KT UAIIWAVf. M Y N U 4 1 MHAT li AILS , YOU? Do ymi fort dull, languid, rnwplrltrd, lire, leaa, and Indi'norilmbly mlaoralilp, both phyai cnlly and mentally rxKrl'iice a at naa of Tuiloaaa or liloallnir after can nil, or of "none naaa," or ctmptinoaa of atmiiuclt In the morn lng, toniiuo eoalad, bluer or bad taata la mouth. Irregular appetite, diulnem, fraUant headaooea, blurred eyealght," floating apucka' before the even, nervous prostration or ex haustion. Irritability of temier, lint fln.baa, alternating with chilly aeiisntiona, aliarp, tilling, transient pains here and tliore, cold feet, drowalneas alter nu iila, wnketulneaa, or disturbed and unrefreahlng sleep, constant. Indescribable feeling of drvad, or of luipeud lDtr ealamity T If you have all, or any conaldeniblo number of these symptoms, you are sulTcrlng from that niont common of American inalartlea Union. Ilystela, or Torpid l iver, aaaoviated with Iyapeala, or Indigestion. The more complicated your dlacanu hns become, the greater the number and diversity of symp toms. No mntter what stne-e it hns reached. Dr. Pleree'a Goldru IViedleal Ulacovery will stttHlua It. if taken according to direc tions for a reaaonahlu length of time. If not cured, complicatlona multiply and Consump tion of the Lungs. Skin Din-axes, Heart Illaeaae, Hheumatism, Klilui'y tli-aii, or other grave maladies are quito Imhlti to ant in and, sooner or later, induce a fatal termiimtion. Dr. Fierce'a ;olden Medical Dla covery a.-ia powerfully upon the I. Ivor, and through that great bhxiil-puritylng organ, cleanses the syntem of all blood-t'iints and im purities, from whatever cauae arising. Jt is equally efficacious In acting tiH)n tne Kld neya, and other excretory organs, cleansing, strengthening, and healing their dlaeaaea. As an apteti.lng, restorative tonic. It promotes digestion ana nutrition, thereby building up both flesh and strength. In malarial districts, this wonderful miHilcine hits gained gnat celebrity in curing Fever and Ague. Chills and Fever, Dumb Ague, and kindred diaeaai. Dr. Pierce's liuldeu .Medical Dla 'cures all humors, 1 from a common Illotch, or Eruption, to the worst Scrofula. Halt-rheum, " Fever-eoree," Bcaly or Knugh Bkln, in short, all diseases caused by bad blood are conquered by this powerful, purifying, and Invigorating medi cine. Great Kating Ulcers rapidly hcnl under Ita benign inlluence. Eapecially hns It mani fested Ita potency In curing Tetter, Kczcma, r.rysipeitts, lions, tarnuncica, ore r.yea. miroi- iiiotis riores aim rweinnga, itip-joim urn White riwellimra." lioitre. or Thick Neck. and Enlarged (lands. Send ten urnts In tamps for a Inrge Treatise, with fcnlored platea, on 8k In Dlncascs. or the sameattnouDt for a Treatise oil bcrufuloua Affections. FOB THE BLOOD IS THE LIFE." Thoroughly cleanse it bv using Dr. IMercew Cioldeu iMcdlcul DlNcovcry, and goed digestion, a fuir skin, buoynet spirits, vital strength und bodily heullh will lie established. CONSUlIPTION, which li Norofula of the f.uiigr, ts arrftd and cun by (In remMly, it taken in the earlier sIhrl's of tho dihouso. From ita mar velous power ovor this IVrrihly f tit kJ riineaae. whvii tlrHt ntTrrliiK' thin now worlil-tametl rvm tty to the Mttlu, lr. 1'iore thought wrinunly of calling it his M ConsI'mption i iik," but a.Mnintl that mitno us tM n'Mriwivo for a metlii-ino which, frmn its wonderful com binatmn of tonii or Blrf-nutheniiiK. alttmtive, or hlinrxl-c h'uiiriinjr, anti-hiliuiiri, LKH'toral, and nutritivo prup itn H, Ih uu qtiaUHt. not onlv M n n-iuc.lv for 'oiiMtiiiptiuii, but for all Chronic lMMrnara ot tho Liver, Blood, and Lungs. For Weak Limn1, Ppfttlnqr of Tlloorl, Khort ncM of ltivuth t hronie Nanal t'utarrh. Itron chitis, Asltium, K'Vni- Coughs, anil ki mired anVi'tiono, it in ftn rliicii nt n'lueuy. 8oll hv DiUKumts at $1.1)0. or tSix lh.ttlri for .. ' tWS'tnl ten eentu in stumps for Dr. Pierce's book on t'oiiHumptioit. Adilrciut, World's Dispensary Medical association, U(I3 Ifluiu M., Ul l TAl.O, N. V, W- L. DOUGLAS $3 SHOE. Tha only S3 KKAMI KSS Khoo Iu the world. Vlnaal sT'la 1 1 t.,.r-f..-1 111 mml WirTatlltt'd, i OIIL.TI-ric. liUit"n and liavce, all hvIim toe. An V thttM ooBtinr ft.1 or a. s;iiau aim uiii.wio '4.RO SMIIK rvrcli tlbd bf oilier viua. pe M WlhtM aJ aavk hba. Bnvi all wear the . I.. oOK.I. AS SHOK, If your ilta'iT dutb rm! k-t , tin ui. ml -ur iiumeoa poial to W. L. lXH'CLAS, ltiockUa, Uaaa. OnAgnt(Hurchai.tonlr wanted :n vry towufr -aaMI I HP 'I "yVJSvg tftfa4i Our traV' en your Taunt. I'm I'll in Ii" U Kt.arltly in crcaatnic, taking i-t iukiiUi i u laU. We It up to lituiUlv at ltai -t'Oii i i r n ml). alooutc, A 1E a Co, , T.u Kit. bill ImUv 1 1 i y , Utah, aditr.a- It. W. TAILls t (.. ( hliag. 1)ALMM Itu.iuraa College, Ptnla , r'a. Bltua lloaa fiuut.-.iou ....I- .i- i,.. ...ip, 1U. Writ nit. DHU Croat English Gout and Uiall S rlllSi Hlieumatic rtamady. U.al Itaa, Ji t.auii, is fill.. t ai MM HWaMII r ro. & r B.. W "iaa a a 4 f Va lataaaass.