FARM AND GARDES. Prn M a Fen Hirer, t'pon a poor rMge planted with pota toes, writes Wdlilo Brown in tho l'hila delphia , I applied a handful of bran to each hill In alternates rows, dropping it directly on the seed. When the rows without bran were eight inches high the others were a foot high, and the differ ence in growth wm noticeable all turn mer. 1 weighed each row as dug, and found fifty per cent, more potatoes in the rows to which bran had been applied, and a much larger per cent, of market able tubers. I prepared the bran by mix ing it with an equal bulk of rich loam, then moistened it, allowed it to heat, turned, mixed thorouuhly and spread it out until the heat snbsidod, when it was well decomposed.- A friend of mine ap. plied dry bran in the same way, and the seed was destroyed wherever it came in contact with the bran. ' Cramp In Fowls. This is a disease to which chickens about six or eight weeks old are very suhject, and it is chiefly due to damp ness, as it is found mostly in birds reared on a clay soil. By giving very dry coops and plenty of fine, dry soil or abes in the house and sheds, much can be done to prevent the disease. Birds affected by this trouble first begin to show cramp in the feet, aud the toes curl np so that they cannot spread them out. Then the whole leg is affected and they walk upon their ankles. Apparently they are other wise in good health and eat as heartily as whi n entirely right The lirst sign is a nine lameness in waiKing. ana as soon as this is noticed they should be removed to a dry boarded I'oor covered with straw, and kept thereuntil better. As a curative, foment tho legs well with hot water, and if the birds are large enough, put strips of flannel as bandages around the legs and feet. Jf this does not speedily effect a cure, rub the legs with turpentine and put near a warm fire at night. The food will need to be good and stimulating. The birds should be dealt with before they are seriously af fected, hence the necessity for keeping a constant watch upon all the stock. Cut tiiator. Enemies of the Peach Tree. The worst enemies of the peach are the yellows and the Peach Borer (Kgcria exitiosa). The only effectual riddance of the former is to destroy the tree, root and branch, and burn it as soon as the enemy makes its appearanee in the orch ard. Yanous remedies have been pro posed, but there seems to be no substitute for eradication. The borer begin its depredations early in the summer and continues them during the season, and if the tree attacked is not disturbed until October the little white worms hatched from the cgijs will be found of all sizes from the sixteenth of an inch to a half inch or more. It continues in this state until the early days of summer, when it comes out iu the winged state. I'nder this last form the insect is a slender, dark blue, fuur-winged moth, having a slight resemblance to a wasp or ichneu mon fly. They may be seen in almost any garden where peaches are grown. The moths lay their eggs at the collar of the tree, a little below the surface of the soil. If not taken in hand, and persistently hunted to death, they will, in a few years, destroy the best peach orchard. It is a good deal of trouble to destroy them by the most effectual remedy digging away the soil from the collar of the tree, and, onbeuded kaees,with sharp pointed knife and wire, scraping away the saw dust and gum from the wounded bark, and impaling the enemy. This should be done several times in the course of the season, especially in June and Octo ber. When this is done thoroughly, the wounds indicted by the worms are soon healed by the growth of the tree, and its life is prolonged. If neglected the tree is girdled and it soon dies. It is a great safeguard against the attacks of the moths to fasten a strip of sheathing paper or other covering around the cleansed trunk, extending two inches below the surlace of the ground to a foot above. American Agriculturitt. Feeding Hogs.. It is the fact that it is as productive of evil results to feed swine too much as it is to feed them too little. Pome peo ple seem to entertain the idea that the only purpose to be sought in fattcninir animals or in feeding them for growth is j tu'f them, though a moment of j te;it will show plainly enough that stuffing means a demoralization of the di gestive apparatus. It is a rule often laid down, and it is a good one, that animals should never be fed more than they will eat up clean; and if feeding always re ceived the attention that it should, that would always be the plan. But our im perfect ideas and systems are very apt to be the result of thoughtlessness, fctnrt ing with the idea that corn makes fat, and that the more corn we feed the more fat we will get, we shovel the corn before the hog and let it gorge itself. It is true that the more corn we feed the more fat we will have, provided the di gestive functions take care of it. If they do not, the stomach is overloaded, and an overloaded stomach means trouble to a greater or less degree. It is to prevent this that we should always aim, whether we are feeding for fat or bone and mus cle. Profit in meat production means economy in feeding. If we lose an ear of corn either by having it trod under foot and into the dirt in consequence of I feeding more than the hogs will eat, or i if we waste it by overloading the stom- j ach, destroying or impairing digestion, and thus preventing the cysteiu from utilizing what is consumed, it is so I much oil the profit, and whilo one ear of corn may not amount to much a j good many ears amount to a great deal. Columns have been written I to show how the price of corn may ! be raised by feeding swine, and it is j alwavs interesting reading to the swine breeder aud feeder. But it is no trouble I at all to figure out the protit or loss of profit of a bushel of corn that is wasted. The herd should be carefully watched all through the fatteuing period. The rule ' sooften Inidduwn by the War' and I man we again state : Do nut feed too heavily w hen the fattening process is be- j gun, and, by tlie way, that ought to have i been begun, and generally has been before this time. Feed lightly at first aud grudu- I ally increase the amount; and when the ; hogs have liecome accustomed to full ' feed, feed them all they will eat and no ' more, (iive them good, clean food, und 1 feed on a clean floor. Neer act upon the notion that the hog is naturally filthy. The animal will cut filth, but ii likes clean food as well as anv animal , Wutern iiural. Fawn and Garden Notes. Patents on all the best hives have ex pired. Any one claiming a royalty on a hive which you have been using for years may be ket down as a fraud. A halter that controls a cow's nose is much better for leading her than a rope arouud her horns. Kvery rail' that is to be raided ought to be taught to lead. Every farmer should bear in mind the fast that superiority of crops deends in freat degree on the good ju.ilityof seeds, and he should therefore try to eti ins very rjest, even u cost ba consider ably greater. t ow and horse manure) Is worth l-LAl per ton by analysis. This includes liquid. Worth saving, says Our tVun- try jome. D. II. Thing says he has visited silos in Maine, Vermont, Maryland and New Jersey, and has never met the first man but was pleased with them. He believes tno stock could be largely increased and consequently the farm would improve. A farmer at South Charlotte, Me., thinks superphosphate is best for beans, but for oats he has best success with fish pomace, a half a ton per acre. The pomace sells at the factories for $3 to IS! per ton, and some farmers think it better to buy than superphosphate. Professor Whitcher say that a ton of ordinary manure contains only about twenty per cent of fertilizing material, the remaining eighty per cent, being water. If that is correct, dry manure would be all fertilizing material., which wouia place it ahead of superphosphate. Chloride of lime is an infallible pre ventive for rats, as they fleo from it odor as from a pestilence. It should be thrown down their holes aud spread aoout wnerever tney would be likely to come, and should be renewed once a fortnight. A dairy woman gives the following ad vice about churning in the Farmer and Home: Cream should never be churned fast until it has thickened some, as it i likely to become frothy, especially in cold weather, as there are more milk taken off with the cream than in warm weather, where open setting is practiced. If one is in a hurry the best plan is to make haste by churning slow at first. Any kind of straw, chopped into lengths of about six inches, which is done by passing it through a fodder cutter, makes excellent litter in which the fowls can scratch. Leaves are not easily obtained now, and straw is the next best material. I'se plenty of it, pla. ing at least two inches thickness of it on the floor, and if a handful of grain is thrown therein tho hens wilt keep busy. Regularity in milking is an important point in successful dairying. We know some good farmers who make a practice of milking at 0 o'clock night and morn ing, winter and summer. This requires the use of lantern at both milking dur ing three or four mouths in the year; but there is probably a better yield than would other otherwise bo obtained. One advantage certainly is that the stock this cold weather does not have to go so long between meals as it d ies when all the chores are finished by dark, and nothing is done again until morning. There is no doubt that bees often serve a valuable purpose in fertilizing the flowers of fruit trees and plants. Where there are no bees fruit crop are less cer tain than where they are. Other insects undoubtedly help some also. But neither bees nor insects of any kind are abso lutely necessary to nature's processes. They are helps, and in the flowering sea son are never any injury. If the weather is dry and the wind blows freely it helps to distribute the necessary pollen, tfome flowers, as those of corn, the bee never visits, and winds do all the distributing. But in fruit trees the air in spring is often moist and the pollen is heavy. Then bees do valuable service. Wood ashes, beside being useful on the farm for soap making and fertilizing purposes, may be used to advantage as a deodorizer. Hog pens and feeding houses begin to smell bad at this season of tho year, but this nuisance can be done away with by scattering a liberal quan tity of wood ashes on the floors. Pow dered ch:ircoal is better for this purpose than the ashes, but is not usually at hand for ue. In building hog houses a layer of burnt clay or wood ashes, one foot in depth, should be put in before the floors aro laid, nnd will tend for year after to prevent bad smells and like evils. Such sanitary measures as these are worthy of consideration in improved farming. Farmers often want a moisture-proof glue, and it can be made by dissolving a pound of common gluo in three pints of skim m lk. The cement is Btronger if powdered quicklime is added. A fire proof cement for use around stove pipes, tire-places and chimneys, where the danger from fire is greatest, cm be made by mixing two parts of sifted fresh wood ashes and one part of air-slacked lime, with sull'cient boiled linseed oil to make a smooth paste. It hardens quickly to the solidity of a stone. This is my owp discovery.and the cement applied around a stove pipe where it comes through the roof in the ordinary sheet-iron shield three years ago is now as firm as at first. It is water and fire proof, and adheres to metal perfectly. Life In Llbby. From the story of the celebrated escape from Libby in the Century we quote the followiug: At night the six large lofts presented strange war-pictures, over which a single tallow-candle wept copi ous and greasy tears that ran down over thepetrilied loaf of corn-bread, Borden's condensed milk can, or bottle in which it was set, and where it struggled on until 'taps,' when the guards, with un conscious irony, shouted, ' Lights ! ' at which signal it usually disappeared amid a thowcr of boots and such ether missiles as were at hand. The sleepers covered the six floors, lying in ranks head to head and foot to foot, like prostrate lines of buttle. For the general good, and to preserve something like military pre cision, these ranks especially when cold weather compelled them to lie close for better warmth) were subdivided into convenient squads under charge of a ' Captain, who was invested with au thority to see that every man lay 'spoon iiisuion. "No consideration of personal con venience was permitted to interfere with the general comfort of the 'squad.' Thus, when the hard floor could no longer be endured ou the right side especially by the thin men the Captain gave the command: 'Attention, Squad Number Four 1 Prepare to spoon ! One two spoon 1' And the whole squad flopped over on the left side." Au Italluu ' Industry" in Jftw fork. It hau't required very sharp eyes to di-cover one of the very latest industries of the Italian colony iu this town. In a ttroll on Broadway any of these bright afternoons you will see ac odd intervals au Italian walking ou either side of the street close to the curb. Their inuaturd hue 1 faces are bent with intense interest to the gutters, and their dark eyes ob serve many things iu a twiukliiiir. Thev are looking for stubs of cigars, and iu a trip down Broadway, particularly from Canal street, they liud enough to till their pockets. They go in pairs, and pounce on a cast-olT stub with something of the avidity displayed by a buxom hen when she seizes a choice morsel. m. Chang Yen Hoon, Chinese Minister at Washington, is famous at home for his possession of a luagnificeiit palace and extensive gardens, filled with riwo plants, Th Ftnereal Month f garth An observant metropolitan harbor mti that be ran Ml one's physical condition by the State of hishnlrl The Bible tolls us that with his hair irons ranieon lost nis strenEtn. l h unmans con Sldered baldness a serious affliction and Julius Oor wns never quit satisfied with bimsrli because his poll was bars. The fare, however, is the open book, sncl one can readily trai-e in its various expres sions, lines, changes and complexion the state of the system. The eye that Is unusually bright and yet has a pallid brightness, the fnoe upon whose cneeks nature paints a rose or singular beauty and Hush, more marked in contrast with the alnhanter apiwaranra of the forehead and nose and lower part of the face, is one of those whom the skilled physician will tell you wi'd some day dread the funereal month o( Wsroh, because, it is then that consumption reaps its richest harvest. Consumption they tell us is caused by this, that and the other thing, by mirror in the air, by micro-orcan-Isms in the blood, by deficient nutrition, by a thousand and ono tilings, but whatever the cause,- decay begins with a cough and the remedy thnt will effectually stop the cause of that rough cures the disease of the lungs. That is all there is of it. The couirh is an evidence of a wasting. To stop it effectually, a remedy must be used thnt will search out the cause, remove thnt and then heal the lung slid do away with the conh. This is the ower, special to itself, possessed alone bv Warner's Log Cabin Couch and Consumption remedy. 1 tils is no new. fnnglcd notion of narcotics and poisons, but an oin-isntonei preparation oi naisnms, roots and herbs, such as was used by our ancestors ninny years ago, the formula of which has been secured exclusively by the present manufacturers at great trouble and expense. It is not a mere cold dryer. It is a svstem searcher and upbuilder and a con-1 sumption expellant. "here others fail, it wins, liecauso it r.ets at the constitutional cause nnd removes it from the system. J. W. Ilensaw, of Greensboro l'a.,on Jan. 15, InvS, reported thnt " he had derived more rvaj lienefit for ths length of time, from Warner s Log Cabin Cough and Consump tion remedy thnn he had for years from the best state physicians." If you have a cough, night sweats. " posi tive assurance in your own mind thnt you, oh you, have no consumption," and yet lose flesh, appetite, courage, as your lungs waste away. you may know thnt soon the funereal month of March will claim you, unless promptly end faithfully you use the article mined. If other remedies have failed trv this one thoroughly. If others are offered, insist the more on trying this unequaled preparation. Home persons are prone to consumption, and they should never allow the disease to be come seated. A Noted American Dentist, Dr. Thomas Evans, the American den tist, is said to have made a silver tube for the throat of the Cicrman Crown Prince by which that personage's life wa prolonged. Dr. Evans is one of the celebrities of Paris. In the early days of the Second Empire he wns prncti-ing dentistry ,in an humble way in Paris. His skill coming to the ens of the Emperor he wns called to attend that potentate professionally. fo well was the third Napoleon pleased with Evans' manipulation of the imperial molars that he gave him private informa tion of the plans of Haiissinann, the Bill Tweed of that day, who was then re constructing the Paris streets. By taking advantage of the Emperor's tip and in vesting judiciously iu land l)r. Evans made a large fortune, but continued to practise dentistry and to bask in the patronage of royalty. It was undoubtedly due to Dr. Evans' cleverness that the Fmpress Eugenie and the Prince Imperial were smuggled out of Paris after the news of the Sedan dis aster, and he claims to have had the dis tinguished honor afterward of being kissed by the Emperor in grateful recog nition of that service. Dr. Evans is a stoutish man of medium height, with long whiskers of the kind described iu ( hicago as "sides," dyed a deep black out of respect, hi enemies ay, to the memory of the oscillatory Emperor. He dresses plainly, lives in a handsome villa in the beautiful Avenue du llois do Boulogne, occupies himself with the Church affairs of the American Colony, own the weekly paper called the American lighter and is ready pro fessionally to answer, the call of any pntient above the rank of duke. In cases. w here royalty itself is afflicted Dr. Evans ! volunteers. Aw lor Telegram, Toison of Human Teeth. "The poison conveyed by human teeth is one of the most annoying that a physician ever has to deal with," writes Dr. A. C. Robinson. " A bitten ear or ' nose is mouths in healing, where a more important wound inflicted by an instru- ' nient would readily yield to simple reme dies. I have under my attention severe and most complicated cases of blood poisoning, in which the patient had but lightly abraided the band in the course of a rght by striking the kuuckles j against the teeth of his opponent. I have known hands thus poisoned only ' aved from amputation by the applica- cation oi all the resounes or science. Tobacco or whisky, or derangement of the stomach from many other causes, may be responsible for the poisonous con dition of the teeth, and I am not pre pared to fay that a man with good health and a clean, sweet mouth would convey the poison, but I can only speak of the frequency of this clas of cases and the ditliculty of attending them success fully. " Ch kago At wn. A Prohibition Bride Wanted. There was a small riot in Bolton re cently, because a marriage, which had been anticipated with much interest, did not come ott. The bridegroom, a well known tradesman, who is an ardent ad vocate of temperance principles, went to the bride's house before proceeding to the church, and, placing a pledge card befoie her, insisted ou her at once signing it. Hie refused, whereupon he announced that there should be no wedding. The clergymen and a number of friends were at the church, but the parties did not ap pear, and when the cause transpired a number of women assembled outside of the bridegroom's house and pelted him with rotten eggs and other pleasant missiles, and so much resentment was manifested that he found it expedient to leave home for a time. London l'ruth. b mrt io get Hood' arpartll4t my cttlUI. Ht e thvt hf da nut fit you auyihiug 1ml You rv mt!iiibr It U tho mtxlic.ua which did snavwa oo much good ' jemr ago o relisVU -, bcosacUl piOMUl to toko my fvorlto tpiing modlcino. Hood's Sarsaparilla aUdruaalata. SI i alz for S3. Preeared oulf 1 Bold by all drusglat. 1 ; all for S3. Prepare Snlri by all drugglata. 1 1 els for 3. Prepared only syC. 1. llLK'L a Co., auoiaeeaxlaa. Lowell. Maaa, IPO Poaes One Dollar CarrlM Bat's Llrtr. Of all the queer superstitions of which I ever heard there ie one possessed by a man on 'Change that cap the super stitious climax, says a St Louis Ulehr. Democrat writer. I won't tell you hi name, but he is one of the most promi nent grain and pork dealer in the city. One night last summer he wa a visitor at the Fifth District Police Nation. We were bothered a good deal just then by bat that keep flying up and down through the stable attached to the sta tion. Our visitor and the stable boys killed several of the bats, and the liver was takea from each of them and carried away in the merchant' pocket. He wanted them, he said, to give him luck in his business transaction, for he de clared there was more good luck in one bat' liver than there was in half a hun dred rabbits' feet, which were well known to posses luck of no mean pro portions. He told ii where he had dis covered the bat's liver charm. It was on a lower Mississippi steam- boot, about a year auo. A party of col ored deck-hand were playing craps. One of the party It td a bat' liver, and ha laid it on the floor every time he picked up the ivories to throw. As a result ha won all the money his companions had. After doing this four or five times on the trip up from New Orleans to Mem phis, the Vat's liver holder was barred from the came. He couldn't lose. The merchant to whom I refer carries his bat' liver to this day, and never thinks of go ing on 'Change without it. A Romance of the Railroad. The great strike on the " Q" road re minds me of a romance, says a writer in the Chicago Hail. In one of the town on the main line lives a man who for years has been in the employ of the cor poration which is now having trouble. From an apprentice boy in the workshop he worked his way up until he became an engineer. One night he was called up and sent out on an extra. He had not one far on his run when something anced before the glare of hi headlight, and as quickly did no reverse the engine. Leaving the pilot, he walked down the track and found a child neatly wrapped and wide awake. He took it back to the pilot, made a cot for it, and proceed ed on his runv On his return home the waif of the road wn taken to his home, adopted, reared, and educated. She be came one of the beauties of the little town and grew into womanhood. The engineer, although nearly thirty-five years older than the pretty-faced creat ure, loved her, nnd they were married. When there were rumor of a strike the old engineer appealed to his child-wife for advice, and she begged him to re main with the company and not desert the road on which he had found her and from which he rescued her. lie consent ed, and there was one of the old engi neers who was true to the throttle. I have this little story from a gentleman who lives in the town where the old en gineer makes his home. Coffined Before His Time. The Pater Lhyd reports from Belgrade what narrowly escaped being a case of shameful superstition. The police found lying in the street the body of a man ap parently frozen to death. - Efforts to revive him failed, and his identity hav ing been ascertained, he was handed over to his family for interment. The ceme tery wn a considerable way distant; and a it waa being reached the driver of the hearse told the priest who attended for the religious service that he heard some noise in the colli n. The clergyman and otheis drawing neat also heard the noise, and all ran away lest a vampire should issue from it and attack them. The driver, terrified at finding himself alone, turned about and drove the hearse to the nearest police station. By this time a knocking was distinctly audible. Tho coffin was forced open, and the man was found alive and in a very exhausted state. He complained pathetically of the at tempt to bury him despite hi remon stances. He was taken to the hospital and had nearly recovered. He had been spending the evening with some boon companions, and wandering in a state of intoxication, fell and became insensible from the cold. Probably the jolting of the hearse revived him. It is a supersti tion in Servia and among many Slav peo ple that when a man dies suddenly his spirit returns a a vampire and prey on his near relatives and friends. The Haade.aseet Lasy la Tswa Remarked to a friend the other day that she knew Kemp's Balsam for tha Throat and Lungs was a superior remedy, aslt stopped her cough instantly when other remedies had no effect whatever. o to prove this and con vince you of its merit, sny druggist will give ou a Sample buttle t'rt, Larua bottles DU cents and 11. Thk entire polic e force of Kansas Cityars church members. Two are Sitters, and any number deao, ns. A Sou a re 8tatesnent sy a t'arpeaier. "For years I have had a cheat trouble amounting 'O nothing short of consumption. I mi u' how o' hers in like eonditiun hud been cured by the use of Dr. Pierce's Golden Medi cal Discovery, aud resolved to tent its merits in mv own ntx. The results are so yUine as hardly to require u hi Mori, or any nuorr-meiit ill favor of lliisirnle remedy. It does aul it chums! It bmMa up the system, tipport and strengthens where others fail." Hoi'i: "My reioverv, whl h is now on a sure oumintfon, hiiiyc entirely on the lompuss of this wonder lul Itesiorative, having tried other remedies witliouta bit of rulief." It Is sevrn hours and a quarter now from Loudon to l'ur s. Den'l Hawk, Coask, suffer dizziness, indigestion, inflammation of I he eyes, headache, lassitude, inability to per form mental work and indbuoi-ilion for bodUy labor and annoy nnd disgust your friends and acquaintances Willi your nal twang and of fensive breath and constant efforts to clean our nue and throat, when Dr. Safe's "Ca tarrh Kemedy" will promptly relieve you of di&conifort slid suffering, and your friends of he disgusting aud iieedleaa Uifliuuoun of your loathboiiitt disease r Over 1.(Oi.IXIO,OiiO cans are used annually by the cauuers ol tbiso uutry. Spring Hood LUruparlllo U tho bmI popular ad suoooMful Spring luledicine s tprluf piedlclae Uke Hood's sruparlUs to expel tha lm purities which have aooumulatad In tsa blood dar ing tha winter, to keep up strength as tkl warm weather oumee on, areata an appetite aad promote healthy dliaallon. Try Hoods aaruparllla thla pring and yau will be eoaTinead last It dsea poetess superior and peculiar manw A Cood Appetite "When ( bag as taking Rood's Kanaaarllla I waa nluy la tha morning, bad a aeadaahe and no appe tite ; but aow 1 can hardly sat enough eooked to et." tau auraaa, I Oerel street. Wen-eater. Mana. "l aat aprlnf my whale family took Head's ana parllla. Tha result la that ail kaa been eured of arrufula, my Utile bey being entirely free from ores, and ail four of my children look brlglit and healthy aa poeelely eaa be. 1 have found Hood'e Burma partita good fas oalArrh." Wa. B. AT nan TOM, raeaale OUy, V, J. Sold by all drugglata. SI ; els for S3. Prepared only by C. L llOOO a OU, Apocaeearlaa, UiweU, ataaa, IPO poses One Dollar A. OsorfHa woman m4 enplt ef battlefield shells for andirons In her flra plnoe. ne day when she had a hot fir 8r.g rlr bang and the loss by fire was settled for $1825. The ftxaerlrnre ef Mrs. Patera. Mrs. Teters had lll, Mrs. Peters hsd chills, Mrs. Peter was sure she waa going to die) Thev dosed her with pills, tth powders and squills. With remedies wel, and with remedies dry. Many medicines lured her, ltnt none of thorn cured her. Their names and their number nobody oonld tell; And she anon might have died, Hut some "Pclleta" were tried. That acted like maglo, and then she got well. The magic "Pellets" were Dr. Pierce's Pleas ant lMiritative Pelletts (ths original I.lttls Uver Pilla). They cured Mrs. Peters, and now she wouldn't be without then Tnaastsa flourishing grove of 83,000 rooos nut t'ees at ('ai Sable, tha soutnarnmoat pvint of Florida. Yes, Barber, what you say is true, I need a number one shampoo, t , And came in, as I always do, Because I can rely on you To choose pure Ivory Soap, in lieu Of soaps of divers form and hue From use of which such ills ensue. Well, sir, we Barbers suffer too, From humbug articles, and rue That we have tried before we knew' Foor toilet frauds to which are due More scalp-diseases than a few. I know we are the safer who Use Ivory Soap for a shampoo. A WORD OF WARNING. There re many white loapt, each represented to be "Just as good at the Ivory' " they ARE NOT, but like all counterfeits, tack the peculiar and remarkable qualities of the gsnuine. Ask for "Ivory" Soap and insist upon getting it. Ccnrrlrbt Isss. hr Procter eV Gamble. FRAZERG?ALcl BEST IN THK WORLD U II C H O C tW Oct die Genuine. , Sold KTarrwnara. PrFIlP ivbn away. p''mu Xf I" ll flower See.l &.) Unrtel, wit Paic a BaeWMlaV FIBRIL Uuide, u for a atanipa Kv e.j U''vr lover dnllghbd Tell all your trlenila u. tv. P&as. Kaanetiiinurff. Pa. rar-8eud at once. Thu notice wtUaotappear-raln. AP ta SM a day. Ratnplea worm 11.30, yRKK SW Lines not utidt the horae'e feet. Write f t Urewalar Safely Ueln Uoliler Co UuUjf, Mich. ARE YOU SICK? I)o you feel dull, lantruld, low-splritcd, lifeless, and InoVscritiahly miserable, both physically and mentally: czpericnon a scuso of fullness or bloutlnir after eatlnir, or of " goneness," or emptiness of stomach In ths morning, tonjrue coated, bitter or bad taste in mouth, Irregular appetite, dis sinins, frequent headaches, blurred eye sight, " Austins' siwoks" before the eyes, nervous prostration or exhaustion, irrita bility of temper, hot flushes, alternating with chilly sensations, sharp, biting, tran sient pains here and there, cold feet, drow siness after meals, wakefulness, or dis turbed and unrefroshiuir sleep, constant. David O. Lows, Esq., of S(. Agatha, Jlfatittota, Canada, says: " llcing troubled with a terrible bil ious attack, fluttering of the heart, poor rest at night, etc., I commenced the use of your 'Uoldeu Medical Discovery' ami 'Pellets,' aud derived the very highest benefit Uierelrom. " Bilious Amci "FOR THE BLOOD IS THE LIFE." Thoroughly cleanse the blood, which Is the fountain of health, by using lis. FlSHCK'S UOLDEST MgUlCAL DlSCOVEHV, and good digestion, a lair skiu, buoyant spirits, and bodily health aud vigor win be cstablwhed. OuuiKM Medical Discovert cures all A medicine possessing the power to cure such inveterate) blood and skin diseases as the following testimonial portrays, must certainly be creoatud with possessing properties capable of curing any aud all slain stud blood diseases, fur uoue axe mora Obstinate or difficult of cure thau balt-rheum. "Cor-rJMBDS, Onio, Aug. 18th, 1MT. World's Dihpensakv Medical Associa tion, 6U1 Maiu Street, liutfalo, N. Y.: Oentletnen F'or several years I have felt It to be luy duty to give Ui you the facts in rela tion to the complete cure of a most aggra vated case of sail-rheum, by the use of your 'Golden Medical Discovery. An elderly lady SALT-RHEUM AND Rheumatism. relative of mine had been a great sudurcr from salt-rhcum for upwards of forty years. The disease was most distressing In her bands, causing the skiu to crack oieu on the inside of thaflugers St the joints and between the fingers. She was obliged to protect the raw places by means of adhesive plusters, salves, ointments and bandagtsv snd during tlie winter months had to have her bands dreaaed daily. The pain was quite severe at times snd her general health was badly affected, paving the way for other diseases to creep in. Catarrh and rheumatism caused a great deal of suffering In sudition to the salt-rliHiiiu. She bad uaea faithfully, and with the most commendable M-raeveranoe, ail the remedies prescribed by her physicians, but without obtaining relief. She afterwards began treating herself by drinking teas Hindu from blood-purify-lug roots ami lierbs. She oontfiiued this for several years out de rived no beuetlt. Finally, about ten years ago, I chanced to read one of Dr. Fleroe's small pamphlets setting tortb the merits of his ' Golden Medical Discovery ' aud other medicines. The noma struck CONSUMPTION, Ooi.iien Medical Discovert cures Con sumption (which is Scrof ula of ths Lungs!, by Its wonderful blood-purifying, invigora ting and nutritive properties. For Weak Consumption. Bolomom Butts, of North Clayton, Miami Co., Ohio, wntnas: M I have not the words to eiprrtt my rutitudo for the good your Golden Medu-tU IiHtH)vt'ry bai done my wne. ne waa ULzen witu ootuuiupuoo, and aruir tryiujr oue doo tor after anottiur I finally (rnve up all hoevt relief, fk-lng' very poor aud bavin if but one dollar in the world, I prayed to (iod that he might ahow me aomethlutf ; and then It whmus hh thoutrb eoint tiiintf did U-U me to vet your 'UoMen Medical Disoovery.' My wile took it ai directed, and a a rtuit aheiaaoahe uau work now I ....... I WMiinar sDlaeaae.-Watsow I HIKED 125 Pounds. I Of Box lti), bummertuU, iY.nc iV'iuxini Wuiui, Can., writea: When 1 commenced taking1 vour Golden Medlcai bittoovery." I wu not able to worn ana whh a Durafu 1 I welsfhed L2d Dnunda. pound. Then I uaed ta vat about oue vav tvur w uti u uarou mi. WORLD'S DISPENSARY n Osseassarlea Csa s CresM Dr. J. 8. Combs, OwensvlUa, Ohio, sayst "1 bars given Poott's F.Mn.siosi of Ood MverOfl with Hypophnaphltes to four patients with better results than seemed poslh!e with sny remedy. All Were hereditary case of I.ting diaeane, and advanced to I net a aire when ('ntigha, pain -n the chest, frequent brenthlng, frequent pulse, fever and hinaeiatlo'i. All theae cane have Increased In weiuht from IS to His., and are not now nestling any medi cine." F.vgst New 7 land Is now competing In the Kngllsli markets for the butler trade. renaamptlna Siaretv Tared. TO the Kditor: Please Inform ynuf readers that 1 have a positive remedy for the alxrrs fiamed disease. Hy Its timely use thousands of inpclpas cases have lieen permanently cured. 1 shall he glad to send two Itottles of my remedy rnss to any of your readers who have con sumption If thev will send me their JCiprsss and P. O. sddress. lteH-clfillf , T. A. HUHJUM, M.V., 1H1 Pearl Bt, N. T. If sffllcted with sore eyes use fir. Isaac. Thomp. son's Kye-water. Druggists soli at Xfto.uar bottle. j NORTHERN PACIFIC v LOW PRICE RAILR0A3 LANDS an i l-Mli;!: (aovrrnmcnt IONS of ACRKSo: irh Iu Mlnnraxxm. Nort" Pjtkottt, ktontan.t, ulaim, t tttilfif .ott ctn.i Ortvim. rrun Cnn 'ultlU'Hi(tni wild tU)wdrriiiuiK u.f dCntl rUtl rlkt AttrlrnHurt lUrHimic ami 1 lmtMr I riuIr niw n(wn -o s-n airH, hrnl l-'rr. A'ttl p CHAS. B. LAMBORX, (iT. P.t I I., Minn. (CoryaioiiT, Uu7. Indescribsble feeling of dread, or of tm- pcniiiiig calsmlty ? It you have all, or sny considerable number of these symptoms, you are suffering from that most common of American maladies Oillous T)ysie)Sia, or Torpid Liver, associated with iuyspepsla. or Indigestion. Tho more complicated your disease has become, the greater the number aud diversity of symptoms. No inntter what stngo It hss reached, TH. I'lEiit r's uulukn Medical Discovery will subdue It, if taken sccording to di rections for a reasonable length of time. It not cured, complications multiply and Consumption of the Lungs, Bkin Diseases, liart Discaso, Hheumatism. Kidney Dis ease, or other grave maladies are quite humors, from a common Blotch, or F.rup tion, to the worst bcrofula. ISalt-rhuum, " Fever-sores," focaly or hough fckin, Iu short, sl! diseases caused by bad blood, are comiuered by this powerful, purifying, aud invigorating medicine. Great batiug I'l ceis rapidly bual under its beniyu iiitlu- Liver Disease. WEAK LUNGS, SPITTING OF BLOOD. Lungs, Pplttlng of Wood, Shortness of llrealh, liroiichitia, Chrouio Naaal Caiarrh, Severe Coughs. Asthma, and kiudred afleo Uuus, it is a sovereign remedy. While it Cough of Five Yurs' Standing. family, with good F. Ot.arkk. Fm.. Worth 51000 A BoniL 10 iiiyaeir. At that tune and to-riav I wiirh Mt uiual a day, aud uow oaa tie put back where I IMseovery 91MO, MEDIOAl ASSOCIATION, Prppr'i, Nt. CREAM BALI I 0 CPFaXi J $HjTtrrti ftvm m torrh 12 trrtrn. dropping Into f thiat urn nnuarut iQ. Jsfy ftoM bird n' mnH ttnity. Si fie th first dny b wm qf Kij' Cream fintm Am htu no bU-tfiina, tha ttnrr fli-M i entirety ffon -P. a. Uarittn, nvitl the Hotton Iiuitoel. A nurtlPli in nni tr rriivrcvctjiy SOI fi'f Intofnoh noattii n ml I trwntt p. rrlciiftiot-nt HAY-FEVER t dmuulMA bv mMI, rrglatoi o c,l New Terk. THE BEST INVESTMENT for (ha Family, the Hrhonl, or the Prafes- alonal or 1'ublle Library, Is a eopy af the latest Issue ol Webster's Unabridged. UNABHWCfr forerioNA re - -" - - Besides many other Tsluahla features, It contains A Dictionary ef 111,011 Words, Doon FnirsTlnea, A Gazetteer of the World locating and describing ir,,oan Places, A Biographical Dictionary of nrarly lo.nnn Noted Persons, All in One Book. soon mora Words and nearly WOO mors Illnrtra tiona tlian anv other American Dictionary. Bold by all llooksellrrs. Pamphlet tree. C.tC. MtBRIAsl a CO., I'lib'rs.Bprina-nsld.Meaa. A GREAT BLESSING TO VOIKN. I Read Symptoms arirl Condltlone tills leillo will Mellore and Cars. If You Ullt'l If You If You have nervous or sick hrsrlncha, stom srlmchx. backsibe. enineaoue. bluatina. iiitt'ruul huat or scalding urluo, have chmnlo weakness, bcsrlni down or iKirvoraiuns uu-iuuiit to lile-clianja, hnve uterine catarrh, suppressed or piiinf ul periods, or ovarian dropsy, have suspicious growths, disposed to If You ouruor or rancor, or uemorrnaire. It Dnilrlo 'P Quickly a run-down constl to ll UUIIUO turn and brin its rvfrvabing sleep. It dispel fhoso dull tired looks and feel- Mi in-, nuil luiiiK bark youthful bloom ill bciiuiy rvstuit'sthe nervous sysbom. la ft 1 h P TC 0,r H y"T Wf,ak rtHk".it rltmfflisV' IIIWIMUItl rm, noil Trtrnirn m impure) bivm em rM-apsj u h(Unf auitl puriruiitf litfluenvei. If Y nil VH,U0 fro, lif'tilth, mirf hope for km It I UU life, " "frViuulo KcoioU.v." VOQ Pymiitnmitwntipiirsl with crtifl.t of mrm, O C C Itt "uuide) o IleakUi,H frwex Alto sulvio) frtv Dr. Kilmer & Co. lilnghKmton, N.T. Druif gttti $1 JONES WsV(1 PAYS the FREICHT raa 1 t, Hun nririM-, mtmm ttrt. Hran Hoi tor friOO. tar Bm ItvrtMac rWt. tt irst Us satMl this aatT And sulJrsMB JOHfS Of ifrOMAMTII. BIN lii HAM TON. N. R 1 CURE FITS! Whr. 1 My euro do nut mMB rarlr to atop lYmm tnr a liiur and thn hava ihfiu r-i urn aaTin. Idindi fmlu-al cura. 1 lTnm.Wi!idirW-ol K1T8, KPU I PSY ur KAU.INi. hlt'K N KM) a lift Kmc alnd. I irrnnt my rrnniy lo rure tU worn cmki, hiiM niticra have fail! ia no muin fur not nut twesminf curv. K"tid at om-a tntiiwiand Fr-a HtU of mi inlealliblo riiidy. iir Kiiirtwaod Ptail Oflic. Blair'sPillC Rheumatie RemeJy. Oral Ilea, 31 1 raaad. 14 fills. CI O I.I) U worth v) per lb. feint's Kye SaWs la M oorui (1,00, but la eold at r.ali by dealers, SJICVICIV aWID ! niKIWeort their Widows. f ICAIwAn H All IVn.l.m-now for you all. AV HI .Irene K. II. (ielalaa eV 'a.. Washington. D x liable to set In, and, sooner or later, In duce a fatal terminatiou. lin. I'lKHis'g (loiaiEN Medical discov rHV acts H)werlully upon the Liver, and through that greut blooil-purifyliig organ, cleanses tho system of all blood-taints and Impurities, from whutevrr cause arising. It Is cijually elllcncious in sctitig upon tho Kidneys, slid other excretory organs, demising, strengthening, and healing their diseases. As sn apii fixing, restorative tonic. It promotes digestion and nutri tion, thereby building up both tieslt and strength. In malarial districts, this won derful medicine bus gained great celeb rity in curing Fever and Ague. Chills and Fever, Dumb Ague, and kindred diseases. 1.1,1 J 9 XM Mrs. I. V. Webber, of Yorkshire, CattarauguM Co., If. Y writes: ''For Ave years previous to taking 'Golden Medical Discovery' and ' reliefs,' I was a gn at, sullerer; hail a severe pain in my light side contiuuaily: was luiublo to do toy own work. 1 am uow well aud suoug." rnce. Virulent blood-poisons are, by Its use, robbed of their terrors. Especially bus tt manifested its potency In curing 'letter, Eczema, Erysipelas, bolls. Carbun cles, Sore Kyes, hcrolulou Sores aud Swell ings, liip-iomt Disease, " White bweliiugs," Uuiue, or Thick Neck, aud Eiuarged Glands. my fancy, and seeing that It was essentially a blood-purifier. I Im mediately recommended it to the old lady who had been so long a sufferer front salt-rheum. Bhe couimeuivd taking itatouce.aud took one bottle, but seemed to be no better. However, 1 realized tiiat it would take time tor any luediciue to effect a change tor the better, and encouraged her to continue, bhe theu purchased a half-a-dozen bullies, aud before these had all b.-n used sbo began to notice sq improvement. Alter taking about a dozen bottles she was entirely cured. Her bands were crfectlv well and as smooth and beailhy as a child's, lier general health was also greatly Improved; the rheumatism ciitiivly lelt her. aud the catarrh was almost cured, so that it ceased to be much annoyance. She has enjoyed excellent health from that day to thai, ami has bad no return of either salt-iheuiu or rheumatism. The 'Discovery1 seems to hsve entirely eradicated the eall-rlu um from ber system. She is uow over eighty years old, aud very healthy lor one of such extreme ago. I have written this letter, of which you can make any use you see tit, hoping that some sufferer from salt-rheum might chance to read it and obtain relief by using your 'Golden Medical Discovery ' for 'Golden ' it is iu Its dilutive properties, and as much above the multitude of nostrums aud so-called 'patent mediciuea,' so sealously Haunted before the public, aa iHU ia above the baser uiuutls. Hespeutfully yours, F.W. Wueeleb, 168 21st Bf promptly cures tho severest Coughs, tt strengthens the ssleui and purities ths blood. Mr. N. W. Rid. of Neuian$, Vermont, aaya: I feel at liberty to acknowledge tho benefit I received from two bottiea of the l olden Modival Discovery, ' which ourvd a cough of five years' ftiaiiihng, and dytuep ia, from which I hud pudend for a long; Uuic. I have also utud lr. J'icree'a ExUacl of Bmart-Weed, or Water temper, iu my effect.' W. R. Satis, Esq., of BrnviUs, Flortda.. wrltts: "I hsve taken your wonderful 'Uuldcn Minilcal lllseoveiy' and have tn cured of oonaumptlou. I am now sound and well, and have oulv spent three dollars, and I would not take three thousand dullars aud was." Uls Bottle for tS.OO bf BruggUla. 663 Mala St., BUFFALO, N. Y, 1 ... I!
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