. sym: FARM. AND GARDEN. To Grow Tomatoes In Perfection. Because the generous nature of the tomato yields bountifully with seemingly little caro and attention, says C. L. Allen, in the Anieriran AgriruU'irUt, the CTCnotal imnrpaplon nrcvalio that in. nlmi requires but little attention. This is a sad mistake, for there is not a vegetable in me gainen mat is so gross a feeder, nor one that readily pays for all the food and care given as the tomato. To grow It to the greatest perfection, the hills should be dug out to the depth ot two and a half feet; at tho bottom there should be a half bushel of well-rotted manure; abovo this let the soil be nn equal mixture of loam and manure thoroughly mixed. The hills should be at least six feet apart. Let the situation be open, warm, airy. When the fruit begius to set mulch with clean straw or very small brush, t'nder these condi tions six plants will furnish sufficient tomatoes for a family of twelve persons. Whatever variety may be planted in this manner, the result will show specimens of size, smoothness, and esculent proper ties, unknown to the variety when grown in the ordinary manner. Modern Improvement In Farming. Among the many helps to make farm ing easier in the last few years, says a farmer in the Kew York WorlL the windmill Bhould not be forgotten. It is one of the greatest boons to the stock raisers that has ever been in use. Where fifty or seventy-five head of cattle are i. . J . i vein ami mis is not an unusual num berto water them for one day suffi ciently, would require the time and strength of onoMian at the pump for two . hours, and nothing is more fatiguing, whereas with wind power it is easily done. Ten years ago a windmill was quite an unusual sight, now the Western prairies are dotted over with them. herevor practice has shown their im perfections they have been improved. Kome are made so that when the wind is too strong the fans that compose the wheel, close together, so that it must needs go slowly. Some wheels are made so that they turn edgewise to the wind when not pumping, thus being safer from damage. A lever keeps them in gear when the wind would otherwise throw them out. The tower, in whoso top the large wheel is fixed, must needs be higher than any adjacent tree tops or they will intercept .the wind when it is desirable to turn tho mill; unless the tower ex ceeds the gable in height, the wind when in some quarters, will come whirling around the building to the risk of dam age to the wheel. Many dig tho largo stock well, over which the mill is reared, in front of the barn, and with iron pipes conduct the water underground, after it has been pumped, to the vats in the dif ferent yards where the cattle are kept. This plan gives the cattle purer water to dnuk than if the well were sunk in tho yard. One of the greatest inconveniences at tending the use of windmills are the ice storms which occasionally occur. The ice adheres to the fans-in the wheel, obstructing the working of it, and nothing can be done to remove it, but ait until it thaws, which is usually but a few hours. The wheel at intervals needs oiling," and it needs a cool head to mount tho laddor, which is always a part of the frame, and oil the works. Sometimes a gale will strike the wheel, which is usually about ten feet across, with such force that it falls to the ground and is demolished, when it must be re placed by a new one. It is found that the higher the tower on which the wheel rests, the less it is likely to be injured by high winds, as a gale expends its force for mischief nearer the earth than is supposed. Windmills wear much faster on ac count of the wind power which runs them. ' Domestic Cheese Making. Some families desire to make the heese for family use. It is true cheese cannot be made of such uniform texture and quality as where all the appliances are at hand, as in a well ordered cheese factory. Nevertheless, by using care, a better cheese may be mad'e than is usu ally found in country stores. The very best rennet must be used, and proper attention be paid to the temperature of the milk during the process of manufac turing. The rennet (the fourth stomach of acnlf, before it has eaten grass) should be at least six months old one year is better and must have been kept per fectly dry. Put a good sound rennet in a gallon crock containing three quarts of . warm water, a teacup full of salt, and if a handful of sage leaves are added it will give a delicate sage flavor to the chece. Soak three days, or until a teaspoonful of the rennet extract stirred in a teacupful of milk will curdle it in fifteen minutes. The strength is then right. Then take out the rennet, dry again thoroughly, and it will then do to soak again with a fresh rennet. Strain off the liquid ex tract into bottles, tightly corked, and keep in as cool a place as possible. To make whole milk cheese, strain the milk in a clean tin boiler, setting it on the range, where it will remain at near blood heat, or say 85 degrees. Stir in a gill of the liquid rennet to sixty pounds (thirty quarts) of milk. Stir until thoroughly mixed. Let it stand for twenty minutes, or until curdled; the curd should be ready for cutting by that time. Cut in squares, so the whey may separate from the curd; heat gradually to not over llti degrees, let stand till the whey rises to the top of curd, then break the curd in pieces with the hand, carefully, so as not to start the white whey, and thus lose some of the richness of the cheeso. When the curd is pretty well broken do not hurry this operation, break up very gently raise the temperature by a gradual heat till the curd is scalded suHiciently, not over 110 degrees, then dip into a muslin strainer, laid over a rack; or spread over a good-sized market basket, so as to allow the whey to drain from the curd. The curd must be cut fine and worked all tho time it is heating, so it will not adhere to gether. When the whey is drained off, salt and put curd immediately to press. This pressure should be gradually in creased. If one has not sufficient milk to make to cheese at one setting, the curd from the first lot can be hung awav in a cool place before salting, and wetnaiu until the next batch is ready for scalding; then it can be cut fine and added to the fresh curd when it is being scalded, and treated the same as if freshly made. It is much uiore work to make cheese from this double curd process than from one setting, and liable to a less successful result. The curd may be salted at the rate of near half au ouuee of salt to each pound, say three ounces to fix or seven pounds. This salting it not so much for flavoring as to check the tendency to putrefactive formation. The saline taste in old cheese is due nut so much to the salt used as to the formation of ammoniacaUalts in the process of reprosojng. The pressure on pruieks oi repressing, i tie pressure on ua vw in me prmis must ce regulated by circumstances pounds. Whon the rheeso is taken from the press it should be bandaged with cheese cloth to keep it from spreading. The temperature of the curing room should be about 04 degrees. The higher tho temperature thfl onirlrpr tha riniininf. Turn every day, greasing with whey but ter as occasion may require, to prevent cracking, or in lieu of this with tin snited butter. After the cheese becomes firm, turn only as occasion muy roquire, the ripening process requiring two or three months. Farm, Field and Slock man. Farm and Garden Notes. Secure good seed corn early. Starving hens make a lean egg-basket. Baby lambs and calves need good care. Succulent food makes succulent milk. Stables should rertnlnlv ho rlnon daily. Pears do well where the land is half in grass. A pood tree well set needs nn trimrfn -rfa Add scalded milk to oatmeal for ing calves. It is not well to allow cattle and ivinA to ruu together. Dirty boots are as much mil r.t ni... uu im v as on me carpet. Buckwheat is recommended for soil infested with wiro-wortns. Old orchards should be manured and plowed, using lime and ashes. Wood ashes, where available, are the cheapest fertilizer for fruit trees. It is usually necessary to moisten eggs a little just before hatching in nests built uigu nun ury. For the first month five times a day is recommended for feedino- vmmrr cbini- ens, by a correspondent of Poultry World. buinbur, insect powder and kerosene should be used frcolvin nrinti'n v. t ..a : 'jir.'lT. r'" u iu uesiroymg poultry Currants would give better satisfaction if not so generally slighted. They repay iiucittujr mr pruning, manure, and culture. Lay in a stock of copper sulphate and "r oincr materials are needed, at nu cany uate. Ana aon't lorgct the spraying pump and nozzle. On many farms it will pay better to build a largo poultry yard to pea the chickens in, than to build a much longer fence to pen the chickens out. It may be a pleasure for farmers to try some of the fancv hreerla hut tha ,. profit comet from adopting one of the KKucmi juiusa tvinus ana Dreeding it straight. Old pear trees that have apparently been worthless have been rcvivmi h h application of a neck nf Bait Anil a.lina scattered nround the base. Now is the time to try the method. In pruninir roses rnt.linrr h.alr li..ai. produces, as a rule, fewer blossoms of finer quality, while from those not so closely pruned will be obtained a larger quantity of smaller flowers. When about time for a setting of egg to hatch, the nest and hen should be thoroughly insnected. nurl if !,.. , . sign of vermin, all should be thoroughly uusieu wun suipnur or i'ersian powder. In nlnntini? neach and nninr. -,. they should be given a rich, mellow soil. viu vrccs may ue materially benefited if the branches are carefully thinned out and a good dressing of well-decayed manure is given over the surface of the roots. 'aVS the Kew Knnlnntl TPii-m A farmer will spend a day in carting some fertilizer for which he has to pay a good price, when for the Rama t.inia Riuiiit ha might have had something just as valu able by carefully collecting the drop pings from under the roosting fowls." Plant raspberries in rows five feet apart and three feet in the row. Black berries in rows eight feet apart and three feet in the row. Strawberries may be set in rows three fctt apart, and twelve inches in the row. "The soil should be fertile, but good cultivation counts much. However great possibilities there may he in poultry raising, the plan adopted by many farmers causes a loss of far more fruit, nnd "garden truck " and irrain. than the chickens am vnrth in. jplligent management and feeding are as liprpsisnrv with riiiil-i.n. ma milk I. - w " J ...... vuivai.ua J nim WlUCr live-stock. No one need expect to get sound, healthy chickens from eggs laid by hens that have been coddled into, good-for-nothingness all through the winter mouths. The constitution as well as the other characteristics of a chicken i de termined by the health and condition, or its parents. ' Sneaking of pasturing, a New Eng lanuersays: "In my opinion a farmer can keep a sheep with every cow with out any additional expense. A farmer keeping twenty cows will find he has just as much food if he has kept twenty sheep with them, and they are just as well nourished." Wood ashes nre one of the best possi ble fertilizers for young trees, whether fruit or ornamental trees. It should not be put directly on the roots, but worked into the soil, as it is filled in after the tree has been set. land plaster might also be used in the samo way, either alone or in connectiou with the wood ashes. The ashes and plaster might also be broadcasted about the trees and plowed or spaded in. The best treatment for mnntrA in rorra (-, - ... i " is to apply a mixture of flowers of sulphur ouu Luuiuiuu mm. Ajipijr mis uiuiuient to every part of the animal, rubbing it iuto the hair and skin with a good stiff brush. The pigs thould, of course, be reiuoed from the old pen and placed in one perfectly clean. One application will usually be sullicient to effect a cure, unless the disease has been neglected until the ampul is covered with sores; then two or three applications may be necessary. Affecting to the Brokers. Nearly all the 3000 members of the New York Produce Kxchage are sub scribers to a gratuity fund. When a member dies each subscriber is assessed $3 to make up the sum due the widow or other surviving relative. The deaths have beeome so frequent of late that the a-sessments are very heavy. If a black boarded notice appears on the official bulletin board the subscribers sigh and excluim . "Oh, Lord! Another $:! all around. 1" One evening Messrs. A. E. Orr, F. H. Parker, Duncan Norvell, iJavid Dows, L. H. liussell, K. S. Whitman and a do.cn other brokers attended an amateur theatrical ente: taiaincnt up town. In the play was a dcuth scene. The actor who was to be the corpse had just "breathed his lutt," and at atmosphere of deep solemnity pervaded the audience. Suddenly one of the Produce Exchange men exclaimed aloud : "Another :! all around." The luniiliter which followed sadly dis coucerted the actors and nearly broke up me perioruiauce. .Vcw l orn I tU'jram. THE LAND OF EXILE. (Jrnrire Merman'. Trip te Pieerla-Ills oiwrT i a.r-ar in Til I'eninrT. 11 IS (JKvrCRT MAOASIX has inspired a number of important enterprises the (irent South papers; the ar ticles on South America (the result of an expedition sent out bv the mairarinel: the War Tapers, which in creased its circulation by 100,000; thn Life of Lincoln. for the serial publication of which Messrs. INicolay and u. i i... rr-tarios to tho IYeauienrs are now receiving tVlO.IIOll: tlinA ajll.l m.a. llv. llxt nr.il Ul enterprises anil serials none will surpass In Interest and in far-renrhing results the papers on Niberia and the Exile System," the publication of which has just besrun. Mr. Kennan. who writes the srHi-lm hurl ?wnt a number of years in Siberia before hg OtWuri; people started him off to ex- Clore the country in their interest, and what e expected to do was to prove thst the exile system was not as terrible as it had been described. Knowing that he held views favorable to them, the Hussian (iovernnient leave him every facility for a thorough ex amination of all the prisons and mines of ",; it. juuuaujr oi nie interior fur nished him with a rircular letter which ad mitted him everywhere, allowing him to travel with exi!0 parties and to make the acniinintnnce of hundreds of "liberals." A" Mr- Kennsn relates In his preface in the May (n(riri, the result of all this in ipectiou was to make him change his views completely, tfnd he has returned to America Hilly convinced that St.-pniak and Prince krnnnttin nn.l . 1 : i. : i . t . ..... .,,,. I,. ilr, iiiiiuiat writers nave not drawn with too strong colors their pict- ...-. inriiwra, t me me or a miKsian In these papers, beginning with the May Crnfurt. Mr. Kennan will ilmrriha his journey. In the May number he crawes the Hussian frontier. In June he visits the very Interesting forwarding prison at Tinmen, THI PRISOlf YARD AT TrCJlKW. From an Exile't Sketch in the June Centum. built to accommodate $00, where, at the time' ui jar. A-ennan b visic li4l men and women were imprisoned. In rooms built to accom modate fnrt.V men ltUI Were alanninn T breathed as little as I could while f was there," says Mr. Kennan, "but every respir ation seemed to pollute my very soul, and I became faint from nausea and lack of oxy gen. It was like trying to breathe in an underground hospital-drain." Mr. Kennan's articles are torn mif. nf tha. ennies of Thtt I 'r ttvu whii.li antAi u . they, as well ns Mr. Kennan himself, being now on the Russian black-list, but other countries are reading what Mr. Kennan wriies. The articlesare being translated into Polish, and they are npiiearing also in the organ of the Itufsian liberals at Geneva. r.ven a mitcn nens)iaper published on the Island of Java is reiirint.itiir them fn f.iin page supplements. NEWS AND NOTES FOR WOMEN. Princess Louise, of Lome, ia inst fnrfv years of age. A black silk rown ia indisnensshle in a lady's wardrobe. Queen Victoria, tnbooea the elnetrte light in her palaces. French women of means affwt the study of astronomy. Pale pink and D-rav is a favorite mm. bination in cotton dresses. Immense Leghorn bntfl for ehiMren wear are imported extensively. Short dresses are the rule in Paris both for day and evening toilets. Altogether there are IS nnn women in Great Britain engaged in nursing. JIme. Patti-Nicolini requires forty three trunks to carry her wardrobe. Russia linen of a heavy quality makes dur.ible and serviceable dish-towels. Tho fancy Homan ribbons are used both in millinery aud in trimming cos tumes. Gray in every shade is considered in Paris just now the most stylish of all colors. The popular color for gloves are tan, eucalyptus -brown, and gray in many shades. The cculists all wgreo that tho use of dotted veils by ladies has increased their busineMiv The Princess Christian, of Schleswig-Hofstein,- hag an article in Oscar Wild's Magazine. Full sleeves and short waists go to gether, and both are rapidly coming iuto vornie. Pretty pinafores for children aro made of white naihsock, with a low bodice and full shirt. Pure white hair of the best quality is so rare as to be worth more than its weight in gold. Long woven silk mits 'or stocking-leg gloves are worn with the open sleeved costume this summer. The new Marseilles blue takes the place of navy blue for summer gowns of linen, serge and flannel. Pose pink and white are favorite colors for bridesmaids. Green or yellow rib bons with white are also favored. The ex-Empress Eugenie will spend the summer at Osborne Cottage, placed at her disposal by Queen Victoria, A young woman at Cairo, Mich., wears a head of azure hair, hav ng mistaken the family bluing bottle for her hair dye. Roman moire sashes with lengthwise stripes appeared this season in rich dark combinations, and also in the true Roman colors. Stylish garnitures of silk cord, gimp, etc., are arranged to cover the entire sur face of wool skirts from the knee to the skirt hem. Marietta Ifolley, the author of "Josiah Allen's Wife," is said to be the worst ficowoman of all the women engaged in iterary pursuits. . Tho number of women who walk for exercise regularly in New York is in creasing so rapidly that the doctors are beginning to complain. Singular Cause or Inattentivenes. Aprysexie is the name I)r. Guye, of Amsterdam, chooses for inattentiveuess, aud ho quite singularly finds that tho. nose is a cause of it. A dull boy became quick to learn ufter certain tumors had been taken from the nose, and a man who had been troublid with vertigo and bu.zing in the ears for twelve years found mental labor easy after a like operation. In a third case a medical student was similarly relieved. Dr. i ;uye supposes that these nasal troubles i fleet the brain by preventing the cerebral raph from circulating freely. I A I'niqne Telegraph System. 1 There has grown up among the farm era of a county in Michigan a telegraph system which might be extended throughout the rural districts every. where. The system began by two farm ers connecting their houses with a wire for their own convenience and operating their line with an ordinary Morse in struments. Gradually other farmers ex tended the line to their houses, and after a time the wire was run into a neighbor ing villaco. Seven years ago the cora bined farmer and a lew village merchants organized themselves into a company and it has since been extended until now it has sixty-live miles of wire and ninety otliccs. two-thirds of tho lat ter being in farm-houses, and nearly all tno rest in stores wnere these farmers do their trading. One or two newspaper offices, as many more railroad freight winces, the county Telephone Exchango ana me larger post-ottices aro all con nected. Every farmer is hit own opera tor, battery n an and Hue rcpairor. Of course, any quantity of privato Com munication is kept upbetween the stock holders of this independent system. There are two or three independent sys tems of these lines in the country, ar ranged to that they can be connected with each other at intersecting points. nd tho whole scheme is being worked very cheaply and successfully. Chicago Wanted Two Millions. Ono of the cirls in fashionable society in New York made up her mind to get married tho other dav. and after con fiding her intention to her father, she laid: "hat do you intend to do for mei" Tho father was a wealthy man, and thought that he was showing a liberal spiris when he answered: "Well, will give you f 100,000 to buy a house nd t..i,090 to furnish it with." "And what will you give me to live onf" the young lady demanded, with a dissatisfied look on her face. "Oh, I will allow you tho interest on another $100,000,"rcplied her father. "But my cook will cost at least $1200 a year. How do you think I ran possibly manago with so little?' The father looked slightly grieved, but only said : "That must do while I am living; you will probably have more when lam gono." The young man who was interested in hearing the result of this conversation between father and daughter said when he heard it: "He miirht at least havo given her two millions." The marringe did not take place. JVoio York frets. Transplanting a Rabbit's Nerve. The British Medical Journal contains a full and scientific account of a remark able operation recently performed by Dr. G ci sung, of Yientia, being the trans plantation of a nerve from a rabbit to a man. The patient is Professor Von Flcischl, a distinguished physiologist of the University of" Vienna. Sixteen years ago he was poisoned by a cut during a post mortem. His thumb had to be amputated, a disease of the nerve intervened, and after somo years the whole system of nerves of the thumb and the first fingers was affected and became very painful. Gersung's operation cousisted in taking as long a piece as possible of sciatic nerve from a rabbit, which was still pal pitating, and inserting it in the place of six centimeters of the diseased median nerve cut from Fleischl's hand. For a few hours there was great pain. This then entirely subsided and healing be gan. Two months have now elapsed, and the pain has not returned. The suc cess is believed to bo permanent. As a reueral thine thn man nlm ! full of himself finds his appetite unap peased. , If You Feel Tired Weak and weary, worn out, or run down from hard "... , u, iinu.v-risiiu eonniuoa or toe btoo:l or luw state of the aTstem. von should take Hnai'i a..... parllla. The peculiar tonlna. purirjrlns, and Tit ills .UH tuwi. w ui mil BucceMiti, modlriiia are soon telt throtiahout the nt-ra ivMam ndin., and giving quick, hra'th action to tverf organ. II tone, the stomach, creates an appetite, ind rrnun ui n.rr anil imntji lnousands who hare tak n It. with brncflt, t itifr that Hoods BarsaparUla uiaavvB inn weal strong. Hood's Sarsaparllla "I hare token not nultj. - kniiu .f n . a. . i - . . . v . . uuuu nana natilla. and mud it la nna r,t h. tu... . i . . . for giving an appetite, purifying- the blood, and ' --""" iuc .i'k.'.-ui o urgans, mat erer heard of. It did me a treat deal of crnrui Vna Wan.. utr, Canaatota, N. Y. Makes the Weak Strong "Feeling languid and dlnr, having so annattta and no ambition to work, I took Hood'i Bann parllla. wim tne oeu return. Al a health lnvlgorator aud medicine for general debultr I think it UDei-lor to anything le."A. A. Ruuta, Utlca, N. X. Hood's Sarsaparllla Rold by all dructfata. S i ! tor gs. Prepared only by O. L UOOU a CO, Apotheoarlea, LoweU, Mats. IOO Doses One Dollar What Scott's Emulsion Has DoncI Over 2B Pounds Gain In Ten Weeks. Experience ot a Prominent Citizen. Tm Cir.iroB.HiA Bomrrr fob tbx) fiUFPRESiitON OF VlCH. I But l-aaiicisco, July 1 tn, 1886.) I took a severe eold upon my chest and lungs and did not; give It propen.attention ; It developed Info bronchitis, and in the fall of the same year I was threatened with consumption. Physicians or dered ine to a more congeni al climate, and 1 came to San Francisco. Soon after my arrival I commenced taking Seott's Emulsion of Cod Liver Oil with Hypophosphltes reg ularly three times a day. In ten weeks my avoirdupois went from 1S3 to 180 pounds and over ; the cough mean time ceased, c. R. bennett. SOLD BY ALL DRUCCI8TS. VOI) will NAVK MONKV Time. Fain, Trouble and will C'l'HK CATARRH BY I Ml Mi ELY'S CREAM BALM. Apply Balm Into sach nostril. Kl V BKOS.. 56 Warren St . N . Saw m For Light Power. Al.o Maw Mill of all alzea for Lumbermen, wttb HM.K'rt ItiritUVKD l.ttti HKAU AND BfcT WOB KM. Write for rlrt-ulara. SALEM IRON WORKS. Salem, N. C. nU.K'eDMI Cr.it English Gout and UICIII 9I 1119s nneuntiiie M0maly. llval llutiUll rami, U fllti. S5 to j a day. baitipid. wurta t!J r'kttit Lluea uot uu.l.T the liurMi'a foot. Wnla bruwatur hufwty Iveln tluldt.-r Co Holiy, illcll S16Q TrVAC I aWln'-OOO'OOOreabeatatrlriil. I LAHu LHrSU lur.l 1,11,1 amiiug lano lur sale. AaamM.i.OKi.lK kl'OiiT.LK.,laHM.l'e. The tfw product of Mnssscbusftts In crensca from .1,441), Situ dozen to 7,003, 200 in Die Inst two years. Tlia milk product doubled, tho butter increased nearly 2.00(1(1(11) nnnnrli tobarrn (In clincd, oats, barley, corn and buckwheat Increased, and the number of horses and cowl wns liberally advanced. Tho wife of tho French President ii said to look net more than 23 years of ago, aunougn sue is just 43. News About Town. ' It Is the current report about town that Kemp's Balsam tor the Throat and Langs Is making some remarkable cures with people who are trottblrd with Coughs, Anthma, l!ron chttls and Consumption. Any dniRKlst will give you a trial bottle fret of nut. It Is tniar- nnteed to roller and cure. Large bottles, 60 crnta ua yi. TnuRiwrreM.IHn student at the twenty ;.iiMinii mm-prnuies nur.nit tne last sonslon. ui uieoe into were rorrignrra. Mar to Rell. XVnr Rr,;.- I'll write run a ohort letter To aav I'm wonderfully l.ti.-r- llnw much lhnt mean u onuht to know, V no eaw me Jiml one month air i tun, nervous, tretrul, white bo chalk, Almost too weak to breathe or talk; Head throbbing, a if lit for breaking, A weary, evor-prcHrnt uchinir. Hut now life aevms a diff.-rent thing: I feel aa glad aa bird on wtugl I eay, nnd fenr no cmtradlrtl n. That I'leree's Favorite t'rexerlptlnn Jltrnndl Why. I'd have died witliontttl Na think there's nn mistake about it. It's driven all my Ills away: Just come and see. Yours ever. Mat. TtIR experiment nf raWlnir wim.C'iihan frA Products ia being tried in Orange County, lurida. What a liuarel I suffered wlt'i feve-.hnt head and fonl breath, nitlia stomach disurdered-waa sick unto iie-iin. I .horJt a week surely ' wna a dnnee i In n 1 took a few "1'clleti" lliey cured me at uiii-r. W hnt a Hnnpa. Inrlna.il lna.ala.1 .....I. a edy and sutTer a week, when quick relief cmild "' "i-i'ii iimnu in nr. fierce Pleasant l'ur. Untiiti 1 Uliyt. . ItALTlMOttK rnuiita nn a ntllllnn vnn..la,iM . . ....i'uinvif u v-"i rai , iit-iiu.-. tf Vftll havo ratjarrli niall..nH.i i . , . ...... . .iiisn, laiurui Dr. bagD'a. T.?Kli? re now eighteen towns named Avon In the X. ntlcd !tnfs. ii nniicteo witn sore eyes use nr. Isaac Thomp son s Lye-water. Druggists sell at ttc.pnr bottle. (QHOSECHES Jimps Mean RHEUMATISM, NEURALGIA OR KINDLED ILLS.m cU. (7 $85 MID GOLD WATCH FREt IbiaiplantlM, sulM fold. humlnr-raM wstrh. ft bow so U fWf ai imc por it ihr twt banntiD in Aaniri ; until Utr9 It rnuld am l putrhawd for to iha lull. W ba both a-Sl'I- 5?d--",t "! of Miul lu. 0K PIKNIiV hlH.SI.u.l,l.i,n a.e. An al nt .1,. Irr.nl WBle(hwttMnlile)ir KKKIl. Tlfw watrlm ma t on, not onl m !! (rold. but M aiaitdliiff imnnt tha ww pritot-i, rDTTTci ann rriiaina nmraaeiieri m tlic world. Hi Mk how la tbi wonrlrrful offtr poMtbltT V amwctwnc want M pftta tn f-arli locality to a.r thrir bomaa, and show I lhiaa who rail, a tronlia Una af iviir valuabla and vr-nr mtrfal IIOI S til') Lit fttUI LRSt IhrMMmnlM. aa w.ll it., iw.i.-l. wa rnd Absot-ITBLT rttKK.and afttryoa haa kept them in Sr mnmv rut s moninm, mnn anown to tl.ia nbo muy tallad. ibr Isacoma mitrwly joar own psvfrt ; It ta 1. Ma to maka ihia r otfrr. ndiug lha Htilla dold ntatrli and larra Una of valuaMa aannlM Vara. f.vr ik. fcaaonthat lha abuMfnr of tha aa trip lea In any locality, alwa ra " ' imnB i"i ,Iirr WIT Hinpiei um9 nre m ft ttvalitr for a month nr lean. w mill . ft .limn. .i.taiia ind frumiha anrronndiar n-untrv. Tboaa wbowrita to uaal one will rclra a frr brnrAt fur acarrtlrati work nd trocl-Va. Thla, tha int remarkahl and Ithcral nfrWtrrr known, mada in erJcr that our altialla llnuat-hold Kamnlt-a my ba plarrd at Miff whrr thay ran ba arm. all over AmrrW wui ia naruiy Mr iroutiir for yon It. . them In ay allaiymir bna, and yuurrrward will ba Bvtl A toll rant on whl-h to write ua. fdiii hut 1 ernt, and if. aflrr io know a'l, yon do not car ta mo funher, wrhr no barm la dona. Hut If r da nA w.aaar itaM n.-a.yon ran rmira, ruiu. ah LruKT tt.X, klid Gold, Hl Kl it.-( ask VTt 11 antl eurlarii,roRiplcta liitaof ral i t.l Hor-kMOLB 9am PL 1 1. W' pur alt tumw lKigfat.au. Ailraaa,blisAll&t.uniiui aj.; lrtUd, llama G OI.Db worth MOptwItk Poiltfa Ky StUve U wuriu uub i auiu m o. a n x oy ueairs For a case of Catarrh in CATARRH in THE HEAD. snmtWIS or THE DISEASIV-riull, heavy headache, olistrui tion of the nasui piuwairea, diseharire. fnllincr from tho bind into the thront, sumotiiiu-s profuse, waterv, nnd arrtd, at others, thick, tenacious, mucous, puruli-ot, bloody and putrid; the cye are weak ; there 1. ri rutins; in tho ears, di-afnina, hackinif or couching to clear tha throat, expectoration of odenajve mat ter, together with si -a In from ulcer.; tho voica is chauiced and has a "nasal twang"; the breath is offensive: smell aud tasto impaired; there is a aensiition of dizziness, wilh mental deprca. sion, a hacking cough and general debility. Only a few of the alKjve-nuiiu-d syniptoms are likelv to tie present In any one ceso. Thousanils of case, annually, without manifesting half of the above syinptoms, result in consumption, and end In the grave. No disease is so common, more decoptue and daiurernua, leea understood, or more unsucocestully treated by pbysiuvns. Common Sense Treatment. If you would remove an evil, strike at it rcfet. As the prx(ii8p(Mtitir or nul cuuao of tutarrh ia, iu the mujority of crscs, some weaknitM, impurity, or otherwise faulty condalou of tlio system, in attfrnpting to cure the disemta our riii' aim iiiual to dirocted to the remotxii of thU caitM. The more we aoe of this odious disvaao, and we treat ftiioofstifully thousands of cuwti an nually at the Invalids' IIot l and HuiyKid liiBtitule, the more do we realize the lmnorLanoo of combining' with the uho of a local, soothing and hauling application, a thorouvh and pcrsuUiit inter nal use of blootl-cicanax aud touio medicinea. r 5 In ourinar catarrh and all LH1LF I t fretjuently I REL1&KCE. I ja.xa.nui, aa iva luuq UIOVIWII, TI Itl IW BKflUn-II, Uirrhal drafiMtja, weak or intlanifd ryca, impure LI'mmI, crofuloua nnd syphllitiu Uifnta, thy wonder ful uowera and virtiKH nf Ir. Pinrd'n fsildin Mod- leal Discovery cannot be too strongly extolled. It bus m spec. Ac Sold by Druggists. 25 Cents a Vial. BEING PCHEIT VEGETABLE, Dr. Pierce's Pellets operate without disturbance to tlio system, dut. or occupation. Put up iu glass vials, herwetieally seali-d. Alwsys fresh aud relia ble. As a gentlo laxative, alterative, or amiva IturgaUve, they give the must purfect aatiafuuUua. Now laughs the sun ; the south-wind blows ; Three merry maids hang out the clothes ; Miranda, Maud, and Madaline; They hear the village clock ring nine. Quoth Maud: "Why are we done so soon? The washing used to last till noon?" Two rosy mouths in chorus ope, "Oh! now we use the Ivory Soap." A WORD OF WARNING. There ire many white toapt, each represented to be " Just at rood it tho 'Ivory' they ARE NOT, but like ill counterfeit!, lick the peculiar and remarkable tp of the genuine. Ask for "Ivory" Soap and insist upon getting It. Copyright, las, by rmeter flamhla. rDA AND llltfhfmt Hnnnra at ii tir..i u.-...i.e. r.i.iniiiaas .ia. 1M7 Ifllalulaa --) In aam.a ...... v 1. V Rented. UaUiucne, 40 pi. Uo, t. PIANOS. MKAAK A nttnllti tin ITrt heallnln tn mika tha avtraisMltaL. ry dim that ihrir l'iana ar miin-rltir lo all nlhrt. 1 (tin lltr attrihuti anlclv tn 1 1. 1.1. tntrt(liitn.l by Itirm In l J, now ktionn a Iti ' MAM)N A HAMIjIN 1'iA.NO Hi KINGtR " FuU parliculan b nivl. lil;jf;fdrlMjliil BOSTON. tM Trfmont St. C'HIt'AOO, 149 Wnhwh Avt. .. . wa., ww nmw iiiu era,, r, union CM(Mnf. " WELL DRILL AH cnttinjv. of tb drill In rlay, und. ravnl. rork. o , am thM-lirtrafsl ni nHrlnrr hhvm rcaioi ln iBntn. N.it-mJ for fniccnna hr irttmra fail It 1 lit frnisaj 70 ! 1KJ ilin n Mttnnir. Pnhta limt, CttiaUufjan Krrr. l.UO.UlH V KV.H4.Nt TIFFIN, OHIO. JONES PAYSUibVr EICHT ft Tom Wacon Hralrs Iraa lttra. Hi4 hanrieita, Mxaal Tani Kanai aart Rram Una fn BOO. Rnry Mar Hnata. Ve IVr pra iratlna Ihl- .r- and ad.lrraa iOHtl ir IlktfiNAMTII. B1M.1IAMTU.N. Na V. ASTHMA cured 5 nvniiui's rn.w .u tlie w.imt OM-wtnanireaatirifucV I I al le alnrp ; otTecta r a rr w hrre aw I otiern fail A 2 3 trial van - tAa t tkplKxtL iTicf MW". art,! B l.ttlruj-TKTniaor itv Uiau. cv.11 fitrtrtanip DtK K( '11 1 rrM r 6) the Head which they cannot cure. ' "If a1'!'. 'E''ir?''jj'',1' ( orrmoiiT, PW. I OHIO IgallWfiflBaCBMMHanlLa effect upon the lining mucous membranes of the nasal and other airpaesares, promoting tho natural secretion of their follicles and glands, thereby softening the diseased aud thickened meiubraue, and restoring It to its natural, thin, deheate. moist, hrall by con dition. As a blood-purifier. It Is unsurpassed. A. those, disctisea vhich oomplioate catarrh are disease, of tlio lining mucous turm bnincs, or of tho blood. It will readily be seen why this xucdiuu. is so well calculated to cure them. , ful antiseptic, and Sieidilr destroys all bad smell which ad-nm-piinles so uiainr cases ot catarrh, thus affonUog great comfort to III V III. .llll'I iiuui Permanent when effiKXa upon the lining membrane of the nasal passage, u aiiis rnalcrially in rcstoruitr the diseased, thlckcocd, or ulceraUd nu nw brane to a healthy condition, and thus e radi on U-s Uie disiec When a euro is effected In this manner it is permanent, Ikth Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical PtsooTery and. Tr. Pnfm'A Catarrh Hrmtniy are e ld by druttrUt the world over. l)ipcry f l.io. Biz bottles for $ Ui. Dr. bale's Catarrh Kcuiedy o ct-uuii bulf-doen bottles $..'J. A complete Trealiee on Catarrh, giving1 Taluable hints as to clothing, diet, and other matters of importance, will bo mailed, post-paid to any addrcas, ou receipt of a Xcent posUiKO stamp. Address, World's Dis penAry IHedlcaJ AasoclsUiooa No. 63 Main Btreet, UtrrALO, M. r. tho various diawwra with complimUd, a.9 throut. 91 . aajs sla S I If" i f 1 I v w . w mm Thb original 1TTLE LIVER PILLS. PURELY VEGETABLE I PERFECTLY HARMLESS ! Aa a LlVCIt PI1.1, they are (Juequalctt I cMa.T T ",e, OHBAPB8T, EA8IEBT TO TAKE. Bewsre of Imitations, which contain Poisonous Mineral. Always ask for Ilr. Pierce s l"i!li ts.wljon aro lime nuKr-ooairu ruis, or Anu-biiious Gnuiuics. ONE PELU.T A OOtiE. SICK HEADACHE, Blllona Headache, Oizxtnesa, Conatlpatlon, liitlie.llou, tiilious AlUacka, and all d. ruiiue tnents of the stomach aud bowels, are promptly re lieved and permanently cured by the use of Dr. I'leree's Pellet.. In explanation of their remedial IlllW.'r livnr a., u-iv.nl. vurllV if t ill-ill41 it. 11IHV (rut hfully be aaid that thfir action upon the system la universal, not I glaud or tissue escapiu their sanative iutlueooe. Hasaiactsrsa by Wi&UP DihPIJiHiftT HEDICiX ASSOCUTWll, Laetur on ROUGH ON RATV ri. with Krjuw mi nmrar abotit lbfirhnoMi pnt a I V. lox nf It (n a ntnt of btniJ"-- BED BUGS creviiieai where grease caiimrt be .piill-. u Water Buga, B-eU-a, U(. hm, . t . a Tor two or three nl(rhs . w ' ltinkle Koeoa o Hats iirr. , piiwiler, in, about anil flow. the tiiidr,,h'.,,,X BEETLES th morn j nir wah i all awar i down the drain lpo, whn the lti!wHui from rarret tooltar Jr will dlNAniw'&r. T ht nennH la ha WATER BUBSilSISi".. bouse tner mutt drink duHnft the ukhi lrtato Ilua. Insert, on Vines, etc.. a spoonful of the powder, well HAW aiiakn tn a keg of irnter. and HUm api'lleil with tprinkliiiK pot spray whiak broom. Keep ii well eUrre4 i Bfto. and 81 Boiea Abt. rtne. rVe ( Hons with boxes. CK.OUNO CQU' RAaaiTS, Bperrow Oophera. ( i cleared out by Koufrh on luta tti-e u ROUGH ON MALABSA Fc-er and A tons Chili, hutr thao ft E. bTwsua, Jeittey Utj, J. jn.MF" KIMTKO.M AfJNKTM JU'ria. Tha ireateal rvmatlUI nKt'ut th- rTr-r knew. Natura'a trti llin. Kfc, or-rinu t-melfot. Rmna-hra nil inrin-l Cm1lllmi phWa. 81. II. Jt.Nfc.rt l urtnn, Waah. is... ! iWaMn at MTthtnvalaa In tha wrH Kith aa aa. Taraaaraaa. itMrtia, Tin tu., Ax . r 52 aaaWaw.w.w.,w1,waiiMaa-a11l aHMiBtwHal twawa V TTTTl Asaloeal application for healing the diseased ooodl LOGaL I "OQ ,ho bead, Ur. Saire's tatarrh Heinedy is beyond I all ooniartsoD the bint preparation ever invented. IrjrilT I It is mild and pleasant to use, producing no smarting WULHI. or Hjiiii, and couuuiiing no strong, iiTilaiiug, ox cauia tic druff. or other Douvin. This Itemedv IS a nower. ml. UIHBK. The Golden Medical T)irovry is the naUurnl Mhelpmute' of Dr. Here's C'ntarrh Itemcdy. Jfe tint nnltBana.n mti-it.ua 1 1 lolx ami tinDlaa Pifpra I up the system to a tit alt hy standard, and cou VUtlLAa I quers throat, bronchial, ana lunir ouniplicfitiutiHi. any such exist, but- from its sini-uho Size or PCLLcrs. o o o o o o l- ai rfTW immiff ttm.