NEWS ANI NOTES FOB WOMTN. Afternoon gowns nro mode of foulards nnd India silks. Br. Annie Sawyer is the one lady phy sician in Ottawa. An Esquimau woman is lecturing in the United States. A proat deal of ingenuity is exercised in the-matter of sleeves. lints with low crowns and broad brims, likrt scoops, are fashiouable. Ribbons of gold and silver metal are extensively used for trimming. Twenty thousand women and girls in Chicagoearn less than $3 a week. Empire, fans are sometimes mado of gauze ribbons mounted on white sticks. "Worth makes liis mourning dresses in a design that neve goes out of fashion. A young colored girl from Atlanta, Georgia, has gone to Congo as a mission ary. " Diamond earrings of tho latest mode consist each of two stones, one set above tho other. The Empire dress with a train of three yards is the prettiest stylo for bridos seen this season. i All the women elected to municipal office in Kansas this spring write "Mrs." before their names. j Dresses made of fish net have for trim ming rows of moire or satfn ribbon run through the meshes. Swiss bolts of jet beads are worn with black net and lace dresses. They are pointed back and front. "Women who wish to preserve the- slim hess and contour of their figures Bre ad vised to learn to stand well. I Irish poplin, though not yet a favorite with the world at large, is very much used by the leaders of fashion. ' Big silken single tulip petals set amid frills of lace or lisse, bloom on. the caps now sent out by London milliners. 1 A popular- St. Louis girl recently re ceived during a temporary illness 5000 roses and forty-eight pounds of candy. The fact is noted that some of the most tender hearted ladies do not hesitate to have the cars of,,their pet dogs clipped. A lady named Lanesco was chosen Mayor of a town -in Roumania, but tho Minister of the Interior quashed the elec tion. Some of the handsomest of new im ported cretonnes como in scroll and daisy patterns, with much cream color in the ground. Cambridge, the scat of England's fam ous university, has the further distinction of sheltering within its walls a college of carpentery for women. Eptire gray toilets are trimmed with 'silver braiding, gray passementosks in Arabesque designs, or made up with vel vet or brocade of a deeper shade. I Mme. Kerschbaumer, M. D., who prac tises as an oculist in Salzburg, recently 'delivered an important lecture in Vienna on the study of medicine by women. Fichus of India silk muslin, edged with knife-plaited lace, are in high favor. They are particularly effective when worn with gowns of scarlet sicilienne. ! Gray in an infinite variety of shades is a notable color in the newly imported French and English gowns, and but few of them are trimmed with contrasting colors. i New nnd very stylish aro the cloth costumes which consist of a Russian red- ingote of one color opening over a vest and draped front of clotli of a contrast ing shade. The round French waist, which is gath ered at neck and waist-lino, front and back, and shows neither darts nor side bodies, is used for all summer fabrics, whether silk, wool or cotton. A popular garniture for skirts of dark cashmere is a latticed border of narrow iblack velvet ribbon laid over light cash mere. The upper part of the corsage also has this velvet trellis pattern. i Gail Hamilton practices greater economy In writing paper than almost ary other literary man or woman. She alway writes on scraps of paper, the backs of old envelopes being ner tavonte material. I The newest thing in London household economy is a female butler a maiden jdressed in a livery of blue, green, gold or scarlet, as taste may prefer. The ef fect alleged is "more quiet and equal style." ! English dust coats for driving or trav eling are made of gray mohair in plain redingoto shape, single-breasted, open down the middle of the back, and vt ith large coat sleeves, full and high on the shoulders. Turquoise blue is tho new pale shade, which is sometimes almost green, and which is most popular in India silk, ben- galine and crepeline, figured or striped with black, or trimmed with black rib bons or laces. A woman in New England (,'oos to i town and takes the name of some iii fiuential citizen, and claims relationship, and the first move the man makes is to give her 300 to 81000 to got out of town and eo hence. She savs she makes a'JOO per year. 15 y me win ol lluronessue t uUueiaiiu g who died lately in St. Louis, most of hei large fortune is devoted to the buiMing aud endowment at Lexington, Keutu of ail asylum for old Protestant white men and women aud young white Protestant poor children. Here are heroines indeed from North Carolina: Miss Lucy Miller and her small niece, llattie Rainey, found that a high and dangerous railway trestle was afire, and by dipping water from a near creek with their felt hats extinguished it in time to save from harm a traiu of cars close at Land. Miss Grace King, the new Southern writer, is described as a delicately formed girl, with a mass of fair hair, hhe bus Creole blood in her veins, and is the daughter of the lute W. W. King, who was a prominent lawyer iu Louisiana. She was a gay society girl before she be gan to write. Queen Victoria, on her recent visit to Biarritz, conimishioned tho American painter, William Geduey Bunco, formerly of Hartford, Conn., and lately of New York und Venice, to paint a picture for her. This is the first time, it is said, that tho Queen ever gave a commission to an American artist. A grand washerwomen's competition ha been held at Bouverst, ou the shores of Lake Geneva, between Franco and Swiss luundresses. Two of the c hampion washerwomen of Paris appeared to rep resent their country, and one Mile. Lefev re, aged nineteen, won the first prize. A banquet wound up a day such as the lake baa never witnessed, SCIENTIFIC AND INDUSTRIAL. "Snuffles" of infants arc usually th result of over-feeding. A sncccssfnl photograph was taken th other day by the light of Cuban firefly. Smokeless powder is being produced In large quantities at Rottwcil, Ham burg. Living bacteria, in considerable num bers, may always be found in snow, and they resist extreme cold. Suspension for one to three minutes, three times a week, is a new way of treating locomotor ataxia. There is a lake of petroleum in Utah and several thousand tons of asphalt in one deposit. It is worth $20 per ton. An English firm has just brought out a new sensitive-flame burner, which can be extinguished entirely by a loud noise. Belgium's nine manufacturing business has developed until one-third of all the r.inc used in Europe is mado in thatcoun try. The Capo Peninsula, South Africa, in an area of 6UU square miles, contain! 17B0 species of plants, of which 102 are orchids. A mimlcr of new sugar factories will be started in Kansas tills vsar, and the sugar product will be many times greahei than it was last year. At the International Exhibition ol Botany, to be held in Antwerp in 1890, will be celebrated tho three-hundredth anniversary of the microscope. The svstcm to relieve street traffic in Paris, as proposed by M. Borlier, consists substantially of a system of subterranean cast-iron tubes, 18.4 feetiu diameter and about ten miles iu total length. It is estimated that sixty-six per cent. of the anthracite coal is wasted before it gets to market. Fifty-five per cent, has to be left in the mines for pillars, and eleven per cent, is lost after it gets above ground. Lakes iu eastern Oregon aud Nevada aro drying up in consequeuce oi the divergence of their waters for purposes of irrigation and a continuous drought. A number of large lakes have diminished many square miles in area. One volume of liquid benzine will ren der 16,000 volumes of air inflammable and 8000 volumes of air highly explosive, but nothing but contact with flame or a white hot body will touch off the most explosive mixture of petroleum vapor and air. After twenty months of trial Dr. E. Houze, of the Hospital St. Jean, Brus sels, reports tannin tho most beneficial substance in consumption he has known. After the first few day expectoration, sweats and couch diminish, and the appetite improves. In engraving on glass by means of electricity the plate to be engraved it covered with a concentrated solution ol nitrate of potash and put in connection with one of the poles in the battery. Tho design is traced out with a fine platinum point connected with the other pole. The perfect combustion of coal seems to have been effected by Mr. William Gibbs, of Essex, England. By means of a fan and suitable openings the exact quantity of air necessary is supplied to the furnace chambers, and the products of combustion issue as hot air, free from smoke or odor. Professor J. "W. Mallctt finds that most alum baking powders aie made with alum, acid phosphate of calcium, bicar bonate of sodium and starch, and he settles a disputed point by showing that not only alum but the residues left by its use in baking powder must be un wholesome in bread. A French scientist has found nine forms of microbes in the juices of a healthy stomach and concludes that they piny an important part in digestion. Every stomach seems to be a little in habited world in itself and sometimes the population appear to indulge in a revolu tion which may be fun to them, but plays the mischief with the owner of the organ. Tho Famous Peacliblovf Vase. The famous peachblow vase was im ported from China at a cost of $10,000. Mrs. Mary J. Morgan, of New York, bought it for $15,000. Its history ii thus related by a correspondent : "Th next step in the history of the vase wai its sale with the effects to Mrs. Mary J. Morgan on March 9, 1886. While ex. hibiting it in the galleries, the curiositj excited was very great. Some person! even asked the privilege of kissing it, since, they said, they could not own it. Groups of people were always gathered in front of the vase, aud made many and various remarks about it. Expressions oi surprise over its reported value were most frequent. Finally when the day of the sale arrived, there was a tiptoe of excite ment over the matter. The auctioneer Jiointed to the modest thing and asked it le could have a bid of $5000 for it. At this price it was started, and crept up graduully until it reached $18,000, at which it was knocked down but to whom? This question has never yet been satisfactorily answered. Among those who were bidding for the vase was Mr. Sutton, of the Ainer-i can art galleries. His instruction! were not to pay more than $20,000 foi the vase. It was sold for $18,000, and Mr. Sutton was the buyer. It has been said that he bought tho vase for himself, but be did not. lie bought it under ! structions for William T. Walters, of Bah timore, and the little treasure is now in thut city, where it now rests in a closet, hidden away from the eyes even of Mr. Walters's friends. A few days after the sale Sir. Walters denied having bought it, according to a correspondent of the Tribune. The only explanation given ol this evasion has been that Mr. Walteri was afraid of the notoriety which the pos session would give him. Ho refused to have his name connected with the pur chase, but it is, nevertheless, a fact that he has it now, but he probably does not get much comfort from its possession Atlanta CoMtituiion. Hypnotized by tho Phonograph. Dr. Pinel, of Paris, has succeeded in hypnotizing several subjects by means ol the phouograph. All the commands given through this channel were as readily obeyed us those uttered directly, and 'sugestious" of every possible sort were as effectually communicated through the medium of the machine as if made viva voce. The conclusion deduced by Dr, Pinel is that the theory of a magnetic current passing from the operator to the subject is entirely baseless, and that the real cause of the phenomena of hypnotism is nervous derangemeut on the part of those subject to them Electrical World, THE FARM AND GARDEN. TALTTtt o HTtN DROrPiNOB. The statement that the droppings of one hen per year are worth fifty cents is going its annual round. We have kepi about one hundred hens on the average bnt find them credited with onlv fivs dollars on our book for manure, or fivs ! cents each. Ten cents is the very high. ! est that we would be willing to allow foi , the annual manure crop from each hen. American AgriculturitU MICT5 AMONG TOK CORK. Mico make serious work among coi in the ear in cribs. They work around freely among tho cars where cats cannoi follow them. Rats kill off the mice, but are themselves worse than the vermin thej destroy. Tho best security against vermin in corn houses is to set the build ing on posts capped with a tin pan s. that mice cannot get around it. Then i not brought in they cannot cffict an en trance. The corn house should be cleared of all rubbish cobs and the like at lens) once a year. Courier-Journal COTTO!-SEKD MEAL FOn COWS. The agricultural department at Wash ington has been making an analysis ol butter from cows fed on cotton seed meal, which produces unlooked-for results. Th analysis showed remarkable points: 1. A low percentage of vegetable acids. 2. A phenomenally high melting point. 3. A strong persistence of the rcduehig agent. The first point is of importance as show, ing that mixing cotton seed with the feed of cows in the South will tend to raise the melting point of butter, thus render, ing it more suitable for consumption in hot climates. Professor Wiley says! "From an analytic point of view the re sults are of great importance, since thej show that butter derived from a cow fed on cotton seed meal might be condemned as adulterated when judged by the amount of volatile acids present. Since cotton seed meal is destined to be a cattle food of great importance, especially in the southern part of the United States, this is a fact of the greatest interest." Chi cago Timet. COVERING COBN. When the ground is dry, corn requires a heavier and firmer covering. It is sometimes 'said that tho later the planting the heavier and tinner should be the covering; but this is true only so far as it holds good that the later in the season the drier the ground. Sometimes the ground contains more moisture in May than in April ; then the May covering should be the lighter and looser. Generally, how ever, toward the close of tho planting, season tho ground has lost so much moisture that not only should the cover ing be heavy, but it may well be com pacted by a stroke with the hoe or even by tramping upon it. If the planting is done with a two-horse planter, the runners properly set to go deeper aud the firming action of the wheels is not disturbed. Iu fact, if the ground is unusually dry. it is advisable to go over the field with a heavy roller two days after the corn is planted. Germination has not yet reached the stage where tho displacement sf the earth by the roller will prove Injurious to the corn, while this displacement will kill myriads of weeds that have just started near the surface. If used early enough, a roller is a good weed-destroyer. If, on tho other hand, the ground Is damp, as it is most likely to be early in the season, less covering is required, and the covering should not be compacted with the hoe or foot. If the planting is done with a two-horso planter, tho harrower should follow close after, to loosen the covering compacted by tho wheels. The amount and density of the covering should also be modified by the character of the soil. A light, loose soil therefore one that dries out rapidly ; may well be compacted above the seed when a heavy, clayey soil should be kept loose; and the covering of the former should be heavier than of the latter. The general principle is that the covering should be sufficient to keep moisture about the seed, but not of a character to retain an excess of moisture or to shut out the warmth of the sun ; and the shallowest covering that will secure the essential conditions of germination is the best. American- Agriculturist, HORSES AT llEST. There are some curious facts about the disposition of horses to lie down, says the Horte and Stable. To a hard working horse repose is almost as great a necessity as good food, but tired as he may be, he is very often Bhy about lying down, even when a clean, nice bed of straw is pro- vided for him. The writer once rode a mare seventy miles in a single day. The stable in which she was put for the night was as comfortablo in every way as it could be made, yet she stood the whole, night through. She ate her oats and hay and then went to sleep, leaning forward with her breast against the manger. There are horses that have never been seen to lie down, and if they have ever done so it was only for a short time, and at an hour when they were not likely to be seen. JNo marks have ever been dis covered on their ceats which would in dicate that they had been lying down.' A 1 ! .1.1 1 - I norse is recaueu now mat occupied tor fifteen years, from the time he was two years old, the first stall in grandfather's stable. Up to flio hour he died no one; had ever seen him lying down, and several times alter wearisomo drives oi eight or ten hours, a watch was placed on him to see if during the night he would lie down ; but he was never caught iu that position, and he could not be tempted to recline by the sweetest and cleanest of bedding. Llo died literally upon his lent, lie was taken sick, and in giving him a drench, from a long-necked bottle, with his head pulled up to a beam, he suddenly fell buck and expired. Unless a horse lies down regularly his rest cannot be complete, aud his joints and Sinews stiffen ; and while it is true that some horses thut sleep in a standing position continue to work for many years, it is equally true that they would continue to work for many years longer, and per-, form their work much better, if they rested naturully. Young horses from U' country stable may refuse to lie down when put into a stable in town, and the habit may become confirmed unless in-' ducements are offered. Horses can bo taught to lie down, and they can also be taught to be as neut and cleanly iu their habits as an individual. It is a very rare thing for horses afflicted with a disease that superinduces fever to lie down; they will stand up until nature becomes completely exhausted and their limbs refuse to sustain them. Tney have un instinct which teaches tbeui that if they lie down it may be ilJllicult for them to get upon their feet agu, t WATEll FOR BEKS. Persons owning bees and not located pear streams of water should furnish them (fresh water daily, as it will save time which, to the bee, means honey, as it means money to a person. '1 he way they frequent wells and cisterns showi that they prefer water fresh to stale, and they appear to enjoy si ptung it from gravel and sand. I 4iave used mflk- crocks filled wirti gravel and sand, but, on the whole, prefer wooden kegs with cloth put in them, hanging over the sides, acting as syphons. Tho bees sip watci from tho sunny side of the kegs. The kega should lie washed out frequently, and one should be a HtMe brackish, about a teaspoonful to a pail of water Prairit thinner. SMUT OF OATS. The smut of oats said by a Manches ter, (Mich.) inquirer to bo very badly in- lurious throughout is caused by the fungus (Ustilago segetum) which feeds on tho panicles, and develops a great quan tity of dark brown spores. These arc wafted about by wind, and if they fall upon other oat plants under the propet condition smut will again be produced. As a preventive, it is well to practise ro tation, nnu never raise two oat crops in succession on tho samo lnnd. Tho seed used should be plump, well filled and frco from smutted kernels. It is a common practice in some sections to soak the seed for thirty-six hours in one pound of cop per sulphate, dissolved in four gallons of water; this destroys any adhering spores, and will greatly lessen, and perhaps pre vent, attack of the smut. A solution of one pound caustic potash in six gallons of water is thought to bo as effectual, aud it requires only half tho time of soaking. On being taken out of the solution tho seed should bo rolled in ashes, lime or plaster. When once established on the plants no application can avail. 2seio lork Tribune. FAtlM AND OARDKJ NOTES. Silage is a partial substitute for green grass. Silago may be mado an efficient ally of or a good substitute for soiling crops. It Is no sign that a hen meditates evil to her owner simply because sho lays for hira. Be sure and set out some fruit a few berries at least and how nbout the cur rants and grapes? The first eggs from pullets should not be used for hatching if hen's eggs can be had conveniently. Some who keep cattle up in summer say that silage is even more valuable in sum mer than in winter. A lath fence is the first thing to plant for a farmer's garden. It will pay the best of any one crop he can put m. The common school is the fanner's col lege, and the parents ought to visit the ichools and be interested in their work The persimmon is naturally a slow fjrowcr, and although plenty of fertilizer given, they seem to grow only just about io much. Fanners are not putting business method enough into their work. They must make their brains do a little more and then hands a little less. If you havo any mongrel cocks or those from which you do not wish to breed, get rid of them at once. It is a needless ex pense to feed them. An important advantage resulting from the use of ensilage all tho year is, that manure made from it is available for use not scattered at random over tho farm. A cow should never be idle more than six weeks at one time. Sho will last longer and earn more than a cow kept the usual wav milked seven months, hall fed and idle five. In selecting fertilizers remember that gypsum, or land plaster, is a cheap and valuable form of plant food. It is es pecially valuable for mixing with hen manure, ashes and compost. Among tho latest notablo features ol the poultry business is thut of hatching ducks by incubator and fattening them for early market. It is claimed to bo a very remunerative business. Have no fear of feeding potatoes to cows giving milk, but be careful about feeding them a few weeks before time oi calving', for they stimulate milk produc tion and at that period may cause garget. The butter product of any State can be increased twenty-five per cent, with the rows now used and without additional ex pense by feeding a liberal balanced ration and giving the cows and the milk proper care. Boxes in the kitchen windows provide piobably the best and most convenient way to raise plants from seed for tho home garden. Sow seed about six weeks before time to transplant to the open ground. Uees should be furnished water ii a good supply bo not close at hand. Take a salt barret that has just been emptied, soak it in water and set it out near the apiary, and tho bees will show how they appreciate such a tonic. From tho earliest streak of dawn to the )ast ray of the setting suu,thcre is some thing that can be done. It is not all drudgery. Much of it is plousant labor, but it is work that must be done, and done thoroughly at the right time, or it will not be made a success. To clear pear trees of the scurfy bark louse scrape the scales off during cold weather and as soon as spring opens, .and when they begin to hatch syringe 'the trees and their limbs with a solution of washing soda (half a pound to an or dinary pailful of water). Prompt treat ments of this kind will destroy them Some pomologists paint the twigs and branches with linseed oil for this pest, Silage is made in stacks in England just as hay is stacked ; but the stack is covered with an. air-tight roof, drawn down very tightly by means of powerful screws attached to foundation timbers un der a tight floor. This method is fre quently a failure, as the fodder is spoiled for a considerable depth and sometimes the whole stuck is damaged. For a disease of the bean consisting of u parasitic fungus growing iu the tissue of the polls ami producing lurge brown Spots, a recent bulletin of the Department of Agriculture suggests to a Louisiana correspondent to try spraying soon after the beans begin to lorin with a solution ol one ounce of hyposulphite of soda to a gallon of water, repeating the operation when the beans are about half grown, and igiun eight or ten duys later. It is suid that never before at the be- L'iuuing of a new administration have there been so many women, otliceseckers ktt Washington. Food for Reflection. The New York World of February 0th say": "'Theqnwtlonas to how much of what the prvtond to know doctors really know is a rmf Intoi estinB one. "ThoV tHMaeaa nxrnt.lntiallv cranf. faptlltlMl for himihuirglnK, and the presumption t tha thoy are not proof in moat cases, at all times least, (tirnliist famutation to maka tin oi t limn. Their nrofession comes as nur hin4 an rwotaric one as any that Is arkoowlocl 1 to be nwpivtaWo. Hut the revelation as to their views in the Knhinnnn arsenical polscfn. lne eases In Boston ia startline. i - .... . . Thnre wera Ave dnatha from t.hn (truer. anrl the doctors in their ccrtinc-atas attributed tlroni respectively to pneumonia, typhoid fpvnr. meniaritis. bowel diseasa and Briirtit'l disease of tlia kidneys. The truth would havs neypr Iwn known but for nntpMms with mm in doctors nan notnniff to no. mere is food, here for reflection aim for doctors." The almve criticism is full warranted bv the startling ignorance shown bjr the attend ing physicians in the Honierville cases. It. cim be antlv mid that human life Is too often sacrificed to the itmnrance and btsrotrr of tho profusion. i cool ten it. happens that fatal results fol low an impiij)cr ccuirra of treatment the physician tit the patient for rpnmitnptlnn, gi'imrnl debility or for nervous disordors, whilst tlie real disease, which is shfwly de stmying the kidneys ami filling the system with a poison quite as deadly as arsenic, is altop't her overlooked or docs not attract at tent ion until too late. Fhvsicians too often treat the svmotoms of disease instead of tho disease itself. It is well established that four-fifths of th ordinary ills which besot humanity are tha results of disease in the kidneys which will yield to the curative properties of Warner's taje Cure if timely used, and to it alone. What is apparantlr a disease in the other organs is more of touttmes a mere symptom of kidney disease, which should be quickly eradicated by Warner's (Safe Cure before it secures too linn a hold on those organs. Country and City Lungs. A few days ago a New York specialist iu pathology showed the writer two bottles. One contained a section of n healthy lung of a man who had lived in tho country, and the other tho lung of a mau who had lived and died in Now York. Tho country lung showed a clear pink color; the city lung was almost black, and it was impossible to trace the veins through tho smut and dirt. Tho experi ment proved, of course, that tho air in New York is so impregnated with dust and dirt that the lungs become in as much need of a bath as if they were laid in bed of charcoal. Hartford Courant. There is a great deal of typhoid fever in tho City of Mexico. What Is sweeter than roses That blooin in the beamy of June? Or the stately and fr Kraut lilias Whose bvil rlnira summer tune? Ah. sweeter the rtffl blowing; On the cheeks of those we love. And the lily of health that's glowing Tn cheeks' red rose alxre. Put howsnon the lily and the rose wither In the faces of our American women. Why W it? dimply because io ninny of them nre victims of weaknesses, irregularities aim functional oe rnntrcmenta incidental to the sex. If they would use Pr. 1 'ierce's Favorit l'rcscrlntion all these beauty and hrnlth-der troy ing ail ments nilifht ho warded off, and we would hear less about women "growing old before their lime. P.H a m. sends ns sixty-nine per cent, of the total amount of cotTee imorted. and the cost per pound is six-tenths of a cent cheaper than any other. Toreculate the stomach, liver and bowels. Dr. Helve's 1'eUots excel. One a do e. It is estimated that the annual oney vslne of the fruit consumed in (frcat Britain is $10, UW.UiO. of which about SlS.COu,UU0 worth is im- rorted. - 100 Ladle Wanted, And 100 men to coll dally an any drucclst. for a free trial package of Lane's Family Medi cine, the Kreat root and Hero remedy, aiscov. ered by Dr. Silas Ijuio whtle la the Kocky Mountains, For diseases of the blood, liver ana kiiluevsit. is a noait'.ve cure. For cons'. it atton and clearing up lit complexion it does won ders. C'litUliea like it. Kveryone prnisas it. Irtfe-aUo package, ,u cunts. At au urug gist'. TimFK eantlve Knelisb millionaires In Eat Africa have been released on imyment ot lull) pounds ransom. If vnn am ilmilif rnl as to the nse of Dobbins' Electric Scan, and cannot acct pt the experi ence of mWli.iua ho ue it, after the 24 years it has been onthe market, oiif Irlni will convince you. Ask your grocer for IU Take no iinlm lion. Tiif total production of wheat In America In IrV- was tiri.HiS.oflO bushels. Of this talltor- ntu raised SMl.-i.tW bushels. Catarrh Cured. A clcrcvuian, after years of snfferlng from that loathsome disease. Catarrh, and vainly Im injc every known remedy, at last lounu a prescription which completely cured andf aved uim troiutleath. Any bullerer rrom inisnreno ful disease feiidhik-a self-addressed stamped envelope to l'rof. .1. A. Lawienre, SS Wan en fcl., X. V., will receive the recipe free of cliarfe. Rttidents. Teachers (male or female Clergy men and others in need of chuntreof employ ment, should not fail to write to li. . duhnson A Co.. liW Main ft.. Kichmond. V. Their great success shows that they have cot the. true ideas about making- money. They can ahow you how to employ odd hours prolitably. Oregon, Ibe Paradise f Farmer. Mild, equable climate.certain and abundant crop. Urtl mill, grain, ej ass aim sioc- uuini try in th world. Full information free. Ad dles Oregon Im'lirrat'n Board, 1'ortlaud, Ore, The International Bank in Co.. 31 SJB'way, N, Y. City, call attention to their adv. headed "An Kgc.llent Investment." They refer to telle au Co. and to Kvasler A Co.. bauker. JfafBlcted with sore evesnae Dr. Isaao Thorn t ea'aEye-watar. DrurilsU aell at aoc.per bottle , a ii ii.t frn.n the dYiirefl.tua efleel of tbs changing icusou, or by hard work and worry you nred tbs toulug, bulltllug up. urv-treugtheuln j eflect of Hood'. Kursuparllla. oj orugkuo. With Universal Log Bsaiu and Sinmlt.neoua Work a. also fcnirlnca. Wood Flausra alanui sutured by si ,k.n is in w u it tv -a.r.i'ii n. PENSION Ii 7 i inn-full V I JOllNW.MOBRH. Um Fi-lat'lval kxanUji.r, U. S. Feali'U llurcau.AU'y at Law, H'sililDtt... .-itiiLra elhliinurlalDiu. lui-rta., re rails.-, wuiaw. . cumin. . urui rslatlW. Tfxperlaaue: 3 yers InlMtwar, 15 year, la fent-B Buru. aaU attornt aluo ta ea. IS YOUR FARM FOR SALE2ffi.WS5 If .0 ailiircsa cviana a hshibi.mj airu.u-ai.. . -sKBMii- RBfllts that aerar fall. Cure lo 1 itaiiiD. or LMrinwnC UnUr mtriut. 1i3c, .tamp, or CSMb. C. t.'. ALMbKlau llarioUbt. UrualB, N.Y. A seats wantsil. Si aa bour. w nsw artlolea. Oatl'avt aoU .atupli. trts. K. Mamtiall. lx:ktmrt. I. PEERLESS BYES &ZHj2J!!l Tub young man in New York ho went uud urowuea iunmeu uecause ut could not dress in the stylo he coveted might just us v eil have knocked out Lin bruins with a stick of maccaroni and saved the trouble of fishing hiia out. Thkek HtNDiiED young Bulgarian nobles have organized themselves into a body guard for l'lince Ferdinand and taken an ironclad oath that he shall not bo kidnuped as I'linc? Alexander was. t T.!wJ'L.-ltsFAirivi-wa' ! Mr- v', rLpy SAWMILL. 5?jacoos oil FOR POULTRY. Ct'RKS Chicken Cholera and all Diseases of Poultry. tVGXNKftAt DJif(7r0,V5,-K( Vifly tfroil er dough ofuralfd rA 81. Jatet Oi. V thtfoal eantut luolUoU Jbrea U dmn On Uirmt, ill m$ ton mtal doith wflA IA OU. Oivt ftottfcf ta. They viU finally rot mf Sf nurd. fold ty Dniyoittt and Ptolert Brtryuhert. THE CHARl l a, VOOiUft CO.. Bsltlmws, MS it r n iT-9-j .i r'A T T..ni' a I i iuui iiiilu mm I Vi i uner isdii ata di b LIS AS MILK. So disi'Md that tha tnnst i dsllcststtomacacaataxtlt. Itamarkabla as a vi rnunvoGR. lrso-s gal. rapidly arP"" vhlU taklac It. rjf'.nij crnTT'5 PMnrcTftH uuvii if uavuuivn Is acinnwteAgffl hy Physicists to ha th FIHT-ST and BEST preparation ot ita elaaa forth rUt ol cnysrftFTioy, scrtorrr.A, ort:mi ltFHIf.ITT, WASTlSn niMCHMKH or VHlI.I)KKX,and CIIHOMU VOVOM.H. Au. pxdoouis. Scott & Boirne, Hw Tsrk. MAKE CHICKENS PAY. ft you .now brw to proirlT car fortliNu. VoTiH reut in PUmpa ypuc-Upnx'uiYa luv-FAtiK Ihmjk lYluir ilm Fiii-i-Wice of a 'lrti- tur, but a mau working for do! Ir atul cent ihirttitf a imrtf. oi ar years, it trtu-hrn you tiow to IVffsrtatul (ur lUfarn; In PVtl for Y'.fu ami aWo for 'ttn(tii: which '! to Hat for UreliUf I'lin-o: and rvrrvthtnv. itiilw.. yen mould ,iow rn unit mi itt t tr mar it rrom liitl'sr, lSi in f. t-r-wi imi -.nit. ... . aawiFsv m lronarl rMrrrt, l, V, lt JONES 1 1 1-3 PAYS THE FREICMT. . .1 Ten l aioa Kralrs. Iron I". Mwl CnH uff, hrus 'iaiv iitiain and 1'v.iaBnt far BOO. S er li- S, lc. 1 ..r f pr Hit n.rlit.ua Hii p.TSrttl .d'lr.'" JONES OF BINGHAMT0N. niNtiltAMTO, N. V. CUPID'S SECRET. Ft-Mt toMiirttjr fii ant for A 1,1, bMN hl.SKASKS. Im-omparaMe for romplf-lun, chaflnfr. rviuift, ac-ltl, burnt, cuta unit niirainn. it aooihea and Immttttatel- Favor U i rescript Ion of n riiilnmt pb vale tan for 30 yara, Otnirt bottlr W rt ; Box 3ft cut., iMtp-ll. Circular fret. AriilrfM THK W. II II. OSBOUNK CO., Lock Drawer J7, Taimyr, N. Y SOMETHING NEW ! K l..!.tiM' ir.irfc ;:.i.tr( eo JUST OUT I AH infirj' H'urfc linaket eotniiWs without the I.1TT1.K VOMKlt,lhe nrolrat, handle aa.l must mrul article fur th Hurk Ptukrt trtr lu vented. It will save its cunt In a .ingle one vt the many tliluR. It 1. desiKticd to tlo. Kent free by mall to any aildreM on receipt of .1 cent, hy the HuMll SUVK1.II CO...J1U Attains Mreet, urooaiyu, N. 1 NORTHERN PACIFIC. J LOW PRICE RAILROAD LANDS & FREE Government LANDS. . MlLUONSof ACBKKof wch in Minu-t. North r.-k-nL Montlll-. litiho. W -hiiwtou ni l On' n- CCftin CAS l'uolictio With ilHt tlfc r lnif th dtniJ rUll bat Aj,t culturai. 4rcinif a l i loin-v Lanlt nuwoiwMi 18. ttl. Irer. Atllra4 AUIC D I AUtfnSU ii't Coinniiosioiifr. iO SUCCESSFULLY REMOVED Wtthautaaln ar the use fine knife. Fa tttiut. will iivclvn every homo comfort. Charge. reasonable, pirnd for clrciilara. Holland Medical and Surgical Institute, . DELAWARE AVE., BrfFA-O. W. T IDO TOU WAtit io Irani all a'tout a Ilt-raM How tn Hn k tint a IiiiikI Una t kuetv ItiiNi t-r!..- r aw-- 1 1 at PYaiitl lierai l In-ia-inti.l rfTm-t a, I tlr f 1ll th Aire h ihvTecttil What to fall the . li.ft..n.nL l.ri ( tha Animal. How to,.,, an tll ami ..ilit-r .lur-l ,n(or imtiOD In our IM ritiK ILLl h i ft A I 0 IIOHNK BuOh 1.4 n.t.1 Af i.i.lv 4L. IX H 111 tIll!yL ouviv ri, n. nt'iafi b iinu-iiBt.i'. - Matrimonial Paper, lrag. mchty iilusVtf. F-tr- -mm Mr eealaiM aewl Mt aJr- - f L.tUa f a t '' -raatiac Le enp4 fw fua or watftawaj. ftaBpl MM, 1. (11TWL AatlMt. " Iica-P KJ tk 11 1 Ml fhlr . III. laxini Book. UchlTlUiuUMd rroo wiu - Colored Maps of eacn State eSIl '-Si- W A it. M, FAMILY ATLAS Also Maps ol every Country in the werid. The letter press gives the square miles of each State ; time of settlement ; population ; chief cities ; average temperature ; salary of officials and the principal postmasters in the State ; number of farms, with their productions and the value thereof ; different manufactures and number of employes, etc., etc. Also the area of each Foreign Country ; form of government ; population ; prin cipal products and their money value ; amount of trade ; religion ; size of army ; miles of railroad and telegraph ; number of horses, cattle, sheep, and a vast amount of information valuable to all. EVERY NEWSPAPER BEADER SHOULD HAVE ONE. AU newspaper readers are constantly needing an Atlas for reference in order to intelligently understand the article they are perusing. It is surprising how much information is thus stored away in the memory, and how the'ehief points concerning all the Nations of the World. POSTPAID FOll ttG CENTS. 1 BOOK PUB. HOUSE, 134 Leonard St.. NewYor AN EXCELLENT IXYESTmT fOK fcVKiiVBonv. SAFE AND SECURE. WITH TJ 7 TOUOAK P BBX7URIC A HOLLAND WHITE CROSS 10X9, Whleh I'artlelriata. In THRFK DlflTKI IHITfONB KTSIIT TSAR' until It I. redeemed W1a. a premium. KVK.KV MtlNI) MIIHT 1IK 1 The retlem ntlon. take rises on APRIL 1, AUG. 1 AND DEC. 1 of pacta . rwy year. Th9 follow taf fDormOui l'rfm.tmi are rllttrlbiiUdt PremlNtft ft 900,000 VflO.OfMI Premiums ft Premium ft OOO 100,000 l0- I'rrmlnnifi ft Premiums ft 11, A Oft $.000 J.tMNf 0(10 OOO Pre remlum it J.t'OO I.OOtt J Premlumaft 'j Premium ft 10 Premium a 40 Premium A AO Premium a una mo nuo l.ooo O.O'Jtf UnktUK a Uru.l ToUl of S.I'i.OYO rimins 1. C , ?SO Premium n 14 ititrlltuted tbld rrar. Anr ou of then iiremtfurM ou may gci ir you do in aurn ninn. lt-erjr iwou ilitpr mtisit reietvr at hunt 13'' florlna whrn ht lumrt la Tvdefftirrt If h liea not reretv a laritcr tiremium. We hrpwith rf pent what we rt- aaltf .fure--r.VKHV HOND Ml'H'f UK HKIKKMKP. ttiK country of Holland ani. aiprovM by H V At l-Kt'KiyK, In ailrtltltm to mtoWb n Kl'KtMAl HIIAH A'tTKK ani HKKKKVK Kl'NH amounttiiK to a,4NVttO llOl.I.iNU FU'ItlNHara drponhc'l Jn the Hank of Dip Nrkherlandt fwhlnb la thr UOVKKN'MKNT HANK OF Hol.I.AMM t aerure tb redpmptlun ot Uie loan ftnd Ut pavmcnt of the prrmttima. j Weoffrr thm tioml to you at tb exoeedmRly low brloeof Kljtht (w. Iollra caah, Uvft reot iit of which e will ImnxMllately forward to you lit bond, or, If .mrrliMHHt uHn moutbly Inataltnetiia, , wr will allow you to imy for th oe t Hi rate of Two ($i.iK Doll am a month for n monttta, aliow tni you the aaiur rlglit and privtleffi aa you would Thw homlx vre lwiert in rtrn nn n.ninan- Have ll you pam iiip iun price nown m once. Honey ran bent be aent elthor by IKk1'K on Kew rtrk, rofTOFr'lfK or KXI'HKHS MONF.T OliUKHa In BEUlHTiflUKO UTTKHH tn the foUrmn ad- drenat Ni.HJ(ATI(JW AL. HANKlNi. itwi VI aud S.1 Hroadway, New York Uty. rbM TVnr1 are no to be oompared with ol l-rtery or lottery arheme prohibited by BriVd by the Court of Apprala of N. Y. lb Circuit Court of the U. H. Dlatrtct of atbllib l aud Kroafiway, 1874. New York Uty. If. P.nifyW TVnr1 are not to be oompared wit aar hind law, aa OcritVd 11. Y ., by the Criminal Court of Bt. Irfniia. Mo., and h the. NiniMinr iairt nf Man Kranclaco. Cal. They are therefore loanllT tranmnltted tltrouah tho nialli nud a Irirltinmre article for commerce, wa refer by permission to neietra, J.m v .aViirrnan tt o..iiiiia iiinp:.,-. i.v nj. Men. Krister A Co., M Wall St., K. City. Atiffln-Auntrlnn Haiik, Vienna, Auatrla. AUBtrlan! Jtcndpr Hank, Vienna, AuMrla. A-K.M8 WAMU) XVKHYWHKHK. Mentlou Uila paper. YOD NEED IT! j "T hsrs a hit nictlnnanr. hut it Is sn no wort to II t It for "animation that lam lnrlm-1 u alilrk Imitliiff out woiilii. sltlintuh ilf.lrou. of stiwlU. Yimr "1IANHY UU TION MIY" is alwaya y mt wa I lonk out wonl. ou tbs In.unt. s th Infcnualiou la luii bmiI on nijr miuU.' Lvmtpmdtnt. Webitsr's Ulnitrstcd HANDY DICTIONARY Thaaaand af Ward Uedaed. llnndr-of Plnarea. Ahbre TlalUna Kaylalurd. Ordin ary Foreign Phraaea Traua- irdl. Metrlo Kyatdra ftfr Weithta and Memaurea. rrtnbMl In tin all. alaar tvoe. on flna? QIO Who that rea. la doeen't e-err day eonia worde whoffe nifanta b drea not know and which fie cannot proaouuoe nr T iiftir the dftnina . or a tuotlrrate-aiard lUctiomry which ran be kept , ttband ataaya ready for i-frretite. 8uth a work ' wi'i be naed a hundred time aa inurh a a larjr un- ' iflilT Tohime, aim therriore la a trreatereaunaior. Aa tne Hivlllnir and l'ronunrlatlon of many com- 1 durtua thalaat ' year, people owutnt the oid-fahloned l1rUuDaiiea , neea a inoorrn uiip. jirrtj i i mi m uuiutg (rv-h Poajpaid for i5c. Iu 1c or 3c ataaipi. BOOK rtBLlAHlNU 1IOCHB, 1.14 Leonard Pt. M. Y. lty detectives; faal Is T C mIT. Bk H m to M as4 lsrstaa ; UMrSwrtS.rtlM. l...rt.vM..I BwMrr. rrll..l"i rr. raaaaa Dstsctlr larsaa '.M Araail.ClitUiitl.0. FRTZERCM hviik im ruw WtfiR I. II ar uet U uaauiaa. Krerywhar. WANTED K-ery one to Inreatlirate; 99 jumrit.UHiy luvoaieu win ieti to a furtuue; aa opportunity for people with limited nienua. bond atainp furjr tlculara. TY1.KK JL iit.t Ha nan iiy. M: for ioplv 1 tlculara. 1 S5: SSaday. niplea worth f 5 Pr. e uot untier l.wr feet, rue lirew rraliy Kein Haider '., itoiiy,atca Cai'T. Hamilton McmtF.Lf,, of tha BtcnniHlup Missouri, bits but illustrated onco nioro what has alri-ail become tlio pri no article in tho oroed of Anier rau and liriti.Hh sailors, namely, to en dure anything, suffer anything, sseri ilfo anything, in order to help a vessel in distress and save the lives of those on board. Tho sea captain who cheer fully throw half his cargo overboard ami ran 2,000 mi' es out of his course lo place the passengers of the Damn ark in safety, has furnished a lesson and au example to mankind which can not fuil to prompt others to noble deeds, both ou sea and shore. SHE NEGLECTED AN OPPORTUMTI ASD SHOWS IT IS HER FACE. you be equally foolitli, but tend at once for the CHEAPEST ONLY 25 CENTS. 191 Pages, 91 Full-Page Maps, and Territory in the United States, soon one becomes familiar with 4fL 1 oaa ' rijM.-4ii:ia-ti.ei IM CUntS nHtSt A Li Ml (AILS. LJ M Bt Ooii( 8;rup. Tastss rood. Dm I.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers