SCIENTIFIC AND INDUSTRIAL. Gum chewers' paralysis Is the latest form of professional neurosis recorded in medical literature. Tho new telescope for the Harvard ob nervntory has been completed and will be used for photographing stars. Some intcrcstinir experiments have lately been undertaken at Cherbourg, France, to ascertain the. possibility of tele phoning between topedo boats and the admiral's ship, so that orders cttn be giveu direct. The smokeless powder intended for use in the Austrian army is now declared to bo perfect. Beside the initial advan tn;je of being smokeless, it is said to pivc n velocity some twenty per cent, greater than that of ordinary powder. A German scientist wishes to deter mine by means of photography if tho moon is inhabited, and it is said that the King of 'NVurtemberg has decided, in order to solve this interesting problem, to cause to bo made, in the best possible condition, photographs of tho moon; then to enlarge tho negative 190,000 times. M. dc Susini, a Corsican doctor, has, it is asserted, constructed a nu.tive ap paratus or propeller of twenty-horse power, which is worked by sulphuric ether, a result which the doctor antici pates will realize a saving of sixty-five per cent, of the combustible material at present employed for setting machinery in motion. A young German student of Assyriology has been experimenting with soft tiles and a stylus, and concludes that tho As syrians wrote their' cuneiform lines with a cube-shaped instrument having a pointed end, which was made of wood, not metal. Ho professes to find it very easily to write cuneiform as rapidly as German with such a stylus. It is calculated that a range of mount ains consisting of 17(5 cubic miles of solid rock falling into tho sun would only maintain tho heat for a Bingle sec ond. A mass equal to that of the earth would maintain the heat for only ninety threo years, and a mass c;tml to that of the sun itself falling into the sun would afford 33,000,000 years of sun heat. Professor Hirschberg declares in a Viennese medical paper that Professor Ebers, tho well-known novelist, has rendered a creat service to medical sci ence by the discovery, translation and re production in facsimile of part of a val uable MS. containing medical recipes used in Egypt and written about 1500 years before Christ. The portion trans lated and annotated by Ebers treats of diseases of the eye. It is the oldest med ical treatise now know n. A peculiar tendency in idiots to imper fections and disease in the teeth has been noticed by several physicians; and it has been studied by Madame SolKer in a hun dred cases of idiots taken at random. The multiplicity and variety of the den tal lessons were remarkable; and the con clusion has been drawn that idiocy, with or without epilepsy, predisposes to arrests of development and to anomalies of denti tion. The effect rarely appears iu the first teeth, however, but almost wholly in the second. THE FARM AND GARDEN. T111S COLOR Of IOWID COM. In passing any piece of sowed corn lata1 in the growing season, it is easy to see' what will and what will not make good feed. That which has been thickly sown, especially on poor soil, is a light yellow color, tasteless, and nearly Toil, of nutritive value. That sown in drills andj cultivated once or twice, is large, thick stemmed and dark gTeen in color. Taste, it and you find the sweetness that with a little more room and time would bo transformed into the starch of tho peri fected grain. TfRNirS AND TOTATOKS FOtl rOCTTRT. According to P. H. Jacobs, pc dtry1 authority, young chicksare partial to po-i tatocs, ami adult fowls also cat them readily. Save all tho small and unmar ketable potatoes and boil them for the hens. It is not necessary to Liash them, as the hens know how to eat them with out assistance. Turnips also make cheap food for poultry, especially ducks, and will pay as a crop for feeding in thai manner. The most successful breeders of ducks use turnips, cooked and thick ened with bran, for d'icklings, and serve, e.s a very satisfactory diet for geese in winter. But littlo grain is necessary it poultry are well supplied with cooked oats. ri'X ASD STRAW TOGETHER. Those who feed oats to cattle can save expense of threshing by giving neat cat tle their ration of oats and straw to gether. For this reason it is well to leave unthreshed such stacks as have best ami short wt straw. One year we put tin unthreshed oats in the barn, but mic played mischief with them, so that this )lan is not to be recommended unless one knows how to circumvent the ro dents. Since then we have cither carried from stack to stable as wanted, or trans ferred a stack or moro into tho barn by way of tho cutting-box. Mice or rats cannot burrow in the chopped stuff. So far as we can discover the grain is as thoroughly digested bv cows when eaten from tho bundle as when the whole is chopped. Tho advantage of chopping comes from having less waste than when iiaiiy carried from the stack, having the fodder under cover and consequent con venience in feeding. Tho economy lies in saving the expense ot tnrestnng ana grinding, for when eaten in the straw there is no bolting so to speak of tho grain, but uearly all is remasiicatcd and assimilated. farm, Mock und Home. Where Colors Coine From. j ' The cochineal insects furnish a great ' many of tho very tine colors. Among them are tho gorgeous carmine, the crim son, scarlet carmine, nnd purple lakes. The cuttlefish gives the sepia. It ii the inky fluid which the fish discharges in order to render the water opaque when attacked. I Indian yellow comes from the camel. Ivory chips produce the ivory black j and bone black. I The exquisite Prussian blue is made by fusing horses' hoofs und other refuse animal matter with impure potassium carbonate. This color was discovered accidentally. Various lakes are derived from roots, barks, and gums. Blue black comes from tho charcoal of tho viue stalk. Lamp black is soot from certain resinous substances. Turkey red is made from the madder plant, which grows in Hindostan. The yellow sap of a tree of Siam pro duces g'amboge; the natives catch the sa in cocoanut shells. Haw sienna is the natural earth from the neighborhood of Sienna,. Italy. Raw umber is also an earth found near Umbria and burned. India ink is mado from burned cam phor. The Chinese are the only mau ufacturers of this ink, and they will not reveal the secret of its manufacture. Mastic is made from the gum of the mastic tree, which grows in the Grecian Archipelago. Bistre is the soot of wood ashes. Very little real ultramarine is found in the market. It is obtained from the precious lapisluzuli, and commands a fabulous price. Chinese white is zinc, scarlet in iodide of mercury, and native Vermillion is from tho quicksilver ore called cinnabar. Avttrican Drur'jitt. CELERY. Celery should be banked soon. Some gardeners are following the practice of tying tho tops of each root together be fore banking. It may take a little more time to tie it first and bank it later, than to have one man handle while two others do the banking, but it has the advantage of keeping the earth out of the centre , of the bunch more thoroughly, and there are less stalks broken off in the digging j and putting in tho pit. It also will pack , much closer in tho pit. More of the earth can be put up against it with a ! plow, leaving less to be moved with the shovel. It should not bo handled when wet, as this causes rust. Before thero is any chance of the temperature falling below twenty de grees it Bhould be packed as closely as possible, standing upright, and with boards across once in eight or ten rows to prevent, any danger of falling over, as if it does not stand upright, it will heat and rot. The pit should be so covered as to ef fectually keen out the rain, and have a drainage which will take off any water which may soak in. It should also be ventilated by openings under the peak of the roof, which should be kept open whenever it can be done without danger of freezing, unless it is desired to blanch it out for an early market. Heat and dampness hasten the blanching, but also cause rotting. j As the weather grows colder the pit should be banked up until the sides and ends have a wall nearly four feet thick, and the roof should have not less than one foot of salt hay, or two feet of) straw, to protect it from freezing. A the demand for celery is irreatest, and the prices better, after the middle of De cember, those who can keep their celery until that time without danger of free.-) '. ine or rottiug will do well not to hurry. the blanching process. It seems that the demaud for celery bus increased witn tlit increased supply, uutil the amount sold iu our largo markets is ten-fold that handled a few years. The better tho quality the larger the demand. Ameri can Cultitatvr. STRAW, WEEPS AND BTTBtlLB. What use shall we make of these waste products of the farm, and how shall we manage them to get t ho most good at least cost from them? Tho profit of the farm are not largo and we cannot afford to let anything go to loss. If we can by a care ful saving of all vegetable matter increase the manure pilo so as to transfer n few acres from the unprofitable to the profita ble side of the ledger, it is our privilege and duty to do so. Tho worst possible use a farmer can make of straw is not to use it at All, and strange as it may seem, thero aro thousand of farmers who do this very thing. They thresh in some re mote corner and leave the straw on tho ground. I have often counted from five to eight of these straw stacks on a single farm, says a writer in tho Philadelphia iV, each containing ono year's crop of straw. Good, bright wheat or oat straw has considerably more than half tho feed ing value of an averago hay, and either horses or cattle may bo wintered in good condition with no other rough feed, with a moderato increase of tho grain ration. It is best that this increaso shall be of bran, oats and oil meal rather than corn. I have neighbors who bore auger holes in the floor of their horse stall to allow tho urine to run through, and yet leave stacka of old straw in the fields. I do not only bed liberally iu the stable, but cover my barnyard so that it is never muddy and no liquid runs from it. Weeds, corn stalks, potato vines, clover straw, etc., are all packed into the barnyard. We have just cut and raked up all our wheat stubble for this purpose. From a part of the field we got a full two horso load to the acre. Eight acres of our wheat that had been sown to timothy had made quite a growth, and as the spring was very dry the clover was poor. Consequently fox tail and ragweed made a vigorous start, but we mowed it early and there will not be a foul seed on the field, while the weeds and stubbles will help to keep the barnyard clean nnd save the urine. The last week in August I visited a neigh bor who is a successful wheat grower and found him spreading straw on a field which was plowed and harrowed ready for the drill. He burns this straw and tells me. thnt many years experience shows him that it pays as well as to ma nure an equal area. His land is strong and rich in humus, nnd while this with out doubt is good practice for him on thin land it will probably pay better to plow under straw than to burn it. I (would nlways, however, if possible, burn 'stubble on fields where there has been K hiuch bugs. It is well on such fields te tset the machine to cut high so as to leave (enough stubble to burn readily. I have Iseeu excellent cflects from burning stub ble on laud to be plowed for wheat, the Iwheat in a few weeks after it came up showins to a foot where the stubble had been burned by its strong growth aud healthy color. It is a fact, perhaps not known to all, that one pound of the uriue of a horse has a fertilizing power equal to six pounds of the dropping, and the only way we are likely to save this is by free .use of absorbents. With good manage ment every farm will furnish enough ol these, aud it is wise to make tight stable floors and bed freely. Even cornstalki make an excellent absorbent and will decay more quickly than straw. If cut to lengths of from six inches to a foot they make excellent bcditing for horses. They crush easily, and the pith of the stalk takes up the liquid better than straw. 1 scatter the waste of twenty acres of corn fodder over my small barnyard each win ter to bo tramped and mixed with the straw and manure. By April 1st the manure is in goou snnpe lor spcauuig, and only very close inspection would dis cover a cornstalk iu it. NEWS AND NOTES FOR WOMEN. IIOW TREES GROW. There is rarely sufficient room near any tree for all tho seeds it produces to germinate or for the seedlings to develop into fully grown individuals. Nature is lavish in sowing seeds that the succession of the plant may bo insured. Most trees are gregarious, therefore, in extreme youth, from habit transmitted through many generations. They love company, and really thrive only when closely sur rounded. Close planting is essential, therefore, to insure the best results. As the trees grow, the weaker are pushed aside aud finally destroyed by the more They were, warming vigorous, ana the plantation is grauuuuy the tarry smoke that j thinned. This is the operation which is always going on in tne iorest wnen man It is a slow ana ex- A Dog That Showed Sense. A little crowd of seedy men, says the New York Tribune, were gathered the other night about ono of the ugly fur naces that defaced City Hall Park, while the contractors were covering the plaza with asphaltum. their bodies in streamed out of it, and had deserted the seats under the trees where they had slept most of the summer. 'I saw a queer thing happen here yes terday," said one of tlieui. "A big New foundland dog, with a muzzle ou him, was following a boy along Mail street, when a little bull terrier made a dash for him aud got a death (.'rip ou one of the big fellow's ears. H was all done so . quick that tho Newfoundland was being ; well chewed before he knew what struck j him. Ho gave a howl aud a snap at the I little brute, but his muzzle would not allow him to open his jaws, and the bull terrier chewed away like mad. All he could do was to turn tail and run, but the terrior did not loose his grip and went along, too. They dunhed through the crowd, passed tho fountain, and out ou the plaza here, where the big fellow uearly ran over a pail of Bmoking hot tur that was standing fur a n.oiueut by the hidu of a workiuau, who had stepped to light his pipe. "Quick as a flash the big dog stopped, aud threw his head as high in the uir as he could. This dragged the little terrier well itf his feet, aud nearly tore the ear limn ihu head of the Newfoundland, but when the lit tie bruto came down again, he lit plump iu the pail of burning tar. Ho let go quick euuugh then, yoli bet, und us I he big fellow trotted off, Ukiug lua head, I fell like giviug him a clieu (itr hitf amartn..a " does not intervene. pensive operation, however, and the result is attained by a vast expenditure of energy aud of good material. The strongest trees come out victorious iu tho end, but they bear the scars of the con test through life. The louir. bare trunk and the small aud mUshappeu head the only form of a mature tree found in the virgin forest tell of years or of centuries of struggle, in w hich hundreds of weaker individuals may have perished thai one giant may survive. But man can intervene, and by judicious and systematic thinning help the strong to destroy the weak more quickly and with less expenditure of vital force. Thick pluutiug is but following' the rule ot nature, and thinning is only 'lolmiig nature do what she does herself too slowly, and therefore too expensively. This is w hy trees iu a plantation intended for oruameut. like those in a park or pleasure ground, should he planted thickly Ht firtt, and w hy they should then be sys tematically thinned from time to time; aud it is because this systematic thinning is altogether neglected, or put oil uutil tho trees are ruined for any purpose of ornament, that it is SO rare to find a really tine tree iu any public place or private grounds. Of the implements re quired to produce tiue tree the ax is ceiuiuly the first and most important, i I Wiirtil. tinti. h'nrMt. ' ' FARM AND GARDEN ICOTF.S. Never allow the fowls to go thirsty. Above all things keep tho hen house clean aud well ventilated. Slomiv food, only fit for hogs, and tho flock suffering with diiirrhcra. WThen you hear the hooting owl con sider are the fowls aH in the coop? The fattening stock will lay ou flesh twice as fast in mild weather as they will after it becomes cold. Supply the proper conditfions of warmth and variety of food, and fowls will lay iu winter as well as summer. It matters not whether certain weeds are ten or ninety per cent, bad ; they all succumb to good culture; all perish by the same process. The first thing to be done to secure a large flow of winter milk is to make tho cows comfortable; tho next to feed judi ciously aud liberally. There is a never-failing market for poultry and eggs ou the farmer's own table, and no farmer can tlo better than to keep this well supplied. In churning, stop the churn when the butter is in small granules, wash with brine or clear water, aud salt with brine or dry salt as you may prefer. Cracked corn is good fool when newly ground. It will become musty sooner than the whole Kernel. it, is uest wueu the meal is left in aud when scalded to swell the mass. We are glad to notice that there arc dairywomcn who aro not afraid to ex hibit their butter at dairy shows. Gooil home-made butter will never be crowded out of the market by factory butter. The poor will. Soak tobacco stems in water to make a strong liquid, then evaporate it ou the steam or hot water prpes for keeping off green fly in the greenhouse. ' Stems cut tine, dampened, and laid, about the plants will be preferable for tho house, as the vapor and smell is 6omewhal offensive if evaporated on the stove or register. A practical test will convince the dairy mau that his cows are capable of itmsum ine and diirostiii!; a much larger amount of food than the usual nllotvancc. Ex periments of this kind will suou deuute which of the cows pay the best by noting whether the excess of food is converted into increased quantity of milk or flesh. Cooking corunieal does increuse its di gestibility for fattening hogs, but the increase in food value is not sutlicient, with only a few hogs, to pay the expense. Yet, in feeding on a huge scale, the cost of cooking the cornmeal, with a propel apparatus and mixing iu a little cut clover lay, will be amply paid for in the result. The most convenient and the easiest way to feed fall pigs is to give them whole new corn. While this is true, it is a most hazardous way to start them, for they are liable to come to winter ljuarters burned ; out, lacking in vigor ind digestive powers, which makes it (xceediugly probable that they will g through the wjnter without a paying Tartans and stripes are in higher .atoi than ever. Skirts grow longer in tho back, but shorter in the front. The newest Taris gowns have the skirt sewn on to the bodice. Tnblo covers no longer hang all over and all around the table. Mrs. "Stonewcll" Jackson is writing her husband's biography. In London tho women nro beginning to wear the singlo eyeglass. Steel knives have corn's into fashion again for use in certain courses. The craze for antique oak and white and gold furniture is on the increase. Brown, tan, gray, and black gloves nre tho correct wear with all out-of-door toilets. All waists have surplices, brctellcs, plastrons, waistcoats or rovers of one kind or another. Tho now Duchess of Marlborough is making a reputation in England by rais ing fine dogs. Embroideries aro not used on the choicest underwear. Lace trimmed goods are first choice. A discussion has been started lately as to the advisability of having at least seven pockets in a dress. Hangings of willow bamboo are used for country bedroom windows. They can bo looped back or left hanging. Entire dresses of crocheted wool are worn hy English, children, especially ilelicate ones, in cold, damp weather. At the sale of tho Duke of Brunswick's effects in London, Mrs. Mackey purchased pair of diamond ear-rings for $400,000. The Carrick cape, with a flat boa or stole ending iu square tabs at tho knees or higher, is a fashionable London wrap. A handkerchief in the possession of tho Empress of Russia is said to havo rost ? 2500. It took seven years to mako it. In the manicure world filbert finger uails are cultivated nnd tho moons brought out with a touch of cherry lip rouge. A piano once owned by the wife of President John Quincy Adams is now in the possession ot Miss Cordelia Meyers,of Newvillc, Pcnn. It is said tho milliner who makes tho bonnets for the Princess of AV'ales and her daughters has no other customers and does not hang out a sign. The exquisite "finish" which is put upon all dresses nnd mantles, and which is the distinguishing feature of the times, is an outcome of the tailor gown. Some one who has mado a study of tho chemical properties of veal urges women who desire to become beautiful to sleep with slices of it on their faces. Mrs. Harrison has now in tho White House several quaint aud geouino pieces of antique furniture which she picked up during her summer s visit to JNanuicKct. Tho mother of tho famous Guernsey sisters performed the remarkable feat at the ago ot seventy ot learning Hebrew enough to lead tho Psalms in their orig inal tongue. An old friend has come to the fore again this season in the shape of ladies' cloth. Tins fabric appears with border effects, which are a novelty. It is likely to be exceedingly popular. Dove or Quaker gray is the most fash ionable nnd also tho most becoming shade of this most trying color. It com bines well with Eiffel, pale rose, blue, water green, canary yellow, flamingo red, and other shades of bright and posi tive color, with cream, pure white, black, silver and gold, copper aud steel. It is to be feared that tho very small bonnets which even elderly women seem so fond of will bring about au invasion of hair. "Too much hair and not enough hat" form a combination that has been' fashionable before. Cau wo ever forget the day of big chignons and littlo tip-tilted saucer-shaped hats? Is not tho very thought of a return to theso terrifying? Ringoal is a new English out-of-doors mine for ladies. It is played with grace .loops and sticks aud two nets eight feet high nnd ten feet wide. It is proposed to make it rival and rule out tennis, if i.,;Kilili. as it exercises both arms, both shoulders, both bauds, and the whol body in the running and turning neces sary to catch tho hoops before they reach the goals or nets. Oriental ideas prevail in costumes. lVrsinn. Buluarian. Turkish. Servian aud Arabian embroideries aro all tho rage, and are used on L'owns of pure white ami cream sertrc, ou velvets aud silk and woolen, nnd silk and wool mixtures of all colors and shades, converting the gar ments with which they nro trimmed, no matter what tho material, into gorge ous wonders of tasto nnd fino art and dreams of splendor. Fireproof Wood. The recent discovery by a New Knp land chemist of a cheap mothod of ab solving r.ino by combining it with hy drogen is regarded as ft most valuabl. on. The product is ft ioiuuon caiieti r.ino water, and has tho property of mak ing wood to which it has been applied absolutely fireproof, and .at ft Tory low cost. This discovery is likely to rovolu. tionizn fire insurance, as well a to Ira niensely decrease the loss by fire. A ttrrat Horarlna la In stoi e for all who use Kemp's Balsam fnt the Throat and Limit", the great guaranteed reincily. Would you believe that It Is sold on Kb merits and that any druigist is authorized hy the proprietor of this wonderful remedy to dive you a sample bottle fro-f It never falls to enre acute or chronic eonghn. AlldrugglaU sell Kemp's linlsa:n. Larue bottles Wo. and $1. Wrm.it In Knsala the Shah ordered 11,000 re pealing rllles for his troupe. A man who has practiced medicine for 40 yenrs ouitht to know salt from sugar; read what he says: Toi.nno. O.. Jan. 10, 1W. Messrs. F. J. Cheney A Co. Ur.ntle.men: I have been In the general practice of medicine for most 40 vcRtu, ana wouici ey ma in my practice and exwrtence, have never seen a preparation that I could prescribe with as lnneh confidence of success as 1 ran Hall s Ca tarrh fare, manufactured hy you. Have pre Hfrihed it aurest many times and Its effect is wonderful, and would say in conclusion that I linve vet to find a case of Catarrh that, it would not cure, If they would tako It accord Inn to directions. Yours Truly, U L. OoHspcn, M. I). Oriice. lo Summit ?t We will sive 1100 for anv caw of Catarrh that cannot be cured with Hall's t'alarru Cur-. Taken Internally. , , -K. .1. Ciiknkv Co., Props., Toledo, O. I Sold bv UriiKnlsts. 7.V. Tur solo panacea for every ailment in China Is a plast r. ll Don't Pay To experiment with uncertain remedies, when aAiictrd with any of the ailments for which lir. Pierce's tlolden Medical Discovery is rvc oiniiiended, as it is so positively certain in its curative etTecta as to warrant its manufactur ers in gnarnnteeinic benefit or cure, or money paid for It is returned, it is warranted lo cure nil blood, skin and scalp diseases saltj theiim, tot or. and all scrofulous sores and swelliiurs. a well as consumption (which is fi-rolula of the lun s) if taken In time and given a fair trial. Don't hawk, hawk, blow, spit and disgust everybody Ith your offensive breath, but uo Dr. Simo's C'BtarrbJtcmt'dy and end IU Tim Texas cotton crop is estimated to be .worth JS4,i CO 0U0 this yea". You wear out clothes on a wash hoard f'n Itmrr irs much as on the body. Ho foUK Puv Dobbins' Electric Smu of your urocer and save this usel ss wenr. Ma le ever since Im'4. Don'i take imitation. Thero arolo.sof them. AM. the lee imported into England comes iroiu isorwuy. A Wonderful Food and Medlrlne. Known an I used by 1 .ivsieians nil uvor the world. Scott's Emci-hion not only gives flesh nnd a reiiKth by virtue of its own nutritious proiie tiea, but creates nn apatite for fond I hut builds iiptbe wasteil bodv. "1 huvo been usintf Scott's Emulsion for several years, and am pleased wl h itsaction. My put fonts say it Is pleasant and palatable and all urow s'rtni. it and uain tlesh from the use of it. 1 use it ill ail eases of Wasting Diseases, and it is special ly useful for children when nutrient medica tion is nred.d. ns in Marasmus." T. W, 1'lKlu K, M.D., Knoxvlllo, Ala. FROM RAVAGE TO CIVIMZATIoy. Orrsnn. thi lRradine n Fnrmrrn. Mild. 'n uutle rliniaircfrtatn ami almndfint rroj.p. Hi'Ht fruit, pram, gntM ami slock emiti-. trv in the- world. Full ..formation freo. AU i (lrK8 (Jrt'ip.n lmMcrat'i. Hoard. Portland. (rij TRADE K MARK CURES PERMANENTLY Altl NTLY jhumbagn SOLD BY Druggtwt and 1 ealcra. THE CHARLES A. V0GELER CO., Biltlmor., M.. SWIFT'S SPECIFIC is a sintplu vege table, compound prepared from rots fresh ly gathered from the forests. The formula Hvas obtained from tho Creek Indians by the, whites who had witnessed the won derful cures of blood diseases mndo by hat tribe. It has been used since WW, and has been the great est blessing to man kind in curing diseases of the blood, in funny instances after nil other remedies liad failed. Swift's Sieeiflc cured me of ferrlW Tetter. fmn which 1 had ninVred for twenty long year. 1 har now been entirely well for rlvo years, and nn to ol ny return of the disease. itoners. Ark.. M.y 1. 1HW). W. II. Wioirr. , Ono bottle ot 8. B. 8. cured my son of bolls so risings, hlch resulted from malarial poison, and stlcctod him all llio summer, lie had treatment from five doctors, who failed to brnefll him. l avanal. Indian Ter. w'"r" I have taken Hwlft's Kpeclflr. for secondary hloo poison, and derived gn at benefit. It aeU m ucta bet ter than potash, or any other remedy that 1 have ever used. M. K. WinornuuD, M. D.. Kichnioud, Va. Treatise on Blood and Skin Disease! mailed fre MOW AY'S fl READY RELIEF. THE GREAT CONQUEROR OF PAIN, For Mprnlns. Mrol.ea. narkaehr. '". the Chest or Hide.. Headache. Toothache, or any other rxlernol puln. a few milieu. Hons rubbed on by hand. el like iniiale, cnuslng Ihe pnin lo Inamnlly "'op. 1'orConiesllona. Colds. Ilronelillla. 1'neo. niouin, liiHiimnialloiia. II hemiml Ism, en. rnlvln. l.llilibMio, pVlntlea. more Ihoraunt Hid repented npllcnl lon are necessary. All Internal I'nlns. Iinrrlir, olle, tinasma. Nau.ea, Knintlns !iell. frttif ne, Kleeulessness nre lelierd Inslnnllv, nndnulcklv cured hy inkins Inwardly in till droua In hnll n tumbler ol wnler. aoe. a bottle. All llrugglsla. IgAD WAY'S ft PILLS, Tits tSwrrr "metric Ca Drawer S. Atuuata. Ua. I r VOt WISH A J .MM HBVOI.VKR- In una rf l.r.Lsl KMITII A WKSKON mis. The nneat small arms ever maiiuraetiired and the . .......... all xn..rtn. i i .K.. UJ Maori 44'H. Sln- . ' .... 17. ii,,,,ei-lcsan1 H arael models. Constructed entirely of feral J Jtv v. ron.hl alrel. carefully l';""1 .nioi.hli. ai.dst.s-lc.tliey are unrivaled tor I Hnlak, riur.blltly an.laerurner. I'o not be dee'e' I rlienu innllenhlr rnal-lroB Inillallona wnu la are often sold for Uie genuine uo; ii.Ki.. lull iian-i'rus. t ...i.... lh. cele..-&-. ' JrV rF!.. IV Jl An exrelleut nnd mild rnlhnrllc. I'u'ely eelablr. The Holes! and Best Medicine In tho world lor Iba lurool nil Disorders I Ihe only unreliable, but dangerous. WKshiin Revolvers are all slampeo uis . ret with arm s name, address and d.t. of P"n j,ndaregonrnnleed"Tf.- l In evary detail. In sist upon havlii. the genulM article, anl " J"" ' dealer canunt supply you an order sent below will receive promt and careful 'T'I"U Inscriptive catalogue and prices furnished i.-oow au plication. SMITH & WESSON, ' r-Mentlnn this paper. KprlngSeld, Moaa Sn.drnrlllnlrnnl iismitu' This Trada Mark la on T&e Best Waterproof Coat In th world. JW A,J T", P-trMtt LIVER. STOMACH OR BOWELS. Taken according to dlrecllona Ikoy rU reatore health aud reuevt vl Price. 2S etg. a Bo. allir. Bold by U Brag glitg : IPIUfil n 1 Of D 1 T I Chadwick'i Manual DAOD DALL lHt wuriuirirwL f v r -." BTlRGCHAIR!t l 'J. ft .UBIDIHiaianni ib. Vl'-ior ruRNiTune. 'INVALID v THE 0 ad HAY-FEVER 50 Cts. . tf KP IVS 0.6 Jl HM L . . tr. r. SK-SvN - v 'rWflW-Blf P5L4''&4 r' - SSVjui W nUlt ftt Ul tWaaf And Hhtp guodl tob Kid fur on itolivftry, nil HHQD fi I'-O mm VI' V 41 1 at ' m FREE st iu aaKLiHiius in u ias. SririAL ,-KB psi.if ai. IXMUHtt Mru. CO., US!. atl'-IU4-ra. 1F.AI. KST4TK AMI LOAN AliKNl'V. Ai.kxam.kh Uanii-Toi, Knlem, Mariou Co.. HI- " Shadowed by Three, ".m l?mo, 1170 pw. 95 full-paira Illustrations. A rnsctnaunic. e-cltlng hrlcclUe story. A great novel. Largest and Wat liuwks ever sold fot price, only 44 renin, poslpald. Add real ALg- T. LoYy A Co., LaltcBltlo bUlg., Chicago, 111. PENSIONS DUE til SOLDIERS , fJi-ah; COLD -HE AD iiitui ii-vlio on nvieasu,m-w CUclusll. U., a. n. ariouaitg a nnv a itMUsgiss, u. u a.auwa uu w and WHISKEY HAB ITS cured at noma wiih out pslo. I look of i-ir- Uoilars tent FREE. B. M. WOOI.I.KV, M. !., omra tiH Whitehall St. 7 In. a .1 In. 711 page! Illunilnnted i over. .-.Tm -ri-DW onapplleatlou enclosing SENT TREE lamp, by addressing THKOInlKK MuUAMjt. Ht b.!!: mnde fey our Agenis. re.lt IV I -r a. .. nana an nuun I'm. ih MEDICAL. CO., Klckmond, S25 Here It Is! Want to Itara all aboat a Bono! Bowto Plofc Ouia . Good Oat f Know Uaportac l fleas and so Quoad agalnak Fraud? Detect DUoueas EffactmCura when ianala possible r Tell tho aca br hs Tasth T What to rati tha DlfTsreat Parta oi tho Anlmalf How loshoo a Bora Properly I AU Uda gad other Valuable Information can ha obtained feA reading our lOO-PAUK ILI.VHTKATKla IIOBME BOOt., whlok wo will forward. mU ia.d, oaracelptof ooljtlS caata la gtaaipa. BOOK PUB. HOUSE. IS4 Leonard St.. Nw York City M n m m Li P ISO'S KEMF.DY FOK CATAI-RII. ltost to use. Clicapent. Helief i.s immediate. A certain. Fur Cold in the Head it liiis no equal. 73 jV ji Oi ii i. nn i liniment, nf which a small lmrticle is atiiilieti to the. nostrils, l'rice, Wo. Snhl by tlrunu'ists or sent tivniail. Address, K. T. Maki.tisk, AN iirren, I'u. rR.KOKill.KKM PAVOKITt. l OI.IC .WIXTIMK for all lomHtic uu1iukI, will curt tti out ol every liu cut of uolic, v. lutnr flat ulent or ipaHintNik. Hardy more than 1 or 2 tiiw- ntvetiiuiry. It doe nnt con fctlliiitf, rattier arts a a laxative ami U eullrHy hannlru. Aftrr ytarf trial In more lhau sum caaes, our fiiarautee In worth komi'thlug. Colin inunt b irf nipil promptly. Kxi-vnd fiw rents amt you tiave a cure ou band, ready w htn nee dp. I, a nil per h apt nave avahiMM home. If notal,ourdruuii-t,i.,t-u trluwj 50 ceutit for amiln bottle. nMit prt-palil. A1dret lilt, KOKIII.KR A: 0 llrlhlrhf m, June Or. KoehU'r' "tavurUt Colui I l'e vluvrfutly rtcuMntfnd tr. Knthltr Slirturr" right along eith tMcee. It i I "farorttY l"olc ,Hulurr." K ouM not M lift bel coif- mrttirine I ha ever ten. without it a .'U a we hat horrs. i&AAC MOt Hi, l!ov4 Healer, ISAAC MUSKS A Witt., iirovklyn. Sew Xorlc. I Sale and Kxvhunge StaltU, Adaton, ra cure is FS3 Li Lrffn SMI THE EU W ARO UAUKU0H IkdtXXiXj oo HwiBi-e torr at "td-r Inrptonn' Mtanilr1 Wnrr V . L Ktftne tt-riitdlng and Kloiirltts JtC MlIU ol all aua and yar.etiea, f'Spm All fjal ill Kraat oapatv iW , , Bi ty aad d ur a U i 1 1 ij . n -W rfOfcA-- V Mills aat oa trial toKf vMafi ? "9 low l-rlrfB. Writ for W - Vl,P' '--ft itu- a.C'',w 'V-i Nfirv lltuatr.tted fi nut' and inctulon IUib uaper. MptoouV half- of your roil can be Christoiilicr C. Amlel is the father of the smallest mite of humanity iu New Haven, ami, in all probability, in Con necticut. His only child is a baby bdy tlatt. when it was seventeen day old, weiuhed two pounds and five ounces. The bov was then eleven inches long. but very tliiu. His arm was then about twice as thick as the stem of a clay pipe, nnd hi tinkers were bo slender it was difficult to institute a comparison. Se-y,"When me wind blows your nfCir IS useless ro nre yuuiooij.. Disease lias ruvaa;ed some of the grouse preserves in Scotland to an alarming ex tent. On one moor recently out of 2(50 birds killed all had to be buried. We recommend "TanslU's Pnneh" Clttar. uanger irom uaiarrn Catarrh Is on txeeedingly dlsagreeablo dlseaas, Its varied symptoms dUcliorga at te nosa, bad brealb, pain between tho eyes, coUKhlug, chuklug euUuu, rlnKlog nolsoa lu the ears, etc. beliu not only truublesoma to tha sufferer, but ofleruuvo to othen. C'afarrA U alto dan.rrou, becauJ II may lead to bronehllls or consumption. Being a l,l,.udulsoa, the trua method of euro la to purify the blood by taking IUkkI's SariutKarllla. "For several yenrs I had been trouble- with a kind of asthma or ealarrh lu my throat, ny wun wanted me to trv a bottle of Hood's Sarsaparllla. I mux! y 1 v.n v. ry iniieh l-nerlted by u.lug It and Mould riH-nnuuend It ery hiriUly' -Ja f. K-v. till-, uiuulitt. Nub. Hood's Sarsaoarilla Sold by all drUK-'lns. l', .Is for V. frepared onl by C. 1. IbiL'U a Co., Apothecaries, Lowell, Maa. IOO r osea One Dollar II A KIT. Only t erlnlo and rosy ( I IIF. in Hie Worll. Ur. J. I.. KI'tlMIrM. Lebanon. O rTI'll V. Hook beeping, Business Korms l eliluun.hlp. Arltlneelic, Miorl-bsud, elo. thorougaly laugut by MAII. cu-eulars free. Itryant'a .liege, 447 Muln St., Bun -to, x OPIUM HOME 1 1 thnrou FRAZEl.Gai BEST I.J THE WORLD UlltMOl. . -f Csm u. Crsuuifiti, vi4 H vwrraa-a. , . i r-j i,,,t nr'tt c;APnT.IC). lhousanas ct it doesn C maKe us ureu 10 ten auuut mv- w. women in the United States thank us every hour of their lives for having toU them of SAPOLIO. Its use saves many weary hours of toil in house-cleaning. " BEWARE OF IMITATIONS. r ftn sWitute cheaner foods for SAPOLIO to make a better profit. VJ 1 UV.V.I - V ' - A c Rmt Lack such articles, and insist upon having just what you rUOCH MORGAN'S ordered. MORGAN'S SOPJS CO., PJEW YUKk, EVERY 10'NJ BYTHE 1 '000 I iiAKMi&L IcHlLDKtNS LpLfttNli 11.75 See the larje advertisement in a previon. Lime of this paper. Sen J (or Colored Announcement and S,ieei.neri Copies, free THIS SLIP FREE TO JAN. I, 1090. To any Nw Bub.erilH.r mU will cut out ami .end uathla .Hp. with an.l 1 oat Orrle. n.ldre.a an.l 1.75. w. will ae.i.l Tl. You.l.'a 0n..auluQ 1 !'','' .(J"'u.V 1KI.U. and for . full year from that tlntn. Tl.l. nfler I... lude. tl. l K I: HOLIMAV MIMlltKS. and all th 1 1 1 I TU Al.lt WKKKM 01 l'l'U.UlNr. THE YOUTH S COWlPANlWel, Boston, ms... 45 Addrest, WITH i SI. 75