1 I THE FARX AND GARDEN. oarhots Fon rrrmmts. Ant horse worth wintering alinulii have iome (rreen food in winter to keep in oowcis open, it is rtry and conct-n-tnited food that carries fevers bv consti pating thn bowls, mnking tho hnir rough. The pood effort of oil meal con aista in thn fnrt, not that it directly mnKPS lot, tint that it cnnbles tho atom nch to digest food more perfectly. Oar rots have tho same effect. A few given daily enable the owner of a horse to di minish the grain ration mid keep the an imal in better order at less expense. American cultivator. FKLKCTINO FTOCK FOR BRKKnrXG. The special fitness of pure-bred stock to the farmer is in its ability to improve the common stork by breeding. One of its special valuable point-sis the inherited anility to transmit its special iiualifica tions which have been acquired during years of feeding and selections of the best for reproduction. And this ability has been proved so conspicuously and so generally that any farmer who retains the prejudice referred to may be understood to mean that he has had no experience in the matter or has made the great mistake above mentioned. In tho breeding ol cows for the dairy it is unquestionable that tho use of a pure-bred bull, selected and provided with good cows, may be made worth 500 to any dairyman who will rear the calves judiciously, if his herd numbers no more than ten cows, and this within five years. Ilut it should not be forgotten that the better the cows tho greater the progress made in this im provement. The use of such a bull w ill easily double the product of the herd in the five years mentioned, which is equiv alent to the doubling of the area of tho farm or the halving of the cost ot work ing it. But equal dependence must be placed on the feeding nnd care of the herd as on the breeding of the sire Xcu York Timet. FARMERS' FOWLS. They should have a warm house; it can built of matched boards; the roof of the same, and shingled only when it be gins to leak; a ground door; a window in the south side, not too large, and well barred ; the roosts in one end ; the nest box in a corner; two or three on the ground, with several above these, dis posed irregularly; covers may be ar ranged, so that the hen may creep in and out and be as secluded as she likes. In another corner place a vessel for milk and one for water; along the side a dust-box; straw the floor ; throw the grain on the straw and lot them scratch for it ; feed all your grain-screenings to your fowls. Sloppy food is not good for them, especially in cold weather. In the morn ing feed screenings, scraps from tho table, warmed skinimilk (the very best egg food); fill the water vessel with water Blightly warmed and the dust-box with coal ashes. Ie afternoon give a feed of corn, an other dish of milk and another supply of water, if necessary; gather the eggs; then, if the fowls are all in, shut them up for the night ; allow them to run out every day, except in stormy weather, or when tho snow is too deep; but do not allow one to make a nest outside; in this way they will supply themselves with what you do not furnish them. On pleasant days, when they are all out, dust tho house, thoroughly by throwing the coal ashes high upon the roosts, a"d do other cleaning, if necessary. Keep few old fowls; market the old with the young in the fall, keeping tho finest pullets; in deed you should have no fowls over two years old. The farmer need spend no more time or labor with his fowls than this. He will have eggs in winter nnd vigorous, healthy fowls iu spring. jt York Tribune. LONG KEEriNG OF ArPI.ES. Winter apples of the best keeping sorts may be kept until summer apples are available. Of course, perfectly sound apples must be selected a small bruise or decayed spot cannot be allowed. A temperature just above tho freezing point, and equable, is essential. Fruits do not keep so well in a warm temperature, and fluctuations are even more to be avoided. This should be observed in keeping apples for use during winter and early spring; and for this reason ii is best to have tho fruit-room disconnected from the cellar, or at least separated from the rest of the cellar by a partition. If a brick partition caunot bo afforded, one of matched boards will answer. Sliding sash will enable one to regulate the tem perature. The fruit -room should always contain a reliable thermometer. Select tho apples for long keeping in the late fall or early winter, aud wrap tissue paper around each apple. Bought in quantity this paper is cheap, aud sev eral bushels can bo wrapped in an hour. Place the apples on shelves, steins up. Or, what is perhaps a better plan, pack the apples down in fire-dried sawdust or bran, chaff or laud plaster. The fruit may be parked in either kegs, barrels or boxes. First make a layer of chaff, or whatever is used, au inch thick; then a layer of apples, stemB up; fill all the spaces with the chaff, and then a layer of chaff, and so on. Apples so packed will keep nicely in an outhouse with three or four feet of straw thrown over them. The barrels or boxes should rest on the ground. Tub apples to be kept late should be assorted out in the early Bpring and placed in a room that can be kept cool one that can be opened up to admit the cool night air and closed tight during too litut of the day. American A'jncul turitt. old cows. ' What to do with tho old cows, says writer iu the American Dairyman, is a question which the majority of farmers and dairymen are often obliged to con kider. The minority are saved this trouble for they uever have old cows Jinny of them only keep a cow two or three years, feed her as much grain as she will bear, aud when the shows the slight est indications of. fulling off in her milk production they either sell her or else get her ready for the butcher. L nder their treatment cow has no opportunity to crow old. She is crowded so hard that the period of her highest usefulness is pussed long before she has become ad vanced iu years. If she is properly cared for and judi ciously fed a reully good cow may be kept maoy years with profit to her owner. Cows have been kept until they were eighteen or twenty years' old, and leeu quite productive to the close of this x-riod. But there are not niauy cases ul this kmd Jlost cows fad so much bjjiym. itwitry ueMieman, -y the time they are ten or twelve years old that it becomes question whether it will pay to keep them. I believe that if a cow is really good and is hearty and vigorous it will pay to keep her until she is pretty old. It is true than an old cow needs a little bet ter care than a good many young cows reccivo, and that it will cost more to feed her than it would to keep a younger cow of tho same size. But if tho cow is sold and a younger one is bought to take her place it is not at all certain that as good a one will bo obtained. The old proverb assures that "a bird in tho hand is worth two in the bush," and many n farmer has found that a good cow that was growing old was a great deal better than a poor ouo that was still young. And some farmers who have had ogood deal of experience both in buying nnd in raising stork appreciate more fully than they used to do the difficulties of securing first class cows. When they have a cow that they know to be good they do not feel disposed to part with her for anv trivial cause. Another reason for ml selling the old cows too soon is found in tho fact they will command only a low price. They make poor beef; they wilt not take on flesh readilv, and the butchers will pay but little for them after they are fattened. When the cost of feeding is deducted from the price received from the butcher. it leaves but very little to represent the value of tho cow before the fattening process was commenced. There is such a thing a? keenimiacow too long, but as far as mv observation goes it is seldom practiced. A good many farmers do not got as goo 1 returns from their old cows as they should, but this is not tho fault of the cows; it is be cause the owners do not feed them lib erally enough nnd care for them properly. This is altogether a different matter from incurring a loss bv keeping the cows after they have gone beyond tho point of possible proht. I believe in raising the heifer calves of the best milkers and thus having cows coming along to take the places of those which for any reason are removed from tnc hem. JJut I do not believe in turn ing c ff a gocd row merely because she is growing old. I believe it will pay welt to keep her as long as she is in good health and her milking qualities aro not sciioiisly impaired. FARM AXD GARDES X0TF.3. A woman can aid in caring for poultry, and her suggestions are worth consider ing, for nearly every woman is a thought ful guide in the care of such stock, aud should be given an opportunity to use her judgment. The stalks from old asparagus beds should be burned, nnd a good dressing of manure spread over the ground. Any good, rich garden soil is suitable for as paragus. Newly set plants should bo lightly covered during winter. Many a crop of fruit is lost, and many a fruit tree dies from the unsuspected cause of injury to tho roots by hard freez ing. Protect them by tramping tho snow hard, and covering with long man ure. In the case of peach trees this will tend to prevent early bloom, aud loss of fruit by late frosts. A. practical test will convince the dairyman that his cows are capable of consuming and digesting much more food than the usnal allowance. Experi ment will soon denote which of tho cows pay best, by noting whether the excess of food is converted into increased quan tity of milk or into flesh. The amount of honey to expect from a hive cannot be estimated from the number of bees in tho colony, but upon tho advantages possessed by the bees for working. During long spells of wet weather the bees can do no work, nor can they fill the combs unless they havo ample opportunity upon which to work. Thero must be bloom of some kiud or there will be but little honey. When chicks of different ages are run ning together and older birds aro about the food for the little ones should be thrown under slatted coops into which only such can enter. This will save the youngest and the delicate from being trampled upon and crowded out, and will give them chance to eat their fill at their leisure. They will soon find out what it means and more often than not will be found waiting in the pens for the food to be thrown to them. The value of lime in the poultry-yard cannot be overestimated; experience teaches that there is nothing more effec tive as an insect-destroyer than a thick coating of whitewash made of fresh lime and au infusion of crude carbolic acid. Cleanse the house thoroughly before ap plying, aud cover every accessible por tion of the woodwork, especially the perches and the sills on which they rest. A generous fumigation of sulphur and tobacco is also advantageous. When any animal put up for fattening will not eat the feed it is an indication that it has been overfed and the appe tite is palled by excess. Change the food and reduce the quantity. A small bran mash with a teaspoonful each of salt and ground gentian root, given once a day with a littlo hay for three or four duys, will no doubt restore the appetite. If cornrceal has been largely fed change and give corn ears or cut hay with meal. It is useful to change the food ot fatten ing animals. Trials or City Pedestrians. A very littlo thing will make a man feel very cheap. Now, how often a man kicks himself metaphorically for a little incident on the street that no one notices. He is walking along, and he runs into another man comiug in the opposite direction. He steps to his left just as the other roan steps to his right, and the two confront each other again. Then, while tho one steps the other way, the other goes that way, too, and there is another blockade. Then each grabs convulsively at the other's arms to push him out of the way, nnd, finally, both feeling very sheepish, go their respective ways cursing himself and the other fellow for being a couple of clumsy clodhoppers. Tho best thing to do if you run into a man point blank is not to get Hurried, but to stop still. If there is one other street incident that riles a man it is to walk ahead of a friend and then turn and make some remark to a dead stranger, who looks at you with a kindly pity as if lie thought you were crazy. Tho sor rows of the pedestrian are numerous, iu- uccd. St. Louts btar-ottymgi. Pleasant Medicine. A man with tioor health aud poor di gesiion confined himself to bread and butter, accompanied with strawberries raspberries, blackberries, peuchea, etc., in their respective seasons. They cured SCIENTIFIC AND IKIHJSTKIAI. The difference between the weight of brain in man and woman increr.ses with civilization, and is most maked in the Caucasian races. Becent discoveries mado by the uso of the spectroscope show that all the heavenly bodies appear to bo composed of tho same chemical elements. Siberia is said to have a spot of ground about thirty miles square that lias not thawed out for a hundred years, and is frozen to a depth of sixty feet. Professor Woodward declares that in about two thousand two hundred years tho rock over which the waters plungo nt Niagara will nil bo worn away. Leather, paper or wood may bo firmly fastened to metal by a cement made by adding a teaspoonful of glycerino to a gill of glue. It can be used for fasten ing labels on tins. About 3500 watchqs are daily manu factured in tho United States. A first class American watch, well kept, will last thirty years, or sometimes even longer, before tho works wear out, but the average life of an ordinary low-priced watch is ten years, whilo that of a lower grade is seven years. It has now become a well-established fact that waste-water power can bo con verted into electric energy, conveyed from ten to one hundred miles on a small copper wiro in nmounts from ten to five hundred horse-power, at a cost not to exceed six thousand five hundred dollars per mile for the greater distance and the larger power. A bomb-shell has been thrown into tho scientific world through the discovery of Brereton Baker, of Dulwich College, about oxygen. That gas, which is known as tho great agent of combustion, loses its character when dried. It becomes inert. Even charcoal will not burn iu it when heated to redness, nor phosphorus become luminous. Aa'jct there is no ex planation. . It is found that files can be profitably recut by cleaning them nnd placiug them in acidulated water between two plates of carbon, aud closing tho circuit so as to form a real volt.iic cell. The hydro gen liberated clings to tho points of tho teeth of tho file, protecting them from further action, but the cutting action proceeds freely over tho remainder of tho file. This process speedily brings back the teeth of an old file to the original shape and dimensions, without necessi tating cither softening or retcmpering the metal. Experiments of an encouraging charac ter have been made in the manufacture of spikes, with a view to making a fin ished article by rolling the bar so that its width shall be the length of the spike, and in such shapo that spikes may be cut from it with shears, similarly as a cut nail is made, excepting that the head is formed in tho rolling process. In tests mado by running through somo steel nails that have been slowly heated for two and one-half hours tho lesult showed that with somo changes in the working mechanism the operation was entirely practicable. It seems that the project for a tele scope still larger than that of the Lick Observatory, nnd to be mounted on Wil son's Peak in Southern California, has not been abandoned. The crown glass disk for tho lens is already cast, and has been exhibited at the Paris Exposition by its maker (Mantois). The other, tho flint "glass, is yet to bo cast; it may be a year or more before it is ready, and the Clarks can do nothing abcut grinding the lenses and making the object glass until they get both pieces. The raw material (i. e., the two disks of glass uu ground) will cost over $15,000. i '":' Sho Wished to See a Hirer. Last summer two ladiea staying in In dia drove in a bullock tonga to see tho view from a neighboring hill. Tho pros pect of tho thick jungle, stretching away for hundreds of miles, naturally sug gested the idea of game, and one of them said : "How I should like to see a real live tiger just once in his native glen." The sun was beginning to sink as they started to drive homeward by an unfre quented track cleared through the jun gle. Soon they came to nn open space, nnd there, "All at once," writes one of them, "on looking up, I saw what I at first thought to be the stump of a felled tree, about thirty yards off the roadway. As we drew a little nearer I saw it was moving. " 'Look,' I said to my friend. 'It's a panther!' "Fortunately, the bullocks did not scent him, or they would have bolted and probably upset tho tonga, leaving us at tho tender mercy of tho beast. As wo were passing hiin he left the tree under which he had been standing and camo toward us is a crouching manner, as if making ready for a spring. We then saw it was a tiger, and a very fine one. "To say that we were frightened would not be wide of the mark, especial ly as he moved parallel with us for about twenty yards, keeping his eye upon us the whole time, and looking as if deter mined to have at least one of us for a meal. The driver whipped up his bul locks, we shouted, aud ono of us opened aud shut a white umbrella. This appar ently frightened tho tiger, who disap peared into the bush." London Graphic. Touching Forethought. Shortly before last Christmas tho wifo of a well-known West End physician died of cancer. On Christmas Eve the door-bell of the house rang, and on the door being opened a messenger delivered a good-sized package. It was taken in, aud when opened was found to contain the Christmas presents of the dead wife to the members of the family. The lady, realizing that sho was about to die, had purchased a number of gifts and had them sent to the house of a friend on Walnut Hills with the admonition that they bo delivered on Christmas Eve. Each of the gilts was marked by the donor in her own handwriting. Cin cinnati Enquirer. C ft"-Duys Etren for a Watch. Watches are funny things. Do you know that there are times when a watch will not run rcgulurly I I have had rail way engineers say that locomotives aro much the same way. When a watch has one of these irregular spells it is almost impossible to make it go. Many a watch is ruined, too, at times when carelessness is the prime causa. Some men will wind a watch too close, aud then if it refuses to run shake it until everything is out of place. A lurge per cent, of the repair ing done is brought about by persons who do not know how to take care of a watch. rhiludilphUi Item. NEWS a?:d notes for women. , There is a girl driver on the Btrcot-cnr line nt Abilene, Kan. Mrs. Jefferson Davis lias decided to re side permanently in Kansas. Oenuino antique Persian embroideries are worn on cloth and cashmere dresses. Blanche Willis Howard, tho novelist, lias patented a music rack and a bath shoe. There are 1 C.000 women enrolled on tho books of tho New York Exchange for Women's Work. Heliotrope and yellow are combined in tho evening toilets of silk crepo aud transparency cloths. Mrs. Emerson and Mis9 Emerson, wifo nnd daughter of the dead philosopher, livo in Concord, Mass. The University of Basle is the omy ono in Switzerland which still refuses to admit women to its medical teaching. A woman in Illinois who broko her wrist whilo trying to raiso a window in a railroad car has just received f 16S5 damages. Miss Maud Morgan, thh harpist, dresses most picturesquely for tho stligo. The style is that of Kato Grecnawny grown up. Mrs. Grover Cleveland is very fond of French literature. Sho spends a great deal of time in reading Purisiau novelists m tho original. Sleeves of real tapestry cloth are put in long wraps of velvet and brocade. The contrast is novel, whatever may bo said about tho taste. Pretty ami comfortable dressiug jackets for wintry mornings arc made of flannel, with largo collars and turn-back cuffs of cream worsted lace. Parlor maids havo been forced into white muslin dresses and Turkish slip pers with tassels on tho toes, but minus so much as the spring heel. Tho event of the season at Berlin was tho appearance of tho Empress, hereto fore wearing her hair on tho top of tho head, with tho double plait of Faust's Grctchcu. The wife of a New York banker has invented a machine for making wire rope, the patent of which she has sold to a Sau Francisco firm for $25,000 cash and a royalty. Striped cheviot is the best and most serviceable stuff that can bo had for street wear. Brown is a good color, and a few ornamental buttons are tho only decoration required. Mrs. James McKce, the President's daughter, is never so pretty as at break fast, when she appears iu a morning drcs of turquoise blue silk, made Wat tcau style, with bronzed 6lippcrs. Mrs. Olga Neymann, a New York den tist, hires female assistants, nil of them young, pretty and earnest, whose duty it is to stand by the patient, and, if it is a ladyetrokc her hand sympathetically. ; Tho belle at a recent dog feast on an Indian reservation in Dakota wore a jacket trimmed with teeth from 150 elks, which she herself had slaiu. She is the granddaughter of tho chief of the tribe. Ex-Speaker Randall's married daugh ter bears a striking resemblance to her father. Sho can converse intelligently on the most intricate political matters, nnd has a wide fund of general informa tion. Dinner gowns for very young ladies barely touch the floor in the back, but those worn by their mothers and older sisters have very long flowing traius, round or oval, edged with a cord or bus .fold. ' Tho prettiest hats for young children aro of white felt, with straight, round brims turned up at one side, aud fastened under a cluster of white ostrich tips, a single long feather encircling tho crown. Tho newest tullo gowns havo their low bodices cut with very sharp points below the waist line, anil either round or pointed at the neck, tho full sleeves be ing long enough to drape tho arms al most to the elbows. Jackets with vests aro quito in favor. The regular jacket fronts may fail apart over the pointed vest in tho fashion of a gentleman's coat, or they may be so ar ranged as to close with one or more but tons, or may button from top to bottom according to fancy. . Eccentricities in furs nre shown in His way of combinations of two kinds. Very little, however, can be said in favor ol this, the only excuse for its existence be ing the insatiable desire of ea)ricious ladies for something different from that which already exists. A bold and effective ornament for an evening dress is a Russian sabre, eight or ten inches in length. This is thrust through the dress material, or into a mass of lace or crcpo folds, a greater por tion of the blade being left in sight. The hilt is covered with fine diamonds. Both the method and results when Byrup of Figs is taken ; it is pleasant and refreshing to the taste, and acts gently yet promptly on the Kidneys, Liver and Uowela, cleanses the sys tem effectually, dispels colds, head aches and fevers and cures habitual constipation. Byrun of Figs is the only remedy of its kind ever pro. duced, pleasing to the taste and ac ceptable to the stomach, prompt in Its action and truly beneficial in ta eflecU, prepared only from the most healthy and agreeable eubstansea, its many excellent qualities com mend it to all aud lava made it the most popular remedy known. Fyrup of Figs is for sale in 50o and $1 bottles by all leading drug, gists. Any reliable druggist who may not have it on hand will pro. cure it promptly for any one who wishes to try it Do not accept any substitute. CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO. r a . Oonorat Doodoro da Fonneca, Prwidont of tho Republic of Brazil, Is much like a bird of prey In appearance. The chief feature of his fare Is a thin, high now,1 very much hooked, above which Iris nmnll, keen eyes watch restlessly all that is going on. Novrltlea and KnawlptJc, A nvtv hook of a'tmrttr rwwltntr, brtrnfli I of fftxHl Hiinirti worth knowing And llluntrAtml, 1 juM Iwiiixl. It contain a large oollixstitm of vahifthlp AutoRrttph, irellpnt mvlpta for I'IaIii (lishrtv humor In rhyme anl proso, monthly rnlont.itrfl. Anil can bn hrul of all tlntKiri'tA Ami d 'Alerts r. hjr sending A two rent ntATtp to the rniblinhcr. An ImporiAtit fttnre of the worV In It ofTor of Fre Mnlo, which o!Ttr 1 wet fnrt a therein, And brprornr InK tho txtok, at mice. Any one ran to mippitod w It h a rholre wrlenrlnn. "The little volume id the St. JticoU Oil Cftlendur for lwW-ttO pun liwhed bv The ChnrU A. Vofreler Company, Hnlttmnre, Md. Itt fully the equal of Any of Its proiltM rwrrw In the interest of the i rent Heme ly for Pain, St, Jaoolia OU,whnwe virtue never ehnte. And whose popularity never wAnoft. The demand for both book and medl clue Is rRreAt; J. H. Pn Art rmn, a Jimtre of the Tea re at On at r ail. N. II., haw been In ollke continu ously for iifty-lhroe yearn. Car efThnnka. If the proprietor of Kemp's lUlwm whouM publish a card of thanks, containing expres sions of frratltudo which come to him dafly, from theme who have leen cured of severe throat and Inner troubles by the use of Kemp nNnni, It would fill a fair-sired nook. How much belter to invite all to rail on Anydrnir pist And tret a free sample bottle that you may test for loursolf its power. Lance b.ttlosOOc. and t. Thw New York Bible !1mie ince April 1 lat has humed 7.(ii0 volumes. IIiw'r Thlnl We offer One Hundred Dollars Reward for nycafeof t'ntnrrti that rannot be oared by tAKinn Hall's Catarrh Cure. K. J. Cuknrv Co., Tron,. Toledo. O. We, t h underpin red, have known F, J. Cheney for the last 16 ycArw, And believe btm perfect ly honorable in all tmMnena transac tions, nnd financially ahle to carry out any ob Itestlonp made by their firm. est Truaic, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, O. Waldtng, Kinnan A Marvin, WhoUwaie Drug- Kitw, Toledo, Ohio. K. II. Van Howon, 1 'ashler Toledo National Hank, Toledo, Ohio. Hall's Catarrh Cure is tnkon Internally, ant ing directly upon the blood And mucous sur faces of the svstem. Price, 75c por bottle. S'old by All Druggists. Thb British brewery syndicate have now about (WUO.UOQ la vested in American brew erica. Never Hay Die! Scourged with ulcers, boils And tetter. Weak of limb nnd wore of eve. Hopeless now of growl better, Surely ono must die. Not At All, i onr, discourage 1 sufferer from disordered blood mid scrofulous trouble. Take Dr. IMcrce'a Uolden Medical Discovery, the ptvat blood-purifer and life-saver of modern d iys. All thoa unwholesome sores ami blood disorders maybe cured, nnd the victim will look and feel like a new man. It Is ttHirnmtcd to benefit or cure or money paid for it prompt ly returned INr'ection is attained in Dr. Sage's Catarrh Remedy. It curat the worst cases. A i.L the Jamaica railways havo b en taken by an American syndicate. Nearly every article wold Is cheapened. In cost nf (iroduction, at exp -nseof quality. Dob bins'g hh'dric Soati Is exactly dwlay what it was iu lHtWi, absolutely puns harmless and uni form. Ask your grocur for iu Look out fur iiiiilnli 'us. A ma American dairy has been started at Sun Denato, near Florence, Italy. Oreen(lhe Paradise ot l'armer, Mlld,etiaolenlimatn,o$rtnln and b indent crops. Rest frulU grain, grast and stoec coun try in the world. Full lufnrmaUon free. Ad dress OrefiultuMgrat'n Roard, Portland, Ore. They dlsapi ear like hot cakes before a St, Louis tramp "Tuns Ill's Ranch sc. Cigar. If Atnlcted withworeeyet use Dr. Isaac Thomn oi)' Kve-m Ater. Druggist srvl I at &c. per bottle THE GOOD OFFICE OF: fZ jXv Is will illimtmted la LJA-tli A1.V cure uf n.'iimlgU. TWI IflPlinC? rM' f ynitoui ft '!ljtllljJllSwl''1 !. n iiilfrmtt. fy llr-v tif ln:ptii whlfh follows ZJ I M I thi'coutw of the nerva J I 111 affectiM. JacnbuOil S vlla ly gentle rubbing anj applied frequently, will euro AEUKAL GIA. PncVett St., Brooklyn. N. V., Jon. SI, 1881. 1 vu8 taken with neuralgia In ftilo and tifferel 6 months. I waa given tip by Uoo torn, but was cured by St. Jacob Oil. MICHAEL iUOIN.V. At Drigoists and Pealir. THE CHARLES A. VOGELER CO., Bimmsr. Ms. Ely's Cream BaImngJ3 CHILDREN OF CATAHHII. Apply Halm Into each aoitrlL ELY HKOS., M Warren St., N. Y.t COTT Of Pure Cod Liver Oil and HYPOPKOSPKITES of Lime and Soda is endorsed and prescribed by leading phyaicUus because both the 'fed Ltvrr itU aud liyiophophitcm are the rooogntwd otcats In the cure of CoHMUitiption. It is a palatable as Dills:. Scott's Emulsion im a wintdcrfxU 4'trslt I'whirrr. Ml it the Mtit itvmtdy for CONSUMPTION, Scrofula, Bronchitis, Wasting- Dis eases, Chronic Coughs and Colds, N Y M U 4 EK1AZER AXLE GREASE UKST H TIIK WOULD 1 i r uet me uenuitui. ooia jsverrwncrc. A Portrait at Tte 0J4aa WVd FW s TttW DIO TIUNAHT Or I'KIAMS OuMa to riirtaMam, ln' Taaaptph, Haav (i TaUa MkfV -Sum, ' PafvOai B-o &4 Tncks la -, . - M Amiain.cu Moiaa T.a.h Alalt, aVlsr fw tfc ,! F OH Yaat. a4 tb D.f t4 li.t Albn. AU aW a mj d 3 PTC Ttra .! rUuaaa la aMl k LlrvliHt aa aaaalaVM. AfWaA lilNigUU huTsU.IT WuiU, fca au rulta H, M- I. kCT r ftlJUHS W..UOKMIS tNblUN WMalilngion, i.? Successfully Prosecutes Claims. Laktt Prlucipnl ii a am iu el U 8. i'eutttoo BuremU. 9 yra iu liwtt war, lb iwljutlicaVllug clauuis, ally Uijs 12 0 GUARANTEED. "Wiiv. . ikiu'i ;a(.k, hank ami in. 0 tfcni'Mfc.vr C(l taro, N. Uakou. By J. Ilnmiltaa Arera, A. SI., M. D. Thlilf amoat Talmul. took for th. hoilMholiL leauhtuK aa U J w t ie eaUly-dutlmuMlied yini? toiiunr dlll. reiil Uli,ej, thj cuuset au4 meimf ol pMvauUiw ma 'haw.-aso4. and he auuplaat r.inliel wu.:h will all..via:a or cure. prufOMle lUu-trautl. I a In, k la writt-u la i.lulu eWy-Uui r.uuu, ami la frj,i rruai Uj uwimk-ui uirma wnloh raiiilt.-r iiiu.il UjL-Uir b ,m valu-h- k lUe i.utuv ailiy of ri-ailura. Duly tiu-. po.,i;,l l. Ulvoa a ooiu. ptete analyai- of evet-ytliluu iM-ruuilntf ki oourUlilrv i oi l"" l1""1""1"" au4 reorluit of lioauhy Iaiiilllt; lo-.-tin-r wtili valwtolt rucltiui aad urm jcrlptijua, cx;,a ihUju of b ,lulel uraotltx. lor. rct ll.o of ordinary ht-. ba. Wi n twa book In U J-'iittlliereliu:,.,,,, Ull kuowtng what M o la aa enit-rcuuy. b-nd po nowj or poataj. lamp, of any duiioiiiUiall.ja uot laraur Uiaa 6 111(4, WU nn, UVVH, ImH US . I. Ol,. EVERY Wi IIIB 01 DOCTOR SHE COULDN'T WAIT. Lady "I want to sit for a picture. " Artist " I Rhall be very glad to paint you if you will wait ft week, until I finish tho ono I am at work on now." Lady " Oh, my 1 I couldn't wait that long, to be homo at dinner at five o'clock 1 " That Is the trouble with some people; they have no time to wait for results. Some womeu will take a dose or so of Dr. Tierce's Favorite Prescription ami expect to feel well Immediately. True, some do find marve lously speedy effects from Its use, but chronic, or llnjrcrlii";, diseases, which have had possession of the system for yeHrs, cannot generally be cured In a day. Such maladies aro f;enerally slow in their Inception, slow it their progress, and must bo cured, if at all, by slow degrees and regular stages. Terscverance in the use of the 'Favorite Prescription " for a reasona ble length of tiino will cure all those chronic wenknvascs, irregularities nnd distressing derangements with which so many females nre alllicted. Hut tho uso of this world-fumed medicine must bo persisted in for a considerable tiino Dr. Pierce's Pellets regulate and cleanso the liver, stomach and bowels. Ono a dose. Sold by druggists. A Ulll'lll I for all tlo.n-H-litf a u iiais liltul or apaani wlio. Kar-ily aitiutt-. riitlutr uttta as a tai In iiiiin- than ;M i-au, our when neeileu, alia teruai. eut-loati an t-t-nia for a iniplw i, Ad,lri-at inc. af -V JSfvrtO June fr, AmAWri "ui-unl l oil JNxtuf-a" riuLi tttona wffft awocraa. it la li.t Iftt colic a,itiit-n t ftin-e rtvr aera. rtiAAU aucUi fmrar firnrr, Lrvoklyn, Arw 1 oft-. STANLEY'S "iil.Vl Aaenla Waiiptl. fci'lid volirown, and adtlreaaol all kooa Aseutajruusnow, ami wo win M-u t )oil a copy lite. J. W. ZltaiierX l.'o., .vol'bwtiiut t.. fall!., fa. PENSIONS It you want your peu-tiou tttlhout delay, put your claim In tha hnutli oi JOMtl'll it. III VI' hit, AT (XH, A!H1NU'I'. ' Hnur UTtHlY. Ho--?la, lluiluenKtir.ni Unit l'euiuaaaaia, Arithmetic, Short-lmntl.ot j morouialy Uujat by alAlu circulara frej. Ilriam'a t ollt-ao. -I4 Mala i St, Ininalo, N. - OPIUM II AIM P. Only t rrlala anil t l ltbluUi Woria. lir. , eitl'll .!". Lebanon, u MAKE GSIIGKENS PAY. If yii know !iw to proirlr run lor ttifiii. For ,J rrnin tn nUni,- )mt.-auroturt-av iai'At. itooK. pmnif ih iiit-riem' i iru-u-ml ivultry itaitM-r not n ftm.v tour, i-ut a tnau work.UK lor tin; 1.. Miiu et'iit tlurlutr a. i-vriml o: Vft yt'urm. It tt-a 5u Umv t. l'rtfvtaiKt Vutv lim-ar; to r'f d tor K(fK autt aluo lor t ..m nnirf ; ttilch fowl to havo for 1 urtKitv : mi t-vf rvtliinkf. imutM. inu Mi oiilti kn w ou tlitt nil jtvt 10 n... it i klAr. helit I-OrttlBUt lor IftOO liOl'KK 13ft 1-poinirU Mirri, S. iv a Roai rViuirh sfpdir-ino. Cures whero all t'lso fails. tasto. C hililrcu take it IT emit I t II tlty 1 EVERY MAN HIS OWN DOCTOR By J. Hamilton Ayers, A. M,M. D. Till 9 Is a most Valua. ble Book for the Ilouae Itold, tcacliliiB- as it floes tlie easllyadltatlns'uisbed Byinptoms of dlflereut Diseases, the Causes and Means ot Preventing: sueli Diseases, and tlie Simplest Remedies wlilch will alle Tlate or cure. 598 Pages, Profusely Illustrated. The Book is written in plain ev6ry-day English, and is free from the technical terms which render most Doctor Hooks so valueless to the generality of readers. Tills Hook Is Intended to be ot Service In tlie Family, and is so worded as to be readily understood by all. ONIlY 60 (The low price only being made possible by the Immense edition printed.) Not only does this Book contain so much Information Relative to Disease, but very properly gives a Complete Analysis of everything pertaining to Courtship, Marriage and tlie produc tion and Hearing of Healthy Families TOOETHEB WITH Valuable neelpes and Prescriptions, Kxplauatlon of Botanical Practice, Correct use of Ordinary Ileros. New Edition, Revised & Enlarged with Complete Index. With this Book in the house there is no excuse for not knowing what to do in an emergency. Don't wait until you have illness tn your family before you order, but lend at once for this valuable volume. ONLY OO OEATTB XOST-rAXD. Send postal notes or postage stamps ol any denomination not larger than J centl. BOOK L'VJli. IlOtJrSi:, 84 I.E9NARD STREET, N. Y. City. Why, I promised In long standing, complicated and ob stinato esses. Do not expect speedy relief and cure, but havo a miud of your own, and when you have decided to seek a cure of your malady through the medium of this wonderful medi cine, Rhow a little will-power and tenacity of purpose, and you will, in duo time, rejoice in the complete res toration of your health and strength. Tho "Favorite 1" rescript ion " is tho only medicine for woman's peculiar ills guaranteed to give satisfaction in every case, or money refunded. j A largo Treaties ( 100 pages, Illus trated ), on Woman : Her Diseases and their Cure, sent in plain, sealed envel ope, on receipt nt ten cents, in stamps. Address, Wokld's Dtsi'KNSAHT Md icai, AesooiATiON, No. 003 Main St.,1 Buffalo, N. Y. j ll's Hi Villi ITK 1(11.11! .11 I TU KK w - H o ira Ji-i-U at ev.iry ltlio.hi.lt of oollti, wuetharflaV in km in aa I or 4 iltiui ntw ,,ar. It tloi aol oti. itiv-i a-i li a ulr ilr tiar.iihMt. Aftor yeariot' trial iiuaranU. t worth aomtittiln?. :lln Will it aave a vanm-na uaraa, if qui a. ytmr utu..m. m ttlltt, at-nl ur.-oil I. lirit.ll l.r.il iv I u ,-,,,1... . rr't "nivni Citfto Xufun,' H'ottif mm (m irtthstut K OM tuna a ie JMV rWrwj. JSAAV iHtSt&i HMK Mitfuwl hrthanj Stiiin&i, JCastun, afU JONES Jl 12 PAYS THE FREICHT.1 1 Ti n ubu rrnlr. Irxxi Ir MhT 1 Marine, Brm Jtuv lioaun Riirl ltiua flu fr BOO. 1 Krvrv iHtrftt'Kio. hr trt pr.tr itt in nt ton th naiff and adftrvM JONfcS OF BINGHAMTON.' OPIUM-HABIT Vull Information nf nit V.uny it ntl ptprrrfy Carf Api-ly to r. J. V, llolhtmn. Ji'tlrrmm, W)mxm;m ere Et Bs! Want to Irani all Mloiit a Ilorae f now to Pick Out a Good One F Knowimirfoi' ; liona and o Unant atfalnal I mud? Ictcct IlRtase an 1 I-flrctaCur when lameti potaililvr lell Uto ago ly nvTvcthr What to call t lie lint, r.-i.a I'.u-U of tut Animal t HowtoSli-ie a llorae i'ruporly AU thta mihI other V'a u ilite lnfumiatluit cau t e obtained b-C rriullnff our 10U.1A(.U 1 L 1,1'LHTIt ATKI IIOUSF. HOOK, whl-Mi wa will forwarJ, itt iaiU,uu receipt of only ' H cvnta Iu ai BOOK PUB. HOUSE. ' 134 Leonard St., New York City. Rpponimnnilixl tv Phvsir I'loasunt unil aifriiouble to withtmt objection, liy drutrp;ist8, Ratwi fralaal inna. tt.'S the I'fTJ 1 ' ;i Hi a I Jf I 1 V TUT . W CENTS POST-PAID,
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