i Is Hie Jaws of a I. ion. 1 was out alter porcupines ami was lyiiiR down one nijiht pear a porcu pine's bole waiting for him to come out. 1 had no pun, but only my hunting knife ami Diy kiiobkerric, with which to knock the porcupines on the nose; lor that, you know, kills him at once. I did not hear a sound until I found the grass near me more and a Hon put his paw on Die and lifted me up. The brute pressed his claws into me, but lucki'y my leather belt prevented his teeth from damaging me, and he car ried me by holding on my belt aud coat. If either of these should have given way I should have been laid hold of in a far rougher manner. A lion is like a cat in one thing, he can hold a living crea ture in his mouth and not damage it, just as I have seen a cat carry a mouse. I knew the nature of the lion well enough to know that if I struggled 1 should have my neck broken or mv head smashed in an instant, so I did not struggle, but quietly drew my knife and thought what best to do I thought at first of trying to strike him In the heart, but I could not reach that part of him, ami his skin looked so loose that I feared that I could not strike him UcH-p enough, carried as I was. I knew it would be life or death with me in an iustaut.so.turn.ng myself a bit, I gash ed the lions nose, and cut it through. The lion dropped me as I should drop a poisonous snake, and jumped away roaiing with pain, lie stood for an in stant looking at me, but I did not move and he did not seem to like to carry me again. More than once he came up to within a few yards, licking the blood as it jiourcd from his nose; but there 1 remained like a stone, and he was fair ly afraid to tackle me again. I know a butl.tlo ami an ox are very sensitive aliout the no.-e, and a cat if just tipped on the nose can't stand it, so I thought a lion might be the same, aud so it proved. C'liiM I. ou the Ainmou. . It is Interesting to watch how the mental traits of the race appear even in the young babies on the Amaz n. If a plaything is given them they examine it gravely lor a little while and then let it drop. l-erve how diff'.-rent this is Irom a white ba'iy's actions. A bright little six months-old at home has four distinct methods of investiga tion: first, by looking; second, by touching; then by puping the object in its mouth; ami finally by banging it against the tl.ior. '1 he brown infant jtit looks; he does not investigate at all. As the children grow older the same trait is apparent in almost every case. An Indian is content to see and hear a thing, without troubling himself about the w hvs and wherefores; even i such incoinprehensive pursuits as los-sil-collectiug or butterfly catching, or sketching, provoke hardly any curiosi ty. The peopls look on quietly, some times asking a question or two, but soon dismissing the subject from their minds as something they are incapable of understanding. With all the crowd ing to see the lady of our parly, hardly a person asked why she came. So, too. the babies are unambitious; they do not cry after pretty colors or stretch out their hand to a candle. And the men have no apparent deire to better their lot. Thev iro on just a tiieir lathers did; submit to the imposition j of the whites, a little sullenly, but with- j out a thought of rebellion, unless there j is a w !i!te or a nail-urceu to icau wii-ui. The children do not care much "for playthings; we rarely see one with a rag doll; the little buys delight in bows and arrows, but they take them as part of their traii-ing. Sometimes the jieople have dances, in iuiitatation of the "festa" sports; and we hear them humming the waltzes and quad rilles which their quick ears have ciught from the musicians. As an In di?u will paddle steadily all day, w hile his wife at home hardly ceases her mo notonous cotton-beating, so the little ones have an inexhaustible gift of pa tience. Where a while child wouid fret and cry, the brown one sits all day Ierfectly still, but watching every thing around hiiu. To see a little In dian boy in a canoe, you would say that nothing of him was alive out his eyes. A Shocking Fellow. tleorge Bell, of I'ortland, Oregon, possesses the remarkable peculiarity ol being able to deliver a shock as percep tible and distinct as that from a gal vanic batter' O.i the evening ol the 4th he attended the ball given by the Master Mariners' Association at B'hai B'rith Hall, and there created consid erable amusement for those who kuew the secret of his po-crs by the way in w hich he treated the ladies to w hom lie was introduced and with wliora he mingled in the dance. A reporter called upon hint to request an explana tion of the phenomenon. "You can call it a phenomenon or anything else," said Mr. Bell, "but I can give no explanation of it. I sim ply possess the power of giving these shocks, and that's about all there is about it. I don't care about any sense less publicity on the subject, though you can mention it if you want to. I will tell you how it works. There is a great deal of electricity in my system, and when I catch a person by each hand it seems to pass from me to them. You've seen people take hold of the handles of a battery; well, my hands are like those hardies. Give me your hands and I will show you." Mr. Bell took the hands of the re porter in his and pressed them tightly. A shock of electricity, in no way differ ing from that given by a battery, was received. "You see," said the living battery, when I draw In my breath the elec tric current seems to a-quire a great power." The reporter felt the truth of the remark as the sharp prickly sen sation increased, as if a few hundred invisible needle were being shot through his arms. "Tiiere, you have the whole thing, description and experience, as much as 1 can give," said he, as he dropped he bar ds of tne reporter. "I understood you could pick up nee dles, Mr. Bell, with your lingers, as with a magnet," said the searcher for facts. "Oh, no, I never could do that. These stories are always exaggerated you know," replied he, as he lit his cigarette and blew the white smoke out through the open window. "I presume it furnishes yourself and friends abundant of amusement when you desire it," suggested the reporter. "Well, yes, I cau have some fun now and then. I give the shock, you know, when no one expects it, and often i frighten the ladies when I place one band upon a ehoHlder and grasp their Laud with the other. Thev take it in good part nearly always, though I now ami then get into a little trouble with those ros8-grainl sp"riiiins of hu manity w ho never can take a joke." "How do the ladies treat your elec trical powers? Are they frightened more than the men "Of course. Ild you ever know a lair who wouldn't scream louder tian a man could when she saw a child fall Uowa stairs? Those who don't know me at all sometimes get frightened; but t'le ones who do, usually say, "Oh, how you shock me, Mr. Bell,' and laLgh. I shock the ladies often, but I can't help It you know." A Boy's M rework!. Joseph us Thlstlehummer is a good little boy, and he told all the boys that he was "goin to have a bully old Fourth, you bet yer boots!" He kept his money in a savings bank. The bank was tin, and he put the money in at the roof. The savings banks always pay out 100 cents on the dollar. Some oth er savings banks do not pan out so well. Josephus held a meeting of directors, and it was unanimously resolved to re move the deposiu from the vaults of the bank until after the Fourth. Perhaps labor riots were teared. He removed the nickel and copper accumulations through the roof by means of a case kuile and a two-tined fork. They amounted to $3.91, which he put into first-class securities rockets, Koman eandles.serpeuU.torpedoes, pin-wheels, crackers, etc. He took advantage of his younger brother Sebe's (Kusebius) absence to climb to the top of the book case and put his pyrotechuie acquisi tions there. In two minutes he thought of a better place. Hide 'em under the bookcase. His mother w ill fiud some toe scratches on the mahogany to-morrow, and soiuebody'll get hurt. Then he thought of a tiptop place, aud took them to the kitchen. He'd be up be fore daylight in the morning, of course. But the cook got up first. She was up at five o'clock and much surprised was she to find the fire all ready lor lighting stove filled with nice round piiie sticks and colored paper. Old Thistlehuminer was growing kind, she thought. She touched the kindling off with a match and began pounding the beefsteak. The cat came in from her family of six at the stable and rubbed her side and back on M ilinda's aukles, her tail waving her spine graceful'y and billowy. She purred loud aud ex pectant. The fire wis cracking glee fully. !reat guns! sizz-whiz baug bociu! The top of the s'ove went out first. The cat bowled through the win dow, leaving a strong smell of burnt fur trailing after her. The hired girl ran on into the yard aud went over the fence like a lrirdle jumper. Then she fell in a lit. old Thistlehuminer awoke aud remarked to his wife that he supposed the blanked Idiocy had be gun. Then he heard more, and the house rocked like a canal boat in storm. Thistlehuminer is a brave man but when he came down stairs aud gazed in the kitchen he was somewhat shaken. Ii vk-.'ts, K nil in c.indlcs.pin w heels, serpents and fire-crackers were holding high carnival in the sacred place, chasing each other as if posses sed. A sky rocket w hich had been im Htently sputtering away in a cor"er, roused itself for a final effort, and car ried away two of the old gentleman's trout teeth r they were false, though) then gave hiui a parting kick in the back, leaving a iriiianeut lumbago. They managed to save the rest of the house without calling on the fire de partment, though the end next the kitchen was burned a black as free lunch liver. Josephus will never forgive Malinda never. "Xothin' but kerlcssness." says Master Thin'.ehummer; "she'd orter looked." But Malinda went to the hospital, and the cat, as she has never teturned. hs, it is presumed, found another boarding house. A Butterfly Collector. Mr. Metzger, a resident of Albany, X. Y., has one of the largest and finest collections of butterflies in the world. It took Mr. Metzger twenty-five years to gather them. From Russia. France, Great Britain and Spain; from Florida and Texas; from Maine and Canada; from the woods of the North and the groves of the South, thuse marvels of nature have been brought and now preserved in a manner maintaining their living features, they present a picture of beauty simply indescribable. There are over ten thousand of these richly colored flies, and they are a study Indeed. The wriler suggested they represented a fortune, "Yes," said Mr. Metzger, with a shrug of his shoulders, "but I never sell a fly. That I would not do. Sometimes I want a particular fly from abroad, and it costs me often ten or twenty dollars, but be ing a poor man I endeavor to effect an exchange with my duplicates. Others more fortunate 'than I can buy them outright. I confine my collection to the latitude of the Northern Hemis phere. There is a fly named after me, and over in that corner is one that is simply priceless. There are but two known to exist. You sec that deli cately constructed insect. That is of a remarkable family. It hatches as a butterfly in September; lives through the frost of winter; cold, however in tense, cannot kill that gossamer bit of God's handiwork, but when the spring conies and the soft nights of May makes all nature lovely, this little thing gives up its eggs and dies. Its mission is over. There is the common moth. How graceful and dainty it is! There is the outcome of the tomato worm, which has desolated acres of tomatoes in certain years. There is an insect of which the male only is winged, and yonder a fly of mctalic hue, which is considered by us very valuable." "Have you caught many of these butterflies yourself?" "The greater part of them. When a boy in the old country, it was my hobby, aud for eighteen years in America I have been busy. Kven in this neigh borhood I am out nearly every summer night, hunting for my treasures. I will spend all day in the woods, or all night, for that matter, in search of what I want. In this way I got many flies that I had not, and many that are wanted abroad. I am an enthusiast, of course, and take great care of what I have." "To you, then, it is a delightful oc cupation to search for and find a new butterfly." It is a delightful occupation. Every thing in nature is beautiful, not mere ly butterflies. Take the birds'or fishes, or different insect life. It is a study ot man for wnich a lifetime is too short. Nature is as rich and bountltul in beauty as in utility, and it is pleasant to tl nd this out by personal experience." u1!B!,,',?,wi?!!ftS,,,,l-!',ul"' ...t'i.f ...... a-.t.t,,'-, j'lm'v- SCIENTIFIC. a Vast Furnace.-WhUei It the Earth .ngaged hist May In watching the , varieties mom in -.c. iraiisitof Mercury, Professor I'roctor ; osier and the Kentucky Green. l Ue and his assistant observed an intensely former is used bright sK.t in the centre of the planet latter for heavier. The cuttings should as it crossed the sun's disc. It Is re- j be stuck in rows three feet apart, and ported that, seen through their power- should be clear down th' J0" ful refracting tehveope. it appeared see onlv the en. . or ve ry littl e ot the as a mere viviJ point of light, central ! tip. Care should be taken to stick them in the planet, like a hole pierced in the j as they grow, buds up, but this Is not middle of a piece of round black card- essential. Cultivate them twice or board. It was permanent from the time three times the firt year, and If the the planet's centre touched the one weeds are very bad between tne cut limb of the sun until it left the other , tings, pull them out by hand. Ihey llmb-a period ot seven hours. "If wiU raise from one to four little canes, the observation was reliable," says a three or four feet high the first year, commentator, "it proves that the planet which must be cut off, leaving only an has a hollow axis. There are hypo- : inch stub. The cutting should be done like John Cleve Symmes. t thought that should any of the bl-1 0nists of Clieyne's expedition reach j IS loon the I'ole thev will be warmly received, the theory being that If the earth is a hollow cvlinder, each of the Poles is the I mouth of a vast furnace. In this way j a German iecialist accounts for the i Vurora Borealis, attributing the mys- tenous "Northern Lights" to the glow-I ing crater at the Pole. j 6 J The exi.eri.nent for showing j tl. ...,.t,..siioii of oxvtren in ammonia 1 is conducted in this way: A coil of heated platinum wire is suspended In a flask containing a small quantity of i strong solution of ammonia. The coil continues to glow by oxyidizing the ammonia. When a current of oxygen is caused to pass through a small tube to the bottom of the flask, it w ill burn as it rises in bubbles though the am deTbui l-nWeryNaville. Ten., j monia. ITOI. 1. l.upiou, oi tan shortens the tube, and makes it Uis charge the stream of oxygen about an inch above the surface ot the solution, wher it bums gently in the aminouia cal atmosphere of the flask. The plat inum coil is removed as soou as the who have long held that the axis of possible where the sou is loose, soas the oiher planet spheres of our solar i not to break the rootlets. In the east system, is similarly hollow, with a they cut when the ground is frozen clear tabular passage from the North I bard. The first year's euttings are .:.... I..,!- ' it md. u tl, fact. It not worth making. Hie second year flame surrounds the end of the oxygen ueep, a iu me, .ua, ... - tube. This modification appears to be if you like, and peel just as easily as a decided improvement. ! hen they came out ol the tank I he ; peeling is done bv two nibs of Iron, and ingeneous- process ha lately been i machines t folngVdriiam power, china, Krce lain, etc. Sulphur Is dis-, xhes Wheat Snot i.i Bk Cct. solved in oil of lavender spike to a Tnere ,aS .,. gome diversity of opin syrupy consiteiiee; then chloride of jon a, t0 the tllIie to cut w ileat, gold or chloride of platinum is -1 j,prinr from the common practice of solved in sulphuric ether, and the two j armers. It is generally cut when dead solutions mixed under a gentle heat, j riiM. or Ht ieat w en t lie grain has be The compound is next evaluated unto come ,ian Tnts s no Uollot a error, the thickness of ordinary P"" : and one of more imiortaiice than many w hich conditio.i It Is applied with ' s,,,vose. it should be remembered brush to such portions of the china, that wlu.at Is composed of gluten, glass, or other frbric as it is desired to , gUrch M(, ran GUia. U the nour cover. according to the design- or pat- ( jBlitW ,,anty of the grain, makes the tern, with the electro-metallic deposit. ; flMr Hlk.k to,rPtuer i t,e hands of the The objects are baked in usual way be- baker aui, iVM wcisnt to lhe graiu fore they are immersed iu the bath. ; am, ta.re u tlie greilttst quantity of gluten in the grain, just kIkh the trnr A temet for uniting broken parts of ,Jfu,,ir fro or three joint from the glass Is thus made; Two parts isinglass , ground, the head turns dofnuiard, awl you are soaked in water until well swollen, ' ,. nuinh a grain ofttrsrn your thumh and the water pjurcd off, and the isinglass dissolved in warm alcohol: one part mastic dissolved in three parts alcohol, and added to the above solution, then one part ammoniaciim is added. The solution is well shaken and evaporated to the consistency of strong glue, tuen a!so tiere js danger of rust, w hich allowed to cool and solidify. When usually makes Its appearance during used, both cement and articles to be the la-t ten days of J une. mended must be warmed. Trimjiini; Cows. Something quite Air for J'.ia'iiiia. A projosal to use ! new to you, 1 dare say, for which of c impressed air lusted of gunpowder ; you ever heard of triminir.g cows w ith for blasting iu mines has been brought ; their own horus and ears? How would forward in England. The plan is em- ' you like to see a cow w ith her ears ploy air at a pressure ot S,0W unils ' poor thing! cut to the shape of a leaf to the square inch. Its probable sue-. with uotclied edges, and horns trained is indicated by the result of some tests ' in some queer she, twisted icto curls, recently made in some of the collieries. 1 or divided into lour, with two meeting , . overhead, and two turned down toward of the latest applications of vul- the ground? It would be a dreadful csnized' rubber in England is to render sight to me, I am sure; but the Afri china, stone and glassware noiseless. ! cans admire such things. 1 hey con It is applied in the form of narrow 'Jer this trimming of cows a sort of strips inserted in grooves. fine art. You don't see how- they nian- . . age the horns? Well, they begin when "7.'"-t Vdvances in Telcraphy" is the horns are young; divide each '"to the title of the addresses "bv W. II. two, or more, and gradually train them, Breece, lately delivered as the third w hile crowing, in any w ay they choose, course of the'"C outor Lectures" of the Of course it must hurt the poor cows, Socitty of Arts, London. take a good deal of tune; but the ' people who train cow's horn have not All rr.,., w 1... wrk t matin arti- a '... ei...i.i ha ,. ,Ji ,i,u, the coloring powders used for the pur-' pose are nearly all poisonous, and that ...s.i . i in . . r. . - .moui c me, ... -,... ..u. , . The ancient black glass of the Vene- tians is now so closely imitated as to . to ramble over the ground, ror gar dely detection. The process is to use a I den culture there is no doubt about it mixture ol sand and sulphur, with an addition of tit teen ner cent, manganese. : ... The unn. The loon is, iu the strictest sense, an aquatic fowl. It can hardly walk upon land, and one species at least cannot take flight from the shore. But in the water its feet are more than feet and its wings are more than wings. It plungvs in the denser air and flies with incredible speed. Its head aud neck form a sharp point to its tapering neck Its winirs am f:ir in front ami Its leo-s enuallr far in the rear, and its course , , , . ' . , ... through the crystal depths is like the siieed of au arrow. In the northern! Aboit Shyinu lioK-ts. There nev lakes it has been taken forty feet under er wasashying horse that was not near- i..t. i...;,.i sUhted. Such hordes do not seethe .-, lane iroui. . nau neer ni one uiuu last tall, w heu one ap)eared in the river in iront ol my house, l Knew j instantly it was the loon. Who could not tell a loon a half a mile or more ,,., ! Wa.,u.o..s.. ..c ..e,c-r reeu j before? The river was like glass, and i every movement of the bird as it sport- , ed about broke the surface into rinnles. that revealed it far aud w ide. Pres- ! , . , . , : entlv a boat shot out from shore and - . . . i .,n.,i,i lut ljon. 'l he creature at once seemed to , divine the intentions of the boatmen, and slided off obliquely, keeping a i sham lookout as if sure it was mir- sueJ. A steninercame down and passed between them, and when the way was 1 again clear the loon was still swim- i niing on the surface. Presently it dis- appeared under the water, and the boatman pulled sharp and hard. In a few-moments the bird armeared some rods further on, as if to make an ob- servation. Sceinz it was being imr-! sued, an J no mistake.it dove quickly ! facturln this M nd "PP'jing it to and when it came up again, had gone thc llSuanS of buildings and cities on a many times as far as the boat had in ' ,arSe 8cale- la doing this other pro the same space of time. Then it dove , uuets of ""tiHation were developed un- again, ai.d distanced its pursuer so easi- ! l" U P " fcleP ule snowing ingrali ly that he gave over the chase aud rest- i enU are exacted from it : An excel ed on his oars. But the bird made a fi- j ,ent 0,1 to ""PP1? "ght-houses, equal to nal plunge, and when it emerged upon ,he 8Perm oil at ,ower cost- Ben the surface egain it was over one mile ; zole Vlht sort of ethereal fluid which away. Its course must have been, and i evartoratos easily, and, combined with doubtless was, an actual flight under ! vaPr or moist ir ls useJ for Hie pur water, and half as fast as the crow flics P?86 , f Portable gas lamps, so called. In the ir i Ptba, a heavy fluid, useful to dis- solve gutta-percha and India rubber: Languor, lis CaoHiud llemej;. The caiue of languor, mhtn it is not the im medial r indirect consequence of positive disease, is traotible to a debilitating temperature.- Persons living in a wtrm, moist climate re pecoiiarlT sut ject to it. DimuusheJ phys ical vigor and in uuiisiHMution to active exer tion are its cbanuteh-tira. Sometimes it is coomnied by undue relaxation of the bow els, aud by dyspepsia or bi ious symptoms. A reliable remedy is iloetetur'sbtumarh bitten, a strenptbeuiUK and alterative medicine de rived Irom the purest and most efii acioua vegetable soui ces, ith a pure spirituous bams, pronounced by eminent I byncians a mild and wholesome sUmulauu The Bitters, foremost of American XoniJs. is largely need in the tropu a, where the climate is very productive ef debility, malarial fevers, and disorders of It- bowels, liver and digestive or.ana. AGRICULTURE. Gri.wi.no Basket WiLLow.-The two w nil a suarp nine, suu s v.iciui.j as cultivate the same, but be careful of the new canes, as lliey are very tender, and H you oruise one n, win " ing and be worthless. Hie second year's harvest is quite valuable, paying back more than half the expense you have been to. The harvest consists in carefully cutting them as close down as you can, so that the hills w ill not Ret stumpy, as soon as the leaves are all down. Make the bundles about a foot through, binding with the pooreK canes, nuui. ju. . ,v in, w here vou must have a tank made of galvanized iron set In an arch about four feet wide and about twice as long as vour bundles. Fill this tank about a third full of water, bring it to a boil, then till up with your bundles, put on vour lid aud fasten it down tightly. Generally an hour is lor.g enough to ! boil--vou can tell by trying; put out a wai.d, and if you can easily break the .kin with the thumb nai.and then strip it off. it is all riirht. Take them out and till up again. Pile the boiled ones tightly under some cover where the w Ind cannot get at them, and as you begin to peel, throw the bark into your growing itile until it is a foot or two nwjer trithout vroducini anv tnilk. It may therefore be set down as an indis putable truth that every Jay the wheat stands after the stage of its ripeness, the gluten decreases iu quantity and the bran increases la thickness, while very tender feelings, and they are rich- er in spare time than in anything else BesiJ;s iey do not have to trim their n tlol"es mucn-tney re savages. jjaisix ToMAT0Es. Tmnatoes are much more abundant and of "jetter fla vor whet staked than w hen suflered Deing tue most promaoie pian, ami u becomes a question as to what is the 1 best way oi doing tne tiling, in our owu cae we use stout branches that have numerous snags on, and which help to support the immense weight of ; fruir w hich our plants alwavs bear Others use a long trellis, sloping and meeting at the top of a section which looks like an inverted V ( a) but the cool air so much shaded soil induces is not favorable to the best results in to mato growing, as the tomato rejoices in warm ground. Some take pains to make net upright trellises and train and prune the plants, maKiug a pretty garden picture : as well as producing capital results ror the kitchen ' object until gett w jl, break ,he horse of t,Je habit un,e - tne blinders are discarded and an open head-stall used. 1 reat the horse kind' "T - ever whip him, but try to coax I him "P..10 the object, that he may smell of it. One ol the worst slivers was broken by leading, riding and driving in a meadow where stones, stumps, boxes and buffalo skins were placed iu ditlerent positions every day, the horse ke'nZ led up to them and allowed to eat a few oats off the object. Let any one w,:.. .... n K. i. i i , examine a w ell-behaved horse s eye. lna thcn , .jNrj. eye, and note the difference. Ba kind and gentle to a shyer, A Lamp of Soft Coal. 'o-years no one had supsed that a lumP of rt al duS from "'' or beU in the earth Isc-Sd any other P"rPOe than that of fuel. It was next folmd lhat IC would aflorJ EM that was combustible. Chemical analyses Proved it to be made of hydrogen. In process of time, mechanical and chemi- caI ingenuity devised a mode of manu an excellent oil for lubricating purpos es. Asphaltum which is a black, solid substance, used in making varnishes, covering roofs and covering over vaults! Paraffine a white crystaline substance resembling white wax, which can be made into beautiful candles similar to wax ; it melts at a temperature of 1 10 deg. and affords an excellent light. All these substances are now made from soft coal. Fo f-cRorrt.4 is n its Forms, whethei Clceratiuiis of the Fle-h or Bones. Kniaro? tneuls ot the John Glands. Miellmirs Krun. tions.Tuniora.4c, 6r. Jay..es Alterative has oeen round preeminently nuoressiui. By its action on the blood, it destroys tne virus or Msonous principle from whl. h these diseases VUia.e, and drives it from the systenu iilm'ii in i i'ii'i 1 ii I DOMESTIC. VDis-isaa-r ttr fnt r Er.KF. Take some cold roast beef that has been un derdone, and having cut off the tat aud skin, put It, with the bones broken up, into a stew pan with two large onions sliced, two good sized ioUtoe8 sliced, and a bunch of summer savory and a leaf of sweet basil, or any other sweet herbs you may Have nanuy. auu w this the gravy and about a pint of warm water; cover it closely and let It sim mer for about an hour; then skim and strain it, removing every particle of fafr in another sauce nan melt a piece of butter about the size of a walnut. and thicken with a spoonful or Hour; stir it a few minutes, and then add the strained gravy to it ; let it come to a boll, and then put to it a tablespoonful of catsup and the beef, cut in flic slices; let it simmer from nve to ten minutes, but ou no account let it boil, as this would render the meat tasteless and insipid. Pniu.iiii ruE. Take two eggs. three-quarters of a cup of sugar, six tablesjioonrulsoi iuk, one auu u cups of flour, three tablespoon fuls of melted butter, one teas Doonful of baking powder; season with nutmeg. First, beat the whites oi nieces i fmih thon ml, I the volks. next the sugar, then the milk and flour, in which is silted the baking powuer, ami lasi. the three tablespoouful of melted but ter. The batter shoum oe very son., it is much like sponge-cake. Bake hall an hour. Be AVise axd lUrrr. If yon will stop all your extravagaut aud wrong notions in doctoring yourself and fam ilies with expensive doctors or humbug cure-alls, that do harm alwavs. and nse only nature's simple remedies for all your ailments you will be wise, well and happy, and save great expense. The greatest remedy for this, the great, wise and good will fell yon, is Hop Bitters rely on it. See another col umn. . To o to Sleep. When ready lor bed, sit down iu an easy position, re laxing all the muscles of the body, and let the head drop forward on tne breast as low as it w ill fall w ithout forcing it. Sit quietly in this way for a few minutes, and a drowsy feeling will ensue, which, if not disturbed, will lead to a refreshing sleep. If the sleep less tit comes on iu the night, sit up in the position dsscribed. . Vi.c-r Ti .vr.Mivr.K. Stew nice fnuii fruit i'niiil will dr (whatever you may please, cherries and raspber ries belngtne nest;, strain ou tue juice ami Bu-opipn ii r.-isp? rdflce it over the lire until it boils; w bile boiling stir in cornstarch mixed witn a nine coiu u ater allow ill? two tableSDOOIlfulS of cornstarch for each pint of juice; con tinue stirring until nilliciently cooked, . . , . . i.i men pour icto iiioiuus n in cum water; set them away to cool. This, eaten with cream and sugar, makes a delightful dcsert. Kimakins. Four ounces of grated cheese, two ounces of butter, two ounces of bread (without ciust), halt a gill of milk, one-third of a teaspoonful ol salt and mustard, a pinch of cayenne pepiKT, two eggs. Crumb the bread and boil soft in the milk; add the but ter and the eggs ; beat thoroughly, then stir in the whites of the eggs, beaten to a stiff froth ; pour in a soup plate or in small squares of stiff white paper pinched at the corners, and bake fif teen minutes. A delightful dish for tea. Tiih:k has never been found a pefton who tried Iiobbins Electric Soap, (made by Cragin Co., Philadelphia,) that did not say at once, it was the best soap lhe ever used. Try it once, you'll al ways use IU Whitewash for Octuoi ses." While it is true that any lime wash cannot be made as durable as paint, yet lime adds materially to the durability of wood, and, If repeated once In three years, an swers a good purpose as a general pre ventive. Slack one peck of lime, add one pound of glue, one potmJ of starch, one-half pound ot borax, color with cheap paint to suit, an 1 reduce with water to the requisite thickness. Wash for the MovTn. Dissolve a spoonful of black currant jelly in half a. cup of hot water, and add to it two lumps of sugar. Keep it in the mouth iust as long as p ssl")le. You must not swallow it. It will give relief when the tongue Is dry or the mouth foul. No Goon Pkf.aciiivg. N'o man can do a good job of woik. preach a good sermon, try a law suit, w ell, doctor a patient, or write a good article when lie feels miserable aud dull, with slug gish brain and unsteady nerves, and none should make the attempt in such a condition when it can be so easily and cheaply removed by a little Hop B i tters. See other col u m n. Starch for Fixe Muslins. A solu tion of gum arabic in water makes a nice starch for lawns and thin muslin, giving them a new appearance. 1'ili'te the dissolved gum until you find by ex periment that you have it just right. It takes but a minute to ru'i a cloth in it, slightly dry and iron it, to test the strength of the gum water. Lawns renewed in this way, after washing, not only look as though just made up, but retain their good apiearance won derfully well. Lemon Svri'P. The lemon syrup bought at stores can be made at home much cheaper. ' Take a oiiiid of Ha vana sugar, boil it in water down to a quart, drop in the white of an egg to clarity it, strain it, add one-quarter of an ounce of tartaric or citric acid. If you do not find it sour enough after it has stood two or three days, add more acid. A few drops of oil of lemon improves it. Ari'LE Tatioca PcDDrxr,. Put one hall cupful of tapioca to boil; slice thin a large pudding dish of apples and sweeten very sweet (btown sugar pre ferred); then mix with the boiled tapioca and bake two or three hours in a moderate oven, stirring occasionally until rhe whole dish becomes clear looking. Eat cold with cream. Delicate Cake. One and a half cups of powdered sugar, one-half of butter, one-half of flour; one-half cup of corn starch sifted with the flour, one-half cup of milk, the whites of six eggs beaten to a froth, one small teaspoon ful of cream of tartar, and one-half teaspoonful of soda; fllavor with al mond or vanilla; bake In a moderate oven. "Practical Science." Under the above heading, the St. Croix Courier, of St. Stephen, N. B., in referring to the analysis of Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery and Sage's Catarrh Kemedy, recently made by Prof. Chandler, of New York, auil others, says: "Nothing was discovered which we think objectionable, and the published analysis should increase, rather than retard, their sale. To us. it seems a little unjust to call a man a quack, simply because he seeks to reap as much pecuniary reward as other classes of inventors." The English Press is conservative, yet after a care ful examination of all the evidence, it not only endorses but recommends the Family Medicines manufactured by Dr. Pierce. 'o remedies ever offered the afflicted give such perfect satisfac tion as Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery and Dr. Sage's Catarrh Kemedy. i f sti- - 'rr t i HUMOKOUS. Owing to the Weather. A big newsboy doubled over a bench at the City Hall market, too sick to nfcve, and discouraged to care what became of him. Two or three of the mother mar ket women fixed him up doses of pei per, and when be was a little better one of them said : , "Bov. vou want to let harvest apples alone !" , .iT Harvest apples?" he sneered. Do you think eight or nine harvest apples could double up a oig ooy I aw vou eating cherries,' put in a second woman. "1 know vou did. but nam i i use.i t cherries? 'Humph! Why, I'm fifty timesasbigasaquartorcuerries. "And he bought two cucumbers on my stand an hour ago!" squeaked a little black-eyed woman. "Yes, I did," answered the boy, "but they didn't make only a inouthlul. T'other night I ate ten all at once and they didn't hurt be a bit." "And I saw him eating tomatoes and turnips !" solemnly remarked a ull man with green glasses on. "S posin you did!" wailed the boy, as the colic got a Iresh grip, "wasu't tomaters and turnips made to eat? Ion't you folks want to give a boy any show to git along? I tell ye it's this here storm what affects me, and If you women had any mercy on me you'd bring me some plums auil green corn and bologna and pears and a dish ol ice cream to take this pepper tiste out of my mouth !" SnEwas a hard looking sinner, and she knew better than to wring at the front door, mo she marched around to the back steps and told her tale ; widow, three small children, etc., as usual. Xot taking very much stock in her story, the lady of the house dismissed her with a hot doughnut just from the fat. Looking contemptuously at the piece of fried dough, she said, with all the Milesian grace of sarcasm she could command: "God bless your stingy sow!, d'ye think that three childers wud grow fat on the likes o' that?" and she let it drive straight at the head of her benefactor. Things aee -not WiiatThet Seem. Lazily swinging in the hammock, be neath tbe stiade oi tne great enn tree, reading the hours away, isn't she a pic ture of contentment; but it is safe to wager that slie Is mad, mad clean through, because her pa wouldn't pay her bills for a Saratoga trip, but sum mered in the country, where all the music heard is the "S Boss and "Haw Gees" of the overgrowu farmer's lad, and the cuisine consists of "biled din ners" and "picked up codfish," Iresli from the vin-.-s." Ix Austin, Texas, almost everything U plastered over with big patent medi cine advertisements. In the court-yard of a hotel there is a big cistern, and on it is an advertisement in letters a foot and a half long: "Smith's Diseased Liver Kemedy." A stranger from the North saw the hotel clerk draw a bucket ot water from the cistern on which the above sign was plastered, and then he said, as though to himsell, "I've heard it was sickly in Austin, but I never expected to see people draw fl tneir medicine by the bucketful." It doesn't do any good to veto a butcher's bill. Bloggsby tried it, and the butcher, in defiance of all law aud constitutional precedent, absolutely re fused to vote any more supplies until the bill passed. Bloggsby savs the coun try Is qu the verge of a new revolution, and in fact the new revolution has come, for he now walks clear around the block to avoid the butcher's shop. Medical men often puzzle them selves over the large sale lhat Dr. Bull's Baby Syrup enjoys. Its great popularity Is due only to the excellent qualities possessed by this household tnedk'ine. 25 cents. "Evert man should provide liberally for his family," says Mr. Smith. "Ever since my marriage 1 have kept my wife provided with a sewing-machine, sur mounted with a tine mirror." "What is the mirror for?" inquired a party present. Well," said tiieoracle, "I tell h.er that when she gets so lazy that sii3 cannot run the machine, she can sit right still and sec herself starve to death." Wash a baby up clean and dress him real pretty and he will resist all ad vances with a superlative crossness but let him eat mol isses gingerbread and fool around the coal-scuttle for hall an hour, and he will nestle his dear little dirty face close up to your clean shirt-bosom, and be just the cun ninget, lovingist little rascal in the world." ''How much shall you charge for a bologna sausage that shall reach from one of my ears to the other?" asked a soldier in Berlin of a dealer. "Fifty kreutzcrs," was the reply. "I take the offer," replied the soldier; ears was cut ofl in a battle miles from here. There promise. "one of mv a thousand was a com Swtnbvbxe sings, "1 hid my head in a nest of roses." Did you, Algernon, did you? That was wi-e of you to hide it among tlie roses. .Now, if vou had covered it up in a nest of cabbages. wnen you came to pick It out again yon could not have told, for the lite ol you, which head was touts. Stick to the roses, old boy, every time. . Nothing removes an Incipient Cold more miii-Llir mi'l i.I.iiwi it, I v th.tn i j i' reliable cathartic medicine, such as that oia ana inea remedy, i)r. null s Bui timore Pills, used by thousands of families throughout the land. Price only 25 cents. vt hex rsemamin rr.inklin was an editor, he was in the habit ot writing to tne young lames who sent in poetry, saying In honeyed language that, owing to the crowded state ol his columns. etc., but he would endeavor to circulate their productions in manuscript: then he tied the poems to the tail of his kite lor "bobs." An Oil Citizen terms summer "haughty spirit," because it goeth be- iore a lan AS A K Irlllhl I'bm In. PflM Mr. Wm. J. Andrew-, of Columbia, Tenn., writes tue rouowuig : Uesiora. Kecstaedteb Co.. New York : GErrs For upward of 20 Tears I bare been afflu-tjwl with - IM. V .... them they were bund aud very pa nfuL For kw-.ii, An VUH . I .: , 1 . i , w m jm mioj wiiuuueu as uuuu tuen commenced bleeding. Tbe hemorrhoids con tinued to increase until I was losing at every etool fully a gill of blood, and frequently while standing at my desk, the blood would ran down into my boots. 1 have had these hem orrhoids to last for several hoars. In tbe meantime, like a drowning man, I was grasp ing at everything, trying to find relief. On one occasion I had them cauterized, which, after intense suffering for over a month, effected temporary relief, for a short time only however. About tea months since, while at stooL my eye fell on an advertisement headed in lares letter. piLj," -Send 2 cent stamp and get circular." I did so and received a few -Plain Blunt Fa-He" in reply, after reading which. I concluded it was soch plain common sense that I would give "Auakesis" a trial. I did so and the reeult was. that aftt-rafew days use, the bleedin ceased and I have not Buffered a moment's pain since. It is said that "m fellow feeling makes one wondrous kind.'' 80, knowing quite a number of friends who were suffering like myself. I distributed quite a number of them, and from every one re ceived a favorable report. I would not be without Anakema" for a hundred times its cost. To ail who are afflicted with files I would say : "Oive Anakesia a trial and yon will no longer be a sufferer. " ... . ... W- J. Axdhews. "Anakesia'' is sold by all nrnt-claea drug gista. Price (LOO per boa. Sent free by mail on receipt of price by P. NenaUedter i Co. , sole manufacturers of "Anakesia, " Box 3916 New York. Samples will be sent free to all ufferers. ? a ..mt t, irkv -r -1 r -" - - "iP'riiia - -a-- 1 -.-. .1-,.r., Valuable Mixtcbk. - A vuluablc mi,rre to keen on hand at this season "so, e of 1 es' BU'r hfT ' bore The ashes should be very tine. : U is ihe best after passing them through ; Inordinary coal-ash , . ve lo o Hill fUl 01 aSlies luua ' i Kurofsujphur.ndmix. For current wwuw. p.--- - , .7L near trees, melon bugs thto is very effectuml. It is al ways best tins is ; j , . nlirnin!r. to use it in ui w .. . , i . ........ , 1, a i,r while tne uew is uj -. "Who is the sender of this p.ree.r- Carman : "Sorr. X o me knows now ni. - -should be Mrs. Thompson by her mo ther, and her Husband has put the name or Dooun on ucr. , I b'leve you may write down auher or thim." t. Ton in Ktavocs sot DwaEMicD tak HoorLASD Gkbaji Brrrua. w,rM wsrsii. Worms. - xr vr. Worm Svrao nevev fails to destroy Piu. beat and Stomach Worms. I. IS Jhtouly .uccf ul physician who . moves Tape Worm in two hour-., aiiye with ESTaid'no ntil reinoved. Common sense teachee II lape nuim. - aU otheTworms can be readily destroyed. Ad- ceet office and store, Jree. The ,n tell whether or not tne F""" ; Thousand, are dying dady. with worms, and do not know it. r ite, sowm. crampe choa ingaud suffocation, sallow complexion, .arcleo r 1 . . .. . 1 .,.1 1 m Ins round the exes, sweiuug 1 - st Hnach, restless at night, grinding of the i.Hh. picking at the o - uig at the sea', neauacuo, 1 ueut trows pale and thin, tickling and irrita tion in tne anna ail these symptoms, and more, come from worms. t " Wokm bluer never laiia to reaj a, ..tU Arai hnttliM for C3.UU. fFor Tape Worm write and consult tbe doctor.) For all otcers, duj ui -ut.-- Worm Hyruo, and if he has it not, send to pa. E. F Eniut. to! N. Nnth SU Philadelphia, Fa. Advice by mad, free ; send three-cent stamp. If Vow Want to be Stronr, Healthy a d TiKorona. take E. F. KL'XKEL'e Bitter Wine or Iron. Jo lansuaire can c -ne u adequate idea of the lmmed ate and a moat miraculous change produced by tak ng E. F. K V N K tL'd Bitter tt ins of Iron in the diseased, debiii ated, aud shattered nervous system. Whether broken down by excess, weak by nature, or impaired by sickness, the relaxed and unstrung or;aniZat: n is restored 10 per fect health and vigor. &ld only in !. to bot tles, or six bottles for t j OU Vsk your druu ,t for E. F. KL'NKtL'S Bitter Wine of Iron and take no other. If hehaiit not. send to v F KTTVKKI No. 259 N. Ninth I 'I I J 111 It: .' . . - Street. Philadelphia. Advice free jseud three- cent stamp. 1T.M1H.). rhntm.nt will M1M UnTS UID.W., i u.nu viuHHwu. cA!wl. kam m Rarher'a Itch on the face. of Grocer's Itch on the hands. It never fails. SO cents per box. sent by man ror on cents. J onus ton, nonowav a tji Arch St.. Phila.. Pa. Biukll's Trmi Onmrcrr win cure all al It or seal; diseases of the skin. Oakland Female Instilute, NORRISTOWN, PA. WTXTFBTKKM WILL COM r.Ct SEPTEM BkK, IS7. I'ltcinoiui aadt" J. UKIfcB BALsTOX. rrinrlpal. JL'ST PUBLISHED, THE VOICE OF WORSHIP TOK CHOIRS, FOK CONVENTIONS, TOK SINGING SCHOOLS. Vrtrt 51.00. CJQtl Jt r. TUt VOICK Or WORHTP.r L.O. T.vrwn. iItk ithr Ci.nruh Mmic by t n -.n, u tiittr, rT'tiiint!nt tVr urac -f'l o i iMntttui nmlc, vud fur thc Aim ikiil dJ juiUutut m lecuuabl rfaumcul. TW First iiMjfJ inelml-tri MNi;'N,5 S HOol IVl'KSE.fi- which r trnitid m iitjr fin b-uiuvu i 4 itb;torgiv lur ftrtctk ud fiijo menu T Stum 4 lltnjred Pom arvfl lMwlthtri best of Hymn 1 na-, S nteocea. 4c.t irg, ftt-w li tr h c. cttou. Ti Thirl Huit fasts eon U In a capital l of AMUK1 bpriiada eopir aa:lrd fr fur 9 W. TMERSON TOTAL METHOD. int nt ha a atf. rrminftO'-nt f u4 orir itu- pn-vir-ntf ih:h re tvoaibio and a-ciol- I xauatu. Pric C 1-5. Oliver Ditson & Co, Boston. J. E. DITTOS ro m Cweataait 1 Pwlla. HOP BITTERS. aaeaiciae, sat a Srtak.) eoa-raixs BOrS, AtrCHT, HAKOKJiKaV DlIDTIlnv Mil OvitnnJ w m VTsu Brmu 1'a IHV f ll i . tt. tail Dtasaass af the Iuvmhi Ham,, th . tr.. . aj-tii r" nssiTur(aaa.SsrTaiiaossi.ltiaal as sspscaauj Ftoiais Complaiaia, tlOOC IX COLO. "UlBeaIaferaaaaslBsrwraBatakA, .J m w nrunf imrmT er rajarMs roans Is atcm. i aasfearsracgistlerHae Bitten aa4 artha tasters fee alssm, Taka a staar. pC0TUCvahltaiTMBiMal(ta 1 Aak OiIMna Irhe Iaruf mowmr. Urer M ItMsaai hi I saiaeeiarieaUetaara. Aas immaia7 PJ-t absslate ane hMstte sere far! fDrnavsasss, asa of apt am. tobacce aad aaroota PURE TEAS, tffi AgTots Wantfd wrry- tu rvti to tmiif. al lars ct'HAnm- iarc stock id tbecniinirv: uiithtv and irrni lb bM. Country torkepri4 hould mil r writ Till. W KH- 1 KA liHANi. 31 Fa tua Strwt. N. V. F.O.B-iW LANDRETHS' SEEDS ARK Trial ftKRTi . IXsTDKITU SONS, n a , tTZTB kV PVIIOBTIila JTH Tr AR OF OU TKLkliOl NT SIMISART. XorriMovn, Fa., Begins N-ptembr th. Patronizii hf prvpl d-n ias lb-tr ns thoroahlr arrpard tr CulleKor buaiBtai For Circular.. dlr-M JOHS W. LOCH. Ph. P., 1rlncia.. 119 TO ADYERTISEKS. tr We will faralsk appllentlosi, cellos tea for Advertieina; the beat and larcrat clrcalated Xewapapersla lhe railed! Stales and Canada. Oar facilities are an rnaaaed. We make rl'artosKrt1 Inlereafaear awn, and lady ! plraae and make their Ad vertlslaa; prefllable ta Ibcn, aalkoa- ands wka hat tried as can tesltry. Call ar address, . SI. FETTISGILL Co., T PARK ROW. New Tort. 'Ot cnESTNCT Street, PSUadelphls. PIANOS TmJTSSKSTi Mihanh.k . M:e i..r itv.rv ftiM-t un. ruthu la Aawnra 12.-HU la ar Pi.n. mt oo tn.iJ'atMlfu. Irw. MixprLS. soaa iu Cu u . utb susm. -. V. Those answermc .AlTTtl-m-nt will K.k b"OT"P"" the AdTertiwr and the ln' inrrww the adrar, . uusKHiraaUBaauoc r the papmrt. eiTHS?IBIHl iwaa. uui infrt .ii "M mio au tppliearina to tb n u ilfc' w. . h n B B . m at phnidaa ahnra in .bai-. W -maaTj naawe and c-fol ,tt Mv.q6 jiuu Ia, V UVE I 1KB AT GOOD ADVERTISE ment oe, upym,: one in, O' six .lnes two times or tEn i,ni. 20 Cash, ---n. tl ement of one inch p',, Address S. EL PETTEKGILL St fl) 37 Park Row, New Toll, Or, 701 Chestnut M. Vbi Advertlalng- d"n In all nw, Cm ed Males and Canada-, t Ptl Cuu al IS up. l.ill-trr-l Bri-rll t V riatola of moti apsrovwl k-ttia2 aiak-a. All kind uf pnirs lmwT?, aTV das r-inin-d bf p.rlinii aiw ri- mTnr1 ri. ap-ihrb-st(aastsil f, th. -sft.lcatiua. "s-i, JOS. C. GRU3B & C0H 712 Market St., Philadi pt ESTABLISHED IMS. UOBGAN & IIEADLY, Importers of DW A1S I) Kinfictors of SiEiHa IB lillOI itrwe, rhUaaa,ltai Clostnted Price List tent ta tk tnk a apDHcadoa. SM. I ITri.II.L A -,M. a Ateula. ii r.r .Vw Iw.,,,,--; lb stnul Miet-t, Puila-leipiiti. rc-ne ll-ienients for pubiicaiiuu In any part world al Iwt-st taus. ADV ICE as 10 Hie most Jndie-rtH ijT'irja and tlie best mediums aud lue m-mor uf j7; fcSTIMATts lor one or m re ityr K,b an aiTril-enient, In any Lumber utiaa-I forwarded ou appdcailon. A K-aBE H.t EroK t6 THE COMPLETE HOME! R. lira Jl'lll Vr tin VBli:ti Th thra is ot. apn h'ch t i u:WVi. tobar tb frai's f --ar uf rrh. .tfvT , mD'i tritv-!. btb in th conntry xA 'b"ii wu 1 b lu'l MC-d color! p ..rT, til iMrta'trif 4evm ad tooirn Homes ar nir-i! uf iFK.lrf:c U-o:rs J l. Kl'l HV , X 3. f IVE1TU ft.. Pliiii4-iur. IN Ct.NTKAL ILLINOIS The Eest I-and in the West VI HAVE FOB 1-ALs IMPROVED FARMS at low pric-ji and Tar tr ruj ftir-i. 9cV atid t burche tklrvsviy built. Pn-anc- H- tT ca-b- I and nuurp 1 i i yUiitiTy Uft lor tiun. "--cd f-r Jlap-ud Lircu.Aia, micbitvt aarticuiax, to A. I ATEH3 1 CO. Jhwtonti:i,HL py A .. l- tt i y i ti-j rmuLui AW aVn-1 WOU'U'Tlnl l!ln! U' m"111-tIlBW When Trade is Dull Judicious Advertising Sharpens It. HOW TO ADVERTISE- " s.iTTrr.iiti WHEN TO ADVERTISE WHERE TO ADVERTISE- sr s prTTF;.iit TJtJ-Tq-Q-py'j TO ADTEUTIK TIIBOICI ear sp irTTFiiiL GO TO 37rARKKow,EWToKKitl Mf S- FTTTFMU SEXl FOH A SAMI'I.K F it1 i rv i : OOLONG TEA FROM tajm M i Sea & Co, So. 1613 CHESTSCr St, Ph:Iaie!t!u, h. DEALEKS IN Choice Family Grocerie Of Etery Ir rrlptloa. GENTS' -V StSD P"T L ri-K ran I Lltt an.l laitrn:t; n.a W 1 -lf-M-a-ar'-r.- i. sn w a wm I w- Kitii.-i bwutu NINTH Strt. Ih I tdt- p 1A, Pa. TOR ..T.K OR CXrH.-.XGE T(K riTT F P E K T T, thr n Y.rk, Hro- t J f Ph;Ud-i.hia. T W K N T Y E V E At'.: tv loc:iM aad pr- diKtn land, on ir hich -t-i caitivatin. with a Maniioa H-.a-? r-pft f-ry cnTfnlTc; porter lu.i(j-. tarni bi Q,t barn nd -tlI-. ic at.d ptr-n hunat-. If-. ,t--rl biin-irrtl a-nr tr. krrapr, Ac. lHnty,5ni..rM north from Markt-t s;rv-r. Ph:!:''' phi . atl)ininr t.n-y Station, on tn ?ai -vMfci ao.t N-towu Railroad tbt m a ry i--ir.b(' iDTWmwit for a capitalist, a it i- b ni t lirT ocreaatf in value. r'.r in'1 nr i-tlar- priT t S. M. t.t'MEY A 7J3 WaLM'T MrM. I'lulaiiTftjVa. SU, t mnt, fernMWw, il.,r, uaranle insaaaaa. br a REMARKABLE CURES! STRONGLY ENDORSED!.. UlT K AaTatraTBoa. MosTaoaaat BuOkaW saasrs wis ban aaad tals Ttaalmsat - SENTjm! SjrS aaraa. ..-- imaiH Sa-iaa 0 TT.KK r.LA'SE. Mi. r rfp... pH-trl-. tn 1 r.rTiiorue.tf-., B . r-'Tiitr A' Ol Ht lur.,1 e,c, K. J. Be K. ll0I' in i. -hi'-.l-loii a m ! 3 ait f..r illnlraml I alal..Ku of Kl pa. awl awMiliuo tbia papr. we Stapls Hardware rp-ditia 1HPNTC Th-y s II la s.r i.dii:. "Ut It I J at nr. rlv-n f r tn'l tarmol pIH i-robla 1MB H t. i a.r c-ol. ll" UlNTFn "a aarainakins 5to 3 P"7' " " 1 tU- Addras lor or,ptl.a orcuia Ll I .NU9TOX A CO.. troa Foaod r. PitlJif e x o tru s Tathaheat laada. In tb N fi-f-. Wth tb? -aaraata. and oa la bat Uum a.uu tn Uu 3,000,000 ACRES II atalj la tha Famous RED RIVER VALLEY OFTHE NORT"- On lone ttaas. lew prlM aa4 aT parmwia Famphlat with fall Infonnatloaaullwltraa. Aop"s D. A. McKINLAY. Land Com '. hu r. x. Jt n. k t. If DXlsctsd. mar rapldlj was oi vimmj. i .ww ' . , Toies.mk M.oUiia?J I I . It heretofore b-en i-nt-retl. aiU b-i.c-Ana -: haveaele.r A l-l. .-nis-t-ijt cru.x at,uuaic t tfa- wreat book mf Ike sear. F..r lull d.-:i iDtiuu mi.J If u . afir.-w tit ntlyCts.perll!!, Ta aaw r'ai'a7aail MM imm ba aiok aisaaa - vv-ja4, fjjfrmua; oaun, and jtaoiTy ttmmmpnom mdymuti - pOSSUIViPTIONHiT1- T- T,t'w. Vrottbs, Nri(wifi and Catarrhal Hftsidicbe1 D "" aATaat.aad evil ti jteawsnisi mT-fm Ti4 luPaT hr ao HMich, azl eaartaiB la cun uatl jira mirtan- IMHALENE GARBQLATED P:?3E TREE TAR Z:&"J oriuw. and E.l.ai ..pnr, and unm di to tbs dmswl c" iZ . . . - . . i . i ths air-DsnurM and U Infurs wbr u acts . du) irfa. .nil iu l.Itluinu nmr "" T V""'"" lo tb dnran-d aarfc. and iu b.ltbiin -:"r"- Th anh aM h -b-ch th diw cmba prmanUl 3 TKtATMtWT STr-" h - - .... I . ... rw.HM. Mr Bmxl for oirmlar sinnc full tnforruttoo. tans. e oa all obronio dimima Stata ayrnptooM pbuntf-m -.and free arlW by rrtars a. ail. ""rt tO U. W. cor. Tuith and Anh Du.. Fhila.ta.tJi'ai I I alb