About Fillns "awe. Tbe l!-absorbi8 question of the present day among mill men seems to lie, how can we ran thin fjiws ? Sow, the practice of rainy filers is to use a beveled face, or beveled backed tooth or both claiming that it cuts easier and rung stralghter than any other. Having learned this when young, they coucieuliously think that It is all so, aiftl aa it is very difficult for most to file a square tooth, they stick to tbe old hevel, and will not try the square. This is their practice, and this class of men number about one hall the filers. In some sections all filers use this absurd Aid-fashioned toith, which practice tins already said was wrong. We will look at this pblcnie tooth in a theore tical way. It is a well known fact that all baud-Hied saws, get "out of space," that is, alternate spaces between the teeth get wider than the others, conse quently, the teeth following these spaces have more work to do than their fellows, and as each draw outward, the leih having the most to do and they are all on the ;iiie side will pull tbe hardest and the saw bedrawu that way just in proportion to the amount of feed carried or the work done, and no amount of hammering, tinkering, or griniing will prevent this continual pull and bard drawiug, so long as the phleme tooth is used. Then we will look a little further and sea what theory baa to say against this beveled tooth. The filer must give his saw all tho set ne cessary to clear Itself upon, running on slow teed, and when forced to carry heavy fced.ihe teeth will be drawn out ward all that they will spring, increas , ing the width of the cut from one-sixteenth to one-eight of an inch, although tbe saw may go perfectly straight. This oomiitiou of things will make the lum ber tuicker at one end than the other, and as ihe saws are generally started In on blow ;e:J, which Is steadily in creased, until the other end is reached, there Is a taper on both tides of the board. Then again, when these teeth run iuio a hard kuot, they are sudden ly drawn In opposite directions, mak ing the saw cut wider and consequent ly very much harder. This sudden wrench has been the cause of breaking more saws than any other one thing. There are reasons enougti why a man wiio files a (dileme tooth cannot run thin saws, because they are more sen sitive tnan lhick ones, and show the defective fitting more readily, and no filer ever fitted thin if hammered right with a perfectly square tooth, toy and bottom, who could not run them and do good work. At least of the hundred of mi'.is 1 have visited in the last three years, I have failed to find one. If uiiilowncrs would require their filers to sw age the ter.h full and heavy, giving them one-fourth of an Inch side joint, with a comparatively steady motion, a 10 guage saw can be run just as easy as a 6 gauge saw. Xo man should ever use a taper saw, for if it be tapered on one side and straight on the other when Handing, it will be tapered alike when running, as the centrifugal force will 6tra!ghcen it up and rut twice the strain on one side that there is on the other, making it more liable to break. These theories can be proven by any mill man, with out cost, in his own mill, and enable fcim to fchow Li uj ail practical as well. Ciioominc a -Tofesaloa. Vt. Holland and others, who have been discussing the question of bow a youag man should choose a profession can profit by the experience of a young man who promised his dying father that be would adopt a profession, and that It should becnethat bis conscience toM him he was fitted to fill. Tbe old man died, end the sou began to con sider what profession he should select. At first be thought of the medical, but reflection convinced him that he never could go through the erJeal of fitting tor it. as he hain't the nerve to rob a graveyard. Then he thought of law. but as he became satisfied that he couldn't be friends on the street with the man who,in ths court-room, called him a snivelling blackguard,and whom he had hinted was an ex-train wrecker and moreover as he wasn't g jo 1 at poker, he gave up tbat idea. lie thought of the stage, hut tbe conclusion that he shouldn't like to be fired at several times a week by the man with whose wives he had flirted made him feel that he was unfit for that profession. The church suggested itself. lie might be a clergyman. Bat when be asked himself: "Do you like to play cro quet'" his conscience compelled him to admit that he detested the game. lie was, therefore, unfitted for the church. But at last a happy thought struck him. lie did not object to profanity, be was willing to yell at ths top of his Tolce, he enjoyrd a sou (He now and then, and he liked to wear diamonds aud draw a big salary. Tin way was open to him to k??p his promise to his father br becominga professional man, and at the sme time do nothing that his conscience told him lie was unfilled lor. lie pitches a curved hall." Id Ifelsrd. The main d fiU-ulty in Icelandic traveling is to find ground firm enough to bear a horse and his rider, and tbe safest track is ofien along the sea-beach where that is available, or even in the bed of a stream. Water is everywhere, and the traveler constantly crosses ford, eit'ier iu the river whose course he is following, or through torrents rushing down from the field on either side. The pass over which we had to ride Is about 1,5m feet high, and in the month of June the "divide" was still blocked with snow. Tills snow was hard enough to bear a man or a pony, but in many places it would give way beneath them, when both on the same set of feet, and iu consequence the Captiin and I did a good deal of walk ing. Tbe old guido, however, stuck to his steed.except when obliged u cross a torrent ou a precarious bridge of snow, and they managed to flounder triumphantly through all difficulties. An Icelander in riding uses neither whip nor spur, but works Ids arms and legs perpetually like the Sails of a windmill, and can thus keep his pony uiovi.. at a pace which leaves the foreigner lar in the rear. On the quiet waters of tbe fjord the cider ducks were taking their newly hatched broods for a first swim, and as we scrambled up the fjeld, cock ptarmigan fluttered and croaked over our heads, according to his habit when the hen is sitting upon eggs. The region of forests, represented by dwarf birches and wbortleberri. is soon left behind, and near the sumi-it of the pass there is hardly any vegetation of a higher order than Ieolkiidio mess, while the bare rocks are profusely marked with strlations from glaciers that have long sin o disappeared. AG R ICULTCRE. The Farm Horsb. There is no ani mal on the farm that is so likely to be neglected as the horse. The horse of tbe city truckman, or the expressman, the driving horse and saddle horse, are well cared for, but the farm horse is too often irregularly fed, and, so far as cleaning is concerned, regularly and systematically neglected. It is difficult to find a hired man brought up on the farm -who thinks there is any necessity tor taking special care of a horse. Home horses upon the farm are rarely if ever properly curried or rubbed, and yet the condition and use fulness of the farm horse depend, as much upon the manner in which it Is cared for as any other horse. M'beu brought perspiring to the stable be ought not to be allowed to stand over night with the dnst drying upon him. A zood cleaning off is half a rest, and yet how olten we see the farm horse brought out in the morning covered with the dirt of the day before and with the accumulated filth of the night still clicging to him. Under soch con ditions a horse is not mucn more tnan half a horse. Often, too, he is irregu larly fed end indiscreetly watered. A horse at work should have water five or six times a day. If he does not drink more than two or three quarts at a time all the better. A horse that is kept from water till he drinks two or three pailfuls, will be very likely to have his digestive organs and bowels seriously deranged, t o keep a horse in good working condition he should be led regular ly, whether at .work or idle in the stable, lie will last many vears longer than if, when at work, he In heavily led and when idle neglect ed. A horse on the larin should al ways be cleaned at least once a day, and when hard at work both nlghi and morning. If not at work good grcoming one a day would be sum cient, and when idle good. hay might be substituted for grain. Care ov Sheet-. A sheep to be well and beany must not be half starved at any period of its growth. It mast be personally comfortable to grow wool every day of its life. Three hundred and sixty-hve days niak) a year. If lroin any cause a sheep Is iiGcomfort able a single dav, he will grow wool only SCI days in a year. If for forr mouths at a time from ill health or lack of food or water it produces wool only eight months in a year, there is a iocs ot oue-tlurJ ol the promt be would have given his owner. A Eheep out of condition is subjected to a'.ltueuts that in good condition would not haveafiec ted him. ohetp fat in the fall will go turougii tbe winter with safev. aud success. If iu thin, weak condition, the relaxing ol the system iu spring aud the extra tiemxuds on the system of the ewe, bring a series of diseases qu.te dlsgustiug to the flockmaster animai rcwarus its owner so, lor liberal lecuiug aud painstaking care, as does the sheep. Tbe idea has so of ten been expres.d that a sheep can do witnoul loud and water, that many have concluded it was trne. It niav live on less food (and do well) than any other animal in proportion to its live weigbt, but tbat tbe sheep lives bv eatiiig is sure, and vthe more iu eats aud tbe better treatment it receives the Letter ate the results that follow, iu every particular. A sueep's teeth the nrst year are eight in number, appear ing all ot a size ; second year, the two nituuieoues are sbed out and rt placed by teetu much larger than the others: tbir J year, two very small ones appear one ou eacn side ot tbe eight ; at tbe end ol the fourth year tbere are six large teeth ; tilth year, all the front teem are targe; sixtu year, all begin to snow wear not till tUen. Coitstet Butter. The art of mak ing good butter is ot s common as it ought to be, even though tbe article is one of the most ancient of food pro ducts, aud was mentioned by Herodo tus 2,310 years ago, and frequently re- lerred to by other early writers. Bad butter Is lar more frequently met with than good, aud of all the old fables w blch find acceptance in regard to the superior delights ot'a rural life, none have less foundation in fact than that which asserts that the butter which adores the average farmer's table is ot better qualities tuan is obtainable in cities. As good butter as is lound in hotels aud upon first-class lamlly tables in a city like Boston can seldom be found in country farmhouses. Ihe larmers' wives aud daughters do not know how to make the best butter,and have not tbe requisite appliances il they possessed uie knowledge. The butter which is common in the farm house of even rural w England, and which Is often relerred to by the housewife with pride, is ranked low in the list of grades of butter in the Boston market, and it would be well il the fact were thoroughly compre hended. It may be loriunate for the palates of a great mauy people in tbe country thai, they have no iueaot wual good butter is, and are actually inca pable ol telling good from bad, but It is not so loriunate lur tbeir pocket-books. It is nearly as ea--y lo make good but ter as lo luake poor, aud it has been suggested tbat it would be an import am aud benevolent work if competent persons would go through the couutry tiplaiuiug what good butter is and how to make it. Fowls. With hall the farmers their fowls cost them more than they get from them. They feed them just enough to keep them alive and to en able ineiu lo lay fcn egg now and then. When a dry time comes, very likely they do not have any water, and hens without water do not do well. They should have plenty of clean water al ways accessible. It is the extra leed au auimal gets over and above what is required to sustain lile, which makes the tirofic Wuh poal try it will make eggs in ihe season, and with all ani mals flesh, wbicli is gain and the gain is profit. Hints. If hens have a. warm bouse and enough u wt, and or the right kind, ihev- miliar in minup n as summer, boar milk will bring better returns iu eggs than in any other way. Beets of ail kinds are injured somewhat by hard freezing. Watchmaking la, America. The watch trade is another marvel of rapid development, dating back for a few years enly since Its commencement. It was in 1S50 when two Boston arti sans, Allan Denison and Edward How ard byname, first opened a small work shop ror watchmaking at Koxbury; but finding the place not sufficiently quiet for their wishes, they changed their locality to Walthain, a little town about eleven miles from Boston, and here they established themselves on the bank of tbe Charles river. Although they demonstrated the feasibility of making watches by machinery, they failed in a pecuniary sense, not having started with sufficient capital, and the concern then passed into the hands of Mr. Bobbins, who founded. In 1S5S, the now celebrated American Watch Com pany, considerably more than a mil lion of watches have been issued from this factory from then to now, and al though they were originally intended and expected to supply the home trade only, their cheapness and excellence havo caased a demand for them in for eign countries, England not excepted. Over 80 operatives are employed by this company, wcrking 11 hoars per day, except Saturdays, when the limit is 9 hours. DOMESTIC. All Tax Rage. We see nowadays city and country house which look rather like shops tor tbe exhibition of bric-a-brac and rich hangings than homes in which people expect to get comfort. Tbe rooms upon which some famous upholsterer has lavished the resources of his stock may remind one of the modern scenic seats on the stage of a theater, and there seems to be lit tle provision tor the substantial enjoy ment of their occupants. ' Everything in them is harmonious enough, per haps, except the people. Id color and composition they suggest a picture, but the inmates ot tbe house are out of place as the living figures in it. They don't belong amougsuch surroundings, and they can't be comfortable amid ail this tasteful and splendid display. But unquestionably people's houses are looking better than they formerly did, and more particularly those of people of moderate means. For the happiest thing about the modern decoration is tbat its effects are produced rather by colors than materials, and very Inex pensive fabrics will serve the purpose. Cotton stuffs, as, for instance, cotton flannel, will take the most delicate dyes, and yield tints ot remarkable beauty. Aud our own wall papers, htcb are now in unexampled demand, may be bought for a small price, and yet be of patterns aud colors which will satisfy a critical artistic taste. Fainted Ladies. Remove the eyes and stalks from some nice round-looking apples tbat will cook well.aud peel them very evenly to preserve tbeir shape. Fiace them in a shallow stew pan large enough to hold them in one layer. Dissolve loaf sugar in sufficient water to completely cover the apples, allowing lour cunces of sugar to each pii t of water; add a lew cloves and a little lemon peel and stick cinnamon. Cover the stewpan, and simmer the apples very gently, or they wUl break before being cooked thoroughly. When done, and they are cool enough, lift them carefully to a glass disb, and with a small brush tint them delicately on one side with a little liquid cochi neal or melted red currant jelly ; strain the syrup, return it to thestewpau,aud bjil it rap'.dly until reduced to one third of a pint. When cold stir in it a wineglass of sherry and the juice of half a lemon, and pour it rouud but not over the apples. The wine may be omitted. A Hash that will satisft. Cut some beef In nice little slices from the bone, removing all the hard parts and skin; put the gravy in asaucepan with a pint of water, three tablespoonfuls of catsup, a dessert-spoonful of minced savory herbs, an ouion chopped flue, half a teaspoouful ri salt aud a third of cayenne. Let these stew togelhei tor lit teen minutes. Take out acupful ot the liquid and rub into it a table spoonful of flour; stir it well Into the stewpan again aud stew for ten min utes longer. Strain it through a sieve, return it to tbe pan, place tbe slice of beef in it and keep the sauce pan on the site of tbe range until the wat is beatec through not to boll.or it win become hard. A few minutes before serving add half a wineglass of tarragon vinegar. Arrange some toast ed sippets rouud a very hot dish and serve tbe hash Immediately after It is cooked. Apple Tapioca Fcbdlxo. One large cuplul of tapioca, one eupfnl of sugar, a teaspoonfnl of salt, one teaspoontul of essence of lemon, or a little net- meg, three pints of cold water, three piutsor pared and quartered apples. Wash the tapioca, aud soak it over night in tbe water (three hours will do, if there is uo more time). Cook the tapioca In a saucepan, with the water, until It looks clear. Stir oten to prevent taming. It will take Ironi twenty minutes to half an hour. At the end of this time add the sugir, salt aud lemon flavoring, and then thi ap ples. I urn into a buttered dlsb, and bake an hour and a quarter. Let it stand in a cool room half an hour be fore serving. Serve with sugar and mills. A Chartreuse or Apple asp Bice. Boll six ounces ef rice with a stick of cinnamon, in milk, until it is thlok, stirring in a spooniul of rose or or ange-flower water, fare ten or twelve apples Golden Pippins are the best scoop out the core, and flu up the on flee with raspberry jam. Border a deep dish with paste, put In tbe apple, leav ing a space between,and All it up with tbe rice. Brush the whole over with the yolk of an egg.and sift sugar thick ly over it ; form a pattern on the top with sweetmeats aud bake it for an hoar in a quick oven. Oystf-k Toast. This is a nice little dish for luncheon or for a late supper. Scald a quart of oyesters in their own liquor; lake them out and pound them in a mortar, when they form a paste; add a little rich cream and some pep per. Uet ready some tbin, neat pieces of toast, moistened slightly with boll ing water and spread with fresh but ter. Spread the oyster paste thickly upon tbe toast, put a tiinly-cut rouud of lemon upon each piece, and arrange fern on a platter garnished with pars ley. Serve very not How to Cook Okba. After cuttlnz on tbe bard stalk ends of the young pods old stringy pods are worthless put them into boiling water, and boil tor about half an hour, until, iu fact. the seeds are red; strain off the water: add a little butter, black pepper and salt, and a littteieinon juice. Fish Fbittkbs. Take the remains ot any fish which has been served the preceding day, remove all of the bones and mince flue; add eqnal quantities ot bread crumbs and mashed potatoes; stir In two beaten eggs; season with pepper and salt; add enough cream to make the mas9 ol the proper cousiittency to mould Into little balls, and fry them in boiling lard. A oood paint for wire-work Is made by boiling linseed oil with as much litbarge as will make it of the consist ency to be laid on with a brush; add lampblack at tbe rate of one part to every ten, by weight, of the litharge ; boll three hours overa ge ltle fire. Tbe first coat should be thicker than the following coats. For toothache, take equal parts of camphor, sulphuric ether, ammonia, laudanum, tincture of csvenne, and one eighth part of oil of clove 11 Ix well together. saturate with the liquid a small piece of cotton, and ap ply to tbe cavity ot tne decayed tooth. and tne pain win cease immediately. How to Behove a Glass 8topr from a PxarcMKar Bottle. Place the necit of the bottle over the chimner of a lighted coal oil lamp, gently turning it round ; in a few seconds the neck of the bottle wl 1 expand, and the stopper can men ne removed easily. Cum for Colds. To make candied lemon or peppermint tor colds. boll on and one half pounds of sngar in a half pint ot wmter till it Deems to candv round the sides ; put la eight Irops ef essence: poor it upon buttered paper and cut it with a knife. COCOAKCT Pie. One crated ant, one quart of milk Ave eggs beaten separately .one tablespoon n fine bread crrumos; sugar ana DT3Tlng to taste. The above makes two pies. No top crust. - . - ' To Remove Rcst from 1soj. The easiest method to remove rust from Iron is robbing it with a rag dipped In oil of tartar. Ths rust will disappear immediately. Waterproofing Cloth. Cloth coated with linseed oil to which a lit tle wax and litharge have been added, will be waterproof. . ETJMOBOTJSl. Miss Blanche McRRTlavery pro per j oung lady. List week she caught her little brother smoking. "Yon terrible thing," sne hissed, "I am going to tell father on you." "This is only corn silk," murmured tbe boy, penitently. "I deu't care what it Is. I am going to tell on yon, and see that you don't eet into that beastly, horrid, degrading habit. I wouldn't have anythiug to do with smokers." It is evening. Miss Murray Is sitting on the front stoop with Algernon, it is moonlight, and the redolent spirits of t ie honeysuckles and syrlngas are waiting bliss to their already intoxicated souls. "Would little birdie object to my smoking a cigarette f" "Not at all," replied Miss Murray, "f like cigarettes. They are so frag rant and roinitio. I think they are j.ist too delicious for anything." "Then I'll liirht one." He lights a cigarette, and they talk about the weather for two hours and a half. The man who carries an extra hand kerchief should be very careful how be loans 1c to a lady to put over her bat In a s hower. Tbe other day a r ttber you ng, good b umored, married gentleman saw a youag lady getting caught iu a storm of rain, aud she asked him in that confiding manner which girls have toward genuanieu who are half old enough to be their fathers, whether be coulj not lend her bis extra handkerchief to tie over her twenty dollar bonnet. He whipped out tho handkerchief in an Instant.and held the umbrella over her dear little head while she tied the handkerchief over her bonnet aud under ths chin Just about that time another lady came along aud said: Husband, let me'bave your extra handkerchief to tio over my hat or it will be ruined, and it will cost you twice as much aa the other woman's bat will." It Is not safe to try to talk the lang uage of Cambridge in another suburb. A Harvard student weut to a house in Chelsea, and when the door was open he said : "Daughter of tbe fairest race of women on this contiment.do I judge aright, after the conglomerate circum locutions of this morning, thu before me stands the maiden who will bid me rest my wearv limbs in her father's palatial halls'?" She replied wltn a disdainful glance,"Ou 1 1 know ytz.yes be one of them air students from Cam bi idgeport ;" and turning to her nice little pet dog, she said, '-Seize him, R iger," 1 started for tho street, writes the studeut to tnmaon. "tie aeiSad. As old New Jersey farmer read an item in a piper, not long since, to the t fleet that Secretary Sherman was breaking ground tor a handsome house in Wa.liington.. "There, Sarah," he said to his wile, "that's the man we want for Fresident. Ycu see he ain't loo proud to dig out his own cellar, and 1 vum If he gots 'lected next year 1 11 go on to aslungton an help him with his garden sass, or my name ain't iel I'ost." . Calling on a girl now a. days is ra.lier a perilous amusement. It Isn't every man who knows what to say wben cont rented with a hideously ugly curtain and a-ked : "Woy, don't you remember? 1 was working on that at Swampscott that afternoon when you came down to tea, and you suggested thai alteration in ihe design yourself." Daxbcbt's grateful policeman was at breakfan, wrestling with a piece of remarkably touh veal. Bis wife said to htm, "You always say there's some thing to be thankful for In everything. 1 guess you'd bs puzzled to find any thing to be thankful for in that veal." at all," he cheerfully responded stopping to breathe : "I wasjust think ing how grtteiui we should be that we met it when it was young.' aIekchaxt to his clerk, who has just recovered from a spree "Why did you get drunk, yesterday?" 'Because you told me to." "Sir. 1 told you tof What do you meant" "You said never put off till to-morrow, what 1 could do to-day, and and I didn't," The Declaration ef Independence was written by on of the greatest men tbe world ever produced ; it will be re garded with love and reverence as long as tine American heart continues 10 beat ; but offer a youthful American his choice between reading it and per using an aocount of "War Whoop Dave; The Howling Fear of the West," and nine times out of ten he'll chooee the latter. "You can deceive your guileless little wife, young man, but her father's wife xear." Did she surprise you crawl ing In the back window at "two a. m. and declare that it was whisky and not coal oil that yoir breath was flavored with T Better bieak up housekeeeplng and try boarding. "What are your politics?" the chap lain ol the Iowa 1'enitentiary asked an intelligent looking convict. "I have n-tceuieout for anybody yet," re plied the convict, gazing placidly tn rough the bars. A boy has to be coaxed and threat ened for an hour to get him to take a dose of medicine, but. though tobieoo tastes twice as bad the first time you try it, he doesn't hang back a bit about taking his first chew. "Is there an opening hei e lor an inte! ectual writer?" asked a seedy, red nosed individual to an editor. "Yes, my friend," replied the man of quills; "a considerate carpenter, foreseeing your visit, left an openiug for you; turn the knob to the right I" A COUPLE of reporters fnent fTm night in a cell with a man who wss doomed to br hanged in Connecticut recently, and in ihe morning tho pris oner was perfectly willing to die. The time is comiug around again when a man eannot open his window to shout at a passing friend without removing or upsetting a half dosan flower pots. A liberty pole in this country some times signifies liberty and sometimes lager beer, and the average batrlot doesn't seem to care which it is. The bay windows in Albany are built large enough for a cow to turn around in.and all possible emergencies are provided for. They had to put off the dedication of a new cburcb at Lead vine for a week, because the fireworks ordend for the occasion failed to arrive. The conductor who divl.Ipd hi nl. lections with the compan v claimed that It was a fare arrangement. Why should a Aulnnel hav a v.rv large fist? Because he Is always sup posed vi nave nis regiment well in hand. Little Johnnv Vimmi mm l give Carlo this lump of apgar?" "Jfo. mvehild.lt annila tha tAatH? t it yourself." "IT is mora bleaanrl tn rlv than to receive," cs the schoo -koy remarked when the teieher was flogging him. It's easier to tie a knot In a hull'. born than te make your wife believe tbat every other night is a lodge night. SwExrnia conclusion Ths train of a Werta dress. Ladies will find relief from their headache, (XHtlveness, Swimming in the Head, Colic, Sour Stomach, Rest lessness and the many ills the sex is at times almost universally subject to. Indigestion, Constant or Periodical Sick Headache, Weakness in. the Back or Kidneys, Tain in the Shoulders and different parts of the Body, a feeling of Lassitude and Despondency are all removed by taking Simmons' Liver Regulator. It should be used by all persons, old and yonng. It is not unpleasant, is purely vegetable, is not injurious to the most delicate canstitio "Being seriously afflicted with general debtll'.y and total loss of appetite for past three or four years, I tried Sim mons' Liver Regulator, which has com pletely restored my appetite, and my health In general Is greatly Improve!. "Mrs. Edhcxd Fitton, No. 61 Sellers street, Franklord, Pa.' fapar la Cklaa. Psperls very extensively manufac tured in the numerous little villages situated In tbe valleys among the nills, about eight miles to the southeast of ths city of KiDghien, China. It Is made from the bark called Tan-shu-p'i,tbe paper-mulberry tree bark, and wheat straw, which after having been well washed and boiled with a certain pro portion of lime, is again washed, and then exposed to dry for a whole year on the sides of the hills, In spots where thegrassand brushwood have been previously cleared away for this pur pose. Alter the year's exposure it Is washed once more, and then pounded on a stone with a large wooden ham mer; it is supposed to require 1,400 blows from this hammer to reduce It to the necessary consistency; after which it Is removed to Tnother build ing, and left to seak until It becomes quite a pulp in a large earthen-ware vessel, containing a liquid glue called the Yangkowt'eng, a species of hooked Yne. This pulp Is then put Into a cist ern ot water, and well stirred up with a stout stick. A finely-made bamboo frame, or sort ot long oblong sieve, Is taken by two men, one at either end, and dipped twice into this liquid, which Is made to run equally over the whole surface, somewhat after tbe manner iu which the photographer allows tbe de veloping solution to run over his plate. By this means a thin and tolerably even laver is left, which soon partially dries and forms the sheet of papers and whioa is removed by simply reversing the frame. As toon as a sufficient number of sheets has been made, they are taken to the drying room. This room contains a large brick oven.coat ed on tbe outside with lime, and built up to within a few feet of the roof Upon the top of this oven the paper Is placed, in parcels of about a foot in thickness, until perfectly dry: after wbicb sheet by sheet is damped once more, and while still moist is by means of a soft brush mada to adhere to the sides of the oven for a short time to on- derg) its final process of drying. It is then taken away to tbe packiug room and made up Into bales, weighing from 80 to 120 catties each, the catty being equivalent to one and one-third pound avoirdupois. The largest sized paper is about one "chang" (ll? feet) long, and U worth one dollar a sheet. This particular size of paper is made en lirely from the "Tan-shu-p'i," but the smaller sizes -c composed of a mlxttirs of the above-mentioned bark, or tbe bark of the paper-mulberry tree and wheat straw. This paper is known by the name "Suanchih," and is consider eJ a gool quality paper in the Chinese markets. Faca ol IMCtora. The fee of doctors is an Item that very many persons are interested In just at present. We believe the sched ule Tor visits Is JJ.U), which would tax a man con fi ned to bis bed for a year, and in need ol a daily visit, over $1,000 a year for medical attendance alone! And one single bottle of Hop Bitters taken in time would save tbe $1,000 and all the year's sickness. Pott. Fonilt In the Sierras. There recently came Into the possession ef Stephen Barton a specimen of shale in which was l hi imprtss of two tea-shells. Search was made and a large body of fossils was found more, perhaps, than all the previous discoveries of the kiud in tbe sierra .Nevada fountains, ihe elevation at which these lossils weie found is about ten thousand teet above the sea. and clearly i.peaks of the so journ ot these formations beneath the ocean. Ihe structure ol the stratum In which they appear mw stands ver tical, aud seems to have occupied that positiou for a long time anterior to the glacial epoch. The character of the lossiU seems to indicate tbat they be long to the lurian age, and if to they carry th date of California formations further back tuaa Las generally been supposed. At a point south of where these lossils are louud the lorination dips to the east and approaches a hori zontal position as it Joins the granite. Ibus a mile of 6tratinod rock seems to repose beneath the first apiearance of the siluriau, and will doubtless carry us back to the most an. lent of geologi cal epochs. "While kneeling at tbe altar, With Father Oood betweeu. We'll call the world to witness A match Iro-ji Caeboli.se." A Ooaa Itaby. Xothlng Is so conducive to a man's remaining a bachelor as stonpli.g for one night at the house of a married friend and being kept awake for five or six hours by the crying of across baby. All cross and crying babies need only Hop Bitters to make them well and smiling. Young man, remember this. Tr at tiler. The site attained by icebergs is some thing prodigious. From measurements made upon one. Dr. iayes estimated It to contain about 27,000,000,000 feet, while Its weight mnst have been not less than 1,000,000.000 tons. It was grounded in wate- neailyhalfa mile in ueptn. w hat, then, must have been the thickness and size of the glacier from which this mass had become de tached ? Mary had a little lamb. Its fleece was white as snow, she washed It oft with Dobbins' Soap, and that's what made it so. (Made by Cragin A Co.. Phila delphia, Pa.) Try it ence. A very curious proof of the identity of animal and vegetable protoplasm has been supplied by Claude Bernard, who has shown that both are alike sen sitive to the influence of anaesthetics. Exposed to ether, a sensitive plant no longer closed its leaflets when touched. Assimilation and growth, as well as germination, are arrested by chloro form, hchutsenberger has proved that the fresh cells of the yeast plant breathe like an aquatic animal. The gentlemen who essayed to ser enade Miss. L., a few evenings since, should have had 'clear' throats, and their efforts wonld have been better appreciated. Dr. Bull's Cough Syrup is the best remedy extant for a 'thick Or COnraated condition nf tha Thrnat and Bronchial Tabes, giving Instant HUM. Effects 0 Brfalhinq Oxygen.--A yonng Frenchman, M. Aune, has lately made experiments on himself relative to this question, which he las chosen as the subject of a medical thesis. The expe riments lasted fonr weeks during which time he submitted himself to a uniform regime as regards quantity and quality ol Saod, muscular exercise, and intel lectual work. He took oxygen only during the second and third week, in baling between forty aud eight litres of it dally, but during the whole time he made a careful record of temper ature, pulse, respiration, etc. The conclusions arrived at are briefly as follows: Inhalation of oxygen made under phlsological conditions does not cause any inconvenience. One may absorb 100 litres, and even more, dally. Oxygen Increases the sppetite. and develops the functions or assimilation ; and on this account it tends to increase the weight of tbe body. It produces a slight intoxication, and tingling sensa tions in the extremities. It raises the temperature very slightly. Under irs Influence the respiratory movements and the pulsations becomes more nume rous. Oxygen has an Incontestable action on certain elements of tbe blood ; it increases the number of red corpus cles and of hematoblasts, and the rich uessorthe former in hemoglobin. It has no Influence on the white corpus cles. M. Anne did notexperience that sensation of heat In the chest of which some authors have spoken in connec tion with this subject. Commenting on M. Aune's experiments, M. Uoyem remarks tbat the effects are only tem porary, and tbat while inhalation of oxygen may be of service through favoring assimilation, it ould not be made a definitive treatment, and it would be necessary always to admin ister iron in addition. The Inhalation gives very good results in the case ol dyspeptic phenomena and obstinate vomiting. A remarkable solar protuberance was lately observed by M. Thollon at the Paris Observatory. The protuberance rose vertically as a thin luminous jet, moving at the rate ot about twenty miles per second, to a height equal to one-four:h of tbe sun's diameter, or about 315,000 miles. After rising, it gradually decreased In brightness, at the same time enlarging to prodi gious dimensions. Tlaaaly Dlaevry. "Qreat men ai not always wUe, neitbei do tha aged understand Ju lament. " Job. This afflicted palriarcn might have known of ths osaleas and pauiful treatment ot Emeroida" in hia own tuna, bat his words woaid hava been arao mora applicable had hia prophetic eye looked down tbe long viata of medical his tory aud witnessed the cruel, absurd and inef fectual treatment of Pilea by tbe many schools of "great and ai;ed proleaaom." natd at laat disgoated doctor pionoaneedpUca 'the oppro brium of the art. Dr. 8.iabee has put to euame, by tbe aimp'icity and excellence of hia great pile remedy, net only the whole family of quack nostrum, whose name ia leu-ion. but tbe pretended w.adom of the medical profea aien. This Anaketi (or pUa remedy), ia aun- le and taay of application, gives inatant re let, and by combining the meiits of a poultice to soothe, an instrament to bold np and eom presa tbe tumors, and a skilfully devised medi cine, applied directly to the diseased parts ul timately cures tbe worst cure of pdes and keeps them cored. Half a million of persona pronounce Analams, tbe most beneficent dia corery of the axe, and we btliee tbem. Jm ktrit. Dr. & Silsbee'e External Pile Itemedy is old by all firat-clasa druggists. Price t'. 00. Samples mailed free to all aufferera by P. Nenataedter A Co., Uvl 3916, New York. raaie am4 EaTcwt. Disease never cornea to os without a canse Ask an experienced physician M s rrasoa and be will leil ion it ia something tbat inierferee with the working of tha great organs. Kidney-Wort enables them to overcome all ob s'rnetiona and prteerre ptrfect health. UcmsettoWL. mmtm 0 Xmajsl UTts me requirements or tbe rational medical philosophy which at present prevails. It H a I-rrieciiy pure Trgeuuie remeay. tmnraciag ike time Important properties of a preientlve, a tonic, and aa aiteraUTa. It forunes the body as aim aitea.se. invigorates anl re-vitaluea the torpid stomacu and brer, and effects a most falsi tary change In the entire system, waaa la a morbid condition. for sal by ail Drnfrvlsts and Dealers geneiauy. TUT LATZMT VEKTIOS-ll-r.I.7le k Metaiex!. O viis aid lara Vt el.y croms-talmeot ia any ky oa Pia sr Onrs In udihour. H at re!rri tn th wmM. Pries SO cuts ! stanis.. AdJrrst RIX'HESTSlt Ml SIC A I. I.O.. Box AM, Bocbrstrr. N. Y. r-.n. Phil I will hare oasai ear Poiii. II OI D wrsrs faint lo givo swtr F. M, 1MI. Ths Srst so- will reiv S. Pries SS csata. arret P. O. Box a Bostoa. Hsu. A U.E.VS Bra la Wmm rarae Dntni l-b(;lty V ssd Wvakuas. of Onsrstlvs Organ, S&tII drtiMista. Sen! lor Clnalar to Allsa FbarulcT. aiarim A..li.T. $777 A TEA B saa mrnii to seta Oatflt fna. Address P. VICKEBT. Araaata. Malaa. as an I aonlar a fas raeUlalverl Maaaaaws la r tbat Uiey saw Uxa ad ti KTDITEY DISEASES. era tJt and aarslr eared by the ass of KTDK-T-WOBT. Tils nr. sad ws-darftil rsmody whit a. hsTlnfKnr-hgs faBTnerwa Lis tn 11 p irfti ynt wk- i -..,1 pt4pTM II nalin.a aUsiljUl and tons a tha diseased organs, and thrones them clsansss the systeia of aeeuralated end r""" f fcaor XJt InsTdlssssssor thirty yssnstsndliig have been sored, also Fuss. Cn!psttoa, lisBjatlr. SML.wk.hasedlsUiSLi.d theslotl a far years. We hsrs ala ss cf tsstlmo-y ef.ts won rtnl e rsl power. No tongsri e Aloholle Bitters, which do note harm .ban good, or rsstle 1-Us.bpt sssastorss xaetiy.E-DirET.WO-T, aod asslth wiu bs qoieklT regsiosd. Get It of your On Atxslst. Prtc B I. fRi;is-JastBsill VF.t.L Ull H UirS 4k CO.. " Ksrllsas,VJ -Dr. Pierce's Ooldea Medical Discover- enree an Haasara. frsr the worst Serefala to s eommna Blotch, ri. iple, or Brwatlea, Err si arias, aalt-rheaaa. Fever Wrea, Scaly e saga aaia, in soon, aii oiseaaea causea By parUji finedall has it manifested Iu BMeeev hi vine, ana inriroraunr moiieine. clee. Sore Eyes, BerorWlsas Beraa mmm SwaUlaca. Whlla Swelllaca, r.llrs ana xxw si. mihs Hetllcal liMOTrr ha no nnaL It ffects npUM, ui aatot.Mi.tyi ui DCdiOAl tacuur. - -Alaal a. . . SW . :.? , l Tce1 asr a sa tatvx ,: v:.rr.rr. r.r.-"'rr' - "UT&wVVO arSwaV. 47. V. DUatn CealaUoa, lasa-ra rlials tmm -"' ---a, -www - .icataeas or CheaX. blxslarsa. Bear The Only Medicine That Acts at the Baane me aaj ThUm.ttiBaicrftluCirii eaaa erwaas. eaUaaSavl will bs psrferti If ""T fl. araadfal elaauas are ear a HoUe w wit TERRIBLE SUFFERING. miemaeM. eeeacae, Bji.iarii.Jeim Slea, Ceastleatleei aa Pllra. awEJe awy Ceajalalata, OraTst, Maketa, r Baeamatl Fatas and Aches, are Tt!lopM! bot-ansa thn blood ! "'"?" with ths tamora that eaeald bar seen axaeued aatarally. KIDXET-WOBT wfn leatare toe healthy eeOoa lead aH rneaa destror'na eUs will be bealehed , aexUrl them and yoa wOl lire but to aatTsr. IhoMaadsaaTebeeaeured. Try Ksssrea wtn dd assume la the somber. Take IX sad health TUluaus mors gl'd ""S0 aBssrssaajsaaaBie asset oi ce and saanTiftsd. Try a lead Oaa IHeaaaaaxaaaaataaWaTtsaf atedlrlfli rear Drmevm .ee er wjjj ajl) Jte asm. Jjislaiapsa hnttmf. iVSc turn. , IO w tr-r-AJ "-' THE GEEAT USTBUCTIOI BOOr I Richardson's New Method For iheSPianofbrle. BY HATHAN RICHAEDSOX. PBICI fS.tS. . . ittv mvnpnrn tm t TTTfS 13 TUB MO-f PKHFElT. AS WEU,A!''1" MOOT fUU CBrUL rin.TOluni m ""V.YT Tl"! BOOK KVBtt PUBUHBI. HAWSI BEEN MANY T1M3 hfcVIBKD. IT MAT BS CONSlDKaKB AS NTILV KBB "Oil BKROK3. IIAVIJW BKEN KKPKAl BULX BS LAKUtU. IT IS RF M HK m HLt TILL AH tXlMfUhra. MAST TilorATOS OF T-ACHBRS HATS USKD THB BOOK F )K TEAKS. AND 8TIU1 CVN 1'INl. B TO U3 IT, A8 THB BBT. BALRd AhB CONSTANT. AN1 VERY LARGE. MICH. ASIISOXS MEW BEfHOB FOR TUB FlAorBTKW TUB HTLK. OH DEB IT BY TUB WHvt.B Tll-E. AJU JH--ari ay OTHER BOOK, SINCKTHM la TUB OKJG1NAL ASU TRL lilCilAKDSOX." BOLD BT ALL THE PRISCIPAI. MCTIC DEAL. KKS AND BOcK.ELLR Of TUB USITKB bTAT-S AND CA-NAUA. MAILED, rOST-FBEK FOR BS.33. Oliver Ditson & Co., Boston. m. e. pmow. 4 co. ms rkeetMt tree. riiUaWlel Dhlaw oT7TV i sf kt- Ins tailtntf sseraadl aitf-l sort, co w Cora arsis usi OS as vssts. asa Hop aV. -Q-Tctl lrtg flUfJB aatTT ta tloe. . If jfa mrm mmr- fmuLf.mulBriait from nc on bat. ( mcM. Sitter. na-il IrOsa M funs af K Id . v d-LBe--e tbsU DJrlst ks-M betm jviu-4 Irye.tts.fil7 ot smpawdxxrv O.LO. It sn sUofts jmI trraBatt-t-trte en r far Klr3atOAeiS, aw ) obMUD. 9twal aW 4naaf' UfirijJ-ur. A f'w-srtds Ob. SAPONIFIER m las Old aUTIaste Ceaeeatratat Lye Say - Aatt-t SOAP X Ah I NO. Dtrsctioa aesusi assy sash saa low --., M-d.fcq i- Talln Saa bk 1 iU al HMUk. ABK FOB BAPOmi-BB, AK TAEB NO OTBSB. B-JfaTA BA1T AX;-e. CS- ntXUAWk . Orpnr Of?-r' w c,ri c, (. jsl.lic sa H'nnilril a s. :l'l lTni li:n m Ktltu !. . 1. N r- M1 I). 1 llmm-i AT LW.I K 1'riw. liSHll. WAIt-SAl'tt. -nSsy,k. . GENTS VAtlTED JS torn THI n Best and Fastest Selling piCTOBIAl BOOKS 211J BELES. caus, i;:, ou iau. Us, Ho Mors Old Maids. So Mora Old Bachelors. AMERICAN MATRIMONII! BUREAU. 'Fomidt-d for th promotion f Maurlm fteeorrjlaf t ib La.- of Puf-iCeU and Meat. Aditti(,. Svntl ad'lrvM, itkonM, ocupatioa, aa ot ftwr "fial iMcription of Toaraa f, toatar vita On Krt!ar, and rci iba aJrr, boto. aod yaraal tl-ocriptioii of a aeraoa ot tLaoiaoait aai. wka -eaJr ta aian j . rrna tai-DO oii.-ltsti ba.a -irlcti? i rt '. F.tr farth-r rticlr4 appr to tlWl M. r&KNCH. WUIsaa.-v Mavaata 7hi XlM, fttex TO PAPER HANGERS ! Th Bvat complete Machltta for l.-aeinff Wall Pavpr avr laiind ie low ra1r t pl-ic bwfor" tba pa I lie. Kve-ry Mac Lid will do tha work of tlra Hi a, acd better i haa br band. On a. an caa htcc aJ rll ia tea boat a. Aa Am. tear a taeca aa ire 't-wafalijr a practical baud, featl for aixca-ax mni bt ca list. 1. U. COt G HER A CO., -!.., Clarioa Co., Fa. MONTHS ON TRIAL lor t Hit S-cr. stamp or I lui norusjODUu, uagt-rstowa. xo. dkam. -MMMnaM-t-SS .UOnl IT , SUt KSJC. i,r e-.n- 1 clM Bnniarl adtlrt- ft nr t'.nri cab Miitoti or Wc. pr & 1 Atklr-M t.'aU Arab. the. of I Jftl(. , BOX A3IStl, aVSartSl-JI- AsTnts Ws.DtMl Tt-r7tar te t tBunllte-, lkoU ssad Urg cotwnn-n ; Urcmt Mork ia tbMoliatrr : aalltr BBdtiv-tblMhvi, tVvtjntrT fiorr k -. r kvooki call or wri l.Tfll WELL.TEA t03tPA3iT,iroUoal)U-i.T. F.O.BoxtsV. GREAT WESTERN GUN WORKS, rii.Gnnr., eV. MAKE HENS LAY. Aa Englwh Vstersary farraoa and Casn-t,a I iravslins ia thiacoaatrT.ssi last awstof tlis Uor. aadtstils fuwdm asrs srs wlblra trssa. H. I mjti Inst hheridaa's cssdHMm Posters srs sbso- I iimir pars sue iaim.nei)r tsiosms. staiag os srik will .sks bsds Is? hxs Skeridaas t-uadi-oa rosasrs. I'.so, so ttarsooa to on" flat oi fsM. I nnj.vn.ur wrni uj mrnii lor algal lett. stasias. LB.JUUbSOh' A to.. Banaor. Ms. IBS) CONSTIPATION AND PILES. baa eiooa, are ooatjuarea Dy this MwsxSuL eerhie Tetter. Staia BasM. Wafis- oerfect aad ndical anr-k I ana mlMu. putMUu iiaiiaiia u " II- I rrUroosSaS III raoa by tn ma of 1 O J""' duttes sS4d 1 Ba .itMknti mmm la I. Mop B.ttere, If yoaanyaaaf sad II dL4eneta sr dims SB PS ,,,4 or smiils. old or II H sourbealtb or tansuub II mem. Rlj;oa Hopll I mam TOSar.. a Wfc I. aiisDSTer yoe f1 T I W that y o a r tystrai I Via ai-eds cfcDrosr. Um- f H ing or umimtinw. Iff 11 without ttluncucau, I 1 I Bitters.' 9 Hywov O-jaX V pr,BS. Iff 'M or itriAarr ch r d If atom, dbesjr '31 a of the fo.jA. a; irn u ea.Ty-l- J OITTnC 1 1 K-rl:1: NEVER 1 I J dre-a. y . Ij t I m&Mmmi msmm fsr CsttsaaSnV tSsaSastOsaa. Imhsuustl Braa-aaa-sa to nie ef taking the large, re-nlalvo, naaeooas 111 Tbeea qwrea lfSMall. ri Blsaaneli. Bad Vasts la M ..ta. Mil loan attacks. Pala l vacla. mt Midairs, la tarsal rsvor, Blaalsd fiillia rrmw a risaaaal wipuw rsllsBS. DR. RAD WAY'S Sarsapariljlan Mm THE GREAT BLOOD rraiFIER, Wat TTTB CUBE OF CHRUUIft DTAS ar-o-TT.A on TWRli.iTin am.ni TAJtT OS CONTAQiOLa, I atwdl Ba TB -antra a asaxtkaki. ear Moaaa. TVss- mr Merreav cotMnmsn ttts bolttxj ahd vrnTrx A ,MU, AiubM Bpwana, Sttwoia, Otaairaiar rarrUtr. BacktmiDry Ooairb, Caaceroaa A Oee. (tons, STpaiuiss Complaint-. Bleeding of toe 1 a DC. Dyspepsia. Walar Brush, Tie Doioren Wtule Bwellinga, Taaaora, Ulcere, s.la sod H i Dteeaaes, Mercrrrtal Dies-aav-a, Female Coen. ctaJataGoot. Draey, Sail H-eera. Bfaocblua, Liver Complaint. Ac, Hot only does the Panapartt"1 Itesolvt-ni . a.a ,,,a- as tn t hsk SHrAAf h rvn Lm avcec 111 rem sua .new w iwi Baorolooa, Coewxituiiooal an I bkla Dtseaaea, fea R H ttta o Ijr pot-Uv core for KID JET 1JB B LADDIE C0XFL1I5TS, Trtaa ry sad WemB Dtsrasea, Gravel. Dtatete. nmat luimra of Ws.er. Incontinence vt Mis nrls-tw Disease. Albumfnurtu, and In sU panes wbere tbere are bncklu- dt-po-lu, far ta water B WICK, eioaay. nuxea i sua SMaees like te wait ol aa egif, or threads Uko wblte aUk, or tbere IS a morDio, dark, biuotis sppoarsaf n aad wait booe-dust dvposlts, aal wbea tere to a pricking, burning ansauoit wbea paaslnc water, ar d pala In the suall cf the back sod aoeg tbe loins. Sold by Drag-gut-. PRICE ONE DOLLAil OVAItl AH TTJMOR Of TTV TEARS' OHOWTH OCiUD IX DB. BADWAT - BKMBDIsVi On battl eon tains saore of tas aetrss ptnev UesptatedlctaeaUaB say other FrtTKirau .a. ratea l Taaspoonrol doees. walle oUiera re jauw Bvs r au times aa mach. R. R. R. RADWAY'S Ready Relict; CTJRSd ASO PBETdTS DYSENTERY. DIARRHOEA, CHOLERA MORBUS, FEVER AND A2UE RHEUMATISM. NEURALGIA DIPHTHPPfA INFLUENZA. SOUE THROAT, DIFFICULT BREATHING. BOWEL COMPLAINTS. Looaeoees Dtarrhosv Cholera Mo'bss or ra .. tui dlacliargvs from the bvwels are stoppej m 14 or SO mlnuu a b.- taking ludway's licJy K Her. No conirestlon or luilimniiifon. no w-i-aess or IsaalMda wUl toiluw ta iu ot tho B. H. IT WAS THS FIRST A XT) IS The Only Pain Itemetlj this Instantly stnps tho mo?t eacru-.-la-ni -""j. uhuwjmuvubi uiu cures lonit.'. Uon whvlhr of the Lung's, stomach. toe.s or other glands or omq, brcn- ipplii-atlon I'r.a. I. lwe.lv a-l.ates. no luat ter how violent or excrucbttlo tiie pa;n. t n ineuinatle. Bed-ndden, I nana. Cripple I. SHr otw. Neuralific or prostrate, wuh dl-ei mar suffer. BADWAY o K-AUt BELIEF wlu afford Inat&ntease. aaaaMtl.. mt tbe Kidneys. USanmaiisa aI Ilia Bladder aaaaauall.. ot the Bsrl l .nr 1 f . 1. r ik. s !SrTkre, Dlftir.li Breathlw.. lyexarlea, Kwrnp, ti a.?-erl.e "a'" i &-- iHtft. . . .irisfi, leeplesae.s. .(rmlKia. Kkeanoail.m a.ld hills. Arw.rb.llla. Ckllbladu ..U I rsil ktltea. The application of tbe Ready Relief io tne rart er parts wbere the pala or diakulty exists w,:i afford ease an I eomfurt. Thirty to sixty drops In a half tnnb!r of watrr will In a tew minutes curv? L'ramp-i. Sprains, wu S-omitfh, II'-rUura, Rick Hai- sk.ii-, iHBtruvai, vyxaivrj. uoac, wuul in m e Bowels, and all Internal pains. Travelers noma always carry s tTlof R d wayx eady Relief with Uieuu a few droiu la water WUl prevent tn.-sa or r, i, fr,u,. ebangw ot water, it is tetter Uian m-.ax Brandy or Bitters as a suauianL tnco iaij Cants per tottia. Radway's Regulating Pills. rwnalt-ee. Bo-tMnr Anorlsuls. Ae W TVout Pala. ailwaya KeUabl. mm fc-t ral La thalr Opexatlu. A TXQXTABLX SURSTITLTB PfiR rALOXEl. TwrfeetTy tastsless, elecaotly coated with SJleefam, purge. reoUui, panvy. aese and Babwatw rtus, for tbe cn-s of an Dlaorden Sf tan &teoeaCh, Liver, BoweM, Kidneys, Blaa Ser. Nerroas Dtsesses. Headache, lonst'.pa. Ion, teU-seaa,-lo(llprvaUon, Dyspepsia, Bil ou. eaa. rever. Te flam mat 100 ot Hie BoweLs, ptl-s. and aU 4eraByeaw-u ol tbe lorernal Viscera, wamirted lo elees a perfect cure. Fuivly vegetable, oatnlnlDC no mercury, minerals or SaJetortoua drOKa. y"' the for owing- trmrtoma re-n!rtn from Diseases ot the Djresilre Orns : Cooati PaOoa, sawsrd PUea, Fuilun. ot tbe Blood tn Head, Acidity of tho Stomach. liauaet. Hearts bwra, Dlss-uas or ttood. t .l.ness or Weigbt la the Stoou-B, Sour Erucutloos, tnk-lnj or KluU tarns at too Baart. Choklne- or Kurr, r,n mi. aatlona wbea ta a lying posture, Dimness ot Vkdoa, Dou or Webs Before (be slu-bt, Kever a' d Doll pain la the Bead. D.-llclt-ncv of Perspira tion, Telfowneas of tbe Bkia and ye4. i-sin ia U Bid, chest. Limbs, and buddea i'laaes cl steal. Burn 1 c tn the r.e-h. A few doses at RabwaVs rnxa win tree taa arstogi from all Lhe above-n-med aisordera, Pi Ida, B9 Oe.ta per Box. We mad tnat tba eM9sr stntt it ... books and paners oa the subject of diseases anil their furs, among which may bo named : "runs a.d Tras . -"Hmeiwmj mm Irritable Trethrav' atdwar Heratwla." and otaani Miattas to differaat elaawss ot Dla. OLD BT DECOOrSTBj SIXAD TA1MK ABB TBCI." Seed a letter stamBta BADWAT at c. B WsMnrosx, .r. Cbau-ch . Its l--arormAtloa vtkrtli tlMasaada will be tJU TO THE PUBLIC. efDn. Rabwav. old esuwUsned K R. R. Kimx- - .urmio.B imitatious ot them sa thsrs . r s-i. . . ana Pills. Be ears and ask for Radtys, and aaa thax tha aasaa t. BV. ' fl THE BUTCHLEY J I 'la. ULHI UliLCI i PUMP TmM wa r wna ol skt esf -. r.-4.. ti. u.u. eTmrnVt rwars tnds, Cosoti j stwes. Pus uhars. sT See that the turn, rs bay k atsacued C atATCHeT. 1 a.ravt.ra.. ABCT Btrsst. THlLADkLI"Hl. Ta. 1 rjrs axsa. t. BrII tha Suadud Arljj Boa .amiMM (mm n,!T raiiimig iur now TELUHOWTnfcs Make Money I Uss aw sassy Omrm ttm M . rr LrjD I Crt for t.t'aiM 2t -.--.inniiinjreiisjnK j. c :cV i-KDY .a.w.rff?.r' W-igs W e . - M aar.7. L"-, 0rrH Hs. SSO as7ll.".r""I?, Bre-e ' mmm H. m m 1.1 i . a- au ai r-ssi I v.ir n J.-.II-" -id rtm ao .iAif iwcitY' aa esaj JOS. C. GRUBB & CO.. 72 Mirkot Street. Phila- Pa.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers