WO!fDIErrL KFTEtATTOyS OF TUfc MICROSCOPE. D1 -ear err f f- M- Pea;lT V;-TJ l Mankind The Bariliaa l Ravage. The cieuU'io world has been greatly tartled and ntritatei of late by tiie discovery with tbe micros; of the ino-it dr&ulf'il enemy of mankind in the form of myriad of little death-dealing parables. The air we breathe end live in is cliar-jed with thete deadly little growths in .roirtion as it a infeeteJ from vari-ms iiosioas sources. Having by recent eii-erinients and research been shown to be the most fruit ful cause of disease known, and the welfare and health of every individnal d-ipeudinif so largely on the freedom from their destruc tive ravarres it is bat natural that th-a re port of recent invesriintnrs in this field of scientifio inquiry should be widely read, and fchat every pbaseof these astotinding discov. ines should be subject to universal discuss ion. At first received with some soiicion they hare at lenih been thoroughly tiroven, and are now receiving the unqualified in dorsement of the leading scientific mer throughout the world. But little else is talked of in the schools and clubs of scii nce, and the medical and scientifio journals are crowded with the testimony that is being added corroborative of the value of the mnr velons discovery which is pronounced the greatest advance in medicul science of mod ern times. , To Li. PiSTEm, the eminent French scientist, who by his learned investigations has savai to France 60 many millions of dol lars, is probably due the honor of first point ing oat the terrible power of these perms. In recognition of his great service the govern ment has recently voted him from the public treasury flO.OuO. with which to continue his experiments, lie has descried several va riatiaanf the--e parasites, some comparatively harmless, others extremely dangerous. One form he proved by a series of vaccinations and other conclusive eijerircents wis the .cause of death of many thousands of ani mals and herds of cat'le; another the active agent in the death of fowls by cholera. Act ing ur-on the knowledge he hud g tiutd of the nature of thee germs, he pointed out a means of relief tliat siedily preven'ed a spread of tie dioeaes and ended their devas tation. TTNnu-t, with the aid of other eminent English investigators, made a nnmher of ex aminations of the floating particles in the atmosphere, and found number of living spores capable of producing disea-. In dry and healthy localities hut few germs were found, and these of the harmless varieties, while in low damp places, crowded houses and unhealthy cities, the poisonous germs wereexTremly numerous everywhere. Dr Kcdou-h Koch, of, Walh-tein, Ger many, a man whose work in connection with the organisms of contagious diseases has made him a recognized authority upon the subject, by experimenting after the met hods of Yhxevix, has discovered and published an account of one of the most dangi-mus varieties, to which it is proven more deaths are due than to any disease incident to the human race. He descrilie it as a simi le cellular orrmn Ism beloninng to the same order as the luic terta. When dried the germs may. without losing any vitulity, endure great extremes of temperature. Being as fine and as liirht as dust, invisible to the naked eye. they may le blown any distance by the wind or carried upon the clothing or body. LiWeseeds. they may lie for months or years undistnrlied upon the furniture, floor, rirpets, curtains, walls, or in the bedding, and only requiring a proper degree of warmth, moisture and food to waken into life, develop and grow. They thrive and live in the blood, lyinph, mnens and secretions of the - human body. When the system is unhealthy or weak they attack the cells that make up the animal frame. Any albuminous fluid will furuNh them with tood for growth, aud a single drop is sufficient to contain hun dreds. Examined with microscopes of great power, which enlarge them soth.it they can be seen and studied, they h-ive the a iiear ance of minute rod-like Ixxlies having, when active, some iower of mot ion. They bend in the middle like a bow and straighten with a jerk that sends them a few times their own lei g h. At the temperature of the humav body they are tho mo-t acii'.e. Their power of increase or reproduction is remurkably great. One genu i:i a few weeks' time, under favorable conditions, will give rise to millions. The TrotTs is by simple growl h and division. old dtstros or pre vents thtir gnmlh, ar.d this is why re f rierti bon prevents decay of m-iils Ri.d oilier a:ii mal foods. Kxposed to wartntu ih-e stuall organisns attack and eat up tiie albuminous tissues, leaving a foul mass. Tne odors so common to tins process are given oil by these miuute organisms, .-in J is al it the only iiidt cation of tiiecr presence. Ti.is is the warning of m tureand it is un instinct to avoid nil such smells. The foul breath, bad odors of old sores, etc, leads man to avoid there germs in a great measure. The danger of tli-.-ir pres ence in the body c.m be imaiued when li.eir raiiid increase is considered. A few germs may be readily absorbed into the system I y breathing air cont aining tl.etn. They me thus drawn into the interior of the body through the long and narrow r spira'ory passages of the throat, che t ami nose, which are lined with soft membrane- and covered with sticky pmcus. Jn thts il'jid they rn-1 ready hnigment and f;ivor:i!)Ie condi tions for development, in-rease and growth. Th "cull or catarrh, oza-na or cliiottic c itarrh, b:;y fever, etc. are common mi nile-.ations of the ef. fects of one of the le st harmful of these rerms or mHTOZijir.es. In the u:cl art 'rom the respiratory passages at ench tu; tnousandsof the living ;mn:ialc;il;p are f'.u The fever, debilitv, pa ns " in the lone loss of appetite, etc, are ualica'ions of tiici! dei'ressing etiecis cp"ii the viril orirai-s. It is from g-Tins of slo.ver d-veloputfTit, however, thai the t're itest tlat:ger iohows. To the one most fit ly d -scribed by Kuril iJ due moie deaths lit .11 to any other known cause. Accoritm to ti;e rese irches of CIct ter, FuNTand Ijeje:;im-:. over ei. bt million people die every e tr tr -m this ia ie alone. The nrnin.d deatiis in Inure, tn.-land, Germany and Ku-:n fn.tri tiieir destr-ict.oa was over one and a half millions. In the United St.it and Canada over three hun dred thousand pers- ns peri-ht-i Ji the litst year from the (.-.-i ,V.i alora. J he ruo-t common disease re-niiing from it is con sumption of the longs. 6:t ot' er organs of tiie body are liable to be aaecte 1 as lir y de velop slowly but sine y in any organ ihat may be in a weak or unuealthy state. If active and healthy, the li-.er, kidneys and bowels have to a uoi,d.rftd extent the power of expelling thee deadly Hniaialculre or parasites from ihe sstetu. And this fact furnishes an importaut indication for the successful treatment of ad the long l:st of maladies cansel by these 1 ara-ites as wai be hereinafter sh wiu The studies ot xjxcr.se a, an eminent Italian, and Wood, Foumad and others, are interest ing, as showing the lanre variety of chronic diseases as heretofore c l.issiiied, t.'iat result from these germs. Amoni; the most common were hver complaint," biliousness or torpid liver, dysiH'ps.a or indigestion, lung infec tions, bronchitis, kidney diseases chronic diarrhea, spinal compla.nt, fever-sores, white swellings, htp-joiut disease, rheuma tism, malarial diseases, such as fever and ague or intermittent fever, general and nervous debilities, female weaknt-sses, chrjuiccitarrh of the head or oz:-na, many fotms of un healthy discharges from internal organs, and all the various scrofu.-ous aileelu us of the skin, glands, bones, joints, etc.. inclntliiig consumption, wl.iuli is but scrof ulous dis ease of the lungs. In this large caudogne of apparently wide ly differing diseases, but re ul ad dej-euding upon a common cause, and therefore natu rally to be successfully treated on the same general principles examination of the blood and secretions revealed large numbers of these parasites, and curiously enough the number bore a direct reiaiion to the severity of the disease, a compar atively small number being pres ent in mild cases aud a very large proportion in bad cases. Under the ti-e of the specific treatment which they give, and which is substantially tiie same as that described and recoinmeuJed later in this re view, thenninbcr was seen to steadily dimin ish from day to day until, with the restora tion of health aud bodily strength, Uiey eonld not be found at all. The greatest variety of symptoms were found to accompany their pre.-n?e, due to peculiarities of the constitu ion, the part of the body most seriously a:!eetcd. ;.nd the ef forts of the dillerent organs to rid tiie system of these germs. Among tiie most common were frequent headacnes, ncuralia piuns, nausea, constipation, poor or variable appe tites, diarrhea, bad bieath, hectic tever, cough, ' night-sweats, cold extremities, dyspepsia, ra arrh, sore thro it, sore eyea, etc, whne where the skin was affected, aalt-rhenm, boils, carbun cles, scurf skin, erysipelas. Si- AutLony's fire and other symptoms we; e common, and all gradually but ith cei tatuty were curi d by the same means, lie h.vitc fe- er so often met with in consnmpti'ui, with the hacking or tearing cough, niyht Etre.- ts diarrhe, and other symptns due title edorts of na ture to throw off aud exjiel these genus were also readily controlled and cuied in the same way as were the old sores, abscesses aud ulcers in the lungs, liver aud other im portant organs. The corrosive acids and mineral poisons are found to jossess tiie power of killing these germs, but tiie dati-erotis n.-vn.-e if such powerful agents prevent their internal use. For the purpose of expelling the germs when once within tliesyste 11 it is necessary to resort to vegetable remedy's in order to cleanse the blood ot liie germs wiUiout in Jury to the patient. An American phy-lcian of large erp?ri ence in the treatment of all forms of chronic diseases, r.ow concir.s:vey shown to be caused by parasitic life, for many years de voted much time to the investigation of the causes of these affections, and in the treat ment 01 many UioiiSiinJa ut cases OeveloitaJ and thoroughly tested eoRtcrn ation of veg etable agent which be jscd with marvelous enccess mtiieircure. In case of wasting disease, as consump tion or scrofula of tiie lungs and other or gans, and in all case attended with great weakness, it was found to exert the most -wonderful toiuo and restorative intluencea, beside its nutritive proiiertiea far surpass those of cod liver oil or any of the remedial agents resorted to by tbe medical profession in such cases. Hyopbosphitea, iron and quinine bear no comparison to it in build ing up the strength of the debilitated. The recipe, as advised by him, has been used for years with the greatest success in avast and most successful practice. The written experience of the many suffer ers who have been cured and who express in terms of Ilia highest praise their indorse ment of its great value, are sufficient to fill volumes. Living witnesses are everywhere, monuments to modern genius and scientific progress in the iiealing art. Sufferers from "liver complaint," giving rise to '"bad blood." consumption, scrofula, and other affections and symptoms, the re sults of blood poisoning from the ravages of the deadly parasites or disease germs so briedy referred to, find in this remedy prompt relief and a permanent cure. Tbe great and increasing demand for this God-given and peerless remedy for so many apparently different, but really kindred, ail ments, led to its preparation in pure and convenient form under the name of L)r. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery. It can be obtained the world over at drug and gen end stores, ana full directions for its use will be found in the pamphlet that surrounds each bottle. It exerts the most won derful stimulating and invigor ating influence on the liver, that greatest gland of the tinman system, wmcn Las been not inaptly termed the ''house keeper of our health." Through the in creased action of the liver and other emuno tory organs of the system, all poisonous terms are rendered inactive and gradually expelled from the system with other impuri ties. In some cases, where there are nn healthv discharges, as from the nostrils in cases of either acute or chronic catarrh, the use of lr. n-ige s Catarrh Keniedy. a mild and healing antiseptic lotion, should be associated with the nse of the Discovery. It is also advisable to, nse tins lotion in other local manifestations of disease of mucous surfaces. By this means the eerms of disease are destroyed and the membranes cleansed before any of the poisonous bacilli are absorbed into the blood, in sore throat quinsy or aiptitnena. the Catarrh Keniedv lmnid should be used as a gargle, and the Golden Medical Dis covery' taken freely. In women where weakness 01 special or gans is common and alinort certain to be developed, attended by backache, bearing- down sensations aud other local symptoms, the nse of Dr. Pierces favorite Prescrip tion in conjunction with that of the Dis covery, speedily restores the healthy func tions and assists in building up and invig orating the system. In any case where the bowels have been costive and are not regulated and acted ui-on sufficiently by tiie mild laxative pro pert es possessed by the Golden Mediia! Discover.-, Dr. Pience s Pleasant Purgative 1 enets ( utue liver piils), taken in sin dl doses of only one or two each day, will aid materially in estab lishing healthy action, and in exilling tb di.ease-pruducing germs from the blood and system. At therisK 01 repetition ana ny way 01 re capitulation, we may truthfully say that Golden Medical Discovery cures all humors, from the worst scrofula toa common blotch, pimple or eruption. Erysipelas, salt-rheum, fever sores, scaly or rough skin, in short, ail diseases caused by disease germs in the Mood, are conquered by this powerful, puri fjii.g and invigorating medicine. Great eat ing uleer rapidly heal under its benign influ ences. Imperially has it manifested its po tency in lairing tetter, rose rash, boils, car buncles. so:e eyes, scrof ulons sores and swell ing, white swellings, goiter or thick neck aud enlarged glands. 'The blood is the life." Thoronghly e'ease this fountain of health by using Gold en Medical Discovery, and good digestion, a fair skin, buovant spirits, vital strength and soundness of constitution are e-tab-li-hed. Consumption, which is scrofulous disease of the lungs luJueeu by the deadly disense germ bacinvt, is promptly and positively ar-fe-tbd and cured by tins sovereign remedy, if t;iken before tLe last stages of the disease are reached.- l'romits wonderful lower over this terribly fatal disease, when first offering tins now world-tan .ed remedy to the public, iin. PitiiCK thought favorably of calling it his " consumption cure." but abaudoned that name na too restrictive for a medicine that from its wonderful combination of germ destroj ing, as well as tonic orstrengthening, alterative or blood-cleansing, anti-bilious. diuretic, pectoral and nutritive projiercies ia une-iu ded, not only as a remedy for con sumption of the lungs, but for all chrome diseases of the liver, blood, kidneys and Iuil-s. If vou feel dnll, drowsy, debilitated, have sallow color of skin, or yello-vish brown spots on face or body, frequent headeche or dizziness, bad taste in mouth, internal heat or chills, alternated with hot flashes, low spirits and gloomy forebodings, irregular apj-e'.ite and tongue coated, you are suffering from indigestion, dyspepsia, aud torpid liver li ; ' til mnnv CJ4 M itilv narf of these symptoms are experienced. As a reme.lv for all such cases. Dr. Tierce's Gold en Medical Discovery has no equal, as it ef- fert-iierieet and radical cures. For weak luugs, spitting of blood, short breath, consumptive night sweats and kin dred affections it is a sovereign remedy. In the cure of bronchitis, severe coughs and cousauiption.it has astonished the medical faculty, and eminent physicians pronounce 11 tue urea test medical discovery of the age. The nutritive properties possessed by cod liver oil tire trilling when compared with thoe of the Golden -Medic.-d Discovery. It rapi dy bu.lils up the system and increases the flesh and weight of those reduced below tiie usu:d standard of healih by wasting diseases. Tne plan of treatment that we have so brielly outlined in this article for the large cla.-s of chronic diseases referred to, ha long been acKnow iedged to le tiie most success ful, based as it is upon the belief shared by the most sKiiuui medical men 01 the day. l. lab mo vutjr wi lu geb iiu ui me nox ious disease-produiiiig germs in the blood and system is through the liver, kidneys and bowels, aud ttieretore that those agents Inch are known to act most efficiently in r storing healthy action of these organs are the ones mast to he re'ied mon. tor this uur pose the Golden Medical Discovery is pre rtitiwntnt lite agent that 1 uiiills every indica tion 01 treatment required. I'll Take a rrout Meat. His Honor was signing the wnrrants and making ready to open court wb-n a voice from the corridor wag heard singing: 'Pjor manl" sighed the court. "Per haps that one circumstance bas changer1 his whole lile. Ciiab, it must be sad to be lilted." "I should remark!" replied the old man. "I vc lieen jilted thirteen tlinerent tunes, snd each time has come near killing me lt s twice as bad as having a boil And tbe voice from the prison cell broke in strain with a song. "That man hug a soul filled with ro mance and sentiment," softly whispered his Honor. "If you'll let him cfii 111 Rive him dollar,'' replied tSiiah. For the third time the audience was held snell-bound by the voice of the in mate of the cell. B.iiih brought him out. He was not a sad-laced young man with a far-away look in his eves. He did not have hollow cheeks and a hacking cough. On the con irarv, he was a squatty man with a big, red neck and three waits on his chin. He had on a red flannel shirt, chewed plug tobacco, and bad scarcely toed the mark! when b". blurted out: " Well, old man, 1 reckon I was pretty fill'!" The sentiment shipped out through the a!'ey window, and the romance vanished like sliawberncs at a fc&iivaL. 'Is your name John Prince?" "She ar' that." "Where did you come from!" "County of Muskegon, State of Michi gan, II. & A,, and I reckon I got sway with more wh.sky in two hours yesterday than your best man can swallow in a week. Ob! I'm a bull saw-mill wliea 1 ge'. start ed, old man!" "Tue title of this court is not old man, and this is no place for bragging yourself up as a loafer." "Ail right beg pardon crack ahead on the case. I own up that I was drunk." "Vou were also disorderly.'' "All right put that in too.'' "Well, prisoner, I shall fine you $10." "(.'heap enough- dog cheap for the fun 1 have had, but I'm dead broke. Had 50 yestcrdu morning, tut slie's gone all gone not a red letL" "Then 1 shall send you up for sixty days." "All right straight as a hair-pin. Those who dance must pay the fiddler, and 1 never shirk when the bat comes round. Cick your old omnibus up and 1' .Uts front seat! " Study and SUanuUuUt Mr. Matthew Arnold bas never smoked, but lie baa always drunk wine, chiefly claret. As a general rule, be drinks water iu the miJdle of the day and "a glass or two of sherry and some light claret mixed with water at a late dinner, and thin, be says, seems to suit bim very welL He bas given up tbe nse of beer in the miditle or tbe day, because tbe doctors assured Lira it was bad for rheumatism, from wbicn he was a sufferer. Mr. Arnold thinks that mt young people could do as much without wine as with it, and adds: Ileal brain work of itself. I think. upsets the worker and makes bim bil ious: wine will pot cure this. Dor will abstaining from wine prevent it." He, however, thinks that wine used in moderation seems to "add to the agreeablene&s of life for adults, at any rate, and whatever adds to tbe agreea bieuess of life, adds to its resources and powers." Wilkie Collins writes: "When I am ill (1 am suffering from gout at this very moment) tobacco is the best lriend that my irritable nerves possess; when I am well, but exhausted lor tne time by a bard day s work, tobacco nerves and composes me. There is my evi dence in two words. When a man allows himself to become a glutton in the matter of smoking tobacou, he buf fers for it: and if be becomes a glutton in the matter of eating meax, be just as certainly suffers in another wsy." When 1 read learasd attacks upon the practice of smoking, I feel indebted to tbe wri terbe adds largely to the relish of my cigar." The lute Charles Darwin drank a glass of wine daily, but be writes: "I should be better without any, though all doctors urge me to drink wine, as I suffer much from giddi ness. 1 have taktn snuff all my life, aud regret that I ever acquired the babit. hicU I have often tried to leave off. and have succeeded for a time. 1 ... ... -i feel sure that it is a preat aid ana stimulus in my work, I also daily smoke two little paper cigarettes of Turkish tobacco. It is not a stimulus, but tests me after I bave been compelled to talk with tired memory more than anything else. I am 73 years old." This letter was written on the 9th of February, 1S82. Mr. Thomas A Edison gets his lnspiratiou from chewing to bacco, which be thinks a gooa stimu lant "upon any one engaged in laborious brain work." Smoking be finds pieasant, but "too violent m its action; and the same remark applies to alco holic liquors. I am inclined to think that it is better for intellectual workers to perform their labors at night, as after a lone experience of night work, I find mv brain is in a better condition at that time, espec ally for experimental work, and w hen so engaged 1 almost invariably chew tobacco as a stimulant.'' Mr. lieade included Uladstoue among those of wuom be asks bis questions; tbe answer came from the 1'remier's son, Mr. linrbert J. tjiauoioue, wiiti begs to say that "Mr. Gladstone drinks one glass or two ot claret at luncheon, the same at dinner, with tne addition of a glass of light port. I be nse ol wine to this extent is tsieciidiy neces sary to him at the time oi the greatest intellectual exertion. Smoking be de tests, and bas always abstained from the use of very strong and nery stiniu lauta." Dr. Oliver Weudell Holmes prefers an entirely undisturbed and un clouded bruin for nieutitl work, un stimulated by anythuir stronger than tea or ccllee, unallected by tobacco or other drugs; his faculties are best under his control m the forenoon be tween breakfast and lunch. The only intellectual use be could find in stimu lants is the quickened mental action they produce when taken in company. He thinks ideas may reach the brain wheu slightly stimuluted, which remain after the stimulus bas ceased to disturb its rhythms. Dr. AY'. D. Uowells never uses tobacco except in a Yt-ry rare sell-defensive cigarette, where a great many other people are smoking, and 1 commonly drink water at dinner. ben I take wine 1 think it weakens my work and my working force next morning." Mark Twain writes that he bas not Lad a large experience with alcohol jriuks. "1 rind that about two glasses of champagne are an aamirable stimu lant to tue tongue, and is perhaps, the happiest iBspiration lor an after -dinner speech that can be found. "Uut, as lur as my experience goes, wiue is a clog to the brain, not an inspiration. 1 nave never seen the time w hen x could write to my satisfaction after drinking even one glass of wine. As regards smoking, my testimony is of the oppo site character. 1 am 46 years old and bave sniokrd immoderately during 38 years, witu tne - exception 01 a iew intervale winch 1 will speaK 01 presently. During tbe brat seven years of my life 1 had no health. I may almost ray that I lived on allopathic medicine, but since that jeriou 1 bave hardly known what sickness is. My health has been excellent, and remains so. As I have already said. 1 began to smoke immode rately when I was 8 years old; that is, I ltegan with 100 cigars a month, and, by the time I was 20, 1 had increased my allowance to 200 a month. Before 1 was 30 I bad increased it to 300 a month. I think I do not smoke more than that now. I am quite sure I never smoked less. Once, ben I was 15, I ceased from smoking for three months, but I do no remember whether the effect resulting was good or evil. I repeated this experiment again when I was 22, but I do not remember what tbe result was. I repeated the experiment once more wheu I was 3-1, and ceased from smokini; during a year and a half. My health cid not improve, because it was not possible to improve health which was already perfect. As I never permitted myself to regret this absti nence, i experienced no sort of incon venience from it, I wrote nothing but occasional magazine article during pastime, and, as I never wrote one ex cept under strong impulse, I observed no lapse of facility, but by aud by 1 sat down with a contract behind me to write a book of 000 or 600 pages tbe bojk called "Houghing It" and then 1 found nijself most seriously obstructeu, I was tnree weeks writing six chapters: then I gave up the tight, resumed 300 cigars, burned the six chapters and wrote the book in three mouths without any bother or difficulty. I find cigar smoking to be the beat of all inspira tions for the pen, aud in my particular case no detriment to the health. During eight month of the year I am at home, and that period is my holiday. In it 1 do nothing but very occasional miscellaneous work; therefore, 300 cigars a month is a sufficient amount to keep my constitution on a firm basis. During the family summer vacation, which we spend elsewhere, I work five days each week, and allow no inter ruption under any prefect, i allow myself the fullest possible amount of inspiration; consequently I ordinarily smoke 15 cigars during my five hours' labor, and it my interest reaches the enthusiastic point I smoke more; I smoke with ail my might and allow no intervals." Mr. Lryce Wright, an English min eralogist, announces that a new form of spurious emerald is in the market. The color and customary fliws of the true gems are imitated with great skill. Sir, Wright thinks they consist chiefly of prepared alumina, but has not as yet ascertained their precise composition. Their specific gravity affords a ready means of detection ; it is 3.402, while that of the real emerald is 2,76 at most. AGBJCtTLrUBS. J. U. Jolt gave to the Montreal Hor ticultural Society directions for planting black wiluuts, of which the following is the substance: Avoid transplanting tbe trees if practiceable, by planting tbe nuts where the trees are to remain. The rows should be four feet apart each wav. At this near distance tbe trees will grow up without lateral branches (which are apt to be torn off by snow or wind) and they may be thinned as their growth requires. The nuts should be sunk about two inches iu the ground. The rows should be perfectly straight, set m ith a bine and marked from place with stakes, so as to show accurately the yoing plants the first year in culti vating. The ground must be thoroughly prepared beforehand, and the richer the more rapid the growth. Always sow in the fail if practicable. If the nuts are lett till spring out of the ground they become dry and will not grow. We have found no difficulty in transplanting the young trees at five or six feet high, and have measured a number set in streets more than 20 years ago which are now about 11 or 15 inches in diameter.grow ing in grass and near flagging. Herbert Osborn. of the Iowa Agri cultural College, recommends as reme dies for the scurvy bark louse and the oyster shell lonse, kerosene and soap, The kerosene may be used pure where it can be done with safety, but ordinar ily it muse lie diluted with water. This may be accomplished by forming an emulsion of kerosene and milk (skimmed milk answers well), and then diluting with about an equal quantity of water, or by shaking up a mixture of milk, kerosene axd water in equal parts, and then adding more water, taking care not to add so much as to cause the mixture to separate. Sprinkle or spray it upon the infested twigs and branches, boap is an excellent remedy. Make a solu tion of whale oil soap, oue-lourtk of a pound of soap to a gallon of water, and apply to the infected paita cf the tree, repeating the application alter a few days. Lye is said to have been used with good success, but is considered unequal to soap. Frofessob Sueltox, of the Kansas State Agricultural College, gives his views concerning the continued culture of broom-com on the fertility of tho soil in the college paper, the Industrialists He says: " Ultimately, the effects 01 such crops as broom corn, hemp, flax, and perhaps castor beans, which furn ish no stock feed, or but very little, will be seriously felt in Kansas in tbe loss of fertility sustaiued by those lauds upon which these are cultivated. The fact that broom-corn is a hoed or culti vated crop makes it much less danger ous than is flax, which receives no cul tivation during the period of its growth. The general rule for every farmer who has a higher aim than to scourge his lands and then seek newer ones is to grow no crop upon a considerable scale that cannot be used wholly or in good part as stock feed. This has been the rule of really successful farmers the world over, and at a near day will be the rule iu Kansas also." A correspondent claims that he gets the greatest number of eggs wheu he feeds bis bens on wheat screenings. He feeds in this way: "I have fed sorghum seed, corn meal, oatx, corn middlings, and have concluded that feeding wheat in tbe morning and shelled corn at night with a feed of shipstuffs wet np, having a good dose of ground pepper put in, aud then baked and fed twice a week, and once in a while substituting pow dered sulphur iu place of pepper, is the best plan. I have good shelter, and good, clean nests; teed regularly aud sl.ow them a good rauge, with plenty ot gravel to scratch in. I sell the fowls when they are two years old.and always keep the hens for hatching. I have never been able to obtain a pound of butter from less than 10 quarts of milk, tinder the best management aud from the best milk. Thus presum ing t!ie cow to yield 21'JO quarts of milk per annum, we have 219 pounds. This at 23 cents per pound amounts to $61.32. A quart of milk weighing 2 pounds, 2190 quarts theu weigh 4380 pounds. Deducting weight 01 butter, it leaves 4161 pounds of skim milk aud buttermilk, or 2080 quarts. This at cents per quart, would be $41.60. which added to the price of butter; gives $102.92, and leaves a balance ot 23 82 net per cow. This is presuming my ligures correct and no allowance for shrinkage of the liquid in deducting the sand material A writer makes the statement that oue cf the neighbors planted some cab bage plants among his corn where the corn missed, and the butterflies did not find them, iihe has therefore come to the conclusion that if the cabbage patch were in the middle of the corn held the butterflies would not find them, as they. By low and like plain sailing. On a cranberry farm at Hyannis, Mass., 40,000 worth of cranberries have been sold last season, and $7000 paid to pickers at the rate of from 1 to 2 cents per quart, Picking affords busy work during the time so occupied, and, after the crop is gathered the gleaners often secure large quantities of the fruit. The Boston cultivator says that the flowers of raspberries, where this fiuit is largely grown, are ruining the honey product of the neighborhood. The bees like this food, but nc human has been discovered who appreciates the product. The honey from raspberries is a dirty yellow in epiiearance, with a very disa greeable ouor. A new white potato, called Duke of Albany, is becoming very popular in England. It is a sport of the Beauty of Hebron. Most of our American po tatoes do well if taken to England; but the rule does not work both ways, as American farmers who have planted im ported seed have found to their cost. The best way to cure corns is not to have them. Have your boots and shoes made to fit your feet, instead of trying to shape your feet to the boots and shoes. If you are so unfortunate as to have corns, soak them in warm water occasionally, cut off the softened sur face, and in due tome they will be seen no more forever. live hundred and fifty tons cf com pressed gun cotton have been manufac tured for the military and naval servi ces of Great Britain, within the past 5 ytars. It is stored and used iu the wet comlitiou, and according to Pre-feasor Abel, F. R. S.. one of the highest au thorities on explosives, it has become the accepted explosive agent for milita ry engineering purposes, for submarine mines, and for torpedoes. Haying re gard, however, to cost and convenience, it appears that the preparation of nitro glycerine, now so well known as dyna mite, is superior to compressed guu cotton for use in ordinary blasting. M. Chappuit thinks that the blue of the sky may be due to ozone present in the upper regions of the air. He argues that the electrical discharges constantly taking place will produce ezonejand the recent researches of himself and AL Hautefeuille have shown that ozone, at any rate when near its condensation point, is of a nine tint. lie has exam ined the absorption spectrum of ozone and finds nine dark bands in it, three at least of which correspond with known J bands in the tollono spectrum. DOMESTIC. Thexz are many women, at least two in every village, some of whose moments are made burdensome on acooant of having in their sitting-room, behind the coal stove, a long shelf of wood. This is usually painted white, to match other wood-work in the room, and on this white-painted surface the soft, gray dust settles all the time. There is no vigilance short of the eternal which serves to keep it free. A young wife tried this plan, and it is so nearly satis factory that she tells it for the benefit of ethers: Make a lambrequin for the shelf ; it may le of aida canvas or of Macrame. It need not be a deep lam brequin; from ten inches to fifteen will answer. Then cover the shelf with crash and attach the lambrequin to it. The dust may settle there, but if given one careful brushing in the morning you will not be disheartened by seeing it for the rest of the day. The lambre brequio in the case mentioned was made of Macrame. and was crocheted; three spaces were left through which scarlet ribbons were run; the edge was finished with a deep, large scallop. The ribbons were put iu lengthwise. If one choose to do so, the ribbons could be put in the other way and the ends could be left a little longer than the lambrequin, and, after being turned back in points, little tassels of crewel could be put on. This is a pretty de sign for a corner bracket, Treatment op Diphtheretic Sorb Throat. Every now and then we meet an epidemic of a form of sore throat which, in many particulars, resembles dlptheria, The onset is sudden. The disease is ushered in by chilliness of actual shivering, followed by fever, loss of appetite, headache and pain in the throat, aggravated by swallowing. On examination, the tonsils, the arch of the fauces, and in many cases the uvula, are red and swollen, and in some cases albumen is found in the urine. The temperature may reach 105, while the pulse is much accelerated. It is dis tinctly infectious, for wives become af fected subsequent to their husbands, and in some families all the members are attacked. Such an epedeinio has recently appeared in Edinburg, and Dr. Allan Jamieson, who makes a report of it in the Edinburg Medical Journal for December, has found tbe most marked benefit to result from the internal ad ministration of salicylate of soda aud local application of a solution of bnro- glyceride iu glycerine, frequently dur ing the day. That That though beefsteak may be made eatable by mincing it pretty line with a chopping knife and cooking quick ly in a pot with a close cover, to prevent the steam from escaping. That salt pork will be as nice, nearly as fresh, if soaked in sweet milk and water, equal parts. That clabbered milk is better than water for freshening salt fish. That In. If a cup of vinegar in the wa ter will make an old fowl cook nearly as quick as a young and does not iLjure the flavor in the least. That liver should be thrown into boiling water after being sliced thin and then fried in lard or drippings. That pie crust will not be soggy if it is brushed over with the white of au egg before the fruit is put in. lhatapiece of cors is better than cloth in applying brick dust to knives, Anaesthesia by Kapid Breathing. If a person is directed to breathe hard and rapidly for some time, a condition of anssthesia is soon produced, in which there is complete relaxation of the muscular system. It is not an easy task to get a patient to do this effectu ally. One has to urge the patient "Breathe hard, deeper, faster. StUl keep on ! Do not stop 1 ! Just a little more, etc. The eflect will be most marked, the contracted muscles will relax, and a general "limp appearance will be noticed; this is the moment to seize for the reduction of dislocations, incarcerated or strangulated hernia, etc, i'his method, as W. A. Berridge poin.s out in the British Medical Journal ot November 25, 1882, is one to be borne in mind by country practioners, and in fact at all times when ai;a.-stiietic8 are not procurable. Organic Ixpcrities in TYatek. A very simple and important test for de termining the quality of drinking wa ter, and especially as to its freedom from sewage contamination, is given in the Bhurmaceuucal J ouruai. 1 his con sists in placing a few grains of the best white lump sugar iu half a pint of the water iu a perfectly clean, colorless glass-stoppered bottle, freely exposed to daylight in the window cf a warm room. If the water be perfectly free from sewage contamination, it should not became turbid, even alter au ex posure of a week or ten days, in which case it is almost certainly safe, other wise not. Blotting Books. A neat home-made blotter is composed oi half a dozen strips of colored blotting paper, twelve inches in length, the edges are carefully trimmed to a uniform size, and fastened together at one end by perforated points, through which a pretty ribbon is passed and tied on top in a bow knot. The upper sheet of pajer can be decorated with a spray of daisies cr sweetbner in water color of the flowered design. Children should have warm night gowns fastened around the ankles, as they are sure to kick off the clothes in the night. It is better to sleep in ai moderately cool room, though dressing in such au atmosphere is not conven ient in the morning. On this account a servant or some member of the family should be entrusted to go around the first thing in the morning while the family is in bed, and close windows and doors and open registers, so as to make the rooms comfortable for dressing, Protestor J. A. Wanitin, of St. George's Hospital, .Loudon; announces his beat f that carbolic acid is wholly inefficacious as a general disii f ectant. There is great difference of opinion among sanitary authorities on this ques tion, however; but, as he truly says, there can be none as to the danger which attends the popular use of car bolic acid for disinfecting purposes. It is so frequently mistaken for something else that Professor Wankiyn thinks more persons have been poisoned cf late years by carbolic acid than by any oth er single ponton, it was recently au inuiitered to forty East Indian soldiers at Alalta; uuder the impression that it was lime juice, but fortunately not in sufficient quantity to be fa' aU Itscaus- tio pioperties are another source c f dan ger. Dr. Urban Prltcliard, of King's College Hospital, relates a case of his own practice, of an infant who merely tell into a pool of tbe ordinary solution of carbolic acid which had been acci dentally spilled on the floor. The child was so fearfully burned that it died in a few bonis. , The quantity ot water pumped annu ally from the workings ot the great Comstock lode in Aevada is estimated at four millions, two hundred thousand tons. It is all of a high temperature, that from tiie deepest mines being as hot as la7 uegrets Fahrenheit. Argu ing from these and other data,Mr. John Arthur Phillips lately maintained be fore the Geological bociety of London that mineral veins are constantly in process tf formation at the present day. He said that he himself had seen the formation of silica deposits in the West inclosing cinnabar and gold so as to make true mineral veins. HUMOROUS. A young lady residing near BUJ' in Ireland, was visiting some "Iat in this State a few winters ago. sne pretended to be very much P16 over the democratic state of affairs m our Republic, The village baker was a Justice of the Peace, and a shoemaker had been sleeted Assemblyman, while the State Senator from that district was a coarse, illiterate man -none of them by any means gentlemen, as she under stood the word. She went skating with the children one afternoon, and alter her return told a frier d that on the pond the butcher's boy had greeted her and cfiered to assist her in putting on her skates. "You didn't allow him to do so, did you?" demanded her friend a little indignantly. "Oh, yes, she said, "and skated with him, toa 1 didn't know but he'd be President of the United States, and I didn't want to offend him." A BfiurtskK Car tflimlita. William 8. Lsker. of Lewis, Vo county. In, write a f uilowa: -My bui w tekeu with wcroi nla lu tbe hi when only two jmrt old. Ho tried -eral pyn.-Uim but the boy . no rril t from their trMlinrat N.d!i your ScorllTa KrerU!m nJ snuuiiris, or Blond aud liver Syrup. leoommendea o bljrblr. I bmiyiit an me of it ot you m tne y" . and contmocd takma- tt till tna aorw anally healrdup. Br ta now twenty-one yare of -age. and brlrr mne! that your awnchie did bim eo mm - i otk-nuvuanllt. wb wl to trv it aumin in an cuVr cj, and now write to you to gvt oine of it" Batv-r Pali Paw enn- pain In V mi and Brtat. Cm: !-x:-n..i and Internally. A laboring man sauntared into a Woodward avenue grocery yesterday, and after looking around a little, he asked the prices of sugar and butter and tea and other goods, but without leaving anv erder. As he was looking at some apples in the back end of the store, a boy about 12 year old outside beckoned to the clerk to come out. "What do you want of me? was uie query. , , "la there a man in there with an old black overcoat and a gray hat on? "Yes." . "Does he want to buy anything ? I think he does." "You'd better go slow on him he ain't reliable," continued the lad. "How do you know T "How do I know? Why, he's my father, he is, and what I'm giving ye comes straight from a boy who's known him tor over a dozen years !" The man was told that goods were sold for spot cash, and when he got out the boy had made good his escape. On Thirty Dajs' Trial, The Vol'aic Celt Ox, Marshall, Mich., will send Dr. Dye's Celebrated Klectro Voltaic Belts and Electric Appliances on trlsl for thirty days to men (young or old) who are afflicted with nervous debility, lost vitality and kindred troubles, guaran teeing speedy and complete restoration of health and manly vigor. Address ai above. N. It No risk is incurred, at thirty days' trial is allowed. Some Tears ago an actor applied to Liester Wallack for an engagement for himself and wife, slating that bis way was capable of playing all the first lines of business, but, as for himself, he was m..i . . : - . -1.1 T'liiiw uie worst acior iu mo . ULj were en-iated to support Wallack, and the lady answered to the character which her hu.sluiud had given her. The gentleman having the part of a walking gentleman set him for his first appear ance, he asked lister inuignaniiy now he could put him in snch a paltry part, See," said the smiling Wallack, here is your letter, stating that yon were the worst actor in the world. -irue, re plied the observing actor, "when I wrote that letter I had not yet seen you act," He was cat-t a little higher from the tip of the irate Lester's boot. Pure cod liver oil. from selected livers, u the seashore, by Caswell, Hazard & Co., W. Y. Absolutely pure sad sweet Pa tients who hive once taken it prefer It to all others. Physicians declare it superior to all other ods. Chapped hands, face, pimple and rough km cured by using Juniper Snap, mad by Caswell, Har-trd & Co.. New York. A belated pedestrian going up Fort street, in Detroit, at a late hour the other night, thought he observed a fig ure ctonching in the latticed porch covering a front door. The matter had a suspicions look, and he halted and looked over the fence. "Go on, now !" called the voice cf a female through the gloom. "Do yon live there?" inquired the man. '-Indeed, I do." "Cau't you get in ? "Indeed, 1 etui. "Well, what are you waiting for? he asked, after a pause. '-What tor? she demanded. "Would a re spectable woman be crooked over here at this hour of the night, with a club in her hand, if she didn't expect her husband every blessed minut ? Q lr-Hous hit l!ie Chinese men should have such lon lunr. L-uiies if you would have your hair as lunir as the Chinese and as beautiful as a Hourl's,use Carboline,the deodorized petroleum hair renewer and dresser. " If poor old Job had beea afflicted with as many boils as there have been jokes made about his affliction, be would bave turned his face to the wall and kicked off more plaster in a minute than a mason could put on in a month. V KiikTiNi is now prescrihed in casts of Scrofula, aud other diseases of the blood, hy many of the best pbysiciaas, owing to its great success in curing all diseases of this nature. Promotion is always rapid in the Ger man army. In times of peace f flioers of the higher grade commit suicide be cause their pay is too small. This lets the small fry up. Malaria, chills, positively cured by Emory's Standard Cure Pills. Their equol unknown, sugar-coated ; no grip ing, 2oc The tradesman who skins his custom ers can afford to sealskin his wife. ' "Roach en Kau." Clears out rats. mice, roaches, flies, ants, hed buga, akuuAS, chipmunks, gophers. 15c llruggfiitt. Bkactt measured by a finger-print: Beauty is otdy skin-deep, and some times it is only as dep as the powder paint. Ladies and chumen's bouts and shoes cannot run over if Lyon's Patent Heel .Stiffeners ore used. The general effect of lime is to render available the plant food already in the soil, without itself supplying any signi ficant amount. Liming cannot, there fore, be successfully repeated except at considerable intervals. Dr. Kline's Great Nerve Keatorer k the marvel of the aye for ail nerve diseases. All flu stopped tree, send to M Arch street. Philadelphia, fa. Chaecoac should be fed to hogs and poultry. - Experiment has demonstrated that the same amount of feed will pro duce a far greater amount of flesh and fat when fed with rl-- of charcoal. "BifT Corr.H Balsam is the Would." Try n Price loc f. W. aim as a to Ausuali.Vaine An there any elevators in the new Capitol Y' asked a newly wnnved stran ger in Austin. "Xo.'.they got them next door to the Capitol for fifteen cents apiece, with a clove thrown in." Mother Swan's Worm ffyrnp. Infallible, tasteless, harmless, cathartic: for fe Teiuauesa, reaUeaaneas, wanna, cuustipauoo. ate. on his return from Jgj 1 Jengex. in be explained I to his iM"o mine on mT huid a few days aK- Ire Md acres and - ' to oar - .n,i acres oa - been down w "- putting a members of Conres aoo tariff of 50 per dn't Je a red chalk nd the wouldi. lef,. move in the case. jible. It s not ouij i--"r ' Ik on the marxe begiu to ; throw my chalk on over wui cuiu" -ith chaix, vessels, each one Jgg indus rve dUiCw at the tJZSbZ Ituencaa patn ots!" . Pro,esor BcH. writing to tne Medical Pre, n "from the nse of probable danger arising from g nltra-martne , U W marine that a room hung with an colored paper f'Len. the 8mell of 9Pe umeVaped source of which tor smne u ' f the -.i the paper, examinauuu was iu" - 4. -1 lh. -h,Vh led to the ed w r.i..v under- nnnclnsion deep blue wal a nroce deep blue w w --tion under paste the influence o. - to ed to j tha h an cm ST. piece nfirmed, for on of paper in -J Sphnnrt slum it gave off sufficient v ... ted hydrogen to be to the nose, unu w Nver interrupt any conversation with m a K oTdV. Bull's Cough Syrup and cure it. . :.t, m this village, the motherot a bright little W.; ing to him the other night, just as she VlfW him to bed, about the effica- ofrraver and told him that if be would fforything that he particu larly desired she had no doubt 1 to e ouest would be granted. The little quest " vn and fellow knelt a u " - -- - . vai1 Hod to send nun fifty little sis ter and one hundred Uttle brothers The praver was never finished, tor the motheraghast at the prospect of bav. Log her house turned into an orphan asylum, lifted the boy to his feet, and tucked him into bed without a moment a unnecessary dt lay. MBncba-Palb' Tbe qolc.rnmpletecnrell anaqJW J, R ajlileralftd iriUJtrj 7iHt-v 'Wmw are we going to get our Oilt Edged Tonic Y' asked a prisoner in the Austin jail of the jailer. "What do you want it for?" -I read in the papers that persons of sedentary habits ought to use it." A statistician has estimated couitsbips average three tons of each. that coal Vcgetiiie JTST WHAT I SEEDED. B ALTUIOU, lid., Haj 4, 167. If R. Stktvss : l-krs.r: I have. In tbe sprinxT of tbe year, a faint, slnkinr feenna; tn tbe stomai b, and tbts prm have been so wen It Ui4t I felt the nerd of umetbinir. A friend w bo bad tued VEIVETINK alvtel me to take me, I did an, and It proved tu be just what I iKeile-l. It bunds tbe wboiesjatem n,and nukes one feel like a new person. lours repeeiriiuv. lira. tUZAHETH PORTER. I Cbestnul Street. Rheumatism, Indigestion. B ALTtaoKB. Md., April 19, 1ST. Dear sir: I have been suffrnni from kbenma- tlani and Indigestion for over two years, and since 1 bave coonueu.-ed taking your VK. iEriNK I bave received zreat benedt. 1 bave taken but two bot tles, and I tbink with the aid of a lew more I will be reored to mv health again. 1 can recommend Um VtctTLNt f' what it 'las done lor me. Kesuecllnlly Tours, lira. K. J. LEWIS, ;:sn. linilSt. Losn of Appetite. I.aasitude and General Debility. BoeroM, vaa., Mij It, 1ST. Xa. JoserH R. Gbosb : Pew Sir: Tour rormal reeommen-latton of v ku 1 1 1 . k as a spring Medicine and ril'tod Fu ri ser Induced me to anv It a tbnpsiirh tnaL and I candidly admit that in my experience it is all yon aave- cLumeu iot h. uantrMer oasaiwaya been amicted with Scrofula humor in a very severe form, and particularly tn spring was badlv troubled with Lo-a of Appetite, Lassitude and Uem-ral De bi.ity. The V Et i F.TIN K had the desired effect and we are never without tt. Its success was a ap parent in this ca.se that manv of mr trie u Is aud relauves have also tried it, with general satisfac tion. Any further information wu be cheerfully given by lourx trulv, ;. R." WILLIAMS, Health Department City ". Vcgetine. SPRING MEDICINE. Vegetine is Sold by All Druggists. f nnfailinr and infw liHMe in rutin v h.inl flIC r It. siMsnic i mnw, a irono. ism Opium iLHtinkf. Nk. vutu debility mtoIuU mid Kii ."'TYiKli an K.tHMl dt.iniiw t rvjo y !. aunivvT. ir 'f 5 VJ oih ami nil wiMjrtes,. O-. I ru l ion. IrmriilAritfast. bowel or kindfyH, m t NEVER FAILS. iv" mDire a htv tHl1C. ntrlMatiaawr rvi -nlmulam, SaniMhlai. .NtrvirrwMK InvalnoKU T 1mm wanh p rocinl m il vlgnrantthfteverM.h'i''rii,!, AIM AKESis atmitWNDS OF PILES. prep-iClKv ni.it Samnieaii'. J"1 "JOner bow aT.II mS -r.-ri. by P.TenJ'o?,'! l-VW-Sn. li'IliJ'OSSTsSGLl aacr.babtv baawHf.i tll MlJJO. raajicnTOooi aioarr uLZ aIn. Kama zrzzw .! 3 ?snSi?w5 nrmn-nt "ulna I aiq. S.a,CMMlTMT1S.-fl ! eorr a tana- nn- . . i fanner LtVjUULVaV.Lr I Tltal Questions tt . v ,h most eminent physieian school, what the b.st thing i!hi for iietth? aad allaying all im. tneworWtsl.d cunt all form, complaints, giving natural, Some form of Hopsi chapter L any or all of the most eminent phy- riCat tf the best and only remedy that II r lied on to cure aU disease of tbe fJe wd urinary organs; such as Bright, 5 rhabetes, retention or inability to d' unneTand all ail- SSarWomen''- ndbTwuIteUjou explicitly ami- d f.wiiat is the most reliable and surest "foT ,11 liver diseases or dyspepsia, coo mflizestion, biliousness, malarial Je'ver ai etc:.' and they will tell you: XnakeJorDandeUoar Since, when these remedies are com bined Vith others equally TaluaWe nd I compounded into II op Bitters, such . .onderful and mysterious curative pow !,T. developed which so varied in iu rperaUonsS no disease or id health can Sly exist or resist its power, and yet a harmless lor the most frail woman, -Jkest invalid or smallest child to use. CBAPTU II- -Patients -Almost lead or nearly ujinif V, vears, and gien up by physicians f Right's andother kidne y diseases, liver plaints, severe coughs called consump. Uon. hae been cured. Women eone nevlv rrazv 1 vni irony ol nenr .lxi. nerToasiw-ss w.xMai- DTeodn excrueiAtin, aiP.luliI Uon, an-! in I tUaeMK HiveTAured T Hop Bit" ers, proof ol wbrk b, TfcSad in everj nehuortl ui tne know, world. THE SUN VIE HILI.IO A WEEK. rwidlopinionevpiT--;lin nirua nut r ne lrtHiIvn"f bafevln U w;u world l. woriu 1 bat m everybody w ...re t. n I ,:. i-.'hrmilLJV. mnittlJI-ir; r7i paraA. p" "; SI per -. ..- .Kifahor. Tt City. WILEOR'S COMPOUND OF PURE COD LIVER mT A "NTT. T.TMT U1U 1A11A AJ'a J a M aalve Mmmr hapf? to le lueir K-tluionv m lAror .i the ii tf h oro.ed it b he a valnai.'e r-ru- ijr l. r rT" ...hm. l)i I)ith'n-na, ai;.l li I:h wan.lLa'-tlirerl only I ' Hl.U 1 1. ! " -' " ... . i . . . ir u ii ifc.a Cbemist. Buabro. Sold by U i: uwita. FRAZER AXLE GREASE ml la lh world. the ceatnlwe. Every urkacs r traMle-mnrk attil I a arknl raaer a. awa,a tlElinHASa. tn elts one wnimz paper, In blotter, Arrau O vl "ta Cj.len.Ur. bv mail f.r S.c. - wutext. port, Mass. cosoaT 'raumsa Co Htwaaij- ONLY S2Q fnr tbla arris of FHILADILfHIA SIXbkK. sqaai to may sugar tn Btarkat, i aai aaani, mi a lid it AaSweawiMMiaaw oeWw yaaapoyorit. TbJalathaauaa atria atnar eDmpanias racail fce $50. All Macbinaawamuitadtw ram S-d lot Ilhastaiad C1f aauaraoa Taarim.ua la Aodnaf CflAKLES k. WOOD CO, O UlTsU.St.PiilaWtN it ff T am ri orna, Bonlona. Scalds. Bral9ea.Sorenna of toe, naxkta I CANCER INSTITUTE w!; KUT 5rit(ikinlmL luot-t t"i traoruuuirT fiir- by h' -,i!3JWt Of (3IKvT can "i irv. f i-1 l, -a Arch 8ttulaaiiixP SUSIS WHEM AU HU fAuS. I B0onhyniD. TaMmnL I t -e m nr.te. HnM bv dnicmu. S BOO K,ACENTS rwV7.1?.5 K Mibin " oat 1 evlrt, .C1 .UJ',,"r "Arr'tle ut early bonier life did T2m- '"TOl.l AK-ent. and -i.fc-u- M in lit' ' r t"""'"- " are now aehnur U."iS- WT -Went in er- i r Tn"" nd nrtulan. frve. Uoaclaaa Brolaier.u N. :ui strL PhHa.. r. a-vm sav tM, auauita, AGENTS SKI l?Tr POt irtlin wotio. nt4 iot ibvrtitiia t. v wri.u r l u -.. "mptv rmiaufiuQlaV, . ilr. Ik It . i oraeaaaa ihtiilr!. 'S"" doab treatad ni riir.l kaa ilaiDlr bni aVtlj T..:ln Phy"cl. B r.cr .fr M rear' i . - ... . nmm o, m ... r. , : . - n-a I wlb a lanr. bo..;. 'J'r- a. aawwaar on wi,h, . . lr. r.HlaJnM A. AS. aUiaaftOl Jl - xTTi iiiJ,lrUt'tli od BU4ea- Prices t ""f,4L.C, I n Uhiii. V $5 tO $20 ?r " booie. sample wort PorCanxl, Maine. AdUress Stuonso" Co '---"Uf JUllOS a t'O.Ioimieuer.VI THC BEST IB eui.... .THRPfJHCRQSAWIILLi JJnitrtto an aeetlocM. i STOPPED FREE OT. U5E-8 GREAT NEbVF Rcotadc o a.. A.1D OUII enn-M addta.. w - eW 2.1 V . na imw.r.u iiw 0 n v 1ST -7a.et& . itcbuurrromanrcauae. w-Kjovuanui laaaaaw tM or aenj la U t ttimtt Straat, aVX.aaaa Irw Lm. twl Brtacs. 9m TI3t IfJl. f av joiu, ii: r4 Tmtt rbijii. jd J oldnnulaL Wvraaia fiatt, aUauMla. "I For & BBVaataTtM i J JQMS OF BIMLHiMTaS, JEr'TZtt Slwmi.MM. a. l.alg- 11 fii- it v r ilTl-jii 1 llDlaVl eb., aa I H VV N'wlnk I II the Car of I 311 FREE ! ! VJA1 CtrrriiiM. D w mAiT 1 lln vateai of la ""raVCe. J w. th.Uuemnatl.O. llna w . luan, IIL "Airae. lad.; Conuueraal Hotel. OWa rwn T.. . Port lami, Maine. H. HALLSTT CtA, C. B.C. 2SV "UyNESMCOlXEOB - j- . t rtta for Cataluarua. JLit.T- ku lmi.B i TV E" i mr tana "ai. UI.. ---,.TIATISS an this - i n i (a a ' ..v. .... ..1.4 n na erMa aj.4 r -X. A, suigvav i la AW Sv ,w Tara. adttFtaa
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers