Juniata sentinel and Republican. (Mifflintown, Juniata County, Pa.) 1873-1955, October 01, 1884, Image 4

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    Tip': fi--
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la A Der-Sled.
A travel!- said; I bad a thousand
wi!es M go before I should reach the
Arctic Ocean. 1 tound some difficulty
la that ciammiug myself into my tleer
sied, aud a few hours afterward quite
m great in petti-is out of it. The
deer-sled is a lonp, narrow affair,
placed on high wooden runners; it is
made extremely lilit, of a framework
of slender birch, aud is covered with a
hood in order to protect the head and
facs of the cccuiwnt, from the biting
blasts. It is, in Tact, in appearance a
lensthened-out cradle, aud, I think,
about as coiafortable. At night one
sleeps in it very comfortably. I re
n-eiuber the fut night we were in the
forest, the mcoti nfluit bright, the road
w as ebed, "arid Yakut tiara his trained
to follow "-tue Aa.tsr laUhf ully, and
only the leaduS driver Tias any serious
wuik to do. .SvjieB l-was nwake, how
ever, I fowiS Vie Journey strangely
wired a:id jiitw-stHj . You see before
vou nothing Wiit of trees and
slHiiiler uaJerwood n oining iu
which vou can iniajrinc that a road ex
ist. But tl leader enters tlie glootu
of the forest 'fearJessly, lie darts on
lirst to the right aud then to the ltit,
between trunks of trees scarcely more
than a foot wider apart than is needed
tiiiousli which your s!ed is to pass. Now
and then you lose sight of the sled in
advance of you, but your horse knows
the road, if you do not attempt to
drive, and he follows. Strange forms
then the sleds take on in the whitened
gloom. The Yakuts do not put sleigh
bells on the harness, and you pass on so
silentlv, and ti.e tinting things iu front
of you, of which you catch glimpses
occasionally, serm to form part of some
strange, weird and gliosily procession.
S you pass on lor hours through the
forest. Then a white, bleak space
opens iu fiout of you, over which you
jmss in the moonlight. It is the frozen
S'ufat e of a lake, of which there are
H-oies among the forests. Suddenly,
when you have passed the crest of a
Lill, you look down toward the Talley
that seems a mile away. Y'ou imagine
tLul rockets are being tired into the sky
by some unknown friends. They seem
to lie shot up one after the other with
g;eat regularity, and you can imagine
or ti.e moment that a company of
Cossacks has been sent in advance to
tKilnt out your resting or camping place.
Jiut this is an illusion. The valley is
not a humlied yards away, and the
rockets are nothing more than the
eiKirks from the blazing hearth of a
Yakut vourte.
Outside the Yakut yourte looks a
very msiguiticaut affair. It is very
Jow, covered with a layer of mud, and
iu winter of i-tmw, and has slabs of ice
propyl up from the outside for
windows, ai'd a doorway only just
large enough for a cow to squeeze
through, aud much too low for a man.
Enter the hut and you feel the grateful
warmth of the blazings piled upon the
raised hearth, and feel at once well
i!isioed toward the inhabitants, who
ever they may be. Once inside and
you see that the yourte is built of stems
ii large trees, the sides sloping up
ward toward the roof, which is also
aiade of lurch stems laid side by side
iml supirietl by pillars rising from
;he fljor. In the center of the yourte
ts the huge iv.ised hearth, slender stems
nf trees" plastered with mud forming
the smoke conductor, or chimney. The
lgs lor the lire are placed iu an up
right position, so that they burn quick
ly and throw out a comfortable warmth
tiound the room, which may be from
fifteen to twenty yards square. Close
beLeath the sloping sides are built rude
lynches, divided off into compartments,
each about six feet long. These are
the sleeping-bunks being only iios&ible
when you Lave a shawl or rug to hang
up before your division. Ou these
benches jou a!I sleep, Yakuts and
travelers, the yemscliiks taking the
floor, and you sleep comfortably enough
in the blaze and warmth of the fire.
There is an inner apartment to the
yourte, a kind of annex or deiendence.
This is not given up to the family, or
even to the ladies of the house, but is
ti.e unrestricted domain of the cows,
which, however, have to pass through
the living department to get to their
own.
Then there are the belles of the
family. These are nothing if not ugly.
In one yourte there were three Yakut
damsels," their ages ranging from 12 to
20. They possessed bat a single pipe,
which they passed arouud from one to
the other. If their brothers, the
yemscliiks, are just going out on a
journey they allow each to take a few
energetic w hiffs before their departure,
and then go at the work themselves
again, chatting and looking after the
boiling of the sour milk at the same
time. The pipe is kept going almost
incessantly from morning till night.
The girls are not, as I said before,
handsome. Their faces have too nauch
cheekbone, their noses are too flat, their
ejes too straight slit, and their habits
in general too peculiar for appreciation.
Such a Yakut ma;deu is not long fancy
free. She is betrothed by her parents
at a very early age, say 6 or 7, when all
the contracts for her future life are
bettled aud sealed. Ten or a dozen
years later the betrothed pair pil
grimage together to the nearest Greek
church, which may be fifty or a
hundred miles away, and are married.
In the Y'akut yourtes there was also a
curious kiud of cradle that attracted
my attention, filled witn hay, cotton,
wool and a little baby. It was a long
little box, made of wood. Barrow down
toward the place where the feet should
come, and provided with various open
ings, whose utility I could not grasp
until I learned that when once a young
Yakut was properly Oxed in his place he
is kept there for a week or two, or per
haps longer.
All these Yakuts are Christians,
though I should not like to assert that
they understand very well the myster
ies of the faith to which they weie
introduced in such a summary fashion.
I noticed when we started on our
journeys that the mounted yemschikin
front of my sled invariably took oil his
fur cap immediately after starting out,
aud with a long series of crosses com
mended himself and the party Intrusted
t J his care and guidance to the God of
tne Greek Church. But all along the
r-iad, on the trees, were tufts of horse
hair and bits of rags, and these I learn
ed had been placed there by the Y'akut
y;mscbiks in order to propiteiate their
oid divinity, Shamal, and to induce him
to give them good weather and good
roads. But neither horsehair nor rags
were of any avail as regards speed.
A Wnnderml Memory.
A teacher of mathematics named
"William Lawson, who died at Edin
burgh m November ltoi, on one occa
sion, to win a wager made by his pa
tron, undertook to multiply regularly
in succession the numbers from one to
forty, without other aid than his memo
ry, lie began the task at seven o'clock
in the morning and finished at six in the
evening, w hen he reported the product,
which was tested on pajier and found
to be correct. It made a line of forty
eight figures, and a fair copy of it long
occupied a place on the wall of his
patron's dining-room, for which it was
framed and glazed. It may be added,
that in the course of the day on which
the mental calculation was made Air.
Lawson received his pupils as usual
and gave them their ordinary lesson in
Latin.
In mil way building across sandy des
erts the French engineers are beginning
to employ iron ties. A lata pattern
consists of wrought iron bar supported
in the middle and at both ends by globn
Jar plftUt U . iron.
AGP.ICUL1TBE.
A he" over two years old it not profit
able to keep and will be less so every
day she is kept over that time. All
such old birds should be weeded out
now, and disposed of or at the latest be
prepared for sale later when the demand
may be a little better. But it is a good
maxim to follow that when one is losing,
the losses should be cut short at once;
and when one is gaining the profit
should ruu on. Money is 6ved and
made in this way iu keeping poultry, as
all ether farm stock. But it should be
figured np whether the cost of feeding
for three months longer will be made
np by the increased price obtained then.
Sometimes a tiling may be sold cheaply
at one time, aud more profit made frm
it tliau by keeping it longer and gutting
more for it. This is a poiut upon which
poultry keepera and farmers generally
may do a good deal of useful figuring
at times. This plan of weeding out the
flock: gettinc rid of all the old fowls
and younger ones too that are not prof
itable, such as surplus cocks and hens
that d not lay, is the best way to im
prove it and in time to get a flock that
will have no dead-heads in it.
A coitREitivsPssT says: "I raised a
good u.any gripes (in a amall way)
which were sometimes troubled with
mildew, one vine especially, which I
had trained np a plum tree. I dusted
the foliage with sulphur, but when I
came to the one on the plum I could not
got at it conveniently, bnt happened to
think of having some sulphur aud asaa
laa'i.la with water in a vessel, which I
bad kept tor g veu to my hogs occasion
lly. 1 tried syringing the vine, tree
and all, with the mixture, which had
stood eo long as to tarn black. The
odor was not pleasant, but the curcu
lio did not puncture a plum on that
tree, aud it was loaded with large blue
plants. Other experiments have been
equally successful. I commence ning
the ftyringe as soon as the tree blooms,
continue as often as it is washed off by
the rami, until the plums are nearly
lull tizo."
A cohkesp ndkst is inclined to find
the cauie of abortiou in cows iu the use
of Syracuse salt, and thinks there is
gome mineral iu it that causes tlie, trou
ble, lie says: "The first I ever heard
of abortiou as an epidemic was in the
vicinity of Syracnse, and as the salt
made there came East abortion follow
ed." Singularly enongh, a Littleton
(Mass.) farmer, who keeps a large herd
of cattle, bo rue time ago expressed the
opinion that abortion in cat tie was rretty
anre to follow the nse of Turk's Iilaad
salt, and that when he used American
salt for his cows he avoided the difficul
ty. Xhese two observers agree in ascri
bing the trouble to salt, but each finds
safety in the particular kind ol salt con
demned by the other.
YWieat asd Em Where wheat is
largely grown rye is one of the worst
kind of weeds that can get in land. It
is very difficult to separate the grains
so that some rye will not be sown each
year. But as rye runs np into head
several days earlier than wheat it is a
comparatively easy matter to go tbrongh
the grain, and with a corn knife cut out
the rye. If cut jutt befere the wheat
heat's out the rye will not sprout soon
enough to mature aDy seed.
Milk and Conscmption. It is assor
ted that in ilk from a cow Buffering from
tuberculosis is not only liable but abso
lutely certain to produce that disease
iu the Luraau being who drinks it. It
is believed that there are many cows so
tlil ottd iu New York, and that they are
ruMUibible for luauy deaths occui ring
from till r ular consumption. How
urgent a tui ject this is, may be inferred
from the face that the deaths In New
York city from tubercolosis last year
numbered t2i).
A Kextvcst farmer who knows how
to raise 400 bushels of potatoes per acre,
gives these pciats as to his method:
Kiel), light soil, plow deep early iu the
spring, plant fitteeu incuts apart, cover
four inches dtxtp or more; keep down
the weeds, but do not work the ground
alter the potatoes begin to bloom. The
maia secret, he says is in selecting the
stvd. He always cuts off the blossom
end. Oiie eye will yield more potatoes
than two.
biLK cuitnre is not advocated as a
very lucrative business, but as a home
I industry it adds largely to the wealth of
nations encased m it. in t ranee its
metnods and practice are taught in all
the schools. The raising of a few
pounds of cocoons each year need not
materially interfere with other duties,
and it Is by each household raising
few ponuda that make it profitable as
a whole. Large rearing establiihmentd
seldom pay.
Mr. C. C Cp.ocket, of E:chmond,
Iud., reports the following tst of his
youngcow, Mable Crocket 18,713, 2years
and 5 months old : Began saving milk
morning of May 25, ending on evening
May 31, seven days. Cream was
churned twice on Wednesday during
wtck of test, and luesday the following
week. Insult as follows: JO i Tbt milk
dailv average 13 Ibi 14 oz.: making 14
ft? 9 oz. of butter. Test began two
weeks after calving, feed, nothing but
gravs.
XoETLWKsrKBV sheep men have all
along given more prominence to mutton
than do the flock-masters of the o'd
sheep-raising States, and now that wool
is getting so low it is not strange that
they are pav'ng inoreased attention to
the carcass. A high class of mutton
comes from that country, too, and the
tendency is rather toward improvement
than deterioration. It is claimed that
Calorado alone will market 300,000
wethers before winter besides l'JO.000
lambs.
JIattriti of stock has been hastened
by good breeding. That is a pig or a
theep which matured at three years, or
steer which was ready tor slaughter
at five years formerly, is now ready for
the butcher at less than half these ages.
Pigs are said to be ready for pork at
nine months, wethers for mutton at
twenty months and a steer at two years,
though it is feared that these claims aro
greater than may be justly allowed.
Nothing, will secure better remunera
tion to the average farmer than to assist
in building np and encouraging home
markets for desirable farm products.
Among the first essentials in this direc
tion is an increased variety in the pro
duction. An important requisite in
supplying a local market is to furnish,
so far as possible, a full assortment ot
what is needed or commonly in demand.
bosis one says that the most direct
way to some men's pic'tetbooks is
through their stomachs. The doctors
evidently discovered this some time
ago.
F. J. Faraday is inclined to the be
lief that the breathing of air devoid of
the usual quantity of r xycen is ant to
develop germs otherwise harmless into
those which produce consumption. As
giving support to his hypothesis, he
cites the decrease of consumption in
well ventilated barracks, and the relief
afforded to patents by sea voyage, the
air of pine woods and the inhalation
of carbolic acid.
A solution made of a tablespoon ful of
salt-petre to four qntrts of water is one
cf the best antidotes for the roan-bug
and currant-worm, it is also death to
the cabbage-worm. Apply -vith forca
pomp or garaea ijTinge,
DOMESTIC.
How to Cook Eooi Cook the first
in the orthodox manner by keeping it
in boding water three and a half min
utes. Then place the second in this
same boiling wtter; but, instead of
keeping the saucepan over the fire,
place it on the hearth and leave it
there, with the eggs in it, about ten
minutes or more. A still Detter way
of making the comparative experiment
is to ufe for the second tgg a water-
bath, or bain tuarie of the rrench
scientific cook; vessel immersed in
boiling or nearly boiling water, like a
glue-pot, and therefore not quite so
hot as its source of heat. Jn this case
a thermometer 6honld be used, and
the water surrounding the egg be
kept at or near 180 dg. Fahr, Time or
immersion about ten minutes or more.
A comparison of results will show that
the egg that has been cooked at a tem
perature of more than 30 dg. below the
boiling-point of water is tender and
delicate, evenly so throughout, no part
being hard while another part is scmi
ra and slimy. I said "ten minutes or
more," because, when thus cooked, a
prolonged, exposure to the hot water
does no mischief; if the temperature of
160 dg. is not exceeded, it may remain
for half an hour; in fact, the per
fection of cooking, according to my
experience (I always cook my own
eees when 1 have tne opportunity ana
can spare the time), is attained when
kept at 160 dg. about twenty minutes.
The ISO dg. is above-named because
the riRiBd of the temperature of the
eggs itself is due to the difference be
tween its own temperature and that oi
the water, and. when that difference is
very small, this takes place very slowly,
besides which the temperature oi tne
water is, of course, lowered in raising
that of the cold eg.
Hot Cboss Bc.ns. Into one and a-
half pounds well-dried flour rub four
ounces moist sugar; warm a quarter ot
a pint of milk, not hot enough to scald
the yeast; make a bote in the middle
of the flour, and put in quarter ot a
teacupfulof good thick yeast that is not
too bitter, or it will taste iu the buns;
pour on it jour warm milk aud mix
about one-third or nearly one-half of
the flour with it. leaving the rest un
mixed around the sides of the pan. Set
in a warm place to rise for three-quarters
of an hour or an hour. When it
has well-risen, melt a quarter of a
pound of butter and mix it with some
milk; let it be on the fire until it is
warm, then mix it with the rest of the
sugar and flour into a dough. When
mixed it should be rather softer than
bread dough. I'ut it to rise for a quar
ter of an hour and then mould it into
round balls, cut a cross on them, put
them on buttered iron plates, and then
into a warm place, to rise or prove;
when well-risen, bake them in a hot
oven. It you wisn to nave currants or
carraway seeds and spice in them, mix
in either of these when you add the
butter and milk. The spices to be
used are equal quantities of ground
ginger, allspice, coriander and caraway
seeds mixed U getner; put in as amen
of this as you think sufficient.
Tub Raint 1at f ai.vt- Bex. In some
nook Oi corner of the children's trunk
make provision m the shape of amuse
ment for the rainy day. A box of
water-color paints is a well-spring of
joy on such an occasion. Any old
magazine with pictures, are ac
ceptable. A little boy spending his
summer at the seashore loudly ex
pressed his desire for a rainy day so
that he could paint. His mother kept
him out in the open air playing on the
sands aud in the pine woods, so long as
the days were clear. She wisely eco
nomized his little pleasures by reserv
ing some choice niorsol for the rainy
days. There is a card game of "Alice
in Wonderland," which very little
children can understand.
Indian FurriERS. Put three table
spoonfuls of Hour into a Uusin, and
pour into it sufiicieut boiling water to
make it into a stiff paste, taking care to
stir and beat it well to prevent its get
ting lumpy. Lsave it a little time to
cool, and then break into it the yolks
of four eggs and the white of two, and
stir and beat all well together. Have
ready some boiling lard or clarified
drippings. Drop a dessertspoonful of
batter in at a time, aud fry the fritters
of a light brown. They ought to rise
so much as to be almost like balls.
Setve (hem on a hot dish, withaspoon
iul of jam or marmalade dropped be
tween each fritter.
Grahim Mcpfins. Into a sieve put
half a pint of flour, two teas poo natul
cream-of-tartar and one of saleratus.
M x the three ingredients thoroughly
aud sift them into a bowl coutaing one
and a-half piutB of Graham flour, half
a cupful of sugar and a teaspoouf ul of
salt. Mix all thoroughly while dry,
and add two well-beaten eggs and a
pint of milk. Fill muffio-cups about
two-thirds to the top aud bake in a
quick oven.
Bkeakfast Cake. In warm weather
breakfast cakes, take one cup of mo
lasses, one cup of brown sugar, nearly
one eup of butter or lard, and butter
mixed, oue cup of sour milk, four cups
of Hour, four teaspoonsful of soda, not
heaping but even full, one teaspoonfui
each of cinnamon, salt and ginger, one
egg. Bake in gem tins. These will
keep well for a week.
CAtTLtFDwca Salad. Boil one large
cauliflower with two quarts of water
and one taolespoonful of salt for half
an hour. Take np and drain. When
cold divide into small tufts. Arrange
on the centre of dish aud garnish
with a border of strips of pickled beet.
Pour a cupful of mayonnaise dressing
over the cauliflower. Arrange a star of
the pickled bert in the centre. Serve
immediately.
Grapb Tib, Do not send to the
table a grape pie the filling of which is
at least one-third seed; u you nave
not time to make the pie as it should
be made, wait till a more convenient
season, and stew the grapes without
sugar first, and then the seeds can be
removed with ease; then sweeten the
grapes and fill the paste just as you do
with other iruit.
TJEbT Salad. Boil new beets with
out scraping them. When they are
tender drop them in col J water, remove
the skin, slice them and put them in a
saiad dish in layers, with shoes of hard
boiled eggs; season with pepper and
salt, a little butter and vinegar.
New Potatx.es Fbied. Peel after
being boiled; do not let the skins
breaic so they may remain whole, have
ready one beaten egg, and some rolled
crackers; first roll the potatoes in the
egg. then in the crackers. Fry in
butter or hot lard nntil a light brown.
7he Gazette Maritime et Commer
cials relates a curioaa instance of the
formidable power of molecular forces.
The Italian ship Francises, loaded with
rice, had pnt in at East London, leaking
badly. A squad of workmen was pnt
on board to pump the vessel ont and
unload it; bnt in spite of all their dili
gence the rice absorbed the water more
rapidly than they could discharge it,
and swelled until it forcibly bust the
vessel to pieces.
THB cranberrr eron in tha flnnnfrv o
, large, is repot W as having been 461 Qi 0
17- n'ri? "iHS11 r3200,0 ?
42o,000 in lSS-i. In the last men i"D d
Tear. Mew Knolori,! fmrvatiAl 1 rtlul
' bushels; New Jersey 125.000: and tha
wuieni states ltj.lQq.
IIUMOROU3.
He had a handle of papers nnder his
irm, and was standing near the Brook
lyn bridge weeping.
What is the matter, little boy?"
said a pleasant faced gentleman.
"If I go home withont selling me
papers, me fejther and mother will
bate the life ont of me."
That's bad."
-Yes, sor, but the worst of it is that
I am an only orphint, "
"Yes," replied the philanthropist,
allowing a nickel to drop back into his
rocket; "only it doesn't often happen
that a boy has ancu bad luck."
"fo, Charley you've got a sweet
heart, I hear," said one young man to
another.
'I've heard something of that sort,
too," answered Charley.
"f s)ia nrett?"
Either."
i j -
"Father living?"
"i should smile.
Liveliest man yoo
ever saw.
"Well heeled?"
"I don't know whether he is heeled
at all or not, but I have cause to be
lieve he is very heavily toed," and he
limped away with a hurt look and a
crumpled coat-tail.
rcr Half a Lils-Tlai.
Mrs. John Gemmell, Milroy, Miflin
Co,. .Fa., in tne spring oi ioo mjureu
her tpice and partial paralysis ensued.
For nearly twenty years she was unable
to walk. In the Spring of 1883, she
was advised to use St. Jacob's Oil, the
great conqueror of pain. The first ap
plication gave instantaneous relief. Be
fore the second bottle was exhausted she
was able to walk and is cured.
"I tjsdekstand that you are going to
Chicago t4-day," said Noodles to
young lady acquaintance.
"Yes," she replied. "I depart at
4:30 p. m.
"Wenld you permit me to escort
yon to the train?" eagerly asked the
youth.
"Really," said the blushing miss,
'it would not be right for you to go
to so much trouble."
Oh, indeed," said Noodles, eour
tesying profoundly, "it wonld give me
the greatest pleasure to see yon off.''
Then te felt like going behind the
house and kicking himself very, very
hard.
Th Secret of Lit.
ScovlU's Sarsaparilla, or Blood and
Liver Syruit. is the remedy for the
euro of scrofulous htiut, rheumatism,
white swelling, gout, goitre, consump
tion, bronchitis, nervous debility, malaria,
and all diseases arisiug from au impure con
dition of the blood. Certificates can be pre
sented from uiauy leading physicians, min
isters and heads of families throughout the
land, in.lorsinir Scovill's Blood aud Liver
Srrun iu the highest terms. We are coU'
mantly iu receipt of certificates of cures
from the must reliable, sources, aud we
recctnmend it as the best remedy for above
diseases.
Joses boueht a new hat: on the in
side was the motto. "Moveo et Profi-
cio." lie took some piins to find out
the meaniuar of the words, and at an
evening party introduced the subject.
but when he attempted to translate it
he couldn t remember it and appealed
to his wife. "Maria," he said, "do
yon remember what was in my new hat
when I brought it home on baturdhy?"
"Perfectly," said Mr. Jones, with her
usual composure. "Aud what was ill
he aked. looking round on the com
rauv as much as to say: ''Now you
will see what a scholar my wife is,
"A brick," was the crushing answer.
High f'rtced Butter.
Dairymen often wonder how their
more favored competitors get such high
prices for their butter the year round.
It is by always having a uniform gilt
edged article. To put the "gilt edge"
on, when the pasture do not do it,
hey use Wells, Richardson Co's.
Improved Butter Color. Every butter
maker can do the same. Sold every
where and warranted as harmless as
salt, and perfect in operation.
A New iork mau tas l ist patented
a loaf of bread so baked in slices that no
knife is needed to cut it. each slice
being easily pulled off. A Vasaar
College girl who baked a few loaves of
bread by the New i on mau s process
claims to have greatly improved the
patent. It appears that the slices of
her bread, which pull off nicely, can be
used to roof a house, being more dur
aide than slate. There is something in
college education after all.
tea-Quantity and Quality. In the
Diamond D7es more coloring is given
than in any known dyes, and they give
faster asd more brilliant colors. 10c
at all druggists. Wells, Richardson
& Co.. Burlington, YL Simple Card,
32 colors, and book of directions for 2s.
stamp.
"Is there any one here that cannot
see that what I have said is true?" de
manded a frenzied campaign orator,
"Yes, I can't," said a man standing
np. "Wuv caut you?" asked the
orator. "Because I in blind, was the
response.
Pretty Women.
La, he who wotiM retain freskness and it-
vauiiv. Try "Wells' Ueaita Kenewer."
An advertisement in a contemporary
reads: "Wanted a girl to cook.
This gives rise to the grave suspicion
that cannibalism is not yet played ont
in this country,
Carbo-bnes.
Strike the bosom of old mother earth,
And from her veins unseen
There flows an od of untold worth
When made into Carboline.
It is a singular fact that the more
unclean the political canvass is, the
more "soap" there is used, and yet the
more ' soap" is used the more unclean
the canvass becomes.
"Koueh oa Toothache."
Instant relief for neuralgia, toothache, fane.
aclie. Ask lor "Kouzn uu itMiUAcne." la&iM.
"Ecr, oh, papa, George and I do
love each other so devotedly.
1
don't care. I sav yon shall not marry
him. llowon earth can he support
the daughter of a wealthy merchant
when his salary is only $5000 a year?
'But papa, yon forget he is your con
fidential clerk, yonr trusted employe.
What of that? ' "Why, he probably
owns more of the store than yon do
already."
Dit Kuvs'S ureal erre Kesrorer is the
marvel of the aire I-r all nerve diseases. All
Lis 8topx-l free. Ueuu to til Area Street,
I hUaoeiphm. fa.
PnTMBn HKnimjAL -llrta"! Dart
H-w little the old farm has changed
Honest Faimer "Very few changes
have been made, my son. You will
find things pretty much as yon left
them twenty years ago. Over there
the apple tree yon planted."
"Yes, the same tree, only larger; and
there is the dog-house I made for the
new pnpi"
"Yes; poor Carlo! He died of old
age ten years ago. xnat dog you see
is his grandson."
"And over there is the chicken
house I helped to build for eld Bidd
first brood."
"Xes; poor old Biddy! I wish I had
known you were coming home."
"Why?"
-Because! might have saved bar.
! but 1 took her to market last week."
.
t Tm mn hn vnaVaa
very wicked, bnt the one who doaa not
U no Letter.
By the term instantaneous photr.
graphy" a wrong impression generally
prevails as to its meaning. A clear
photograph cannot be taken of a body
motion as is generally supposed.
Au animal, planet or comet may be
traveling witn marvelous rapidity, bnt
the picture is secured in so brief a space
of time, that the body to all intents and
purposes is absolutely at rest dorirg
the operation. The human being sits
in the photographer's chair a full min
ute to allow the camera to receive the
correct impression. During that mo
ment a horse on the race course, travel
ling at the rate of thirty-six miles per
hour, would have gone 1,080 yards
Had the camera been exposed on tne
horse a full moment, the image produce;!
would scareely represent a shadow. In
secouu s time the animal would nave
traveled eighteen yards. It is obvious
consideration ol the above tnat no
better results would have been obtained.
Travelling at the rate of eighteen yards.
213 inches per second, in one six
hundred and forty-eighth part of a sec
ond, the horse, as a whole, would have
advanced one inch. Even in that oriel
time, and the animal, moving that short
distance, would give the camera but a
blurred, unrecognizibie impression.
In order to secure a good picture, tne
aniaial, as a whr.le, must not move over
one tenth of an inch, an amount equal
to the winking of an eye or the nervous
vibration of an individual sitting ami
before a camera. The time thus r
quired would be 6,48Jth part of a sec
ond. Mr. Muy bridge fonnd by actual
experiment that in order to secure an
accurate photography of a galloping
horse the exposure of the camera must
be less than one five thousandth part of
second. He accordingly devised a
highly defected apparatus by which
every posiiiou of a horse in motion was
secured.
"It Knock the Suotr ,
and everytbiug in the nature of eruptions.
blotcues, pimples, ulcers, soroiuious uu
mors, and incipient consumption, which is
nothiug more nor less thau scrofula of the
luiigSjCOiupletelyoutofthesystem. It stim
ulated jaud inTitfurates the liver, tones up the
stomach, regulates the bowels, purities the
blood, aud builds up the weak places of the
body, it is a pure vegetable compouud,
and will do more than is rlaimed for it.
We refer to Dr. l'fjne's "Gulden JfJicuJ
Discovery."
Talkino with a friend the other day
about the tricks of youth and the dimly
remembered slipper, he said that he
recollected one day when his mother
was sick and his prim old aunt came to
preside over him, the older brother
and the table. Having teased his aunt
past alt endurance, she tapped bis
sconce, when he called her an old fool.
At the supper table his father was in
formed of his impudence, and Will
was told to go to the head of the table
and tell his annt he was sorry. lie
went and fulfilled the command, with
hanging head, by saying:
'I m sorry yon re an ol I fool,
Auntie." He got no supper, but
meant well.
As Goofl as New,
are the words used by a lady, who was at
oue time given up by the, most eminent
physicians, and lelt to (lie. lleilucutl to a
mere skeleton, pale aud hazard, uot able
to leave her bed, from all those distre-ssiiii;
diseases peculiar to suttcrint' females, such
as displacemeut, letU'orrlio.-a, iiitl.imma-
tion, etc, etc, she, be.j m ta km; lr.
Fierce s "iavorite Freseription, and aiso
using the lucal treatments recaniiiended
by him, and is uow, she says, "as C'tod as
uew. Price reduced to oue iloll.ir. Hy
druggists.
Biggins was poorly "all ruu dowu
and uo strength," he told his friend
Smith.
"Do you ever taka any stimuleut,
Mr. Biggint?" asked Smith.
'No," answered Biggins, mournfully.
"except sometimes just before going to
bed."
"Well, for mv part," said Smith, de
cidedly, "1 don't never waut to take
nothiu jest afore goui to bed, for 1
goes light to deep an' loses all the
good on it."
Throw Away Trass.
when our new method is guaranteed to
permanently cure the worst cases of rup
ture without tbe use ot the Kuile. !-rail
two letter stamps for pamphlet and refer
ences. orld a Iispeusary Melieal Asso
ciation, GiiJ Main Street, Uuflalo, Y.
The Province of Amazonas, Brazil,
exported last year 190 tons of earsapa
rilla. The z:rza vine grows in the
swamps, in soil that in Canada is known
as "black muck," and the collectors
often spend weeks in these marshy pools.
The roots are traced and raised with a
sharp stick, bnt the vine is not disturb
ed, the roots being cut off near the
stock, which is covered up with a little
earth, so that the fresh roots may grow,
and, in time, fresh harvest be gather
ed.
Hat-Fever. One and one-half bot
tles of Ely's Cream Balm entirely cured
me of Hay-Fever of ten years s standing.
Have bad no trace of it for two years.
AiBELT A, Perm, amithboro, X. Y.
Price 50 cents.
Hat-Fevbb. I was severely ffllicted
with Hay-Fever for 2o years. I tried
Ely's Cream Balm, and the tfL-ct was
marvellous. It is a perfect cure. 'W u.
T. Carb, Presbyterian Pastor, Eliza
beth, X. J. Price 00 cents.
Observations nave been made in Ice
land, showing that gleaming waterfalls
seem to be as attractive to moths as ar
tificial light moth after moth flying
deliberately into the falling water.
This fect can, of course, be observed
best in a country like northern Iceland,
where there is no darkness at night
during the Summer.
' Hard to Believe.
It is hard to believe that a man was
cured of Kidney disease after his body
was swollin as big as a barrel and ne
had been given np as incurable and lay
at death's door. Yet such a cure was
accomplished by Kidney-Wort in the
person of JU. M. Devereaux ot lorua.
Mich., who says; "After thirteen of the
best doctors in Detroit had given me
up. I was cured by Kidney-Wort. 1
want every oue to know what a boon it
is. '
Mr. IMmatt Hunt was once sharply
criticised for painting a rainbow of one
color red. Two such rainbows are
described in arecectnumberol KaAnre,
as having been seen, aud a third which
showed only orange and red. In the
Dresden gallery there is in the copy of
Raplsors Madonna di t oligno a semi
circular rainbow which is red and yellow.
"Rough on ltch.'
Rough on I'ch" cures kuraire, erupUoos, nag
worm, letter, salt rheuin, ckdulaioa.
It has been estimated that there are
about 6.000 species of birds, of whicu
five-sixths are known. The Cones list
of North American birds now embraces
888 species, 120 new species having
been added during the last eight years.
Piso's Remedy tor Catarrh is a certain
cure for that very obnoxious disease.
Mr. X. B. Clark proposes, in the
Journal of the Franklin Institute, to
employ, as source of emergency power
for ships oi war, lurnaoea into wmcu
petroleum is sprayed along with super
heated steam and not air.
Life rraaerver.
If you are losing- your grip on life, try "Weils'
Health rtcoewer." tioe aired to wean sputa.
It is well known tha a constant sue
cession of sound-waves eicites vibra
tiona in the wires of suspension bridges
and increase in force with the continu
ance of the cause. For this reason sol
diers marching over these brwdges are
required to break step and hands of
1 atoaie arc not allowed to play a than,
f oderw 8amon.
The present Emperor of Kassia ta
said to be one of the u'Tr
his empire of herculean di"nj
While heir apparent he one day visited
his father, the late JimpMor. to com
plain that his mad was tampered with
The Emperor sent for the chief of
police, drew from him a nf8''
guilt and chided bun in the prese nee
it the Czarowitch. The latter said not
I word, but handed the crestfallen
functionary a sign of how great was hvs
anger in the form of a silver rouble
twisted into a roll. In his younger dys
this was a favorite visiting caru oi
Czarowitch. He could striae.
against his arm and bend it, bite pieces
out of china cups, feats which were in
the repertoire of Thomas iapuam,
celebrity of Islington. Tapham was
dravmau, and sometimes when exhil
arated by the vast potations of liquor
supplied him by admirers would take
his horse's place between ""
He had a playful habit of twisting heavy
kitchen pokers into a coil about the
necks of trembling countrymen. O-e
night after having astonished a tavern
full with his drinking powers, he came
upon a watchman peacefully slumbering
in his box and threw box and man over
the wall of a burying ground.
In 1871 M. Uregone, claiming w
71 years old, astjuiahed the physicians
and the public of a town near Lionuon
by carrying 7WJ pounds wun eatw,
lug an ox ana ptnoruiiug -
derful feats. A celebrated physician
who examined Gregorie describee him
as an exaggerated study by Hayden.
His shoulders were proaigious
bleeps almost incredible. Gregorie s
strength, rather than a source ol pnue
to him, was tre cause oi 'j
Although the mildest of men, he lived
in dread that he should be provoked
to nse his strength against a fellow-
beintr. He was afraid to nurse ui
own child lest he should give it a fatal
tqueezo.
Nearly all the individuals oi uncom
mon strength make np in bulk what
they are deficient in height. Stanley,
the African explorer, describes a stroBg
man who was six feet five inches, and
rather disproportionately slender. He
could toss an ordinary man ten feet in
the air and catch him in his descent.
He would take one of the large white
Muscat donkeys by the ears, and with a
sudden movement of his right foot lay
the surprised animal on his bacK. He
could carry a 3-year-old bullock half
way arouud his master's plantation.
Once he actually bore twelve men on
his back, shoulders and cheat a distauce
of three hundred feet Middle-aged
people who remember the dawn of in
terest in muscular exercises recall Dr.
W iuship, the originator of the idea
which was subsequently embodied in
lifting machines. The astonishment
that the doctor's performance created
was equal to that of the Berlinera a few
yeais ago at Jorgnery's feats. The
mcst wonderful of these was known as
the trapeze feat. The Frenchman hung
suspended by his legs from a swinging
bar, and by sheer streugth lifted a
heavy horse and its rider t ff the stage,
suspending them several minutes, aud
then letting them down gradually and
evenly as he raised them. Merwin
Thompson's achievement at Rochester,
N. Y., la-t year was, however, in the
opinion of competent judges, more sur
prising than this. Thompson laid face
downward on a firmly fixed ladder and
resisted the efforts of a team of power
ful horses to pull him from that posi
tion. newswaper writer m reviewing
this womhrftil performance remarks
that the little mention with which it
escaped could htppen only in a nation
where strong meu were common.
The same feat in lG.o cave William
Joy tho name of the English Samson.
Ike medic d tacu'.ty ot lenna thought
of Joseph Pospischilli worthy of dis
cussion at several special meetings.
This mau held a table suspended by his
Ueth while three gypsies danced upon
it. He and one of his brothers bore
niKin th?ir shoulders a sort of wooden
badge while a hon-edrawing a cart lull
oi stones was iinveu over it, l ospt
schiili's strength was thought to reside
iu his back, and his bones were said to
be twice as large as the usual size.
Fishing parties and explorers in the
wil s cf Northern lscousm were a fe
years ago familiar with Peter Panquette,
the Samson of the region, tie was
lanious woodsman, possessed of migh'y
eudurance and muscles that were like
ifou. Senator Clark tays: "I have had
him bare his arm to me aud crack hick
ory nuts upon his muscles. It was like
cracking them on a stone. could
kike a handful of dried bard hickory
nuts and crush them to pieces by mere
ly tightening his hst. Uu oue occa
sion, while serving as a guide lor i
any of explorers, a yoke of oxen draw
mg tne Don dowu tne r ox gave ot t
through fatigue. Panquette took their
place and hauled tin boat along, heed-
uiK the strain less than the beasts.
Sheppard, the wonder of the Covet-
try volunteers, whose muscular devel
opment answers to the description givt n
of Panquelt-, like the latter, wore his
hair long. With the half-breed it wis
a custom derived from his copper-col
ored ancestors, but with the ruddy
Englishman it was in obedience to his
belief that that all his strength Uy in
his flowing yellow locks. Sheppard
could lilt a heavy mau iu each hand.
and hold them at arms length. He
could to-s enormous tables, ba-rela and
bags of fl ur about as though they were
filled with feathery. He could take a
pewter pint pot and tear it into pieces
with his teeth, and he could munch
large oyster shells as a person wonld
munch a biscuit. Sheppard wis the
wonder of the country around, but his
prosperous popularity developed ene
mies, aud one ot these, it is related.
induced the strong man to drink deep! v,
aud whiie sunk in stupor cnt off his
luxuriant hair. Sheppard awoke, felt
his bare poll, and in tones of horror
announced that his strength was gone.
Whether because such was the case, or
because he wished to excite supersti
tious credulity, the strong man from
that moment was weak, timid aud uem
fating nntil his hair grew long again.
iportaar.
When vrni vnlt or leave Niw Tor City, nave
dsrifre Kxpre-uire sqI Carriage Hire, aiij !op
it ine iarauii I uiuu iioioi, otpu4Ue oraau Ceu-
Ir&l beuoi.
Kleyint roonn, fl'te-t up at a cnxi at one
million ihSiaiM. reduced k $1 an t upwar ls per
uav. fc.unteaQ riau. ruevaior. Ketfiauraul
sunnlie.l with the he-, llirae cars. Moires aa
elevate I railroad to all depou. Karaite can live
heller for les mouev at the Grand I aton llulet
uuui at any other arat-claas hotel in the CJ.
It is estimated by Professor Brewer,
of Yale college, there may be 800 se
cies of wood plants growing native iu
the United States, of which about 300
attain a height of thirty feet and about
2"i0 are tolerably abnadant somewhere,
Excluding semi-tropical species on the
extreme southern border, and some oth
ers that are rare, there woald still re
main about 120 species, of which about
twenty grow to 100 feet, twelve to 200
and five or six to 300 feet or over, Ul
these 1-) about fifty are conifers.
Eakthqiukm are very aristocratic,
at least they always belong to the
upper crust.
A blundebbcss Kissing the wrong
cirL Blank despair LauaJly that of
the lottery ticket investor.
"St. Bernard
t VEGETABLE PILLS"
I Th bat enr- for LTVTS fcni BT.
IOI S co-npittllta, CoSTIVkSLS.
HtAUACUfi ana oinruiA.
LPrk. auitjt, u uruprwa, or rr
at riu. aoJxwm
hX. KaMUl AUK ViUih.TA.BLI POX MAICB3.
Maroa-am- w leak
.li llAVmaUfM
Say !-" uat belts be kepi "
Bhouid Uken,irience has taught
and pliable nd$X
us that the bet llc good castor oih
Or leather me lemove.
It softens, and at tw the rfrrface of
M dirt dg it to adhere
the be. 'JaUT.
the more p W belU from
is sometime, used to prere
slippinf- While this i mj end it
.aed effect fo'""foh. the purpose
causes tne very Md barden-
i, to prevent, by -f . acale to
iae hfaoTSe belt, thereby
gather n "0f the belt proper
preventing the "'f'the pulley.
S t Tethered on tLe
houldhavegocdauenuou.
determines ,.ver tnea
. . I -Trit aava m I ,
ETidentJ lSSdlil shoulder to get
to reacu . . k (tupender.
hold of the end of broaen '""t
Have Suffered!'
Wi,h everv disease imaginable for the
niSSirfj. Aulrson, recommending
"Uop Bitters" to me,
v ..i two bottles! ...
..-,Yt cured, and heartily r-"
meud Hop Bitters
every one.
J. I).
Walker, uucaner, i
I write this as a . h of
Token of tne gre.ii
J0""0? ,..mwl
WW- B!trld "
Wittt unummatory laeumauam I n
for nearly . ,
Seven years, and no medicine seemed to
do me any
lntu' I tried two bottles of your H
Hop
ii. ...I ta mv surprise um
tc
day as ever I was. I hope .,
"Y'ou may have aouuuau "-
'In this great and"
Valuable medicine:
Anvoue! wishing to know more
alwut my cure?
Can learn by a.liiressiu "". -- mn
Williams, 110J Kith street, Washington,
P. C.
. 1 couaMer your
Krmedj tne heat remedy in existence
'or Indigestion, kidney
CotAviaini.
"And nervous debility. I have just"
JS'..- .nih in a fruitless search for
health, aud rind that your Uitteraare doing
ine more
Good!
Than anvthin else;
A month ago I was extremely
"Emaciated ! ! I " . ,
And scarcely able to walk. ow I am
liaiidng strength ! and
Tlesu ! ,.
Aud hardly a dav passes but what I ain
"
complimented on my Improved appearance,
and it is due to Uop
Bitters! J. Wicklitle Jacasou,
Wilmington, Del.
tr-Xone genuine without a bunch or green
Hop on the watt label, shun all me vue, pot
aonoua stuff with -Hup" or -lloni" In their
name.
DR. LINDSEY'S
BLOOD SEARCHER
The Great Kwlf. cure Boua. Plmp.ev sot-
Ejea, Strolu,, a. aria, aoJ ail BkooJ Uueaaei.
R. E. SELLERS & CO., Prop's.
PITTSBURG PA.
LVOIA C. RKKHAM'S .
VEGETABLE C3M?CU0
is a pusrn sx cc tx to &
All tbM yaiarfal I'otwp.aiata
m4 H raJk cummab
to mr tv-st
IE1 4I.lv tori'LiTIO.
trim tl to , SArtear le--.a-iw.Wm.
P purpose fa "" txjttwmit kruhw9 mf
J.jzm tKm Lf of t.. tt.at U Oil
It vaH'l swifirlT ail T&nTi trvtnbtv. InftaAl
t. m avid rirvntton, tftibiitt ard ltslaCemenT, i.d
-ate, ii ant SpioaU Wwb. au.tl t ?rti,iilmTlT -ipt-
d U Lb LtukOK ! -u.
It rvmowvw t&intr--- Tmtu)rv. ifstrnTw-v-M Tnwirc
foe "timaUnt-i. m1 j-l'eTen 1ty.mknr of tkv Jmvca.
It cur-- Ittouinr. TMdvV. Vroti Prortrati n,
lrn-Tl !nbt. Slro;-vrv'--, -pr-'om mm 1-wli
ration. TriaU (e!irMf-f br1x 4 WW. reviwiiX
tvnj irkaw'lhr t a.w;r- aW-rrnautrDtiT mrr-d by its u---
S-n.t smii to Lrnn. Mjaw. fi-tr nmrthlrt I --" f
J 111
cmtxs ai.Tj
BISEA9KS OP TS
; KIDNTYS.
i XJV1U, BLAUDEK,
AND
tntntABT oboaks.
DBOPST.
GRAVY. L. DIADTTE3.
t ItRI(JHT-3 DISrASS.
PAXNS I2f Tli-2
' BACK,
, XjOTXS OB STUB,
: KBBVOUS
I DIASS.
ffcYMkNOVVI
. rp rAtLA-l
Br the m of this &EHKDT. the
Btetnach and Bowels vpeedi regain
Ihmr BtreBcta. and to blooa in
It uroaomieed py hrmdide of thebMt doctor te
pe tan OKLY CTJBB tor all vJndof Kjduay Dliniin.
It im purely vegetable, and eures wbea otAer medi
ebues frol. Over 10O Physician In tile state of Bnodn
Jalnad oa record tenorying la its tavor nnd who pre
ffenbe It regulnrly.
HOP
This puroas. pUCer m
tmwm tor ita ai. k
PLASTER
BrtanitaiirHwi,
Crirk ta th tlack, 81d or Hi. hrmln. Jolau
mod Muriia, 8ora Cbe-, kidtwy Trxmtas aad all pains
war Sn-'htTi inthr loml or dehittL It 8oo4le, StrvairisV
rnm mjul Sttoiaavt u pon tm nruvw f koptcoay
linineBts. Lotwiu muA SbvItcsw tne cants or toff
"Miis'-vril A GREAT
ceipC of orteo. ifaj
SUCCESS
Ummpaa. Pro.
prtetwrs, BoMott, Mavisi
la-Tkehestrssuly WU Bnde llselev'sstofaark sa.
T t.-r P-' i 3Re. PlesMetlnsreinnaerteevttmke.
er Wormy Veins rvtecuK. wun m
e" 1 Lost Manhood, b.ellltv. Ac .
IairU.saeilu carl kr lb. Elastic Cradln
:ompreS90r, $6. Glee-Ar,e. CirciLnr Fres.
Cirla UMalflTi Aili'n. IK tCjn 3s l?rv Tt
Hale's Honey
Xorelioiuicl nnd Tar
.S SL w.i.-rrc 111 -t'vs . 7t .': '
C ? rHiI.lt. n ; II TP WU- WtDlt:i ,r..
BRONCHITIS AND CONSUMfZ
a v.w. 1 1 11 -inn E-aj ijt)-! q H
f4vctiia-or chronkciut) BKFAiCS UK
roi.US like msiic: IT CI Rnn 1.
J-tv w&ers outer rcinctileff k
veel it in 1
ulinM. Of all TVmsnarta. at fKnTL. n
l -Urirr-it. rt-pt. I,oK OUT fi IWITATI -"h
Pike's Tilsmvrlo UrvB-- Cro IrstsMio saltsr-
USTiiinVu ooru KattUkvr kuls Our as sal Buumoa
Quwiicaiv
DICTIONARY.
!Pr. Price 1
tICOte
POCKET-DICTIONARY.
fc "'. Price f l .aa
Fur Sal. b, nil Boo,. s,w
lienlers.
TAKE NO CTFIEH.
Xorwiu A te.. HiueaVipnin, Pa.
7
anal obuutej. V. nto tor I Si V s toJi u UI 6rl
II... 1 , , .1 mtiisuus luriUMkeiA
-'.-,u-"- IS.
s-a 19 ior a Life Scholarahip n the
'-olmaa Boaiunsn t ollexe,
Newark, New Jemev. Positiuns
for s-mtlnslee. ....
. . wi.r..wij UO.
ACiEXT WATKI n.k. t.,v.,M
ued. Antkrstie. Iweaniel Cea ka at As w i
oia. Jr, vu Tii rTl"'- ''
MsrvousOe.iiitySvZ;
pig
mm
Alld
jna.
".. 1
r,i.ni"N
brrraaa
he
.net"'
ill ileers. kam.
lke,lnleaes
BADWAI'S
EEADY
RELIEF,
one to twenty minutes never full v
I" 52 pTivr wrh one Uroroogri apolicsnf.a,
' tT?r-how violent or excrniaimj ine pm
-i'hMraatle. Bed-ridden, Infirm. CT.pp.e
afford instant ease.
BOffFL COMFI.lI.VrS,
SffljSrvUS -"ifrT- . ! ui
I1. -iT and ad Internal fain
ttrlers should always carry a bottle of Rau.
Yv JtUb RELIE" w"11 ",e'-
. JL i waTer wul prevent swanesa or pains tr,a
:!ho7wate" It i i'"" "" '
!tau:ra a a stimulant
THB TBUE BELIEF.
FADWAVS KEADT REf.IEP U fie ox,
rental a ' u'a, V"1 ,IU "i' '
Iheth-r k or iiervon. Hothach-. n.-uia i K
,n7aaliveaalu ihe Oach. pir ,r
EX., TiSaarouud me liver, pieun.y, e!.ai
'fSi taiu. spra ng brui. bile-, of iturct- u
52 inVutl.Uie ea. ano its umuuued use tJf a
!ew ect a permanent euro.
JALA a It I IT WARIort lOltSS,
iLVia A3 Afclt.
mew. is not a remedial ant In thu tr r:j
that wul cor. l ever and Ague and ail ouier .M.
uiij cea-.a. iwld bj ilru
Dr.
Badwiy's SarsapariUias tiaoiveat.
The Great Blood furmer.
Euuifs and i nrai, uanilei t .e Uiuu I, reii-xltij
lieAjiaau'i viavi.
Radway's Sarsaparillian Rosolvent,
A remedy eomposl of ingredients of ex-.r-oinary
nfedieal properties, essential 10 par,!.
aenretair an-1 invigorate ihe broSca-Jowu mi
watedoodV-VCica, fLaASAT, Sa ana fin.
SSL-lff "Xpce. - P r bor.
Bad .ray's Kcgulalins Tills
The Great Lictr and Stomadt Ktw.lj.
Perfect, Purgative, Soothing. A pen
ant, Act without Pain, Always
BeliableanJ Natural in
their uoerarioES.
A VEGETABLE SUBSTITUTE FOR
CALOMEL.
Perfectly tameless, elegantly coated with
jam, purgx, regaoie, puriy, deause and atrcai-
'"kadwav-s Puis tor the cure of alt dlsomr J
the wotuach. laver. Bowels. Kldnejn, kla-Mer
Fa n in ihe Back. Um "I A) pettte, LaiigMr. Nerv
ous Diseasea, Heoache,Couipa!io,.'iveat;,
luuigeMloa. Irvsoe-Mia. Bili.Mianes rever. in
ruruuiatton of ihe Bowels. Hues, and au deranvi
uems . f the Interiial Viscera, rmreiy ve-iae,
ciuiaiLU uo mercury, minerals, or Ueieieruru
"few dea of Kadwavs mtswtU fre t'e
mtem m,m ail tae aiRive-name-l .Usurder rrics
jS t ents per box. bold by drugiiila.
REA1 "FALSE ASD TRUE."
sn.I a iter stamp to RADWAT k CO., Sa Jl
V arrcn, .'or. Uhurca St., New VorK.
tar-lulormisUon worta taotwan-la wUi be sea:
to vou.
f ili Ptaklle.
Be anre and acK for Kabwav"s, ml see trtti tie
name "Kadwav" ison what joo bcv.
DR. LUTZZ'S
SPECIFIC roil W03IEX.
Tests bv Sir J. Simiioon. one of Enu'anJ' ran:
hialr distiiiuUlied p!iv-ician. fruf. Itnr,
and manf oih -m. In their pra.-u-, hiv e-n
ll-he-i bevoud a doubt t.i wurii t in: wi:
remeilv in dleaes of women, ihe S;-iar 11
nature's own great reined, for Prolap-tu uteri
anl other d -p.afemnn of ine wonr.. m c'ifi--
n wit i proper ! a- aiicai oa. u cure. 1 1 ki-
u Vu va. Am n jrr'fet, Le:ic iirtxea, lvi-it:i '
rhosk, rl'jo-nn r. lud iamuton, I. ce'a. .i. t-.r"-lep-v,
Louvi i-u iti-s i. Viius' Dm e, .It aal
Nerioua ll.a la ue, KTiein a;t-ui. Fui.ru-d
Joints. Kirtuei iu.-e:k', l)rD-i. fatarra, S-rv-ou-o--st,
Keb ra (mm In linr "on-i .a 1 Kx-
e-e. viatica. i.tirut)A-, ta.saaii im-; t, r ju
lional T ooW. i.
Health Sm-ets for V;ii ':i.
To make Set'-Cai e an I 'e f-Treatiuent toi-f'iJ
anUsjcies(Ql,we havep ib ishl aotr.jvp.ir?t
v Irr. Lutze. Ue nl ri; in D.:in laniii.'- "
Feina e luuclt n. Wu-4M!sn 1 Ii-ea-f w u
luHrruclitu- nov to avoi l, relieve an t cure J-: i
couip a ut. l. port a peraal ir tn-.- tw. .a.ic
cau d-tue .'S nu.e. wreuncr v e.r rro
jieM to scif -reitm nt it n.. In ra-w-i whre
tne. have aiiv doubt, lr. I.tiUe wul, up"U a:u-1-
un to nun p-rir.il.v or br let er, ai-.-n'i. f
five them ihe nei-e.arv a-lvu-e win ut liar.-e.
or me cnara-ier sn-i exijen-nce or t.ii .r.
Ex. V. S. Kx Su irn. fx. ei- to trie Si ru
Acatlemv ol ve i:c,ne, Aut'i-T of Viiri u-t .i.,'i.
ararus on ti ltt-eet o( Women. Ac, A--., ;
pubiinheroX trie -virardtty Kerning trie rl-e-a
literary an-l t;im:; pao-r in the l"nitl s-j'm,
takee occasion fc ia -T'ta frvAL-twr of lit'
Tiprr Mbt friwrn l-r. LiUzti far f(rtrn jr,f.
IHxi'jfs rruuhitiw o.t a I'n'j.ncLZ a-i t
iOirye are a fujb-irtit 7ira7k'e- uf i-V to-'
of Ms Sitert lfc for W'ltwH.' m
in wruinj tor advice, 'Jr
D1U H TZE.
Ill Oirnnl Street,
Pin ade ph.a. Pa.
TT ces. at office, or tv mall to au dure--s a
re-eipt o( price.
nr. luuc s pevin- ror women........ -
- ioirawan.
Liver and t.'onsi Ipatlon Itemetly. M
KemaeSvrnite 1
lira in Sec re is (oc Womeu. W
rsV-Wtth everv Br?t order for the Sr.ao
cop. of "Health Secrets tor Women'' wui be ?e:.l
iree. Aiun-iM,
fcOW'ES, LUTZS A ca.
llll l.,rjr1 Mree
LatV Agmt.t WiBitrX l'hi:a-lelp!i , P.
"LlfJENE"
&TciNtl Collars ami ul-.
Trim down coiir-i.
RtTBKNH, AF.tVL ArlAlvL.
Tbe itw otAasislHST stvio. Ml RII.L(. -
Kfc btSIULlx Btkuittnu tbo turn tio.ru iyux. 1
lop ! haw s s:di ui. ronrnl toad liiAt cauiii. ira .
Uaor. fitriii t-".s ftS-
iiO. Itisxi-'!."i
OUl SidrM ?Ud fill '!-
v aoac kAv -.ija-t ,-rfcv-iiy V
,t,i t iaU Ten t.tr r-r svi -r- T
TS littlil 3letlh aii.l Lrinu v 1 71 - - l
t M. u M. A. tir, H-MCoo, lwL CLr sal r:f
cufl-t, any mt, c try. i-tr-il Utt IX ct. ra r a
na c.rcain ire. MeuCaau till ivtviMr. Kifr
A-l.r s-, FsctAjr. OsjattH-uirw. Usm.
AGENTS AVATHD the t. uvu s
BLAINE & I CLEVELAND &
LOG AM. 1 HriNDRICKS".
re 1 . r. W. k. ja I ?e 1 Tol c Uu. a. B.
Authorised. Authentic. Inrerttel Ce, le:e. the -' "'
t'W- Tke lejdiov r,eire book.Af 1H Oi,:,;:
etkenlekt. te-Lk UiMiur.,1 ii. ...... I vlr,! -"J
-fc Anta mrn te b-.'a a oat. Now u eie in-- a
ke IDOIl-V fAt. Knrt fn. f -Irr. Ttr ., ..nn 1.
AKTl Will PlKLarHlAU .'A. elsrllwa.
It rtiel. Al.. . , . . u ... e
talfl eAl-, !e s perfect V'eceuk4e naj mtt I
nsnelAtel. free tie heed rroa nil eAeatruS. rst-'r
nlr U its neMrel eelar, kst nreSsre n nee T
er.etn it hks rsiiea oS. It auee not eSeet the Deeitn.
"hK"'' eulnhur.nus-ref lead end a.tmteol airer pr-r
Aboee 0Ae eAne. It eill chnnne lietot feded Iwtel
l- ;e.bcutal clueaj beinm. Ask rear erx(-
leciA Ifh knttle m nuM. it Kltee A e .
w ttole.il. As ts. raun.. Pa., sad U(.tkUnnwn.S. V.
Bl USInmimWt CwAtrlCATC. krneinvi
MALI BY DKIUCI "t
For core ot all chroo.e di.e. Scroll a, coa
wroDUou. ti-uiluur Due, Uo -r. i. ir. w
SmaTtHm, sr,s !e!.H. K.;dae-. Wal ler an-1
Walnal l.rnl Mair BeeAerer.
HfORRflSi
ft
TS
STOPPED FREE j
lesaoe Pernrw ftrrtorea
lr.KLnrE OSXAT
N'mnrTnF
"lumtvnnlniuui eavi
tmALALa kt tAAes n sliiil' n i fit
JrAVder reA Ternree ed fe wed kerde ee.
CASMcertikDn lUNIjeArd stTSoAa,lpe.. ,
(.lit Hl All ElSt Mlli.
tMMlceticharun. T0tenroAd.
"nliw Hold bw drnciiAM.
rGOOD NEWS
12 LADIES!
e.r
esi
se it rree,nBdAeeures6eAen.
U Set, er Hi.ei in lMoer
""''l Te"e Kel. r red eernenaae eddr-e
-wiling iAiiwYta CUt kkrt
td by Dr.
uaA. IjAwttoii':-''
carss. B AfeA til, FMIa wr tairuitf- Ad-i
irrtUUnut Of , u lltn r.,i .d at n rarv rSHa-w wa
KIOOER'g PASTIL1F3. K'y
k 0
U. A
U. B
Sa
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CAAtawavB, S
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