sms w iimm s sas assaa Pi; a il'-i 1 V -!-.r M A TALK OX DKEAM9. Wlicu l.ilnnin I Indeed Mow Coach. A ..inent Philadelphia pbyalcTan, who. as a specialist in uiseasra ui i.rin ha a. wide reputation, isenzaged In writing a little book about dreams and dreamers. In a discursive mood the doctor talks about the psychologi cal phenomenon, commonly spoken of as dreams in a most interesting way. Generally." said he the other evening, ,;we think of nothing so swift as the electric current, and yet, a flash of lightning is a slow coach compared with the rapidity with which upon occasions the human brain operate?. Nothing shows this In so spiking a manner as the wonderful performances of the mind iu dreams. The events of years, to the most minute detaiL, are recalled in a second, and purely imagi nary events, covering years aud decades, are pictured so as to be retained per manently ui-n ins mind, aud are con jured up" in the hundredth part of a minute. Son.e years ao, a friend of mine related to me the paiticulars of a striking proof of this f.itL He bad been musing another ft icud whose lll-ue-is was such that he required constant watching. My fr;c::u had been at his lds:i!a for nearly t'ii hours. A little Fniich clock stood i:i an adjoining r.H.in which struck the half hours, and thus pave notice of the time to admin ister the patient's medicine. At 2 o'clock ;i uose id iu()iliia I -ad to be given the sick man, and the nursu was waiting for the intle deck tJ strike. He was very sleepy, and could with diffir ulty keep his ees oik n. Presently the first tinkling stroke of the hour sounded. At that moment my Irieud fell as.eep in his clia r. He dreamed a most won- !nful dream, the details of which it would be tedious to relate just now. The events in the dream were spread over three years, during which time he had lx en to i'.iris, to Loudon, to New Orleans, and made innumerable brief tiii s by laud, lake and river. Ilia vision began with a wedding and con ceded wilh an execution, when the dreamer saw his own wife hanrjed. The m-jst minute l'-tails of life and travel and ad vent nre were distinctly liortrayed. and my friend estimated that a novel of two bis volumes could be written in ni-n-Iy outlining the events of the vision. When lie awoke with a start at the climax of the execution, he heard the French clock strike one. Supposing that he had been asleep several hours. Le fell Mime alarm. His patient, how ever, was sleeping quietly, and when he went into the other room to look at tne clock, l.e was astonished and incredu lous to hud that the stroke of the clock be had heard upon awaking was but the eeconJ stroke tor two o'clock, and that his wonderful dream had occurred be tween the two strokes of the hour. But this is not at all an unprece dented occurrence. It ii related of an English clergjman who fell asleep in his pulpit during the singing of a psalm before the sermon, that he dreamed the events of a life betore he awoke, to find that his s!iiuiler had lasted ouly during the singiiig of a single line." "Can tne brain act coherently during sleep? asked one of the doctor's curious little audience. j "Oil, yes, that is well established,! and has hut recently, in a striking lnci dent, Ix-en further verified. Canon Knox Little, of Manchester, dreamed that he wrote a hymn; remembering it liimn waking, he wrote it down ou the fiy-le.if of a handy book. He then fell asleep again. When he awoke the sec ond time l.e bad f.-rgotten the words of the hn:n, and supposed that all Ot the incident had been a dream, but when be looked at the Uv-leaf in the book, be found there, snre ei.ougli, the verses he had written down, and which are now Incorporated in several hj mil-books in England. "it is a matter of history, as we all know, that the poet Coleri I decomposed his celebrated fnurnieut 'KubU Khan' while asleep. He fell into a doze while reading I'mcha's I'ilgiim, and was in slumbtr for several hou.s. When be awakened, he remembered an entire !oem which he had composed during his sleep, lie at once seized a pen and wrote down the part of it that has been preserved, but was called away when he was but half through, and was never able alterward to remember the baiauce so that the ixieiu has remained as a fragment. Tartini, the musician, cum posed the 'Di-ril's rHinata' under the inspiration of a dream, and mathema ticians have solved rioMrms in their sleep which they were uuabie to master while awake. 'Hut,'' continued the doctor, after a slight pause, '-su-ange as these unac countable heuoiueua may seem, there is yet a more curious lact m relation to dreaming which has never been suffi ciently noticed. If a dieam Ins but a baseless fabric, to wh tt unsubstantial and elusive thiug shall we compare the dream of a dream? The thing happens often, but Is so freoueutlv mingle 1 wilh the fantastic medley of the dream itself as to be seldom clearly delined. A verv gcxl friend of mine, who lives in West l iniaiieipbia, some mouths auo, related to me the following dieam of this kind which many years ago disturbed his siuuiuers, ana winch, tiecause of its strangeness in being a dream within a dream, made ? great impression upon liim and fixed itself Indelibly upon his memory. '1 was sleeping.' said he, aud fell into a dram, iu which I imagined that 1 was in a sickroom talking to the visiting physician about the patient's condition. I thought that I wai tired and sleepy, and t!:o doctor kindly ad wised me to take a nap, offering to remain at t ie patient's liedside while I obtained some rest. I dreamed that I threw myself upjn a sola aud slept, and as 1 alept, I thought that 1 dreamed of a terrihle thunder-storm, and that I was awakened by a blinding flash of I'ghtulng. Ow ning my eyes, I saw the doctor b :.: ir. end's bed, and spoke to him of my dream. -Oh!" said he, that is easily explained. Your race was toward that window there, and the wind blew ien one of the slats you see there, and the sun was thrown directly in your face, and thus causrd you to rt- .am of the lightning." still, in my dream, 1 talked some time with the doctor, and then awoke. The doctor, bis patient, the sickroom and all had been a dream, during the progress of which I ha 1 actually dieamed of the light uinc stroke, awoke from thatdieam aud continued for some tim. to carry on the thread of the first vision.' I might multiply .such experiences," said the doctor, as he prepared to bid his friends good niht, ''but noue of them would so ckaily illustrate that strang est of all s'raujre things iu the phenom ena of a sleeping braiu a dream within a dream. A (o.iiift)! professor spent twenty jr.us in aiuu nig me uauiis and char- acteusucs oi a certain snail, and learned this interesting fact respecting it. On the Pacific coast or America, where it is found iu great abaudauce. It is preyed upon by a certain fish which abounds in the Padlic Ocean. As an aid in escaping from its formidable enemy it hits been provided with an eye on the back of iu head. The same snau is louna on the Atlantic coast, exactlyiike its far Western brother in very paiticular except that it has nc jposwrior ey e. And the reason for thh is that ihere is no corresponding flah tc iPrey upcu it n uie Atlantic Ocean. m.weier tilings may seem, no evil things is success, and no good thing is . SSassSSassaaw SSJ j" I KPOI1T Vi INDIA. ' I FARM MOTES. HOUSEHOLD. . Uabxess FoLisn.The ScUnee Aetrs gives the following recelpe for making J a harness polish: Four ounces flue, a ; pint and a half of vinegar, two ounces gum-arabic, a half pint black ink, two drachms isinglasn. Break the glue iu pieces, up In a basin, and pour over it about a pint of the vinegar; let it stand until it becomes perfectly soft, l'ut the gum iu another vessel with the Ink, until it is perfectly dissolved; melt the isinglass in as much water as will cover it, which may be easily done by placing the cup containing it near the Are about an hour before you want to use it. To mix them, pour the remaining vinegar with the softened glue into a sand-pan upon a gentle fire, stirring it until it is perfectly dissolved, that it may not burn the bottom, being careful not to let it reach the boiling point. About f 2 degrees C. is the best heat Next and the gum; let it arrive at about the same heat Again; add the isinglass. Take from the fire and pour it off for use. To use it, put as much as Is re quired in a saucer, heat it sufficiently to make it fluid, and apply a thin coat with a niece of dry sponee. If the ar ticle is dried quickly, either in the suu or by the fire, it will have the better polish. Theke are but few pastures that will carry a herd of cows through the summer and keep up the iluw of milk without feeding them sit the barn. There are portions of the season in New England when the sun is so hot aud the wiuds are so dry that a large portion of the pastures become nan-bed and fail to produce sufficient young grass to supply the wants of as many cows as are usually assigned 10 a tviLturfl nn Tina jiprvniiir. unless Hie farmer 'makes some piovisioa to feed his cows at the barn night and morning, the flow of milk will be very much re duced, and the cows will los9in ilesh; thus they come to the barn iu the autumn licht In weight, with the How of milk reduced at least one-third bsiow what it should be. To avoid this the farmers who are abreast of the times will be prepared to feed their cows as soo.i as the feed in the pasture begins to fall off. The animal takes the food, more or less liuely comminuted by previous preparation aud mastication, into the stomach. If not already fluid, here it made so by mixing with the gastric juice and other digesting fluid, aud is conveyed through the intestinal canal, which is provided with countless absor bent vessels, corresponding to those that cover the rootlets of plants. These absorbents drink up the liner and more nutritious portions of the fluid and conduct it Mto larger channels uutil it finds its way into the lungs, where it becomes a portion of the blood, or cir culating fluid. The grosser portions are rejected by a discriminating pro vision of nature. The stomach of the plant is the soil. Here the food is dis solved and prepared, if not digested. for absorption by the absorbent vessels of the rootlets, which collect and con- !vev it into th general circulation of the plant. Fowls os Sowed Guaix. The damage done by fowls to wheat, oats or ther small grain Is greatly overrated. n ii at. uiey iic& up is maiuiy on me j-iiii tacc ii mr) m ulcu lucj uo iiuy usually get one-quai ler of the seed, and land is generally overseeded in that proportion. It is different w ith corn in hills, where fowls will scratch until they get every kernel. The bad effects of fowls on sowed grain will be gener ally confined to a small border a few feet in width, where the ground will be kept eaten bare. Hut winter grain thus eaten dowu iu the fall will grow in the spring as if nothing had happen i r v. .1.. ni.f i ed. Generally, however, fowls are kept through the winter in the same place, ready to renew their work of devastation. As soon as small gra n begins to head fowls become very des tructive aud must be kept out of it. Five or six years ago there was a novice of a cheese-maker in Manito woc county. Wis:, who drew the whey when rather sweet for those times, salted his drained curd, heaped it in his vat, and went off to his dinner, three-quarters of a mile, which took him out of the factory about an hour, We remember he was spoken of as run ning great risks, but somehow he always had good cheese, but the stupid crowd (ourself included) did not see then that it was in his m-'hod. We 'an now see that be was practicing substantially the same as that now called the Arnold, Curtis or Harris method got his curd out of the sour whey and waited for dry acid. The factory has gone ou from small to large, from good t better, aud last spring put iu an 8)00-pound circular vat while lots of the sour whey cheesc-makeis have cone out through the whey spout to bankruptcy. A good answer to a question about working butter is embodied in the fol lowing views of Professor J. W. John son: "Working or knead ng removes very imperfectly the unchanged cream and salting removes not the casein, etc., but small quantities of the natural moisture and sugar. Hence, as far as salt is concerned, its office is not to pre serve the butter, but to cause a separa tion as far as possible of the elements aside from the butter fata, and take up the milk sugar. Thus the moisture i partly removed from the pores or the butter, and by this combination of these substances they are salted, which for a time renders innocuous what can not be removed or extracted from the butter." Ix relation to wearing out the min eral constituents of soils, Sir J. Ii. Lawes, the well-kuowu English author ity, is reported as saying: 'Even in the long-cultured fields of England it !s rare to find a lack of the essential min eral manures, and, with care to keen or supply carbonaceous matter to the soil, and not to allow weeds to appropriate the nitrogen as it becomes solub e iu summer warmth and moisture, soils are not readily exhausted, even by heavy crops. The evolution of the tomato is going on in a remarkable way. Not many years ago the fruit was mostly skiu and seeds, but the newest varieties are almost solid pulp with very few seeds. Possibly, as in the case of the bananas, the seeds will yet disappear altogether, and the plants will have to be propaga ted by cuttings. It is estimated that 50,000,000 eggs are consumed every day in this coun try, or about one for each inhabitant, which Includes, however, those used iu the arts. Every farmer must know what kind of swine breed well and are wanted in the markets. That is the kind which can be bred with profit. improvement is noted in grinding stones and emery wheels, by which thd wheel is given a reciprocating lateral motion in addition to its rotation. Every one has noted the advantage of moving a tool from side to side on a hand grindstone, so as to equalize the attraction on the different parts of the edge It is found that by makinz the enndstonemove, and keeping the tool still, a more perfect result is attained, while the detached particles of steel have an opportunity to drop off the grindstone, instead of being crushed into it, and the wear of the stone and i trnuivn Oatmeal. For si.- i ..n. Af ti mw who are "trying to wutiiii v, - , . iiL" nntmeal when Drepared in the or- HiMn l,v Btirrinz it lnt a paste, and not succeeding as well, perhai. as tir wr.nld like. 1 desire to give iuj r.r nrpnarincr it- I US6 the Oat meal which is in the kernels not the rolled variety: and for our family of ihre crown people. I take a teacupfu and a half. I put that quanUty in a basin in the evening, and add a pincu of sa't and pour on just enough cold water to cover It Uy morning the oat meal has absorbed tLe water entirely, i then put the basin in a steamer, and cook for about half an hour. I try it by thrusting in a spoon, and when the crains of oatmeal fall apart dry and nice, it is done. Do not stir it at all; tne n,iniii khnniil come to the table witn the grains a3 whole and perfect as when ii. troro nur. into the steamer. Eat 1 - with cream and sugar. A fixe frostmg can be made of one cup granulated sugar and one fourth cup milk, without either egg or gelatine. mwIkkI Srir suzar into milk over a slow fire till it boils; boil Dve minutes w ithout stirring; remove lrom ure, sei sauce-pan in cold water, or on ;ce,whne you stir it to a cream. Spread on cake while it will run. The advantages oi this frosting are that it will keep long er than the egg or gelatine frosting.auu it w-.ll eut without breaking or crumb ling. Flavored to suit the taste, it ls excellent. Eoilku Cheese. Put four ounces of good cheese, sliced as thin as pos sible, two tablestoonfuls of cream, i niPrt of butter the size of two walnuts, mto a saucepan and boil, stirring it trpntlv all the time until it becomes thick and smooth, then add a raw egc aud a Uttie cayenne pepper. Put the saucepan again on the fire, stirriug as before until the wnoie is quite uut Serve on small souares of dry toast. The above is enough for four people. Some sweet aud savory sauces belong to the far-famed Mrs. ltundelrs econo mlcs of pudding making. Mrs. Ilun dell advises lottled sauces ready for all emereeucles. For a plum pudding. steep in white wine half an ouuee of shaved lemon peel, a anarter of an ounce of mace. with kernels of apricots, peaches, and nectarines; after being oroperlv steeped add this to a bottle containing a pint of be3t brandy, half a uiut of sherry, and two ounces or joat suirar. Two tab'espoonf uls of this will flavor a sauce tureen of thick melted butter. A light pudding is made of one pint of Hour, two teaspoonfuls of baking powder, and a little salt, witn milk enough to make a thin batter, flutter some cups aud set them into the steam er, and put a large spoonful of the bat ter into each cup, and then a spoonful of jam; cover the jam with another spoonful of batter and let the pudding sieara from twenty minutes to half an hour. Make a sauce of two eggs, a tablespoonful of butter and one cup of sugar; beat them together and pour over them one cup tf boiling milk. This pudding is delicious with fresh fruit berries, or peaches. Toxcue Toast. A very nice dish is prepared from cold bo:Jed or iwtted tongue. Mice tongue, and cut each slice into small fine pieces; heat it in a pan, with a little butter. To prevent burning, moisten with warm water or clear soup. Add salt and pepper; stir Into it two b-aten eggs. When set, ar range neatly en toast. Elood oraneres muka a beautiful salad. Tl e oranzes are put on the ice, then peeled and sliced across. Arrange the slices in a salad bowl, with pow dered sugar, or in a dish with a border of cold rice flummery, that has been boiled with rnilk Into stiffness. You can pour a rich cold custard over for the Tcssing, cr a lew tablespoonfuls of some cordial. A Home Clam Bake. Roast the soit clams as you would an oyster, over the coals. Turn them out on toast, then 8crapu the saelU out and to the scrapings add but er, se.xsonine and sufficient cream for gravy, heat and ti.ru out over the clams. Fish Mollie. Take some fried fish, two tabiesi oonfuls of cream, a dessert spoonful of butter, three or four onions, green chillies (when they are to be had) a piece of ginger, and two or threo tablespoonfuls of vinegar, boil for ten minutes, then serve. This is an ex cellent breakfast dish. Pixeattle Sliced, with Wixe. Paie aud cut the fruit into dice, put a layer in a glass dish, sugar well aud wet with a few spoonfuls of sherry; more fruit, more s-uaar and wine until the dish is full. Strew sugar over the top, heap on ice and eat within an bout after the dish is prepared, as the wine toughens the fruit. The following is a delicious cake: O.ie-quarter of a pound of chocolate grated and made hot in the oven, oner quarter iKiund of butter, one-quartei pound of sugar, two and a half ounce; of flour, three egjrs, one teaspoonful of baking powder. Mix well, as for a p-ound cake, aud Lake in a moderate oyea. Ginghams and prints will keep their color better if wasned in water thick ened with flour starch. Flour is very cleansing and will do the work of soap in one or two washings in the starch water. This, with the rinsing, will be sufficient and the goods will look fresh er than if washed and starched in the old fashioned way. Caramel Plddixo. Trepare a mold by giving it a thick coating of caramel sugar; when this has set, pour Into the mold a custard made of the yelks of eight eggs and one and a half pints of the best cream; steam for one hour aud serve when cold. To preserve goods from moths, do not use camphor in any form. Pieces of tar paper laid in fur boxes and in closets are a better protection. Five ceuta will buy enough to equip all the packing boxes and closets of a large house for a year. If one quart of milk is set In a cool place for twenty-four hours, it will yield enough cream, well whipped with Dover egg beater to furnish ten cups of a strong coffee. A simple cake is made of one cup ful of sugar, half a, cupful of butter, one-third or a cupful of milk, three eggs, one aud one half cupfuls of flour aud a teaspoonful of baking powder. ' Having recently made an assay of a gold ore from the vicinity of Const nti nople. Dr. A. Ii. GrillUus believes that the following remarks may interest metallurgical chemists: The gold is disseminated in very small pieces heie and there throughout a miart? nn.i earthy matrix. The ore comes from mines which Lave not leen wnrkxi rar several centuries aud were thought to uo Munusieu oi gom. xno asav. both by dry and wet methods, of a Mrf..i! selected sample, gave three ounces and fourteen pennyweights of irnid .r of ore. Tne gold in the ore contains iron and copper, and a very small quan tity of silver. The matrix is fmnnca.i Chiefly of quartz, but contains calcium time. SMat-ng Hoars ami lluniiitjl Man-Eat ins 'ligers. Ilog-huiiting is the chier port of India aud esj-ially of llengal; Anglo Indians say scarcely any sport m tne world is so exciting, and this no doubt is true. The spear must be clever.y i,,iim and a certain aim is required ti use it fatally when the rider is racing over all soits of ground at lop speed; tmside, the sifety ot tne iiorse m u. bo looked to, for one si sh or a boar s tusk will give a cut as from aa ax. Though our author has enjoyed every kind or good sport in Bengal, and all the danger and excitement Incident to tier-shooting, he nevertheless holds that a chase after a tough boar is the highest diversion or all. "There ii," he siys, "a rapture nnJ delight in the pace, which must be Ue bts-t your horse can go; an excitement in the struggle for first spear; a satisfac tion iu tho cjmbat with a plucky well-grown boar, only lo be equallid bv a fast forty minutes wanoui a check, w hen well mounted an l ao.e o hoid your o-vn.over me spien un pa-v turesof Market, Hjtrb.rough and Mel ton " What an artistic "pi .'-sticker" air. Simpson is or was may bo gatiiena fiom the following extract from lis diary: 'At (lirislmai. 1cj4. I could get no companion who would rile; but on the ni.i s . 1 , l..Tln.l tii'aliru lrrTU .ttnoi ueceuiuer i kiiic boars, and, on tlie 2'dh, thirteen. This, us I was sin ;le-lanJed, was glor ious sport; my aim was stilt and tired with the hard work, l was now, may sav, au nccompiisneu uauuier oi the siar, for I disp.itcheJ these twenty-five old fijUtiiK boars Without allowing tho horses to receive a singie scratch." In the chapters oil tiger shooting, sundry cu:iou3 anecdotes of elephants are give.i. ome elephants are coura geous in the extreme wuen lacing tigers, and others are as cowardly though what is real courage in an ele phant. Mr. Simpson cannot determine. One day, be relates, one of the staunch ed among these huge beaats bolted several times from a rat. which came it angrily squeaking, with its back up and fur standing ou end. Among the large numier ot tigers he has killed. Sir. fe.iiipson never found one which exceeded eleven feet from snout to end of tail when properly measured, and tin most experienced tis:er-s!ayer of his acquaintance, a gen tleman who has shot over live hundred, cannot say that he ever obtained a tiger more th in a lew inches over eleven feet. It would set m that a tiser measuring ten feet Is a very large tiger, though now and then tigers reach ten leet three inches; while a few rare and veiy exceptional cases are ou record of tigers of from eleven to twelve fe-t long. Mr. Simpson wamitho novice against shooting on foot, and consider it little short of madness to thus n- ceive the attack of a tigr; for he justly observes that though a man be ever to good a shot and able to place bis Luiltt where he pleases though the hunter s nerve be like a m-.tchiue, and he may not feel pulsation lucreaso as he sees a large Hirer bounding toward him, when the only chatico of saving his life u the delivery of a shot that shall be in stantly fatal stiil, the rbk Is too great. The lst shots occasiona ly shoot moie or less wide of the exact marks and many a mortal vouud may not instantaneously deprive au auimal of power, fir a tiger may charge on with a ball In his heart lor even an uudred yards, and tneu str ke a mur- lerous bIoWWith hU mighty paw. lluffiilces, it may b iulJd, aip il Th'w.t to kill, and lire often almost as danger- 3us to puisne as are t Perhaps tha bo.ue l instance Oi shooting on foot, tha result of which was evidently more t' e result of good luck than good management, is to I e found In a story told of a gallant old Frenchman named Deveria, who, as Mr. Simpfon, had s-rVid under the great Xapoleon, and was a remaikal ly darii g and cool man He was informtd that a tiger had takeu up its quartern near his house, so he went an J took a look at it crouching in the grass, -ile returned home aud cleaned his oi e single barreled iitle, fitted a bullet to after much trimming with a ie:.- knife, and sillied forth, intending to shoo: at the animal at tome distance. ut he thought, as he had only one chance, he had better get ch ser, so he walked up to within about fifteen yards f it. The tiger never moved, and the Frenchman killed it on the spot with a ball through the brain. "1 lie r-looa i Ilis Lire." Thoroughly cleanse the iiiooti. which is the fountain ot health. bv tiMus Dr.Pierce's Guillen Meilical fliscoveiry, anil good yestlon, a fair ski-i, bnoyaui itpinix, vital strength, and goundness of constitution will bo c9tiiill.-.hfil. (io.ilen Mnlical Discovery cures all hn- morx, from the common pimple, bintcli. or eruption, to the worst Scrofula, or blood- poison, tsnecially lias it proven its fl.ia- cy In c-nriin; Sa'.l-rte'iuu or Tetter, Fever- sores, in rv joint Disease, Scrofulous S res and Swellings, Enlarged (i lands, and Eat ing Ulcers. Golileu Meiliral Discovery enres- Con sumption (which in bt-Mfulaof the hangs), uy us wen lerini tiloou-purifyiiur. mvieor aiiiijr, ami nutritive properties. For Weak lames, 5-piitn;r or Jlioo.1. Shortness tf Urealh, I.roui-linis, Severe C'ouzhs. Asth ma, ::iiil kindred ariVctiutix,it isa sovereign remedy. It rumptly cures the severest C-on-rhs, For Torpid Liver. Biliousness, or ''Liver -iiu.ji.ul!iT, .wyspepsia, ami lniIieston. it is an unxj-aaie.1 remedy. Sold by dru- Kisis. A woman need not always recall h r age, but she should never forget it. Pile tumors, runtura ami fi tuhe.rndically cured by improved methods. liooK, iu cents in stampi World's l)i peusary .Medical Association, Uulljlo,S.y. A women Iislens to play with he- n.m i, and ju:Tgf s it wnh her senses. Uilr. I'iercea "l'eilt-ts" for all bilinn. aiiacKS. It lakes as much wit not to displease a woman as to please her. If yon co to New York you will find the yw,..u .muj, nuTKL,.r.pusite the Gr.iuj eniral Depot, a -'.xxl phi;e to gton. Yon can j.et an excellent room lor SLoO a day. me iies.aiiranc is lirst-ciass and moderate n price. The fact th it il is alnavx full i. the best argument in its favor. obserfant machinery uanufac turer thinks there is one material ad vantage in locating a foundry in the second story of a machinery cs ablish ntent, where the castings wanted are ugni ana room is Important His idea is that anything can be put under a lounary, wnue notning can be put over it, owing to the fumes and heat Involv ed in casting. AKESIS. f.'l'i 'Kin E for PILES. race. LQ0 ,w bor. lit urn, by nuil 8anirl- "era mE by p. Nst- aTAEBTEB Co., J.'o. a UmmSt. Ke York. Solo maun! of -ANAKEMS." COCKLE'S ATI-BILIOUS PILLS, THE GItE AT ENGLISH BEMED Y For Lier. pile. Io lenotion cw. eury ; contain, on it Piir V-t,Ki. JL? Ageu: V. a. iaiTTEMO.i, fw f erk. NTT Tin Y .Y lUJJjJ '' Rheumatism r ' We doubt if there U, or ran be, t iperlS remedy for rheumatism; bat thousands who bars suffered its paiui tare been freatly ben rated by IlooJ'i Saruparilhw If Ton hiTe foiled to find reUef. try tLU great remeily. It correct, the aclduy of the blood which is the causa of tha disease, and builds up tha hole system. I -was afflicted with rhesmatism twenty years. rreTioa to 1S4 I found do relief, bat grew worse. nntU 1 was almost helpless. Hood's ftanarorUla did me more good than all the other medicine I ever had." II. T. Balcox, Shirley Village, Mas. Hood's Sarsaparilla Bold by all drnpeists. $1; six for? J. Mado only bjji L HOOD & CO, Lowell, Mass. ICO Doses One Dollar j W l -a-V LYBIA L PIKKEAS'S Vegetable (jos mm Had stood the test of twraty years cm ft Ucrr.mly for Pemaio luescs Telicvteff periodical pains, pro Eiotinff a healthful regularity c! seasons and curing weakness. bcfcsch0 end oonsMuent nervous distress. y Its rvnnTn iv.nr for tux leitiitt nr xisxa rr '' rv an d the Kriaxsrorrtiv. ins pbomtt in actius. US WHAT ONZ &1TH OF ITS 1EJIITM. Fltti-bunr. I'a.. Nor. r.th. l?vSL 1W Kyitta E. Pi iik ham : An iifreqnrnt?T thccap itb tiioiiiers mimiiive rran-tt inrw Januii-, i nave Dten a crvji: Fcfferer for Trarfnin cmnnlamls incidt-nl to war- riid life. I have tried tho ikill of a number of -faTirians and the virtue of many mctlirim-s with c:ifc relief, and &n aa experiment I concluded to try jours, 1 can assure you that ihti bnerita I h::v? !erUed from it came not tircause of any faith 1 Ji:.d fn it, fur I h.ict but eliftt liope of any perma nent (TonI. am not a seeker after notoriety but tfnnt to tdl yru that J have ttrn wonderfully Ixntf.tied by your tittfinf. I cm now nini'my fourth botile and ft would tal:e but little argument uturrnaue me that my health la tabu restored. i f.'ionld like to widely circulate the fact of t:s wonderful rnralive power. ' J'llr.lSA K(MH Tit JIRiKEST DR.'G.e?r WILT. St PPtT tO'. PBIt'K LOa. ELY" . CatarrH tream bairn A. CJ -seiiil F.'y'i t'rram I luhl catarrh j,-ciir. Jfi ii"e in Iked. . 1 tlttmyh nrc inniM urrrr Jico7. Kly't Cream lbthn ha enrol tiif. Mm. M. A. J,uh- x.ir. V 3 A KAY-FEVER A pirtfc I sppli.1 tnn iei n.ii'-H an 1 SJrr. Bt c t H--0. tntv sri rti hv ln:l n ' t tlrbrl-it4. n-u.l f.ir ciivuUr. KLV IlltOllliilH. UnuKUU, CURES ALL HUMORS; from a common Blofrh, or Ernptlon, t the worst Scrofula. Ssll.rhrum, ieer-ore,"hraI or Hough Skiu, in Fhort, all diaeases eHUM-i by bail blood ara oimiuerxil by tlw pom-rful,- porifyinp, and iiiviinimtinir lnrdieine. -reat Latins I 1 rrrs niiuilJy beul uuikr its beniKn intluence. K-p-ially luta it tnuni filled It poteui-v In ruriri r Tetter, Homo Iiaali, Hoila, Car. buix-leis ore srlyea. Srrof ulouw sores a ii. I Sweliin;c, Illp-Joillt Iiec, Uli Wo SwrlliiiKu, 4.oitre. or 'I hieic ISc k, anil liuluriied bland. Pent! ten ci iiui in etampa fur a biriro treatise, with col oreil iilated, on Skia 1 iis.-asn, or tho panw amniinf fnrBtmati- oo SiTofnIous AffeetionA. "liir. iti.ouu is tiik i.itt:. Tliiinuiptilr eh-Hiini it !v uinfr Ir. Pierce' (oldeu lilcdieal I'lucoiery, and ttoodl dicestiou,a fair skin, booyinl spir iio, vital virenztli, and soaudunsol coukliluliou, wiil be eolabliihed. wlil-h It Serofolonn Dioraae of the I.nnasu H Iininmtlir and certmnlr urnt. i and eunl by this GiKl-piven renu-ly, if takca ieioro rue i&bisuurror tueuiseasenre rt-ai-tied. From lis wonderful power over this terribly final diseaae, when firt offerinir this dow ct l ebruted remedy to tho publie. Dr. Pikbcb thimirht wrionsly of callinir it hm "(n. summit on cure," 1-ui.iuio.mcd ,Knt as ton iinuied fur a mcdieine whirb, from it4 wonderful combination of tonic, or strer.rtheo luff, alterative, or blixnl.h-an-siiisr. ant 1-t iiir.i-a, l-i'toral,aud nutriiive rn-perties, ie uncuaie-i, r.r.t only as a remedy lur cutuuiuptiou of Uuj l.iugu, but for ait CHRONIC DISEASES or tos Liver, Blood, and Lun Tf von feel doll, dmimr. Hobllltnfw1 hnr-m Fallow color of Fkin. or yellowish-brown siiots on face ir body, Ireoiient hendncho or ilizi. ness. bad tasto in nioiiih. interuRl heat nr eliiiL' alti-niatina; with hot Ihidhcs, kiw pitit and irloomy borobodir.irs. imiriiliir aptxtite. and cimred tonffiie, yon are sufTermir frr-m liidl pCKtlon, Uyapcpnia, and Torpid I.lver, or "Itlltouauei.." in manv euiw-s only part of these symptoms are cirp rii nced. As a remedy for ull such caw-s. Dr. Pierce' ;oldru lUedlc-al Iiscovcry boa no e-iiial. For Weak I.nucn. Knittlnir of Itlo1. Khortnea of Ureal h, lironr tilli, I Severs Coailis, t oiisnnipilun, ami! amuiu nun-uuiis, n. m a sovereign remedy. tVud ten cents in rtamps fer Iir. l'ierce'a oooa on vonsumpuon. sola iy Druggist. PRICE $1.00, on o ion i noTTi.rs jo.oo. World's Dispansanr Ksdical issociallcn, rroprieton, GiS3 Main St, BcrXALO, N.T. LITTLE Vnasavvt ttttpti FILLS. AXTI.mi.lO' S and CATHARTIC, uoiu it j vrusjgiaia. ceuta a vial. $500 REWARD il offered hy tho proprietors oi nr. -ape a tiuarrn Kenxy for a itue of catarrh wbiub tiny cannot cure. If you have a diohanre from tho nnee. offensive or otben. wiae, partial loan of smell, taste, or bearing, weak even, dull nam or Pressure ia bead, you Uava l atarrh. Tbou- suiiiw oi cage terminate m eonsumption. Ur. Sap- t r-AT. Rnn KmiiiY enrea t he worst caaeaot Catarrh, "Cold In the Head." . . .'um uu. U oraiS, D T-T1 MfTI 3 'ivMitnr,' Hsn l-T!.-u,lt free. lr.vr V AU jru -js. Wubinictoa. 1). C. Une should seek for others the hap piness one uesires ior one s self. lmiMirtant. When yon r.slt or eare Neir Tori City, sirs ecrcareexpre-KuTan-l jacarriasroilirs. an-ls- ia lUhe lirauil t ulon Hotel, opuMica bruM Cua lisl Depot au tXgjnt moms. fltteJ np at a eost tt oaj niililon dollars, i au-1 opwar.ls per tar. Enropean Kan. Eeraior. Hestaaraul nipplleil with mo lie. Horse can, switas au I e-evaiel railroad to all depot. 'amliea caa ira teller for itas money at the tirsnd l oion ILttbi Umli at aat other druc.a.sii liiue; la Uu cut, The human heart is like heaven; the more angels the more room. To thoronfrhly care fcrofuu. It Is neceuary to atnke directly at the root of the evil. Thii Is ex actly what llooJ-j SaraaporilU does, by acting upon the blood, thoroughly cleansing n of all lm pnriUea, and leaving not evea a taiot ot acrjfuu in the vital Cold. A women would sooner rule a heart than fill it; not eo a man. F rarer Ax la Urease. Don't -work jour horses to death with poor axle grease: tus Frazer is tha ouly re liable make. Use. It once, and you will have no ether. Friendship between the women IS omy a suspension of hostilities. If afflicted with sore eyes use Dr. Isaac Thompson-! Ej-e-water. Dnig-ists sell at 25c. per bottle The be it protected life 14 tTift nnA Tir- tected by suffering. t?.:r U'l "Wr1 rre Treatise aoi r: trial toltieof Ur. Kline s ureal Nerve Ksiorer Irw , ritcaae. benQiour.Kliae.l Arch tVjp Love Is what distinguishes fne man Is his own love. Jfothinellte Cann a Kidney cure for Dromv .raveu lingafs, lu-arr, Lnntfyor UrmDms&l Nervousneu. Jtc -ufe ir.r ...,'i . Try"!1- VhlA " lXUe' UreisVi lie who thinks lio from temntation is most. . fall. Mr. Topxoody sat with tils wife by llicir readinK table the other night in reflective silence with a bowk lying open mill useless before liini, ami Mrs. T. wa busy with a piece of that restful kiud of needle work all women resort to as a mental and physical relief. 'My dear, said Mr. Topnoody after awhile, "if I were to die would you marry again?" , 'Do you think of dying?" she asked, as if a new interest bad come into life. Xo, my dear, not particularly, but it just occurred to me to ask the ques tion." "Well, Topnoody to be frank with you, I think I would." "Why. my dear, that is very Incon sistent hn sAiil. in surprise. "How?" she asked, sharply. "I'm not usually inconsistent, am 1?" "No, my dear, but in tnia you are, for you are always railine acainsi mar ried life, and regretting that you ever tried it, and all that." "But what has that got to do with my marrying again r' "You don't want to repeat your misery, do you. my dear?" "Of course 1 don't you see I wouldn't have to have you, Topnoody, for my second husband." Topnoody looked across the table at her, but "he kept straight ahead with her work, and he relapsed into silence. Omaha Gikl "And so there Is a real rebellion in the llighstone Semi nary?" lieturned Fupll "Yes. indeed. The girls just made up their minds they wouldn't stand it and left in a bunch." "What was the trouble, dear." "Why, you know last term a cookinz school was added to the departments." "Yes, I remember. Y'ou spoke very highly tif it." "Yes, everything was just splendid and we did have sncii fun. I cant see what got into the PrlnclpaI,Jut 1 guess ilie Is a little crazy." w hy, what did she do?" "Would you believe it, she actually Insisted that this term we must eat the th ngs we cooked." "I pkoiiised to send you a boquet, Miss Mary," said a very bashful young man who bad been calling for a long time. "Now suDPose you tell me what kind of flowers you prefer." Just then Mary's mother who was sitting off to one side, spoke up aud said gently, but firmly: "l think. Mary would appreciate or ange blossoms about as much as any other variety." Mary got the orange blossoms lnsuie of a month. Sin," said a fierce lawyer to a wit ness, "do you, on your solemn oath, de clare this is not your handwriting?" "I fear not," was the cold reply. "Does it resemble your handwriting?" "Yes. sir, I thmk it don't." "Do you swear it don't resemble your handwriting?" "Well, I do." "You take a solemn oath that this writing does not resemble yours m a single letter?" "Ye-e-a-s, sir." "Now how do you know?" " 'Cause I can't nor never could write," "5fo Mis3 IMank is married?" he in quired. "Yes." heard that her lather cave her a check for $10,000." i es, he did." "Was it eood for anv- thlii2f-' "Well, that's the point that puzzles everybody who waa theie. They were all crowding around to see If it was certified, when she teht it aloft and exclaimed: 'Dear father, hut thesa. diamonds are enough!' She touched it to tle gas, and away it went. 1 tli in K it's a new kink, and one intend ed to save the old man." Yors:a r.iiv Are you an admir er of the beautiful. Dr. Slasher?" Dr. blasher (a youn saw-Lone?) Oh, yes. Indeed." Younz Lady "What Is the most beautiful thine you ever saw?' Dr. Masher (contemplatively i -Wdi I think the most beautiful thin? I ever saw was the way In which l'rof. Pi-t-p-cutter took a man's leg off at the hos pital last week." Bnowx "Hello. Jones, what in duced you to go in to private theatri- Is?"' Jones "My wife.' Urown Ilow is that?" Jones "I was offered the character of First Citizen, and, as my wife is anx ious to get among first people, I thought a give ner tue only chance she d ever have." Barker "Sir, youVe getting bald rapidly, I have a moss excellent rem edy " Old Gentleman ".Nevermind. I'm just yearning to be entirely bald." "Eh? Why, that's a remarkable desire. Indeed" 'No, it isn't. I've got a terrible wicked son and I'm determined that he shan't bring my gray hairs in sorrow to tne grave." I hear your little boy is sick. Mrs. Hitormiss." "Dear me, yes! the char lotte russe broke out all over him. and if he hadn't worn the Injun beads aa an omelet it would havecalummatediKtal ly, I fear." "Will you have some tonic with your oysters, Mamie?" "Yes. Get me some ginger ale." J'Gmger ale?" ""Yes; that pops, I believe." Floating bricks are now manufactur ed iu trance, the material of which they are composed being a kind of eanh found in Tuscany, consisting of fiftj- uve parts or pandy earth, fifteen of magnesia, fourteen of water, twelve -alumina, three lime and one iron. It exhales a clay-like odor, and, wiien npnnKiea witn water, inrows out a light, whitish smoke. It is iiifuslble in the fire, and though it loses about an eighth part of its weight its bulk is scarcely Uimniislied. Bricks composed of this substance resist water, unite perfectly with lime, are subject to no alteration from tue neat or cold, and tne baked uiner from the unbaked ouly in the sonorous quality which they ac quire irom tue nre. xueir strength is a little inferior to that of common bricks, but much greater in proportion to their weight, . The holiest snot on earth ia that where the soul breathes its purest vows, and forms or executes its noblest purpose?, Store -Money lur Yoar Xfon, Improve the sooil opportunities that are offered you and you will receive more money for yoar labor. liallott & Ca, Port land, Maine, will mail you, free, fall infor mation allowing how you can make from $3 to 1 23 ana upwards a day and live at home, wherever yon may be lucaU-d. Vou had better write at once. A number have made over $30 in a day. All is new. Capital not reauired; Iialiett & Co. will Btart you. Both sexes; all aces. Grand au-nxu at tends every worker. Send your address at once and see for yourself. Poetry is most just to iu divine nri. gin, when It administers ti e comforts and breathes the spirit of religion. If you fed as tbougii water was im!wrin around the heart CiearKlrotwri or have heart- rheumatism, palpitation of the heart with suffoca tion, sympathetic Heart trouble Dr. Kilmer-., Ocauf-WtED :ea!atea, corrects and cures. If one strives to treat other. iia would b3 treated by them, he will not fail to come near the perfect life. Belief la IisiiiaHsu i . Piao'a Keinedy for liatarrb. co cents. .1 In exchange gives the following very way of avoiding the disagreeable CtiiiliilM VAV smoke and gas which itlwars twurj into the room when a lin? U lighle-l in si stove, heater or fire place on a damp day. Tut in the wood and cul ad usual, but. before lighting them, ignite a halidful of paper or shavings placed on top of the coal. This produces a current of hot air, in the chimney, which draws up the smoke and gas at once. Offic k Uoy (to editor) "There is a maa outside what says he has a bill to present." Editor "Say to him that his . manuscript la respectluliy de clined." "Mr. Featherlt," said Bobby, ignoring his niothrVs signal to keep still, "did you ever hear pa whistle?" "No. Bobby." laughed Featherly, "I never have had that pleasure." "Weil, you will," went on Bobby. ' lie told ma that ho lent you $' last night and that he expected to whistle for it." The origiual color may be restored to gray hair hy using Hall's lUir Kenewer. Important in sudden coMs, Ayer't Cherry Pectoral u equally effectiVJ in lun troubles. Neither time, nor death, nor eternity can harm those who foliow the light that God throws upon their path. DYSPEPSIA U a duimu w-i as diiumr eomplint. It DXS'l'c'eU. It tenOK. Djr uopini. " pn-Minc iho t.m. ut tlx statwa, to fngm 1st ssf for Kipid uecline. the: SESTTQKIC ? yatcfclf 4Ui4 ctxDpsi; arm Uyp-v h4 forms. lJearfnrii Klrbin Tn it lorms. iiriiriiirii nt'iraintit NiiTaf irt j-oodsMe. It enncomarwl punn Li tiisioa.Ktiin-.-bu tba ppt-tit. KKt 3'iA the u-imiiMMn ol I "1 MB. TUUM.u. t-l(t'"T at H't'it l, Char t- rmrie. Pa., hvb: Iuetl Brown's Ima Bittr.-tfot l5?pepHiv li incre ae4 my aipet it mad rrxiavc J Mit. J. K. JrFTTr.ii. PltnCncriphrr. 1 Main St., Nriwk, Vs., mti: " I nilTl natly f mm a Hrvn cam of ITspnkM and dnf no bnerit from vart oum tmatmenta.- I a-i Bsmwn'a Irun bitten, ao4 my twaiU a full) naasjfwd,' Gmainft hn aberrm Trr Mark and CT'mn3 red Ilnea on np;wr. Tail.i- wtbrr. Mad culy by UUUU . lUKMRAL i HALT. .-:. M I UNEXPECTED. A MOTHER SAVED FSOM AN UNTIMELY DEATH. Tears of Sorrow Turned to Smiles of Bejoicmg. KncBlsTKK, Ana". 31, lui. rmtEi Vei)H-ie Ca liKNTi.KxiN: I am now seventy-: liree yenrs ol-l, an-l nutil I wa sefeni? I wa always SJronz -n.l brjiiliy; lut the amount ol suirertnir I havt- en-lurel aiare ih: I nii, I fee! to be autncieDt lira lite-time I nai a srrere at. ia;s: of scialu: riieuiuatiu, which cm:p'e:-iy prostrated me ; my lmihs mn-l fret, and in fa my whole body, wis m ur.iwn out of shape thai it was in-.K4iiti:e to move without art.l?tance. I w.s u aine to sir.i'iin in my limhaor t step on m? tc for more tti iu a rear sn-1 my life was -lLpalre-l of. Chtlilrea ini frle:nls werecaiied in toaee me the. 1 was treated by three goo-l phvieians and tey ami my ine ils did all th- y ou!l to relieve my sulftTinir but with noav.u!. My Hiis were lli. tereil, au-1 my IhnUs ni i -e-l.HlItieilan l biml ise I, but nothlriK they ra!d no isif ir-led me even 14-iu-p-irarr relief. Tousrue cannot iieicrib'? my sulTV r-inir- I uriff-1 them lo let me try IT. i'aMee's Ki iueilr, ait 1 hail read so inn- h aiut Ir, an. I or thune who hd tieen rareil by itfl u-te. that U xve me conn-lena? in it, aithonnii I eon' 1 hail nit:e or do faith lntuM-ii!leil pttent nielicines. The Kemeily was proriire-1, and 1 con.men-el ns;n it as directed, and al'ar t iking it a s.iort t:m-? c- oi-t see that It wa helping me. 1 u- iijn to persj-ir -freely, and an the ptrsiiriion iin-reac I tue ruin decrea-ied, but my clixnniir an.l btiliaj; was a siirht to oeholil, tieina; ne iriy "an yellow as aaf Iroa.'' 1 had taken the Kem- ily but a short time, when I could sleep likearhild. and relish my foo-l lUexne. 'Hunt l.o-l it has .-ure-l me, aud I am Uxiaj aa heaitny a".l nui a lf-re, and au walk and have aa free me of my limbs m ever. 1 have recommended your Remedy to the v.-ry maoy who were aitlicted. and I -lo not know of a ease that It has not en re-1. I am eonndent that il will cure young people, if it will euro at my aire, i ou are at lilerty to use my name, if it wiil i-e the means of in tuetrur any poor auffen-r to oe your excellent K, lue-ly. f aiu very greatfa:iy yours, MIIA JANE A. TLACK. SOI JefferHoa Avenue, Uochesler, X. Y. The sale of I)r. Par-lee-a Item -dy for the nat three months in Western New York has exceeded that of any remedy known. i:y cures wholly unprecedented in tlie his'ory of medicines It hjs prov. n Its nht to the tiile of "Tlf i;reatr.t l.hmt er,-' ever offere-l to thearnu t d. We ehuiiene any medicine to show an appreciation at home, or wherever usod like that wtiieh has been poured uii.a Dr. i'ordee a liemeny. The iermanent eures It has efrecte-l have made for it a reputation tliar no oiher remedv ha i-en able Datia.u. fceo-l lor piru -in I. rAUUEi .MKDIUIXE -o.. Uochesler, N. Y. il P I II II MaDlt Cured. Treatment senton trial. WT IUM lliijtmsiuriu.Lyu i f -pBSf ! V:.4WTil . J'.l . V''- .3-1 Ll msmm PAINS I HOP PLASTER, fej M 1 P3 &iiiissssssssssssss.ssss ptvin whfn sppUcd to backache, k id 5 j vM m ny paing. rheamHiim. ncnrlgij itnini. t;fl M 4 EA K maacle. feml wravknew. sore cheat, all suddm, N t tZ2 B sharp p&iiss. 8oothea and wondtrrfuliy tprryfth- fl SJif a-na weak parts. C-'., t tor tl ou everrwnem h Mailed COF PLASTER CO.. Boston. Ham. fS fmiLIBERTYEHLIGHTENIHGTHEVORLD. Til r. wt 1.1 :r lmte.l8tate.or, ,,,,,,,. i su-riiikVfiit-nt u. - ' ' irw "etiilina- tw 1 IIIVIUI.S. " . , mr sjecimenSeoT LX, I-rUK 1.11, THE CHEAPEST BEST MEDICW FOKtAaiLV-r INTHF 4i WORLD! CURES lx PAWS I.iternslorEn SOca BoS DR. RADWAY'S PUIS For theenra of all du-ipler of the Stomartrj Kowels, Kidney, H adiler. Nerona bi? Low ol Anpetite, Headache. I'rmiwerunr real-vi, Ui.iousne-n, Fever. lnamai,tion Bowels, Pile, and all deranremeau of tn Dal viHcera. Purely ve?eiai.e. eontjij-C mercury, minerals, or deleterious irux mre, 25 cens per lot f ol I by all -Irajji DYSPEPSIA! DODWrSPILlSS3R sVorearn-tik'tn ti the tirn.vsi .m I eu.i n j-Tw f-nn m tmi'-tki:)', Tlie 8vn.ptiu of lem to coatrut-.t ii-e WAY'S vT n iv Uail JulILLLlJ 111 A positive cure fir S-rfu!t an I ii: u.joi L Skiu 1) j-aiei Oue I Lir i.r n.t ; lA RADWAY St CO. N. Y. Tha Graat Hursai-r el PERGHEilCn HOUSES. imported i;rc-.xl jr OItl!01--e?tFaail:i.J. llRtK.M.ifHFM A;iAif3,b0!hhcK-t N STOCK 30l lo 4!M inroESTCD .MALI.f .s.i , iii.-i-..t i"- t -.ru lilt - T n-ric .1 y.tZ.fTV I'-rr-r 1 Sllid Lwlf. l ite l''-r- n. ; - in t. i h- i.n in' ic that h tat 4 "fl u;port arnl -ndtr- ri:-nt "f t.' S. -r. I for lQ-Di-o l M. W. DUNHAM, lCane. DuPace Co.. Illinois, II II -.1 i:l UNRIVALED ORCAUi Onth- E Y PA V UENTTlfm,fMn Stg pr QVMitn up. 1U -t yir-.. u t $ . .v uJ f- -jt aitvue nlih full partkulr. uiiu-d fr e. UPRIGHT PIANOS. Crro-trtfti ca tU dw rnht of .trajliu, waiiiar termA. n-t for dv-ripiiTe Ciia.o.ua Ul.SOH & H A3 LIN 03GAr( XH3 PIANO CI Boston, New York, Chicago. 'tr: iu.'l : . f. 1.1 a !. D.C tL.ii Wasli;:itfi. IfiEOiCAL OFFICES, J 20C IT. Secesd St., Philada., Fomer , rrs. j.ir.fi j.e.e:3z::sacz U & tablUIicd 40 yran. For the cu nr!inSV.4RICOCi:i.l-i:tc. Ca:!orwrifear.dU nirol hv atir.i.'-.iitecf rctcnon Co!?cge, with Hospital tj.i-cuer.ee H-ur, h to -i9 to 9 C3S0i Sl3iti Ko Ron lo Cut 01 li?rs?s Wanes. uu it 1 1 if um!inttS. nnri. H iltr rrmy part .-.f u. frt, on eplat d:- '0:111c to uw inkils. raJ f )r J'rlo Li t It or it ( V. SSr ilar. worth r.s nrt BaicwsTsaSs-rsTTltani Hoi.pta. Hollr.tlca ivi a-'C :id FAf 7., HANDS, FEET, -KU- 1. Ii...riiiiv.ai.,.,w f i.i iliir. Wirlh Wa.-ks JIKh. Frvk!. I:m N..--. A.-ni, Ej3 S. il lor K. ' . r -.. , 17 Vlwi t..A t.n. Ljbti'dm STCPFt'JrKtt !rrs2?? Peson Ke5t:r?f Dr.KLINE 3 GREAT Nerve KtSTOREfi TNHALLIBLB it t .krti ai ii.rcrtrl. A ':t ir3t ltJp !.kl.l!-. .-( :l t..P:lJril-.--a F. rr avsTr---- ' :.-'"" "'TJsw.VJ sf.-i: P I U Rrl H A B ;MlNoreir -J.-nliL Ha. wh--ncun-l. lUn-iAW i-tofirv- I'H I'-J Wrtniritwr. KanMi'itT 503 r-' At Olios: W frii (;i-:ac- , L i u, lit )., k.,,U if i-n- ii-!, n-haSi.Ftiil-u II.Mr: M. t 4 p. M.. airii.t athSL. 5 to K M., sun l ly 4 to 11 . l, A'Uux KhiUtrtS PAS1UIES. 'jv'i IMSTOFSpCTOTHPOW K ceplag Teeth Perfert and ;am llraltia t!.?r5C ESslI" Grtaf E.iglis.GaafsVal riUll sl ils7 Rheumalic Rsraedj. al H .r.l.-Hr, round. Sit rt. DATENTSM S.-1 T f via' u.u ia. i " utxansjf. l a a:it La tj Wasai.-ut aUI- E WAPJT VnilT prrflttJtiw rmplnvment to rMiivrut ui ! ? fcir-rT one txi t. tmrtlt an-l prtu-ulf Krt. 0 NHSD. 5- t FRAZEHrd BEST IX THE WORLD tiT- 0.-t the PENSIOWS) MILO B. STEVENS Ss CO. WA.o,I,'T- T,1.' CLKV.LAS-D.-HI . cun.at.ij.ii.u KErrt-)iT, siiot-. iVVSTi ,lI.iL''7 ?.' - w: i.'iKl ' 2" lubiis;r ia IS R f U.H f Bill lit Irs nrii Brill. Hcmfteao, L B t, t"EAl" list fails. a fcS Uest I olIKh Syrup. Tastes coal. r, fl; LJ In tone s.ld bv dnice-.li PL Wi ui.il. K.,,.VS,r,,?7ori.,.,, .'. 'or ,u - tte Lllrty. - . . rial. i ti i - L J''.' ,:" aH de...i .1. ol tli r UK, S3, SS ,4 7 r.rk Plac. .. lit. -iW,r iiW.f,.h -.,r.r ,,'I".Vt",,l"'". . of our ,.i,l.:i.-,, 4,i p-eft as state.! shove. f J? laeaehcatlfuu"r,l2Tii.T,,'ft-'--''',,,t '-''- .ill . n-l the 1' a-t r.,,,HtforltJ!..,a:oe"e M!',TM,,,, ', "" -Tsi KIM,,,,, will fc-iL'. w ' remltrtiire. j FRANKLESIJK'iiPnPmjRMnwnmj; iHE-SHaniiK w.tn llitratim..h.l.r.IIVui"!5 i-,?I .4"'" wlSr I Psralsraeirare. v ale nmlak i In. L '"f 'n "and oi Uia I ia.a.li.l( im. v . :ti n-oi:ie aaaasr l:ir"' a - n-w ..... . l .. .. MB iji-eat Seaports aud anu:- lean I-Bjplo on Lia4 asisl Walr J til 1 r ygrji,!ii'i' LI ssUm aaWbstjajJX