the sToar of a r.ixo. How -Well the Jewels of an .V.tre-w Keep Their Own seem In one of her conudential moments Mile. Mars relat-d to Her vouiaiui u-i- ti.A Tho.itre Francais. the iCOUUO vs. ssw m m. ir7p the history piece - 1 v diamond ring occasionally worn by her. Many years ago," she said, ''I was plaving at the Comedie i rancaise Mile, da iieauval in Brueys et 1'alitprat,' the plot of which is extremely simple, ana lunges on the delivery of aa author v.. nrisnn 1- mpntis of a diamond lins generous offered him by a cele brated actrevsol me time, uciuicv ,nii. tln st;i?e matiaZT brought me. accurdinjr to custom, the 'property f,.r tli nicpe. which was inerelv a bit of rudely cut glass in a rim of copper ; I wore it as usual, and it in the course of the even incr Twn davs after the same comedy was again given, and this time the l.nnsa nowdol hi excess. I had iiwt l.fr uiv dressins-ro-.m when, in stead of the Yin,: I h.id worn on the pre vious occasion, the stage manager pre- .ntI me with a small case in li, i.lne velvet. to-'e;l:cr with a sealed note. hut tlicv had been left for me bv a servant in "livery, with the request that. I would wear the inclosed ring lieu of th" other. I ojiened the cast and disoov.-r.-d a magnificent d.aiuond riiif whieli so surmised and dazzled n.H tliat fin :i iiio:iieiit I for.ot tlie ac .riii.anviincite : but at length, relied- ing that it would probably explain the mvsterv. I broke the s-al and read as foiious- ' 'The ring worn two nights ago by Mile, de Iieauval was neither wor liy of her nor of you. Accept tins one, m.-xlaiiie. without fear : it is ofleral aininif lioma to the artist, and lie who semis it pie Igcs bim-lf ever to re main her unknown admirer. 'The lines bore no signature, and confess that I felt a momentary hesita tion before complying with a request which, after all, might not be quite so disinterested as it at first sight apiear- ,l I had. however, no time lor re- iwtioii . asthestaire was waiting; so. slinniii'' the ring oil mv linger, 1 man a-red to ret throu-'h mv part without anv unwoiued emotion. During the iierformance I tried to discover among the audience the writer of the note, but in vain and when the curtain fell re turned to mv dressing-room, where my maid. I.isette. w;is waiting for me .Xaturallv, the diamond attracted hei notice, and. on mv telling her how I came by it, 'Depend upon it, niadame,1 she said, 'it is no real stone; it it were it would le worth an enormous sum of money.' '.So much tiie better,' I re plied ; "those who make valuable pres ents to actresses generally end by de manding something in return, and have ii.t the least desire toacknowled the obligation.' 'Tiesei:tly the room was filled with the regular habitues, and I carefully scanned every face in the hoe of di vining t he nivsterious donor, but with out success. AVIien they were gone I.isette c ame baek in great excitement. "I have s no thing to tell niadame, ' she said, "which will astonish her. 'Have you found out the writer's name V I e gerly asked. 'So,' she replied, 'but, what is more to the junose, I have as certained the value of the diamond. While niadame was talking to the gen- tle'i en. I took it to a lewelei in the I'alais Uoval. and he assured me that it was worth at the very least UO,iJU0 francs.' ( n mv scolding her for doing this without my x nuissioii, she urged that I ought to know its value; saucily adding tliat 'if people were not aware bow much they owed, they would never lie in a position to pay their debts.' "Time passed, and nothing occurred to relieve my anxiety; the ring had been long since carefully put away in my jewel-box, for I felt that I ought not to wear it, regarding it as a deposit which, sooner or later, would inevitably lie demanded back from me. About a year after 1 had received it, while din ing with a colleague of our theatre, one of roy mother's friends suddenly burst into the room where we were sitting and announced to me that my hotel had lren broken into and all my dia monds stolen. I hastened home, and found everything in disorder and my servants in a panic of consternation. Tnanks to the activity of the police, the thief was ultimately captured, and, as yon may have read in the journals of the time, condemned to the galleys ; the greater part of the jewels were re covered and restored to me, but among those missing, much to my regret, win the diamond ring. '"Some years later I was invited to a fancy bail given by the Countess de B , a lady holding a prominent iosi- tion in society, who had sjtared nothing to render her fete the great event of the season. Jt was a scene of enchantment, an 1 the night was far advanced before I could tear myself away from so brill iant a spectacle. Fussing through a gallery leading to the entrance hall I suddenly felt a hand upon my arm, and looking up I Ix-held gazing intently at nie a masked figure in the costume of Charles the Seventh's time and wearing a blue velvet skull-cap with a jeweled clasp. For a mom nt or two lie re mained silent, but presently asked me, in a voice trembling with emotion, if I had forgotten the evening of 'ltruevs et Fiilapart. " 'No,' 1 replied, with a vain attempt at composure. 4 J low could I 't ' " My words seemed to make a pro found impression on him, for lie seized my hand and clased it warmly. 4 You remember it still, ' he exclaimed, 'even though the tokeu that might have kept it in your memory has disapieared ! Tell me, did you regret its loss ? ' " ' Bitterly. ' 1 said ; ' not so much for its value as on account of the mvs tery attached to it. ' '"'If it were again in your posses sion, and 'here he paused' on the same conditions as U-fore, would it give you pleasure ? ' " ' How can you doubt it I"' "He held my hand in his and pressed it tenderly ; then, mastering his agita tion by a strong effort, murmured in my ear in a despairing tone that still haunts me : ' A pledge once given by a man of honor cannot 1 broken Whatever It may cost me, I must re main forever your unknown admirer Adieu, niadame, adieu!' Before could recover from the stupefaction into which this interview had thrown me he was gone, and the long-lost dia mond was glittering on my linger. " "And you have never seen bin since?" inquired Mile. Doze. "Never.'' "What a pity it is," rattled on the lively ingenue, "that rings cannot speak. Yours might have furnished a clew to the identity of the mvsteriuu stranger."' "Silly girl !" said Mile. Mars, with a smile. "What would become of us actresses if our jewels did not keen their own secrets?" If a farmer makes but little effort, and is content to drive an old scruljy team, and scatter a little fodder to old brindle. wh le sheep and hogs complete the stock ou-fit, tnt man is a failure. Dox't iorget or neglect to put your farm-roads in good repair before it is too late. You will save more than the whole cost of the job iu a week when you need a good track in the busy springtime. Dr. Jumtt Davits states that the Druidic college of the twelfth century considered tannin the most potent of all the product of nature In producing sterility, and that tea drinking, a pra -ticed by the public, undoubted.1- acts in the same direction. HOUSEHOLD. 1'ixr.ir.it Salad Slice a 3ma! TrhitA raMwico verviicewlth a shaip knife. l'utnalfacup of vinejjsr m Ana aanpnan and half a cup of inilk In another. When the vinegar la hot, add one tablespoonrul of granulated antral nnA tahlesDOonf ul of butter and fu.it. and DfDoer to taste. Let all come to boiling point and then add the finely rut "hba?e. set the pan on the range where it will not boil but be kept very hot, covering closely. w hen me mna la hot, mix with it one well-beaten egg at d set it on the fire, stirring until it t k i.fc una Turn thn cabbaee into a salad bowl, pour the hot eggs and milk over it. mixing thoroughly with silver fork. Cover the bowl while the cab bage is still hot and set where it will cool very rapidly, .serve cold. How to Disinfect Carpets. If any article of household furniture re quires diseDfectiiig occasionally, it is a carpet; especially if It has been used a considerable time. The following is a ncthod recommended by a lady housekeeper, both as a disinfectant and a preventive of moths: Add three tabiespoonfuls of turpentine to three quarts of water. ?uuraie a uisu sponge with this mixture, squeeze it about two thirds dry, and go over the carpet carefullv. As often as the sponge becomes dirty, cleanse it ana take in a fresh supply or water. T2roilei Chicken-. Do not attempt to broil an old or lull-grown fowl; take a voune chicken, split it down the back always, wipe the inside dry after removing the giblets, and place it on the giillron with the inside down; keep it so until it begins to grow very brown, then turn it, but the moment the skin threatens to burn, reverse it again. To uua now it is couauig iuscit a sharp knife into me inicnesi ureati, if tbe flesh Is pinK at all, ietum it to the fire; when well done and browned, lay it on a platter, inside down; butter, salt and serve. Corxmeal Sally Luxx. Two- cups of Indian meal, 1 cap of flour, 2 eggs, 1 tablespoonful of lard, 1 quart ol boiling water, 1 cup of milk, 1 table spoonful of sugar, one-half of a yeast cake d.ssolved in warm water, 1 tea- sp3onful of salt, .scald the meal with water, and while hot worm in la u, sugar and salt. Let it get almost cold before adding the milk, flour, yeast and eggs. Let it rise over night in the mold in which yoa mean to Dane iu Much of the success in making it de pends on mixing and beating. Both should be faithfully done. Sating ix Cookixg. An Engl's'i inventor claims to save one-third of the time and ten per cent, of loss in the cooking of joints of meat by thrusting into them meta.lic conductors to secure their simultaneous heating throughout, these conductors being copper blades with globular heads of iron. Flesh is a very bad conductor of heat, and with out this devise the meat is greatly over cooked, with much waste of nutritious u:ces, before the ins:de is weu done. Veal Cutlets. Dip each cutlet in a beaten esg, then in peppered and salted cracker dust, and fry in hot drip ping to a rich golden brown. Lay each as it is done on paper to absorb the grease. Arrange on a hot dish and put on every cutlet a generous spoonful of sauce. Make it by beating two table spoonfuls of butter to a cream with a tables Hon ful of lemon juice and a tablespoonful of minced parsley. To Cook Beets. Beets with but ter sauce are liked when prepared in this way: Take two Bermuda beets of medium size. Wash and dry them without breaking tbe skin. Boil them for thirty-five minutes in fast boiling water, slightly salted, which must en- irely cover them. Then scr.pe off the skin, cut the beets into slices, and tbe slices into sttips. Melt an ounce of butter, add to it a little salt, pepper and a teaapoonful of vinegar. Four It over tbe beets and serve. Milk as a Summer Diet. a very important element of summer diet is milk, but it must be taken in modera tion and caret ully. Drink it slowly in sma'l mouthluls, and if there is any tendency to dyspepsia, beat tbe milk a few moments to break the butter g'obules an i reander it easier of dues- tion. Skimmed milk of fresh butter milk is Infinitely preferable to icewater as cooling and refreshing summer drinks. Ice-water dyspepsia Is a com plaint which is very general though its cause is but little understood. Mixced IIam ox Toast Take the remainder of some cooked ham the bone with the fragments that adhere to it, remove all fat and dry in the oven until it will grate like cheese. Make some buttered toast and spread with the grated ham. Make a sauce with the yellow of two tg?s. a till and a half of cream or of milk, with a bit of ouiter added, heat, stir and pour boil ing hot over the toast Toast witii Poached Egos. Boil the rice the night before it is used; put it in a bread loaf pan and keep on ice; the next morning cut it in slices, brush a little melted butler over the broiler and the sliced nee, and broil, or rather toast, before the fire. When done butter the slices, place on each a poacnea egg, spot the top of the egg with a little black pepper and serve. EATINO FRUIT. An exchamrn savs- It is a mistaken idea that no- fruit should be eaten at breakfast. It would be far better if people would eat less bacon and grease at breakfast and more fruit In the morning there is an acid state of the secretions, and nothing is so well calculated to correct this as cooling sub-acrid fruits, such as strawberries, apples, peaches, pears, etc. luiBonugs 10 minu an old Spanish proverb: Fruit is gold in the morning, silver at noon, and lead at night. Brown Betty. Cut into thin slices several large apples, have readv butter pudding dish; put into this "layer of grated bread crumbs, then layer f iced apples; over those sm-mkle sutrar and so on alternately, bread, app.es, sugar, until pudding dish Is full, let ting the top layer be of bread crumbs; on this place three large lumps of but ter, put in oven and bake brown; serve hot with butter and sugar sauce. 3od--ii-on is the name given to an alloy for filling blow-holes, etc., in castings. It is made of one part bis muth, two parts antimony and nine parts lead. It has the property of ex panding in cooling, so that a hole filled with the melted alloy will not show any cracks, and the plug will be tight It appears that some time arn a "faith-cure" orphanage was established in New York for children under 12 years or age. Now the Society for the Prevent! in of Cruelty to Children has takeu the matter up and shows that the faith-cure is not for children, and that they should have medical attendance when ill. Oil from pine wood is now manufac :ured on a considerable scale at the South. The mateiial is subjected to ntense heat in sealed retorts, and one xrd or it is said to yild fifteen gallons if turpentine, eighty gallons of pine ood oil, fifty bushels of charcoal, o- e mndred and Dfty gall ous of wood viue jar, and a quantity of inflammable sas ad asphaltum. FARM NOTES. Uftfers. Raising heif ers' sounds well in theory, but breed ng cattle is a separate art from dairying, and unless followed witn great juug n.ont is a ioa:n business, as not every heirer raised becomes a first-clasa milch cow. The best plan Is to buy heifers heavv with their first calves called "springers;" and in this there is much more room for judgment and skill in making these selections than most men aiiw arfmit. The mistake usually made is in being misled by a fancy for certain shapes, color ana iasnionaoie points, to the neglect of others relating immediately to the usefulness of the matured cow Tbe first point to con sider is that the heifer is strong, with a deen flank, indicating constitutional vigor; then see that Ler teats are large and set wide apart Viewed from be hind thn twistsuould beoneu and wide, with her rudimentary udder well dis played and teats far apart As second ary' and fancy points, a slim neck and long head with small horns are good features. Above all things, avoid those heifpm that show very email ruaimen tary teats, or those with large ones set close together. Such a heifer never can make a first-class cow. There are enough risks to run before securing a good one, without starting out with those that can never improve. Even the best of pedigrees cannot make a good cow out of a heirer witn a aeiorm- ed udder. Those who have stuaiea Guenon's method, while they ao not reiy upon it to the exclusion of other points. find it a great aia, ana ieei uuu moj cannot ignore the escutcheon. TnE dairv men in Italy are improv- imr their facilities Ctia ouiier u such an extent as to become ior- a . . midable rivals ts the Dutch in the export trade with India, China and other Oriental customers. Italy has a much longer butter producing season than Denmark, and threatens to supply French markets with large quan tities, thus forcing French and Danish butter upon the English buyers, re-acting upon the American export trade in butter, which has already suffered con siderably from European competition. Fowls should never be allowed to enter barns or stables, as they will foul more bay and feed than their eggs are worth. Their domains should be en tirely separated from those of horses and cattle. Not only are vermin from poultry sometimes communicated to hones stabled in their neighborhood, but the specially filthy and offensive excrement of the fowl defiles the hay and grains. All the parings and fruit wastes from tbe kitchen should be fed out, it for nothing else, to destroy the insect life they may contain. Almost any caw will eat five or six quarts of good apples a day, if she can get them, and if store pigs are given one meal a day in place of grain, they will do all the bet ter for the exchange. Fruit is good for human food, and it is equally valuable as food for most domestic animals. Whenever rhubarb throws out a great many leaves and the stalks are small and worthless, the roots should be dug up and transplanted, dividing them, so that only one thrifty bud is left to each piece of root This should be done early in the spring, as soon as the newly formed buds are ready to push through the soil. Kkei-ixg down the weeds will not be tbe only gain toccme from thorough hoeing. By having a layer of finely pulverized soil at tbe surface, evapora tion of moisture will be prevented dur ing the day, while absorption will go on through the night Alter every heavy rain the soil of tbe garden should be gone over with hoe or rase to prevent crusting. Separated early and raised up by themselves, pullets are worth at least a quarter more for use than if allowed to run with a lot of cockerels. In tbe large, late-maturing breeds the evil Is less, though eveu With them tbe prac tice of keeping them separate is most pioli table. Arr-LE trees should not be trimmed to a cro ch with two or more limbs. It is all right while the trees are young, but when apple trees begin to 'bear the crotch splits and the tree is ruined. Train one leader up straight and tbe brancnes from this will be less likely to break off when loaded. A well-known horticulturist, In relation to trapping certain injths, ad vises aa follows: "Take shallow pans or saucers and place some strong apple vinegar in them and fasten among the branches pf the trees. The odor of the vinegar attracts the moth and they are caught and drowned at the same time." Tiie best ground for a peach orchard is a light sandy soil that has been planted for several yeais with general crops. Do not plant on ground rich enough to produce onions, peas, spinach or lettuce, for trees will lie liable to make a late autumnal growth, and pro duce unripe wood that will be winter killed. Ix Europe dairy schools are being es tablished, at which boys aud girls are given both a theoretical and practical knowledge or milking and manufactur ing butter and cheese, as well as fami liarized with a knowledge of the breeds of stock and their characteristics. The schools are imparting great benefit wherever established. Ix planting cabbages, etc., with the dibber be sure that the soil is pressed firmly around and in close contact with every fibre of their roots. A too com mon practice is to merely close in the soil round the neck of the plant by a surface application of the point of the dibber. The plant is thereby left hang ing, as it were. In the hole. The Gardener's Monthly says let the laundry folks on every wash-day pour boiling hot suds abou: ;'ie loots of peach trees, which will destroy the in sidious little fungus that produces the "yellows" and other diseases, and fur nish the larvse of insects, which are so injurious. Stock, as a rule, are naturally clean and will not lie down to rest in a ma nure pile if more cleanly and comforta ble quarters are provided, and we all know that cleanliness is conducive to health. Bt keeping land in clover, cutting the first crop and plowing under the second, a New York farmer produced 100 bushels of shelled corn per acre. The fertilizer used was a handful of hen manure around each hill of corn. A Birmingham firm has recently pat ented a handy pocket case. It consists of a little metal case, 3J inches in length, 2 inches in width aud one inch In depth, and within this narrow com pass are neatly packed a compress fo stanchlng blood, an isinglass plaster, 8 feet of antiseptic bandages, a roll' of tape for tightly binding a bleeding limb to atop the flow, a small bottle of am monia to be applied in the case of vec omous bites, a sheet of waxed silk and some safety and surgical pins for se curing bandages True dignity ab.des with him alone who, in the patient hour of silent thought, can still anspect and tii revere himself. Greatly prolonged sleep is one of the rarer phenomena of hysteria, and per tains to the catejory of hystero epilep sy, in wh-ch sleep predominates over the convulsive svroptoms. Charcot re cently had a case in which sleep con tinued for fifty-four days, and was fol lowed by two davs of restlessness, ac comianied by hallucinations. There was no difficulty In feeding the patient, n mnrpmenta of deelutition aa icuw ... . t , . occurred whenever anything was placed In the mouth. The urine anu ixxa were passed involuntarily. Tue patient awoke spontaneously and had no recol lection of her long slumbar. " "WTiat we learn with ploasar we never forget." Atred .Vercier. The following U a case in point. '"I PiJ " hundreds of dollars without receiving any bcnetit, aav Sir. Emily lluoaus, oi mcoiuio, Mich. "I had female complaints, espec ially MragKing-down.' for over bix years. Dr. K. V. Tierce" 'Favorite Preacriptlon lid me more good than any medicine I ever -.1. r .i.r. !-k ln.lv tn take It. Au. isv. - Aud o do we. It never disappoints its pa lons. Druggists sell it. The Lord can more easily have faith 31 the religion that wears an old coat a church, than the man in the coat n. . For weak lung, spitting of blojd, short less of breath, consumption, night-sweats ind all linsoring countit. Dr. Pierce's "Golden Medical Discovery" is a sovereign emedy. Snperior to coJ liver oil. By Iruggists. It is better to arise from your knees. nd shut your hens out of your neigh jor's yard, than to indulge in long jrayers. Stranger Uiaa Fiction. t ire the records of some of the enres of con lumption effected by that most wonderful -emedv Dr. l'ierce's "Golden Medical Discovery." Thousands of grateful men tnd women, who have been snatched almost from the very jws of death, can testily .hat consumption, in its early stages, is no onger incurable. The Discovery has no rqual as a pectoral and alterative, and the li oat obstinate affections af the thro it and lings yield to its powor. All druggists. It cost S103.019.528 to conduct tbe jublic schools of the United States in ISS4. liow to smre Money, Wherever yon live, y-ro should write to flallett&Co., Portland, Maine, and learn lbout work that you can do while living at your own home at a protit of at least from fotot-'j and npwarJs daily. Borne have made over 5-iO in a nay. All is new. Either sex. All ages. Ilallett & Co. will tart you. Canilil not needed All partic ulars free, bnd along your address at race and all of the above will be proved to you. fiothing like it ever known to work logmen. Electricity furnishes the motive power for a liu-mcn gun raciory in Italy. Frmier Axle Grease One trial will convince yoa that it is the best. Ask your dealer for the Frazer Axle Grease, and take no other. Kvery box. has our trade mark on. An artificial sponge has been made of cotton in England. It is efficient and cheap. SU-ii UtadiKtif. TbouaancU who hive suffered Intensely wlta sick headacne say taat Hood's Sar- aparula has completely eared them. One gentle man Urns relieved, writes: "Hood SarsaparUls Is worth lis weight la golL SoM by alt drag- gbis. lui dosrs 11. 11 any a mn who now lacks shoe- leather, would wear roWeri spun if knlghthocd were the reward of worth. The farmer, in their wimpi, wa're sure. Could nnd the roots and pUa-.s that cure; II by their knowledge they only knew For jmt the disease each one grew. TaVe courage now and 'Swamp-Hoot try (for kifiner, liter and I lsilder complaints) As on this remedr jon can rely. Rememter, whatever warrant you have for prat ing, you have the same warrant to believe your prayers will be answered. FITS: AH Fits stopped tree. Treatme snl Url uniieot yr. untie surew Tve rt.'rer, ireo n incases, bendto Or. iiine.ul Area sL, i'uus.,tM. "Ciiii imagination liW 13 the ques tion which the British and Colonial Driujgvst puts to itself in discussing the deatn of a youn? woman at Hackney under circumstances In which Keating's insect powder largely fiured. As the powder appears, under Dr. Tidy's ex periment, perfectly harmless, the sug gestion is not unnaturally made that the deceased, who was possibly of a hysterical, highly Imaginative turn of mind, look the powder in tbe full belief that by its means her death might be accomplished. The writer of the arti cle in our contemporary, we think wrongly, brings forward two remarka ble Instances of what may be regarded as practical jokes with melancholy ter minations. In the case of tbe convict delivered up to the scientist for the purpose of a psychological experiment (the man was strapped to a table and blindfolded, ostensibly to be bled to death; a syphon containing water was placed near his bead aud the fluid was allowed to trickle audibly into a vessel below it, at the same time that a trifling scratch with the needle was inflicted on the culprit's neck; it is said that death occurred at the end of six min utes), fear must have played no incon siderable share in tne fatal result, and we do not know whether all the vital organs were in a sound condition, though they were presumably so. The old story of the case of a college porter is also one in point. The students en trapped him into a room at night, a nock inquiry was held, and the pun ishment of death by decapitation de creed for his want of consideration to the students. It is small wonder that. under tbe dominion of tear aud belief in the earnestness of his tormentors, the sight of an ax and block, with sub sequent blindfolding and necessary geuuflexion, a sharp rap with a wet towel on the back of his neck should have been followed by the plckiDg up of a corpse. Aeiordinj to recent Franklin Insti tute tests one Douml of coal will violri on amount of light averaging 150 candles with the electric arc light (about CO er cent, of this It glass shades are used). si. . . . . ' z i canaies witu incandescent lamps and 14 to 17 Candles With iras. In tliia sell. mate it is assumed that steam coal is burned under a goed boiler for the elec tric lights, and that the gas is obtained froui a bituminous coal. Anlinut Marbles. A recpiit il!2 fllbCOVerV IS tlmt. nf lha onniont quarries where tbe leautiful antique uiaroies were ootamea. In the prov ince of Oran. Aloriers. ha h.-n nnonod an extensive deposit containing gtallo, antico, breccia and cipoline. besides black and whltn mnrl! iiniii ti.ia re-discovery the beautiful yellow marble, guiio antico, nas oeen unKnownsaveby fragments found in Roman mm- t.wn cr three years ago. AKESIS MB toss Hill niSeSs asaM mm Buanl of "AJtaXESJS." COCKLE'S ANTI-BILIOUS PILLS. THE GREAT ENGLISH REMEDY For liver. Bile. Indla-estlaR. ore. r- w Men Wlo Want it Pun. tjive me a quarter of a pound of black pepper," eald a customer to an up-town grocer recently. "I want it pure." The grocer took dowu a litlle pack aye done up in tin foil and adorned with a yellow label bearing the legand: Tare black Pepper." This is what sellJ for black pepper, but seeing I know you pretty well I don't mind telling you there's not a grain of black pepper in it. I wored for five years in the milling room of a spice-nilll, and I'm on to the business from end to end. Now, this particular spice is made this way: . "Take eighty six pounds of fine ground bran mixed with pulverized charcoal the last to r present the black bull of Uie pepper grain; then add fifteen pounds of ground cajeune pepper and there you have 100 pounds of pure black pep per." "It's the same way with mustard," the grocer continued. "Fifteen to twentv pounds of cayenne popper, the balance of cheap wheat flour colored yellow makes 100 pounds of genuine mustard. The highest grades which aren't often retailed, contain as much as one-haif real mustard. But cream of tartar is the biggest swindle. A fifteen-pound can of the low grade con tains one pound of tartaric acid and fourteen of terra alba. The terra alba is a mild alkali and neutraliz s the ef fect of the acid. Iligher grades of the mixture contain a tnde more tartaric acid. "Vou probably think you've eaten some cinnamon in your time," the grocer went on. "Well, you haven't. I don't suppose there's ten pounds of cinnamon bark in the United States. What passes for cinnamon is the bark of the cassia tree. This is adulterated with a still coarser bark, known as cassia vera. The article is also mixed with peas and roast bran. I need not tell you about roast coffee; everybody knows about that. It's just the same way through the whole list of spice?. If you could smuggle yourself Into tl e basement of some spice mill you would find bins of bran, peas, terra alba, etc." They Found His Hrc. Last winter a Detroit doctor went to the police with the complaint that some scamp had taken Lis horse and bugcy from in front of a patient's house and driven it around town for several hours and then left the rig In the suburbs. Tbe guity party was not discoverd, and one night about a month ago the same thing was repeated. This time the doctor was so ma.l that he not only went to the police, but gave the infor mation to all hi3 friends aud offered $i5 for the arrest of the scamp. He cently the doctor was called to eee a s ck man in the country. lie went out Woodward avenue three miles and then turned off and drove a mile ai d a half further. He hitched his horse undoratree about ten rods from the gate, and the animal was whisking away at the first summer flies when a couple of Detroiters, who had been out to see a relative on that road, came along. -ay, isn't that Dr. 's rig?" queried one, as they drew near. Why, or course." "Some one has le;n running it off again." "That's so, and so we'll take it in tow and return it to him." They hitched the horse behind their buggy and jogged into the city, with a feeling that a fellow human lieing owed them a debt of gratitude. When the doctor came out and found his rig gone he indulged in Fuch language that the wild plum trees shed their blos soms, started for tbe woods, and his two friei da, who were interne wed after be bad limped back to town, are said to be in bed and dangerously ill of nervous prostration. Difference Itetwofn Linen. Cotton and Cotton is not a Cher, but a plant bair. It h lds to be spun into a thread jecause of peculiar twists in each hair. shown under the microscope especially in polarized light. Linen thread may be spun because the flax fibers have certain rongbness on their surface?. which.enable them to cling together. A rtctnt writer goes for the fusible plug in boilers. He says that they will by the action of heat become hard and fail to melt, and that they sometimes become covered by mud and melt slow ly, when some one is hauled up for carrying low water Cleanses the. scalp, and leave ) the hair soft and beantifuL Hall's Hair Kenewer- If you have any form of throat or lung disease, Uke Ayer's Cherry Pectoral. Whether be is great or small, set that man down for a fool who boasts that he does not read the local papers. OH! MY BACK Err-ry Urals or raid sttarsa tkat weak bark aeariy prostrates jos. THE BESTTQH1C Ou-eag-.hens the Muscle. Steadies the Kerree, Enrich the Blood. ;lTrs Now Vl(or. Mas Euza Jisihu. GP Ilemlork St.. Allexuetv. e-t : "' F. srracal rears I hsTs aaflarad with Back-acheandWealuMM. Tha ranona rem-rimi 71 rod afforded bat little relief. Threo buttles of Brotrn'a Iron Bitters cured me. Ms. Ai ruro Bbioos. Petersborf;. V . rare- -1 ban for ;eara bean an inumse eultrrec from pnina la my back. Ionia, kidnera and bladder, bare tried innumerable preemptions and preparations without bment. Two bottles of Brown's Iron Bute:s en tirely cared one. and 1 aratelulljr recomownd It. Genuine baa abore Trade Mark and crossed red luu on wrapper. Take no other. Made only bv rtuou'N ciiF.Mii-aL c uwTmeiii; PATENTS Inventor' Hani -Hook free, l.-yr, eioericni-e. FLESXEtt CO.. Attorneya. Waahlairton, D. C Keeplna Tooth Perfect ond Mams HealihT. ItlairO f-lll tngnsn uoui .nd Uldll drillS? Rheumatic Remedy. , Osal Bex, a I. Qui ronnd. 30 eta. ICnreenaratiteed or. UrJoVSI.,,,. at ouue: no 607 PATENTS 2r 15rpr Braoaun. PMot Lawyer. Waetuortoo. a 3 S5 f? ""V. Samples worth HS3 ram Lines aot under tie bori.afr.lTi .STOPPED FREE . Insane Persens Rertorti) I Dr. KLIN B 8 GREAT " Mroi.r Oi-A-n eavffBsAtltftKnrvsDlsaasss. Onljm .oo-T Mi, tug, fpufty, twraLLlsUllukea aa diror-td. K. Fitimi la 4y t are. Treurse aal $i trial bonis tret ire-ved. Sfnd ninn. P. O. snd ami ad -m J flitted t D..LlNEja Arrh S-.r:ltd'rli r. iIAm rjLAVOS. PENSIONS procured or no Fee. Ht neira. Jiewlaws Hennar Co AO' j a, li yra, Waatuojrtua. D. O. OPIUM MabltCuroxL Treatment sent on trial. Vl ItJsal Hcha I Bmici c Lat j, i Stt IP ifflll U U KJj 'flood's Sarsaparilla T!ii f accenrnl uiciUc ' - -ii-.u..jr-r"ttre'-. extract c.f t:i Le;t rct:eu.r f rt-.tUl.l kaigilo.:! ka-m to rr.c::cUc:.-nc r j -. AKr-ratlvei. Bleed IHrifieN, Diuretic.!, f jid Tu.xcs. snch at ffeunpariila, Yellow Dotk. WiWusl. lr.!cllon. Juniper Berries, Slandrako. Wild Cherry Eark and other selected roots. Ixuk and herbs. A medicine, Uke anythin; eUe. can be fulrlr judged only by iu results. We point with utiafaction to the glorions record Hood's SaruparUla has en tered for Itself upon the beans of ttiocaands of people who bare personaUy or Indirectly beea reUered of rcrribla nfferir.it which all other remedies filled to reach. Sold by all drocglits. fl; six for fs. Hade onlr by C. L HOOD CO, Apothecaries, Lowell, JlJ'v IOO Doses One Dollar PINKHAM'S VEGETABLE COMPOUND, barositlveCsre for ALL of thoe Pairrfu Corr-pUints VK Coirpltcated t-oublvs src Weaknesses to cotnmor tmorg our Wives, Motrtsra .' trill rare fnfrnrfi aHortriasortia0a rnrnMs, Ft la tiois smd f'torro Hon, FalUnf ana Ditplacrmanft 4 wuequrnt aptnm. Wtaknm.nd U partieularl The- Woman'! Sure Friend e- lift If llUl SLl.-u4.-.(. Iu OTLJCWoRltXl WOXZS. IT USOTTI Hurry EM, rLATtxxsCT. au. cvunxo ra arrsrrLsjrra jjtd aruxm wzaktcis or nra srosuca. Crm Lso OOKXBOU. V STTTJCil. rTTUODI FAftSZD WtJvmt WX. UTtiolibj DnsgiUM. Price 81. res-bottle CURES ALL HUMORS; from a common Blotrh, or Eruption, tn the worst Scrofula. Sall.rbrnm, "FerfMorea," scaiy or itoagn sain In short, all du?iuvs caused by bad blood are) connuered by this powerful, purifying-, and Inviiroratins; mwlicino. fcrrat Eatina law rera rapidly heal under its benign influence. tprc-ialf has it manifostrd its poteoey la curinir Tetter, Hose Rash, Boils, (an bmiclea, sore . Scrofulous Sores and Su-ellinsT. HfpwJoius Disease-, It hi to Swelling, Ooltre, or Thick Neck, and Enlargt-d Olauds. Bend tea cents ia stamps for a large treatise, with col ored plates, on Skin Diseases, or tho sama amount fora treatioe on Scrofulous Affections. "llli: BLOOD IS THE LIFE." ThorouithlT t-h-anse it tiy limns- Ir. Pierce' fioldeu llledical Discovery, and good, disjestlou, a fair akin, buoyant eplr lta, vital strength, and soondncas of constitution, will U) established. CaNSUr;1PT!GH, which li Sorofnlcuin Dl tic tine of tfa Lnng fe promptly and etna inly arrced aivl cun-d by this Gixi-friven n'tnedy, if taken 1efore the last stn;rfe of th dispase are ivcht. From Its wonck-rful power over this t-?rritlr fatal disease, when first offering thts cow cet ebrated remedy to th public. Dr. Pijcrci thoiiffht acriotiBly of callmjr it his 44 Coil u iu pt ion C'n re." but nlviudonea that r.a me aa too .united for a medicine winch, from i:i wonderful combination of tonic, or 6trrnjrth'Q lnjr. alterative, or bio-rcanrMng. anti-biJtoua, pectoral, and nutritive propei tun, w unequak-d, not only an a remedy fur eousuxapuoa of lha luuga, but for all CHRONIC DISEASES or THE Liver, B!ood9 and Lungs. . If you feel dull, drowrr, deNlitatcd, hare sallow color of ekm. or yr-ltowiab-brown srtots on face or liodr, frequent h-adsche or dirzi cess, bad tavtc in mouth, intrmnl neat or chlila. alternating with bot flashes, low spirits and gloomy borebodings. Irregular appetite, st)4 coatel tonariie. you are suuering fmtn lndl arcatlon. Dyspepsia, end Torpid Elvers or "Biliousness." In nisuy rases only part of tbese symptoms are eiperirnrrd. As a remedy for all sucb rases. Dr. Ilerces toldeu "Iedlcnl Discovery has bo eiiual. Vor Weak Lines, Spitting of Blood. Shortness of llrcaih. Bronchitis, Serer, tongus, Consumption, and kindred affections, it is a sovereign remedv. Send too cents In stsmps for fir. 1'icrce'a book on Consumption. Sold by Druggists. PRICE $I.0Q,?WSTSS. World's Dispsnsarj Bedical Issocialien, Proprietors, 6C3 Main St, BrrraLO, N. Y. LITTLE a a a a Vt t i tlt OWU. PILLS. ATI-BIMOr and fATHIRTIG Sold by Druggists. 25 ecu a a vial. I $500 REWARD Is offered by the proprietors of Dr. Sage s Catarrh Remedy I a foracaseof taiarrh wticatbey lV a cannot cure. 1 1 H If you have a discharge from "BV tf the nose, offensive or other lTf T; wise, partts I loss of smell, taste, or hearing, wesk eTes. dull pain or pressure la head, yoa hsrs Catarrh. Thou sands of cases terminate in consumption. Dr. Sage s Catarrh Risidt cures the worst cases or Catarrbj"Cold In the Head." and Catarrhal Headache. 0 cents. One Ajrent (Merchant cmlri wtM tn every Iott j for Onrfmjitvintordpridariuff th pint Ht jrn -tvrt th- mrtt ot your Taurii'a Paner & cer.t ciK-vr winticb Jt t TKUisa.Driicrts Pnacetoo.IU. 1 he "TfttiBiU' I'unch" be eltrar ifivm N 1 nt:i. fiction. A TlWADBrRT, WrTman. liL Addre R. W. TAMLL fe tO I. M-m.ro. WORK FOB A LI, S3S a wek and cxrx-nea paiil. On nt m -rth i and particulars r.-e. P.O. VIi'KEItV. saittuita,Maiae FICE, HANDS, FEET, Ml Ti thHr mp?rfH!on. fatrhidtritr FW ii-iir cvnri ivrks Makj, WfirtX Worh. Frerkl Rrd Ar, hiavk ItMrlal U-sm ! i -sa. s uaa ' SsytM I 1(V. for brck o? 4 par. ti rtitwm. KoeksHt Iri-alnra. Ittera and I'aprrs CDCC frm nrmt all over tiie U. s. ao-i . Canada if you send Jl cento to riaswyonr name tn new iwne nt Asenta Kami IMrcrtwry. ALI KN aC . Pot IV. '.nnetV ; " " CORES a'Htit All USi IAIIS. taster ir-KNl. ire 'ncrK ti-rl Tha Orsai Nurawry Ot PERGHERON HORSES. 200 Imported rrood Mnrr- oi Choicest Families. aaAKCElff.nBEnS, All Agsa, both Sexes, IN STOCK. Krii V Z11 r-errneron uthe onlr draft trtil of France rwsssnlns a Mod btmk f K.. . mpport and endrrWntVlwSDVji oSieSjt? is. " ' m ri n A ag, Was-no. DuPas Co.. Illinois. H ftopa to Cut OT Horses' Manet. iTsslaarst-afSS. atr g 0awl D ft a aaw .i 1. 1. ;ni vi: . " kT ii i . sws'sss, eannoc " - ' " ' aims. B.UHPIW Tl ilrj..m ..... ... a . oyailj.Her H ml ware and Harness Dejira. epeiai aieeoaat to tas irsde. f i Bend f-w pn I I.. (7 ltwck -er. N. V. lf t? f s KIM MJatsa W ... . or voua fktmli, H- aw ea prmwuB, rrnpMl irlV TTIU tmiXt " sk . i 1 . 'liJ :. !r m.,1, " ? . srfsPaJLfl tOJtWASSSM fllS SvWv4? r 7 'gat.fc IA 6 i nr.c. rlvnVirto nrt from book) ''iTy eraclons alive. I would not have been tbe wife of thee, of Warwick for aiivlLinif." iluhbwid "Wb-f" Wife "lcao3e I see it statel trtat no less than SiJ.COO persons are dally at his table." ' Ilusoand "VThat difference wouid that have made?" Wife "Do you reckon I'd want to wait on so many peopl? Jj?!1. I could wash so many dishes? TninK that a woman's created merely to work? I never saw the like. Men haven't got a bit of sympathy. Here you set at ease and want me to set the table for 30,000 people. I ought not to live with yoa another minute, you heartless thing." I presume. General, you have had some very narrow escapes," said a retty Dupout circle girl to an old war horse of celibrat proclivities. "Oh, yes, that ts part of our busi ness," he replied, nonchalantly. "Tell me about some of them. I do so love stories of adventure when the story-teller is tho adventurer. Tell me the very worst of them all," she cried, with a prHtv flush of eicited interest. "Um urn." be muttered, scratch ing his bead, so as to sort them over for the choicest: um let me see well. I was engaged to te married once." One was all she wanted. "I sat, pop," shouted Jimmy Tuff boy, as he raced into the house, "has the teacher any right to keep things what belong to a boy?" "No, my son, she has not. What has she got that be longs to you?" "What has she got? Well, she's got my best jackknife, seven marbles, a glass at ate. a dandy piece of string, a pocketful of noise-chestnuts, my chestnut-bell and" "That'll do, James. I will send over an express wagon and have them brought borne " "And I'm going to ride in the wazon!" and grabbing a bot doughnut from the table be skipped out like a young cyclone. Omaha r.EArTV "Mr. De Blank Arthur, Cousin "ell says you have en gaged yourself to her." Mr. De Blank "I have." "Have you forgotten sir, that it is only two years since you roiosed to me?" "I have not." "And yet you engage your-. if to another!" "You refused me." '.Certainly, but I think you might have shown some little respect for my memory." A r retty Philadelphia girl who Is most 0 uent and frequent of speech came over to Washington not long ago under the escort of one of our society men who is known for bis conversational silence. "Well, Florence," said tbe young l.i.;y whom she was visiting when the two girls had a moment to themselves, "what did you think of Lieutenant X?" "Oh dehpiiful. charming!" exclaimed the fair I'hila delpu an; "he is the most entertaining man I ever met. Why do you know, before we bad gone fifty miles from Philadelphia my throat was so s. re I could hardly speak?" Keal estate agent (to applicant, for hou e) Any children? Applicant Two. Apenl C.sn'tlet you have the house. We dntw the line at one child. Applicant Well, really, I don't see Ajent Stay! I have a plan. I have a small marlatlous house iu the suburbs. Vou might take that, aud when your family is er reducei to the pi ,) -r size I can accommodate yor. MAintA "Vou are becoming a real good boy, Dick." LiUle Dick "Yes sum." "What has worked such a change, Dick? I guess it must have been playing with that dear little Dot next door." "Mebby.5 4,You want another kiss? Of course, pet; joa didn't used to act as if jou cred whether you were kissed 0r not." ' Well, yoa see you told me there wasn't no Santa Claus, and I've got no one to fail back on now 'cept you and pop." Meo. 1'atbiciax (to new girl) "i suppose, Bridget, you overheard my husband and I conversing rather earn estly this morning ?" Bridget "Indade I did that, mnm." Mrs. P. '! hope you do not consider that any thine nnusual was going on?'' Bridget "Xiver a bit, mum. I wanst had a husband meself, mum, an' niver a day passed that the neighbors didn't belave one or the other uv us would be kilt enloirly." Dvseskury (suspiciously) "Who was that joung man who danced wilt. Jessica at the ball last nliht?" ) Mrs. D. (proudly) "That was Sir1 Reginald Bo.ih ' ' . ! "An Englishman?" "One of the first families of ?iump-kin-on-the-Brash. Heavens, George! you do not doubt him?" "Well, I dunno. It struck me be was rather well dressed for an English man." Miss L i ky "I hear that you are engaged to young Solder, the plumber." Miss Puffy "It is a fact, Jane," "It always struck me that be was a cold, callous creature." weu, Jane, I confess that he does not do very much cooing, but on bill ing be cannot be surpassed." Old Gent Ilave you brought all cf my wire's uaps, coachman? Coachman Xo, sir, Some are at the depot ytt Old Gent For trrxvl nii en Ir ' V 1, f have you left behind? M)acnman tier daughter, sir. Jones "Can Brown?' you keep a secret, Brown "For goodness sake, don't tell me any secrete!" "Why not?" Brown "Man, I belong to fourteen societies now and carry enough secrets around to drive an ordinary man Insane Tell some other fellow. " A substance resembling celluloid m iy be made from potatoes by peeling them and, after soaking in water, impregna ting with eight parts et sulphuric aciu then drying and pressing between' sheets of blotting paper. Ia France pipes are made of this substance scarcely distinguishable from meerschaum subjecting the mass to great pressure a substance can be made of it rivalling ivory in hardness. When yen rait or ears n Tort city a.ea " " " other arsfacisa, ItotaTtoe cSl IIe- m "m ftTCfuiio twi.iA i 1.1. . offer u umbrella, MT, 1, I triw6 ple4iSUre in returning U to my husband. Ue left it t tti club last night, you know." Tryu. i oc taw. unnrjisis. The gilded cal f. harinn i.t. ... out ittzabzsz than In thn rlava r. .r. ' w-uay j juunrsi Cold,, CrtllrrL Stiff Bronchi!? Catarrh, n, Tcothao,' Rheumatisi Neuralgia. Frostbit Chilblain. quicker than any known rcms ly. It Wi -v4 . aad is the only PAIN REMEDY rl - Inatanrlv atrnrssl til A ftl Wit. Tl TI". : ' a in . Ut iuflimmatniO, mu l c .r ' nj wr.Hl.er of the Luatr-, V.om ir i, B w v. glair '"g-w-H v" ' -- o m-ittfr now Ttoeit or txrruri-jt .uj NenroHJ, Neari jlc, or prostrate i w::h".;a muT suuer. nmm RUDY EELS will sfTnr-1 instant ease. Thirty to sixit ir'; iu hit' ta '!!'!.: r n win, 111 a " in uut , - - - " i tiiioH-h, Nau-4-a. Vonu'inj. I'a p.Tjiirio (f rl:r,'Uy.'nlerJ, t'oi . Wni-I ia;'i? Eut-j Tiiep is Dot a remedial aea: n t.. ve toat wiu eare rfrersn-i .-imir n i t. o-.r lanons. riH'OU-. ai oiuer rcieri f - 1 rir Ri WAY S PILLS.1, so qmclc ai K Mi.VAV !;.- tr I.IEr. Firtj cennp-r bifl. S.HSj Dri.w DK. KsItWAV CO . N. v.. Proprietors of Kadnray'a s .rjp.:rll:i in solvrut aud Or. Kflw?.' 1'itis. I DOCS f OUR bACH ACHCT ir so. tt.v HOP PLASTER Thm 8TEONrE8T IBE3T Porousi Plsutter n-awi?. 1. n a..,r.:.ev IsvchesB, Btnuna. biau?,iiA2p xid dull p-i: ns,- neasj or worencm in any ia ,! ,tr.t rfriirt' i ie svad tbe part wonUsarfuil r r re:.rtfvn?d. I aed by multitudes. N-ver teila. H ,p P.j-!m ZMJnm OTrrv riUTJB X I LrZZ I v f .Z-r A-iri Cream Balm gHSH C,M,IM ,he?fAMBAlW! Head. 1 1 a y n fc lofESfs In fl a mm at io n. FJ SsNio - 3 Ueabttetiun-ai. F HrVFEflR f-'S g, & positive Corf. HAY-FEVER file t urn. Fnm 3i ma I it !r ?n.a for rireaUr. tLlf B'l'i'ilii t-i. ltn& Ovmra. N. Y. 0 ' S-fst- Pr-.-3urr in a rsnsiL vi"::. fsres Blunts T):smsr. ratarr nf the I. - !i!er. Torpid I ivi r. ; disse'lve; oalltocresand (jrivei. or I rn-.o f'-r whith this luruio. sliouiU be taken. PcoM-ry Ftoppaee niiird-t!r. rr't-ii i-.l InMilinir Millcy-cit HeatL.r'ij Frerjuent rostirenefc-i BonetSL-he Nervous Hedishlari I ric-acid S'tt!inirs Cstarrhari Ftarkscho NerTont he FhnephAfr-J Bad-ta!tc roul-lirrath Call-cut Wfyi ITISASPEC1FIC. ' rA I S r atoaa rota tm tht ewwi. Relleveaand fures lifrrnnt Slime-ferH anser. liritn-iin. Ati-rnna. Malaria. Vrrr ! ind Ague,Jiouiiil.-:a, lili- inuatism. EnlanJ uent oi the l'ri.!i:ute i.titnd. iH-xuid Vi Ut-sa, Sperraatorrhrr.i and Ctmif. II Eliminates ltlnti-1 ltnpuntie mfuli I Erysipelas, alt-HlKllm, Syphilis, PimpieJ iiiutunes. rever-r!S. ann I anct-r-tainLa. It Is ntoat Wonderful Appetizer. B'i''Js P V'H'-kly a Rim4l.n Contimtl.-a. ksr leil vour neiirbtMirs all armur ;r Pk'ck 25c, $1.00 0 bottles $jM. Frepared st Dr. Kilmer's Pispeniirj. Ilnighaniton, N. Y., I". S. A. Jrrnnli.la' ;ni.le to Hmlth iSent FrJ atllem-r.if inintrr promptlr niwml. I SOLD BY .I.I. Dltt (.(.isls. Rhenniatlsra and Catarrh Can be Caret , Us PbrJeelledii-ine Co.: Gettlikex: Nearly all winter I vaa) fined to my room wi:h in.larrmatorr rheu matism. 1 coc-.mcni el usm Dr. 1'ardn'i P.heurr.atic Eernelr, but after taiinsritfi a time the pain bevaxa more intecse, in 1 was alanr.e-l ar t f-areJ ths rsn-.Hv making ma w- r, but coatinuo-i it. use ia: soon the pain left me, ami I gTar!-a'.!v- is jrovet, the soreness leaving my aa sai shon'J.'rs an 1 seeruing ti passoutat my& It ba; complct-.ly cured ma. At th? tia I commonced usin; the remedy, I tal throat diflU-uIty and the catarTh.whi.-lil found ti t better after takln; it, an 1 it oc curred to ma tousa it as a gargL', wai.tl did, and frj my great satisfaction I improrsJ ranidlr. and tcwlnv am free from both rhsa- m.Vism and catarrh. I consider it indi;pe able a a faruily meiicins. I take oa.- ts j snoonful after breakfast, and find it a si I i -1 - a did tonic. I would alvlse you to recomtr.sl it a a gargle for throat troubles and catsrs for I know it will cure. I have ce:i remarkable cures from the u-59 of thij re edy, and it Ison9 I can re-ximmend t o all I am, rery truly yours, E. R. McCAI.L Less than One half the Amonnt Cm Him. John C Heron, of 4G 4th street. Rochets has been troubled for years with rheumssB in the shoulders and about the heart. 2 gave a physician ten di-llars for exaas tion. and ha merelr informed hra that ' had rheumatism of the heart Fie was ft by Dr. Pardee's Rheumatic P.emeily, sal less than one-!ia!f the money paid fort.' a rains tion. Ak your druggist for Dr. Pardee' eay, ana tate no othar. iTice, ! p?r re six bottles, Ik Pardee Medicine Co.. Rochester. 5-t PENSION rloldlera Helra. -e y.ti li ir : i . t. I. vxt Wsah.s: GnRDEH SEEDS r'raacla Brill. HsarsTsap. Loso T'Litii ri.Klk.NtE. la"-oaaiweoDN. a ITTT r ts rm-r.w-nTe e. Cv WASH1NOTON. u C. bKTROiT. VlXi-A EDinni nFFlCESf S06 IT. Beyond St Philaia.. ICl 1 rrs.j.u.&j.2.n:22:;si 1 a-auDltattett 40 Tears, rerts'a ot ail Special niAKS vr aeluding VARICOCELE, Ete. Ca!lorwn'l ared hy a Cradtrate ol JerT-rMin Colteje. w -th H':' taperience lloura. H to i, O Io O. Zilll . f.larvei!ous timd DISCOVERY. J winyBllse Artifli-iai s-5iem-1;r.- ..r vH f oennic-Aliy tKnia learned la one readinl. B', diHHIona for postal cLism. Froai-evtua. kmaiit Mr. Proctor. n,r Astnw-mi-r. ll"":i.I feroa, Jt-oaa P. BasjAMPi. tra. JliSv-i- V"t uars.seat pot nr . ROF NOISETTE. TJ 3T Flrtla A8. e i AFFUCTEDUIihusriiNA " .11, w.vrw so.. easawawr.ai - . i ' aMi v iiL . , m .. . vfi-ls.- a.uuiBb, aviow Lai.o wai.i, SO years experience in all ejPEC I t. ' aianenily mtores those weakened by earle' tiona.&c ("allorwTiie. Adnce free aaa BOeatial. rloars: a. sa. tilla.sad ; w i. tiUa. sad BEST IS THE WOBLD U "fl K10U-K S HA3TILLES. ' II Smt-ll, lleariug. fvic'1 . . fcSeri tVViivVl . qmcwL Itclief liU. im mm ncMoinncLAi rtiii38Uii..":.Vee en-r;eaii. TWLNTI.THO VHH" i 1 VI -jaLJ iaiisfH f -'-ii , nmmm Wj ...j,.'.i.T,.i "v -' v.r;.,,'-',''.'--.-;.?; ! w fyf-)iTyr''-"'"'i'!,?'j"w''''" ' "- .i "'mi sjiatjiai si a.. -ri ssssss, -,. ' - ' - ' - - ' X .v . .(