n FARM NOTES. fiLTii Carolina ruck, acid pho I li.ite, soluble itif, or what eTer ol tli m.iny names iv-n to this fertilize! hy tliffeietit manufacturers has Iwoim iltilar with many farmers. It if letaUed at r.c'4 rantriiur from 813 tc Jl (r tou, while the values given bj iih!)ms do not vary more than twc lu.i.:rs per ton. Misrepresentations ol ;E'ut.s together with fanoy names at tached to it, have induced farmers tc ljy tt.e fc! truer prices, while at much lower rates they rouM ret an article as : ' ami soiuet lines of a lietter grade ;f the lowest prices (riven above. The IL iTiuf.ictiir" of acid rock has after M..u,y jeuis nf tii.il become ft perfect a-M the manner of treatinir It has be come so ii tn'i tl Hi t hut little difference ii tt.e le-t hi.iri'ls can lie discovered, il leij nres I1 pounds of vitriol to il lve ponnls ot ground rX'k. and w Lea tlit-sw are mixed together it Incomes like a mass f ruortar and ircjiiius tu'iili manipulation and teiiioiis drying pnK-v.sses, and If bageed tsi .sm. u U-fore it is In proper condl ! !i. it hecnn.es ?oi.1au(1 lunipyand t'ie fiesh acid w.ll s..n destmy the I ..'. It shuuM We made a year pre v u us t' --:i'iitii out and then reground l.revi.cij l.i shipment, and even then iT kept t. o l.cii; in Lacs it sometimes lie .ouies i 1 1 II - 1 1 1. to drill. Farmers wiui',1 save themselves much trouble f Ti ev W 'li'.l t.Tiy it iescreene.1 and 1' lj;- I 111 thrir piesetieeaild then would S.-e tl.ev Wele Oct '. : '1 -T, ' " lst COtl- diLloll." Kki.i . ri. . . -1 t.i fai.m M. i iiim uv.-l'i t' e advance untile in a I llti.s .f Iit.it. I lal development in 11 e pa-t il.-;vl, :n none Las there l-en ii.. ne piiu.ouiieed achievement than In farm machiuerv. We have more and letter ui.ichmeiy now than was dreamed of when men who are now opeiatlim laru.s were ims. Hut with ere.tr. d.veisi'y and uicr.isiiur erVniency in-cund by iiivi-:li.i:i the price haa been oVaih:y re lured. A combined reaping ai. 1 mowing inacliitie cost in IsTJ f Ji. .Now t!ie s.mie linn is making the two n..ictii:i s separately, each to do its own woik. and tnus do it letter tluiii th- coinliiiied machine did it. The price f tli- two machines fully pr.j ;d, now i-i ;!.'.", wli.cU is M lier in,;, cheaper than the less elllcient c oml'ined uiai'lun." of a dozen years ao. 'J here Is stroiu; rouipetitioii lie twieri the nrtiiut.icturunj tirms, and pi ic. s are alsiu' as low as will allow a living profit. Tii-re are great improve men: s made from year to year in some i l.ts-es ..' f irm machine! y, and one is aii 1 1. -.t ;Uia: d to buy until he actually nee Is a machine for fear of buying too .-.on, or before the latest Improvement of the sea-on has come out. Although faun machinery is cheap, comparatUe Iv. it takes so much of it nowadays tliat 'inite a lare sum Is thus invested. Tin: production of eirs is a tiling de-.iretl t.y every poult r man, and is one ..f tl e most protikabie branches of the poultry business. Ordinarily every hen wiil lay a certain amount of euits iu the j ear, but with proper food and cue they will lav more than If neglec ted and forced to search for their own living. 1 he production of egs is a trreat dram on the hen. L'uriti layi iir time from one to two ounces of hil.iy coiiceutrat-d tood !s secreted throuch the tissues rvcry day or every oth.tr da v. Four ounces of Solid food is enough, and is the average amount consumed by each well-cared-for I en, which shows almost an tiu.tl amount needed fur eiri? production and to supply nourislitiiei.t and waste or the body. s..ii'.iit m. -orshurn is "uperlor to corn us a fodder plant, ai. . it contains a larked percentage f sTijp.ir, does not dry and crumble as e.is.'.y, and ishigldy leaiied by stock. It u a valuable plant, not only ai a source of sugar hl 1 syiup but also for its seed, the product .f which i-. usually large, and makes excellent food for poultry, or may be ground into meal and used with cut l.-ed for other sbck. iiu T" t'nur 11mM A great many b mes are wa.ted on every tarm, wh'i h would make valuable fertilizing uiateiia', eas.'y lepared for use. I'ro i ute an oidp.uk m whisky bairel, and as boil-s accumulate, throw them in and cover them with wood ashes. If the t at rel s'.ands in the weather, in a lew months il t. hones will lrcome fl.abie.ai.il ea-i.v coiiTerted Into the lr .; Imih' .Inc. If a nun ker prtK-ess is H pured, l uiu the bones a'ld crusii I hem. MiM'iM. ilii.Ni-. . An ixcliacge -ays thai .f y.ni can do this yourself buy Uottl tie harness, makes a few cents' woith o. odds and ends of cither. I'roviii" yourseif with wax end - and a salianle n.-t die, and you can save many a d. incur quarter, par t i".i'. u y ou the w.uk harness. i n. r.V'ls ot most crops spread so i.ipi.i.y tlnoujjii the soil that broadcast surface tuanuriig, well cultivated will -;e better results than putting it a ! ill the I. .il. Wheie the soil is fertile, i ut nat nally cold and slow, a little ;ii..ni ie n the lull will be profitable by g.vii: .. .n - plants an early start. tir,,i ;l e m.'.-t valuable mulchef for tut in mi Laid Is well-rotted chij in.mi.ie. ai. 1 t! e lefnie sawdust around l ! e w o. ! (.' 'e. which is usually iiuxec wuh ni ie valuable material i:i lh s'ops In in the hoi.,., th.it are oftet liiiiiuu H i it. Tie- h. ap should lie go! . ut ol t. eua. l. i ne the appioaoh warm w.'a'hei. 1 in te.-t an 1 only way to glow chea( coin i to i!.i..i.i- the leid (sr acre. 11. cie i a lived en-: in growing an .i ' H' i t i;i.i;r. let the yield W wliat it u :i.. an I t i v li i-hel that can lie addni !.. the ;. ;.l pel acre leiliiL-es tlif i o-' pel ': n l.el in the same I ttio. T" ui.iiu po n; in a good tarm w.i.u in.1 low nt vs to save lifting; anil a cut iiii'ler, toi t onvenience in turning, l i e latter, however, calls for very low Ion- wit els, and the low wheels call t.r spmus ti modify the suddeness of the l.It over eb.-tacles. ! t is t' e gei.ei.il HLpressitiri that the total v leid ot wheat wo'l show no fati ng olt fimu previous years, the de cieae in t he acieage in the older settleit "t ates bt . i. fully compeiisiitetl by the in. ic.ise iii I ikot.i. N i-hr.iskn and the exticnie Noltlnvesl. ir is w.i! i!i w hiie for faimers to see wV.it can be done with their land under the ino:-t lav. i able conditions, l ake one acre t.r a smaller area, manure heavily, cul: ivate thoroughly and then make an estimate whether like treat ment of ail the tarm would not give Sweater profit than is secured at pre sent. .l tulci.'c of the rapidity with which interest In scientific research is now extend. ng It Is noted ttat the gain of membership in the American Asso c.ation for the Advancement of Science has been as great within the last four years as in the previous thirty years. i'".i.w geologists consider the gran ites of the lu leper to have formed by tue action of water, instead of haviDj had the igneous and eruptive origin usually assigned to if. .1 -rorJn, J to Mr. I. 15. Ilott. of Ed niburg, the principal acid of opium is not mecoulc acid, as has been generally supposed, but sulphuric acid. HOUSEHOLD. A Braisei N'kck ok Veal rro cure a neck of fat veal and cut off the scrag and chine bone. Now pat in the bottom of your braisinj-pan a sliced carrot, an onion, two or three cloves, a little parsley and thyme, a bay leaf, two or three dicks of celery and a couple of slices of lean bam. Lay the veal upon these, pour m sufficient water to nearly cover it, and place the pan, covered close'y, where the contents may simmer very gently for from one hour and a half to two hours, or until the veal becomes tender. Then remove from the lire, and, after straining the liquor, put one-half of It into a hauce pan and boll it briskly until thick, (ilaze the veal with this, and for a sauce take the remaining liquor and thicken it with a paste (of Hour and butter) which has been browned over the lire. Now boil the sauce until smooth, and after skimming it well stir in the juice of a lemon and serve. E'iiis and Cokkkk. Boil three quarters of a pint of mi.k till it is re duced to half the quantity. Then add a quaiter of a pound of powdered coffee. Iet it simmer for half an hour, and then press the creamy mixture through a very tine sieve. lucoriorate with it the yolks of three eggs, ami also three whole eggs. I'ass it again through the sieve, beat the cream a lilt e, ami pour it into six small cake moulds which have previously been well buttered. Have a saucepan ready containing boil ing water. Take it off the tire and place the molds in it; a.luw the cream to settle, and turn the molds upside down in the dish the teufs au cafe are to 1 served on. 1-ift the molds care fully off their content, add to the lat ter a sauce made of good coffee, well sweetened, and served quite hot. r "')! rii DYsi'EiTics. A member of my family was iucaiab!e for months of letainlng any food -except beef, slightly boiled, and only a small Mrtion of this could be eaten, but at short in tervals. After a while the crust of stale bread could le digested. One person told us that Le could eat nothing but parched corn pounded; another, only whole wheat, boiled the entire day. Neither agreed with our patient, when early apples ripened, they were freely eaten and digested. All other fruits followed gradually, pears last, and now the dy?reptic apparently has as sound a stomach a- ever. The patient should remain out doors as much as possible. SinuMi- salad is so delicious that the mau or womau who has uot lasted -It has something to brighten the future. If canned shrimps are used drain and I air them well, then rinse them. 1'our j vinegar over them, with a very little I oil or clarified butter mixed with it. ! 1-t them stand in this for three-quar-j ters of an hour, or still better for an 1 hour, drain this off, line the salad bowl with crisp lettuce leaves, and place the shrimps within, or a still prettier way I Is to make cups of the lettuce leaves I and put shrimps in them. The dress ing may lie poured over them or served by itseif. Any salad dressing that is suitable for chicken or fish may be ser ved with shrimps. Fi.-n 1'ik. Take oil the skin, and re move the bones of any odds and endsot cold fish that may be possessed; add to this au equal weight of cold mashed po tatnes and any cooked rice that may be over from a dish of curry. Season with pepper and suit, ami place the mixture in a well greased di-di with some lumps of dripping at the top in the oven, and luike it until it is a light brown color. Almhnu F.i i ns. One pound ot flour, oue pound of crushed white sugar, four eggs, two ounces of sweet almouds and two ounces of butter, the rind of one lemon grated. Stir all these ingredients well together lightly, but do not work them much. Koll out the dough as thick as your little linger, and cut the biscuits iu shapes with cutters. Let them lie in a warm room all night, ami bake them the next morning in a very slow oven. .N'ovn. breakfast cakes are being made by taking some bread sponge which was started the night before, and mixing lukewarm water with it until it is like batter; ad I an egg or eggs to It in the proportiou of three eggs to one quait of dough. This should then al lowed to stand close to the tire for an hour; have the griddle hot, grease it siigiitiy with sweet lard, and fry a la pancakes. Si 1. 1 u: am:. Twocupfuls of flour; one and a half cuptuls sugar; half cup ful butter, half cupful swavet milk, leaten whites of four eggs. Stir butter and sugar to a creaiu; add the milk. Put one leaspooutul of baking powder into the flour; add half of it- Stir in the whites and the rest of the fl.mr. Flavor with vanilla, and bake for half an hour. A v kiiv nice way to cook mackerel for b leak fast Ls, after freshening it, to bod It for ten minutes, take it out of the water, drain it, remove th back iHine, then pour over the fish a gravy made of tniik thickened w ith fiour, and with a lump of butter added. The gravy is ju-t like that which you make Jor miik toast. A m rrrrt Imsh I'kk rrv ami f,.Miii. a salad of dres-ed tomatoe (with mayonnaise) served with lettuce, and allowed to star.d in ice until the tire, sing is thoioughly aborlied by the sliced tomato, makes a beautiful supper d.sh; Hanked by some thinnest slices of cold boiled tongue. Serve this last on a meat dish on a bd of water cresses. To mask cologue water try this rule: To one quart of alcohol allow three drachms of oil of lavender, one drachm of ml of rosemary, three drachms each of od of lieigaiuot and essence of lemon, ami three drops of the oil of cinnamon. Fou l n k tilliuj for au orange short cake take two large oranges, peel them, chop them One. remove the seeds, add half or a peeled lemon and one cup of sugar. Spread between the layers of short cake while It is hot. This may lie used for layer cake filling also, but in that case add the we'.I-beaten white of one egg. t'nuN-MKAL mulhus are apetizing. To one pint of meal add one cup of Hour, a lump of butter the size of au egg, two eggs, nearly half a pint or sweet milk, ami a quarter of a cup of rresh yeast. Mix this at n'lght, and in the morning bake in tnutlin tins. 'it Cake. Five cups of flour, three of su.'iar. one of butter, one of cream, five eggs, one teaspoouful of soda; sea sou to taste. 7 fie Russian War Departments pro poses to make use of telephones in com municating with the fortresses of the empire. -V. Ihtranil refers spontaneous com bustion In collieries to the oxidation of iron pyrites In the coal, friction from slipping and beat of air current. It tros long doubted if impressions of inanimate objects could be found iu coal and shale formations, but .Profes sor Mlali regards the doubt as being negatived by facts. The fig Is said to be a sure crop in most of the Southern States. The cost of cultivation Is trifling. hvxtixg leopards. How Che larger Sptt-inien Are Tk-( en Animals trained io nun I)owii Antelope. The accounts or hunting taitiards, found In books of travel read as if they belonged more properly to a chapter in the "Arabian Nights" than to a trea tise on natural history, and yet the ac counts are mainly true. The animal itself has become almost familiar. The London Zoological Garden has a very line specimen. He is lodged in the lion house, and is next door neighbor to oue of the fiercest tigers in the garden. His habits are not to be judged from bis company. He is a quiet, attacha ble brute, living on terms ot familiarity with his ke-ier, under whose caresses lie will purr in a manner understood to express delight, but to uninitiated, ears sufficiently formidable. liHleed, be is in many ways a contradiction and a compromise. There is a gieat deal of the dig aliout him. He is long legged "and hard footed. His rlaws aie strong anil broad, like those of a lox terrier, and as l.e jumjis al.xmt his cage the foot strikes the ground tirnily and not with the silent velvet piessiire of the tiger or the puma, and yet bis head and in deed the whole cf bis anatomy shows li i in to be a cat. T'.ie Prince of Wales, on his return lr.ui India, brought a Iir of these leofirds with him. They were very tame, and it was hoped they would breed in die gardens. Hut I.oiidonf rs were familiar with the creature long 1-efore all wild animals were lodged iu the itegenfs Paik. At the end of the last century, when Serlngapataiu was stormed, among the treasures of Tipiio Sahib's palace weie three highly tunned leii- ards. These were esteemed ot such value that they were Pent to Kuglaud and presented to the King, and tieorge 1 1 1 added them to the menagerie at the Tower. They seeui to thrive in Eng land, though' they do not multiply. The training of them is not a very com plicated process. Nature does most of it. The natives maintain that tor true Iort ou must commence your train ing w ith the fully grown animals. The desirable l'erceness and ll.-etuess are only thus to lie secured. The natives have, indeed, the same idea aloiit hawk?. To English ideas the yport seems curiously tame and uneventful. The leopard is broughtout in a bullock cart, with a kind of hia.-k that covets its ryes. A chain is also slipied round its loins, it is quite tame, knowing its keeT and auticipatingthesiorl. The cart drives along, accompanied by the sportsmen, to a sjn.it which the herd of antelopes will pieently cross in their course. The Iocs all go lir.-d, the black buck the pride of the I'ax-k invariably brings up the ream. The motive is as ci lU'd to jealousy and a desiie to keep his females all under his eye. What ever the motive, the Misitiou is fatal to him. At the proinr moment the hood is slipiH-d off the cheetah's head, and las pit y is show u him. I'nlike the dog, he st ems to hunt by sight, and not by scent. He looks keenly almut him for one moment, and then drops off the cart, generally at the off side, using it lor a cover as lon as he can. If there aie iret s or any rising ground he is quick to take advantage of them, and thin makes his burnt upon his quarry, lie almost invariably chooses the buck, but he runs him down by sheer t!e tness. This is the meaning of those dog-like claws and the reat length of the limb that makes him look almost out of proportion iu the lion's home at the Kcgeiit Park, where all the other catlike creatures tigers, leop ards, jauai's, pumas and lions are short-legged and crouching. The si.'ed is scaicely to le credited thtrelsno English gray hound that can run down a doe antelope. Itut it is sorry soit at be;t if, indt ed, il can be called sport at all. The cheetah springs on the back of the buck, strangles it, and laps up its bio 1. The huntsman comes up, cuts the throat of the auteUqie and, let ting the blotnl flow into a wooden cup, gives it to the cheetah, watching his time when tlie creature is gorged to slip the Ii.hhI over his eyes and lead hiin back to the cart. The natives give their accounts of the animal more pictuiesqtiely and the native accounts are still to le found in the natural history Uniks. Iu a wild state the cheetah feeds itself only every three days, gorging itself on these oc casions and lying comatose during the intervals. The specimen at the Zoo logical (iardeiis is pretty active all day and falls iu w. th the I emulation hours as to lood with meat docility and even with yest. In their pursuit of prey they aie social and iu that way diller from most ot the other carnivora. Two or three of them will meet at night and go forth mi their hunting c.editio!is in company. It is by ascertaining place of tivst that the natives are aH!e to ca ture them. It is very often by tut trunk of a tits', which is found all scratched and barked by their claws. tHises and meshes are ill lven into the ground. The leopards come l-oundiiig over the grass and are sihiii caught. A blanket is thing over the head and tic creature is tied and carried oil. One of the favorite theories of the na tives, which is relocated over and over again iu the books, is that when the trained leojird misses his stroke he can not recover his breath quick enough for a second bound and the herd passes from him iu safety. Then he gets ex tremely agitated, runs up and down until his teinicr subsides, and is at last cartel and again let slipoii fresh quarry. Jt is a pit tin esque kind of notion, but most liu-ii who have seen antelope hunt ing in the East w ill le able to qualify its application. The leopard does not show this temper to any extiem.- extent, and, in fact, is making ai.oil.t r Imuinl on his prey liefore the antelojie cm get oil or the temper can lise. Nor is the Hipular idea that he must U; caught adult in order to secure the ierfection cf his hunting qualities quite correct. He is a tamable creature, and, there fore, even when an adult, can be man aged, but those who have brought up cheetah kittens will realize that it needs no training to make them gratify their carnivorous inclinations. Major Jer don had one that followed hiin about like a dog, racing after him when he toi k his rides. Hut when it grew up It showed soon enough that it was natur ally given to hunting. Iu attacks on sheep bail to be prevented, ami several horsewhippings made it realize that they were under Secial protection. A donkey defended him-clf successfully with his heels. The cheetah was iu such matters quick to take a hint, and hada.iod memory. Its training was commenced ou gazelles, but it soon attained the il.gmty of bunging down antelopes. Its owner mentioned one peculiarity in proof that it hunted by sight aiul not by scent. It was veiv fond or mount ing a stack of hay or ilic trunk ot a tree, and from that eminence looking down on the hunting possibilities of the neighborhood, and, when actually in the chase, if the antelopes g..t out of sight, it would abandon pursuit, but if a greyhound were then slipped he would resume the chase, and of course out strip the dog. Tfte Sutlej, a large river of British India, with a descent of 12,0lA) feet in ISO miles, or about 07 feet per mile. Is the fastest Cowing river in the world. Plutinutii has beea discovered in a vein In New Z -aland, and it has also oeen found m octahedral crystals in a quartz vein in the Thames gold district. To keep the lamps from sraokinz dip the wick iu strong, hot vinegar. Dry it before pulling it la the lamp. HOW BEX CUTLER GOT RICH. Young Men of To-Day May do LIk wle if They Follow Advice Given. General B. F. Butler being asked for some suggestions on gaining success, stated that wheu he was a young ' law yer, ptacticing in Lowell, Mass., a bank president advised him to take bis little deposit and buy real estate, from which be could be deriving some reve nue. The general said that he had but little money and was uncertain as to his future. ".Never mind," said the bank presi dent, "go to the next public auction of real estate, bid off a lot with a building of some kind on it. pay down what money you have and give your prom issory notes for the balance. You will come out all right." General Butler says this advice was good. When a man has obligated himself, by his notes, to pay money at a certain time, it inclines him to econ omy. He followed the advice, and in time became the owner of several par cels of valuable real estate in Lowell. Two classes will not be likely to heed such advice the improvident and the over-cautious. The latter will be apt to say: "It would be all right but for those dreadful promissory notes. They are always running on and if a man falls sick they do not wait for him to get well." There is this danger, of course, but one can make no business venture with out come risk, and with the knowledge acquired by recent investigations of the cause of most ordinary ailments, and the means of curs, oue runs little risk from thai source. It is now known tliat most of the common ailments have their origin in deranged kidneys. They are the chief blood purifiers of the sys tem and when disordered a breaking down somewhere Is soon Inevitable, because the jsoisou, which in their healthy condition is eliminated, is car ried through the entire system. Put them iu order, and health re turns. V. IX Dewey, a successful inau. President of the Johnston Harvester Comjiany, Batavla, X. Y., gives his experience as follows: In 132 my health was failing, my heal pained me constantly, my ape tite was uncertain, I could not sleep soundly. I attiibuted this to the ex treme pressure of business cares, but I grew worse, and finally was confined to my bed for two months. It seemed as though I would "never recover" my former health. Under the aid of stimulants I gradually gained strength, so that in a few months 1 was able to attend to business, but I could walk only with the assistance of a cane, and then In a slow and unsteady manner. I continued somewhat in the same con dition until February last, when I used Warner's safe cure. It has cured me. 1 consider it a valuable remedy and can highly recommend it. Young men have bat to use ordinary prudence, aud when any derangement occurs if they use the same means as did this successful business man, they may feel a constant assurance of their ability to carry to successful conclu sions all ordinary business projects. In eluding tho care of their promissory notes when due. An Oil' u iu Ktitr'a Face. The effect of the drug on the physique of a icisou varies somewhat. Some times he w ill become dreadfully emaci ated, but if the apetito keeps good he will not decrease iu weight. There is always, however, a peculiar color about an opium eater's face, and by that he can te known; the complexion assumes the color of old brass, having a teculiar death like hue, but it is seldom that the digestion is impaired. .. Opium affecls the spinal tortl and brain principally. Tho nerve jiower of the opiuin eater is very much lessened without the opium, and it is very much increased with the drug until the end comes. The death of the opium eater is not marked by any particular scenes of horror. I have seen several opium eaters tlie a very pleasant death, and I do not know that I ever saw a very bad death amohiy; such patients. A iii Jut substitute forgntta perch, which claims to lie far cheaper than that useful material, has been patented by a German chemist. The process of manufacture may be briefly described as follows: l'owdered gum copal aud sulphur are mixed with about double their bulk of oil of turpentine or pe troleum, and are well heated and thor oughly stirred. Alter being allowed to cool to a certain temperature, the mass has added to it casein In weak am nion i a. Once more it Is heated to its former teniierature, and is then boiled In a solution of nut-gall or catechu. After some hours' boiling, the product is cooled, washed iocold water, kneaded in hot water, rolled out and finally dried. If. as stated, the manufactured article cannot lie letected from real gutta lrcha, and will auswer the same pur poses. It will have wide application, if only for the insulation of electric wires and cables, and for the making of golf balls. Jt is rcjiortcl that M. Tom run si has made au important improvement iu the Jablcchkoff electric caudle, by render ing the luminous Hiint practically sta tionary. The candle, it is well known, burns down, and the luminous point is lowered steadi y through the hour and a half or two hours during which the cai.d e lasts. This is not a defect of much moment in the lamps on the Thames Embankment; but M. Touimasi has devised a selenium regulator which receives the light from the candle and acts as an automatic elevator of ti e luminous point. M. Touimasi has also been endeavoring to utilize the peculiar properties of selenium in photometry and telegraphy. Men-ding Matters. Charley (aged 3 to his sister Fanuie's new beau) ay, Mr. Snphtly, Faunie said last ulght that you were not such a fool as you looked. Billy (aged 7) -Why. Charley, she Jidn'l say anything of the sort. Mr. Sophtly I should imagine not, Billy. What did she say? Billy She said you didn't look as j;reat a fool as you were. Too Mrai of a Good Tnixa. Dumley (who has stood an after dinner iigar) Good cigar (puff) eh. Itobln lon? Ilobinson (dubiously) Ye es (puff). 3ut a man can have too much of a good Aing. Humley How's that, Ilobinson? Ilobinson We had corn beef and ibbage for dinner, you know. Something to Shut OutDiscoud. First Worshipper "Why are you wearing those big thick ear-muffs, mlth. it isn't cold?" Second Worshipper "I am going to :hurch." "So am I; but what or that?" "We have discharged our choir and ire going to have congregational sing ng to-day." Sue Spoke by tue Clock. a little ' zirl who had been taught that she was four and a nair years old, and whose mother bad been teaching her to tell ;he time of day, was asked by an ac quaintance how old she was. "I am let me see I am half past four," she replied. Among the curious exhibit' at the Munich Electrical Exhibition were a series of photographs representing the various changes aud contortions pro duced in the human face by subjecting the different facial nerves of a iiatient to the action of electricity. These were the experimental photographs made by Trofessor von Ziemsseu. The expressions of Joy, pain, surprise, doubt, disgust, etc., were easily real ized, according to the nerve that was touched by the electrode. Other obser vations and experiments by Professor von Ziemssen promise to be of great importance. They Institute a compari son between the continuous and the induced current in the stimulation of the Important accelerator and depressor nerves which control the heart. He has round that an induced current, so far from stimulating the nerves of the heart, as heretofore believed, is perfectly inoperative, whereas a continuous cur rent from an ordinary battery is of the very greatest activity. The intensity of the struggle for ex istence iu England is well set forth by a magazine writer who asserts that 300.OOU families iu London aloue are in the habit of pawning small articles, and that more than 6.OUO.O0U unre deemed pledges are sold every year. As many as 27d, 000 articles are takeu in pledge yearly throughout the coun try, and although a certain proportion of these are stolen goods, it is estimated that only one in U.OUO can be counted as such. In no country in the world is the same relative poverty possible, n ot even in St. Petersburg, where the extremes of poverty and of riches are as marked as in London, for there is no Intermediate class to answer to the English middle class, from which and the better class of lower orders most of the pawnbrokers piotits are derived. Iu Paris the Mont de l'iete Is compara tively little frequented, except by tbo?e who have been driven to poverty by ex cesses, whereas In London really re spectable people relieve temporary pres sure in this wav. lnjutbjing of the value of an article ot food, Uerr Ma.ver would consider, as the principal points to determine, its barmlessuess. In the lirst two respects there is, he thinks, no appreciable dif ference lietween genuine and artilicial butter. The third point depends chietly on indigestion, aud be -has proven by expel luient that genuine butter is the more readily digested of the two. The difference, even in this respect, is not great, but Is esiecially noticeable when the imitation butter is used with pota toes. A syndicate in Galveston propofes to build wharves out to deep water In the Gulf or Mexico. To do this they w ill try to borrow 15.000,000 of the state s suiplus, which will exceed $.",000,OCO two years hence, and will be SiO.ouU.tXMj within rive years if the State sells the school lauds. I IWn't V ut Kellef, Hut Cure." is the exclaiuutitiu of thousands gum-ring from catarrh '1 o all nuch we nay : Catarrh can be cured by Dr. Sage's Catarrh lleiuc tlv. It has been done in thousands ol coses; why not iu yours? Your danger is iu delay. Kuclose a stamp to World's Dispensary Mislical Association, Buffalo, N. V., lor pamphlet ou this disease. Poultry are very fond of milk and buttermilk, and they promote laying. An liuportauc Arrest. The arrest of a suspicious character upou bis general aprn-arauce, movements or companionship, ilhout walling UDtil he Has robbed a traveler, tired a house, or murdered fallow-man, is au important fuuetion of a fhrewd detective. Kven more important Is thu arrettt of a disease which, ir not checked, will blight and de stroy a human life. The freijimnt cough, loss of appetite, general languor or debility, pallid tiu, ana bodily a cues and pains, announce the apnroach of pulmonary con sumption, whicli is promptly arrested aud permanently cured by Llr. 1'ierce's "Gold en Medical Discuvery. " Bold by UrutisLs. Provide some old mortar in the hen yard. Weak lun-s, pitting of blood, consump tion and kintlrfd arlecuous, cured without physician. A ti dress for treatise, with 10 cents iu statu pt. World's I iinpsnsary Medi cal Association, otii; Main St., lutfalo(N. V. Under-draining causes the soil to be cooler in the summer. Our Lady fkiends will lie Inter ested In knowing that by sending 20 cents to pay postage, and 15 top covers of Warner's Safe Yeast (showiug that they have used at least 15 packages) to H. H. Warner & tk., Rochester, V., they can get a 500 page, finely lilustiated Cook UooK, ree. Such a book, bound iu cloth, could not be bought for less than a dollar. It is a wonderfully good chance to get a fine book for the mere jmstage aud the la dies should act rroruotly. Klch soil crows a tree larger in one year than a oor soil in three. Kotau Cut' mends anything Itroken Chl na, OiHbo, W ood. Free Vuus at tiruirs X Oro. It pays to liberally manure pcor soil. I f you are bothered uith "hard times" aud want to learn how to turu your time into money quickly and pleasantly, write to It. 1". Johnson Co., Kichmoud, Va. They have a plan ou foot that you ought carefully toconsider. CoN.U-ni-NG IN T1IK FAMILY. Tommy Bagley "There was a wizard at tlie show, maw, and he did the wonderf ullest trick you ever saw. He took a silver dollar, moved it around a little while aud turned it Into a rose." Bagley "That's nothing. Tommy. Your mother cau turn $20 into a bou net in a twlukling." Mrs. ISagley "And your father. Tommy, beats all the wizards in exist ence. He can make S20 disappear iu a single night so completely that it is never heard of again." Tlie Special offer orTiiE Youth's Companios, which we have published, includes the admirable Double Holiday Numbers for Thanksgiv ing aud Chriftmas, with colored covers and lull-page pictures, twenty pages each. These, with tlie other weekly issues to January 1, lss, will be sent free to all new subscribers who send ?1.7.i lor a year's subscription tojanuary, 1hk9. The Com I'AKIOK has leeu greatly enlarged, is finely illustrated, aud no other weekly literary pajier gives so much lor so low a price. When only a few fowls are kept it is best to renew the stock every year. FREE! To Mf.rci14.vts Only: A three-foot, French jrlase, oval-front Show Case. Address st once, 1. W. Tassili. & Co., 55 State St., Chicago. Always keep a supply of twine,chalk and putty iu the house. Scrofu'.a. salt rheum, ail humors bolls, pimples, and diseases of tlie blood, Btaerii debility, dvs pepsia, biliousness, aict headache, kidney ana liver complaints, catarrh aud rheumatism, are cured by Hoods Sarsapirula. Take It now. luu Doses one Dollar. Camphor in water cures hiccoughs. Consumption Surely Carets. To the Editor : Please Inform your reader that I have a pounce remedy for the aoove nained disease. Uy lis timelv use thousands of boprlesa eases have been permanently cured. 1 shall be g.ad to send two 1.011. ci of my remedy I KIE to aur of your reailers who have consump l.tio if they will st-nl me their Express and ir, o. address. Kespe-tru:ij. T. A. SLOCI M. M.C., lsl rearl St., N. Y. Sweet oil is an autidote for most poisons. yottuneliKe canos ivianey cure for Dropsy Gravel, 1. rig. it's, Uean. Lrinaryor Liver Disease Nervousness, Ac cure guaranteed, oitlce, sil Ai. s si, 1'm.a. l a uuiLe, tor sa jj, ur jga-iau, Irj u. Graft pears on mountain ash. Evas Ears Nose W- ca.. OSMTTLr Are all more or less affected by catarrh. The eyes become Inflamed, red and watery, with dull, heavy pain between them; there are roaring, bozzmg noises In the eats, and sometimes the bearing is affected : the Dose Is a severe sufferer, with Its constant nncomfortab'.e discharge, bsd breath, and loss of the sense of smelL All these disagreeable symptoms disappear when the dis ease is cured by Hood's Sarsapartlls. which ei 11 from tne blood the Impurity from which ca tarrh arise, lone and restores the diseased or gans to health, and build ap the system. Hood's Sarsapanlla cured me of miller's catarrh, and bant ap my general health, so that 1 mfeeling betierthan torear. It is tne first me dicine I ever knew 1 f which would cure miller's catarrh.'' Ucoros Fobtir, Logan, Ohio. Howl's Sarsaparilla Sold by all druzglsts f'.;sixfor! Prepared by C L IIOOD& CO., A pot hecarie. Lowell, Mass. IOO I - Otic loIIar EiYrL, CATARRH oream Ddiin Cleanses the Nasal PaiiKaKes, Allays Pain and In It a inni at ion. Heals the Sores. Kestores the SeitNos or TaKte and Smell. Try the Cure. T'Df.ToMvjV ''CtlVI Drv-'-.tsi Ss Cn' . "tAll USA. HAY-FEVER A particle In a..:id -lito emch nowtril 'i.1 Is srr-e SlSe. Ir1s bo ts-titu at Iriurnita ; liy Hiall. rtritr'.t su cts. FLY iilio.. riruKiriftts. Umeuwiili fct N. .-w V i irk iiUMouors. Jatuual Keligiok. Little Geor ge, after his mother had prepare 1 him for bed, while still in her lap used to say his evening prayer. One night Le said: I don't want to say my prayers in this way," and getting out of his mother's lap he knell down before her and placing his open hands together, reiieated his prayer. When his lather heard of this he was much interested. He always felt that this was the proper attitude In prayer in the family and In the closet. As nothing had been said to George ou the subject, he thought it was evidence of a sort of natural religion. "George," said his father, "do you suppose God likes to have you say your prayers this way better than the way you used to?" "Oh, I don't suppose God cares any thing about it I was thinking of the kaugaroo." He had lately been to the menagerie and seen that animal sitting on its haunches with Its fore feet placed to gether somewhat as he placed his hands in saying his prayers. In Love With America. Mrs. Society I suppose you never heard of jour daughter, who eloped with that young bricklayer? Mrs. Old f am Yes, he has got rich, and they are living in Xew i'ork In Cue style. "That is a comfort, certainly. Has the foreign nobleman who married your other daughter returned to his castle yet?" "Ob, nol He Is just in love with America, and says he wouldn't think of going back to Europe." "Indeed! Where have they been during the last three or four years?" "Visiting with the bricklayer." "I had my picture takeu to-day," said little Christine. "I crossed my arms and leaned on a chair, aud the pictureman put my bead In some tongs." "Why, you must have looked like a lump of sugar in sugar-tongs," laughed papa. "Why. so I must have," said Christine delightedly 'cause the man kept saying What a sweet little girl."' Suicidal. Wife, reading newspaper "According to the statistics I see tat the number of marriages decreases while the number of suicides is in creasing." Husband "Tliat 's easily explain ed." How so?" Men are beginning to prefer the less painful method of getting out of this world." Mb. Kewtox. Have you chicken? spring Waiter Certainly, sir. "All the ttceter(is, of course" "Certainly, sir." "Then bring me some liver and on ions. I've been taking a flyer on Third street and chickens is too rich for my blood." A Grinding Monopoly. "How's 'matches?" she asked, as he weighed UUl CllO Blllftll. 'Only a cent a box, ma'am." "How many in a box?" "Three hundred." "Dear me, but how they do tuck It on to poor folks! However, I suppose you'll allow half a cent on every empty box returned?" Inclined to Loi-bt. Sunday School Teacher "Yes, Bobby, God made the world in six days and rested on the seventh. Will you remember that?" Bobby (hesitatingly) "Ye-e. I'll remember that he rested on the seventh, but I don't believe that be made the whole business in six days." Xot So Expensive Now, Mrs. Muggins And so you daughter has married one of your boarders? Mrs. Wugglns Yes; he was the most expen sive boarder I've had since I came to Omaha always in the house, keeping the Ores blazing and the gas burning; why, he liked to ruined me, "liut your daughter married him" "Yes, he Hjiends his evenings at the club now." Little Dick. "I hope Canada and this couatry will fight." Mamma "You mustn't talk that way." "Well, I do hope so, and I hope this country will get licked like every thing." "Why, Dick, what good would that do?" "Then we wouldn't have no more cod liver oil." Oats and barley sown together make good feed. Fraaer Axle rease. The Krazer is kept hy all dealers. One box lasts as loug as two of any ether, lie ceived medal at North Carolina State Fair Centennial, and Paris Exposition. ' Charred grain, either of corn, wheat or oats, should be fed to fowls occa sionally. One of the secrets of good farming is to do little things at the proper time. MARVELOUS DISCOVERY. tVhellr like artiadal Systran . A ar bsak learae la 11a reaaUna;. Rwnmmeiulfd by Mask Tw.i, Richakxi IWm, ' Dr Cl-i nt WO Coltuftbl Law mi." is ; aX a alerlden ; -a, mt NoT-l,-b : ssu at Cberl mm Brim MEMORY CoUase 1 two i-Iiiim of au ea h at YaJ : 400 at VrZ vanity c7 Peso. Puiu. : ou at Welloaier Collewa. k5 Urea larce c at Cbaxaoyua UnlisrsuJ. a Prospectus rotrr rarx from ' f atF. LOttKTra, C7 mrta A.r. x Torkv Give good culture to get good croi. " CHndPrewrt'T - PflgjHrt Colds. CauehS. Sore Throati Hoarseness, StitTNock, Bronchitis, Catarrh, Headache, Toothache, Rheumatism Neuralgia, Asthrha, Frostbites, Chilblains, quicker than sny known reme ly. " was auJ is ihe only . PAIN REMEDY Ta InstantlT stuns the most exrtirlatlng .ilavs l,.n..inm:.u.m. at. l cure e"0 wortber ol the l.unif-t. st.iraacl. ltoc.s or s-lau.ls or orient, in one PPllrj,",i nin No matter now vio'ent or "-7M:'!nV-?M,il tl,e Hheumatl.-. lie.lri.Iilen "f,";,.1; Nervous. Neura gio, or prostrate.l w.tn uit-ac "RAEWAY'S ready relief VonVh. Nsu.es. Volni'imr. 1 -a n 1 Heart. Ma'ana, Clni.s siM rever t alt. njs-.llrart irn.t?ick lles.la.-ie. L aiN..-. I'.vnter,. cole W 1111I in the Howeis ami ail Internal Ha i s. mere is not a remedial airem 10 ,rI that will cine Kever and Airue arjJ ai. or ner Mi a nous. Blllou-c an.l other levers uMe I H.tvs i-ll.i.. so quick as H1'"1 hMlir llhtlKF. Fifty ( s. nr Hot 1 lo. Said b D-ug; . . lilt. K.lV . m For the Cure of a 1 tin- .1i-.,pI.m of the stoma;u. Liver. Howeis. etc 1-K. 1AI A A I O.. N. . . le sure to ei --liiiuwa. a. Great Starching AND IRONING POWDER. HOW TO WASH AND IRON Th art cf Btnrchfnp-, Irnint and washing brought to ivrW-ti.'n iu "K'-t on on I iht. Aliti to starch plndid k1. ttfTnfs5 ana indit-h. The only v&hhii:? com pound tliat can bo usd. PrTent starch roUuieor rubt.mtr up. Makes iron Klip eay. Saves labor. Savfl three-fnurths the starch. A revelation In h.aiaekeepin. A l-o-n to wo men. A new .lisci.very, beats the world. C1 Br.i and purifies everything. Invaluable an the onlv fiafe, non-injurious and iterfeet washer an-f eVanr f.r e.-ntral hufieii-.ld purn,jM. OT1 DflUfJlr The ii iost i next -ent-ned O I Mil Until Ui nrl can. with KouL on Iirt, do a niv- waMtiti? and ironinsr at -an be done In auy laundry. Boiling not ri-eeKrMi-y. 10 & 5c. pkCK. at all first-class, well mocked Grocers. E. & Wells, Jersey City. N. J.. U- S A MARVELOUS DISCOVERY. Wholly unlike artificial ynirmw. Any bunk learned in one rending-. Fum mental I'kin n-i.r- of the I.:-tttKii Fvsfem. L W Holly unltka Miutii-tiU-i in Cvuvipu.ii. k'ct C&s lev(,tinieiit mid K.:iii-i. II. The Natural M-nirv Lfsfred t lt riyht and made uwtrfut. l'r.- l- ly the Ml. r- e mid Trleoij constitute a s.-it'iitirtf jitenlu of t lie Stat ural K-siKln,o 1 the .v-i.-ntf Hi-nil v traluwd Mt-mory au st-n-lin of the Natural Mr-irwrV. Hi. Tnit jo'er f "outluuuii Attention erowlax a.'Mf-e with the MnuTy. IV. Mnm-iry anJ AiN ntl-'n t-flnn RtrenpThni'd to Uiehlniir'Udfvrwlij th-'flvo i. mi. the itetti U Dt Ii-iiACt-r us-d. eii eijt Ui Mfv ca,-4-at II rut aud ufier arl& la uunf nt uJl. ' I'ri'f. Ijoifiw-tre gavp' me a new m. ni"rv" Hon. Judali P. lieiijunilu "li Ua Kf'-atU .trcnthr-ned my natural iu nmrv" H.in. u . y. a'hi-t. late r. s. .Minliter U Iii "I'r .f 1 il-wtt-" t in ui an !- me to i arraat thf Mroiui-t -ii'l-r'nn-nt" John C. Minor. M 1). '"i rt-K-rt-l that It did not f..rm a tart of the rurti' Uluni of our achuuis" Su-fhen Hand. Ej., innter r th- I'. M. Navy Tbre i not one lxist1tutl n f h-.truait: In the land that nould be without It alii If U W'inh were known" Hr. A. J atfclnertiev, Ki-tir of ht. Marv BCauroh. Ammjio Ha Imvh firiiied mif by c -rr'i-"ft 1- ir, aud have ilwliVl U-.ut hereafter I i-had trv to Induce ail my stuileuti to matT this system U-rom thv enpaKe lu the lliiifiilsih- tudles umlT n.v dlrectimi1 Hev. i-nm.-tri ii. li.-iiio, Froft-Hior of Hebrew la the HatiRnr Theoii cirai S'nilnary "1'rof. Lol-ttt-a VMtt'in lsftrirt jii lni ict only to the ftui-nt f snorthan.l, hut w tUv vetciau reixjrter" W. VV. W ii aon, Su-uor.-'plier. "Wince leariuiiK y-ur System, I find loan soon learn to play any iiltr "f nuiioc wirlnmt note", a feat im rK-Hlhle to me formerly Kilxa C'awthorne "No man has a memory s. Mrthat thin methoU will not frreatly aid It ; nor fiai rtny one & memory so -d as not to stand In need nf tlie help which It can fur nlal.'-! rof. Win. H. Harj--r. of Yah "Hi hi Sv t.-m I have alretidy learnet! out hook In one reading, and I intend to learn msnv more In the aame way"-- blr Edward H. Meredyth. Itart. ' I coiitldentiy reo ommend your ) litem u all wbode;rv to Ktrent-then their memory and cure their mind w an.lerliiK" Bernard Ellhi, "It la a perfeet memory tarn" Weekly KudRet "I do not aar that I made myeelf a walking Hume or Macau lav, hut 1 do aay that what I had harne.1. I knew jerfe-tlv, thanks to your rstm. The result wan full mark) (lSoi" Reginald E. Murray, E-q. "1 have Junt come off top in a Huraary examination, and 1 owe mv nuc ceas In great measure t4 the general improvement which your svhtem had e(Tf--te.J in mv retenilene and acumen' Thoma Talt. t'i. ' I have no hetj tation in thoroughly reeommeudlntc the svtcm to ail who ara In earnest In wikhin Uj train their memo rtea efTectlTeiy. and are therefora willing to take rea aonable pains to obtain ao useful a result '--Mr. I'd. h ard A. Proctor, the AHtrhoiiier "I'l-of. I.olsette did not create a memory for me: no. nthlnf; of ti.t, kind. Aud yet he did for rne what amounted to th same thing, for he proved to me that I a,rMlv bsd a memory, a thtnr whh-h I ft not a ware of till then. 1 bad tefrre te4-n able, like moat i-eople, to store up audloae thliiKs In the dark o-lUr of mv memorv. l.ut he howrd tne how to lia;ht Up the ceflar. it is tle dlJTerence-to change the nure- tva-een haWi.c money where vou can't eolle- t It. and ha tne it In your pK-ket. The Information eot me hut little vet 'w!"! 11 at p-'-dltf'""" fiBiire"- S. I., fleme'ia. Mark Talu. "There u Ihh. all Important dlfTer- ence tetwen other h M-m and that of i'rrf. lii aette. that w htle the former ar arhltrarv and artl lUial the latt-r i entirelv lasd ui-ni l'ti'vRl..l..iiU-ai and WyrholoKl.-ttl prlurli.l. - The reoj.l. s. f rieini "I thus ami vl tweuty hi. urs out of twenty four in learn In; the two sermons- Hev. s H l-c. Claan f 1''j Columtila Uw Mudeuts; n at Merlden 2Mat Norwich: two clos, of fraeh nt Yale at Wellesley CoiJega und 4-- at I'ul w-rt.lt y of IVnurvl anta. aSiat Oherlln Cullttfe and throe larue claasea at 'hautauiua. Proepc tiiive sent P"ST FREE, with opinions la full of eminent people in .th eontlnent Great inducements W Correspondent Clasaea, Addxas PI! OF. T.OIKTTK. 'til luui vuue, New York. KIDDER'S il in.- t-i ii. Lii IXDIOKSTKIX and II VSPEPSI A. r.V.".1!-hr"l'',"", hav' 5"!" u" rprosl or P 1 . .T l,;,v""; "'at it 1. th.. Ih-,( iiri-paraUon for In.lU-(l..!i thai ih.-v liavt-rvi r ul l?IUJTi l.IN was t.kon Thai wh. not .-.ir.i FOR C OLERA INFANTUM. , IT Wll.r. HKI.IKVE :on"iII-aiio" DI.;KSTVI.INill,n,.,;fJi,';i'.,u ,1TaltIiVti.TVI.INr.-al1,a1M rtl.w.Iws of the ion,a-li ; th. y all ,,., fr.,m lri.1lK. ,..n sk Toui-druKk-Ut f..r M.iKsrn.lN ,rrl.4 a ,Ur' irj.- and will vnl a l.tl p to v., it .z..r.-s. i r.t.nt I rx. not he.1..... ,.. w, v..r Z K , reliable, y r .-. t . 1 1 -i I twe.itv flv.. van. " WM. K. K IIIIIKIC A- I'O.. 3I.oirarl.niii I hi..ii.. s.'iJohn !., "S. AFFLICTED UNFORTUNATE Alter ail omcra fail ooneui 32 K. ieti St. below Callowhill, Phila., Pa. 20yearie-periencrinillSPr. 1 .4 I. diaeaes Per n.ancntly rrrnre those wrkened by early indtscrs. t.ont. &c . .i.nrwrnt. navicc ucana HriCtlYCOB. paent.ai. flours n a.m. tills, and 7 to r. evenings. 111.1 Ba.lne-. nllette, Phlla.. Ia Uaaa furaiie.1. J.ire .scu-.aj-t,hip. Wltna. Writac I AT E NTS '.""""'". "tamp for 9 ,, . lur.i..r" liulde L. liLMt. hast. F.tent Att..rn. v. WinKum. r. c. litM'WtU.taiatl.HTHIlT.ljJI.ri OPIUM Morphia IUbll Cor fm 1 tt 9l at . a,. I'r. J. fctrpbek. Lt,ssi in corn. LOiaiss, KIDDEK8 PASTIllEr.'H'nii. ' 1 VJ ' W II J U rover Ill'.WashlpaTraJ.d Pit ! P. , r'a Jew Tall., lt 5Ii C.LU. K60OTCO,Ciaaa-ii7 Tl. IU.U liu .... me, suj rom UlTl't to n.e lu.,.r iu s ICuUr Coat, and st hi. r.r.t aa:f hw . experience In a .torta fiid. la k.a .orrow u..t it Is tsrdiy bilw rat.cUaa man s mo.. ju.u s.ttaa a.t aa:. fMU tt.imne4 SL . tskaa la. but aia feej If a ! sat l.k uifli i... HEN A.k for tl " Sa Bkls'D-. SLu w-iZ OoKeWOXb PILLS. HK1TARE OF ilIlTATIOs. IMrlr, ASK rUR I'll- I'Mt ti' t-" 1'f i '..id, o I. ITT IE SVOAlt-COATi:i M-lt.s. Heine entirely veeelal.le. th. T rn. erutt- without tlir-turimnif to in- t-.w. ,i,..t orooeiii'iifion. l'ut up in krlnss vi h cally fi.-fll.Hl. -Always tr-n an ) r. ,:i,r . Afj thtw little IVUctu (five tite in i j t l-rle. satisfaction S!l HEiOtCHE. Itilioiia llositarlifi iizziues, ont I pa lion. 1 nd iet 1". tllious AtiaekM.iin.lnil ticrantri-iiicii's ""-at-h ntil Ikiwi Iii. tut- in.nipt lv relieved ami fH-rinniieiit ly riiretl I'V tnf i it li Hlerce'" IMeasant l-urnmlte I-t lieta. In eililiuirttit.n tit t lie reininiul i ..; ,;,,. l'ell.-ts over so .'n-t a variety of ..,,,,, may truthfully ! uol that their a. -t: :i th.- avutfin is universal, not a Klari.J ( r r ei-eiitumr their sanative, inl1u.-n.i-. . . t . druinrmta. 25 itit a vial. Mnmi1u.-?itr. ! t f... C hemical Ijiliorntory of V ..hi nv Iowlv-ai.t Mam-icai. Association, liuBalo, N . i . Irt nfTere-i I'V the ni:i-M:".i ..r. rrmif lr. Sajic's 4 aiarrh ICrniedv, 1r a a i tinun Na-ul at.it::i they t-anuot 4-ur. SV7IIT01IS OF CATAItltll. I-m;; hettw heu lai tie, d8t Tin t loll I t : r puss-urea, dim-hurpea fnJlintf (r--in t'j.- .al into the throat, noimtitm proli.s.-, u ir.-lfi and acrid, ut nthcn. thick. t iun i--us. :: i. . purulent, idiMxiy una putrio; tne w-ukt watery, ami inHaim-d : thi n in tiie ears, deaf iic-sj-, Imekitur r c-iu h - clear tuo tii rout, eiM-ct.raiion td inattor, tofrether with ac&lM fruin i:l - -, t.,-. voice is cbMiitl and han a nasal tw.i!v. t m bn-uth i offeriHive; m li and ta-;i-paired: there is a aensation of div;r:i- . mental d-prt-6tnni, a haekinar njk't. u:, ! k-. r. th! lie-luli t v. i'nly a few ol the ai.v. , evmptoms are likely to he present in a- . . C-.L--. Tlmuwnds f casfl annually, u .. iiiunifestnir bait of tin anie e-ynipT.-?. v r t-oJt in cMUistmiptHin, and end in t: li No dirteat- m m ciinnio!i. more !. , . ; , (1 j liariiferiiiiK. -r h-w uiiderptiMtd l v ph- . . liv it imJU. fUHittunir. and tieuiin; i r- f.. ri , Ir."Sarea 4'atarrh Hmedv run - n,.- w cHsft.f Catarrh 44 oM in Hie Ii. ad,'i ( orn, mid Catarrhal llca.la. lie. oiU hy drutgisia cvt-n wti. n-: . a. ntold A (tony from catarrh. rn-f. W. IlAl'SNKR. the f:unol!i ni -r: of Thict. X. ., writes: rnme t.-n 1 suffered untold ntrony frmi cl.r- ::. : catarrh. My family physician av-- ti. ,j, M inrtirnMe, and Baid I must lie. My , u such a had one, that -v ry day, t..u;i , S"-t. my oicc would l c.tn ho ho;u- i ,, j barolv"Hpak ulwvve a w ;nsM-r. In Th. .; , uiy couj-'hitiif and ch-aritiK of n:y tin t . . , j ulinitst tranrh; me. Hy the u-d l'r..vs 1 atarrb it im dy, in three inonrns. I w.. i mail, and the cure bia bci-n Hruia-j-. oiiscaully IlaukiiiR and Spiiiiiis." Thomas .T. UfSTtiNd, Ki.. f '? f'.r St. ouii, "h., writes : "1 wii-sn rr- .;t v r. r from catarrh lorthrt-- years. AT Tim. i . , ..j hardly breathe, uud aa e m-tai't : v t:.!-.. and Fpittni-bT. and for tlie hud v.'.A could not breathe through tin i. ; - I thouirht nothuik' could be done I t ri.-. I j A. ilv. 1 was advis-i t try Ir. r.tr-i l;iue-lv. and I am now a w-l man. I ' . .. ... ;t to h: the only sure remedy f -r .ir.i: : :i t. maiiuf.n t ured. and one bns ni c ,i lair tn:d to exiwrienoo aabjuud'ri t ; a;.: a per u: -in nt cure." Three Bottles Core Catarrh. Ti.I Hibbin, finy-Tn I O., ' i; : r-, Pi.t tiaf: ".My daughter had i-aur: :i ;. i phe wiitf five yearn oid. very badly, i -un lir. Sare'a t'atarr"h Keuiedy advcrt.i-.vd. a-, t r t cured a Uittle for li r. and P oi mw t'..: hoed her; a third Uttie et!ect'-l a :: i nent cur'. She is now cjLtlccu jium aj Sound aud ht-arti." M JVldier ITaIrs. rV-1 AU y, V ashirur' -n. li M-Ugal-aJ,flf-abnfr n, .J l'.r'-eeh-Ir-aip'iii dontiie silionruii- Tti l s t.;tr:e. h.-.-cli-.o.vp-r at 4 to ij' J, J'.r- . . .. Jiifl-- f r- in .V) to iM.'t. lomi.',- (nrr. I V i:;-.- - , : s.:ioU ii(. at i ,rMo i . li.-i-.-at; 'i j I. ;l I- - . . M . ii.,i, Kevo! i-r ii'otn s-i to : i. -ii t r: lllllr-tr-ili 'l 'l-iio.'lje. Addt iiKLAT WtMtliN ol N ttukKS. I-j!t-ir:r.- WANTED: OXEAGKXT FOK 1 11 1S 01 XTVj To tjke f;rJers lur tiijiiji LIFE-SIZECRAYONPiCTUP.ES 'Ihe plcTurei are raiv tw:.uirn.. I;- -.-si frtiJ,raD!ced. Apentu can 'ens: v r. : ol '- r-. a .l make a l&ixe coium.rtMou. Addre-,, luternulional l'ublisliiiir 1 rriiilinM a, 528 makklt sr., riiiLi?:i.!'n: v. 1 'T 1 Ar. i. Hu.l'lnl i. II . ir: a f tilf m Ui,!u. .MIR M.,sau.UrMII A j FRAZS AXLE SBEASE. Bt tn th World. MiVi.nlvhvtLfFrn ri or Oo. sa Uli4uu. l.1juia. bviu i.ric:T. WORK l.' t Al l.. Ia;L jinal.; V I. kl.KV. A . 9 CURE FITS! Wher i hsj: -ir- I do D'it m!tn moiv.v i.. Ft -s for a tune si.d liien have i tu rn r-t im M ' I - i: S md'rl cure. 1 hm mad' t d i r. .-i 1 I ! I 'iL- V or KAlXIMi MrKNbiin.. I arrant my rnm.1jr to cur w..r-' ra... .. i .- him otlierb tiave fkv..d is iin riuin for n dire. S-ii 1 ai ncr) for n. frvMiM-nnd a i I cf my in.i.it ! rnr:f. ,: l i . nl, ; - li- UUUT. I a J iVurl i. New rl. ""TREATtO FREE. He treated I'roi.? arcl n ; . s. .i.n.irriui .in" .. . ..... ... t.l-al rem . entlr. I. Iiarn, . a ' ,;. m a, I imp'oiu. ..f lr..p..v In . t.. -JO I . r.at pro.ir..in. e,l hpA,- l, th- i.,i ., ,.,. ...,st lir.t 1.01c .Tmn .m. rsi.i.ily flU.ip.-nr .,1 I-, f J,1 twoUl,J. o- a.l a.tr.pl. tr. anjthinit ar.ut It. Keme.nl-r it e.. u ...1 1, . o. tr.-allu. t.'ir . erlt or our tr-.lm-iu f'.r r. it fre.-. a cantlr nirtnt r.ju. ,f i..n- 1 ti e.. that l..be.a upM. n.ulror t m . a.4 tlip patl.i.l .ie'sred una ..e to ,ve a - - . .1 SSLi Ji 0rT r U"- ""- a-e ..I ho. ' ani-t-d. etc. S i.d for fme pampl.l.-r ......t.JB; . ImonlMs. T-n .lay t-at.... ni turn ar.-.rTrS B-Jttare t pl.ep.y . K.c, n...lt,elv ri,:. .1 II. H. I.KKl N .V -Vi. M Pa.. Central ..o.el. z.-jj A il l t nl -1.. V. T. GOI.IH. worth v r-rll. 1 elm'. Fve sa:va '. Murlliti.iwi but I. f.u at S ... I-.. . u...m Oue Aireut (Mroliant rnih-i wantB.1 1n everv ti. tlur t-II.le . ti y. f-r.'..,t.tf.. t:.L ' lia.U.-at l. a-t Jn i.-r nioi.tli. $5 Pensions hROPSY aiimilip I I ir ""I an-.U-rt l-ii;.. !." m ra - I. .1 - .....II... MM . Id'B V... .. .' . M.OHF. Allf.-; & I'n , I.ru.-i.- N.lt I J..- ' T . 'l Aiilr,eR. n.TINMI.. , t l,leaoi. Ifrs. J. X. & J. 15. IIOUKXSACKi Medical and Surgical Offices. ' Years Estabushkd. -'00 Norlh Seronast., riiiladelphla. I'a. .,;pir"::'r.R''l-'Pre l'nysi.-uns: an 1 r i!l riot .Bc-.l In tne treatment an I .-ir- .f V ca s..f 1,,-rvous .lei.iiity an I sik: :h: .i:.-i4.A, om.-e lionrs rrom 8 a. ax. to t p. m., an 1 Ir : uci i, p. m. Cosed on sun lays. Conu.tat. .:. a r n.a:l-strl.-i:y connjeuiiai. GUNS AIIHATTAIIHl,iESltSt. I PIECE t I8EECH 10AIUL 0011,1 or CataloTi of Specialties KBOTLBLIvo, I.Y A t A I E. 6 and 66 Onml-era 8-ject. Nc Trra. Rloir'a Dili a Great English GDJlmd Ulall S llilSi Rheumatic Kcmtdf. Ul st,jt, r.ns, n f .lit. O L-' 1 bi'unty.-o...-. t.-d ll.-.. ri.-r rellyea :!.- ,.r,.tlc. s,,.-. r ' " l-r..f. J. M. Ilrt..n. 2r.t!. War l Cf .-. ! HERBRAND FIFTH UMtEL. ' : - I wmeut. II tl UIMMII .. t ,'.m.t, We on.T Uk ui.i, .!. fnot style) a uaruient t(...t pr' tl .- l..uU. t .- nil. VuckIV.'-1-"" 1: the only p-rf,,, ' ;,a ,'a yyiu: y-'M w " 1'om-r-s K1.1. Itr.i.-i yy-i-y over i:.r i-.-.J. 1 ' - v. S To: . i". F.- 1 i.V i! - I 1 ;.. I i...- At : An: If . A:- A1.1I - A I r - 1'. .: I - Wl.ot ' I tl'.-::. A - II:.-, ( 1 e v. .- 1 : . ; . J i j .... a:;. 1.1. :-.iW II. ii : I ; . - I I : . f.-. . . tl..- nr I.kJ.-ci ever, UK'i :: ' : l.C-M 1 . f t- -a . 1 to--- 1 - - 1 ":. f,., , W ii 111-! i!.-t : W I !'.!.- ti. -1. li f : W : h. ; 1..-: to. 1 ... O W t . illl-l Uc- t:ii. I 1 a .; -:n io- : . l'.c, y. , li' . : : v. ; K '.c 'It-!.'. .,; ti. i till 0 'f . n: u 1 .1. Ma.:.-, . the tl... Lis s.- . aiid 1 Ti to sit : alter I.. ten t.i I . of t i ! iu t).,- leau.. 1 iHkM C:.ti.-:, lr-M( ; : a 8 U.I reiuhiu. Her 1... heart t: f hloli : Bt.f v.. t tll"Ul .-' ulu-n w':.c-3e-, oi.,'.eL her, ta-.e from tl... l 'Mar e. so i aw''' Then Ch. to Uiw. ; I if 3z v. ri-lT .J-ii"iI"''Mrrnrr :if wpr,it,'i,:;;i(:m:)v AAiSiS-ia. o.i ,fal 3'.. -1 -:..-.'. Lit-,.ati.