Fn< * 1 F CUHEDTO STAY CUREM"BUFFALO!N^Y!' ITHT WELL"" : PATENTS ■ mm ■ ■■■ ■ B 10-pHjoiiooii ir#e, A T2T A WLLL*3 A TAFTH ABTHHALINB AD I FIIIWB A— IHLRCN?"' *•>!»; u«y°u> >d«. we will :na-.l trial VULF EUBQTTLB THE DR TAfT BROS. M. CO.,ROCH!IiTfH I M.t.r KtE Nothing on Earth MakbH^ Sheridan's Condition Powder I If you can't get it send to us, ft Is absolutely pure. nighly concentrated. In quan tity it costs less than a tenth of a cent a day. Strictly a medicine. Prevents and cures all diseases. Good for young chicks. Worth more than gold when hens moult. Sample for to cents in stampa. five packages 2 1-4 lb. can, by mail, tl.'JO. Hi* «-an* $5 «*), exnress paid. Sample copy of HI:KT POULTRY PAPER Sent Free. L JOHNSON A CO., 22 Custom House St., Boston, Ma&s. JOHNSON'S LINIMENT Originated by an Old Family Physician For INTERNAL as much as EXTERNAL use- Stops Pain, Cramps, Inflammation in body or limb, like magic. Cures <'roup, Asthma.C'olds,< 'atarrh, Lame Hack, Stiff Joints and StrulnH Full particulars free. Price, everywhere, 30 cu LS. JOHNSON & CO.. Boston, Mass. QADWAY'C II PILLS 0 The Great Livsr and Stomach Remedy For the cure of all disorder* of tiio stomach, Liver, Bowels, Kidneys, Bladder, Nervous Diseases, Loss of Appetite, Headache, Constipation, Costlveness, In digestion, Biliousness, Fever, Inflammation of tho Bowels, Piles and all derangements of tuo internal Viscera. Purely vegetable, containing no mercury, minerals, or deleterious drugs. PERFECT DIGESTION by taking one of Kad way's Pills every morning, about teu o'clock, us a dinner pill. By so doing SICK HEADACHE Dyspepsia, Foul Stomach, Biliousness,will bo avoided and tbe tr- with 25 cents for six ii it ■i: tK -•■ 11 - npiv.n, toQI 17. I l 1 urg, B. E., Pa. fIU Rlll Bfl Morphine ilabit Cured In lO IlirlllMtoadday*. No pay till cured. VI IVITI DR.J.STEPHENS* Lebanon, Ohio. ■ Piso's Remedy for Catarrh is the |H Best. Easiest to X T se. and Cheapest. ■ sold by druggists or sent by malLH| 60c, K. T. Hazeltlne, Warren, Fa. SELECT BIFTINGS. Berlin, Germany, has 210 miles of streets. The Shah of Persia has a tobacco pipe worth $400,000. There are over 9000 brass bands in the Salvation Army. In Southern Europe 38,000 oranges have been picked from one tree. The cost of making a £IOOO Bank of England note is less than two cunts. A Birmingham (England) man col lected 540,000 pennies during his life time. The consumption of coffee is declin ing in Great Britain, owing, it is Baid, to the excess of chicory used. The curious custom of placing dolls on graves obtains among lot holders in the Baltimore (Md.) Cemetery. A party of explorers have recently dis covered an immense forest of india rub ber trees in the Valley of the Orinoco. Reliable authorities say that the death penalty is always inflicted in Siam on everyone who is heard to mention the King's name. In the pockets of clothing discarded by a burglar in Indiana were found a translation of Caesar's Commentaries and a problem in algebra. There are now living in one house in a village near Norwich, England, five generations, the ages of the individuals being ninety-two, sixty-one, thirty-six, nineteen and six months respectively. One of the missing portions of the old est Polish manuscript of the Bible has been discovered in the city library of Breslau. It was found used as a wrap per or loose binding to a small valuless volume. So great has been the destruction in Rome, Italy, of the many palaces and public monuments that it is very diffi cult even to trace the plans of some of tho more important which were known to have existed. A treasure composed of pieces of gold as large as a twenty-marks piece has been found at Beuthen, in Silesia. Tho pieces, of which there are said to be about a million, are stamped with a por trait of King Otho of Bohemia, and bear date of 1508. An extraordinary miracle is claimed by the Hindoos of Bombay, in the shape of an idol which is said to have sprung out of the sand on the shore at the very spot where a young baniah—informed by a dream—had predicted it would appear. Hundreds ate now worshiping the idol. A gripman on one of the Philadelphia (Penn.) Traction Company's lines got married recently. Ho had caved up money enough to take a week oil, but his bride would not hear of it. They are spending their honeymoon in the cable car; she rides about with him, seated on the short bench adjoining the gripman. A German resident on tho Isthmus of Panama claims to have discovered largo beds of pearl oysters in the Caribbean Sea, on tho coast above Colon. He is arranging for expert pearl divers to do some experimental fishing, and he ex pects to develop with the bods the fact that lie has something more valuable than a gold mine. Origin of the Phosphate Beds. Professor E. T. Cox, formerly State Geologist of Indiana, regards the rock phosphate of some of the immense phos phate beds of Florida, as of mineral and not animal origin. He calls this especial variety of phosphorite by the name of Floridite. These remarkable beds he has traced in places over au area of about twenty miles in width. The phosphate rests on rocks of Eocene age. The underlying rock may be carbonate of lime or sandstone, and contains from one to three per cent, ot phosphoric acid. Some of the beds of bone phosphate are thirty-seven feet deep; and the rock will sometimes yield eighty per cent, of bono phosphate. Floridite he regards as tho mineralization of an ancient guano. As tho Peninsula of Florida was elevated above the ocean, the land bordering tho sea on tho west coast became the resting place of innumerable aquatic birds and other animals. Itains carried away the soluble alkalies, leaving the less solublo phosphate of lime. He says that on some of the islands of tho Pacific Coast are guano beds 200 feet thick—so that there is no difficulty in the way of looking to this as a source for the mineralization of an ancient guftno.— New York Independ ent. A Home-Made Bark Lantern. Says a correspondent: «'Put some heate 1 olive oil into a small bottle, drop in a piece of phosphorus, cork it up securely and put it in a safe place. Any time the cork is removed for a few sec onds and then replaced, a powerful light will be given out by the bottle, which will last several minutes and be again renewed at any moment by pulling out the cork. A more convenient device for finding a house or number in a street where there are no lights could scarcely bo devised, as it will givo off its light on tho stormiest night, and if it gets out of order can always be got into shape again by aid of a little warmth. The mixture once prepared will last for some weeks with but a reasonable am-junt of care." —Neva Orleans Times-Democrat. The City Bin. There is no doubt that the noise of the city has been steadily increasing for many years. It is perhaps inevitable, and yet it is plain enough that, if some restric tion is not put upon the unnecessary tur moil, there will be no such thing as resi dencc here, except to those unable to re tire into the suburbs. Oue easily be comes convinced of the iusensible wear and tear upon the nerves of all the racket incident to the city by noting the irrita bility it occasions after the annual re turn from the country, when a term of rural quiet has takeu us back to our nor mal sensibility. Oh, for the conveniences of the city and the country's oppor tunities for rvst. — BvnWn UeruitU Protection From Rifle Ballets. Commenting on the penetrative powers if the small arms lately introduced into '.he armies of all the great Powers, Dolonel Lonsdale Hale states that tho ninimum thickness of ordinary soil af fording protection is thirty inches, while tingle brick walls, after being struck a few times, no longer atTord any cover. The new German rifle ranges up to 4000 pards, and at 900 yards the bullet will penetrate ten inches of fir or pine and fourteen inches of sand. At 450 yards [ho bullet can pierce three or four ranks, and at 1300 yards a man may no longer Donsider himself safe, even if the bullet has already penetrated two of his com rades. With regard to "smokeless powder," the same authority observes that, though the report of the rifles when fired is heard, it is very difficult to see whence the rifles arc fired. Under cer tain conditions no trace of smoke can be distinguished. Minor acts of surprise, he considers, will be more frequent in the future, and will often partake of the naturo of ambuscades. Very small bodies of cavalry, intimately counected with infnutry, forming in action patrols of tho latter, will, therefore, be necessary, and it will no longer be possible to discover well posted batteries. On the whole, Colonel Ilale considers that only a war can absolutely decide what the effects of the improvements in small-arms will be. One thing, however is certain—that is, that the difficulty of leading troops has considerably increased.—London News. Acting Out a Dream. A young lady of this place who is Treas urer of a mission baud in one of our Sun day-schools, and who had about $5 of the band's money in her possession, quietly performed a feat the other night, while asleep, that was quite dangerous. The lady rcfei red to arose at a late hour, dressed herself, went to the bureau where she had placed the $5, and took it a little room in the house which the family did not occupy. Gathering to gether a few old skirts, she wrapped the money up in them and then securely tied it with a string and placed it in a dark, hidden corner. After this was accomplished she went into her brother's room, took his loaded revolver and started for the yard. It is not known just how long she was out ol doors, but the next morning the revolver was found in a barrel at the rear of th( lot. When the revolver was discovered in the barrel it dawned upon the young lady that perhaps some person had been in the house and taken her mission money, iind she quickly went to the bureau where •lie had the money concealed. On reach ing the drawer she found that it had dis appeared. A thorough search was given, and the money lound in the place above mentioned.—Huntington (Cal.) Journal Salt was the ordinary money of thi Ahyssinians. 11l ONB ENJOYS Both the method and results when Byrup of Figs is taken; it is pleasant and refreshing to the taste, and act* gentlyyet promptly on the Kidneys, Liver and Bowels, cleanses thesy» torn effectually, dispels colds, head nchos and fevers and cures habitual constipation. Svrup of Figs is the only remedy of its kind ever pro duced, pleasing to the tasteanaao* oeptable to the stomach, prompt in its action and truly beneficial in its effects, prepared only from the most healthy and agreeable its many excellent qualities com mend it to all and have made it the most popular remedy known. Syrup of Figs is for sale in 600 »nd 81 bottles by all leading drug< gists. Any reliable druggist who may not have it on hand will pro* cure it promptly for any one who wishes to try it Do not accept any substitute. CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO. SAM HIAHCISCO, CAu . mmiHU. cents a box. SUDDKN CHANGES OF WEATHER caune* Throat Disease*. There is no more effectual remedy for Coughs, Colds, etc., than BROWN'S BRONCHIAL TROCHES. SoUl only in boxes. Price 25 cte. The Convenience of Trains. The Erie is the only railway running solid trains over Its own tracks between Hew York ind Chicago. No change of cars for any class If passengers. Kates lower than via. any other Lrst-class line. That "all gone" or faint feeling so prevalent with our best female population, quickly suc cumbs to the wonderful powers of Lydia E. I'inkham's Vegetable Compound. It never fails. jsp-- " "PKOMPT AND PERMANENT!" * A . THE PECULIAR EFFECTS OF ]pjgg ST. JACOBS OIL jsmgßSfi&b Are Its Prompt and Permanent Cures. u .Ticu Jan- 17, 1883, OEORfiE 0. OSGOOD & CO., j RHEUMATIBIn« Druggists, Lowell, Mass"., wrote: "MR. LEWIS PENNIS, 130 Moody St., desires to say that OKUIN' ROBINSON, a boy of Graniteville, Mass., came to las house in 18X1, walking on crutches; his teg I was bent at the knee for two months. Mr. Dcnnisgave him St. Jacobs Oil to ' rub it. In six days he had no use for his crutches ami went home cured Wth L^wdi el Si'i<>s., July 9. 'B7: "The cripple bov ORRIN ROBINSON, cured bvPt Jucokf Oil in 1881, nas remained cured. The young man has bccai and j S now at work every day at manual labor." DR. GEORGE C. USGOOD. . » u - n . Al/ Aberdeen, 8. Dak., Sept. 26, 1888: "Suffered several ; UAMEBACRa years with chronic stitch in the back: was given up by doctors. Two bottles of St. Jacobs Oil cured SCH^AYGEL< % S DR. TALMACE'S "LIFE OF CHRIST." Covering hit gmt trip To, Through, find from the ChiiiUliKod. II In at rated with over 400 wonder ful nn(tr*vm«, also a grand picture of Jerusalem on the day of the crucifixion, in 12 color® am ten fo»t in length. Exclusive territory. No capital needed. BHJ PAY. Also send names and P. O. of 5 ngente or those 4 UPCMTC U/JIIITCn out of work and get Talma#e's Illustrated Biography IHKK. 1000 AuLnlo VvANI tU. ADD™* HISTORICAL PUB. CO.. PMILA P». GOLD MEDAL, PARIS, 187& W. BAKER & CO.'S II Breakfast Cocoa from which the excess of oil hae been removed, ** absolutely pure and it is Bohtbl*. MfJvk No Chemicals fuj j . Y\ are used In Its preparation. It lit i lilfl nior€ than three times ths 111 ' mil ifrfu oth ocoa mixed with nva ' On Arrowroot or Bugar, juSS i fi II and Is therefore far more eoo kJM r /If I I uocn^ coating less than otts 68LI I II |J cent a cup . It is delicious, nou*- Ishlng, strengthening, BABII.T* DXOKSTEI), and admirably adapted tor invalids Cub well as for persons In health. Sold bj flrocTi everywhere, W. BAKER & CO., Dorchester, Haas. _ YY x U—3 Tou don't want comfort II you 1% mm don't with to look well drotaatf. Ha mm II j9ii don't want the boot, thou RK OM rail don't want tho Lace Sack fw ■ lutpender. Your dealer hi* It if I (Wfl he it alive. Ilheiin'theshculdnl H jjj H be your dealer. W* will mail a R «!1 ■ pair on receipt of tf. 00. Nona RSAH genuine without the (tamp aa wSJm WhEfl Lace Bark Snxprniler Co, >ll >7 l'rinee ."trot, W. Y. ,||^ lew. Durable, and tho consumer pajti lor no tin I or SW package with e*e ry piurtuue. I 112 jniac HTU I> Y, Boo«-icaBPi*o, ilurtnaai fbrnu, UUSC Itnmanthip, Arithmetic, Short-hand, eta. 11 TIIOROIOULVTAUJIITBY .VIA 11.. Circular! tree llrrant'a C ollrer. 437 Main St., HufTaio, N. * •kTIOII riLLOW-HUAM HOLDER. 11 SaVV ACIKKTS Wanted. 83 TO 8.1 An ay WfilW I O. W.NUTTlNO,Brockton,Mmw.W ' « Fa(fUCIAtl->OHN W.HIOBHM, ILNOIUII Wadilnpoa, D.C, 3.vrilnlaetw*r, ISabjudicating claim*, »ttj •Ince. roiuornwr ALOON MUMB ATCD nimnw ron Kfncni ATlCT, UMK BACK, nrsretrsiA, ICTT>INTT^NIW*^II 1 OW! y. H 3 K! Theae combination car® tn half time of any other / J M > treatment or mpney rrfur?»*d, becauae 3 agencies A g 9 >* are at work Instead of 1, and both at on<» time. Al- V S 3 W moat a ftl riae bottle of either for 500. MOW, and a 36C. j S 2 > Plaster free In the same wrapper. ALL DKALKRH. ► T * NOW! -__grOW!_Jl 3 PIANOS We send pianos on approval, return able if unsatisfactory, railway. neigh* both ways at our expense. Distanoe, even thousands of miles, makes no air i fbrenoe.—With our patent soft-stop the B. piano wears less and lasts longer; also is 1 rendered practically noiseless, when de- I aired, for practising. " We take old pianos as part pay .balance to suit reasonable convenience. Catalogue, etc., free, write. I vers & Pond Piano Co., Boston. It's an intuit to your intelligence, but some un scrupulous dealers try it. For in stance : you're suffering from some Skin, Scalp or Scrofulous affection, or are feeling " run - down " and " used-up." There's a torpid liver, impure blood, and all that may come from it. You've decided, wisely, that Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery is the medicine to help you. You know that it's guaran teed to do so, as no other blood purifier is. If it doesn't benefit or cure, you get your money back. But what is best for you to take isn't always best for the dealer to sell. lie offers something else that's " just as good." Is it likely ? If the makers of a medicine can't trust it, can you 112 Ono of two things has to happen. You're cured of Catarrh, or you're paid SSOO cash. That's what is promised by the proprietors of Dr. Sage's Catarrh Remedy. By its mild, soothing, cleansing, and heal ing properties, it cures the wont cues. psTOBIAS UNEXCELLED! A PPLI ED EXTERNALLY von Rheumatism, Neuralgia, Pains fa tbj Limbs, Bacn or Cdest, Miiups, i)pj Throat, Colds, Sprains, Bruisis, Stings ol Insects, Mosquito Bites. TAKEN INTERNAI*I Its HOIITIiIMi aad I't.N Ivi'itA. TINCi qnalltlea are telt immediately. 'i'r/ It and be convinced. Prloe and .>«» ceut*. Mold Hr nil iln r* plats. DEPOT. -10 MI7KKA Y ST.. NEW YORK IMUSHROOMS F T O ; C MILLION § 4 There's money in growing Mushrooms, jfe Constant demand at good prices. Any one ■ ■■, with a cellar or sta- ffc i ble can do it. Our £ >S fir* rlfl™ Primer & Price-list ■> **l tells how to grow £ for it. A trial brick P" j| Spawn (enough |r I for a tx4 ft- experi- P a ment).by mail, post- K ( paid, for aSC. Bv ex- P j f >ress - A Ih for fi.oo; K *7