NiK ART OF TAXIDERMY. low TUB FORMS OF lIIRDS AND ANIMALS ARE I'KKSEItVKU. XHteiiHy in Retaining; llio Natural Line* - A Rig; OUHIIIOSH in Stuffed Skins— It In Now a Fine Art in the Way of Pregjrvi.tiou. is not a business l§ycalculated to bring EH its followers into pub yl lie prominence. The |j| busy world bustling WfSjjjS/W J streets does not care fjf/SjSm \ ft straw tor taxidermy. MffßjAV ' The ordinary man jjfk has something else to think of. Yet there are those who are ■jBN deeply interested in the preservation of the forms of bird and animal life. Some are so from sentiment, as it en ibles them to retain the substantial shadow of a pet. Others are enlisted jn a scientific basis. One may love birds and not be a taxidermist. Audu bon illustrates this: He was a devoted ornithologist, one of the greatest America has yet known; but he paid no attention to taxidermy. When he bagged a bird it wan his practice to pin it to a tree and make a drawing reproducing the natural tints of the plumage, with colors. After this the skin was removed and dried. The collection of drawings and descriptions left by Audubon serve as criteria for sportsmen, but the value would have been much increased it supplemented by the actual forms ol the birds. Charles Waterton, tlio En glisli naturalist, has left far more tc posterity through practicing taxi dermy. The specimens he gathered, now in the museum in York, are o) inestimable worth jn showing tlu natural posture and action of life. On careful examination it will be found TAXIDERMIST AT WORK. I hat ft bird's body is not completely covered by feathers, There are places about the shoulders, under the wings and on the thighs where the skin is about bare, and fits the cavities or rounds out with great nicety. Usually these parts are stuffed full, the result being a marring of the symmetry and proportion. Wnterton gavo particu lar care to such points, trying to get them exact to nature. The best way of preserving a bird's skin demands careful attention from the moment it is killed to the time of mounting. The wounds should be tilled with cotton, an'l feathers discol oic d by blood should be softly wiped with a wet sponge. In hot weather the skin should be taken off at once, b' t in autumn or winter the bird can be allowed to get cold. Beginning at the breast bone, the skin is slowly separated by forcing a blunt instru ment between it and the tlesh. The bones of the wings are cut at the shoulder joints, and when getting the skin from the skull the vetebrie can be unjointcd. Then remove the brains and eyes. The tlesh is taken from the under bill, using care not to mutilate tho openings of the ears or eyelids. The skin should then be rubbed with DUCK WRAPPED TO DRV. a solution of arsenic or corrosive sub liniato and prepared for drying. Before beginning stutling, the skin in the interim having been dampened, wash the skull with corrosive sub limatc, and reconnect to the neck with wire. The wings and legs are also ad justed with wire, and connected with a central piece running from head to tail. A fault common with stuffed birds is the apparent lengthening ol the legs. The three bones of the logs should be articulated to almost form a letter Z, as the upper joint of the thigh is never straight. Chopped llax tow or cotton is the best for stutling or sewing up. Cotton is put in the orbits of the eyes with fine forceps, and the eyes are fixed in with cement. After being stuffed anil the i ose decided, thread is wound plentifully around the plumage to hold the feathers in posi tion until the skin has again dried thor oughly. "The old custom," said the taxider mist, "of mounting birds 011 branches or moss-covered bases has been pretty ranch given up. MORS is a great place to breed insects and for moths to lay eggs, so a T of some nice wood is now preferred." The preservation of fish forms 'is a distinct brunch of taxidermy, and is but little done, it is necessary to treat the tisli as soon as taken from the water, and even then it is dithcult to retain the color and luster of the scales. The first ones to establish a business of stuffing anything and everything in natural life to supply museums and mercantile calls were the Yerreaux Freres, in Paris. Before that a muse um had to collect jls own specimens, hut the Yerreaux opened a sort of pi earing house for wild beasts, birds, fishes, and reptiles, frqni which stuffed elephant or cottpn-fillpd rodent oould be ordered. The Yerreaux passed away and were succeeded by an American named Ward, who to-day TITIOPER FISH MOUNTED. supplies the largest museums with stuffed specimens. His American headquarters are at Rochester, N. Y., where there are thousands of birds, mammals, fishes, and reptiles stuffed, or ready to be, if wanted. He has agents in all sections of the world looking for rare specimens and collect ing others as the general stock needs replenishing. Among taxidermal curiosities is a collection made by the late Henry Bergh to emphasize his stand against cruelty to animals. By stuffed speci mens, the sufferings of the dumb brute from various forms of man's bru tality is reproduced. A number of celebrated horses have had their skins made subjects of the art. Rienzi, ridden by Sheridan to "Winchester, twenty miles away," had his hide stuffed, and it is now at Gov ernor's Island. Sherman's Tecumseh, that carried the General from Atlanta to the sea, can be seen at the Madison University. Robert E. Lee's war horse, Traveler, is in the Lee Univer sity, of Virginia, while famous trotting and running horses have in several in stances also been thus honored. "I am called 011 a good deal," said the taxidermist interrogated, "to stuff dead canaries. They have been house hold pets, but gone the way of all flesh, and the women of the family think it would bo nice to keep some thing that looks as they did when alive. I always ask for a deposit in advance for such jobs, as it is a tedious bit of work, and often by the time it is done the loss of the bird has been partially forgotten. There is a parrot on the shelf there a woman cried over when she left the body, but got over her mourning so much in a week as to re fuse to pay for the job." Animals as Actors. Many animals have the dramatic in stinct; that is, they enjoy acting a part and "making believe" as much as some children do. All English gentleman, who had once been in the cavalry ser vice, used to toll me a great many an ecdotes about a horse that belonged to his regiment. "Old Sal," as she was called, had innumerable tricks and devices of her own, and was quite the practical joker of the company. A very common one with her was suddenly to nip with her teeth the man who was grooming her; and when he looked up angrily after such an unprovoked attack, ho would always find her gazing innocently iuto the distance as if she never dreamed of doing such a thing. She knew how to turn her cleverness to her own ad vantage, too. The horses wero fed from a long trough, with a swinging bar between each two to keep them apart and secure the proper division of the oats. Old Sal would quietly blow lior own oats into tlio fartlierest cor ner, and then putting her head over the bar, blow her neighbor's oats within her reach, eat them, and then return to her own sharo. Logs are very fond of pretending. I know a little dog, the especial pot ol his mistress, who will assume five or six different parts in the course of a game. ( )ne of his favorite plays is to rush at his mistress as if he was going to make a furious attack upon her with his teeth and claws, but he takes tho greatest care never to really hurt her. Then he will be exceedingly mournful, and in an instant all life and fun, changing quite as suddenly into an air and attitude of resentful indignation, and all these with the same ease that a comic actor on the stage might show. But tho best acting I over heard of was done by a dog of the kind called a "lurcher." He belonged to a famous poacher, who is a man that steals par t ridges, hares, and pheasants from his rich neighbors. Many a fine lot of game did this dog help his master tc secure. Tho laws in England are very severe against poaching or stealing game ; for the gentlemen wish to pre serve it for their own pleasure. So a great effort was made to bring this man to trial and convict him. Very little proof could he brought against him. however. Ho had never actually Leen seen with the game in his pos session, although this dog had, when, as the gamekeepers believed, ho was carrying it to his master, who had trained him for this purpose. He denied stoutly that the dog was his, or that he knew anything about it. So the Judge had the dog brought into the room, thinking that he would immediately prove the falsehood of this by a joyful recognition. But, to everybody's surprise, the dog did not look at the man or notice him at all, nor would he even come near him. So the man was discharged as innocent. But the dog was his, and had only been taught by his master to pretend not to know him when anybody else was present. If you have over no ticed how instinctively a dog's tail be gins to wag and his ears to twitch with pleasure when he hears his master's voice, you will understand what a fine piece of acting this was. Tt is a pity li.s cleverness should have been used for such bad purposes. About a Big (.mi. ; Oliver Cromwell, on returning from the field of the first battle of XVorces : ter, had occasion to pass through that 1 city, and stopped for a few moments at ■ the Bishop's palace. Tho Bishop remarked that the bat- I tie had been "waging very hotly over I yonder." ; To this Cromwell replied: "Oh! I I suppose you heard the roar of the ar i tillery ?" I "No," rejoined the Bishop; "I knew !of it from the report of a Canon." "My lord," said Cromwell, "I should advise you to obtain the dismissal of that gentleman from his office." "Oh! why?" "Because a cannon is of no use un ions discharged." "J prefer," answered the Bishop, "to let my Canon off." London l'ick• Me-Up. THE use of nitro-glycerine M cases of emergency instead of alcohol is rec ommended by an English physician. A drop on the tongue rouses a fainting man, and it may restore life in the caso of apparent death, as from drowning. It has quickly relieved headache, heart pains and asthma and strengthened weftk jmlse iu levers, OLD STYLES IX STICKS. *llls WALKING. CANES OF FORMER GENERATIONS. Carried ly the Dmlislily Inclined us rar Rack us the Fifteenth Century- They Were Expensive and Did Not Ma terially Differ from Fanciful Creations ol Co-day. f .|) HE DUDE OF THE clay is gradually growing cold in his adoration for the walking stick fashion ed after the Eugliab riding-whip, with the buck-horn handle, 1 and i*4 bestowing his I fleeting favor on H •1 still more fanciful article. According "1 to an unquestioned 1 authority 011 such R matters —the organ of ' the haber - dashery trade, walking-sticks are now being made that are "useful as well as ornamental," From one a silk umbrella can bo drawn and screwed to the stick; another has a re ceptacle for nickels and cents, and is con venient for those who ride on street-cars; another contains a measure for the height of horses, and has a spirit-level attach ment, and still another has a watch set in the handle. The contrivance of making a repository in the hollow of a walking stick, accord ing to the San Francisco Chronicle, is very ancient. The bourdon or pilgrim's stall' of the middle ages was a strong and stout stick about five feet in length, armed at the lower end with an iron spike, anil evidently intended as a balance and sup port to the body when climbing up steep acclivities. In it may be seen the proto type of tho alpenstock. About twelve inches from the top of the staff was gen erally a largo protuberance, on which the hand of the pilgrim rested withoutdanger or sliding downward. The upper part of tho staff was hollow ami capable of holding small articles, but the lower portion was entirely solid It Is very prob able that in the cavity of the upper part fcho pilgrims originally kept relics of saints, which wore sold at tho tombs to which the pilgrims traveled, and which wero consid ered as satisfactory proofs that the pil grims had been to the spot indicated. In the latter ages of pilgrimage, howovor, this part of tho staff wus converted into a kind of pipe or musical instrument. Above tho tube the staff was surmounted by n small, hollow globe, and it was als; furnished near the top wiih a kind of crook for carrying a gourd of water. If (■ 1 is, however, unques r 9 tionable that the re* ' //IK ceptaole at the top of ( TOM a P il ß rim ' s staff wa ' \ frequently used for Nfijj secular purposes. Twc of these occasions, and very remarkable ones ord. The first is found "1 the Chronicles of AJJJIL I Honsbed, where lie * Mllll 1 1 states that in tho hoi /jjr \ low of a pilgrim's ' 'II \ staff the ilrst head of saffron crocus was so -7 cretly brought from \ . Franco at a time when rftj Yfr It was a capital crime / 1 i / plant out of the coun pß try. Tho other refers 1-413 L to tho introduction of the silkworm into Europe in the hollow of a pilgrim's stair. Two monks who resided in China as mis sionaries wore the heroes of tho incident, bringing the eggs iu triumph to Constan tinople. The earliest walking-sticks ot which there is any record, literary or pictorial, was simply used as u support for old ago. jf ac Jacob leaning on his 1! J/W staff is a familiar J\ figure, while it must | r/iA have been known in i the heroic period, h*/ siuco it was referred | h&io/i to in the enigma pro- | ICiV~ J pounded by the Sphinx and solved by j (Kdipus. "Thoreisa |j uF being," said the quos- ! qgA tioner, "which has four feet, and it has I j also throe feet, but its 11|1 J foot vary, and when \ it has tlio most it is tho weakest.'' 4 'That VJ? Is man," was tho ho ro's answer, "who, when he is an infant, crawls upon his hands and knees; when ho is grown he walks upiightly, and when he Isold ho totters witli a stick." In the daya of Pliny tho stem of the giant fennel was used for a walking stick, the tough light ness ot tue wooa rendering it especially fitted as a support to need oersons. Walking-sticks or walking canes, wheth er as the condition of tho pilgrim's burden or the oriental symbol of authority, wert certainly common in tho hands of tho gal lants of tho fifteenth century. Fortunate ly wo are able to see what kinds of canet were carried then, ana strangoiy enough tho elabo ately "garnished" affair of today is found to have oeen tne "correct thing' more than 4TO yours ago. The Harlein manuscript (1412) contains an inventory of the contents of tho royal palace ol (ireenwich, in which, among the belong ings, is tho following: "A cane garnished with goldo, havuiugo a perfume in the toppe, under that dial!, with a pair of twitchers anil a pair of compasses of golds %nd 'oot rule of gold -, a knifo and a file, the haft of goldo, with a whotstone tipped with goldo." Thsre is also "a cane gnrnishort with silvor and gilto, with as tronomio upon it, six walkyng staves, one covered with silko and golile." In tho portraits of many of tho emlnont porsonagos of English history, painted ID the sixteenth century, there are to l e per ceived numerous in stances of the richness \s\ °' t ' lo stick! f wMkb n c n rril "' Ht . ,hat V me ' / Al/r\ appearing to have ft been tall, stout, and Vj j/VV®v 1 mounted or adorned From the middlo ol (1 the seventeenth con / Ml tur y walking stl-ks / //fl appear to have in ( ]/ I both in respect to the 1 1/ B mounting and mate \ 1 U rial, tho improve- J W. B ments being mainly - derivod from France. 'Ntfx— In tho early portion of the following century the most fashion able kinds were made of fine marbles and agates, exhibiting either a fine variety ol color or a semi-opaque tint, which was most expressivoly described by tho word elouded. These sticks wero of slender proportions, but often richly mounted with gold, silver, amber, or precious tones. Such were the "clouded canes" of the time of Pone, which worn so greatly valued as often to bo preserved 111 cases of thugreen or shaatbs of the lear. Too Much or a Good Thing. Scene—Office of The Daily One Mil lion. Caller (to business manager)—" Ye sterday I put an advertisement in your paper for a servant." Business Manager (blandly)—" Yes, sir. And what was the result?" "I had many answprs ipy front stops wero worn out and tho bell pull broken. Will yqu please have them repaired?" THE way of tho world is to make lawa, but follow outturn. NOTES AND COMMENTS. IF the sharper who exercis s his in ventive genius for tlie sake of d'slionest gain should use it for legitimate ends, he might become as gieat a benefactor of mankind as Fulton, Morse and Edi son. A new racket has been invented by confidence operators which has been successfully worke 1 in various parts ot the West. A gray-haired, rcsj e lably dressed woman of p. rhaps fifty yt ars is put off the train at the next station bo cause she won't pay her fare. She tear fully relates her story to the bystanders, and exhibits a dispatch which t lis her to hurry home to attend the last hours of her dying husband. She threatens to walk every mile of the way home— -100 miles—rather than not minister to the dying mm and speak a word of love and comfort before lie breathes Irs l ist. Tlio sympathetic listeners are too gen erous and kind-hearted to let her walk. They take up a collection and pay her faro. Perhaps they hear afterward that she is a fraud. Perhaps they don't. But that is exactly what she is. A "PENNY famine" is what now threatens the large cities of the West and Southwest. The p opie have lemn ed to use the long-tu spised one e.-lit coin, and the needs of circulation have increased far beyond the power of the government machinery to supply them. The Philadelphio mint is about two months behind with its orders for these pieces, iu spite of keeping at work night and day turning them out. The result of such scarcity is that the poor people suffer more than the rich. Where change cannot be readily made for pur chase's, prices of small comm slities adapt themselves all too promptly to the existing conditions and 1 e *OlllO multi ple-r of five—the one two or three cen's of difference inuring always to the profit of the seller and not of his customer. The seller, in his turn, cannot make s 1 many sales, and the producer feels a pinch. All that Congress can do in the way of remedying this shortcoming ought to bo done without delay, by liberal appropriations for tlio coinage and shipment of copper cents. IN a little town near Chicago there is a school house close to the tracks of a trunk line railroad. The consequence of this juxtaposition of tlio two things is one that never would occur to any but the boyish mind. The boys got up a game which consisted in their seeing which 011 c should be the last to jump across the track in front of the express tiain that parses thereat fifty miles an hour just after school lets out. This ! game has already cost at least three ! lives. The other day a railroad 0111 ployee went to the mother of one of the boys to tell her what her son was doing. She told him she could take care of hei own cliildien and wanted 110 interfer ence by tattletides. She gave him a scolding lie will never forget. Out reason why ho will never forget it is that the boy wns killed by the ex pi ess train one vo'k afterward. The engine ei said he saw the hoy standing l y the | track, but never dreamed he meant to j try to cross it ahead of the train. TIIE latest London wrinkle in the way of insurance is a scheme to insurr j against burglary. A private residence with the whole of the c rat nts of the house arc insured (against loss only) for 62 cents a year. When the content.'- ! are insured ngaii st both loss and dam ago done by burglars, it costs about 7£ cents a year. Articles specially insured, like jewelry-and plate, cost extra. TLU Company agrees to pay the amount in sureu within thirty days after the losf is proved, subject to ihe provision I hat there is no claim 011 tlie policy if the whole loss on any 0110 oe ntsion does noi amount to £5, or that the robbery has not l oon committ d by any meir.b r ol j the household or a servant therein, j One of tlio lm st astonishing tiling* 1 about this company is that it is doing n 1 good business. THE Commisisoner of l abor at Wash ington has just issued a volume on mar ringo and divon ein the United States. Some causes for divorce proceedings are extremely suggestive. A few sample-' of "extreme cruelty," taken at rnnd< m, will illustrate this. One woman sued for divorce—and obta'nol it—because her husband cut off her bang; auothei olaimed that her husband never took hei out, driving. A man obtained a divorce because his wife pulled him out of 1 ed by the whiskers; anotbor complained that his wife would not walk out with him 011 Sundays, and entered asevidenc 011 another point a tuft of hair marked "exhibit A." It is seldom that a statis tical work has so much undo signet I hu mor in it as the Labor Commissioner's latest volume. MR. TSUI KWO YIN, the new Chinese Minister at Washington, is not at all sociable and discourages tlio members of his Legation from accepting invito, lions to Washington drawing-rooms. Tin Minister is a rcclnso, very fond of hooks, nnd it is said that he spends half the night poring over his favorite authors. He is studying English and finds the routine busine.-s of the Legation quite oppressive. His pre d cesser spent many thousands of dollars in entertain ing, but Tsui Kwo Yin has no intention of committing any such extravagance. His subordinates stand greatly in awe of him and his word is law at the Lega tion. THE scheme of the Hungarian Govern ment, already in operation, of buying up taverns throughout the country and turning them into sclio >l-houßoß will be watched with interest in all countries.. Of course it comprehends certain pater nal measures which could 1 o practised only in monarchical countrit s, but it is a bold and interesting experiment in social science none tho leis. Tho gov ernment evidently buys up the places for a valuation ffxed by a commission and then supple sses them. The endeavor has a noble ring to it, and was evidently euggesed by a humanitarian of most practical turn. PRESIDENT CHARLOTTE SMITH, of the Woman's National Industrial League, has addressed a numorial to Congress, in view of the World's Fair of 181)2, asking for an appropriation to erect a monument at Washington to Queen Isa bella I. of Spain, who was the friend and patron of Columbus, Tho petition suggests that the monument in question should be tho work of a Spanish or American woman sculptor, and states that it is destined to c*( mmomoiaty ihe services rendered by a represents ivo woman in counpction >yith the discovery of Americtp ORANDO, Oregon, is a town of eight inhabitants, four men, three women and a girl. As may be inferred, it has very little present, h 4 S< past, but a most glori ous future. At h ast the lively weekly newspaper published iu the town says AN electrical paper of New York re cently publishe I a carefully compiled list of the electric railw ys in operation in the United States. The table shows a grand total f 179 roads 1,260 miles of track, and 11,881 ear-, !-orae 110 being actually at work. Considering that at th® end of 1885 there was < illy one elec tric railway in opeiation, tlio growth of electric tru tiou has bee 11 something phenomenal, oven for such a go-ahead country as America. Tfcere is more Catarrh in thin section of tlie country than all other diseases put together, and until the hut few years was supposed to be incurable. Fora ireatuiany y curs doctors pro nounced it a local disea c e, and prescribed lo ealremedies, and by constantly failing to euro with local treatment, pronounced it incurable. Science has proven catarrh to bo a constitu tional disease, and therefore requires constitu tional treatment. Hall's Cat irrh Cure, mnnti facgired by F..J. Cheney &Co , Toledo. Ohio, is the only yonstitutiorml c ire on the market. Jt is taken internally in doses from 10 drops to a teaspoonlui. It acts directly upon ihe blood and mucous surfaces of tbesystem. The, offer one hundred dollars for any cast' ii falls to cure. Send for circulars and testimonials. Address' F. d. CM k.n t:v A: Co., Toledo, O. t=£T" Sold by D. uggists, 75c. —Just after tlio first Atlantic cable was laid* telegrams between Brituiu and America cost XL \ word. News About Town. It is the current report about town that Kemp's Balsam for tlio Throat and Lungs is making somo remarkable cures with people who are troubled with Coughs, Sore Till oat, A*t lima, Bronchitis and Consumption. Any druggist will give you a trial bottle free oj cost. It is guaranteed to relievo and cure. Hie Large Bottles are 50c. and SL —Since the institution of the Victoria Cross it lias be 11 bestowed upon three hundred sol diers and sailors. Ajnts Bonanxo. HIliN Champion Steam Cooker N'lee work. Largo profits. 11111, Whitney £ Co. Boston, Mass, —There are l.OfifiYouiigMen's Associations in the United States, with 94,120 activo mem bers. None equal "Tan si IPs Punch" fie. Cigar. —ln the British army, according to late-t reports, there are at present 74,720 English men, 13,594 Irishmen and 8.949 Scotchmen. Oregon, the Paradise of Farmers. Mild, equable clhnat>■, certain and abundant erops. Best fruit, grain, grass and stock coun try in the world. Full Information free. Ad-i trees Oregon Im'igrat'n Board, I'ortland. Ore. —Never show levity when the people areou gaged in worship, Pure soap is white. Brown soaps are adul terated with rosin. Perfume is only put in to hide the presence of putrid /at. Pobbiu.s's Electric t-'oap is pure, while ami uusceiited. Has been sola since 1005. Try it now. —Never judge a person's character by exter nal appearance. USO. Last Winter I was troubled so badly with rheumatism in mv right shoulder and Joints of my leg as not to be able to walk. I took Hood's Sarsaparllln, and no I don't feel any aches or pains anywhere. I sell newspapers right In the middle of the street every day in tho year, ami have been doing so for five years, and standing on tho cold stones no picnic, I can toll you. And If Hood's Karsnpnrllla cured mo It certainly ought to be good for those people who don't stand on tho cold stones. I can to soon overy day In the year at corner Tompkins and DoKalb Avenues.— WlLLlAM W. HOWARD, Brooklyn, N. Y. N. 13.—8e suro to get Hood's Sarsapariila ' old by all druggists, fl; six for $5. Prepared only I y C'. I. HOOD & CO., Apothecaries, Lowell, MASS. 100 Doses One DoMar FEVERB-r^-I 50 Cts. COLD-HEAD ELV BEOTHJUiS, 00 Warren St., New York. JOHN F. STF.ATTON & SON, 43 and 45 Walker St. New YORK, j Importers and Wholesale Dealers In MUSICAL MERCHANDISE, VlolhiH, (Juitni-M, llaii jot, A ..or.lcons. Ilnr. uionicu*, Ac, All kinds ol String*, etc., etc. SEND luK 4 ATAl.niil'i:. ' hermometer below Freezing and a fierce storm oi cutting siect which strikes lire face like a thousand needles. Wind forty miles an hour. You say a man couldn't stand such ex posure? No, he couldn't, without just the proper clothing. And there's only one outfit that can keep a man both warm and dry at such a time, and that is the " Fish Brand Slicker." They are guaranteed storm-proof, waterproof, and wind proof. Inside one of them, you are as much out of the weather as if indoors. They are light, but warm. Being re-enforced throughout, they never rip; ami the buttons are wire-fastened. No rail road man who has once tried one would be without it for ton times its cost, lleware of worthless im itations, every garment stamped with " Fish Brand" Trade Mark. Don't accept any inferior coat when you can have the " Fish Brand Slicker " delivered without extra cost. Particulars and illustrat -4 cat alogue free. A. J. TOWER, - Boston, Mass. best is not ea.sy- SAPOO® ■yHrawilt ease ih in path so"If you can'tbe Jjlffl|Mr&sy, be as 'asy as you can"-;- Try ain in your next house-cleaning-' SAPOLIO is a solid, handsome cake of house-cleaning soap, which has na equal for all scouring purposes except the laundry. To use it is to value it. What will SAPOLIO do? Why, it will clean paint, make oil-cloths bright, and give the doors, tables and shelves a new appearance. It will take the grease off the dishes and off the pots and pans. You can scour the knives and forks with it, and make the tin things shine brightly. The wash-basin, the bath-tub, even the greasy kitchen-sink will be as clean as a new pin if you use SAPOLIO. One cake will prove all we say. Be a clever housekeeper a,nd try it. Beware ofy There is but one SAPOLIO, The People Aro not slow to understand that, !n ord-r to warrant their nmnutacturery in guaranteeing them to benefit or cute, medicines must pos sess more than ordinary merit and curative properties. Dr. Pierce's (1 olden Meiical Dis covery is the only blood medicine sold, through druggists, under a fxoiUve guarantee that it will benefit or uro or money paid for it will be returnod. In all blood, skin and scalp diseases, and for all scr fulous affections, it is specific. SSW Regard offered by the proprietors of Dr. Sage's Catarrh Remedy i'or an Incurable About some lives a quiet broods, Like still dnysborn of Summer moods. Most I-lest arc they, whose tranquil calm Gives to their days a spacious charm, lteplet" willi rest, I heir solace Care : And their benign repose nh others share. ON® ENJOYS Both the method and results when Liyrup of Figs is taken; it is pleasant and refreshing to the taste, and acts gently yet promptly on the Kidneys, Liver and Bowels, cleanses the sys tem effectually, dispels colds, hi id aches and fevers andcureshabitt.nl constipation. Syrup of Figs is the only remedy of its kind ever -ro duced, pleasing to the taste and rc ceptahle to the stomach, prompt in its action and truly beneficial m its effects, prepared only from the most Healthy and agreeable substances, 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 f>o and $1 bottles by all leading drug- j 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 uot accept ' j any substitute. CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CP. SAN FRANCISCO, CAL. UUISVILLE, KY, NOW YORK, N.Y. TV VOC WISH A - II . Kratal HMITII St WBSHON PsSSaiS Ww Manufacturedln calibresrwand ii-no. Kin- iv /MM gloordoublo notion, Safety Ilnunncrlt-Hs and v?:v Target modolfl. Constructed entirely ot h>M nunl- If y wrought uteri. euiefully innpocte I for work manship and stock, they arc unrivul. d for flni-h, <1 u i'ii lit Ii * y II nil iicfiirni'v. Do not hedeeeivc.l by cheap iiiullenblo eiiHt-iron imitation*, whicfi ate often sold for 1 tnoguru no article and an; not onlv unreliable, but dangerous. The SMITH ft WESSON Revolvers are ;*JI a tamped upon the bar rels with firm's name, address ana dates of pat. nt* and aro guiii-amccd perfect in every detail. In gist upon having the genuine article, and if vour doalor cannot aupply you mi order Hut to a ldivss below will receive prompt and careful attention. Deaorptlvecatalogue and prices furuUOm 1 upon up pUakton. SMITH & WESSON, KWMentlon this paper. Sprinulield, Mast* nniliy HABIT. nlr Certain and llrlllefil enny C 111 Kln the World. Ir. L IWITI J. J.. STEPHENS, 1 .FT TIN J N 0 the Handle and the Screw ' lout a Ufctiuicf*jfyour 883 .-n ~~. Isl Best Cough Medicine. Reeominendcd by Physicians. gihw fcrS Cures where all elso fails. Pleasant and agroeahle to the rr® taste. Children lake it without objection. By druggists. RTfi The Latest Craze! JL UHCLE SAM s ""^,| l# * ' Whoever gives the trui scienti(l- explanation of this phenomenon will be a public benefactor. !fl Cents, CSTT* 110 Cents. WANTED—TIio Biggest Blower in the Country. Wo have a letter of acknowledgment ou this marvelous scientific toy from the Executive Mansion, Washington, 1). ('. KvV'MAUiKD TO ANY xHDItESH CN UEOEII'T OF 15 CENTS. Liberal discount to the trade. IWUAGON CO., C 4' Vumlewater Street, New York City. rrjACOßsojj W TRADE MARKW^ REME'DY pAIIJ CURES PERMANENTLY STRAINS. Washington, Tex., June 26,18881 Had suffered off' and on for fifteen years with strained back; no trouble with it now; two years ao was cured by St. Jacobs l)l!. No return. H. CARTMELL. AT PRVUUISTS AND DEALERS. THE CHARLES A. VOGELER CO.. Baltimore. OPIUM HABIT.] A. Valuable Treatise Gfvlnd | full Information of an Easy and Speedy ourejVw ta ikoafflicted. I>B /, c. q-iuy^^At.JsAirwf^". AUTOMATIC I REVOLVER. T Til terial, and Workinauship. ' With Safety Catch, impossible to throw barrel open when ills charged. New Patent. 38 calibre, using S. & " . (f . Cartridge. Do not buy until you bars exam vied thi* If you buy a genuine Swift Double- Action Revolver, you are sure to have an perfect a Pistol as can he mode. Sent postpaid on receipt of price. Send 6c. inttumni/or our 100 page illustrated cataloi/ue of Gun*, 111/ If*. Revolvers. Police Goods. etc. John 1\ Lorell Arms Co.. .Mfrs.. Huston. Mass. JxJSK li!Vu ,l .| N VI,.V l | T ts , 7' ' ompn-te M nd lIiTIJC V. Book-keopJnr, Buslm-aaForms,' MwrnC Penmanship, \ri hm.-tio,Short-hand,etc., II thoroughly taught by .MAIL Circulars frat*. Itrruul's ('allege. 457 Main St., buffalo, N. Y. FRAZER 9^I BKBT Iff THE WORLD UIIhHOC IT" Uet the Genuine. Sold E: Vvrhere. nDIIIMax9?Kai Y&Jli ,—IST" B. M.WOOLLEY.M.EJ A PLAN'I'A. Ga. lilllcu 66Jtf Whittib.ll St.i AFTER ALL OTHERS FAIL CONSULT DR. LOBB :iJ!t North I'ilteeiilli St., Philadelphia, Pa., for f j tho treatment of blood Poisons, Kkln Eruptions., Nervous Complaints, JJrlght's Disease, Strictures* Impotency and kindred diseases, no mutter of how long standing or from what cause originating, if?" Ten days' medielnes furnished by mail parr mi -I'M I \ I. Di-ca-e . rfltt. : dorF* i w n ' B (^ Mlf Mf d only ty tb We have sold big G foe ns3*Tni Chtiniotl 00. ™*py years, and It ban INK r 4 lis II it m\ tbu bast of satis* 1A faction. D. It. DYCHEA r °j^' 81,00. Bold by Druggists!. CHICHESTER'S ENGLISH PENNYROYAL PILLS I'hlebMter l hem'l HadUon Sq., I'hll*.,Pa, 1