$0? S?E FAIR SEX. Cousins |a Mwxlro. 'Courting, from all accounts, is a pretty tcugh job in Mexico. The young man is first - supposed to meet the young lady on the* plaza. They sever speak, but they atewajfogaze at each other as they p#SWB~Jen the lady doea not make her appearance on the plaza the young man will repair tcy the street fronting the house, and walk up and down in :front of it for several hours. He will always ga?,e earnestly at the window as ho passes. The young lady and he?* female friends are inside, and she will return his glance. After 10 o'clock the \oung man will go home. This performance is continued for a couole of months, and at last the " young man will knock boldly it the door and ask for the >ady of the house. He will tell her he is in de spair. That her daughter is an angel from the Paradise valley of Heaven; that she is beautiful beyond compare; that she is better than she is beautiful; that he is wildly in love with her, and that iife has no possible intere t for him unless he can win-her. He will then tell of his prjspectMn life^ what he is possessed oi and Iftpe-t to be possessed ot If this latter is sat isfactory to the mamma, she will com miserate with him tel. him that she has noticed his attentions to her daughter, and finally conclude by in viting him to the inner circle and in troducing him to the young lady in the presence of the a sem Jed family. The grandma (if there is a zrandma in the family) wil sit between the young peop.e and witness their cooing. All the re-t of the family remain in the room also, unless they are other wise engaged, but under no cir cumstances must the young peo ple be left alone a second. This, you will admit, is pretty toigh, but that is not half what the young man must suffer before the padre doses the bar gain and gives him a propr etary inter est in his lady love. If, perchance, the young lady has a pair of big brothers? and such is generally the case?the un fortunate swain is expected to treat thern to mescal and cigarettes every time they meet. If a circus or a the atre company visit the town it is the prerogative of the young la y to ask all her female relatives to accompany her to th.* show, and the young man, of course, Is expected and required to foot the bill But the worst part of the business for the love-sick young man remains to be told. He cannct Walk by the side of his affianced on the way to or from the theatre. She will start off ahead in company with some female friend, while the young man will bring up the rear on the arm of his grandmamma or some equally ven erable dame. This is the recogn'zed and inviolable custom of the country, and while it exists the American young man will n tbe a social success in Maxier?. He cannot stand the ra ket. If the young couple are very spoony they can be married in six months, though well-regulated society ^e^Mfiaaa^twelvo months' courtship. Beauty That is Bought In Shops. It is a question whetder beauty, like goodness, mu it not n c ssarily be genuine in order to be adm irable. The climax of this theory is reached wheit the old lady of eighty-five, the aged patroness of many charlatans, is held up to a Imiration because?at a little distance?she would pass fur thirty. ? Proudly her "makers-np" point out how this effect is produced; her hair is false, her ^kinis enameled?bsde being "tighten d" to prevent wrinkles?her eyelashes are stained, her figure is ?* made." the is false all ,pver^T-w. is this admirable? Would not a little honest old age and ugliness be more agreeable? Be this as itrn ayr it is not very important. When a lady has r ached the mature age of eighty five her appearancA^oubles no one very much, except IrHUUhH^ildre^. But when it comes to ?8ggj?T whom you love, or mi^ht lov?B|l^you was qmtejnejlajnjtlmt she was, genuine,; ri&TcasaTTdiffw^ that your dear Angela must sleep in corsets, or sue never, never could at tain to the fashiunable waist; it is sad to think of the inev.table results on her poor little feet of those Louis Quinze heels, which make her pretty boots look so bewitching. Figure to yourself what it must feel like to take your beauty-sleep with a pair of pincers on. your nose. That pretty old-fa?hioned expression has now taken a new and dreadful mean ing. Any one who desires to possess the *Mra Langtry nose" has but to sleep in torment a week or two and the great resuit is obtained. If the figure of the would-be beauty is not as lovely as she wishes, "the anatomical cors.'t-maker " will supply her with a nocturnal.squeezing' apparatus which /will "fine her down" by degrees. I her stature is too low for beauty, she may remedy this by wearing what is mildly called an "appliance," in the days of the Inquisition it would prob ably have been classed as an instru ment of torture. This appliance squeezes and stretches all the lower part of the body, and its use is said nofc to interfere with the comfort of one's beauty-sleep. Once enameled, always enameled. The professed beauty c an only afford to be yellow, "gray and uncurled" in secret. She rinds herself precipitated on the downward path. It is just a> well, having once begun to attend to the matter, to perfect her beauty. Why not make use of the marvels of modern inventiveness?re moJel her ears, her nose and her fin ger-tips! It is difficult to say why she should not carry her theory ont to the full- -London World. Fashion Notes. ifitts are not worn with full dress. Dark blue canvas grenaaine, draped r ver side and tastet ul y tr rnnud, forms a most becoming co.-turae. . In?h-wide ecru linen braids have embroidered figures worked in Lndia red and indigo blue cotton. Nun's veilings, though pretty, have become very common, and are now only worn in the morning. A rL-h . arriage cloak in blue satin is studded with plush flowers n the faded shades known as old gobelins. The English fashion of wearing light gray or drab riding habits in summer is gradually being adopted in this country. A late costume of ecru batiste is embroidered with small corn flowers. The hat is of ecru lace, trimmed with corn flowers. Oval medallions of leather basket work are set on buff linen bands which have their edges wrought with blue and gold. White linen scolloped borders have beautiful Per ian designs stitched in brlgut red and blue and embroidered with gold thread. An evening dress of pink shows a ?^ird of paradise, with outstretched Wwigs, perching on a bouquet of flow- j ers,Nt}mbroidered on the train. For cool days there are short, c'o-je fitting jackets in blue rigogne, trimmed in silver and black braid, and fastened with 8?ver^ burnished buttons. A new pelisse^ in bronze velvet, embossed with Large palms; velvet sash, with large tassels at the side. "Russian sleeves, fuUat the top. The " Langtr/' method of wearing the hair hs going^out. By Christmas all the women aSlgirls will be wear ing their hair on the top of their heads; The lawn tenni3 bio ise is a gath ered belted waist of white or light cloth with a deep bkesailor collar. It is worn with a sailor necktie and wide canvas belt. Gu pure lace is very popular la Paris for t mug summe dre e. It is very wide, ecru in color and the de sign comes in relief. It is called gui pure kremlin, and it looks very well on velet crepe de chine or sateen. Heal laces are again worn, and elderly women are bringing to light all their treasures in the way of Venetian rose point, Chantilly flounces, Brussels thread and antique guipure laces. It is said that lace points and shawls are also to be revived. Dresses made entirely of lace are 'iraped with pompon bows over orange, pink, straw and cream color. The bodices are gent-rally of velvet, the !sa ne color as the satin underneath the ;iace, and are opened in the front and cut square in the back, but not low. A charming way of adorning the numerous fancy muslins, how so much worn, is to coil ribbons of two con trasting shades?say pals blue and pale pink?round the neck, th n carry them thus interlaced down the center of the bodice, to terminate eituer at the waist or lo wer part of the pannier in a shower of merry, dancing loops, the twin ribb.ms being caught down ail their course by spr.gs of mignonette, forget-me-not or red currant. A white satin dress, trimmed with wheat ear -, is very preity. Fruit c omes into the trimming of dresses for c-venihg wear more than tlowers. A paie pink satin dre-s, with short skirt, cffecte i With a sort of flounce of red currants, is one mode, and a garland of apricots surrounds the square cut bodice of white satin dreis. Fruit n ay be pretty, but there is nothing that wilt ever take the place of flow ers?be. ide, the latter are in infinitely better taste. Razors. Primarily a razor, to be good, a New York expert said to a Ban reporter, must be made of good steel, but it must also be ground properly to be fit for shaving. Everything, in fitting aay edge tool for use, depends upon a correct understanding of the service it is expected to perform, and a nice adaptation of its edge to just that service. A carving-knife, for instance, must be ground flat on one side and Wedge-shaped on the other; a pocket-knife must be ground convex, and have a sufficient thickness behind its edge to keep it; and a razor must bo ground thin and concave. See this one, for instance. It is, as you will observe, thinner a little back of the edge than close to it, hardly thicker tl an a sheet of paper. Nip the end of ltu edge with your thumb nail, and you w ill hear it ring like a little silver bell. More razors are spoiled by improper grind ng than in any other way. The only way to know positively whether a ra-.or s good or not is to shave with it. Tiie tye will not determine its quality. But even if a ra :or is of the best steel, aad faultlessly ground, it may be spsiled and rendered quite unfit -for shav.ng by improper stropping. A little too much stropping, or not quite enough, aud you will have a bad edge. Then the razor, which is really not all to i la Jie, is conde uned as no good. A razor is supposed to be better for a rest after it has been used for a good while. And it is. My idea a out it is that an imperceptible rust gathers on it in disuse, and when that is honed and stropped off its edge is thinner and sharper than before. But you will not infrequently hear a bar ber speak of a razor as " being tired " and "needing rest." Many men avoid wearying a razor by constant use by the expedient of having several and usiag them in turn. Here, for exam ple, is what we term a " ca endar case," got up to meet the requirements of geitlemen who takethat sensible view of their razors. It contains, as you will obserye, seven fine razors, lettered on the backs for the days of the week. Such cases are sold at various prices, all the way up from $7 to $20. Why do I call it ' a sensible view?" Be cause, naturally, sev n razors, by such chtmging round, will each do but one seventh of what w^uld be required of aetances, answered: ??Really, madame, I cannot tell, but I will inquire." "Stay!" she said, kindly but abruptly; " who are you ? I perceive that; you are not one of the work men." Blushing aud stammering, he con fessed who lie was. and the motive which had led him to a sume a work man's dre.-s. The queeu. appeased by his love of art, said, with a smile: "I knew for all your dress that you were a gentle man, because you d'd not 'your majesty' me. Pray look at the pi :tures as long as you will. Good-morning 1 Come, chicks, wc must go."?Youth's Companion. Th? postoffice department, in aucordf ance w th a requirement, to that effect, recently sent a notice to a woman in Ohio :.nl*oiming her tha'v a letter ad dressed to her was held on account of insu lie eot postag\ She didn't send the required sta ..p for it, but, instead, she sent a note, and this is what it said: " When pumpkins arc ripe I will send you on 3 that has more brains than ever had the man win made this ruling on postage." The Jews in London number about 100,000. They have three weekly newspapers, Iii teen synagogues and a rabbin You must not collect a large fluck of sheep before you get something for them to eat, and that something must be their natural food. That food is grass?grass that is sodded and peren nial. Th.-: stomach of a sheep is small and he eata but little at a time, and he wants that little very often, say every two or thre hours hence be should be where he an gath< r his o wn food. The tenden y of all kinds of gra n and dry proyender is to make sheep un healthy. A little , rain before sending to the shambles is useful to fatten, but fat itself is a disease and Suould be avoided so far as po.-sible in all breeding animals Likewise should the other extreme, viz., poverty?be avoided. I have seen sheep degener ate from poverty more in one gener tion than they coul I be improved in two or three. I see much in the papers about sheep loving bitter weeds, briars, sassafras and the like, and they are good scavengers for a foul farm. My sheep love the cultivated grasses best. I remember once to have killed some sassafras with sheep, but I also killed some of my sheep. It was done by confining them too long to the same territo y as well as to the same food. Sheep need to have their pasture cha ig.-d at least once a month. And this new pasture is as mu -h to force them to sleep in a new p ace as it is to give a variety of food, Xo sheep can be healthy long that sleeps on thesame place and over his own excrement every night.?Farming World. Tasteful Gardens. It seems to be the universal notion, at le.ist in this country, that the vege table garden and flower garden must of necessity be separated. So it hap pens that if the ground at one's dis posal is small, the ornamental features of gardening i:re entirely abandoned. While the^T?getable garden is of necessity the more important, this fact does not debar the possibility of ornamentation. In the mere arrange ment of vegetables there is a wide field for ths e .ercising of taste. Few kitchen vegetables, when iroperly grown and trained, are unsightly. A neat border of strawberries often gives a pleasing effect when planted in front of larger plants. Some of the principles of landscape gardening may bb applied to a small vegetable garden with no loss of time or space. In gardens so small that a horse cultivator cannot be used, it is better taste to set most plants in clumps instead of un broken rows. P' a; planted in clumps and neatly trained on to several poles converging and tied together at the top are really beautiful plants. More over, this is the easiest way of grow ing them. The peas are easier gath ered and the wind does not blow down the clump as easily as single speci mens. These hills or clumps may be arrahged in rows if the horse-hoe is to be used. Some attention might be given in a vegetable garden to the succession of plants. Early vege tables, as radishes, might be planted among other plants which will cover the ground later in the s ason. The odd places in the garden might be plante l to ornamtn'al plants. Many of the coarser-growing species are es pecially desirable for a background to a vegetable garden; or, if room cannot be spared, a trellis of neatly-trained tomato vines may be made into an at tractive background. The mott im portant operation, however, is to keep the garden neat, especially if it is near the house or the street. The prompt kemoval of pea brush, i abbage stumps and the like is a wonderful beautifitr of the gar.len.?Culticator. i Drlrv II Int?. " It is natural for the calf to suckle its mother, and I don't suppose you can improve on nature," says the old fashioned farmer, wh n urged to bring ins calf up by hand, and raise it on skimmed milk. But the whole process of raising calves and keeping mil h cows is an effort to improve on nature. In the >tate of nature, or when run ning wild, the cow gives milk only for the purpose of raising its young. The amount given is proportioned to that end, and the supply ceases when the calf can get its living from the pas tures. In the domesticated condition the cow is bred with the avowed object of incr asing the milk production and prolonging its period, and is then grain-fed and supplied wiih hay and roots in winter and put in warm stables an i otherwise so treated that she is no better alapted for the methods which were natural to the wild animal than her owner would be to go back to the manner of life of the primitive savages who dwelt in caves and dressed in skins of animals that they had caught in the chase, and kiiled with clubs, and eaten raw, be cause they knew not how to build a fire. The same argument will apply to those who say it is not natural to milk the cow or the heifer before she drops her calf, though her udder may be swollen almost to the point of burst ing; or who insist upon the milch cow going dry two or three months. There would be as much reason in saying that a cow should not and could not give more than sixteen quarts of milk per day, "because that was all grandpas cow gave," an 1 refusing to draw more than that, as to cease milking when a cow is giving five or six quarts of -ulk per day, simply because 'she has given milk as near to her time of calving as grandpaallowe 1 his cows to be milked." Do not feed for the purpose of in creasing the mi k pf duction at s::ch times, and if possible reduce it by re ducing food in quantity or in nutritive quality, but; if the milk is there draw it off, if you wish to avoid garget, milk fever, and ch other diseases as may come from a.i overloaded udder and milk glands, ci from a too sudden change in the whole system of the animal.?American Cultivator. Koroiene tin an Insecticide. The many experiments with kerosene as an insect destroyer during the past two years convinces leading entomol ogists that this well-known and cheap fluid meets a long felt want. The best method of applying kerosene is in a fine emulsion with milk, made by a process of churning, and afterward diluted to any desired strength. The emulsion can be applied through a fine rose of a watering pot, or on a large scale by a force pump with a spray nozzle. The kerosene thus showered upon the plants is very penetrating, and will destroy the insects in all stages of development, even to the eggs. Two parts of kerosene to one of sour milk is a proper proportion. If fre3h milk is not at hand condensed milk diluted to the same strength may ba employed. This mixture is suc cessfully used for the scale insect in the orange groves of Florida, and can be, it is thought, employed to. de stroy chinch bugs. A mixture of water and three per cent kero sene is deadly to the bugs and does no harm to the growing corn. By spraying a few outside rows, nearest a ripening field of wheat, the whole area of corn can be protected from the second brood of the destructive chinch bug. The apparatus for the cheapest and best application of the emulsion is yet to be devised. Doubt less a sprinkler drawn by two horses could be made that, by passing be tween the rows of corn, would spray them quickly and effectively. All farmers seriously troubled with Insects should give kerosene a trial. By using a cheap grade of petroleum the e pense is small, and with the necessary apparatus for applying the emulsion a s?ie and successful war may be waged against the insect enemies. Much de pends upon promptness and energy; therefore, the farmer should be pre pared to act at the earliest warning. A barrel of kerosene and a garden fores pump, with necessary attach ments, ready for u e, may come to be as essential a part of a well-equipped farm or fruit and vegetable garden as fire extinguishers in a city. Try the mixture on a small area to determine the proper strength. It may be that one proportion is best for the potato beetle and another for the cabbage worms, etc.; but the emulsion must never be so strong as to injure the plants upon which it is sprayed.? Ameii an Agriculturist. How EnKllnto Helps. In an article on farming on sandy iand, by ut. Hoskins, in the Exam iner, he shows how ensilage helps. He says: "The introduction of the ensilage system has been another immense ' boost' to the light land farmers, and this is one secret of the vast enthusi asm over it which astonishes so many. The weakness of the sandy farm, until it is fully restored, and even af terward, is in slight endurance under g ass, both for hay and- pasture. The great, dark-looking meadows of the clay farms, bear ng their rich burdens of gra s year after year, with their pastures lush and rank with the 'honeysuckle' (white clover) that in sures a full flow of milk from spring till fall; have been the despair of the fanner who dairied upon the sandy levels. But now green rye, clover and fodder-corn tide over the-dry pas turage in summer and autumn. They are easily grown, and so are the big fields of ensilage corn that take a milk herd through the winter, and with the meal that goes with it fill the cellars and sheds with rich, fine, heavy manure, with which it is fun to grow every crop a farmer can want, ?ither to use or sell. Properly fixed to 3ave the whole of these stable drop pings, the dairy farmer soon solves to Iiis satisfaction the vexed problem of ild: 41 an a cow's manure be made to I produce her feed ?' He finds his sandy ,'ann growing more anl more produc ;ive year after y aar, fuller of vegetable natter, darker in color, more loomy-in ;exture, and abb? to carry heavy crops ;hrough a dry season, even better than ;he clay uplands which he once envied. Thus we are beginning to realize in New England that our once4 wornout' sandy lands can be made into good md profitable farms at moderate ex pense. Some such farms that I know )f have increased in value from one to Ive hundred per cent, within ten rears, paying expenses from the start. Just before my eyes where I sit writ ng, I see a forty-acre field of grass ipoa ? poor, sandy land,' that ten years igo grew scarcely anything but sorrel, rvhich in a few weeks will cut not less than one and a half tons to the acre, Pav ng yielded last year twenty-eight Dushels of wheat and thirty-seven uushels of rye to the acre. This farm jf 100 acres, with fair buildings, was bought eighteen years ago for $7 an icre. It would now sell readily for ?50."?American Hural Home. Recipes. Succotash with White Sauce.? Use a quart each of corn cut from the :ob and shelled lima beans; put them aver the fire n just enough boil ng water to cover them, with two tea spoonfuls of salt and half a salt-spoon ful of pepper, and boil them from twenty to thirty minutes, until the beans are tender; meantime rub to a smooth paste two tablespoonfuls of b tter and one of flour, and when the beans are nearly done stir this paste into the succo!ash, see that it is pala ta ly seasoned and finish cooking it. So it ambled Boos.?Nine eg,rs, a teaspoon!ul of salt, a little pepper, i alf a teaspounfui of chopped parsley, very fine, is what Marion liar and pre 3 ribes for a dish of scrambled eggs. Break the eggs altogether in a bowl; put the butter in a clean frying pan and set it on the range; as it melts add peppsr, salt and par-ley; when it hisses pour in the eggs, and begin at once to stir them, scrap ng the bottom of the pan from Uie sides toward the center, until you have a s:,ft, moist mass, just firm enough not to run over the bottom of the heated dish on which you turn it out; make it into a neat mound; some persons prefer it without parsley. Ground Rice Cake.?Take half a pound of white sugar and quarter of a pound of sweet butter and stir to gether until perfectly white. Add the grated peel of a lemon and four eggs, the yolks and whites beaten separately, half a teacup of sweet milk, half a tea spoonful of saleratus dissolved in very little boiling water, half pound of ground rice Hour and half a pound of wheat flour. Jus!-- before putting into the oven squeeze the lemon juice into a cup, remove the seeds and turn the juice into the cake and beat it up thoroughly. Bake in shallow pans. The white of one egg can be left out, beaten to a froth and stirred up with sugar for frosting, adding half a tea spoonful of corn starch to make the frosting stick. Put it on to the cake while hot. Cut the cake into small squares when cool enough to serve. Hooiehold Hints. A little tomato catsup is a great ad dition to a mixture of cold boiled ham, mustard, etc., for sandwiches. If nutmeg is grated and mixed with the ginger in hard gingerbread, a piquant flavor is given to it. When making soup in which roots or teifcs ?e used?a good way is to put the meat in the bottom of the kettle and place the roots or herbs on it, hav ing first cut them in small pieces; cover with cold water, and then put a plate over the meat, pressing it down closely; let this cook slowly, and when this water is almost exhausted put in the desired quantity for the soup. The following is useful in cleaning and restoring color to wooden floors: One part calcinated soda is allowed to stand three-quarters of an hour in one part slack lime, then add fifteen parts of water, and boil. Spread the solu tion thus obtained*upon the floor with a rag, and after drying rub with a hard brush and fine sand and water. A so lution of one part concentrated sul phuric acid and eight parts water will enliven the wood after the above ap plication. When dry wash and wax the floor. Resuscitation from Drowning. The following rules for resuscitating an apparently drowned person are ap proved by the American Medical asso ciation, and have been adopted by the United States life saving service: Rule 1. To drain off water from eiiest and stomach?Instantly strip the patient to the waist. Place him face downward, the pit of the stomach be ing raised above the level of the mouth by a large, hard roll of clothing being placed beneath it. Throw your weight forcibly, two or three times, for a mo ment or two, upon the patient's back, placing your hands between and below tue shoulder blades on each side, so as to press ali ;iuids from the stomach out of the mouth Rule 2. To perform artificial breath ing?Quickly turn the patient on his back, the roll of clothing being so placed beneath so as to make the breast bone the highest point of the body. Kneel beside or astride the pa tient's hips. Grasp front part of the chest on either side;' of the pit of the stomach, resting your fingers along the spaces between the short ribs. Brace your elbows. against your sides, and steadily grasping and pressing forward and upward, throw your whole weight upon the chest so grasped,gradually increas ing the pressure while you count one two-three ; then suddenly let go, with a final push, which springs you back to your first position. Rest erect upon your kne : while you count one-two. Then make pressure again as before, repeating the entire motions at first about four or five times a minute, gradually increasing -to about ten or twelve times. Use the same regularly as in blowing bellows, and as is seen in natural breathing, which you are imitating. It another person be present, let him, with one hand, by means of a dry piece of linen, hold the tip of the tongue out of one corner of the mouth, and with the other hand grasp both wrists and pin them to the grouud above the patient's head. Rule 3. After treatment?After breathing has become natural dry the patient quickly; or if it can be accom plished without interfering with the immediate efforts to restore breathing, this may be done previously by a second assistant. Wrap the patient in blankets only; let him b? kept per fectly quiet. Take the precaution to provide a free circulation of air within the room. Additional suggestions: 1.?Avoid delay. A moment may turn the scale for life or for death. Dry/ ground, shelter, stimulants, etc, at this mo ment are nothing; artificial breathing is everything?is the one remedy; all other means are secondary. If the breathing has but just c ased, a smart slap on the face" or stomach will some tin es start it again, and may bo tried inci .entally. 2. Prevent the crowding of friends around the patient, and thus excluding currents of air; also .from attempting to administer any stimulant before the patient is breathing regularly and is weil able to swal.ow;. the first~pro motes suffocation; the second fatal choking. 3. Do not be impatient of results. Any time within two hours you may be on the very threshold of success without there being any sign of it There are instances on record where breathing has been restored after hav ing ceased for an hour or more. Use of the Small Boy. It has b en the habit of the brother hood-Of newspaper parag. apheis to say bitter and even cruel things of the small boy. Like that part of the com munity known as the mother-in-law, the small boy has had no rights which these manly wits felt bound to respect. And yet it is evident that the small boy has his uses. An example of his usefulness was given at the burning of the Kimball house, at Atlanta, Ga., where the horrors of the Newhall house disaster in Milwaukee came near being repeated. But for the energy of a couple of newsboys, who went th:ough the building arousing the guests by their shouts, many of them would have continued to sleep until too late to save themselves. These two unknown small boys of the news variety prevented a te.iible tragedy. And perhaps a hundred people owe it lo the ene.getic screams of these youngsters that they are still alive. The small boy has his vices. He is addicted to mischief. lie teases dogs and is death to cats. He plays practi cal jokes on his elders whe l he gets a chance. There is nothing aesthetic about him, nor comely either. But it will be remembered that when the old World building was on fire, and es cape from the flames was next to im possible, it was a little bootblack who had the foresight and courage to cut the telegraph wires, and in this way was instiumental in saving several lives. He was properly recognized as ab y hero. And the youngsters whose shouts save 1 many lives at Atlanta, a re certainly deserving of honor. In fact, there are small boys who have in them the elements of noble and useful manhood. And if the small boy were cuffed less and encouraged more he might be found a good deal more useful than he is.?New York Star. _ _ Old, but Good. "Yes," she sighed, "the world is hard, especially to the poor. I often think that the good people who eulogize work so highly do not know much of overwork." " Quite true," assented Mrs. Sothi ran. "Poor Sarah Demp ster, yonder (she pointed to a neighbor ing tombstone), was of your opinion ; her epitaph, unlike those of most of us, paints her life as it really was. If y.iu never read it, it is worth your while to do so." The tombstone is in a neglected corner of the churchyard, overgrown with nettles and long grasses, but its inscription was still h gible: Here lies n poor woman, who always wa tired, Who lived in a house where help was not tired: Her last words on earth were, "Dear friends, I am going Where washing ain't done, nor sweeping, nor sewiug; Bet e\erything there is exact to my wishes, For where they don't eat there's no washing up dishes. I'll be where loud anthems will always be r ngingj But having no voioa, I'll get clear of the singing. Don't mourn for me now, don't mourn for me never, I'm going to do nothing forever and ever." " That may not be poetry," observed Mr3. Sotheran, with unconscious pla giarism, " but it's true. There is noth ing much worse than overwork"? James Payn, in Longman's Magazine. More than seventy psr cent, of Massachusetts people liv ? in cities and towns above 10.000 inhabitants. A noble part of every true life is tr learn to undo what is^wrongly dona ?A CORHEB.? What la meant by the Tona?Ita Origin?A Specimen Wheat Conor. The newspapers startle us all, now and then, with headings such as "Disas trous Corner in Lard," "Terrible Breakin the Oil Corner " " Frenzy in the Chicago Exchange; the great Pork "^Corner ali gone to pieces." High-princi pled inen do not cry their eyes out when they read of this kind of disas ter. Some men even smile, rub their hands, utter exclamations of pleasure, and express the opinion that "it serves the speculators right I" But what is a Corner? Let us go back to the origin of things, like the old-fashioned authors, who, when they wrote the "HLtory of the Isle of Dogs," began with the creation of the world and the fall of man. Corners appear to have been in vented at the time of the tulip mania in Europe, about 1535. When the tul p was introduced into the northern nations of Europe, about the year ltiOO, it excited the liveliest admiration from the brilliancy and variety of its colors. The price of rare bulbs rose every season, until several varieties were worth their weight in gold. Then the trade degenerated into gamb ling, and corners were made. For in stance: A great lord would order, April 1, a bulb of fashionable species to be delivered to him on uctober 1, the price then to be two hundred pounds. When October 1 arrived the ruling price was one hundred and fifty pounds. The great lord did not want the tulip; he was only speculating. Nor did the seller have any bulbs, or expect to have any, f or he, too, was a speculator. According on October 1, the nobleman paid him the fifty pounds which he would have cleared if the contract had involved a reality, and that ended the transaction. If the bulb had been worth on October 1 two hundred and fifty pounds, the noble man would have recovered fifty pounds and the speculator would have lost that amount. A corner in bulbs was made when a dealer would slip over to Holland, ascertain how many of the bulbs (for which, at that date there was the largest demand) were in ex istence, buy as many of them as he could, and keep them out of the mar ket until he had created an artificial scarcity. Then the price rose and he would sell ; The tulip corner was comparatively innocent, because tu?ps are not one of the necessaries of life. But what "shall we say of a corner in pork, in corn, in oil, in wheat, in oats, in pota toes ? What shall we say of mil'ion aires who, by a system of lies, make a poor widow pay a dollar and fifty cents more for her winter barrel of flour than it is fairly worth ? , Take, for example, the wheat corner of 1879, described by Mr. Henry D. Lloyd in the North American Review. A few very rich men put their heads and their millions of dollars to gether to buy a mountain of wheat. First, they got fifty articles published in their papers, predicting low prices ?very low prices. Telegrams from various markets of Europe appeared, all speaking of the immense quantities of wheat coming forward. The specula tors sold even a million bushels or so at low rates, while buying ten millions at the same rates. At length, when they have bought from twenty to fifty mil lions of bushels, they stop selling ex cept at a price which no legitimate buyer can afford to pay. Read what Mr. Lloyd says about it: " The price was run down to eighty-one and one half cents per bushel. When all the wheat and wheat contracts to be had were obtained, the price was ra sed to one dollar and thirty-three cents." " During the winter four hundred ves sels lay in New York harbor, the own ers pleading for wheat, even at ruin ously low rates of freight." In other words, farmers sold their wheat at a losing price, poor men paid high prices for their Hour, ship owners suffered serious loss, and all interests suffered; in . order that six grasping, k merciless men might make two million dollars each. We should like to be king for about half an hour just to place such s ecu ' lating gentry where they wouid do i their country most goo I. Happily their cornerings often corner them, and their ill-gotten millions are gone in a click of the telegraph.?Youth's Companion. _ The Farmer-Sailors of Capo Cod. A writer in the Century describes " Cape Cod," and says of the inhabit ants: " A wood-packet runs regularly from Cotuit to Nantucket. It is quite common for the crews of coasting ves sels hauled up in the winter to turn to felling wood; in this, as in everything else, is seen a mingling of rural and maritime pursuits, livery mariner knows something of farming, and every farmer is more or less of a sailor. They tell of an action against a town for injuries from a delect in a high way, in which the distance of a certain hole in the road from the traveled path was in question. A town officer had fixed the distance by actual measure ment, and the only evidence for the plaintiff was that of a man who simply gave his judgment. Nobody could gue:s how the plaintiff's counsel would get around the evidence of the town offi cer. But he was undaunted. 'Gen I tlemen of the jury,' he said, both witnesses are honest; one of them is mistaken?which is it ? You all know how liable we are in ciphering or in measuring to make a mistake of calculation; my good friend, the select man, probably laid down his loot-rule one time more or less than he thought, and so he is mistaken; but my wit ness, gentlemen, did not put his trust on any foot-rule; he knew better. As you all know, he has cut more cord wood than any other man in Barn ! stable county, and he can measure by : his eye infallibly. About his accuracy, I therefore, there can be no possible j question. The selectman may be i wrong; my witness can't be.'" The Flathead Indians Not Flatheaded. About seventy miles from the north ern boundary of the United States, in the Territory of Montana, between the western slope of the Rockies and the ; more westerly chain of mountains I known as the Cceur d'Alene, and, as j you travel further south, as the Bitter I Root, lies the reservation which has been'a-signed to the tribe of Indians ! called the Flatheads; and probably no I tribe have adapted themselves more to I the manners of civilization at the ex pense of their firmer customs and habits than these. Why they are called Flalbeads no one in their part of the country seems to know. They do not flatten their children's heads, nor is there any tra-e or tradition among them of such a custom having been practiced formerly; and as their Indian name is Selisli, it is probable that the name of Flatbead was given to them, as often happens in this coun try, through the unaccountable freak of some traveler. Put Out His Eye. There is a lady in London, the daughter of a nobleman, who is con spicuous for her anection and devo tion to her husband, who has lost one of his eyes. The story is a sad one, During their courting days the gentle man used to spend his Sundays at her father's villa, not far from London One Sunday morning the lady went tc church without him, and on her re turn saw him sitting at the open draw ing-room window nodding over a newspaper. For a joke she threw bei prayer-book, intending to hit the news paper and so waken him, but she missed her aim, and the sharp cornei of the book entered his eye, depriving him of the sight of it forever. FACTS FOB THE CURIOUS. Among the curiosities in the great cave at Luray, Va.,is a bird's nest containing three egg-like pebbles rounded by the action of water. "Live" ostrich feathers repel sand, and the dealers' test is to rub the feather over loose sand, which clings to the feather if it be plucked from a dead or from a tame bird. In the German empire there are sixty manufactories of playing cards, which produced during the last fiscal year 3,264,349 packs of less than thirty six cards each, and 1,028,826 packs of more than thirty-six cards each. It Is found that the antlers of the British deer are growing smaller, owing to the practice of killing the finest specimens, so that even a stag of ten is not often found, although on the continent sixty branches are often seen on antlers. The number of coins issued by a national mint in a century is stupend ous, considering the durable nature of a coin. Between 1795 and 18S2 the mint of France sent out 8,651,264,810 francs in gold, and 5,519,846,617 francs in silver. Missoula, Montana, has a curious well, containing but eighteen inches of water, which never lowers an inch, though water is constantly pumped from it to supply a steam boiler. At a depth of thirty feet sol d ice forms nround the pipe in the hottest weather. As a strong draught of air comes from the bottom, the well is supposed to tap a subterranean channel. A cutlery manufacturer found at one time a large portion of his goods being returned to him as in., damaged condition, with rusty, deeply oxidized blades. Finally it was located upon the man who sorted and wrapped the knives in packages. Everything he touched was found to rust, from the peculiar acid character of his skin ex halations. It is well-known that some persons cannot carry pocket-knives or bright iron articles, as keys, etc.. about their person without the same becom ing very rusty. In Ceylon there is a cast lower than the Pariahs, the Rodiyas, whose cattle are belled to mark them out from others, and who, when on the road, have to shout to warn any one who may be coming toward them. Even below the Rodiyas are the barbers and betel-box makers, and the Rodiyas, who can only communicate with men of a higher caste through a representative appointed them by the common hang man, tie up their dogs to prevent them from running into a barber's hut, and thence bringing pollution to their masters. It may interest our readers, and give them some insight into the productive capacity of the Bank of England, to learn that in the course of five years the paid notes at the bank have amounted to 77,745,000 in nurrfber, and filled 13,400 boxes, which, if they had been placed side by side, would have reached two and a third miles. If the notes had been placed in a pile they would have reached to a height of five and two-third miles; or, if they had been joined end to end, they would have formed a ribbon 12,445 miles long. Their superficial extent is said to have been rather less than that of Hyde park They weighed over nine ty tons, a?d their original value wau ?1,756,626,600._ One-third of the Edisto island, one of the famous " Sea islands," is now owned by negroes. An Indianapolis baby was bitten, In teasing a pet Maltese kitten. Before a day ended, St. Jacobs Oil mended, And with it m thers are smitten. A hunter who lives at Bear Run, Hurt his arm by the kick of a gun. The hunt it did spoil, But St, Jacobs Oil Cured him before swelling begun. West Virginia is twenty years old as a State. In this time her population has been nearly doubled. 25 Cents Will buy a Theatibe on the House and His Diseases. Book of 100 pages, valuable to every owner of horses. Postage stamps taken. Bent postpaid. New Yobk Hubse Book Co., 184 Leonard 8treot New York City. Menbmah'b Peptonized beef tonic, the only preparation of beef containing its entire nutri tious properties. It contains blood-making, force generating and life-sustaining properties; invaluable for indigestion, dyspepsia, nervous prostration, and all forms of general debility; also, in all enfeebled conditions, whether the result of exhaustion, nervous prostration, over work or acute disease, particularly if resulting from pulmonary complaints. C i swell, Hazard ? Co., Proprietors, New York. Sold by drug gists On Thirty Days' Trlul. The Voltaic Belt Co., Marshall, Mich., will send Dr. Dye's Celebrated Electro-Voltnio Belts and Electric Appliances on trial for thirty dayB to men (young or old) who are afflicted with nervous debility, lost vitality and kindred troubles, guaranteeing speedy and complete restoration of health and manly vigor. Address as above. N. B.?No risk i3 incurred, as thirty days' trial is allowed. "Rough on Rnts." Clears out rats, mice, roaches, flies, bedbugs, ants,6kunk8,chipmnnk3,gophers. 15c. D'g'sta. Dr. Sri tos. Brooklyn, N.Y., was cured by Dr. Elmore's Rhen uatine-Goutilino of very severe Rhoumati.?m and kidney disease of f everal years' standing, after trying every thing else without benofit._ Frnzor Axle Grease. One greasing lasta two weeks; all others two or three days. Do not bo imposed on by the humbug stuffs offered. Ask yourdealerforFra zer's, withlabolon. Savesyourhorselaborand you too. It received first medal at the Centen nial and Paris Expositions. Sold everywhere. Carbo-llnes. On every banner blazon bright, The motto strong for which we fight, Of all the oils that e'er were seen, There's none that beata our Carboline. Mother Swan's Worm Nyrnp. Infallible, tasteless,harmless,cathartio;fever ishness,restlessness, worms,constipation. 25a For sore feet, swollen joints, sprains, corns or bunions, use St. Patrick's Salve. Dr. Pierce's "Favorite Prescription" is the debilitated woman's best restorative tonio Bon VrvANTS find that bj using Gastbtnb no unpleasant feelings are experienced after eating or drinking. Sold by druggists. Gab thine is in liquid form. Druggists. THE MARKETS. new iobk. 2 Beef cattle, good to prime 1 w C>?@ 8 Calves, com'n to prime veals 7 (rt> 8% Sheep. 3>?(S 6>? Lambs. 4'^ 6}? Hogs?Live. ?i^(3> 6 Dressed, city. 7,'SW 8 Flour?Ex. St., good to fancy 4 60 @ G 25 West, good to choice 4 CO (a 7 50 "Wheat?No 2 Red. 11 U(d) 1 '20 No. 1 White.1 10 (a) 1 10}$ Rye?State. 76 (a) 77 Barloy?Two-rowed State... 82 (tf !? Com?Ungrnd. West mixed. 5'! @ 61 Yellow Southern. 59 oh GS Oats?White State. 45 @ Mixed Western. 85 (a) 38 Hay?Med. to pr. Timothy.. 65 (a) SO Straw?No. 1, Rye. 50 (a) .'5 Lard?City Steam. 8:0 @ 8 P5 Butter?State Creamery. 22)4(3 21 Dairy. is (5 21 West Im. Creamery 13 ra 16 Factory. 9!,;@ 14'^ Cheese?State Factory. 8}?(3 10# Skims. 1 @ 4 Western. 6 (ti 8% Eggs?State and Penn. 21 @ 25 Potatoes?State bbl. 1 37 @ 1 75 buffalo. Steers?Good to Choice.58"1 (3 6 00 Lambs?Western.;j 75 (a 5 00 Sheep?Western.3 CO (a) 4 00 Hogs?Good to choice Yorks, 5 75 Flour?C'y ground n. process. 7 50 Wheatr-No.l.HardDuluth.. 112 Corn?No. 2, Mixed New.... 65 Oata?No. 2, Mixed Western. 41 Barley?Two-rowed State... 73 boston. Beef?Ex. plate and family. .15 00 @15 Hogs?Live. 5%@ Northern Dressed.... 7 (& Pork?Ex. Prime, per bbl... .14 00 @15 Flour?Winter Wheat patents 6 75 @ 7 Com?High Mixed. 67 (S i Oata?Extra White. 55 @ Rye?State. 73 @ watbbtown (mass.) cattle mabket Beef?Extra quality.617%? G Sheep?Live weight. 3 @ Lambs. 6 @ Hogs?Northern, d. w. 7 @ philadelphia. Flour?Penn. ex family, good 5 00 (3) 5 Wheat-No. 2, Red.117 Ml Rye?State. 62 @ i Corn?State Yellow. 58 (5 i Oate?Mixed.. 40 @ Butter?Creamen'Extra Pa.. 20 @ i Chooae?N.Y. Full Cream.... 10 <2 ; SawlnaJHaeMae iB&SBtry. i These remarkable itemsprar intoonrofltoi duly. Mr- H. S. Fulusb, with tho New Homo Machine Company, of Orange, Mao8.,,wiIte8, May 28,1883: " I have used Hunt's Remedy in. my family for over ten years. My wife was troubled with catarrh of the bladder. Buffered intense pain in iho Mdneya and loins, and urination was accomplished with the greatest of agony. My friends thought that she could not recover. We tried doctors and medicine3, and although better at times she would grow worse again. Shatras obliged to use the urinal as many as fifteen times **n a night, and was growing worse daily. At this time my attention was called to Hunt's Remedy, ana I concluded to try it: and after using one bottle sho was a good deal better, tho inflammation was reduced, and the water more natural. She began to gain in nppetito and felt r.o pain in tho back and kidneys. She could attend to her household work without pain, and this bad been a great burden to do, even the lightest kind of work. After using six bottles she was completely cored. Since then I have had occasion to use Hunt's Remedy for kidnoy and liver com plaints, and found it to be jatit as represented, and I consider it a mostwonderf al medicine. I woald not be without Hunt's Remedy in my family; and I have recommended it to my friends here in Orange with equally good results."_ It is said that ?00,000 cattle grazo on the Wyoming ranges, valued at $13,10), 03?. To Consumptives. Reader, can yon believe that the creator afflicts one-third of mankind with a disease for which Ihere is no remedy? Dr. R. V. Pieroe's "Golden Medical Discovery" has cured hundreds of cases of consumption, and men are living to-day?healthy, robust men ?whom physicians pronounced incurable, because one lung was almost gone. Send two Btamps for Dr. Pierce's pamphlet on Con Fumption and Kindred Affections. Address Woeld'b Dispensabi Medical Association, Buffalo, N._Y._ Me. Lay/ton, a Milwaukee pork paoker, is to give his city a $100,003 art gallery. Titz Chicago ice cream eaters spend $3,00 a day on tho congelated compound. Young or middle aged men, suffering from nervous debility, loss of memory, premature old age, as the result of bad habits, should send three stamps for Par.; vTL of Dime Series pamphlets. Address Woeld'b Dis pzhsaei Medicax, AssociATioN, Buffalo, N. Y. The poultry product of America in 1882 footed up $5(30,000,000._ Nervousness.debility and exhausted vitality cured by using Brown's Iron Bitters. When doe3 a man feel girlish? When he makes his maiden speech. _ Balttmobk, Md.?Dr. Irwin H Elderidgo says: "I would recommend a trial of Brown's Iron Bitters in all cases of aneamio debility or when a tonic or appetizer is indicated." A doctob's motto is supposed to be "pa tdents and long suffering."_ Owenton, Ky.?Dr. I. F. Mundy says: "I have found Brown's Iron Bitters one of tho best tonics, and prescribe it frequently. Gbavot is no more evidence of wisdom than a paper collar is of a shirt. Doesyonr heart ever seem to stop and you feel a death like sensation, c?o you have fharp pains in the region of your hear-?you have heart disease. Try Dr. Gravej' Heart Regulator. |1 per bottle._ Wateb reddens the rose, whisky the nose, and tight boots the toes._ " We know heart dis9a.se can be cured, why? Becauso hou;nnd> sny they have used Dr. Graves' Huirt Regulator, and know it doo i care."?Pli/mpton Arews. $1 por bottle at druggists. ' Babbeks make many fricncls, bat scrape more acquaintances. A good name at home is a tower of strength abroad. Ton lime.s as much Hood's Sarsa parille used in Lowell as of any other. M Bnchn-Polba." The Quick, complete cure,annoying Kidnoy, Bladder, Urinary Diseases. (L Druggists. One pair of boots saved every year by Ofling Lyon's Patent Metallic E'eel Stiffenerre T1IE *EAME WALK. In a class of dissasos heavily afflictive and accom panlod by a dogrco of suffering almoi? insupportable, Hood's Sanaparilla, by its remarkable Inflaenco on tho socrotlons, cleanses and purifies the system and re moves the noxious humors which support tho disease. Varicose Veins I hare be en troubled with varicose reins and a Borofu loos humor for a dozen years Since I commencod using Hood's Sarsaparilla my leg Li entirely healed, and I gain daily instrength.?o. M. FaKXOH, Frnnldln, n. H. Milk Leg For tho last twelve or fifteen years 1 have been a auf forer from milk leg, was almost helpless, and could walk only on a level floor. Hood's Saniaparllla has cor tainly mado mo ail ovor new, and about cured mo of my lamenoss. i feol young and spry and twonty years younger than 1 did.? HtfPtTJH Wnra, Burnham, Me. Old Ago and Heavy Pain I have a very largo bunch on my left braut; it Is very painful. Imakoaaoof Ilood'a Saraaparilla to strengthen my system, and Hood's Olive Ointment to soften tho bunch. i think both aro very good. I am 78 years old, and havo boon a minister's wifo the most of my life. Mss. E. D. Wadswobth, Herkimer, n. V. Hood's Sanaparilla Sold by Druggists. $1; six for 85. Prepared only bj O. i. HOOD A co., Apothecaries, Lowell, Mass. The Doctor's Indorsement. Dr. W. D. Wright, Cincinnati, O., Bonds tho lub Joinod professional indorsement "I havo pro scribed Dr. Wm. DaU's Balsam for tho Lungs in s groat number of casos and always with success, One caso in particular was given up liy several phy sicians who had been called In for consultation with myself. Tho patient had aU tho symptoms of con, firmed consumption?cold nhjht sweats, hectic fever, harrassing cough, otc. Ho commenced imme diately to got hotter and was soon restored to hii usual health. I havo also found Dr. Wm. Hall's Bat samfortho Lun^a tho most valuablo expectorant for breaking up distressing coughs and colda that .' havo ovor used." Durno's Catarrh Snuff cures Catarrh and all affoo tiona of tho mucous membrane. 25 Cents will buy a Toxatibx on tite Hobse an i His Diheabeh. Book oi 100 pagos, viluablo to ever] ownorof horses. Postage stomps takon. 8ent postpaid. New Yobs Hobse Book Co.. 1M Leonard Street. THE GREAT GERMAN REMEDY FOR PAIN. Itolleves and cures RHEUMATISM, Neuralgia, Sciatica, Lumbago, BACKACHE, HEADACHE, TOOTH ACH2, SORE THROAT, QUINSY, f 1WKLLING8, SPBAJXS, Soreness, Cuts, Bruises, FROSTBITES, BUHNS, SCALDS, And all other bodily aches and pains. FIFTY CENTS A BOTTLF, Bold by all Druggists and Dealers. Directions in 11 lunguages. ,3 The Charles A. Vogeler Co, (SiUMlMtl N A. VOOEIXti k CO.) IlaltlBore, 2d- c. H. * N Y N U?35 Hoatclter's Stcmict Bittern, by incro.ntini vital powor and ron Oering the physica functions regular am acUve, keeps the ays tem in good workini order, and protects I against disease. Fa constli atinn. dyspep sia and liver com plaint, nervousness, kidney and rheumatii ailmenls.it isinvalua bin. and it atTorda i eure defense againe nialurihl diver*, Le sides removing al traces of such disease fmm the system. Fl; s.iIh by all Drugg'sti u nil Do aJers generali; Or. LcFIEUS' FRENCH MOUSTACHE VIQOf Grow,a b.?r,I ontba imootbrit fico in SOdayio, monr, refunded. KevcrMla. Kenten receipiofM ?tinipi crnllrcr; 3 packajci for IL Ilewareof ebeai Imitations; none other genuin'. Send for circular Addreti,T. w.SAXK,box Wsmvjad. tLS.X AGENTS WANTED host Family Kiiiltiiij .Machine ever Invented. Will knit a pair of stocking with II EEL and TO E inuiplt'tf inSOrninuKw. ltwil also knit a great vnr'ctyuf Inncy work, for which ther is always a ready uiarknt. Smu fur circular and term tu tue TWO.illJI.Y KMTTIN4; MACHINJ CO., |*'STwaioHT Street. BOSTOlf, MASS. WANTED?In each County, alady (Laving her ow hnm*-) as Soln Agent for the moat wonderful Ey Remedy in the world. No capital or nanvaasing n Suirwl. Profit* astinfactory. Address TOWNSEN1 i CO., 84 Naanau Street, Ne-r Vork. WANTED?LADIKS to take our Neu Fancy Wor! at their Humes, in city or country, and earn SO t 812 purwi?k, making goods for our Fall and \Vmt-v?> i s>i iSAss PflQTAB'Q KTTiLS Roaches, Bed Buirs, Hats, gjg1 wn J Mice, Flead, Lice. Ants, Mothf, In? eectH on rowlBXHTCQMiMflTnooplant^ nndanimnlB. XnCA 8 CnHIiWH I UnO).ni,,nn, :,0 Stench. 40c,C5c,T5c.,fl, tTM and *1.5opcrlf II I e doz. All storcs,10 to50c. 4?5 Hroome St.,N.Y^!l?g Silver Oro%Mtovc Po?eST?-ccTIt^TnnioxoC THE FALL IS THE BEST mm FOR MOST SATISFACTORY RESULTS USE P. O. PIERCE dfc CO'S PURP PRKPAUEU IIOISE PAINTS. IF NOT SOLI) BY YOUR DEAL. KRS SEN 3 DIRECT FOR SA.M PLES AND PRICKS. 1?I> *170 ??HI TOK ,;T . NEW YORK. TO SPECULATORS. N. G. MILLER &CO, 5S Broadway. New York. R. LINDBLOM & CO., 6 A 7 Chamber of Commerce, Chicago. GBAUST & PROVISION BROKERS Mambersof all prominent Pr dece Exchanges in New York. Chlcaco, St. Lnuis and Milwaukee. Wo bavu "jelnsivu privat? t?lf^rspbwirobotwoon Chi cago and New York. Will exix ute orders on our Judg ment wbon ronumtad. Srnl for circulars containing particulars. KQBT. LINDRLQM & CO.. Chicago. >sD!ELM0RFS^ R. G. is the quickest, ploasantest, ?ffyis^ rarest nn<7v\ discovcrrd for acute and chronic VOVt?oc> lea, nruralgla, eto. H?s cored hsps. lo h caiu-a BriRbt's disnasc and In time. Sold tiy dniKKl.iin. TION. r YnilU? MCII Learn teicRTi.phy here and we will I UUnU illl.nRlv<> you a sitoation. Circulars free. . VALENTINE Is ROM.. Jcuieaville. Wla._ f OTj-i'^tliK. 8 liaday at homo easily made. Costly , tf I ft outfit free. Address TB?E & Co., Aogutt% Mo. , jplOLEMAN Business Uollegf, Newark, N. J.?Terms \J H?. Poeltious forgraduat?f. Write tor Circulars. ' 4n 64ft per dayat home, bam pies worth $S free.' f #g |U qstU Address Srntsoic 4 Co.. Portland, Me.' has a dollar may buy of the nearest Bitters, there is no reason why i>eop!f or the fun of it