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« • -~r: HR Tf ■ " ^ r'-i: v|... •3£i££?' rar^AISym ttoba* kiMT*! ifor ftrakfc fe. SSwsgS^^i AaA MM to brood e’rr ftoalwl wron wwg l Uk« dMiUa« •ununw •on jd th# vardknt iltute, linUi KfMM 0B« bjr ooa t B} lupbft* bf tbc glmtl*. i _ »M to warbling Mrdr’ rwrot tajr, itilirlr < SayMrafunal lmw«w— T r Mud/ u ■Kut* chartt/ cwcct. awrCt,” ttm "r— ■* Be pure and grut a like (ha Ouwara I” ' ■•l- •' - - - % Vtd aoanaa Hka thaaa wa fact and know Mau waa not made to atonn and mourn— • Coma broader rlewa, trntha claarar grow— ]froM Ufa’a grtot yrobloni mytha arc torn. Rgaarkable and Talnable DiaMrerj. It haa alway? l>oen oagj for housowiyoa vho are troubled with rats to noinon thorn, but the jiroblem haa been to iudnoo thorn to die upon tho Held of honor,- tut to ■peak—to wit, the kitchen floor. They bare usually preferred to re tiro to their inaooeesihle retreats iu tho wall as soon as they have felt tho symptoms of arson- ical poisoning, and the low state of sani tary adenoo prevailing in their Com munities is suen that poisoned rats are never properly buried or incinerated by their associates. The problem has been 1»W to kill the rats without bringing nn- ""”^eiuuiEl"S2for8Tiifo IheluniMn. Mrs. Benedict has solved the difficulty k and is entitled to the honor we give to an inventor and benefactor. She was en gaged, it appears, in the domestic manu facture of plnater casts of various kinds. Oomnlaint having lieen mode of the fragility of those wares, Mrs. Benedict began a course of experiments with tho hope of giving greater durability 4o her oasts. One of her devices was to mix whonten flour with her pulverized plaster of Paris, so that tho gluten of the flour might make tho past less brittle. One evening she hail visitors, who rang the door-bell just as she was sifting the mix ed plaster and flour for tho third time by way of mixing them intimately, ns tho chemists wotxld say. Hho had already set a dish of water at hand, intending to make a cast at once, and when the door bell rang she hastily removed her apron and went to welcome her guests, leaving her materials upon tho kitchen floor. ‘“TlW'gueata stayed nntil late ImmI tinio, and when they bid her adieu Mrs. Bene dict went to bod without returning to tho kitchen. What happened in the night was this. A rat, sniffing the odor of flour, made up the legs of the table to tho to]), where he was speedily joined by other foragers— his brethereu. The dish of flour and plaster waa easily reached, and the ruts ate freely and hastily of it, as it is their custom to do. It was rather a dry supper, and, water being at hand, each rat turned from the Kray disE of flour and plaster to alake his thirst with water. Every body who has had to do with plaster of Pans will guess at once what happened. The water drank first.wotted tho plaster in the rats' stomachs, and then, iu tech nical phrase, “set” it; that is to say, the plaster tlins made into paste instantly grew hard in each rats’ stomach, making a coat of its convolutions. The event proved that, with such a’cast in existence, it is impossible for a rat to retreat oven aorou a kitchen. °\ The next mornin^thirtceh of them lay dead in a circle around the water dish. * Mrs. Benedict, like a wise woman, kept her secret and made profit of it. Hue undertook, for a consideration, to clear the premules of her ueighlxa-s of the - posts, and succeeded, it was not long before tho town was us free of this sort of vermiu as if the pied piiwr of Hrfmeliu had traveled th# way. Then Mrs. Bene dict advertised for agents to work up the business throughout the country, wiling | each the secret for a fair price. Serf York Evening I'ont. Title to PnMlc Lands bj Pre-Emption. The pre-emption nriyilege is restricted to heads of families, .widows, single persons {irietadingvfomatcs) over twen ty-one years of ago who are citb.ans of the United States or have legally de clared their intention of becoming chi- sens, who have nnde a settlement in person on the public land subject to pre- ~ > h ■" Prat Hnley m Dega* , _ J Prof. Huxley pointed out by the use of a'diamm, in which force waa given to the illustration by the skeleton of the animal being railed on its hind legs, that in internal ponatruotion the only difference between man and the dog wae one of sine and proportion. There waa not a bone in the one which did not «X- ist in the other—not a single constitu ent in the one that waa not to be found in tho other. In the caae of the dog there waa not that which, on snperfleia examination, answered to the collar-bone of tho man ; but close dissection would disclose, in the ease of the lower animal, a little bone varying in length from s third to half an inch, which wua indu bitably a rudimentary collar-bone. It appeared to l>e of no functional import ance, but there it was. Considering tho psychological nature of the dog, the lecturer remarked that, he might be met at the outset with the objection : “I don't believe the dog has a mind.” Well, the only reason ho hod for assuming the dog nail a mind was tho same reason he had for assuming tlmt all prescut had minds. There was no more evidence of tho fact in one than in tho other. Bun a pin into a man and there waa a atari and a cry, by which they came to the conclusion that pain had resulted. Run a pin into a dog, and there was a howl ana an attempt to bite. Could they say that the dog w as a mere piece of animal machinery ? li jtm T lltta SSBS&ftOmm/imnm* had held views of that kind, but com mon-sense people were right. At the same time he was disposed to think that in dogs tile feeling of imin was infinitely duller than in human treings. As to the other senses belonging to dogs, lie was inclined to doubt if dogs could see with anything like the distinctness of man. Their hearing wra indisputably very acute ; but it was a remarkable fact that that sense was regulated pn u totally dif ferent scale in dogs as compared with human Ixdngs. Did they ever hear of a dog taking a pleasure in music ? On tho contrary, it seemed to cause him acute pain, accompanied by a horrible sort of fascination, which fastened him to the K]M>t at which he war. subjected to the torture. ', The sense of smell in a dog was some thing marvelous, not only from its deli cacy, but for the fact that its discrimina tion of what was agreeable and tho re verse was exactly liie opposite of .ourw,- Thoy never heard of a dog being infatu ated with lavender water or patchouli; he rather reveled in the smells which to men wore a source of horror ami disgust, He had owned a dog which he frequently left among the thousand* frequenting Regent’s Park to secrete himself behind a tree. So soon as the animal found that ho had lost his master, he laid his nose to the ground, ond in that manner very soon tracked him to his hiding-place. That showed the dog had the power of ilistinguinhing tho.particular moditma- tion of the leather of tho boots FOREIGN GOSSIP. WONDERFUL REVELATIONS OF TH1 . . * microscope. —The dispatehaa report that tha brain ofGambatta weighed 1,100 graamea, or leaa than thirty-nine ounces. The maximum weight of the healthy brain in man ia about alxty-four ounce*, and tho minimum about thirty-one. —The King of Greece speaks English, French* Gorman, Greek and Danish. In conversing together their Grecian majesties use the German language, in speaking with their children they em ploy English, and to the general house- nold they speak in Greek. — During the epidemic of typhoid fever in Paris much was said of the valuable results gained in tho hospitals by the use of heavy doses of quinine. But the Progre* Medical discovers that the quinine used was adulterated with sixty-six per cent of other matter, and now the question arises, were the good results really obtained, and, i/ so, what Is the true value of quinine P —A dealer in human hair at Bir mingham was recently robbed of eighty- seven pounds of tho choicest specimens, cultivated by Swedish girls for the mar ket, varying in length from twenty-four to thirty-three inches,-tHe latter, if of good quality, realizing about a sover eign an ounce, and the whole of tho ag gregate value of §2,000. —A Fellow of the Royal College of Surgery, London, wiu lately Jinedten dollars and costs for “furiously riding a liiuyclrrr”'fftr was irk'veTTng'HoTspidly that a constable on horseback had groat difficulty in catching him, though it was shown in court that the surgeon had already traveled sixty miles that day on his machine. —The fifteen forts that now surround the city of Rome have all extent of about twenty-five miles, so that the vanguard of a besieging party would have to oc cupy no less a circuit than thirty-two miles, and tho main force a circuit of thirty-eight miles. On the most modest ‘The BmUIim The scientific world has been greatly startled and agitated of lata br. the discov ery with the mlcroeoope of the moet dread ful enemy of mankind in the form of myriads of little death-dealing parasites. The sir we breathe and live in is charged with these deadly little growths in propor tion as it is infected from various lioilOtli sources. Having by rectot experiments and research been shown to be the most fruitful cause of disease known, and the welfare and health of every individual de pending so largely on the freedom from their destructive ravages, it is but natural that the reports of recent investigators In this field of scientific inquiry should be widely read, and that every phase of these astounding discoveries should he subject to universal discussion. At first received with some suspicion they have at length been thoroughly proven, and are now re ceiving thrunqualiflea endorsements of the leading scientific men throughout the ^ world. Itut little else Is tatted of in the school! and clubs of science, and the medi cal and-scientific journals ars crowded with the testimony that is being added corrob orative of the value of the marvelous dis covery which is pronounced the greatest advance in medical science of modern times. ' ..... To L. VATTscBi the eminent French sci entist, who by his learned, investigations has saved to France so many millions of loliaxa. ia probably due the hemor of flrat (TomiriTg out The terrible pdw e' r ”67" Tfi cse' perms. In recognition of his great service (lie government has recently voted him from the public treasury $lO ? '00Q.00, with which to continue bis experiment*, lie has described several varieties of .these parasites, some .comparatively hertnless, others extremely dangerous. One form he proved by a series of vaccinations and other conclusive ex|>eriinents was the cause ol death of many thousands of ani mals and herds of cattle; another tha ac tive agent in the death of fowls by cliol- era. Acting Upon the knowledge he had gained of the nature of these germs he emptioa, who inhabit and improve the mum, and who have erect and erect a dwelling thereon. m. n I ■ irapi ted or shall ng thereon. Such persons are authorized to enter at the proper Laud Offlc®’ 100 acres of land, which •hall include their dwellings, nt the smallest price. But before any person claiming the benefit of the Pre-emption laws is allowed to enter lands, he must take oath before tin* receiver or register of the land district in which tho land is situated that ho has never had the bene fit ol any right of pre-emption; that he is not the owner of 320 acres of land in any State or Territory; that he has not settled upon and improved such land to sell the same for speculation, but in good faith to appropriate it to his own exclusive use; and that he has not, di rectly or indirectly, made any agreement or contract, in any way or manner, with any person whatever t>y which the title which he might acquire from the Gov ernment of the United States should inure in whole or In part to the benefit of any person except himself. If the land settled upon is subject to private entry, the settler must within thirtrdavs after settlement file in the Land Office of the district a written de scription of the land and a declaration ■ that he intends to claim the same under the Pre-emption laws, and must make payment within one year after his set tlement. If the land has not been pro- olaimed for sale, then the description anddeclaration most be filed within three months after settiementT or if the land ha* hot been surveyed, then within three months after the receipt of the survey of the township within which it is situ ated at the Land Office ol the distriut embracing it. Settlers upon unsurveyed land or land that has not been pro claimed .for sale have thirty months af ter filing their declarations in which to make payment.—AL Y. Sun. ’ A Celestial Revelation. Mr.. Goober—es the story goes—lived la the Mormon country. He had bat one wife, and never thought of taking any more till one day an elder told hi™ it wae his religious doty to seal nnto 1 a few others. Mr. Goober went sadly informed his wife of tofeai the elder had said, and Mrs. Goober mid she had no objection, provided the eldsr would come round and argue the man %ith her piously. Goober told the »Mdsr, and the elder dropped around. He •ttfled sweetly ae Mm. Goober advanced to asset him. The next thing he knew isUpoing around the room with M «u op the beak end hie hat while Mrs. Goober wnmnstfok. He finally a window, and escaped boots caused by tho wearing of his master, in coutro- diHtinction to the modifications produced bv hundreds of thousands of other peo ple present. As to tho ability of dogs to find their way from place to place, he believed there was an unconscious regis tration in their minds oLtl»e visual pict ures presented to it in the various tracks through which they passed, and that the memory worked backward until the do'g reached his destination. No one could doubt tho moral disposition of dogs. Rome wore trustworthy, others more or less thieves ; some were amiable, others vicious, and so on. Neither wns there any doubt that a dog hod ideas of equal ity and inequality. They could easily settle that by offering a dog a large and small piece of moat on the same dish, and by olfAorving which he hx>k first. Indeed, there was no fundamental fac ulty connooted with the reasoning ]xm«- ers that might, ndt bo demonstrated to exist in dogs. More Case Than Cure. A Hartford doctor, now deceased,~was wont to boast of his skill in curing cancers, and he invariably nttnded to a most difficult case he treated iu another town. “Most remarkable case,” and the doctor would close his eyes iu-a seemingly dee]) reverie as he uttered the words, and then he would repeat tlvem tWO or three times in gradually receding tones of voice, like the falling cadence of a dying echo—“most remarkalde case; most remarkableicaso. ” Tho old doctor’s manner was such as to leave the irnpres- sion. thot tho cure was quite as remark able ae the case. - —. -. On one occasion a gentleman who had a Cancer on his fact', hod pretty much made up his mind to visit New Turk for treatment, when ho happened in to this Hartford physician's office, and was so impressed with the “ rohiarkalde ease ” that he concluded to be doctored at home, and went to the doctor’s office to make arrangements for tho operation. The doctor was out ou professional-busi ness, but his wife answered the bell, iuul the cancer patient got into conversation with the lady, and among other things, ininx-ently asked how that gentleman out in the country was getting along. “What gentleman do you refer to?” queried the d<x.‘tor's w ife. “Why, that desperate case—that ‘re markable case’ which your husband al ludes to so frequontly. ’ “Oh,” said the wife, a little solemnly, “he’s dead. Ho died during the opera tion.” ' The man left word that he would call again, and then took tho next train to New York. Here is a parallel case: X doctor had discovered an infallible remedy against the cancer. Ho lately undertook a splendid case, treated it splendidly, and buried it ditto. While lecturing to his anatomical class, he said: “Gentlemen, I am goingto demonstrate to you, by the examination of the proper organs, that my patient died cured f ’— Hartford Times. oad • very large preporttos fax hid _ . Under the Um of the specific trest- meut which they give, and Which is sate stantially the seme si that deeoribed sad recommended later in this review, the number was Men to steadily diminish from day to -day until* with the re* ton lion o. " th and bodily stnpgth, they oaald not >and fU all. j - je greatest vsrlett of symptoms were found to sccompitfy thfslr pjeaenoe, due to peculiar!tiee of tbs constitution, the pari of the body moet nerioualy affected, and the efforts of the different organa to rid the system of these germs Among the most ooratnob Were frequent headaches, neu ralgic peine, nausea, constipation, poor dr variable appetites, diarrhoea, bad breath, hectic fever, cough, night-sweats, cold ex tremities, dyspepsia, catarrh, sore throat, sore eyes, etc., while where the skin was affectedi salt-rheum, boils, carbuncles, scurf skin, Erysipelas, fit, Anthony’s Art. and other symptoms were common, ana all gradually but with certainty were cured by the same means. The hectic farer so often met with in consumption, with the hacking or tearing coii^h, night- sweats, diarrhoea, and other symptoms due to tbs efforts of nature to throW off and expel these germs were also readily con trolled and cured in the same way ms weri the old sores, absce-ses and ulcers in the lung*, liter qnd other important organs. Tfie corrosive acids ntid mineral poisons ars found to possess the power of killing these germs, out the dangerous nature of such powertul agents prevents their inter nal use. For the purpose of expelling the germs wlien once within the system it is receasary to resort to vegetable remedies in order to cleanse the biood at the germs computation the besieging army would,j pointed out a means of relief that speed therefore, employ from 150,000 to 1G0,- — - 1 “* ■* , ‘*“*“ 000 men. * > —A godsend is the telephone to the imijerim family Nihilist-besieged at. Gatschina. It enables them to near at will their favorite prima donna without exposing themselves to the deadly bomb or forcing the singers to come to the bomb-proof palace. A wire has been l . rowded ho,,^ and unhealthy cj**. the l 0. ^AOil4kx.. n MMaoimiMgaruia«asa.exttmetyiuiiuerous Theater, St. Petersburg, forty miles away, and over it are conveyed to the listening ears of timid royalty all the music, vocal and instrumental, and the dialogue and the popular applause, too, of oveiy opera there performed. ily prevented a spread of th* dlteales and eftdeti their devastation. Tynoai.l, with the aid of other eminent English investigators, made a number of lixaaitnations of the floating Particles in the atmosphere, and foUnd numoers of living spores capable-of producing disease, in dry and healthy localities but few germs were found, and these of the harm less Varieties, while in low dsini ip places, —A strange case of mistaken identity has recently come to light at Gateshead. Some time ago a seafaring man named Joseph Kilford was missing. It was known that his vessel had entered the river, and that he had landed, but no In the meantime his body was found in the' river. An inquest was hold, the body was identified, a verdict that Joseph Kilford was found drowned in the River Tyne was returned, and the body was buried. Two weeks ago Kil ford turned up alive and well, it ap peared that just after his arrival in the Tyne he again'took ship, and while his friends had been mournmg’hts’death hr had been in America. > Setting Large and Small Trees. A resident of one of our largo villages, who had come into possession o: a i ne lot wh ch he Wished to plant, but who ha I had little experiepce with trce c .lt- urc, called bn a neighboring nursery man to make purchases. Ho. wanted nothing but large trees—two inches in MTametcr if he eoul l find them, and ten feet high. Ho cared much less for the kind than for the size—anything w’liich was gigantic, early or late, fruit or orna mental. was eagerly taken. Tho ntfr- seryman frank y gave his opinion that trees of moderate size would bo better, but the purchaser quickly replied: want big trees now—I may not live fot the small ones to grow up.” He carried oil a large load of monsters, in a few years he came again to make a hlitional pH-cltases. The nurseryman* nt once remarked: “I su pose you want all tho largest trees you ran get—I th nk 1 can _ — see anvtJdng it like a man. If you 4sk For It Like a Man. Young man. when you you want, a«k for want to borrow §5 of a man, or if you want to marry his daughter, don’t slip up to lum and hang ou to vour hat and talk polities and religion and weather, and tell old stale jokes whereof you can’t remem ber the point, until you worry tho old man into a nervous irritation. Go to him with a full head of steam on turd your bow porta open like an iron-clad pulling for a, shore battery. Snort and paw and shake your head, if you feel like it, no matter if it does moke him astonished. Better astonish him than Imre him Go into his heart, or his pocket-book, or both, it amount* fo the same thing, like • brindle bull with a curl on his forehead charging a red merino drere, eyes on fire, tail up. and the dnat a-flying. Then you’ll fetch - him. Or, possibly he may fetch you. But never mind; you’ll oe- eompliah something, and ohow you aren’t afraid to apeak what’s on your mind. And that’s a great deal more than you would accomplish by the other method. You need not be cheeky, hut you ought to be straightforward. supply you. "““ No! no ” e-claimed the purchaser, “I’ve had enough of big trees! No mom for me! Tho.-c 1 got of you have scarcely grown any since, and th# smaller ones have overta .cn them, and they are ever so’much handsomer and more thrifty-—give me small, vig orous trees. ” This incident tells tho whole story. and’Should be remembered by every inc \pericncCd plantcrr Many rears ago, .Sir Henry Stewart made a plantation of large t r-oes in tjuMirsisl climate of Sibrlan l. tyiit they made lit tle growth and had a sicklyappoarapeq,' It wits then that* l.eodtmy wbh hri long and extensive experience as a land-capo, gardener, o looed icf make a public test with any one who would try large trees, he him elf planting small - amri -t^rfty ones with full roots, iu rich, deeply trenched, and weir-cult,'vdtud grotind, with the confident assurance tnat in a given number of yeais lio would show trees not only larger but immeasurably finerin appearance. The practical hint to bp derived from these facts at present, by those who made, purchases of large trees last fall, whether already planted or heeled in for next soring, is to give them the ex tra care w hich they require, by spread ing all the roots which they have, equal ly on different sides when they are set, lilling in ail tho interstices among them with fine earth compactly trodden or beaten; brae ng tho trees firmly against the wind by staking; and before the buds swell in spring cutting back all the annual shoots to lighten _ the heads. Taking up a wide circle of uninjured roots is vitally important, hut this may have been omitted. Mellow culture through the summer is absolutely es sential. With all this care, tho trees may in a year or two recover from the check they have met with in removal. But small trees, with the abundant roots which are easily taken up with them, will need no staking, and with subsequent care and the thorough culti vation of the soil, they will spring up and fifrow with scarcely a single season’s chock in growth. Small trees cost less, are more easily dug. have bolter roots, are more easily transplanted, arc not whipped about by the wind, and are more easily trained into the desired form. If pprehased at a distant nur sery, the freight i ill is more easily paid. —-Coun&u UctUUman. everywhere. Dr. ltrDoi.ru Kocit, of Wallstein, 0«r- inany. a man vVhose work ih connection with the organisms of cuntagious diseases has made him a recognized authority upon the subject, by experimenting after the methods of Vlu.XMi.x, has discovered and pubiished'an action nt of on'S af the most dangerous varieties, to which it is proven mote deat hs are due than, to any disease incident to the human race. He describes it as a simple cellular or- jranisin belonging to the u same order as the bacteria. When dHbd thb germs may, r-4w>»hout- extremes of temperature. Being as fine and as light as dust, invisible to the naked eye, they maytiutohlown any dUtanCe by the wind or carried on the clothing or body, bike reeds, they may Kfe fot months or years undisturbed upon the furniture, floor, carpets, curtains, walls, or in, the bed ding, and only requiring a proper degree of warmth, moisture and food to waken into iife, develop, and grow. They thrive and iive-jft-tbe-oiood, lymph, njucus and secre tions of the human body. WheA the sys tem is unhealthy or Wdak they attack the cells that make up the animal frame. Any albuminous fluid, will furnish them with food for growth, and a single drop vs suf ficient to contain hundreds. Examined with microscopes of greatj poVter, Which en large them so that they can be seen and studied, they have the appearance of min ute rod bke bodies, iiaving. when active, so rue power of motion. They bend in the Middle like a bow and straig'hten witj^-w jerk that’sends them a few times their own length. At the temporetiuc of the human oody they are tire m»*-t active. Their power of increase or reproduction is remarkably great. Oije feriii Th a few we"kx time, und-r favorable conditions, will give rise to millions. The process is by simple growth and jiivision. t old de stroys or prevents their growth, and this U why refrigeration-preventg decay of meats hud. other animal foods. Exposed to warmth these small organisms attack and eat up the-aibunirnous tissues leaving a foul mass. The odors so common to this process >we given off by these minute organism*, antb4* about the only indica tion of their presence. Thltrtrtbe warn ing of nature an*t >tvs-arr histinct twavoid all srreh smells. The foul breath, Dad odors -ov-old sores,retc., leadsman to avoid these -terms in a great measure. Thedangerof their presence in the tody c.«n be imagined ivlien thejjt rapid increase is considered A tew germs may be read.ily- adworbdd IjiTo' the system by breathing air containing them. They arrthus drew* into the irr-' tenor of the body throtijta the long and narrow- respiratory pare:*es of the throat, Chest and nose, which are* lined with soft membrane and covered withslicky lifUcu». In this fluid they find r* ady lodgment and favorable conditions fo[ dcvelopmeht increase and growth. ,The'’cold” or ca-" tarrh, touena or duuiilc catarrh, my fi'ver, common mauffeitationa ol the effects of qne of- the least harmful of these germs iir.'nuVroyj/oiw. In the discharges frOm th# ffikpiratory passages at such tiutv-# thousands of the living animalculae are fou tuLTheJever. debility, pains- “in the bones, lofes OlT appetite, etc , are ind ica tions of their dt'pressing effects upon the vital organs. _ It is from germs of slower development, however, that the greatest danger follows. To the one most fntty •(fescribrdhy Koch is due more deaths than to any other known cause. According to ihe researches of ''ut ter, Flint, and Dejerine over eight million Xtr"Xmerican physician of large expe rjence in the treatment of all forms of chronic diseases, now conclusively sh vwn to.ne caused 0y parasitic life, for many jreafs devotSd rituch time to the investiga tion of the causes of thesA affefctions, and in the treatment of many thousands of cues developed and thoroughly teitcd ft‘ combination of vegetable agents which he used with marvelous success in their cure. In cases of wasting’daaease, as con-ump- ♦,ton, or scrofula of »!«%. lungs, and other organa, and in all Casestro|e:Hled ttrth great weakness, it was found to exert the most wonderful tonic and restorative influences, besides its nutritive properties far surpass those of cod liver oil or any of the reme dial agents resorted to by the medical pro- resston in such cases. HypophoSphites, iron and quinine hear no comparison to it in building up the strength of the dehlti- iStetli The recipe os advired by him lias been used for years with the greatest sue- eesSisin a vast and most siiceesafiil prac tice. The written experience of the many suf ferers whg have, peeh .Ctlted and who *X-, * press in teems of the bU'hert ...praise, tireir. endorsement of its great value, are suffi cient to fill volumes. Living witnesNesare eveiyWlfcrt. monument* to iq*<*lern genius ami scientific progress in the neallrtg art. Sufferers from "liver complaint,'' giving -rise to ‘-bad blood.” consumption,Mrofqta, and other affections and symptom*, the re- ■itlie of. bl**pd-poisoping from the ravages of The deadly parasitea_ur disease g«rri»8 so briefly referred -to, find in this remedy prompt relief and a permanent cure. The great and increasing demand for tills God- given and peerless remedy for so many an il. ail- oiooa ana tywtwin ■ m*™ kidnsys and bowals, and , those agents which nr# known to set most efficiently In restoring hSalUry actton of these organs are the ones m<*»te be relief upon. For this purpose the Goldsn Med leal Discovery is pr+sminentlf the agent that fulfills rrsfy fodleation of treatment required. ' * " ” - ' Ylctoria’s Good Heart. There is a& advantage, after all, in bo- leett as well os s woman, when act is to be recognized in an «• fective os well ad a tender war. Ana r must be acknowledged that Queen > id- toria never fails to use tills, her preroga tive, with admirable and fine discretion. Two English soldiers. It tflll bo remvfn- bered, Melville and Coghill, were killed at tho battle of laaudula, Zululaml, while bravely attempting to rescue tire colors of their regiment. Their ^pdows ,were pensioned, of course, bnt the Queen’s own womanly heait suggested a further and more gracious recompense. She sent ont by the Empress Eugenie two wreaths, and tire Empress, after she had made her pilgrimage to tho snot where her son was killed, continued her journey to find tho graves of these ob scure English soldiers ami to lay the (VrefttVs upon them with her own hands. She IT rote afterward ji letter te tire Queen describing fire wTld, grand spot where they are lurried, tire heroic* circumstances of their death, as she hail been able to learn them, adding a few ututfiti Bf eBrBfSt iyapflthy for them ami congratulations tor the sovereign uho had men so brave to lose ; all of which the Queen copies in her own hand and sends with a loiter of earnest sympathy to the widows of the dead heroes. Cer tainly there is something in being a woman as well aw n Queen. Even to a practical American niaarning for her dead, tho knowledge that these two women, who hail been seated upon thrones, had sufferod precisely like her- Self, ntid held out their hands to her iu sympathy, wotlld bring a certain conso lation. To if ■votJJJ; 3 - ,,wor iJSreS l* r parenily > nmrtsrtei different, but really kindred Thu champion rat story of the era is told by the San Francisco Examiner. It says: “A remarkable occurrence lately took place * on our northern coast A fore-and-aft schooner, while lying in a safe harbor, as waa supposed, and having no crew on board pn account of the aofoty of the poaition, waa beartl- ad by ram in such number* that they ate away all hex standing rigging, in cluding head-stays, and also th# jibs foresail, and mainsail. All were de stroyed beyond' the possibility of v Pfiir.” people rile every year from this caureXIone. The annual deathxrin France, England, Germany, and Russia from their destruc tion wns qne and a half millions. In the l nitod States and ('ana.la over, three hundred thousand persons perished ia the last year from ihe bacilluii alpne. The mo>t common disease resultii*’ from it is con-, sumption of the lungs, but otherorgans rrf the body are liable to bo affected os they develop slowly but inrely In any organ that may be in a weak or unhealthy state. If active and healthy, the liver, kidneys, and bowels have to a wonderful extent the power of expelling these deadly an- imalctilae or parasites from the system. And this fact furnishes an important in dication for the successful treatmetit of all the long list of maladies caused by these parasites as will be hereinafter shown. The studies of Laxcisca, an eminent Italian, and Wood, Kokmad and others, are interesiing, as showing the large variety of chronic diseases as heretofore classified, that result from these germs. Among the ratwt common were ’ liver eompUint,” biliousness or torpid liver, dyspepsia or indigestion, lung affections,' bronchitis, kidney diseases, chronic diarrhea*, spina] complaint, fever sores, white swreffingv, .* hip joint disease, rheumatism, malarial diseases, such os fever and ague or Inter mittent fever, general and nervous debil ities. female weaknesses, chronic catarrh of the bead, or ozwna, many form* of unhealthy d Ik barges from internal organs, and all tbs various scrofulous affections of the kkln, glands, bon**i, joints, etc., in- cladinj; consumn.ion, which it but scrofu lous disease of die lung*. In this large catalogue of apparently widely differing disease*, bat really all de-. pending apon a common cause, and there fore naturally to be saeceesfally treated on ihe Mine general principle*. examiaatiMP of the blood and secretions revealed larg* numbers of theae pa routes, sod curiously convenient form under the nartit 1 of Hr Pierre's Golden MedicarDiscoveryr ■ It cart be obtained the world over at drug aiid general stores, and full directions tor its use will bk found in the pamphlet that surrounds each bottle. It eicrtsH** most wonderful stimulating and invigorating influence on the liver, that greatest gland of the human sys'em, which has Wen not inaptly termed the • housekeeper of onf health.” Through Ute inerca.red ac tion of the liver and other etounctory or gans of tlife system, all poisonous germs are rendered inactive and gradiully ex pelled from the system with other impuri ties. In some cases, where there are un healthy discharges, as from the nostrils in cases of either acute or chronic catarrh,the use of Dr. Sage's L'atarili Remedy, a mild and healing antiseptic lotion, should be associated with the use of the Discovery. It Isalsoadvisab e to use this lotion in other local manifestations pf disease of mucou* surfaces. By this means the germs of dis ease are destroyed artd the jneni’iraBes 'cleansed before any o? the [>• >isononx bacilli are absorbed into the blood. I * tore throat, -quinsy or diphtheria, the Catarrh Remedy liquid should be used as a gargle, and" the Golden Medical Discovery taken freely. In women where weakness of special or gans ia common and almost Certain to'be developed, attended by backache, be irl* g- down sensations and other local symptoms, the tue’of Dr.Pferce’s Favorite Prescription in conjunction with that of the Discovery, sjieedily restores the healthy functions and assists in building up and invigorating the system. — . -*»- ■> . Tu any case where the bowels have been costive and are not regulated and peted upon sufficiently by the mild laxative properties |>ossesscd by the Golden Medi cal Discovery, Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Pur gative Pellets (little liver pills), taken in small doses of onty one or two each day, will aid materially in establishing healthy, action, and in expelling the d s<’*se-pro- ducintf germs'-from the Wood" »mhsystem. At the risk of repetition and by way of recapitulation. - we may truthfully say that Goldert Medical Discovery cures all humors, from the worst scrofula to a com mon blotch, pimple, or eruption. Eryaip eirrs salt-rheum, fever sores, scaly or rough skin, in short, all diseases caused .by disease germs in the blood, are con- qliefed by this! powerful, purifying, and invigorating medicine. Great eating ul cers rapidly heal under its benign influ* once’. Especially lias it manifested its - potency iu curing tetter, rose rash, boils, carbuncles, s ire eyes, scrofulous sores and sweilittgs. wbitc swettings, gnttr# or thick neck and enlarged glands.' ‘'The blood is the life.” Thoroughly cleanse this fountain Of health by usiog Golden Medical Discovery, and yood di- gestnaqaTsfr akin, buoyant snlnts, vital siremith anslaoundnew of constitution are ts’ablish^d. _ • Consninption, whi^Iefie scrofulous dis ease of tbe lungs induced by the deadly disease germ bactllut, is promptly and pos itively arrested and cured by this sover eign remedy, if taken before the kst stages of the diseaseare reached. From its won derful power over this terriblylfatal dis ease, when that offering this now-world- famed remedy to the public, Dr. Pi'ioob thought favorably *>f calling it his “eoa- sumption cure,” but abandoned that nasne as too restrictive for a medicine that from its wonderful combination of germ-de stroying, as well as tonic, or strengthening, alterative, or blood-cle»nsing, aoti-bilioaa, diuretic, pectoral, and nutritive proper ties, is Uneqaalleo. not only as a remedy for consumption of the lung*, but for sll chronic diseases of the liver, blood, kid neys and lungs. (f you feel dull, drowsy, debilitated, have sallow color of skin, or yellowish brown spots on face or body, frequent headache or dizziness, bad tests in mouth, internal heat or chills, alternated with hot flashes, low spirits and gloomy forebod- *®i*» irregular appetite, and longue coaled, you are aufferinf from indigeation, dyspepsia, and torpid liver or ‘’bilious- n ®**- In many cases only part of them symptoms are experienced ' As a remedv for all such cases Dr. Pierce’s Golden Med- isal Discovery has no equal as it effects perfect and radical cures. For weak langs, spitting of blood, short breath, consumptive nigh t-eweate, —ami -kindred affections, it is a sovereign rem edy. In the cure of bronchitis, severe ooaghs and consumption, it haa astonished the medical faculty, and eminent physi cians pronounce it the greatest medical discovery of the age. The nutritive prop ertlss possessed by cod lira oil are trifling when compared with those of the Golden Medical Dioooray. It rapidly builds up tha system sad Increases the flesh and weight of those reduced below the usual standard of health by wasting diseased. The plan of treatment that wa have so briefly outlined ia this article for the large dam of chronic diseases referred to, has long been acknowledged to be the, most successful, based os it is upon the belief _ _ loyal EnglishwomMi tho tew scribbled words would outvalue ell pen sions or rewards. RnrOTiKTOP came down tho street the .Other day. wh’tSi I was staudtug at the gate, and with a gracefuLjlffW/ eaid f-— •“Ah, comment vou* jtortez rom t” “That depends upon tho Greenback tote,” 1 Answered, without the slightest idea what he said. , tt “Mod Dien! yon don’t understand,'’ fihlttttglWdr ■*’1 neid ‘ h<*\v do you do ?!- .4-. You must t'ctnemlwr that n’oubticz pa* t" I 1^2 :—_ “ Nix cum arons,” said L ^'importe," said ho. “ You’re anotlier," mid L “ Why—why—*non ff/rri—that w mau- vait f/puf!” he stammered. .. “ V.m’re a lick-spittle liar!’’ I yelled • and I gave him a look that raised a blis ter ou his head. TWENT Y A Efi!GiH]TiE]ETN UN I 0NST" Tor get - ..i<l Shkkp Shearing.-—Washing sheep’, (Ttu ttr-pfFpamthur-mnfUTrersTitr nhnCT~We“lm ; fw^'sJ^teBrT)T bnyhig" C A.TOON A. IrelME I Fndomed by off Buildert trho have rued it. Capacity aX Works. I **0.000 Barrel* PER AHHCM. — Plain and Bolted Corn Meal, ground bp water-power, and tbs celebrated aarmxTv aPx-ooomm Jt'loxxx*. C. W. GRAY * CO., Grayevlllc, Go., MERCHANT MILLERS* ttool, will* perhaps, be the prevailing praeticc. If care is token to keep the sheep so that the wool irill not be filled with dirt, it is better not to wash. ■* FLecea should be done up with care, ; isicel.y rolled and securely tied with’|- liVht twlijri. When it is known that a fanner puts up his wool iu neat shape without any tags, cte., he vtjll obtain r the highest price. Everywhere, btti csix'cially here, -'‘Honesty ia the best 1 policy,” ___ An Oil City man went fishing Satur- A I.<*fuUns T.ondoa PI^VO* i*-inn ,-^talitiiikpa ■« OtUeeln Now York for the Cure of epileptic fits. ' IrunAmJuurnalcf iteuicine, are f*>U |Into of remlnn), who n>*ltf* • *t*«- of Ep-h rq, olthont Coi.htlroatoJ *n,l CTrcJ n„(f/*»«*.i :han insrmm-Jwioif H.>«lclim. il**»no.«*j. )u**siMioi7 h "fo I wo>«vo h,M>rd of <■»«,* <>f OTffr wyoar, .tairdtiig *ocro«,3lir oan il hy him. Ijo hwi rnhM»ht '1 a *i-*h on thl, ot.lrh ho ^o.i* wlih * I*:- wondorful r«f* frfi' lo *nj *uf- fonff'who may i**-na tholr ootl r. O. AU.re,• *-O «II0 wl.hlng OCJUO (•'•<lilro-l ^ trr. AB. MywfUOl.K, So. V0**o*m St , X*** Toik. ia »atnr- | day, and he came home with nothing but ^ a fettle half-jxnind bas«. “Is that nil . yoncaught?” asked his friends. “That s sll,” relied the man. . “How many bites did y«m have?” “None,” exclaimed the fisherman, ami the whole crowd cried, “He’s found! he’s fqnnd! Hefe- is tlio honest fisherman.” He’d have bad fifty invitations to.drink ih ten min tiles if it small l>oy hadn’t brokenthrdngli the croud, imd said: “See here Blister, yet gave me a lK>gns nickel for that air fish. ” And now that crowd has no faith in human nature. - —A traveler m rcehe (cll-i the Springlie tl (Mfcss.jWe, u(dvnn about a (Ictjglitful beverage eflllfd' » lep, a decoction from roots, s Id in * reek ton ns only early in the morni ng- T feo vender^ carry about their can 01 sa'cn vvTtii a ohm coal fire under it, some glasses, and a can of water for rinsing them; and-they coWy cent agJ.qvj. Tbk smffil Iwy who can ride a throe wheeled velocipede in the. hall,-and beat i, drum at the same time, has qualities catenlnted to makelioBieiu^ipy-slien be is not well. ^ ~ Ladins A childre-n's boots A shoes can’t run over if Lyon's Pat. Heel Btifleaera are used Tax way to avoid poor vinegar is to use a lemon. Some damaging statements are made about the impurity of much of the vinegar in the market CnAPPKB nands, f*c», pimples and rongb fk in cured bv u-iuc Jan per Tar Soap made bj Caswell, Hazard & Co., New York. Focb of the former slaves of a brother of Jeff Davis, now own plantations worth $75,000, which they nj^kate, together witli several ythers which they rent, in cluding Jeff’s plantation at Hurricane, Miss. They also do a large mercantile business iu Vicksburg. Pork cod-liver oil, from selected liven on the sea shore by Caewell, Hazard A Co., N. Y.. Absolutely pure and sweet. Patient* who have once taken it prefer it to all oth er*. Physicians declare it superior to all other oil*. , ; ■ A printer down in the city of 840,000 inhabitants, says .“that the Chicago type of a girl has a nonpareil head on a brevier body, and a long primer foot” Bnt you bet she is alive ami counts one of tnat 502,931 inhabitants. —Chicago Inter-Ocean. " w ‘- > The Doctor** Indorsement. Dr. W. V. W rig lit, ClDelnnsli, O., send* the mb- loinod profemiontl rodoraement: ‘I hive pro scribed Dr. Wm. HaU’s Balwm for the Langs in a grett number of cue* snd tlwoye with saccew. One cmc in particular wm given ap by eeverai physicians who had been called in for consultation with myself. The paiieqt had all the symptoms of confirmed consumption—cold night sweat*, hectic fever, barraesing cough, etc. Recommenced im mediately toget better and we* son restored to his usual health. I have found Dr. Wm. Hall’i Balsam for the Lungs the moet valuable expector ant for breaking up dislretslne roughs and cold* that I have ever qaed." Durno’s Catarrh Snufl rures Catarrh and alt sObctions of th* mucous membrane. a ira.-g a.iggr*Js vrstja #7A A WRBR. IfilwdAy M bom*eaetly mode flCoeUf outfltfisa AMrosiTui*' kc*. Aareata ® - *• THI BEST IS CHEAPEST.*' Btl5Es .THRESHERS" RsrifPowfrs f lotff flullrrs (Suited to *U section. Write for v ni.c ITlii- l-imi'hVt ood Prices to The Aultin»n.*:j;»ylor ( o., Manullrid. tTblo. S66 A WIEK In ye'iir own town. Addr» H .Hoi 1st: kOo..PorJso.*. V* 1 eruts amt Itoutattn*.. __ CKRTa WANTttss wv Ih* •«« MS Millsg PlcUrul Back* sad B.klss. Ttk— r- deesd M fittti. X.rtss.t. re.inams C*., itlfcHa.Ua •CT« eonperJBTAtli.-mie. SAmpiee worth 13 tO Ml) tew. AidrsmV.-tvsoa hOo. wortUad. Id* REYNOLDS’ IRON U OfiKS. , D. A. ML LJ.A .Yf , Malinger. P. 0* Box 1690, - “ N£W ORLEANS, LA. W.n»rv*iwy R. ’ reW-* <"»>'.*.vl T'-if ".o COTTON PRESSES, li .n l »' l li ■ « I • * i mkaM ENUINKS. t-l'-Mt Mil.re'. \ ••fl M PAN5.H... ■ !. SlMeabiuSlid l'«-w>l_t > r».i ;»h I Wuli. I ■• "curs MS Kai!r*..*l C.r It-it W..rk a -.^jjally. P d.,*,»l r "ata, ('“lilfline, Ksiiings, Bla •kArttHWnc an.I Mafinil# V' »»rlrtn pen- •rsl. O. C. Timy * YxUtil ELKV f w^elorvo. U?«tert pcHcitsd snd eAt‘nutt«;e utoJi by the ” POKTABL.K '• SODA - ^ Eeiid for Cstelogu*. 1 J Chapman & Co*, l MADISON. iHi:. /m Ih- Ths eonvsnlsnce,of Miidlng goods hy moll or exdiwss ia well oxaursd hy I 1>TK Horhe, UTOV, I.EWAXUO’* IRKfil H Tsarrit i'i.ack, x * Bo . V. B. A. H<isin!%: Tivinie-ysrs, rocovsriag vital sta- »■!*, leetem ratefsd terms Ui •pprectattea of tks mertta as a taste, et Hostotlev's (Heme sri.rr,7S SSAK&S CONSUMPTION I have ft positive rem«iy i<'t thi* • ‘ * of th* p?9 thoasands of ca%OF ftflodin^ have bo<»n cured. In Its offlcacy, send Ifetborwlth ^ “ ““ any bujrorer rauf , omt Kind end of la mv fa I TMTO K>TT I.Kd FK KK. to* \\].Tiui.K TitKATiGI* Ot- thle til***•«, U> 0ive ExpBndr. a:, BE. T. A. B..IICI’H. lit PiirlCt..NswYo k. ESSSBESStSBi ■H-‘M fH fGS I MIS. Seat Cun*': f*vrnp v>>: d.. t *) Lse lr llnu*. i'*> d i*y ti; I'Kcwta.' -'■ *- 'X—* w»J-« k nrcrs itiiXD kuvib m laiwr-aM If i-im k or Am >r beid Uori .. '•w. Both ywwwg s-A ►eeevytefy. -flof A FVyw ih« work, w.ti pro^eis qr to I’arkag* with dirwitone Mated ami p.Mim'd eia..ht Am;is or allvtP. L.A.L>iillTUJkUJ SttfjyAcU.F»la4i>».IU O I Mhy watchmakers. Bymail2l>r. Circodw Ow iafcwJree. J.S.Butctl ACo..»li)ci bt.. Jf. V a tAJP RTSEI. ORUAN. Xsw htyU, *7*. Bold sa ttm msvALLKMv ruas. Most glegsnl Cm*. Beat i. Lowest Pries; Kaoieat Tarmi. PCL1.T WAR* AJMBP. <*. W Hf.TXr.X., RarHatewww. W.A. Strong’s Sanative Pills TOR TH* A RMtdy cure for liver oomnlaint, regulating the bowel*, pur.tying th* blood, cleansing frmtt inalo- rt* 1 taint. A perfect cure for nick headache, coo- stlpatlon and dyspepsia. «old by all leading drug- •.’•i?- aHnen*™ with full nariioulars, address C. L. Rdll A (X>., Box tto. New York. DAKOTA* WHEAT L AN D S* on th« Jjofi of th* mn k wJl;. Fr i m ; 04 ptnil* ia '•n ; 0 pa-p rant vg.*« ^ :toa# aUmp to CtT , n*v«« yet§; * Pta For dfAcriptiuna, etc., in- lx LEW ADAMS, Defiwoffiy Minn. WORTHSENDINCFOR! •oppose themselves afflicted wlix ^refl— ror v“ 1 who roeeof the throat or langt. Ad A SON. S38 Arch SU, 1-lpad, n formation for all who fi. or jisbje to fcy <j!s- i i J -J 1 - BTwENrx lelphla, fa., P. 0 Box XU t 4 * 5" ONLY «ssa LSMstajiso ^^foi ^oitltia " in :h« —nH PaMtshass* Uatsa, AUaato, «*_ «• This »!.o, nirth_„ # ^ trated Circular and Ta^tla^Z iji« oth«r oojaiM - AM MmobhBM « tbr^iy^ni S«ad COLLEGE, NEWARK, NEW JERSEY *«*»♦«.qfltow Twit. PMUicmaftealiMt ' - . a w,.:; v.: