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. Vi / *^ J ’ 1 i Bf B DOMEQTIO. AGRICULTURE, HUMOROUS. A salv'h excellent, for drawing, and suitable for nee in case of a felon or any lesser sore of the kind, is made in the following manner: Take the yolk of one egg and stir it into half a teaspoonful of finely powdered camphor gum, one teaspoonful of spirits of turpentine! This will make the mixture thick ^and salvy, and easily spread on old linen. If the case is very urgent indeed, twice the quantity of camphor gum can be used, and in a few cases, when the in dividual cannot bear the touch of tur pentine, only a few drops need be added. This is to be laid on the felon for an hour or two, or as long as the patient can endure it. and then replaced by a cooling poultice. If applied in the first stages, the sore will be drawn rapidly to a head, and weeks of pain avoided. If very painful put a little laudanum on the poultice, and if that does not relieve, bathe the hand with chloroform. After the felon has broken, or at any stage when it is advisable to apply a solt poultice, there can be nothing better than fiaxseed meal. Pour boiling water slowly over a table- spoonfnl of the meal until a soft poul tice is made—not soft enough to ran, or dry enough to become easily hard. A little experience will enable one to get it ]nst right. In cases of pneumonia, physicians order this rather than poul tices of Indian meal, as it is not so heavy for the patients’s chest, remains moist longer, and is more easily pre pared. ‘•Mush” poultices must be sewed inside a fiat bag, or the meal will scatter as soon as slightly dry; but this is so adhesive that the cloth only needs to be folded together with the edges pressed down. It is necessary that the meal (which can be bought of any drug gist) be kept in glass, tm or stone ware, as the oil (one of the essential proper ties) must not be lost. Toubnedos of beef is properly the tenderloin, but any thick slices of fresh beef may be treated m this way. Melt half ounce of butter in a stew-pan, add an onion aud a carrot thinly sliced, fry them a few minutes; do not let them brown; then add a small clove of garlic, a bay leaf, parsley, pepper and salt, six tablespoonluls of vinegar, and water enough to cover them. Stew till you can pass the whole through a hair sieve. Let it cool. Cut the beef into t-lices— you can lard it if preferred ^ ih tiny slices ol bacon—and lay them in the above sauce for two hours, turning them now and then. Dram them, and fry them lightly m hot butter. Have ready some small, delicately toasted slices of bread; arrange the touineuos in a circle alternately with the slices of bread, each piece Japping over the next. Pour over the whole a sauce bcarnaise, aud serve at once. Measure the yolks of six egg*, heat them slightly, then stir them gently in a saucepan, standing in boiling water, till they begin to thicken, then add to them an equal quautily of hot stock or hot .water. Sur a lew min utes, then add tin. juice of a large lem on and the juice ot an onion, chopped and pressed through a bit of clean linen. .LmStiy, add a dash ot vinegar and tea- spoonlul of chopped tarragon; pour the sauce over the tonrnedoa and serve. How to Pom and Stew. —To do either properly, Ihe food must be immersed at the beginning in actually boiling wattr, and tie water miist.be allowed to reach the boiling point immediately and to boil lor about hvt minutes. The action of the boiling water upon the surface of either meat or vegetables is to har den it slightly just enough to pireveut the escape ot either juices or miueral salts. Alt r Ihi pot containing the feed has begun to boil the second time, it shou.d h«f removed to the side oi the fire and allowed to simmer until the food is done. This sin m.-ring, or stew ing, extiacts all oi the nutritious quali ties of either meat or vegetables. The pot should be closely covered, unless lor a moment when it is necessary to raise ti. e cover in order to remove the scum. The steam will condense inside in diops oi moisture, il the boiling is slow. Do not think that rapid boiling cooks taster than the gentle process 1 recommend. Alter the pot once bt ils you cannot make its contents cook any • laster it you have fire enough under it to ruu a steam engine, bo save your fuel and add to the fire little by little, to keep the pot l o.liug. Remember if yon boil meat hard and fast it will be tough and tasteless, and most of its goodness will go up the chimney, or out ol the window with the steam. The top if fine elastic Balbriggan stockings can be utalized when the low er part is entirely worn out. The tirst knii wrappers lor the baby can be made of them, alter the pretty knit shirts of soft wool, tied with pink or blue ribbons, are laid aside. Tluse are mostly the gilts of mamma’s loving )ru nds,aud real life may be said to begin for the baby when he commences to wear cast-olf clothing. The tops of two stockings will form the body of the wrapper, and there will be enough left for the little sleeves. Make veiy tine seams, so that they will lie down fiat and not rub the tender flesh. It is a creditable state of mind which impeis one to always buy the best, bui tbs highest,priced things are not always so. For some kinds ot cooking a moist brown sugar is preferable to the best white. In soil gingerbread thhr is espe oially true. Tbcu for gingir snaps and oake and bread the old. » ark molasses is preferred by all good cooks to the best New Orleans, It is impossible to make ginger snaps both crisp and yet tender without tnis. The sensible as well as pleasing cus tom of serving fruit as a first course at breakfast should be practiced in every home as far as possible. One nice way to serve strawberries is to send the large fine cues to the table with the halls on; put at each plate a little dish of some kind with sugar in, so that the bernes may be dipped in it, and eaten daintily and most agreeably. Economical and very useful bibs for teething children are made of honey comb canvas. They may be bound wuh tape, or trimmed with a cheap but pretty cotton edging, winch can be bought in packages containing five or more yards in a package To dye a good black, boil together well one pound of logwood with half a gallon of good vinegar. Wet your silks or woolens and put them in the pot • with your dye. Do this three times and then take them fr« m the pot aud allow them to drip. Do not wring them this time. Bang them out to dry and then wash them through several clear waters till they cease to color the water. Beeswax and salt will make rusty flatirons as smooth as glass. Flaxseed fob Stoch—In some parte of the West, farmers sow flax bn newly- turned sod for the purpose of turning the ground for a crop of wheat the fol lowing year. It requires lees labor to sow and harvest a crop of flax than to plant and gather a crop of corn. Seed com is not salable, bat flaxseed always tints a ready market. The expense of marketing flaxseed is less than for any crop that can be raised on the same amount of land. It is generally worth more per !. ushel than any kind of grain and it is mauafacturad in tho \\ eat in stead of in the East. In many sections the manufacturers of linseed oil furnish seed to homesteaders and other poor farmers with a view of securing their crop when narvested. The manufacture oi this oil is very profitable, as the oil cake sells for more than half the sum paid for the seed from which it is made. Nearly all of it goes to Great Britain, where its value for feeding to all kinds of stock is better appreciated than in this country. But little use is made of oil-cake or of ground fiaxseed in the United States, except to feed calves and milch cows that are in poor conditidh in the spring. Few have employed either of them as a part of the regular diet for stock, or for the purpose of pre paring animals for the butcher. There is no necessity for extracting the oil from flaxseed before feeding it to stock. In fact the oil it contains is the most valuable portion of it. Pure ground fiaxseed, when ftd alone, is tooiioh.but if mixed with meal, bran or shorts it is excellent lor all kinds of stock. An ex perienced leeder recommends mixing one bushel of fluxseed with seven of corn and the same number of oats and grinding them together. There is no better feed for calves “brought up by hand” than boiled flaxseed and skimmed milk. A small amount of fiaxseed should be increased to a nound a day by the time the calves are a month old. Dryinc* Plants.—To dry plauts nice ly in sand, you must take dishes of such a depth that the flowers, 8‘ems and leaves can be covered at least au inch aud a half over the top with the sand. White scouriug saud is the beet, and that which has no salt in it should be selected. Place the flowers, stems downward, in a sandy layer,and pile up the saud about the stems, so that they will i-taud erect; then sprinkle it over lightly until each leaf and petal are firmly held in place. It is very essen tial that the branch should not lap over. Then place the pail or can on a shelf in a warm closet, and let it re main for two weeks, then examine it, and if the flowers ore not entirely dry, take off the upper part of the sand and add fresh, dry sand. Tuesaud must be entirely free in m moisture when used at tiist. This is a much better way to preserve flowers for winter bpuquets than by pressing them, as it keeps the leaves aud petais in shape, while it pre serves the eolois perfectly,and they will keep for years. Sheep.—Sheep-cnltn'e has many ad vantages over cattle-raising, as also over dairying. There is a necessity of sheep husbandry for meat production. The rapid increase of population, the s larcity and increasing price of beef,and the inier.ority of pork m he<htuluess and nutrition tend to the increase of U***V«V-* %\l& l XJ suits m the economy of meat aud wool alone, we may add, but from au econ omical standpoint in feeding the soil.no factor in its wealth occupies a more prominent position than sheep. This lias been tested,and will be found to be most valuable in its application to all the economies of farm establishment and developments. Pastubino Houses.—It is a great mistake, says an exchange, to let hor ses out to pasture until after the spring work is all done. One feed of grass will spoil a horse’s appetite for hay.aqd he will be in poor condition for working no matter how highly fed with grain. Many good farmers seep their horses up ail tii3 year. A healthy man will work thiough the summer with an occa sional day of recreation 'besides Sunday. Why should not a well fed. horse do the same? Poultry —It anyone thinks he can realiza a large profit from poultry with out dividing them in such a manner as to avoid crowding, he will make a big mistake. They will do better in small families than in large flocas, and the few can be kept with greater profit even in a small yard than the more numer ous, if the latter have the run of the whole farm. Grain Drill.—Au Ohio man has in vented a grain drill which sows the grain upon the surface of the prepared ground in a row six inches broad and covers it by shovels which throw the surface soil over it, leaving an open furrow between the rows of wheat. His drill tubes are one foot apart, so that half the .land is occupied with grain and half with furrows between. Hobsbs kept in clean stables, espe cially if underground, are apt to sutler from tore eye, caused b- the ammo nia from their urine A little land plas ter or gypsum scattered m the sta bles will absorb this ammonia and save its valuable fertilizing properties. Di luted sulphuric acid will do the same, but is not so convenient as the gypsum. One of the most successful breeders of fowls says that fowls need rowen hay as a substitute lor green grass, aud mills that they will eat large quantities of it every day in winter when placed before them. Another breeder writes in high praise of •the use ol ensilage as winter food for poultry. Thebe is more uutriment in straw than is commonly supposed, and if rich tood like corn or cotton-seed meal is fed, more will be eaten by stock. Straw aloue is not kututious enough for per fect feed,while corn or cotton-seed meal are too concentrated. As a young man carrying an immense pair of blacksmith’s bellows on his shoulder passed along the street he was accosted by a dilapitated-looking stran ger. who said: “Exduae me, sir, but will yon kindly do me a great favor ! Will you let me take one pull at your bellows ? They— They—remind me of the long aeo, wtien I lived at home in the dear old place, aud every morning when I came down to breakfast found my good old mother on her knees before a gieenwood fire, blowing, blowing with her precious bel lows ! Just one blow, my dear fellow— just one blow 1” “You shall have it,” said the other, ‘with the greatest of pleasure in the world. Stand back so I can get a good whack at you! Next to kicking a thiev ing dog what I should admire to get is oneblow- or a dozen, on a fellow that would let bis mother get up and—’’ But the stranger was gone. Happy once more. St. Louis, Mo.—A C/iromole reporter was told by Mr. Alfred J. Papin, of this city, that his nephew bad the most obsti nate case of inflammatory rheumatism which bt ffl ;d all kinds of treatment until St. Jacob’s Oil, the great pain-conqueror was used. It cured the young man, and he recommends it as the grea'est cure for [•Sics it} !!■'• "•o-id The diary of a great man: Pnnce Bismarck keeps a diary. The first en try, on January 1, reads: “I have re solved to drink not more than sixty glasses of soul-destroying beer a day during the present year.” P. S.—Save on Schuetzenfest days. Mother Shipton’s prophecy Is supposed to be about four bundr d years old, and every|prupbecy has been fullfllled excent the last—the end of the world in 1881. Buy your Carbolme, a deodorized extract of petroleum, the great natural hair re storer, before the w >rld co nes to an end. You ask what a libel suit is. A libel suit, my son, is where a man pays a law yer $10,000 in order to get $1,000 out of another man who thought the first mau was a fool and is now sure of it. I’laln Truth ! Seaentarv life, want ot exercise, loo much im proper ami liri gn ar f.ioil or drinks, taking cold, exhausting labor, mind or body. Violent exercise, sexual excesses, impure a r arid ma aria weaken the powers of life, poison the blood, vitiate and thicken the flu ds o the body and interrupt Its Sealihy actl ui. cougesdou lakes place lu whatever organ or fun 'lion hupp usto be predisposed to It, and di-order ends in di e se. Any remedy that win restore healtny circulation will mfil..bly re move toe cause and cure by preventing disease. St. Bernard Veg- iaule rtlis are infallible. All drug gists se.l them. A closure: Liberallandlord—“What are you doing in my back yard ?” Irish tramp (engaged m mending his clothes) —“Iwts jist a gatherin’in me rints, sorr!” The ’squire drops the subject and retires. Troops of Ailments Vanquished. On account ot the promptness with which II che« ks the ever- generated by unhealthv exhala tions, Hostetter'a B tters is <• nsuiere i an Indis- cen ati'e tamilv med'c ne on th- borders of our So t emani Western rivers, and in new sett e- ment- where the plough an 11 e axe are for the fir t time disturbing the solitude of natures. Its re- putati n. however, la not confined to such loca i- ite-. Wherever ti e element - of disease arerfe. It Is f e sorest sa eg ard of i ealtn;wi erever s ckcess prevail*, it ss efUcatl us as a romp ly. Among the serious n -eases which it is gcaran eed to control are nd'ge-tu n, bill u-ne*s, and all the m nor all- jcitL sL-ranjpmpn:* nf thft stom- ach, the Uver, and the bo» el—such as Beat thorn bea ache, tlatti tnce, cosilveness, nausea, dlstasie for ood. languor and debiiny, pa pltation of the heart, tremb ing of the hand--, nol estn the ears, utv rdered vision, di turb* d sleep, and n ental In- quletu e. As these physical and mental disturban ces uud to a cenera failure of all the powers of the sy-iem, they should be at once corrected—as theyalwavs may be—oy a course of Hostetter’a Stomach Riiters. Pereectly empty: “I do wish you would come liome ear.ier,” said a wom an to her bus bat cl. “1 am afraid to stay alone. I always imagine that there’s somebody in the house, but when you come I know there ain’t.” Very Well Put. Why do you defer till tomorrow what we should do to-day f Why dowe nek'lect a c ugh till It thrown ns lot cousu'upti n, and oo isuaiption brings ua to the grave? Dr Wm. Hall's B Isam is a sure cure if taken In aeason It has never been known to fail Use It thoroughly accord uij»t i directlona. Persevere till the die ase isconquered, as It Is certain to be, even If It should require a doz n r ott.ee. There ia no better med.cine fur Pulmonary disorders. Sold everywhere. linker’s Pain Panacea. Is one of the best Liniments put up. It is a real pa n killer, and de troys p in, whether internal or exter- Dal, whenever used. It has been a standard remedy for the past thirty or torty years. Freddy s device: First swell—By Jove, Fred, that is quite the highest collar I’ve struck yet. Seer nd swell— Thiuk so, old man ? Well, I don't mind telling you; it’s a little idea oi my own. It’s one of the guvnor’s cufls. That Huabaoil of Mine Is three times the r an he was before he began □slug Welts’ Health Renewer. $1. Druggists. Opinion is twilight: science is day- 1 ght; ignorance is night. Persons recovering from wasting diseases, such as maiar.a, fevers, etc., will be greatly benefited by the use of Brown’s iron Bitters, a truelonic. The best and highest praises are those we evolve—not those we receive. Dr. Kline’s Great Nerve Restorer is the marvel of the age tor all nerve diseases. All fits stopped free. Bend to #81 Arch Street* Philadelphia. Pa. One eannot live in Christ, and be hid; it will shine ont in character aud con duct Gaatrine Recommended to travelers. Aids digestion, prevents nausea and headache. Druggists. Do that which is assigned yon, and you cannot hope too much nor dare too much. The roof of barns should be steep, aud if of wood the surface either pain ted or the shingles dipped in lime water to make them more durable. Straw aud dirt collect under fiat roofed shingles and cause rapid decay. A weak alkaline solution in the soil is said to promote nitrification, while too much alkaline is injurious. Tne moral is to apply potash aud other alkaline manures thinly, over as much ground as ihey can cover, rather than m heavy doses. Tough meat may be made as tender as any by the addition of a little vinegar jO the water, when it is put on to boil, An unsifted youth: The ttnsalted ’oung matt goeth forth to make bis NeW Jear’s calls aud, yea, verily, he stayeth -ach an unseemly length of time that the young lady maketh a great endeavor to get him to go, bhe saith: “Is the walking good ?” “Oh, yes, very,” he replieth. A little later she continueth: “Are you not afraid your horses will run away f” “Oh, no,” he respondeih; “I am traveling on foot.” Another pause. “Will you excuse mo while I speak to Miss ?’’ “Certainly; I have lots of time,” he replieth; “I have only two more calls to make,” Aud he never leevetb until the frirl getteth her little brother to come in and ask him to assist him in carrying up some coal. Bishop Feck, who tips the beam at three hundred or thereabouts, was at one time attending conference where the supply of beds was not equal to the demand. The bishop, after being in troduced to the party who was to share his couch, eyed him all over, and said, “So you are to be my bed-fellow, eh ? Well, when I sleep aloqe I’m crowded.” Deliberate with caution, but act with decision; and yield with gracions- ness, or oppose with firmness, “DoLIkewIis.” Dk. B. V. Pierce, Buffalo, N. Y.:— “Five years ago I was a dreadful sufferer from uterine troubles. Having exhausted tbe skill of three physicians, I was com pletely discouraged, and so weak I could with difllculty c ossthe room alone. Ibegan taking your ‘Favorite Prescription’ and using the local treatm ut recommended in your ‘Common Sense Medical Adviser,’ in three months I was perfectly cu ed. I wrote a letter to my family paper, briefly men tioning how my health had been restored, and offering to send the full particulars to any one writing me for them and inclosing a stamped envelope for reply. I have received over four hundred letters. In reply, I have described my case and t e treatment used, and earnestly advised them to ‘do likewise.’ From a great many I have received second letters of thanks stating that they had com menced the treatmenc and were much better already.” Mbs. E. F. MORGAN, New Castle, Me. Skinny .Men. “Wells’Health Renewer”restores health and vigor cores Dyspepsia- Iniootence. Sexual Debility. $L Eveuy man is not so much a workman in the world as he is a suggestion of what he should be. OWENTON, Kr.-Uev. J. N. Beck says: “I have used Browu’s Ir >n B tters and consider it one of the best tonics sold.” Be anxious when you relate anything to tell it just as it occurod. Never vary iu the least degree. Bidic?, buy for your husband*, brothers an'! sons Urolithion collars and cuffs, and save trouble in washing. Beal sport: Fisherman—“Get any sport iu the stream, Pat?” Pat—“Indeed, we do, sorr—the hoight o’ sport, sorr! we always throw the bailiffs In there sorr.” Ladies and children 'a boots and shoes cannot run over if Lyon’s Patent Heel Stiffeners are used Never pat pickles in a jar that has had lard in it. A Soot’s New Year: A canny Scot had got himself installed in the eldership of Ihe kirk, and had for some time carried round the ladle for the collection<t. He had accepted the office of elder becanse some wag had made him believe that the remuneration was sixpence each Sunday with a bowl of meal at New Year’s Day. When the time arrived he claimed his meal, but was told that he had been hoaxed. “It may be sae with the meal,” he said cooly, “but I took care of the saxpenee mysel’.” Dr Pierce’s “Pellets,” or sugar-coated granules—the original “Little Liver Pills,” (beyrare of imitations)—cure sick and bil- iotfs headache, cleanse the stomach and bowels, and purify the blood. To get gen uine, seeD:. Pu ree’s signature aud p rtrait on cjovemment stamp. 25 cents per \ ial, by druggists. Extract from a review of the year: To go into statistics, it is estimated that during the year the average man has said: “How are yer ?” 3,743 times; “is this hot enough for you?” and “is this cold enough for you ?” each 471 times; •‘pleasant dav,” 10,748 times: ‘ looks like rain, ’ 12,325J times; other meteor ological remarks, not classified, 786,421, 107,365,792,001 times. The railway up Pike’s Peak is inten ded to overshadow the Alt. Washington railway. The plan is to construct three tramways, each nearly three miles long, one beginning at the end ol the other. The first will start from the rear x>f the iron spring at Manitou, aud the last will be terminable in front of the signal station on Pike’s Peak, at an eleva'tlon of 14,200 feet. The supports will be made ol trees not less than eight inches in diameter and about twenty-four feet high, braced above and below. Oj these an endless wire cable of one inch bore will revolve, and upon which will be fastened, at intervals of about one hundred feet each, a large, covered arm chair in which two persons can comfor tably sit. This will be suspended about eight feet from the ground aud pass at entering and dischatging points along a movable platform to load and unload without stopping. The lower section will be propelled by an engine at tne lower end. The nen er one will be dri ven by water power, utilized on the mountain s’de through a turbine wheel, and the third by an engine erected on the summit otthe peak. Malaria, chills, positively cured by Emory’s Standard Cure Pills. Their equal unknown; sugar coated; no griping, 25c. J'atenl plastering was a novelty ex hibited at a recent budding exhibition held ia London. It is claimed for ’it that it sives both time and labor. The material is prepared beforehand in slabs which are fixed to the joists direct with great speed, forming the ceiling at once. Thus, plastering which would occupy weeks to execute can be accomplished by this slab system in as many days. It is also claimed for this patent that the ceilings are fire resisting. Co''OKus, Pa,'—Rev. J. D. Zetimg says: “I Was paralyzeu in my right side. Tne use of Brown’s Iron Bitters enabled me to walk.” A paper has been read before the Academy of Sciences, Paris, by M. Neyreneuf.on the transmission of sound by various gases. Using a sensitive flame arrangement he proved that car bonic oxide has about the same traus- mitting power as our ordinary atmos phere, but that carbonic acid gas has a much greater power. For Tbuk Heads, Heavy stomachs, bilious conditions—Wells’ May Apple Pills—anti-bUions, cathartic. 10 and 25c. At the Physiological Society, Berlin, it was lately stated that mstead of the condensed milk, which, owing to its large percentage of sugar, has not kept its place as a food for children, a pre paration of mi'k has lately been impor ted and introduced into the market from Switzerland. This milk is pro- tected"against fermentation, and decom position by previous cocking. ■‘Beauty Unadorned 0*ith pimples) to A -I- - —.i Mtc Most. If you desire a fair complexion free from pimples, blotches, and eruptions, take “Golden Medical Discovery." By drug gists. A mistake: At a spec’al election held in New Bedford recently, a certain drummer, who was.looking for a place to quench his thirst, walked mto a ward room and inquired what was going on. He was told au election. “The devil,” he said: “I thought it was a bar room,’ and he left in disgust, amid the laugh ter of the officials. ^ CURES Rheumatism, Neuralgia, Sciatica, Lumbago, Backache. Headache, Toothache, hUHlUajJVv w, . 9ore Th roat. Sw el I i ii««. ftp rain ». Bruise*, Burns. ftcalriH, t rum Biles. AND ALL OTItfclt IIODIIY PAIS* AND AillEH. Sold by DroggisU and Dealers everywhere. Fifty Cents a bottlft Directions in U Languages. THE CHARLES A. ?*CELER CO. (SuooeMota tr A. VOGELER A UO-J BnUiinore. N<i.,L'.S. A High and low classics: High classic— “Can you comprehend me?” “i am perhaps a little obtuse, but you may be assured that I shall get your meaning presently.” Low classic—“Cau yon catch on ?” “Well, perhaps I don’t drop as suddenly as some, but you bet I’ll tumble about as quick as the average.” We Should Help One Another. Mr. Nokkan Hi;ni\ ot So. 1GJ Chestnut St., Springfled, Mass., writes April 10. 18-U, saying: “Having the atHiction caused by kidn y and liver diseases, and after enduring the aches, pains, weakness and depre-sion Incident thereto until body an i soul were nearly distracted, I sought for relief and a care from my trouble, aqd was told by a friend who had been cured by it himself, that the best and only sure cure was Hunt’s Remedy, and upon his recommendation I com uenced tak ing it, and ’tie first few doses Improved my condi tion In a v ry marked manner, and a conimnauce of its use has Justified all tnat my friends claimed for it—that It was a sure and permanent cure for all diseases of the kidneys and liver. Several of my friends in Springfield nave used It with the most gratifying results, and I fuel it my duty as well as a pleasure to me to recommend Hunt’s Remedy in the highest possible terms.” OrtlNDSEYSlOODMCHEfi- 1 r Nothin* iu lh« world equal to it for the -< cure of Scrofula. Pimples, Boils, Tetter, Old Sore*, Sore Ejr*. Mercurial Dbeasea, Catarrh, L<4s of Appetite. Female Complaint*, and all Blood diteaset. It never fails. All druggUta and country a tore keeper* sell it. B. K. Seller* A Com Prop’s PitUhurgh, op every bottle. FRAZER AXLE GREASE Fe.t In the world. Get the cenni' •. Every pitch tree haw onr trade-mark everywhere 11 8 ° l ‘ ,> 80 KHEETS fine writing paper, in blotter, with calendar, by mall for 20c. Agenta PaiNTma ttx, Newbury- w anted. Economy port. Main. 5-TON Manufacturer’s Testimony. Mr. H. W. Paynb, manutacturer of harness, saddlery, trunks, valises, etc., Ne 477 Main Streep Springfie.d, Mass., writes us huder date of April I',;S33: “Gentlemen—I have used Hunt’s Remedy, the beat medicine for diseases of the kidneys, liver, bladder and urinary organs, and have received great benefit to my health from Its nse, an I I find tnat it Will do Just what i-i claimed for It; It will cure disease and restore health. I therefore pro nounce it the best medicine that I have ever used.” Boston and Albany Railroad. At.BEKT Holt., Esq., paymaster Boston and Al bany Railroad, at Springfield, Mas ., writes April #t, 18.-3: “I have used Hunt’s Remedy, and my exp' rlence with it has been such that I can cheer fully say that I am satisfied that itwdl do Just what it promises to do, if used aucordiug to d.reo- tiOQA*” Inm LcT.n, 8t-«l Brau TfiRE IEAM. JOIVKS. BE WAVS TUB WntlaUV. Said o. trial. Warrant. S Jaara. Ill Uua u law. Tor fra. boo*, ad tire*. JONES OF BINGHAMTON, BUGIlAJtTOX. <i. V. YOUN’Ct M F.'V ‘earn TkLEORAPHYhtre and 1 vr U am ill. CjIm we wl i] £ri ve y OU a situation. Circulars free. VALENTINE iitiOS.. JanesvUle.Wia. $5 to $20 C ols man Rcstness College, Newark. N.J. Terms $40. Positions for graduates. Write for circulars 4 GENTM WANTED tor the Beet and Fastest selling Pictorial Books and Bibles. Prices re ed 33 per cent Nstiosai. Pub. Co.. Philada.. Pa >20 Titos• answering an advertisement will eonler a favor upon the artver User and tbe pnbllsber by statins •bat they saw tbe advertisement n' ibis Inwrawl fuansln. nanerl. iiiiTiUM SOMETHING EVERY LADY QIOT TO KNOW. There exists a means of se- cnriiig a soft and brilliant Complexion, no matter hoir poor it may naturally be. Kagan’s Magnolia Malm is a delicate and harmless arti cle, which instantly removes Freckles, Tan. Redness, Roughness, Eruptions, Vul gar Flushings, etc., etc. So delicate ana natural are Its effects that its use is cot suspected by anybody. No lady has the right to present a disfigured face in society when the Magnolia Balm is sold by all druggists for 75 cents. ik DR. -f — dye’s) 43iCfl BEFORE-AND-AFTER Electric Appliances are sent on 30 Days' Trial. TO MEN ONLY, YOUNQ OR OLD, ■\TTHO are suffering from Nervous Dkbiutt, YV Lost Vitality, Lack or Nervr Force ahd Migok, Wasting Wf, knessks, and all those diseases et a Personal Nature resulting from Abvses and Other Causes. Speedy relief and complete resto ration of HEALTB.viooaand Manhood Guaranteed. The grandest discovery of the Nineteenth Centnry. Send at once for Illustrated Pamphlet free. Address VOLTAIC GILT CO., MANGHAU, HIGH. It relieves at once Bums, Piles, Chapped Hands cr Lips, Corns, Bunions. Scalds, Bruises, Soreness of feet,hands, eyes,etc.; Itchlngfromany cause. RSc. Ask your d i gist, or send to 33 Fulton Street, N. V.. OPIUM Morph ine Habit. No eetab! till cured. Ten years ed. 1.000 cured. State OR. MARSH, dulnry. Mich. A ■kin of Beauty to a Joy Forever. DR. T. FKJLIX OOURAUD 3 Oriental Cream, or Hagie&l Beintifier. BemovesTu P 1m Pies, Freckles, Moth-Pstcbes sad every blemish o n beauty, end defies detec tion. It hu •tood the teat of thirty years, end u eo harmless we taste It to be inre tta no counter felt of aimilsi name. The distinomlabed P 1 J-ASeyre. sold toe lady of the HAtrr toii (a pe- gent;)—“AeVou ladles win use them. I recommend ‘Gouraud’s dream' as the least harmful of all the Bkia •reparations” One bottle will laat six months, ualoi It every day. Also Pond re Subtile removes auperfia pus hair without injury to the skin. Him M. B. T. GOUBAUD, Sole Prop.,«Bondet..N.T. For sale by SU druggists and Fancy Goode Dealers throughout the U. S.g Canadas and Europe. WBe- ware of base Imitations. 81,000 He ward for arrest and proof of any one selling tfas some. I B I m gfeSTOPPED FREE Marx tlous success. Insane Personi Restored BS Dr.KLINE S GREAT H NerveRestorer H for allRratn Nkrvb Diseases. Only turt cure for llcrve Affections. Fits, Epite/sy, etc. INFALLI BLR if taken directed. No Fite after first etoy's use. Treatise ttnd $ a trial^ bottle free te rece^v afflicti Urugjj ■ afflicted to Dtt.kL! N h,<y?x Arch bt..Philadelphia.P*. rUfuggiiU. BEWARE OF IMITATING FRAUDS. 'THE BEST IS CHEAPEST." mm THRHHFR<Y 8AVIILts ‘ ItnePoven 1 nfll.OriLnO cWriu].. THE SUN VEK YHOD Y LIKES IT. f THE SUN’S first aim is to to truthful and useful; its pwoud, to write an entertaining history of tto times “CULLEN’S ANTISEPTIC,” counteracts the offensive odors of the feet and body removi h rimple*. awn 114:0s chafes and inflamed feet snd makes a touko skin as smooth a* velvet. If not found w.th your DmsrK«st, enclose one Dollar in »sslf- addres-ed envelope (either in moeny order or reirie- ttred Utter) mid we will forward von • package bv mail. Address J A. tTIM,Rtf A CO., Kleh. montl, ^ a. Send for dtcular. VEi V A Literary Avalanche. TRADE 'ILLS MAAK. The pills are warranted to be PURELY vege table, free from all mineral an-’ other poison ua •ubstancea. They are a certain cure for Consti- ration. Sick Headache, Dyspep.-la, B liousncsn Torpid Liver, Loss of Appetite, and all diseases arising from the Liver, Stomach, Bowels or Kidneyg. They remove all obstructions from the channels of tbe system and purify the blood, thereby im parting health, strength and vlg.r. Sold by drug gists, or sent by mall for SB ceuts in stamps by P. NEUSTAEDTER & CO., . 83 Mercer St., New York, Sole Manufacturers of ST. BERNARD VEGE- table pills. Send tar circular. I ->on>klne Habit C’tarwl In M tolMtAnya. Nopa? till Cured. Da. J. Struhrns. Lebanon. Oh'.oi Overwhelming opposition and delighting all lovers of good books. “What IS the world coming to? The poor man is now on an equality with the richest so far as books are cuucerned”—is a air sample of tliousands of quotations which might be made lionaire^mbHsh °ni. Cust01116and from newspapers ot influenced by the lash of mtl- ^ j v 10X8 OF CHOICE BOOKS, a large portion of them the best edit : ons published in this country, now ready, and yo r own selections from them will be sent to any part ot the Continent for examination, if you will give reasonable guarantee that the books will be paid for after receipt.or returned—return transportation at my expense. offering this month. New publications every week. ^Prices are lower than ever before known, ranging from two cents, for Tenny son’s “Enoch Arden,” unabridged, large type, to 111. 50 for the larg stand best Am ri- can Cyclopedia. My b oks are not sold by dealers-prices too low for them Among the authors and works are those of: -among Prootor, Gh'lkle, Qreeu ' Huxley Kittle; a tynd di, Conybeare . Bawlinson, and Howson, r. Bronte, Taine. tuwn.'- Mulock, Chambcra, SSSr&r. Di< kens, Irving. Waiter Scott, Thicket ay, George Eliot, LongteUow, Gibbon. M CMulav. Baucrolt, Herbert Spencer, Fortar, Byron. Bums, Ingelow, Arnold, Goldsmith, Tennys n Library of Un yereal Knowl- edge, and Others. (Baited to all sections.) Write for FbEE niuo. Pamphlsl and Prlcas to The Anltmand Taylor Co., Mansfield, Oh!o> FLORIDA HOMES IN Land cheir by rUUllll/A WINTER. M.ItKNZ.BriCKepbrt.CL TO $20 per day easily made at yonr own homes. Entirely new buali,ess. No peddling. Samples and inatr uctions sent for 10c, BENTON & CO.. Manu facturers Box 33, Williamsburg^ N. Y. mail, 55c. a month, or 811.50 a year; bunday (& pages), >1.20 per year; Weekly (8 pages) >1 poi I. W. ENGLAND. Publisher. New.York City, AGENTS {“ ake ‘J® P* r “nt- profit aelllny “V, " Kegmter’s Liniment. The best inti World. Write for particulaes to 1 I KEISTER. Pr, prietor, 324 Squth ith Street, PhdaJcipuia, Pa. ([GENTS WHITED ra'KXH.'S ting machine ever invented. Will knit a pair ol itocKtiiga with 14a:EL and TOE complete in 2 minutes. It will also knit a gr»at var ety ot fancy, work tor wh-ch th.-re is alway a ready mar et. «end for circular and term* to the Twombly Knitting machine to , 183 Tremout Street. Boston, Mass. Worms! In the human body ERADICATED by using I SfASimS JSORMSYRUPjl A.n oM-time remedy. EeZVSCSSFI at In Its action. l»rIoe 25 Minto a bouto I O-EOK HALE BY ALL DKUGGIfM HEALTH IS WEALTH, V • m Heal of MiisWealtb ofM DR. RADWAY’S THIUBAT BLOOD PUHflDL Pm blood Bikes aoud flash, itrong bone and 8 el ear skin. If roe would have your flash firm, you bones sound without cA lea, aad your com plexion fair, as# Radway’s Sarsaparillian Resolvent. A remedy composed of Ingredients of extrsor- ‘ ' '' purify m and Sara and Pibma- wunr la Its trealmeni sad care. No matter by whet name the complaint may be whether it be scrofula, consumption, or A romeny composea or lagieaiems ox • ilaary medical properties, essential to besL repair and invigorate the broken-oo? warned body—Quick. Pleasant, Safi end 1 ilad,- thfr ulcers, sores, tumors, bolls, eryslpel rheum, diseases of the longs, kidneys, b] der, womb, skin, Uver, stomach or bowels, etth< ehronloor constitutional, the virus la la tbe Blood which supplies the waste end builds end repairs these organs end wasted tissues of the system. U the blood Is unhealthy, the process of repair mat be unsound. The Sarsaparillian Resolvent Not only la e compensating remedy, but secures the harmonious action of each of the organs. It i system functlon- estebllahee throughout the entire system el harmony end eapplies the blood ves- sels with • pure end healthy current of new fife Tn 8cm, after a few days’ see of the BarcaparUlian, becomes dear end beeutlfnL Pimples, blotches, blech spots end skin eruptions sre removed; sores ted doers soon cured. Persona suffering from scrofule, eruptive dtseeaee of the eyes, mouth, eers, lege, throat end (lends, that here eccumuleted and spread, either from encored diseases or mercury, or from tbe use of corrosive sublimate, may rely upon e cure If the Senapenlllan Is continued a sufficient time to make Ua uepreeslon on the aystem. One bottle contains more of the active princi ples of Medicines than any other Preparation. Taken In teaapqonful doeea, while others require five or six times as much. One Dollar a Bottle. R. R. R. ThoUboapenfi and Beet Medlelne for Family Bee la Use World. In from one to twenty minute* never fella to relieve Pals with one thorough application: no matter how violent or excruciating the pain, the Kheumatle, Bed-ridden, Infirm, Crippled, Nervous, Neuralgic or prostrated with disease may suffer, KADWAY'S READY RELIEF will afford Instant, ease. INFLAMMATION OF THE KIDNEYS, INFLAMMATION OF THE BLADDER, INFLAMM ATTON OF THE BOWELS, CONGESTION OF THE LUNGS, SORE THROAT, DIFt iCULT BREATHING, PALPITATION OF THE HEART, HYSTERICS, CROUP, DIPHTHERIA, CATARRH, INFLUENZA, HEADACHE, TOOTHACHE, NEURALGIA, RHEUMATISM, COLD -HILLS, AGUE CHILLS, CHILBLAINS AND FROST BITES, BRUISES, LUMBAGO. SCIATICA, NERVOUSNESS, SLEEPLESSNESS COUGHS, COLDS, SPRAINS, PAINS IN THE CHEST, BACK or LIMBS ere Instantly relieved. CloferHillen IN la’s VARIOUS F’OBMS. FEVER AND AGUE. FEVER AND AGUE cured for SO eta. There la not a remedial agent in this world that will cure Fever and Ague, and other Malarious, Bilious, Scarlet, Typhoid, Yellow and other fevers (aided BEUEF?^ * 0 “ RAD ^ AY ’ S r It will In a few moments, when taken Internally 1 according to the directions, cure Cramps, Spasms. T Sour Stomach, HeartburnTsiok Headache, Dygpep! •la, Palpitation of the Heart, Cold Chills, dysterlca! Pains tn the Bowels, Diarrhaa, Dysentery, Colic. Wind tn the Bowels, and all Internal Pains. Traveler* should always carry a bottle of RAD- WAY S READY RELIEF with them. A few drops in water win prevent sickness or pains from change of water. It la better than French Brandy er Bitten aa a stimulant. Mtnera and Lumbermen should alwava he provided wtth it. ^ 7 radway's Regulating Pills # Perfect, Purgative, Soothing. Aperi ents, Act without Pam. Always Reliable and Natural in Operations A VEGETABLE SUBSTITUTE FOB CALOMEL. Perfectly tasteless, elegantly coated with sweet then! P ^ rS ®’ re E uijkt *> Pirtfy, cleanse and atreng- Radwat’s Pills for the cure of all disorders of the Stomach, Uver, Bowela, Kidneys, Bladder, Female Complaints, Nervous Diseases, Loss of Ap petite, Headache, Consttoatlon, Costiveness, fndk- vMtinn Dyspepsia, Blllonsneaa, Fever, Inflamma ) Bowels, Piles, and ail i* , —v. -d derangements o: the Internal Viscera Purely vegetable, contain tne no merenry, minerals, or deleterious drugs. fw* Observe the following symptoms resultlni from Diseases of the Digestive Organs: Constlpa Uon, Inward Plies, Fullness of Blood la —D-—— — ———v — v/a vv viJAUo fill MAC Ol mach. Sour Eructations, Sinking or Fluttering the Heart. Choking or Suffering Sensations whi I?, % 1 7 ln - P° etare > Dimness of Vision, Dott W Aha rtAfrtV-a thKA UtswHO Jt II Wal Webs ED ad. lyifr., . , " —..... —, w , . usivu, &SVM V before the Sight, Fever and doll Pam in un V — — * WWl OiAAU VIVAU A mu UI Ui* ,Pede'ency of Perspiration, Yellowness ol the Skin and Eyes, Pain in the Side, Cheat Umbe, and Sodden Flashes of Heat, Burning u tbs Flesh. A few doaes of Rahway's pats will free the system from all the above-named disorders. BOLD BY DRUGGISTS. Price, 25 cents Per Ben. BEAD “FALSE AND TRUE.” Send a letter stamp to HADWAY A CO. No. as Cor. Church St., New York. . ~_ laf °rmatlon worth thousands will he sen) to you. To the Pnhlle, t72 rupture i i>ar«3|f .ArAuujvwt oy or J 861 \rc'i st. pm in "win I PUla. Pa.. Advice free, stomps I ply ... P- i VI »r"r. Main InnLsu & ur at or men Offl’es thera davi month: Keystone House, Readim* p* tin each mouth. Her h«v * d, l J DRS. J. N. & J. B. H0BENSJ THOSE AFFLICTED WITH THE eeb OF SELF-ABUSE AND MERCURlALlZi BENHATK nf'iliV 0 T U8Ult J ’ N ’ Bbd <L I tiBNSACK, of 206 North second street. Phi ITmW °Z b ' P* 78 U«e irom s A. M. to 2 P. M., and 6 to It P.-M Advice free. Whosoever would know his tlou and the way to improve tt shoo'd read Sen. A NUtShKuT on receipt oi 8-cent stamp. - WHJWftK t. ■*- i