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Haadred Xilll^as to Quart. The number .of bacteria present in jnijlr depeads chieiy upon the length of time the milfc has* been standing and upon the temperature. intimites made trpott milk under different conditions have shown from 300,000,000 to- 600, 000,000 to the quart! The effect of temperature ia shown by an experi ment; A specimen of millc which had been standing four dap*, in a cold temperature km found t? have about 10,000,00 0 bacseria pier quart, while tbuxt exposed So high temperature col fleeted 309;000,030 of these microscopic cr?stafia ia less than a day and a half. Between fastf and fifty specie* oi ; bacteria hare been found ia normal uriik and cream. This large-number ia due to , the fact that milk is apt toeoftectataoii any species of bacteria that may be float- j ing ia the air. The iadirkfaals of most of these species are comparatively few m number and are of &ttle sigpificpj cance; a few species are- almost universal and exfrenosely abtndant. It is theto creatures which cause the milk to sour. Some of them do this by the production or an acid; others cardie the milk by causing a ferment liU? that in rennet. All of them are more or less harmful."?. St. Louis Republic. duitar; Walb atd Oiling*. Q. Does the Bible have anything to say regarding sanitary walls? ?'A. Read Leviticus, 14th Chapter, 38-41 :? verses. Q. What do modem sanitarians' say. A. Tbat wall paper aad ghie kalaomices are directly reepowfbie for much ot the ?c'i aem, jgnorantly attributed to other ciuses. Tfcr ? G icago Inter-Ocean, in an article oo papering walla, under the caption of "Nasty Practice," haw this to say. **Our Health Officer. Dr. De Wolfe, say? the free passage of air through walls of living rooms ts an important element in proper " ventilation . The practice of repairing rooms by layer upon layer of wail paper, made adhesive by glue or paste, which adds a decomposing material to the nasty prac tice, can receive nothing but condemnation frc*n the Sanitarian. Xhe perfect wall for domestic habitation is oc iuateriai. which re sists decomposition in every form, and which permit* the free passage of air. It seems to me that Alabaatine ia a Imirably adapted for the purpose. ^ f The Doctor agrees with the Inter*- Occam, that a special law shoul.l be passed "to pre vent the practice of parting repeated layers ?f paper on the waHs. Write the Aiabastine Co., Grand Kapids, Mich for supplement from the report of the Michigan rttate Board of Health, entitle ! ??Sanitary Walls and Ceilings " Remember the name, Aia&astine, made t orn alabaster rock. r\ - ' Black EelT Mr. V. N. Edwards of the United States Fish Commission, has obtained from Cuttybqnk Pond a very singular eel. The eyes are entirely concealed un *der the skin and the colot is uniformly darfe^ almost black. In 4orm and pro portions it i3 like the comknon eel, ??d may prove to bet merely a dark-colored, " fclind example of this species. Trout aad other fish become dark in color as a result of blindness and this may be another illustration of the phenomenon which is often observed 15^, fish cultur ists, The length of the specimen is about thirteen inches. Chicago's Mayor -wants grade cross. in&> abolished* ? y The world consumes 3,000,000,000 pooads of papery jeajvjmd it is supplied Eisfwhere in this issue are published the partic ular* of a remarkable cure that fairly outrivals the celebrated case of John Marshall, of Ham ilton, which created *uc\a, sensation through out the cotintry. The particulars of this case are vouched for by the Albany Evening J-aw Mt, recognized as the leading newspaper at ttt Now York Stat* Capital, and one of the leading papers of the United States. There ia, there* oee,ao room to doubt that the particulars of the cage are accurately and carefully set forth, in efery respect true, and must therefore prove of deepest interest to onr readers; the ar ticle is coctmended to their careful perusal. The Uniferaity ci Pbnnsylvsnia will shortly $*tablis$ a school of Aneerican hiitpry and institutions. Catarrh Can't He Cared With local applications, as they cannot reach the seat of the disease. Catarrh a blood qr coMtitional disease^ndia order to cure It you have to take internal Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken Internally .and acts directly on the blood a nc I mucous surfaces. Hull's Catarrh Cure is no ouack medicine. It was prescribed by (Hie of :tcre best physicians m this country for years. un<l ;> a roiraia^ prei-cription. It is Forerr?*iOHT Stan coaohes carrying the united States mail were held up in this try hut year. L ForfgwtBieniMiiid "clearing the voice, ; Use BrOwji s Bhonckiai, Tboohss. " ? **| to friends who were and they have proved ex ? UIMy senriceabie."? iftr. Henry Ward 7; Forrrr-Otnc electric li?;bt plants have been ?Stabtisiied in the Sooth during the past ?kroe (Booths. . tbrsv.-t'-rv 11k o other MagiveKrritxJk. il Every Month 9|aMjr wooes suffer from Excessive or ueiloa; t hsy don't know wfco to confide in to jet proper advi*e? MtcaeU? in anybody but try ?? e\ Bradfield's ftaalf Regulator ftS*c*c for PAIftfUL, PROFUSE. aCMTT.SVmCSS?9 a od 18R?6?JLA* , MENSTRUATION. Book to mailed free. MA&ffftO RE8ULAT0R CO.." Cm. kM fcr ?u REV. DR. TALMAGEj j THE EEOCEIAX DIVINE'S SUN | DAY SERMON. I ? Tkct: " They took branches of palm tree* and went forth to meet Him ? John xii.,13. How was that possible' How coitt palm ? liBiii h? be cast in the war of Christ as He approached Jerusalem* There are scarcely i any palm trees in Central Palestine. Even the one that was carefully guarded for many !*? years at Jericho has gone. I went over the very road by which Christ appa&ached Jer usalem* and titers, are ptmtj oroHw trees and fig trees, bat no palm tries that I could see. Yon must remember that the climate baa eaapgad. The palm tree likes water, but by tba cutting down of the forest?, which; are leafy prayers tenia, the land has be- ! -come unfriendly torthe pslm tree. Jericho once stood. hi wren nmns of pafaa grove, j Olivet was crowned with palms. . The Dead i Sea has on its tanh th ? truuhi of palm ; trees that floated down fiiwa soon okrtime , pahn % rove and are preserved from decay | by the salt which they received from the l>eai Sea. ' .;S* Let woodmen spare the tcfees of America, if they would not ruinously change the cli mate and brinz to ttiesoil barreuness instead ; of fertility. Thanks to G-od and the legisla- | tures for Arbor Day, which {Hants trees, try- ! ing to atone for the ruthl<9saes$ which has destroyed them. Yes, my text is in har- ! mony with the condition of that country on the morning of Palm Sunday. About three million people have come to Jerusalem to attend the religious festivities. Great news ! Jesus will enter Jerusalem to-day. The sky is red with the morning, and the people are I flocking out to the foe* of Olivet, and hp ? and on over the southern shoulder of the j movnt*>a, and thfi procession oomhtg out from the city meets tue procession escorting Christ, as He comes toward the city. There j is a turn in the road where Jerusalem sud ! denly bursts upon the vision. We had ridden that day all the way from Jericho, and had visited ,tte rjiins of the house of Mary and Martha and Euarus, and were somewhat weary of si^ht seeing, when there suidenly arose before our vision Jerusalem, the religious capital if all Christian ages.* ? That was the point of observation where my text comes in. Alexander node Bucephalus Duke Elie rode hi? famous Merchegay, Sir Heurv Lawrence rode the high mettle i Con ra<i, Wellington rode his proud Copenhagen, but the conqueror of earth and heaven riles a coir, one tnat had been tied at the roadside. It was unbroken, and 1 have no doubt frac tious at the vociferation of the populace. An extemporized sad-lie made out of the gar ments of the people was put on the beast. While some people gripe 1 the bridle of the colt, others reverently waited upon Christ at the mountain. The two processions of people now become one -those who came out of the city and ; ihoae who came over the hill. The orientals j are more demonstrative than we of the western world, their voices louder, their . gesticulations more violent and the symbols | by which they express their emotions more significant. The people who left Phocea, is | the far east, wishing to make impressive that they would never return, took a red hot j ball o l iron and threw it into the sea, and eaiil they would never return to Phocea until that ball rose an 1 floated on the surface. Be not surprised, the^fore, at the demonstra tion ia the text. ? Asthecoft with its rider descends th9 ?lope ofufivet, the palm trees lining the road arj callei upon to render their conti> bution to the scene of welcome and rejoic ing. The branches of these trees are high up, and some must needs climb the trees and tear off the leaves and throw them down, and others make of these leaves an emerald pave ment for the colt to trod on. Long before that morning the palm tree had been typical of triumph. Herodotus and j Strabo had thus described it. Lcyard finds the palm leaf cut m the walls of Nineveh, [ with the same significance, in the Greek athletic games the victor* carried palms. I am very glad that our Lord, who five days after hscfthoma upon His brow, for a little while et-feasfc had palms strewn under His feet. Oh, tbegloraws palm! Amarasinga, the Hindoo scholar t cafis it "the king among the Linnaeus caWit '?the prince of vegetation." Among all the trees that ever cast a shadow or yielded fruit or lifted their arms ! toward heaven, it has no equal for multi i tudiuous u3-?s. Do you want Bowers? One 1 palm tree will put forth a hanging garden of them, one cluster counted by a scientist containing 207, U00 blooms. Do you want j food? It is the chief diet otf the whole nations. One palm in Chile will yield ninety gallons ' of honey. In Polynesia it is the chief food 1 of the inhabitants. In India there are mul ! titu es of people dependent upon it for sus , tenance. ' Do yoo want cabfoto hold Abie or cords 19 iiokl wild beasts? It is wound into ropes ? tHibreakahie. Do yon Want articles of house farnitnre? It is twisteiinto mat* and woven into baskets and shaped into drinking cups and swung into hammocks. Do you want roei*e.ne? Its nat 13 the chief preventive of i disease and the chief cure for vast popula tions. Do you want bou*s? Its wood curn : ishes the wall for the homos, and its le tves ' thatch them. Do you need a supply for the pan? re? It yields su?ac and starch an I oil and milk and salt and wax and vif?gar and candles. Otv4te*p*ii?l It has a variety of eu low ttents, sachas no other growth that ever rooted VL" earth or Hstfe 1 the h^aVent To I the willow. God saya. "Standby the water I courses ?c<f weep." rotne'esaar tie says, r **Sitfcertbe harricinea irrtoiyour boaota."' To the fig^ree He says, "Bear fruit and put j it within reach of sdl the people." But to the palm tree He says, "Be gardeu agd storehouse and wardrobe and ropewa k and chandlery and bread and banquet an 1 man* ufactorv. and then be type of what 1 meant when I inspired Davi ?, Ay servant, say. The righteous shall flourish like a palm tree." Ob. Lord God, give us more palm trees men and women made for nothing but to be useful ; dispositions all abloom; branches of influence laden with fruit; people "good for everything, as the palm tree. If kind words are wanted they are ready to * utter them. H he.pful deeds are needed they are ready to perform them. If plans of usefulness are to be laid out they are ready to project them. If enterprises are to be forwarded j they are ready to lift th<gn . People who I say"*"STes! YesP wheu they are asked for assistance by word or deed, instead ef "viol NoP' * ^ _ Most of the mysteries that bother others do not bother me, because I adjourn them; but the mystery that really bothers ua is why God made so many people who a -ount to nothing so far as the world's bett*r-nent is concerned. They stand in the way They object, Tbey discuss hindrances. They suggest possibilities Of failure.-* Over the - road of life, insteacfrof pafiiiif in the traced they are Iving back in the breecUnzs. 'i hey are the everlasting No. They are bramble trees, thev are willows, always mourning; i or wild cherry trees, yielding only the bit ter; or crab apple trees, producing only the sour, while .God would havi us au flourish like the palm tree, rianteo m.wie oioie mac tree alwavs means usefulness But how little any of us or all of us ac complish in that direction. We take twenty or thirty years to get fully ready for Chrlv tian work, and in the after part of Hfe wa take ten or twenty years lor the gradual closing of active work, and that leaves oc.ly so little time between opening ani sloping work that all we accomplish is so little an angel of God needs to exert hwseK to see it aH. j ? Nearly everything I see around, beneath and above in the natural world surest* useful service. If there is fothing in th* , Bible that inspires you to usefulness,' go out , - and study the world around yoa this spring- ; time, aad learn the great L*aon of useful nesa. 'What art doing there, uttU star? Why not tfrat thine eyes and s>eep for Who cares far for fhy sbiwng?* 'lNo,"' ? saith the star, "I will not i leep. I guide ' the sssiilor on theses. I cheer the traveler f nrrong the mountains. I bel? tip the dew with light. '-Throu th the win?low of the ; poor man's cabin I cast a beam of hopvaad i tie ctnNL on her mother's lap asks mgiee wbit?:^r I come snd what I dc and whence I J gr. To srleam and srlitter, Goi set me here, j A*av ! I have no time to sle-n>.** The snowflake comes strangling down. "Frai', fickle wanderer, why cotnest thou *i bc-re?^ "I am no idle wanderer, " responds | th-^ snowflake. "High up in the air I was "bora, the child of As rain aaft the ceHt^and j at the divin3"bi?hest f cone, anil am nc j s' ra^sler, for Go^i tells me where to put my crystal heel. To bolp cover the roots, the j prain and 5,r iss> to cleans the air. to isicn%cr>n raori harwrtv and the iazle firs more hWght. I com*. Though *> li rht { an that ywvto^ me flrora your nwfflt an-1 ? ?xu-h me u*i^er ymr :'oat, I am dotoj; my Wt to fn'fvl What I was made for. C.otne-i In white I come-ou a heavenly' mission, and, when my work isd^ayanl G^isball oill.ia roonting vapor I shall go back, drawn by the flerv courses of the sun." "jX hat doest thou, insignificant gr^sa Vad" Srn^er rr?^ trI ?rn d.-?n-r j a?yi tee grass t>ia te. "as best 1 can. Iii'Mpip ; fc) diake up the soft beauty of iell ?nl lawn. 1 am sati^fie !, if. with mClioas oZ other? no bigger than I. we can givs pasture to Socks an i herd?. I am wonderfully made. He who feeds thajavens gives su'wtaaca from the soil and breath from the air, aad He who clothes the lilies of the field rewards xne with rhis coat of green." "For what, lonely cloud, goest thou across. ; the heavwa**': Throuarb the bright air a voice drops from arar, saying: "Up and down this sapphire floor I pace to teach men that like roe tfcey ire passing, a way. I gather up tbepntersHwiki lake dud and tiMB, wbtn tbethunde* toll I.ref rfcsh tbTgarth, ] TT>*ting the dry ground to laugh with har vests of wheat and fields of corn. 1 eatch the frown of the storm and tie huea of the rainbow. At evening tide 6a the wtitofa slopes I will pitch my tent, and over me shall d*?h the saffron, and the purple, and the fire of the sunset. A pillar of cloud like me led the chosen across the desert, and sur rounded by such as I the J udge of Heaven and Earth will at last descend, for "Behold He cooieth with clouds P * Ob, my friend?, if anything in the Inan imate world be useful, let us immortal men j and women be uselu", and in that respect be ; like the palm tree. But I must not be ; tempted by wnat David says ot that green i sbatt of Palestine, that living and glorious J pillar of the eastern gardens*, as seen ra-olden | times ? the palm tree; I must not be tempted j by what the Oid Testament says of it, to J jeseen my emphasis of what John, the evan- | gelifit, says of it in my text. Notice that it was a beautiful and law;ful robbery of the palm tree that helped make np Christ's triumph on the road to Jerusalem j *h*t Palm Sunday. The long, broad, green : eaves that were strewn under the feet of the colt and in the way of Christ were torn off | from the trees. What a pity, some one j might say, that "those stately and graceful . trees should be despoiled. Tbe sap oozed out 1 at the places where the branches broke, j The glory of the palm tree was appropriately ' sacrificed for the Saviour's triumphal pro fession. So it always was, so it alwayvwiU be in this world ? no worthy triumph of any Sort witnout the tearing down of something else. Brooklyn Bridge, the glory of our conti nent, must have two architects prostrated, the one slain by his toils and the other for a ' ifetime invalided, The greatest pictures.of ; Kbe world had, in their nchqst coloring, the blood of the artists who made them. The"! mightiest ofa tones that ever rolled through 'he churches had in their pathos, the signs ?md groans of th ; composers, who wore their iveeout in writing tbe harmony. Amerwam ^dependence was triumphant, but it moved on over the lifeless forms of tens of thou sands of men who fell at Bunker Hill and Yorktown and the battles between which , were the hemorrhages of the nation. j The kingdom of God advances in ail the earth, but it must be over the lives. of mis sionaries who die of malaria in the jungles or Christian workers who preach and pray and toil and die in the service. The Saviour triumphs in all directions? but beauty and strength must be torn down from the palm trees of Christian, feeroisaa-atid consecration and thrown, in His pathway." } To wbat better use could those palm trees on the southern shoulder of Mount Olivet i end clear down into the Valley of Geth semane put their branches than to surrender them for the making of Christ's journey toward Jerusalem the more picturesque, the more memorable and the more tiuniphant? And to what better use could we put our liv<rs than into the sacrifice for Christ and His cause and the happiness of on !?' fellow creatures? Shall we not be willing, to be torn down that right eousness shall have triumphant way? Christ was torn down for us. Can we not afford to be torn down for Him? If Christ could suffer ao much for us, can we not suffer a little for Christ? If He can afford on Palm Sunday to travel to Jerusalem to carry a crosQ, can we uot afford a few leaves from our branches to make emerald His way? 'ih* process is going on every moment in alt directions. What makes that 'father have such hard work to find the hymn to- , day? He puts on his spectacles and holds the book close up, and then holds it far off. and is not quite sure whether the number of the hymnis 190 or 180, and the fingers with I which he turns the leaves are very clumsy. ; He stoops! a good deal, although once he was ! straight as an arrow, and his eyes were keen ] as hawk's, and the hand he offered to his bride on the marriage day was of goodly shape and as God made it. I will tell you what fa the matter. Forty years ago he resolved his family should have no need and his children should be well edu cated and suffer none of the disadvantages j of lack oZ schooling from which he had j suffered for a lifetime, and that the wolf ?of I hunger should never put its paw on his door"* j sill, and for forty or fifty years he has been 1 tearing off from the palm tree of his physi cal strength and manly form -branches to throw in th^ path way of his household. It has cost him muscle and brain and health and eyesight, and there have been twisted off more years from bis life than any man in the crowd on the famous Palm tounday twisted off branches from the palm trees on the road from Bethpage to Jerusalem. What makes that mother look so much older than she really is? You, say she ought ? not yet to have one gray liae in hsr hair. The truth is the firaily was" jjotr always as wsll off as ndw^--Ihe married oair had a hard struggle at the start. / Examine the tin3 of the forefinger and thu nb of her right j hand, and they will tell you the story of the | needle that was plied day in and day out. ! Yea, look at both her han is, and they will i tell the story of the time when she did her ; own work, her own mending and scrubbing and washing. Yea, look into the face and read the story I of scarlet fevers and croups and midnight I watchings, then none but God and herself in > -that house were awake, and then the burials ' and the loneliness afterward, which was ; more exhausting than the preceding watch- j ing had been, and no one now to put to bed. I How fair ghe once was, and as fair as the | palm tree, but all the branches of her strength and beauty were long ago; tern1 off and thrown into the pathway of her housed how, ... Alas! that eons and daughters, themselves so straight and graceful and educa^eif, I should ever forget tbat they are waling to day over the - (alien strength of an indus trious and honored parentage. A little ashamed, are you, at their ungrammatical utterances? It was through their sacrifices , that you learned accuracy of speech. Do yoa !o?e patience with them because they are a Jittle querulous and com plaining. I ?Urtss you have forgotten how querulous am complaining you were when you were Setting ; over that whooping cough or that iter tiittent fever. A little annoyel, are you, because her hearing is poor and you have to tell her something twice? She was not always hard of bearing. When you were two years old your first call for a I drink ut midnight woke her from a sound ?lee:) a* quick iu, uny oue will waken at ihe call ot tU? resoj'-ivi^io^ Oh, my young: lady, what is that under the sole of 'your fine &hoss? It is a palo; lea" which was torn off. the trae of maternal fidelity. Young merchant, young lawyer, vowng journalist, young mechanic, with good salary and fine clothes an I refi oed sur rounding have you^ " ^ your father had that raeFs crops had failed; floods or locust, and coat too long and rat he might keep you What is that, mv voi?Bgj& fine boot to-day, thejboat^ your foot, such "a booi^s; never afford to wearPW' It must be a leaf your father's self ashamed of him when : because his manner? try to smuggle te?,i but call in your I the house of God pastor, and sav.^t had kept tor he gave yoij. and as weU, " English P. a great sr , Lord derisive1 _ when you bJa ? "Yes,'' reolied tft well?" surrout we wal 1 hai the unple remember1 __ I remember bow mvH.'ebis for part moved over a roaa sort witn green feav?e. Tbe? wer**orn ol two p?lrtrtre<e?" thatstfeod aif the state of the a&adj prayets, j4h? Christian example, fjth? | 1, advice, the hard work of my fifth* a mofber. How thev tbtled! Their finders were knotted witn hard work. Tfceir fore heads were wrinkled with raajif carei. Their backs :stooped from carjryin| burden?. 1 " ? They long ago We^t into slumber ambife their kindred and friends on the banks of the Rarit&t), but the influences tbey threw in the way of their children ar3 yet green a* leaves the moment tbey arte plucked from a palm tree, and we feel th?n} on our brow and under our feet, and th*y wilfstrew 111 the way until we li? down in the same slum ber. Self sacrifice! What k thrilling word. Glad am I that our worl I his so many specimens of it. The sailor bov on shio nbara was flerviea necaits? lie would not aght or gamble, and they caliedLhi n a caw ardL But when a ciliM- fettoVerboani and no one else was rea^f to r sailor leaped into the ins, and* though iitie. 1 waves were rough, the sailor, swimming ! with one arm, cnrried the csiilJ on the other ' arm till rescued nn i re?cuor were lift el- into safety, and the cry of coward ceased and all buxz&ed at the s??ne of darinir and self If eel this morumg as did the Israelites when on their rajrei to C-^nite, they cam-* not under the shadow of one paitn tree, but of seventy palit tree* standing in an oas;s among a tfoBsn mussing roa-UMta$ oir.as tfe? Book pBt?ijt,i1,Twdiv ? welts waiter arid three soore sad te? pai n trass." ^arel) there are more than s~v.u**> ?sch great au-i glorious souls present to-day. Indeed, it is a murhtv grove of calm trees, and I feel S?hieg?&g o? toe rajSEdFasTWhlcn r shall IM when opr last battle fought, and our last " "" ' * i our last tear &rept, w? in ?mtf rqteesfand palms Hail tjboa bright, thou swift advancing, fbon svarlasting PWm Sunday of th? skies' Victors over siaaad.y*ro* and death and woe, from the huisand valleys of the heav enly Palestine thejrfiave pluck?! the Ion? troad. green leaves and all the ramaomed? some m gat te or peart, am some on oauie-* ; mentft of amethyst, and some on *treetB of V < fold, and soma on seas of sapphire, they i audi stand in numbers like the stars, in i qplendor hks fee morn, waving their palms! ? NEWSY GLEANINGS. I The iron-ore trade is doing nothing. Incendiaries are busy in New Y<^-k City. \ The Indian cotton crop is the worst ever j known,--: The .Mississippi Legislature ad journed. The famine in the north of Hungary is spreading. Titt wholesale price of whalebone is now i HO. 000 per ton, Chinese lepers are becoming numerous on ! the Pacific Coast. There is a great scarcity of corn in some i of the provinces of Mexico. The Argentine Republic has suspended . I telegraphic communication . The City of Mexico is flooded with counter- ; feit silver dollars and halves . ^ The border of the Cheyenne reservation Is ! lined with anxious home-seekers. Indians of British Columbia are afraid to assist in lading of sealing vessels. The total cost of the World's Fair at Chi cago is now estimated at 122,000,000. More than a thoiisandwomen voted at the school elections in Bloomington, III. W x are exporting between three and four ! millions bushels of wheat every week. The Directors of the Chicago World's Fair I have spent $29,000 already in postage. Halifax, Nova Scotia, is to be made a general cattle-shipping port for all Canada. There are six Piute Indians taking the regular course at the Carson (Nev.) Business Institute. A deficit of over 31,000 bales is reported \ in the March movement of cotton as against last year. Iowa has forwarded to the Eastern sea board 32,010 tons of corn and flour for the relief of starving Russians. Canada's internet revenue for 1891 was $7,000,000, or *800,000 less than in 1890, the decrease lrom spirits being over $1,000, 000. Thousands of cattle have perished from ?cold and storms in Oklahoma and Tnriinn Territory. The loss is thirty or forty per cent The people of Naples, Italy, are again in dread of an eruption of Vesuvius. The flow of lava is redder than usual and other signa indicate danger. A lawyer's surety company' has been formed in New York City with a capital of 1500,000. Its business is to furnish bon s as surety in law suits. Cold storage buildings are to be erected in Paris, Franoe, with a capacity of 30,000 tons of beef and mutton, which would give full rations for fifty days in case of a sieges The Russian offiicals are said to appro priate the food sent from America. They see men and women dropping dead cn the street from starvation,* but make no effort to Clieve them. A petition, signed bj 400,000 Chinese in as country, to the "Emperor of China sets forth the disabilities under which they labor in this country and asks for retaliation on the part of the mother country. The German sentinel who, a few days ago, killed a man who bad assaulted him in front of the barracks of the Tnird Klgiment of the Guards in Berlin has been promoted by Em perior William's order to be a corporal. The coffee crop of Brazil has been so large that the railroads of one of the Provinces have for weeks been blocked, every availa ble car being in service, freight depots being crowded ana further receipts of coffee being declined. THELABORWORLD, The undergarment cutters have formed m open union. ) The window glass factories in the TJaited States decided to shut down May 31v There are 4175 men employed on the grounds of the World's Fair, at Chicago. The Princess Vischhegrandsky is at the head of the Russain peasant lace industry. The lumbermen and planing mill workers of Pennsylvania have formed a State organ ization. Electricity in its various forms of ap plication is said to give employment to 5,000,000 persons. In the most advanced Continental glass manufactories glass blowing is no longer done by the mouth but by compressed air. About 25,000 workers are to be locked out by t!:e Staffordshire (England) potters, the former refusing to settle disputes by arbi tration. i". About 200 employes have been laid off on ijejrsev Central and Lehigh Valley rail ' " t>, the first fruitsof the Reading combi 'llTl8S0the numberjof workers employed in American woolen mills was 161,557. Ten yean have increased the number of hands toS2I,032. ' Since April 1 the Southern Express Com pany bap discharged about ninety express ^members for being members of the Messen gers' Brotherhood. The membership of the Telegraphers' Mu ? tual Benefit Association has increased about 1000 this year. The organisation will cele brate its- twenty-fifth anniversary next year. .. v i \ The London (England) Polytechnic, a ?popular institution for the promotion of the education of the working classes, will ar range a series of workingmea's excursions to the World's Fair in 1893. Lead mixing is done by workingmen wearing a mask, in which are inserted sponges on a level with the hose and mouth. It is in this manufactory that the glass panes perforated in conical -shaped apertures to admit the air are made. Nzw Your telephone girls work nine hours a uay; Boston girls are kept at the switchboard !Lne and a half hours. Thirty minutes is the time allowed inbothcompa* lunch and there are two intermis sious for rest during the day of fifteen min tire receipts of the Brotherhood of Trainmen in 1885 amounted to i07, while duriug the first two months *87,937.17 were received, or $15. iore"tban during the first three years Brotherhood's existeuc?. Last month Members were gaia3d. The entire " subordinate lodges is 50& } L | Martha Washington's Fa'i. 3aid that a faa owae.l and usel j 'ija Washington is still in ex- j denervation. It is regarded as a r^rjpsity aSd $1000 has been j l.forifcaud rehired. When un? ed^ aerijes of pictures may be seel $W<ril.' One, a,j>or trait of Georgl represents ;%im at the ag< een, \rearing the military uui captain, and being the onlj in his youth, as far ai^ increases the value of j a*' MS ive is an angel crownings reath, and kneeling neai ; him is an Indian adorned wjth flowerj anj| Ceatheraj arrayed ia1 the robes ofiiher \ staf f lunu^ribh ft $iitk>a&T ei of t He acceptance oi )n*8 left itands the figurg Jbefaceof the fun bs.?r? _ns of S-lje Washington-, ai: I^the color?is%tflf bnglit and diitinci. k)ftrOit Free Frew. if \<i ti pi **krd peace. ? Wastym ribetty. * f'^Scoati<? jlrms ?* A Galvanic 'Caterpillar Teaser. Cart Hering, the electrician has in vented, a curious devices potest titer pillars from crawLfa^' tip' trees. Mr. Henng's scheme if stmpfj-- tcj: run alter nate WfceroUqg ^ w ^ _ .trunk of; the free, aNvdmancc of abcn_~ rial fan inch apart. \Vhen the w/rea have been placed in position Hr. Citer- j pillar starta his ascent. He siukr/ the copper wire, |>okes his little n >se/ over it, and continues. Half au inch further j up his feet strike the copper win.*, [while his body is still i?contncr, with tlje coi? per. Immediately the current is cttrrie I through his &ody. With a howl pam Mi? Cater pitta rM?p* Ltcafd, or'*' if tlie curreut'be strong enough. remain; a prisoner until the ?r; j.ij reaper comv?* ; Philadelphia Keqoni "V ? / i / \ - i k sabatoqa do. HELPLESS W91 1 miS AH II IX CLCDED FROM HOSPITALS AS INCCRAJBLBi I The Rmabkabli Kxfuueitck o jr Gba& QuaJTT AS ISVESTIQAWD ?T A* AL* - BA5T (N. Y.V Journal R?o*> EE? A StO&T o? Sua PASSING ImX&MT. r Albany, N. Y. Journal, March lath. 1 . Saratoga, March 11th.? Far anw* tjo? tl?re have been reports hero nod else where in Saratoga County of a most remark awe? Indeed, so remaika le as to be miracu lous? -cure of a most severe of locomotor ataxia, or creeping paralysis, simply by the: ?' a popular remedy known is '-Pink People,'' prepared and pat up f i by the Dr. Williams Medicine Company, Mornstown, 31. Y., and* Brockviie, Orit! 1 1 Tbe story wa*-to the effect that Mr. Chas. ? A. Quant, of Gal way, who for the last six or eight years has been a great sufferer from creeping paralysis and its attendant ills, and ?. become utterly, powerlew of all; *?"~beiD, had, by the use of a few boxes of ' 1. , 3 *or People, been so folly ' restored to health as to oe able to waJx' ?tout the street without the aid of crutches. The fame of this wonderful, miraculous cure was bo great that the Evening Journal re porter thought it worth his while to go to balway to call on Mr. Quant, tojearn from . nl* Irps, and from the observation *nd testi mony of his neighbors, if his alleged Cere was a fact or only an unfounded rumor. An J so he drove to Gal way and spent a day and a night there in visiting Mr. Quant. ? getting his storv and interviewing his neighbors and fellow-townsmen. It may be proper to say that Gal way is a pretty little !' village of about 400 people, delightfully : iocaU*i near the centre of the town in , Saratoga County, and about 17 miles from Saratoga Springs. rnP?Di the residence of Mr. Charles A. Quant was easily found, for everybody seemed to know him, speak well of him, and to be overflowing with suiprise and satisfaction at his wonderful cure and restor ation to the activities of enterprising citi- ? Ken ship, for 'Mr. Quant was born in Qalway and had spent most of his life there. Mr. Quant was fouua at hie pretty home, on a pleasant street nearly opposite the academy, i In response to a knock at the door it was o; ened by a man who, in reply to an inquiry If Mr. Quant lived there and was at home, said: "lam Mr. Quant, Willvoacotne inrii After a little general and preliminary conver sation, and after he had been apprised of the object for which the Journal reporter h?h called upon him, he, at request, told the story of himself and of his sickness and1 terrible sufferings, and of the ineffectual 1 treatment be had ha 1, and of his final cure by the use of Dr. Williams's Pink Pills fori Pale People, and cheerfully gave assent to its use for publication. He said: MMy name is Charles A. Quant. I am 87 years old. 1 1 was born in the village of Gal way., and, ex- 1 cepting while traveling on business and a little while in Amsterdam, -have spent myi whole life here. My wife is a native of Ontario. Up to abbut eight years ago I ' never been sick and^as then in perfect health. 1 was fully six feet t*li weighed 180 pounds and was very stn)ng. Por twelve years 1 was a traveling salesman for a piano and organ company and had to do, or at least' did do, a great deal of heavy lifting, got my meals very irregularly and slept in enough 'spare beds' iu country houses to freeze any ordinary man to death, or at least give him the rheumatism. About eight years ago I began to feel distressed in my stomach ?n4 con- " suited several doctors about it. They all said it was dyspepsia, and for dyspepsia I was treated by various doctors in different ' places, and took all the patent medicines I could hear of that claimed, to be a* cure for dyspepsia. But I continued to grow grad ually worse for four yeari Then I began to ha.vn pain in my back and legs and became conscious that my legs were getting weak and my step unsteady, and then I staggered when 1 walked. Having received aobenefit from tbe use of patent medicines, and feeling that I was constantly growing woree, I then, upon advice, began the use of electric belts, pads and all the many different kinds or electric appliances I could hear of, and spent hundreds of dollars for them, but they did me no good . (Here Air. Quant showed- tbe Journal reporter an electric ?uit of under wear for which he paid 1124.) In the fall of 1888 the doctors advised a change of climate. 60 I went to Atlanta, Ga., and acted as agent for the Estey Organ Company. While there I took a thorough electric treatmenfcpbut it only seemed to aggravate my disease, and the only relief I could get from tbe sharp and distressing pains was to take mor phine. The pain was so intense at that it seemed as though I oould inot stand it, and I almost longed for death as the orfly certain relief. In .September of 1888 my legs gave out entirely and my left eye was . drawn to one side, "? so that I* had double sight and was diasy. My trouble ap affected my whole nervous By stem that I had^o give up business. Then I re turned to NewHt^k and went to the Rooee velt bospkalj whereT&*^four months I was treated by specialists ancK they pronounced my case locomotor ataxia and ; incurable. After I had been under treatment by Prof. Starr and Dr. Ware for four months, they lold me they had done all they coold for me. Then I went to the New York hospital on Fifteenth street, where, upon examination, they saidJL^ajyacuraWeand would not take ine in. < At the" Presbyterian hospital they examined me and told me tbe same thing In March, 1897, I was taken to St. Pete?s J hospital in Albany, where Prof. H. H. liun frankly told my wife my case was bd^eless; that he oouid do nothing for me and that she had better take me back home and save mymoney. But I wanted to make a trial under his treatment for nine weeks, but se ? I cured no beneht. All this time I; had been SHSLT*** ^ :h<t4 become ; totiwly 55SST!! ^ W*Wst down add had partly lost control of my hands. The pain ^ITlSe; ?y let8 as though they ^.a?d my ^madi would not re veI1 awa7 10 120 pounds. * they riot 17 hi ?Tt?LCk one d*y red hot irons, and after a few days they put 14 more burns on and treated me With elec tricity but I got worse rather tbkn better ?h ? nly "bowels and water, an i upon advice ot thedbctor, who said there was no^hope for me, J. was brought home, where it was thought that death Would soon come to relieve me of my sufferings. Last September, wnilein this helpless and suffer ing condition, a friend of mine in Hamilton, Unt.. called rny attention to the statement of one John Marshal!, whose case had been similar to aiy own, aud who had &tn cured by the use of Dr. Williams's Pink Pills for r ale People. In this case Mr. Marshall, who is a promi nent member of the RoyaT Templars of i emperance, had after four years of con stan* . fitment by the most eminent Caua uian ? .ijsieiahs. bren pronounced inourable anu was paid t he *1000 total disability claim allowed by the order in such cases. Some months after Mr. Marshall began a course of treatment with Dr. Williams's Pink Pills, and after taking some 15 boxes was fully re stored to health. . I thought I would try them, and my wife sent tor two boxes of the pills and 1 took them according to the directions given on the wrapper oe each box. For the first few ava the mid bath* were oretty sgyere. as I waa so very weak, but I .continued to follow instruction^ as to taking tbe pillg and treat ment, and even- before I had used up the began feel beneticial effects from theip. My pains were not so ^tter ; be- atts**' o* "JWtehsa^my j* FF*?"* ever, and now. iple \re the opportunity of bearing testimony tp the high character of . Mr. Qunnt, and of verifying the story o I bis re?*ve ry from the terrible affliction fr6m which b* Had forjso Iobr a time beon a *iifferer. " Truly, tbe* -Joty of the physician is not to save Ji?^ but w.-he*i disease. , The remarkable result from the use of Dr.t W illiA;j>rf? P.afc" Pitts lathe case of Mr.? Quauw induced tbe reporter to make further-' itfqmrwis cnhcHrrifitg thenj, and tteaaftO* taioe-i that tboy are n>ta patent m> iu the sense in which that term is generally used* t>ut a ui^hly seieutific preparation. tflp ^ | ieeuit ot years of study 'and careful < mem. ? TUey have no rival m ft ?amy, a ad all watary eooditkn of 2^ sciatica, Bt Vftoifc < heart, that tM .n '<M|vaiB_ -oi-ni Dr. WUaatfi Flak Pills art iUsa a qpjKifla for trouble pomHar tofemak^j awh waop* prwriont, irregularities, and jail fonts of , weakness. They boild up the llood aod ra ttan thsglow o < baaftn to pile or allow efcaska In the case of laeajthey aCeota radical care la all oeeee arista^} front jaentel worry, overwork, or noaai : of w bate Tar nature. 1 On farther inquiry tbewrij? found that thaee pill* are manufacture! by Tin Dr. WiitiaeM Medicine Co., Brotkrilla, OfttL aad Morristown, N. Y.,; and are t*kl hi boxes (never in balk by the hundred), at to ceatea box, or six boxes for 98.30, and taay be had of all druggists or direct by mail from Dr. Williams Medicine Co., from either address. The price at which tbeee pills are sold makes a coarse of treatment comparatively inexpensive as hampered with other remedies or medical treatment, i POPULAR SCIENCE. mrnrnm?mmmm Wire glass is a new material. Pennsylvania has 270,000 acres of anthracite Erastus Wiman says railroads will soon be run by electricity. Half a gallon of train dil an hour will calm the most boisterous ^oa. Chrono<{Taphs are now wade that will measure one ten-thousamjth part of a second. T Excellent results have been obtained in England in the use of electricity for bleaching paper. Cork, if suuk 200 feet deep in the ccean, will not rise on account ot the pressure of the water. >.The average residue of a$he3 left after the cremation of the jhuman body amounts to only eight ounoes. If geologists be correct New Zealand^ is a fragment of a continm t whiqh sanfei beneath the waters as the new world roso. It is a relic of a bygone age. The nebula in Orion is a iue telescopic object now. The great b ack space in this nebula is known among unpoetic itar gazers as tbe "coal. hole." No star has ever been dctecte I ioj this tvhole in the universe. " Rich organic phosphate J deposits have been recently discovered j in Trinidad, West Indie3. The specimfens are eaid to *how ninety per ceat. of phosphate, and (vithout any chemical treatment it has palved valuable as a fertil zer. There are many cases it which an ex traordinary intellect has accornpiniei icavy brain weight, but. the records ihaw that men whosa n^ental abilities (?ve never been questioned have had orains'under the average iu both size And weight. The theory advanced several years ago that the pass through wuicfc the Tueoiul flacier in Switzerland is n?>"v runniag at OQe time contained no icaL is confirmed by a recent discovery of coiu3 under the ' glacial ice. These coins j bear tie like aess of Augusts aad l)ioclet?fo. In 18S7 a horseshoe was found. Snails' eg^s absorb moisture. The most singular thing abont them, how ever, is their marvelous Vitality. They may be burnt in a furnace and thu* re duced to powder, yet on the application of moisture they swell *nd regain their,, vitality, hatching out its freely an! suc cessfully as if they had b^en let alone. The tonal products of combustion are the sam^, whether gas, Wood or coal w burnt. A gas stove givjes oft a large quantities of carbonic acifl gas and small amounts of more or less prisonous hydro carbon compounds. Altliougb less offen sive ,than the gases arising from a coal or wood fire they are still uiihealthful, and the only safe way is to connect the gas stove with a chimney, aq that the pro ducts of combustion mijr pass into the open air. ; Alexander Agassiz fin 6s that the ani mal life of the Pacific as a whole com pares but poorly with that of the Car ribean Sea on the other side of the Isth mus. This is probably due to the ab sence of a great current like the Gulf Stream, which bears with a large amount vof food, and serve3 to Supply the deep sea fauna along its coursei. It is the Gulf Stream which is supposed to be largely responsible for the enormous rn:t33 of floating vegetation knoiva as the Sirgasso Sea. A device to preveut fengineers from passing curves at to ) great speed consists of a standing fork provided with a point which inscribes a curve on the smoked surface of a cyliuder revolved by a suit aTOs mechanism. The instrument is fixed at any. desired part of the line, and as the Jtraio ^passes the mechanjsm is set in mo tion, the wheels of the jeagine sto^pwig the revolution of the device ;i3 they ie:tyer the curve, The spce:l of the train canbe readily determine j by counting the vibra tions of the fork as show# on the cylinder. Cooking as a Science. "Cooking is as nidcU a science as coexistry," said Miss P^irioa to Foster Coates recently. "It i*of the first im portance that every woman who is to have the direction aud care ofr*>"8-'household, whether large or small, should know how best to use money for what is wholeso no and palatable, and understand the prin ciples upra which food can be most economically cooked. No woman should l>e considered as less accomplished or re fined because she his giyen considerable attention to household duties, and can, if need be, prepare a dinner better than the average hired cook. Mistresses ought to be in every respect the su;>erior? of their servants instead of being bt their mercTj as they too often unfortunately are. "Every womau ou^ht to study domes" tic science. She may lie so placed later as to have no occasion to avail herself of the information acquired, but she will have lost nothing by her effort to gain the knowledge; for this homely branch is really all-importaut,! siuce it affccts the body, the mind, the purse and the morals of the family. Where you find n high order of cooking, ?you will ?nd also refinement in. other inspects. While we, ;as a people, oug'qt to live better than any other natsoo, we live? - too many of t us ? on repetitious of poor disbe=, and the wtete in preparing them is something th*t pains one who stops to consider it. A French peasant, with nothing mor&iat command than many an American ioua?^fe would look upon as absolutely viluelesj, can get forth a raosv appejfcisi i|f though sim ple meal, solely becai 13* oV superior knowledge of tlie wayv to a natural ability to the right fccvor. ..-s 1 ' 1 "There ought to be simewiierfe in the United States a normal school of cookery where teachers could be grained for thijir work, and in every tow* there should be rt room where txirls cduld be sent at least once a week from t-ke public schools to learn t lie first principles of cieaaliness an i of cooking. Such al course would surely decrease the percentage of crim inal* and paupers, for (unclean homes and improper food ha*e much to do with the filling of prisons rad J alms houses. It seems as if the Government could not forever be blind to its own in terest ;ia this matter. Some day a de u-iuii may be made for such schools oh t^e.?core of humanity, r ? Hail and Ex u-i?3 Mi cook food, and the tfkhefc just u a! r. - n DIHip nmww wm? wviy 1 h~ extensive riounterfeftio^ of Ha wains n ttatpps. it l>mdoi lately the police ar rested thre4 nien eogajtd in such wftic> *nd found: millions of | stamps, chetpcals ,ind tools* in their possession. An en paver testified to hirrlng filled an order for 1000 0112 and two- cent stamps in blue and oaroiioe. Tka OiUr Oil KnrPHtUi . cur you turn ran word? These U 1 8 inch display advertisement In this paper, this week, which has no two words a! I :<e except one word. The tame is trueor each new aoe appearing each week, from The Dr. Barter M?lltlne Co. This house places a "Creacent^ on sreryt hlng they make and pub lish- Look. forlt.Bend them the name of the word and thpy will return you book, biacti rct MTHcoaupw or samples rasa. Thb Mamotiasetti State Board of Afri* eotture reportai the abandoned farms of thai State to be 900. , Ladies oeeiin^ a tonic, or children who want building up, should take Brown s Iron Bitters, it is olcas uit to take. cures Malaria, Indigestion, Billo isuess anl Liver Com plaints, makes the Blood rich aud pure. Girls c*er twelve can make valid wills under the laws of Scotland. .Mast periotis are broken down from over work or f>ou>e!iold cart'3. Brown's Iron Bit ters rebni da the system. ai<t-> digestion, i e move> except; of bile, and cures malariA. A ependid tonic for women and children. Swede* and Norwav ere preparing to ea ter the Garni act anti-Drotecttonist losjfue. Mr.C. D. P^yiie, publisher of the I'nio'n Signal, Chicago, 11 L.twrites: "I m-ver saw anything that would rury headache like your Brauycrotine." Fifty centa.^ The steel Tall makers of this country now have orders an hand for 600,000 tons of rails. Bkecmam'h Pills sre not a new remedy. They have been used In Europe for 50 years, all well tested and excellent. Or the 73,000 moaners of the Kansas Far mers' AUIkjkm there are only 7500 whose farms are not mortgaged. FITS stopped free by Dr. Kuxe's Great " , Restorer. No fits after first day's use. ecur*. Treatise and S3 trial bottle , "^lln(t. 931Arch fet., Phlja., Pa. O, /ON? ENJOYS Both tbo method mid results whet Syrup of Figs is taken; it if pleasant and refreshing to the taste, and acta eerily yet promptly on the Kidneys Liver aud Bowels, cleanses the sya> tem effectually, dispell colds, head ache and fevers and cores habitual constipation. Syrup of Figs is tha Wily remedy of its kind ever pro- ? duced, pleiising to the taste ana ac ceptable tc the stomach, prompt in its action and trulr beneficial in ita effects, pre pased only from the most healthy and agreeable substance* Its many excellent qualities oom mend it to all and bare made it the most popular remedy known. Srrup of Figs is for sale tor6%? And fl bottles by all leading drug |ists. Any reliable druggist who may not have it on band will pro cure it promptly for any one who wishes to 'try it Do not aocept anjriuhfitilute. CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO, BM FHANOtSOO, O.iL. tews vrttf trr roitt. ? * ? AP A IHONTI1 f<*3Brirtt Yoonf Mtnor vKK LMW In c*ch Addrwn P. W. yvv zieuleb sc cp., p*n?.? ra. kansasTarmssi^s rood prioca. Farm* for nl? at bargain*. list fraa. CI1AB* *. WOO LIT, Oaten* Kja IVfiLL I fill kll pi?? ocnt for 10c. poiUM fh? . J. My era, 1313 Market 8t*. PhlU.. T% Ely's Cream Bain QUICK LIT CI' RES COLD i> HEAD j Kiceim ?ZEIEZ3 Apply Palm into oach nostril. KEY BROS., 5f Warren St., N. Y. lull's Tiny Pills iitimuUtr tlic torpid liver, ?) rcngChen the <1 live organs, regulate tlie bowel a, i|nd are unequaled ar.an nntl hiltoux medicine. Dooe Kntall. Price; 25c. Office, 39 4 41 Pnrlt Place, N. V. "German I Syrup" ! I must say a word as to the ef- ! ficacy of German Syrup. I have used it in my family for Bronchitis, i the result of Colds, with most ex- ! cellent success. I have taken it my- i self for Throat Troubles, and have derived good results therefrom. I j therefore recommend it to my neigh bors as an excellent remedy in such cases. James T. Durette, Earlys- j ville, Va. Beware of dealers who offer you "something jwjt as good." i Always insist on having Boschee's German Syrup. \ Q Kennedy's MedicalDiscovery Takes hold in this order : Bowels, Liver,, , j Kidneys, Inside Skin, Outside 8kin, j tttor? It th*l oagM MMnV j You know whether you need it op not. MA kT ?rugjl*t, md manufactured by DONALD KENNEDY, * MASS, , 1 AU both in the way it acts, and in tjj& way it'i sold, is L>r. Pierce's FavoK, ite' Prescription for women. It act? in tlis tfay : If you're weak or ? run-do#!!," it builds you up ; if you suffer' from / any of the pjinful disorders ajyr derangements peculiar to your^sex^ it relieves and cures, It im Droves digestion, enriches the blooa, di? pels aches and pains, brings refresh* log sleep, and restores fiesh and strength. For all fung^ional weak nesses and irregularities, it's ? posi tive remedy. } Hence, It's sold in this way: it's guptanked to give satisfao* tion, in every case, or the money paid for, it is refunded. ilie&lW, \ They're t|he Smallest, the c the easiest to tnke. But all that would be nothing, * if they weren't also the fat to take. j 3 Dr. Pieree's Pleasant Pellets pr* p vent and euro Sick Headache, Bil-j ?? ious Headache, Constipation, Indi gestion, Bilious Attacks, and 'I aerangemeuta of the fisu*. ^toroaoh; and bowels, iuL 1 patents?^ KlTfOCOTT Buy or Mil your Wttwi ?|OKEB ,5-Tim Cotton 8mH. SOT CHEAPEST BUT tt$t. , For term* *ddr?M ' ' JOKES OF SnrOHAMTPH binghamton. y. ^ MJ W* "Wi J " m $50.00 t- Ail; WEEK EM. A Ifrklit, ?ro?rtn *?bu MltMMer ffrjfc it that II |M?it tuii Ir4hH1 sLV&W'fifc town or country, w d*i? m>4 * ?t ?fterwartf. A Tor the risbtperloa. Jobs art J. W. JON FREE OF CHARGE. To introduce cnir WmpUUod Xudc pi ~" enabling any ode without any pr^rlotu _ of mu?lc to play the Ptauo and <-Tf.io in & u we wlil ?<ve awfcy to anyoneonfcriBKourl Chord ln-truc(dr a-ii| Book of Aro<ttnpaMli_ elegant M ailo Folle, cvnta!nu:f ev?r IOj the latest voral and l?i8tiH!n<-?.tn1 muHb, F* OF CHARGE Tie price of the Chord lap!** and book Li onlj onr dallnr. KV? hoasn I .at, Instrument ahopld without Ui? S.inpli&Bd InatrutMor.a* Itlwtll t"*oH ftny OQeba?niopy*(a|f| AC5KNTH U'A NTRi) la ever?- City twi tBL,? in the United state* and Canada. Liberal tepM. Deaortpt.ve cfoulnr iient on application. _ - THE AMEB. fH UPLIFTED VfcKC , j 7 W. 14th *t|, b?l. gib A: Wl1> A?e?., (P?kMHfUfw tod Hoph ?tekiTiT?*ki|i|ior iithv au, 4MBit artwi CMr? for ?ttufcinptiot). It kM ??f?l ?TolP^&aot t?1 Mtikij u lath* ? ???*% ?ran* BoM ?vjAPfctM LvrifT tbe'bioaJ, ?r*? j*t? TfXnil. The kcat jfCr.ml m.?UclM k?o*a for CUio Orspnpbi?, I Fr**th. Rr AdMM, MwtWti.i _ of > porttti'. Dtyrtii>WJ riiaftn D ji'.ft'na. l imptr-s nuiow t!rW ?Terr r*roptotn or fr??m Noirf.prjkfiiTm? >f Ika to perform thlur pioorr fttartbrntj r?ri?ripa>n1? ta; oTVr<?{ta* ?rf t*D<t wt Uy :< k Hr K T AH I! fit ?T?f' eacllir.?il rtfrM??T5*H, I r;f>UU*fc\\*4 j drcMt THE UT A*8 a:rjllCAia>', MX . AtcnU KtttHTV prumi prafl. . \ Treated FREE. Positively (tired with rrjiUtio Ket__. lUvpcorM tltuoitildfct c?k?'i, (,'ur** i *t tw.unocd b* best pliy>i<u*u?. FVmii Or?i <h tymptoms rmpi^ljr disappear ; in 10 d*ji> < *.? nit ?imp(oDi< remmxl. inind f?,r .iw tr> n |wl:naibUs of mir*cnloQ? vim. |Orin>V treatment free *9 nul. J'yoti or<|?r truth mqiO i<?. i>t 'tmup* to pnyp<Mt? OK. H. If. U il BKN A ffoViKAIl&TC 00 NOT IE DtCElYEO with Knarcd*. W><1 Tulnt* Vi" Iwn.h. Injurs the Iron. w??i *K?ry? ??? Ti>? Klsln* ?nn Btove FoUr.b |5 l?rlU*l?t,Q?? lesi Dnt.ib!?, and tha consutnCt WJ lor DO US or s'-4J* pa?tese "itb every I'urcha^s ^r. THE ONLYTRtE TONIC ?li6ordcr. bulM Mrmrtli. renew appetite. r^Moro health tad Mftoref youth. Dvanrotdfl. iailliff . uon, thiUlrc-ffecU ins ni> ol nt?| y eradicated, k. Miu'l brat a r' W-'f In. irased. ? nerves, mni? rle*. ffcrcflv* n*\r forc#_ Gafferl** u tn oompiaitfU po collar tojltoir {OX, astnffit.fiiHl UDIES vivncVOl*' 1 pamphlet. % ? j' 1)1. HARTER M?9ICINEXv>., St. LouU, U* ?OLD < MEDAL, PAHIS, 107& W, BAKER & OO.'S ^ Breakfast Gocar from nlLehO:e <*<<*(? ?fol , !?m been rari6v*t1, f-?i It abmvltiMjf pure <tn4 ) it it r * oIh14c. ! . yo Chjcm ioals ate u?cJ irt |ij II * 'l,B ?<ore than ihrr*. t(t>u$ th? 'trrT>$tH Cf <W? ttKcd-lrttt? tHarcb, /:rown><%or fcfar, afcd <? therefore f.ir more ?c<* /eriliam out ck**.acx-p ltt*(i4>nciott#,o??N <<h(ng, ?U'M.c:hcnina, KAMLf jjiwkbted, tail ndTu raMy adapled (or Invalid# M well u flnr persons In hoaltb. Roll bj feroeera W. BAKER -fc CO., Dordheiter, M&ic , , , ?j |. ^ I v.- .1.-' t5 N u