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HOUSEHOLD MATTERS. To Can Corn. Use glass cans, and bo sure that they are perfect. Cut the corn from the cob, press it into the cans (with a potato piasher) till the inilk Hows over. Put on the rubber and the top, and screw down ( tight. Placo them in a boiler with sticks on the bottom, pour in cold water enough to about two-thirds cover them. Boil , livo hours. When about half cooked, , remove n can at a time, tighten the top , and replace. Use fresh corn, and begin mirl finish t.he canniutr in nni* d>iv Anv amateur can successfully can cam if she i will follow the above directions. The 1 reason so many failures in canning occur is beo use of carelessness in little things. The rubbers must be perfect of their kind. New rubbers can be had at any house-furnishing store. The cans must be perfectly clean and sweet.-, and: every stago of the process conducted with exactness. And even then, as with bread, the most careful housekeeper will sometimes fail and get '-down on her luck." j "Fl.vinjf " Glassware. I Glass is frequently said by Korvants to ' "fly of itself.'' It never flies from the I thin to the thick part, but the reverse ' invariably. We once knew a servant girl who sakl a richly cut sugar basin of a flanged shape had flown, and she found the pieces inside of it, so that by her experience g'ass not only flics but jumps. Change of temperature suddenly , causes "flyage." tor example, glass ! ( kept in a cold, frosty pantry will fly when brought into a hot rojm, so a glass from n wnrm 'nlfti ? will flv whnn inn in ' put into it. ThL-k ico plates in glass should never be used, nor should ice plates be touched by a warm hand when in use. It is best to put them upon a china plate. China dishes, nor well d'shes, in even common general earthenware, should never bo put into the oven or upoa the hot plate. Warm water, not hot, will make them sufficiently heated for use. Glass dishes should never have hot things placed in them: ''flyage'' is greatly pre ented if the dishes be warmed gradually. In frosty weather dealers oro TiTArrio/1 oKnilf r*/>Arl o ' 1 ll ^rin rr Tn 1 Ul \J HVtilVU U ?/l/UV 1U5* *U ninety-nine enses out of a hundred this 1 is from a want of knowledge of why ' glass flie-?. 1 Your glass mustard pot, often a thick one, should never be soaked in hot or even warm water. * Your decanters and water bottles [ should never be cleaned inside without 1 ? hot water. ! A little consideration will tell the ' thoughtful mind that expansion and contraction of metals (aua glass is a ' metal) should not be sudden, but grad- 1 ual and regular, in all parts alike. Very 1 thin glass does not fly from hot water ' often, it bw'ing so thin that h^at expands 11 it all at once; conaeqn -ntly it does not burst trom a part only expanding, or the ' thick and thin parts expanding un- j e ,ually. ' Hints and Reclpcs. | l?ie plant makes nice jelly by the same ] process as any other jelly; only you must i first add a little water and boil ten or < twelve minutes. It is nice flavored with 1 lemon. ' \ The Scientific . American, states that 1 plush goods and all articles dyed with i \ aniline colors, faded from exposure tc i ' light, will look bright as ever after be- | inrr cr\nrw?j?rl urifh i Mg U nibU WUIUIVIUIIU* To make grape pie, pop the pulps out 1 of the skins int<? one vessel and pat the skins into another. Then simmer the I pulp a little and run it through n colander ' to separate the seeds. Next put the skins I * and pulp together and they are leady for I pies. I - To eradicate grease; Take of soft soap ! and fuller's earth half a pound each; ' beat well together in a mortar and form 1 into cakes. The spot, after being moistened with water, is rubbed with the 1 cake and allowed to dry, when it is well rubbed with a little warm water, and rinsed or rubbed off clean. If you have soiled white Spanish or ! cachemire hce, do not throw it aside as : worthless, for it may be colored with some of the dyes now to be found in ' sma 1 packages. The lace may then be I used in a great many ways. One way is ' to trim the edge of tidies made of strips 1 of ribbon and lace, or of ribbon ar.d velvet, or of those novelties for the backs of ' chairs made t,f a strip of plain silk placed ' on each side of a very elegant strip of <' era- y patchwork. Turnips cooked in this way are not to ? be despised : Put three tablespoonfuls of butter ki a Miucepan on the stove and ( as soon as it is incited put in one small ( onion, mincud fin?, and one quart of | turnips, cut in dice; stir until they are ( brown, then add ore heaping teaspoon#..11 _ r - - - - 1 tun ui t uur mm nan a saitspoonlul of I ( pepper, stirring for two minut -s. At the end of this time add a cupful of milk or j stock and simmer for twenty minute?, | keeping the saucepan covered. Serve ( immediately. ' Chow-chow: Mime half a peek of i green tomatoes, half a peek of small i onions, one peck of tiny cucumbers aud ; six green peppers; mince the seeds; to J to these add three medium-sized heads | of cauliflower, broken in small pieces; sprinkle suit over all and lot them stand i for twenty-four hours. At the end of I this time drain the muss well and cover 1 w th vinegar. Put three heads of celery, cut in small pieces, one cupful of grated horseradi-h, h ilf a pound of ground 1 mustard, half a pound of mu-tard seed, tw.) ounces of ground b!ar k pepper, two ounccs of brown t-ugar, hair an ojocc of ground cloves and a half an ounce of turmeric into, enough eider rinegar to i cover and boil for fifteen minutes; then pour over?ihe;p ck'.es. Put in glass jars and KeepTor, ft month before using. It improves with age. * ?? 1 here is a woman in Camden, Ohio, from whise body, at different points, there.have been taken gold bars, or, \ rather, neerlles. These pieces havo varied 1 in length, from a ha'.f inch to four or * live inches, and are in thickness a little larger than a darning needle. The only < solution offered is that in early yeaw she wallowed a gold coin, or piece of gold, wl3cb, by some action of the gastric 1 juices of the stomndh, was dtasolvtfd and circulated th.ou^h the system, then, by some i;c'ioD of the blood, prcuipUatea K' V , I POPULAR SCIENCE. Professors Fisclior and Penzoldt, of Krlaugen, have established the curious fact that the seu.se of smell is by far the mo-it delicato of the senses. They find that the olfactory nerve is able to de c::t the presence of 1-2,700,000,000 of a,grain Df mercapton. According to observations made in Munich on a zinc roof which had been in ubb for twenty-seven years it is estimated bhnt such a roof l-48th of an inch in thickness would last for 1.248 yoars. It was found that the rust of zinc, instead :>f hastening, like iron rust, the oxidation on the metal underneath, really protected it. A glass as hard as any cast metal, and lot more expensive than cast iron, has been produced by Mr. F. Sicmene, of Dresden. Experiments are being made to determine whether it can be used for rails on railways. Specimens of this hard ^lass havo been found suitable for millstones and railway sleeper-. An important advantage of the glass is its transparency, as llaws can be detected before it is p.it to practical use. The Journal of Reco-mtructim states that an infant loses from three to six ounces in weight duriug the first four to jix days after birth: by tho seventh day it should have regained its birth weight: irum trim to cut' nitu montn it ought to jam about Ave ounces per week, or ibout s.x drams a day ; after the fifth xionth, about four drams a day; at the ifth month it ought to have doubled its iirth-weight. and in sixteen months quadrupled it. In many skulls from Roman and Ktrus;an tombs Dr. Marter, of Home, has discovered interesting specimens of ancienf lent stry a:.d artificial t$eth. These Int:er are in most cases carved out of the :eeth of some large animal, and in many instances are fastened to the natural teeth by b nds of gold. No fiiled teeth tiave been discovered. The skulls examned date back as far as th'e sixth century B. C., and prove that toothache and :he art of den.i try ase by no means modern institutions. A new method of preserving and transporting fresh fish has been devised by Mr. A. It. Roosen, of Hamburg, and was recently tried in England. Itconsistsin placing the fish in barrel < of steel, ea-h barrel being closed by an air-tight lid Sttcd with a small valve connection, to wbich is temporarily attached a tu'ie from a small hydraulic liaad-pump. With this pump water is forccJ into the barrel I the air beinff at the same time exneiledl jnt.l the guagc indicates a pressuro of ibout sixty pounds per square inch. The tube is then disconnected, and the barpel closed by the valve. Before the pumping begins the b :rrel i* supp'ied with sufficient fish to make th3 cargo, and an mtiseptic solution of three per cent, of boracic acid, tartaric acid, salt aud water, svith ninety-seven per cent, of fresh water. Fish have been brought in a fresh condition by this plan from Montrose, Copenhagen and the Shetland Islands for London consumption. In the west of Scotland, Stevenson Tound the average force of the waves for the five summer months tjbetill pounds per square foot, and for the six winter months 2,03ti pounds. He mentions that jn one of the Hebrides a mass of rock weighing about forty-two tons wai gradually moved five feet bv the waves in a storm. Hagcu records that in the harbor ot Uette u block of concrete measuring ?,500 cubic feet and weighing probably 125 tons, was moved on its bod over three feet. And now a late observer. Mr. E. M. Nelson, reports finding on one of the Shetland islands some granite boulders, whose appearance ind cates that they have been broken fr.?m the (litf at the water's edge as a sing!e block weighing fifty tons, cast up UO yards inland and thirty-five feet above sea 1-jvel, and i>roken in three places. This tremendous I ower of the waves is constantly grindng away exposed coasts forming new and of the removed materia1, and thus ilowly but steadily changing the contour >f the continents and inlands. Worship of Ancestor.*. During the first three weeks in April he Chinese held a prolonged "All ouls" festival in honor of their dead anlestors. Family parties are arranged for i day's outing at the graves of their departed sires. They walk many miles, jeariug stores of jjood things such as oast ducks and fowls, nnrf runk-Arl tinli rhey provide sometimes a roasted pig, 'or which the more economical substiutc a pig's hcnil with the tail in his nouth, which is symbolic of the whole inimal. As the dtmd ancestors care only ;o smell tue offerings, the family enjoy in excellent feast on their return home. Worship o/ ance tors permeates Chilese life, atlecting the most trivial details )f every day. It is the mostconservaive of influences. for it compels the Chinese to look backward, instead of forward, and (Obliges him to stop nnd think f a proi osed act may not offend the sp rits of his fathers. lie may ba a Buddhist, or a Taoui t, or a Confucian, jut his first duty is to worship his ancestors. Kven tViP n#?rvip? nf tVn? I'mniiio Djive way to this act of fi.iul reverence. It is the one thing in China which takes precedence of everything else. The mo%t important Government officer may neglect his official duties with impunity while engaged in some ceremonial associated witii this wo ship. Should his father or mother die while he is fn office, he is obliged to retire from public life for many months. A Viceroy ?f Canton was notified that his grandmother had die at Pekin. An Imperial order summoned him to attend her obsequies and to remain in mourning for one hundred days. Being a prison of dignity, he required a large retinue to attend him. He chartered a special steamer at a cost of ten thousand pounds to ? ojvey him and hi* suite to Tuku. Sea-sickness so disgusted bim with the ocean that he embarked at Shanghai, sent hi* baggage on the Btea uer. and journeyed tne rest of th<r way b; land to honor his grandmother'* remains. Yet the man who thus hono s an ancestor nee 1 not even wear mourning at a daughter's djath, much less interrupt his daily businc s on account of such an event.? Youth?* Co upanion. ' In 1800 Superintendent Cfonkl'n oi Central - Park imported fifty pairs of EnglUh: sparrows, whose descendants in I nil parts of the country it is estimated number over 100, <,00,01)0. i ' " ' ' ?r a v. +.V, :f 'i WM ITEMS OF INTEREST, General Grant was not so busy jui after the rush to tho crest of Minbin Hiu<je, and t-o he sto d with his hat o while a portrait painter took bid liKuuci down in oil. J lin Autrohus was tt painter of this first portrait of Genen Grant, and the orig mil picture has bee E resented to him by a friend into whoa auds it came by fortunate puichuse. The other flay John Poulitt, wh lives at Trout Hun, near Williauispor was out on a deer lick, and while sitiin on the stump of a tree anxiously waitin 1 for a deer to come that way, a bi black bear suddenly nut in an anueai - . -r r ance within about 12 teet of him. A though the surprise was a big one, lb hunter had nervo enough to let ily t Bruin from both barrels of his gun, tt kicking of which made him turn a bac sumersault from the tree stump. Fee ing' Confident that he had slain the an mal he was soon upon h'is feet again when, to his astonishment, the bear wi quite a distance.away, scampering oil * a lively gait without showing auy sign of having been even slightly wounded. Architect Edmond Lepcndre, 410 Sutt? street, San Francisco, Cal., states that havir suffered for a long time with a severe eougl and falling to obtain any relief from docto and the numerous preparations he took, 1 became alarmed. Tried Red Star Cough Cut and on* bottle entirely cured him. M. Chevrvul :s sitting to the tculptor 2 L*?on Grandin for a bust. MV TIM T> W.11. TI..II. n A ?1? ??- - ? ? * tfwuo, A. uouo r. Utf DIOTDQ9 U Wash. Territory, was entirely oured of rhei xnatism by the use of St. Jacobs OIL He say "I consider it a wonderful remedy and wi always speak a good word for itj* Hon. ?1 B. Waahburne is seriously ill i Dixon, III. A post* fflce in-Dakota was named after tl sculptor Barlholdi. Detroit Brewers are dictating terms < settlement to their fttriking emplo}'oa. Stop that Coach, that tickling in the throi .Stop that Consumptive Condition! You can be cured ! You ca 't afford to wnf Dr. Kilijner's Cough Cure [Conai<mptfon 0 will do it quickly and permanently. 25 cenl Sometfalutf Abeut Catarrh. A groat many people are afflicted with Ci tarrh who do not know what ails them; and great many more continue sufferers wl might be cured. Thickening of the membrane which lines tl nasal passages, thus making breathing dill cult; a discharge from the nostrils, more < less oopious, watery or thick, according to tl stage of the diseaso; a sense of fullness in tl) head; a constant inclination te spit; and, 1 advanced cases, a dropping of intensely dU justing matter into the throat, are a few of tt jromlnent symptoms of Catarrh. Deafness, inflamed eyes,neuralgic pains, soi throat and a loss of sense of smell, are ver often caused by Catarrh. All these troubles are onred by PIso's Heme dy for Catarrh, Relief is had immediatel; after beginning its use, but it is Important tha It be continued without intermission until th< catarrhal virus Is expelled from the syster and healthy, secretions replace the disease action of the munous membrane. Manifest! It is unreasonable to expect a cure in a shot time of a disease that has been progressing fc months or years. * This question of time is provided for in tli putting up of Piso's Remedy for Catarrh. It 1 so concentrated that a very small dose AMW IU UUC U 9 U (loient for a long treatment, consequently Lt expense is a mere trifle, and titer* 1m no extua for neglect nor reason for It but forgetfulneii A cold in the head Is relieved by an applici cation of Piso's Remedy for Catarrh. Th comfort to be got from It in this way Is wort many times the cost. The following letters are specimens of thoa received every day, testifying to th* worth c Pi.-.o's Remedy for Catarrn: Aixmhxnt, Pa., Sept, 96, 1885. Plso's Remedy for Catarrh is doing wonder for me. I bollove It will cure any case of Cu tarrh, if used according to directions. Mus. F. JOHNSON, 49 E, Diamond St. 8pntNO Hili>, W. Va., Oct. 80, 1886. Enclosed find one dollar for two packages t Plso's Remedy for Catarrh. The samp] package, received In June, gave perfect natt: fuction. GILL MESSER. Hartford Mills, N.Y.. Aug. 8,1885. I have used a little over half a package c Plso's Remedy for Catarrh, and it nas helpe me more than any of the different medicines have used. I feel confident that It will cur me. I can and do recommend It to others wh are troubled with that disease. Rxv. A. DAMON. In point of medicinal power and excellenc Hop Plasters are ahead of all others. 26 eta. All planters are not alike. Hop Plasters affor reliof and cure when other kinds are worthies: a W.m IT I.. Is not often recorded, but thoee who write t Hallett & Co., Portland Maine, will learn ot gennin? one. You can earn from $& to 92b an upwards a day. You can do tbe work and llv at home, wherever you are located. Full pai tlculara will be sent you free. Some hav earned over $60 In a dav. Capital not needec You are starte 1 in business free. Both sexei All ages. Immense profits sore for thoee wh start at once. Your nrst act should ba to writ for particular*. If afflicted with sore eyes use Dr. Isaa Thompson's Eye-water. Druggists sell a Bo. per bottle. Lyon's Patent Metallic Heel Stiffeners kee new. boots and shoes from running over. Sol by shoe and hardware dealers. M More than all other Lung Remedies." 1 what E. W. Fair man, druggist, Dayton, Ind writes of Allen's Lung Balsam. He has eold I for eight years, and It gives satisfaction in al cases. 25c.. 50c. & $1 per bottle, Druggist*. wnr~ivm lot Dlfu SCOVIM/3 8AR3APARILUA, OR BLOOD AW Ltvbr Strdp, for the care of Scrofulous Tain Rheumatism, White Swelling, Gout, Goitr Consumption, Bronchitis, Nervous Debillt; Jtfalarla, and all disease) arising from an in pure condition of the blood. Certificates ca bo presented from many leading physician ministers and heads of families throughot the land, endors n^ Scovii.l's Blood am Livbh Svrup. We are constantly In receipt* certificates of cures from the most re 1 lab! sources, and we recommend it as the besi known remedy for the cure of the above dl e*Mt*. | , , A uniform and natural esult is produced b using Buckingham's Djefor the V* hlskera. For a slight cold, a liaoking cough, or lun troubles, take AVer's Cherry A'ectoraL Boils And rtmpl?s and oth?r like affections caused t Impure blood are readily eared by Hood's Sarsapi rllla. While It purifies, this medietas also vltalln and enriches the blood and builds up every functlq of the body. Scrofu'a, humors of a 1 kinds, ?wel Injs In the neo'x. hives, ringworm, tetter, absoesse ulcers, sores, salt rheum, scald head, eto., arj all cured by this excellent blood purifier. "I Ml trnnhlM* irtth hnlli htvlns umh) of tlim at time. After enduring About all I could bear I suffering, I took Hood's Sanaparllla. Fouj or fl1 bottles entirely cured me, and I have had fto sym toms of the return of the bolls. I cheerful^ recot mend Hood's 8arsap -.rllla to all like atllcted, belr sure they will flud speedy rellet"?E. N. Niohtj alb, Qulnoy, Mass. "Last spring I was troubled with bolls, caused I my blood being out of ord r. Two b ttles of Hood Barsaparll a cured me, and I rooommend it to othe troubled with affections of the blood."?J. Ecaoo Peoria, X1L Hood's Sarsaparllla old by all druggists. |i i six for gfV. Prepared on' fey C. L HOOD Jt CO., Apothecaries, Lowell. lUu IOO Doiet One Dollar ANEW VIEWOTCONSUMPTION. AuJ One wlilcli Appi-ul* to Common Scuic ^ Many llurnble C'a?e?. " (J/fd cn/ SH'iut.) ;f "Many persons d o of (Jousuni"tL>n wh< Cg crul 1 oa-iily bo cure I," siy.4 Dr. fcj. S. Ular?c, of Wtttertowii, N. Y"., "if tlioy would no a io rignu i tiavoa now view vf tin disease a' Consumption is not alwoys of lung origin." n "liow so.' Wbat is it thenf" io "Mnny cases oi consumption are seond ary. The disea e itself prevails everywhere but tlie b.'Stt jiractitioners refuse to attribute 0 it eutirely to inher taue or tha weatb r. II tt a person lives in the moot favorable climab ? in the world aud has any tendency *to luns n weakness, if certain conditions exist in th H system, that climate, h:?wover favo. able g will not prevent development of the disease r? The di order in su^h cases is only a seeon.mr} l_ symptom in the lungs of some other ailment and can mver bo cured uutil approachut through its source." it "Yes, doctor; but what is the method ol io approach#" k "If you dip your finger In acid you bun 1 it; do you not*" l" I ?V<k ? 1 "If you Wash this burnt finger every second I. with the asid, what is the re^tiltf" 19 "Why, constant inflammation, festering 1 and eventual dostru.tiou of tlie flnjer." ia | "Precisely! Now then for my method. i nuivu wwuiiiiv'uin lt>OIL LCI IQO VQ'IBOIl &I1C i iudginentof every skillful practitioner. Yoi i tnovv certain a i< Is are developed iu the body, >r Well, it the system i? all right those a id; tg are neuti alized or utili ed and carried out ti, If the system is run down by excesses, ant' rH iety, continual e tposure or overworn, thes< ke acids accumulate in the blood. If there ii e anv natural weakness in the lung, this a it attacks It, having: a natural atliuity foi it, and if the acid is not neutralized or passec i. out of the system, it burns, ulcerates and tinally destroys the lung. Is this clear i" "Perfectly! But how do you preventth? ' ? accumulation of these acids In tbo system}' l- "irregularities of the liver and kindoeyt k create this excess of acid and the supply car 11 be cut oir only by corre jting the wrong actioc of there organ*. The kidneys alone should f carry out in quantity, in solution, enough ol , this acid daily, which, if left.in the blood, would kill four men. When the stomajh, th? is liver and tho kineys are all conspiring to increase the a id, the wonder is that weak Qf lungs resist death as long as they dol" "But you have not told us how you would treat su :h cases." it! 41 No, but I will. The lungs are only diseased as an effect of this acid or kidney poiit: sou in the blood. After having exhausted ilj all authorized remedies to correct this a-.*id ts- condition. I was comnel ed. in iimtln** im patients, to use Wasner's safe cure: though a proprietary remedy, it is now recognized, I see, by leading physicians, by Presidents ol a State boards of Health and by insurance 10 physicians, as a scientific and the only specific for those great organs in whijh over 18 ninety p?r cent, of diseases originute or ar< ' sustained." **l8 this form of treatment successful?" >r "It Is wonderfully so, and for that reason 10 I am only too willing that you should an' e nounce it to the wor.d of consumptives." ? Not* by the Publishers:? We have received the above interview from H. H. Warner & Co., Rochester, N. Y.. with the request thai e we publish it for the good of suffering peoy j.le. In a foot note to their letter they say: "The experience of Dr. Clark is not i- strange to us. In our correspondence w? Y have lound that many thousands of peopli t are suffering lrom what they think is Con sumption, wnereas the real di.liculty is with the liver and kidneys, proven by the fa -t Q that whon these organs are restored to health d by the u?9 of Warner's safe cure, the cony sumption-disappears, and so does uremic or t kidney poisoning, which causes so manj >r symptoms of diseases that the human system is subject to. The same may be said of rheumatism, caused by an acid condition of the ie system. We insist upon what we alway Is have claimed, if you remove the cause, the [s system will soon perfect the work already t. b Jffun. Mrs. Rev. Dr. Theodore Wolf, oi 10 Gettysburg, Pa., wife of the editor of the Lutheran Quarterly, said her friendi n thought her 'far gone with Consumption,1 i'. but after a thorough treatment with War e ner a safe cure, she says: 'I am perfectly 11 weiL' We can cite thousands of suchtases, but one is enough. If you publish the abovi * article, kindly send us a marked copy." We gla lly give place to the article, for il we can in any way stay the ravages of Cod '* sumption, which carries away so many mill ions yearly, it is our bounden duty so t< do.]?Pub. Best, easiest to use and cheapest. Piso' >f Remedy for Catarrh. By Druggists. 50c. It f PINKHAM'S 0 VEQETABlE ? COMPOUND, It Po?Itire Core j. I Sytfor ALL of tho?? Palnfu 'WS0 Delicate Complaint! ani '' jrfT' Complicated trouble* am O 5 Weakneuei ?o commoi a ""d"]? ?Uf ^cv**' * ** *c^I eur* entlrtl ? yU /n/tamma ^ f > * ITcaJauii, and i ? par?gw<orl| 'l J/t]ieWoman,tSufe Fr land** ??*!!; ,$ tylr U A KLUSDfQ TO OTXKWORKXD WOKE*. iTBJOfOTr n ruirrxn*. tutuuwot. at.t. qutixo roa imnnjun d AJn> UX1MTXS WlitXlM or THX stomach. Cttsxs Lore oonnnacx. MnrrsuAt. miOM passed without pad*. prSold by Driifgiiu< Price 91* per bottle ?mmmmmmmma u I) I) St > ^ U13 ll?1| II Nl Pll A\Nl[ d Bf ? Ilk^racONSUMPTION Oil. ^ IDh2et?i7 Ufnlleatlsfrm TcteUHe a" IprWieUtluit (rswla sl|bt?f nirr lifertr. a I If tuurso Morphine, Opium or injuroos Prng*. ? h <k?^ /%Bp l? Ti//PlvSk? Summer, III, 17 V \ I t %\y?i/ a"? " M*k* 5'4~jj^K<xSaetUe*lnVi|j?M 4 W nvri'&th* Mucous \ 'Ma' \ 25 K ? I /a Membranes twiT x Nose, Throat, Dronchal Tubes. Air-cells _ and Lung Tissues, causing Cough. What Disease* Invade thoLnngaf Scrofula, Catarrh-poisons, Micro-organisms, Humors, and Blood Impurities. 7 What are the Primary Causes f >. Pnlci*. rhrnntn rnnirh. TlronnnltJa. Hnnimu ;a I tionTlnflammatlon, Catarrh or Hay-Fever, I Asthma, Pneumonia, Malaria, Measles, ' Whooping Cough and Croup. . BEMEVEIQUICKLY-CUBES PEBMAKEXTtl M It will stop that Coughing, Tickling In Throat, Dry-hackingand Catarrh-dropping. Is your Expectoration or Sputa m Frothy BuxnUStained Catarrhal in Put (Matter) TeUowUh Canker-like r? Phlegm Tuherirular Muco-jnirulentt _ It prevents Decline. Kight-8weats, Heo^ tic-Fever, and Death from Consumption. 25c, 60c, $1.00?6 bottles $5.00. Prepared ?t Dr. Kilmer** Dtepmau?, Blnjrhamton, >7 1? ?? ?? ' _ to?oldl8?*Helr?. 8?nrtat*ra n VAnSIAIIft for Circular*. (X)L 1^ nitfrl , VIOBWHg MAii. Att'y, WMhluBtou7I>. 0 CP VT |\ l'?n The Ulobe Curd Co., Derby Un< Ouli 1/ vt, 0. 8., for ?0 UnniM-'xaod Mil flnUh cbromo curd* over oeu; uj two alike. Axeul \j wanted. N.E.O. NORMAL SCHOOL. SKPfeS ht any time. fcourd uud tuition, 0 20 pe^Tern ; ill i ^ I i W y BEST TONIC. ? This medicine, combining Iron with pare vegetable tonics, quickly and completely Cures Dyspepsia, Indication, Weakness, Impure Blood, Malaria, Chills ?nd Fcvcra, and Neuralgia. It is an unfailing remedy for blseaies of the I Kidney and Liver. It is invaluable for Diseases, peculiar to ? Women, and all who lead sedentary lives. ' Itdoesnotlnjurethctectli.causcliea'dnche.or nroduce consilnntinn?nlhrr in>n I It cnriohe* *nd purities the blood, L stimulates the appetite, aids tlic assimilation 1 of food, relieves Heartburn and Ilclching, and strengthens the musclt-a and nerves. i For Intermittent Fever*, Latiltwlr, c L?ck of Ener^i etc., it has no equal. " t3T~ The genuine has above trnde tnnrlc and * crossed red lines on wrapper. Take no other. | VmJr only by BIIOWK C1IXBICAL ?0? BtLTIVORr. ?n i "DON'T PAY A BIG PRICE!" ] ?5E pAnfe Far* for a Year'? rabscrip> DO Ucillo tlon to the weekly American -i > Hum 1 Home, Rocheuter, N. Y., without premlum?"the Chenpestaud Best Weekly In the World." -I 1 8 page a. 48 columns. 18 years o'd. For ??ne Dollar Jou liftvo one choir* from over ISO dlff>rent Clothound Dollar Volume*. 900 to fcX) pp.. and paper n ( one year, | o.Upald. Book postage, 15c. Extra. 50,0C* , J books g ven away. Among them are: la v Without . Lawyers; Family Cyclopedia; Farm Cyclopedia; r Farmer*' and Stockbreeders' Guide; Com non Sense T ; In Poultry Yard: World Cyclopedia; Danlelaon's ' (Medical) Counselor; Boys' Useful Pastimes; Five ' Years Before tho 11a<t, People's Hlst?r< of United ; State*; i nlver<al lllsto y of a 11 Nations; Popular History Civil War (both sides). . Any OKU book and paper, one year, all postpaid, for ' 1 $1.15 only. "Paper alone 05c. u subscribed before * the 1st of March. Satisfaction guaranteed on b>oka K and Weekly, or money refunde T. Reference, Hon. C. R. Pjjt80K8( Mayor HooUNter. Sample paper*. 2a. RURAL. HOME CO., ltd., t [ Without Prcmlnm?83c. ayearj ItocHHTtaN.?. 1 j $XEfS! : 25 25 r for I VUi for [ , Cough Croup i ^NGBAlSA^ THE BEST AND CHEAPEST I G0U6H or CROUP ! JrG-fcLi JVL?LJ_LJ 4 AS AN EXPECTORANT IT HAS NO EQUAL. 1 It Contains no Opium In Any Form. ALLKN'8 LUNG BALAAM In Three SIm R i Bottles, Price '25 Cents, 50 Cents and II Per Bottle. I? the 25-Cent Bottles are put up Tor the accommodation tv of all who desire simply a Court or Croop Remedy. P ' Those desiring a remedy for CONSUMPTION or any ??, r LUNO DISKABX should mcut* the lane bottles. i p : PrlfiA. 28e.. BOo- and tl iwir HftttU- I - I 9 ? W ? ?V" 1 SOLD BT ILL MEDICINE DEALERS. BUFFALO SCALES ' STANDARD Uvftkaw ! , awarded FZ&ST PREMIUM AT THE WOULD** EXPOSITION, New Orlean*. | (Four ,Cold Medal*. All other principal makers competing). Track 8cn.le?, Hay Scale*. Platform _ Bealofl.ctc. lM??rtMt patented IMPROVEMENTS. . ) BEST VALUE for TOUR MONEY. full particular*, *d<lreaj I RUFFALO SCALE COMPANY, BUFFALO,N. Y. I ' COCKLE'S ~ \ ANTI-BILIOUS PILLS " THE GBE AT ENGLISH BEMED Y For Liver, Bile, Indigestion, etc. Free from Mer- Ej cury ; contains only Pure Vegetable In are.I tents. ft Agent: C. N. CH.1TTKNTON, New York. do Rape to Cut Off florcW Manet. U KCL.JPMK* HALTKR ~ vu wia?r|/CT* u/ aui/ uimvo. cMUupit) F1 Halter to any part of U. 8. free, ou receipt of $1. Bold br mII Saddlery. X|Ri^ jBj Hardware and Rarneaa Dealer*. c Special dUeount to the Trade. J^pHf VQ fiend for Price-1.l*t. UffilBfnr V V ? ^TTV | iTV^R^^7^ipTIirTj|FS Kfwffnftn&M a FRAZERAXf.; DK8T IN THK WORLD tt 11 b IIV C 1 MT" Viet Ut? Oeuuiue. Aula bvtrvwatrr. fl Alllllll 110(1 Mnrnblne Habit eond Inio ? to30dayi?. Refer to 1000 patlnta cure- H 9 wl In all part . Dr. Maksh.^uIii y. Mlgjt ? 111*11111 naoit Cured. Treatmentsenton trial. / I Ur IIIHI httmankremkotCo..l^aFayctto.Inrt. ^ 1 400,000 Coplet ready No U Douhle Thanlfsi Youth's Ci Elegantly (Hi Hailed to *ny addrei Free to Jan. I. ? Hon la received to Jan. 1, 1887, i offer Include* the Thanksgiving ai PUaa* nwttum Ms Paper. . Address PERRY MASON k ( r B MpfrtfOLU i. f X Th? Tim BUAKD BLTC1 . A /rt?_ __ a V \| the barrfut form. T.m S WrjS H W a Vl" donnllMiu^ioMI^ T J Bnuxl" trxfcmwfc. in Bap?iwkm?I?iw'wywina vi;'-v>'. i'v* .{.yr-i< gB ?S| M il I M ? 'The bent iUafftizlne Published." ?Allddlepoit (N T.) Ma* PETERSON'S 1VT Art A III I -w? M 'Jo EVERY LADY SHOULD TAKE IT. p"-TKn<oN'8 Maoazink la the brut nnd chrnpeat >.* the Imly'a books. It give* more for the money, mil combines Rroatpr u.cilu than any other. ItglTa* rilE BEST STEEL EN(JltAVIN(JH, BEST COLOI(KI) FASHIONS, BEST OIIH.1N A L STOKIEBfe BEST AND LATEST DRESS PATTERNS* BEST WORK-TABLE PATTERNS, BEST COOK-BOOK, MUSK', El<w Itn Immense circulation and InnftontahllHhcil reps.atton enable Its proprctorto ?ll-itaueo all ompettlon. Its atorlea, uovela. etc.. are the i.n^t i?ni.n?V?* MAMMOTH COLORED FASHIONS I "PrniMOS" Is the only magazine that give* tbea-vI"hey are twicethk uauai.aizit, unp<jualoii fbrbftutn he latest Paris styles, st??l plates, colored by hand. PEltMSf (slways In advaace) A YEARUNPARALLELED OFFERS TO CLVBfik2 Copies for S3.50 w,th the' Boo}c of D!?ntZv V * a splendidly I lustrated tlf* a <4 i< 4 en book, as premium for ge* 3 " " 4.50 ting up the club. 1 Conies for ?6 40 With nn extra copy of th? ; "?r Magazine f..r 1877 as a premt 5 9.UU um for getting up the club. run l.AICGF.a CMIBA STI LLGKGATEB INDUCEMENTS. Address, postpaid, CHARLES J. PETERSON, 300 Chestnut Hl? Philadelphia, Pa. ipoclmens tent grnti?. If wr.ttoa for In good falttk P NU 44 LADIES. 3LD AND YOUNG, iuffcrlng from any form of Femalo Complaints o? IrrcKularitieB, bhould obtain a supply of the Remedial Compound Pills* (SUGAR COATED.) rhey are a positive cure for all Displacements anA he consequent Spinal Weaknesses. These Plilf ire especially ndapied to the t hatigi- of Life, an* ireveut the organic degeneration which lead* to iright's Disease. They are warranted Purely Yogotublo, ,nd Iheonlv sale and sure remedy on the mar' el1, 'byslcian* n*n them to a larvo extent in theU ractict*. I'rlce 50c. a IIox. Ua>l from druKista or sent on receipt of price to any address The Popular Pill Bknowti to oyer 80,000 Females who uno them every aonth during th" year. CorrrHiJnndence Boliolterf, ill letters ot Inquiry answered by oil experienctxt emalo correspondent. Address, The REMEDIAL COMPOUND CO,^ Derby Line, Vt, ' Inqtilry Department." JNKIVALED ORGANS In the EASY PA YMENT nyntenii from ?r month up. 100 styles, $22 to $90:1. Send tor Ctl> logue with full particulars, mulled frc*. UPRIGHT PIANOS. tonstructed ob tlia new method of stringing, o*. lmllar terms. S?ud for descriptive Catalogue. flASON & HAMLIN ORGAN AND PIANO CO: Boston, New York, Chicago. IOOK AGENTS WANTED fbr LATFORM ECHOES w UTL\S T8UTII8 FOB HEAD AND OEABT, By John B. Gottgh. Hll lot and crowning Ufa work, brim fall of thrilling lnta?ut, humor sad pathot. Bright, pure, and food, fall saghtcr and U-ar*.'" it ttUt at tight to all. To It la addaA ^iwra^sssiafts WELL DRILLING jr-aehln?ry for Well* o? any depth, from 10to 3000 f*?fc munulMd to drill factor and with lean power tbulur oth?^. 8P?Sj*i,T to drilling WrlU In earth or roek tO to 1,000 f#et. Farmer* an?1dtfeere are mmkinm to MO f?er dar with our machinery and f*ola ftpieaAIA bajtlneee for Winter or Bummer. We are the oldeet mmt Unreit Manufactureni In the business. Send 4 oenti im Btampefoi 1 Hunt rated Catalogue H. ADDHKIA, Pierce Well Exc?Tfttor Co.. New York __ PENSION accennlui. TWBVTY-TWO YEARS' EX. EttlENCE. tur-CoKR siomd :ncic Huii.utkb. flILO B. STEVENS & CO. WASHINGTON D. C. OLEV I. WD. OHIO. CHICAGO,ILL. DETRO.T. M10H. BPlso's Remedy for Catarrh Is the fcj Best, Easiest to Use, and Cheapest. 9. Also irood for Cold In the Head, In TTonHaphP TTAV Fovar Arr* M UJE WANT YOU! or woman'nettling; Ww profitable employment to represent us In ererj county. 8alary Jr75 per month and expenaea, or a* irjfe commiMlon on sales If preferred. Good* stapla. ;very one buy*. Outfit and particulars Free. STANDARD SILVEBWAIUi CO.. BOSTON, BASS. VANTED GOOD MAN lenretlc worker: business In his section. Salary S70. efsrcncea.Am. Manufacturing House U B*i clay,*t,N.X IP to SS it day. temples worth f 1.53 KRER. . k>l Lino* not ander the horse's feet. Addres*- v pw BEiiwaTitit'n 3a>?ty Rkin iiolpkr. Holly.Mlctc. v|A|JA KZSIIm u eaicn^iisn Uoutand. Jlall SMl'Si Rheumatic Remedy. Oval jliox. yl.OOi round. 54) cu> HURST01TS pearITOOTH POWDER LmpIbi Teeth Ptrfwt u4 Uaau HMUlhr? a m mmm wgm Ik I w a Obtained. Send stamp fo* lATCll I O Inventor'* Guide. L. Butoham, Patent Lawyer, Washington. D. C. CATAWBA WINE-Ertra Kood tl per*allon. j Fbkd. Kocmemdokfeu, Allegheny, Pa. v. 10th offfi dying Number li io ompanion wtratidi m for Ten Gtnta. w Subscriptions sent at once* $1.75, will Include the Companion is from the time the aubscrlpmd a fall year from that date. This id Christmas Double Numbers. 10., 45 Tempi* Pboe, Boston, Mass. CKER'?1 nit mtmM wittntmor, ?n<t trfn k?rp jroo dry in > n-T POMMEL KUCKk'BU a petrol rliiln* coal, and XoM stflHiM WlHmlt Cbo "FUh afratrd C?t?ii.A-u? frM, A. J. Tower, Boa Ion, Kut. IWM.IIML T|?|t'llll WWWnwwwttn HI*