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1e . Dox'T SOAM Turn OoLr.-Inuttering thl injunction we mean far more than metel to avoid frightenigg 0e cplts lest they ru against the fence anuhurt thepiselee. " iean far rbre, also, thadmeiely to avoe Making them wild and 'timid, althoug both these dangers are lminineutiand just fy careful avoidance. In all animal 111 the inherited habits of action may be grea lV neutralized or greatly strengthened b cultivation. This cultivation begins wh< the foal stands up and sucks, and when is six weeks old the education may I somewhat regular and methodical. If y< are breeding running horses, encourage tI colt to extend himself at a gallop, for th Is what you want him.to do in the futur< but if you are breeding trotteis, encouraj the colt to extend himself at a trot, f that is what you want hn.to do in ti future-rear him, if you can witbo knowing that there Is such a gait as til gallop. If you have a young bound d( that you intend specially for the pursuit ( the fox, you rill not allow him to stril out on every rabbit trail he may con across. If you indulged him once lie is much harder to restrain the next time, at if you let him have his own sweet will chasing all the litt!e ground game in I neighborhood, he will be of no use as fox dog. The dog had the inheritance ai he would have been all right if he had n( been ruined in his education. So it with the trotting bred colts in the tieli Every time you scare up pne and make gahop, it is I lie dog off on a rabbit tral You injure the col in driving him out ( the gait for which lie was bred, and t which his instincts led him to adhere. I the end . e will reach the colt that wI not know how to gallop; but as a means that end we must stopmaking the colts < the very thing we don't want them to d To i'ioDUoE healing of a wound in horse or a cow, some stimulant is near always required. This may be comm< spirits of turpentine or the compound tin ture of benzoin or that of myrrh and aloe Either of these may be applied with feather once a day, or if the wound is deej the stimulant should be Injected to the bo tom with a common squirt-can, or a syrlng Wounds should always heal from the bo tom, and to secure this the opening shoul be kept free, by means of a plug .of li dipped in the stimulant used. Lint ma be made by scraping a piece of linen clot such as a towel, with a knife and collecthi the loose fibres. Linen only should b used, and never cotton or wool for thi purpose. If pus Is inclosed In a wouni and the opening Is permitted to close, a abscess will be absorbed, with some futmi ill effect. In the case of deep, puncture wounds careful search should be made f< the possible presence of splinters or oth foreign bodies and to enlarge the openir will often facilitate the search or assist I the ultimate healing. BlU1s ON TiE sARM.-SOIme way < other, mules for work on the farm are nr a reciated by the agricultural community Wy it is so no one can tell. It does nc cost but little over half as much to fee grain to mules, as It (toes horses, as the require so much less and remain in goo order, and as far as work Is concerned span of mules will do as much and prol ably more work than a span of horses cat They are as gentle and as easily handle as horses. It is true they are not as hsan some, and a few years ago they were in as gentle, but the Ametican mule is a grei improvement in every particular on h Spanish brother. They are found to be E profitable by the farmers in the South tb it is seldom a span of horses can be fouri on a farm, but all the teams are compos of mules. There should be more of the in the North. iar'nusw CHAWllFORD) stales in an e, change that the deostrucetion of tonmal plants by the cut- worm niay be avoided I: making a compact mounid of earth abet the plant, as large as an inverted teacuj the cut-worm being unable to climb, Ai other way, which we have ltong practisec is to wrap arcundi the stem, if the cut-wori is feared, a few inches of paper or a lark green leaf, any kind, before drawing tI earth around it. They will not take Ii trouble to gnaw through the paper or lea BUL.PnUn FOiR SniEiEP.-Milx a little au phur with salt andt feed occasionally sheep. It will effectually dlestroy slic ticks. The same remiedly applied to catti troubled with lice will soon rid themiu vermin. The use of sulphur withI salt wec repays the trouble of keeping a supply ft cattle and sheep, if a mixture of one pa of sulphur withs seven of salt bo freely al plied ttiere will be noe trouble wIth vermhi IN sewing the new asaparagus seed, any other seed hard to germinate, it is good plan to sow a few radish seed asmr it They come up soon, are good to mat the rows before the tardy seedis are read1 to come up,and~ the rv :m off0q the grouri before they become troublesome. Tn: planting of elm, maple and othi forest trees at proper distances along lil highways inicreases the value of adjoinir property and adds to the beauty and con fort of the section. In G)ermiany fruit trei adorn the waysides. Separallon of .Nickel O.ride uEnd C balt Oxide.--The author proposes to gi' a process for the separation of the tv metals, derived from two known method and permitting the exact determnination< the two oxides, and the-preparatioti of Ii two metals in a state of putrity. 'rThe tvi fundamental processes are that of Pisan who uses canatic potassa in presence of a ammontacal liquid, in which are (dissolve the two metals, with exclusiosi of air. Tb nickel oxide is precspitatedl alone in bull but always carries dlown with it more< less of cobalt oxide. The second method that of Terreil, who pri.elpitt~tes cobalt I an acid solution in the state of rosco-cobal tic hydrochlorate. The cobaslt oxh~le peroxidized by means of permanganati We suppose that the two bodies, cobalt an nickel, have b~een obtained by know methods, either as pure oxides or pure an phides, free from all foreign matter. Th mixed oxides or sulphides are dissolved I an aqua regia containing a large proportic of hydrochloric acid. The solution is larg< ly diluted with water and saturated wvit ammonia in excess. Permanganato is the added until the solution remains rose col: ed for sonme time. Pure potassa is the added, when the nickel is precipitated hydroxide, carrying with it manganet oxide, derived from the permang~anat< The precipitate is washed by decantatie and filtered, redissoived in hydrochlorj acId, and treated again with ammionla, pe manganate, and caustic potassa. Thle wasi ing waters which coutain the cobalt at collected, saturated with acetic acid, an precipitated by sulphsureted hydrogen. TI mixture of nickel and manganese oxides redlissolved in hyrochlorie . acid, , and tli solution saturated with amnioma. Ti solution is exposed to the air for some ihn and the manganese oxide is by degrees ei tirely precipitated. It Is filtered oif, ti ifiltrate is saturatedt with acetic acid, an the nickel thrown down by means of sa: phureted hydrogen. The process may I employed on a large scale for obtalini -nickel free from cobalt. DOMESTIO. Prne uto LARoz Frowa PoTe.-T y kdow how to protect our large flower pol i against early breakuge, to-which they as e 41tgulakly liable, as all gardeners tnw dI know, Is a batterp of some importenC h when .their cost is reckoned. We use th i- ordinary.sises, and they seem to ist fo 4 ever unless \hey get an unbxpected crack t- but In some unaccountable way the large y ones are sure t o get broken very soon aft' n they are placed in use. These large pot It cost money, especially when over a foc e in diameter, and hence are not risked a u often as they would be, but wooden tubsat ie used in their stead, and soon rot away an it often are not regarded quite as good f: some plants as the pots would be. Now. ,b the reason why these large pots break a )r easily Is front the pressure Inside tle circim te The mass of earth is very heavy, and th it added by perhaps a slight jar in movie ae the plant soon makes a crack, when ti ig pot falls apart not long after. We hav if indeed, seen cases whore the mere filin Le of the pots with roots has caused the ie large pots to burst asunder. To avoid a i) this,nothing in necessarybut to fix a 1ig/ id piece of wi-e underniath the rim. n assoon done, and will thus keep in go o te order for less than a cent a half-dollar p( a that otherwise would be broken In a yeai d How simple all this seema I No doul t anybody could think of this." Perhaf is so ; but we only know one good garden 1. who takes the trouble to do it, and w it know he finds it to his great profit to a 1. tend to It as well as to know It can be don of Try it, brethren, and see if this little hit o is not worth sticking to. In saving ye u many a dollar. ;o To Wian Loz CUnRTAINS.-Make war [o suds and put your curtains in it in ti evening. Let them soak till morninj squeeze them with your hands; use a a wash-board; he careful not to rub then y don't wring them, but squeeze them out a then put boiling water over then and hi 3- them stand an. hour or two; If they don ?. look clear soak in suds and "equash a again; blue and make starch pretty stiff P take three thicknesses of sheets (to prever - carpet from getting wet) and pin them e , the carpet straight with the seam, the cui L- tain at the same; pin across the end, the d the sides, pin every four Inches. Who it dry they will be ready to put up. Do u y iron. To1 0 IAnDEN FaNguinxo VARNiS.---. newly varnished carriage is liable to spot To prevent this, some wash the carria. two or three tlares in clean cold water, ap plied with asponge Insteadof using a hose this will help harden the surface. and prc L vert it, to some extent, from being injurc o by the mud or water getting splashed o e the job. Never let mud (dry on the surfac and then wash off expecting to see n spots on the varnish. You will certaiul be disappointed, and the only way t remedy the evil will be to have it revarn ished. Soft water Is better than hard ws ter for the washing of carriages as thi lime which 1s in the hard water is ver liable to injure the varnish. Tun much abused dragon-flies, says recent writer, are perfectly harmless t a human beings. They cElther bite noi sting, but destroy vast numbers of moE quitoes, flies and. other insects. If brough into the house, they will catch flies an. mosquitoes as long as they are not molest ed. In fact, they ought to be made hous( hold pets, instead of being ruthlessly drive out as though their presence was dange [aous. it KrrostiNi the nests and roots of tlj I poultry house. Whitewash everythlag I lthecm-celiugs, roosts, nests anid a' iiSprinkle a little flour of sulphur im tli nests. First, however, change the hay C .straw. If confiued in runs, give them Sdaily a quantity of grass andI clover. Prc Svide lime. A little bone flour ixed wit their food is excellent, and helps provid material for shell-makmmg. Keep tL Shouses clean. , Lrqui FUEL..--It. Is predicted that co; Swill soon be superseded by liquid fuel fc ethe generatIon of steam both on land an .0 sea, and that It In turn will give way 0 electricity for the propulsion ot miotis -. power. Experiments are being mat] wichi are expected to demnonstrate thn I- the work now accomplished by a tori s 0 coal, costing $4 to $4 25 can be performe P by thirty gallons of crude petroleum cos; inlg less than a dollar. 11 B3omED LEMONADE. -Dissolve half ri pound of loaf sugar in one quart of water t and boil it over a slow fire with two dracl~n - of acetic aicid; four ounces of tartarle acid .when cold, add two penny wor th of essenm of leimon. Put one sixth of the above let r~ each bottle filled with water, andi ad athirty grains of carbonate of soda; cork g immediately, and it will be fit for use. - CoNT~o N. ----This is largely propagate dby means of the clothing, and clothing best disinfeeted by the heat. No form contaglon can withstand a dry heat of 25 r degrees. The clothing should be place Cin a b~ or a closet maintained at thr g temp ture for perhaps an hour. CJarboll - acid will niot dlestroy the effect of vaccit aO virus but for the time being. Tro fix pencil marks so they will not ru ,out, take well skimmed milk and dilunt with an equal bulk of waner. Wash ti pencIl marks (wvhether writing or drawini with the liquid, using a soft flat camne hair brush, and avoiding all rubbin: P'lace it upon a fiat board to dry. 0 Waxx putting away the silver tea coffee pot which 18 not used every (lay, Ia a little stick across the top under the covei this will allow fresh air to get in, and wi prevent mustmness; it will then bem read for use at any time, after havIng first beei ithoroughly rinsed with boiling water. IN]m propagating hioneysuckles cuttings c wood when nearly ripe will strike If ii Sserted in a shady border in the autum and duly warmed. Perhaps the most auc dcessf ul mode of propagating Is by layer ipegged in moist soil in the autumn, who the leaves comnwunce fallin ma ANDPAPER.--To make sandpaper,crus gla.ss under a rtunner, anSI sift it into abot -six sites; coat a good quality of Mamil Lipaper with thin glue, and dust the pualve inzed glass over it. Sometimes twvo coat: of glue and glass are thus' applied to tm paper. eINDrAN PUDDING. -Wash a little Is dian; stuff with meat,, butter and eggi uAdd a little wine-though th'e Indian gee cerally prefers rum. Bake over a slow lra GIonSNAl's.--Take some gingem Stir In a piece of borrowed butter and thr same quantity of molasses and sugar. M! ewith flour. Bake until it snails. To brown sugar for sauce or pudding: eput the sugar in a perfectly dry saucepas 0If the pan is the least bit wet, the suga will burn and you will spoil your sancepamr diMor.&oE.-A little oil of cloves poure dInto a bottle containing~ gum mucilage wi -prevent it from 1acoming sour. gHoT lemonade is excellent for a cold drink it just before going to sleep HUMOBOURG I "1 H AVy a plan to turn the great bahara a Desert into a smiling landscape, full of hills, valleys, gleides -and dells," he said as he * enteted a Griswold street tobacco store. e "Yurn," was the reply from the man e who was sorting over pipe-stems. " The cost will only be fifty million dol lars. I shall issue ten Million shares at $5 r per share. Every shareholder will be en r titled to a ten acre lot and a share In the s profits of sales. Will you take two shares ?" t "No sir," a "one ?"' e "No sir." "Will you give me half a pound of fine r c t for a share I" "No, sir." "Don't you want to see the desert smile ?" s "No, sir." g "And you refuse to ranch In some green e valley in reclaimed Sahara I" ," I do.") g "Very we 1, sir-very well. It is such D men as you, sir, who obstruct-but hold on. I Ghime ten cents' worth of poor plug and i take the whoie desert off my hands, and it let me go ahead with iy tunnel from Port I land to San Frau itco. Eh I What do you t say i It's the last chance you'l have this ruiner to buy a- country of your own. 't Eli? Thanks ; Baharr. Is rours. Go ahead s with the smiling process. e Mis. JULIUs BnowN's husband was one of the passengers on the State of . Califor . ma during its last trip, in wich it was de t tained four days over time. Mrs. B. bore a her anxiety with commendable fortitude until the third day. She was taking lunch with some friends at a restaurant, where n' the waiter helped her to some shrimp salad e in a glass that contained a small portion of whisky. She had only eaten a few mouth fuls when she burst into tears. " What's the matter Mrs. Brown " said the company, much surprised. it "Why," sobbed the poor woman, 't " in-m-my worstfears are realized. I know now that poor Jallus has been drowned. Just taste these shrimps." t And as there was no denying that they " tasted exactly like old Brown, the widow was conducted home, She had just de cided that she would look exceedingly well i in black when the steamer arrived. A.%iunALE husband (who has just finished L moving-" Where are my slippers, dear ?" Wife-"They came along with the third load, and the load wont to the garret?" Husband-"And where is my pipe ?" Wife-You'l find it in one of the barrels of crockery in the cellar." Husband- -" And where is my comb and hair t rush?" Wife-"Jane pcked them in the kitchen stove with the children's shoes." Husband (Mentally soliloquising)-" What a woman my wife is! She never went to college, and yet she knows everything." JU VENILE Induction: Sylvia-" There go Uncle George and Aunt Marf and the baby? What a fuss they make about the baby, to be sure " Daisy-" People always make a fuss about their first-born, and always have ever since the world be gan." Sylvia-" I dont suppose Adam and Eve made much fuss over Cain." Daisy 1" Why not?" Sylvia-" Well they'd never seen a baby before, and must have thought him quite an idiot " LivE a comparative state: A boy on Jones Street was the other eveningK eating away at a big cocoanut that had been cracked open with a brickbat, when a ped estrian felt it his duty to halt and remark : a "Boy, don't you know that twomuch of that r stuff may give you the colic ?" "I guess so," was the reply. "Then why do y ou eat it?" "W~ell, if my chumn, who lives r next door, can stand the small-pox for six weeks, I guess I can put up with the colic for -three or four hours!" was the rep~ly as he bit ofY anmothier big hunk. A Frix hained young lady or Wheeling went away from home seome timie ago on a visit to a friend. She was a fimiky sort of ii a girl and was very proper, indeed. At r dinner on the day of her arrival she ate a l very little. o "Why Jane," said her friend, "you e don't eat anything. Take something else ; e please do i" t "Oh, no," she simpered, "thank you; I I never eat big mesnes away from home." di There was a siloiice during the rest of the -meal. " You must admit, Jim Webster, that a you stole those pullets," said the Galveston Jedlge to the culprit, " Jedge," responded I Jim, "I don't really believe I stole deim ;chickens. In the fust place, Jedge, nobody e saw me take 'enm. In do next place dey 0 could not be found on my premises, because dI I had done hid demi chickens under de floor. *t I can't help believmn', Jedge, dat I is inno cent as a lamib." Am Enghish judge, who was to the last Sdegree cress-eyed once had three prisoners 0before him. Speaking to the first of them, d but, by reason of his ceular infirmity, ,resting his eye upon thre seco ind, he asked : "Y our name and domicile ?" The secondi, believing himself qjuestionmed, gives an an 0swer. Trho judlge tooks at him severely, and cries: "I did not speak to you," when Sup starts tihe third, on whonm liis eye is e fixed : "Nor did I answer you, judge." ) A CLERCIYMAN who had just performed a -wedding ceremony, and was filling out a . blank descriptive of the parties, asked thme husband what his business was; " I am a wine'merchant and a shoemaker," was the r reply. " 'es," exclaimed the bride, "so V you can just set him down as a sherry cob ; erm." y " Wur is a womau more afraid of a mouse than a man ?" Inquired young smart boy of his best girl. " Oh, I assure you," was the reply. "a mouse is miuch'mr f dangerous than a man," and she leaned so heavily on his arm that he, for a moment, Sreally' Imagined that lie was a man, " I CAN'-r find a place in (he city to suit tnme," desparingly remarked a house-hunting lady to her husband yesterday. " Why s:>, my deari " Why because-because--well, Sif you must know, I can't find a mantle a longr enough for the crewel lambrequlue I .made last Winter." o A PoEM in an exchange is entitled " No thing Lost Bnt a Heart." Should think that was t0o much to lose--unless it was one of - these hearts you buy in market for twenty .five cents. d o so you learn dancing. Bob I An d ho oyou like vals'ng?" " Oh, It's not .bad ; I can manage very well by myself ; e but I think girls rather in the way !" OPERA singers mAre remarkably healthy, considering the amount of male aria in bus ' iness. r BUOwNJonN very appropriately calls his - yacht his floating debt. It isn't paid for. TinE girl that blackens her eyebrows wishes to keep her imperfections dark. TiHE comet must br that Star Route krnockred skigeh. (La VAyette (Ind.) Sunday Timns. Out City Drug4iste report an immense I sale of St, Jacob' 11, saying the demand is based upon the popularity of Its success. Wherever it has been used, it has proved its value a thousarnd fold, and receives its best encomiums froai those who have tried it. One of the most notable of late achieve ments has been the raising of the French iron-clad "Richeien," which took fire and was icuttled in Toulon harbor' last December. All that was possible was re moved from her by divers, all openings were sealed, air was forced down to re place the water in the colmpartments as it. was pumped out, and about three barrels, each containing 1000 litres of air, was then used to float her. (4Ubany (N. Y ) iMt1iy li ean id Knickerboelcor.1 A bandlonaed . We perceive by one of oui blassachu setts exohanges that Dr. inrenzo Waite, of Westfield, an eminent physician of Berk shire Co., strongly ludorsei St. Jacobs 011. With it he cured a case of Sciatica that re sisted all regular treatment, and had in fact been abandoned as lucurabit. A Mr. Pleischne of Leilesic has invent ed a marine water motor, by which it is claimed that a 100-feet long vessel drawing nearly six feet of water has been propelled at the rate of 10 miles an hour without screw or paddle. The power comes from a stream of water forced from a reservoir in the hold by a centrifugal pump. Priudaco Kills. "Eleven years our daughter suffered on a bed of misery under the care of several of the best, (and some of the worst) physi cians, who gave her disease various names but no relief, and now she Is restored to us in good health by as simple a remedy as lop Bitters, that we had poohed at for two years, before using it. We earnestly hope and pray that no one else will let their sick suffer as we did, on account of. nrejudice against so good a medicine as Ito ilitters."---rie Parents. The pneumatic tube system is being well developed in Paris and giving satisfactory results. Fifty miles of piping are now being operated from six central stations, and about 400.000 packages a month are being sent on an average cost of less than 10 cents. NA URn S RE EM DY. LT!LER ,AT BLtOOD PuairIER WILL CURE Scrofula, scro ulots Hlumor, Cancer, ianceroA Ilnu r Erysl; ela-, (!anke'. Salt Rheuin, Pimples or limr in ilIe Face, Coug at an C. ild -, Uteers, B1ronciltis, Neu raigia, Dyspopsia, iiheumatan1, Pa.ini in the Side, Constipa. tion, Cosi iv ness. Plies, Diz.Ine.ss, Ileaditche, Nervousness, Pains In I ho Back, Faintness at tie Stoinach Kidney Complaints F.male Weakness ani Deneral DebiUty. This prepirallon Ii scientific til, and ciemi cally combined, an i so b rongly coacentrated froin root-, herbs and barks. that its good ef fects are realized imeneditely after commenc ing to take It. Thero Ii no ilsease of the hu miin -ystein for wlch the Vegetine cannot be used wi it perfect sal. .y, as it do !s not col .in any m1.alic cOmpottnd. For iradleating iho system or all linpurli les of tile blo ad it Ihas no eiu ti It has n-- er failed to effect a c are, giv Ing lone and stro -gi h to the systom debilitited by disease. its Wodtiii ful effects upora tie coii pialuts nimno.1 are surprising to ill. Many have been cur.d by the Voget.ne Lti it have tried many other remedies. it, can well be called 1he Great Blood Pwifier. Dr. W. Ross Writes, sUoIULA, Li Vi~i Cohii'LAINT, DY$Pc.PSiA, RtlUM1 1ATLiSM, WEAK(NElS.S. Miu. Hi. iH. siTEVEss. Boston: I have been practising mediclno rur 2.5 years, aind as a rimedly for deoroiula, Liver cumplaint, D) spep i , ihtiimiatismn, Weakness, and all dis eases of t he bloo~d. I have a ver foindi Its equal. ihave .n0il Vegot ino ior seven years and have never had one bot' he returned. I would healrtily recorilnmetid It to those In need or a blood purl. PitEPAREtD BY II. It. NTEVENS, Aioston, Hams. Vegetine is Sold by all Druggists, N88, LYDIA E. PINKUAM, OF LYNN, EAU., L.YDIA E. PINKHAM'S VEGTA3OOCMPOUD. Is a Positive Onre fler alOhs Plta ouepainte and Weaknesee se ommn e or besfemale population. ( will cure entIrely the worst forms of Female osas ilat, all ovarian troubles, !annamreua and Uloetv. lien, Vallng ad DIsplacements, and the eonsquen) Spinal weakness, and is particularly adayted to the change of Life. It will dIssolve and enpel tumor, from the uteruefa an early stage of development. The tendencyto ene eorous humors therecheekbd veryspeedilybu Iteuse It removes fahatnees, flatuiency, destroysall eraving for stimuulaiate, and reUevee weaknees of the stomach. IS curs Dioating, Ucadeebee, Nervous P'roetration, Oeneral DebilIty, sleeplemsnes, D~epreesioa and lndS. gestion. Thai leeling of bearing down,ecausing pain, weight ani backrache, is always permanently cured by its use It wIll at aln times and under aii ciroumnstancee act in .aarmony with the laws that govern the female systemn, ror the eureod Kidney Complaints of either sew this compound is unsurpaseed. LYDIA E. PINKIIAM's VKoETABLE (ION' POUND 1s prepared at s3t and S5 'Western Avenue, Lynn, Maes. PiIce S1. si botes for 05. Sentbymnal In the form of pills, also in the form of losengee, em seoeipt of price, $i per box for either. Mrs. Pintreama freeiy answere all letters of Inquiry. send for pampb. t.t Address as alove. Jfenston (t. Puper. lNe fataily s'a.oula be ffithout LYDIA E. PINEKHAMV IJvERL PIlL. Thev c ure constipation, hiliousneq and terpidity of th lIver. 5eents per box. *r Hold b all Druggae. 6S itmsAsasto seil the Btandard ricultarai 14ee3 farmin fo rfit Li ineora , co rhe .t aueoose~I a armi Make Money liU -d- . 'I. *--t ra 5. end fyNir~are nd erm * joUNo $1 EN Learn 'heleerapnyi laarn 0es . *itOd mouth a ~t~~ es yelen d i cW."Adonsi . vkr td.I5J,.Il Pasteut, Chamberlaud, and Roax unite In arriving at the conclusion that a now disease can be developed from the saliva of a victim of hydrophobia. 'IlIe germwkloh produces the disease is of the bahpe6f a small rod constricted at the middle and im. bedded in mucous-matter. Strange to say, although closely resembling the microbe which causes chicken cholera, it has no effect upon fowls. The saliva experimented with was taken from a child that-had died of a bite from a mad dog. Rabbits innocu lated with a dilute solution of it, after suf ering from loss of appetite, paralysis, swelling in the groin and in the axilile,died within twenty-six hours, and other rabbits innoculated with the blood of those which had been poisoned with the Faliva soon died also. Dogs similarly treated did not live more than two or three days, but they did not manifest any of the symptoms of rabies. utuinea pigs, although ;o like rab bits, seemed to escapo all evil conse quences. The experimenters are of the opinion that the disease is quite different from hydrophobia; but they nayo not as yet pushed their researches fat enough to be able to say what precise connection ex ists between the two maladies. UIaunted Mo. Debt, poverty and suffering haunted me for years, caused by a sick family and large bills for doctoring, which did no good. I was completely discouraged, until one year ago, by the advice of my pastor, I pro. oured Hop Bitters and cominmenced their use, and in one month wb were all well, and none of us have been sick a day since; and I want to say to all poor mcen, you can keep your fa'uilles well a year with Hop Bitters for less thin one doctor's visit will cost.-A Workingman. The Pepeine Treatment of Tape worm.-The tapeworm Is able to live in the stomach because of its ability to resist the digestive action of the fluids normal to the stomach. In a stronger peptic solution the live worm succumbs and is digested like any other flesh. Accordingly a French physician treated with stronge doses of pepsine a child who had passed segments. of a large tapeworm. About 45 grains of pepsmne were administered daily for five days. The child experienced no harm and showed no special symptoms. Then a pro per dose of sulphate of pelletierine with castor oil was given, and the discharges, showed no signs of the worm. Subsequent experiments with ' vegetable pepsine papaine-which is nmuch more active, are said to have given very promising results. One child passed frag'nents of tapeworm ten Inches in lengtb. softened and praeti cally digested. Why Are You innuili.tv DoCSoc you Laro allo to I .our bowels to become coitive and Liver torp.d. Uso Kid noy-Wk r to produce a free state of the bowo:s and it will stimulate the liver to proper action, a:oanse the skin of its yellowness, oure bilious headache, and cause new life in the blood. Drnggiits have it, both dry and liquid.-Zion' lkvalL. In wnmfer, spring anti autumn, the sud den falling of the mercury in the barome ter, and that for a large space, denotes high winds and storms; but in summer it premages heavy showers, and often thun der. It always sinks lowest of all for great winds, though not accompanied with rain, but it falls more for wind and rain together than for either of them alone. VnoRTIN.-"The life of all flesh Is the blood thereof." And no one can possibly be healthy when the blood is diseased. VEGETINE Is composed of substance identi-' cal with healthy blood; and when taken into the system for the cure of disease, it is absorbed,-.and replaces the deficiency which caused the disease. The light from the sun occupies 8 1-4 minutes in traveling to the earth, the dis tance being 92,000,000 of miles. The light of the fixed star Sirius, supposed to be the nearest of the stars, is 3 1-4 years in reaching the earth, the distance being over twenty billions of miles. THEREt is but one way to cure baldness, andi that is by using OARnoLINE. deodor laed extract of petroleum, the natural hair grower. *As recently improved, it is the only dressing for the hair that cultured people will use. It is maintain ed by Professor E. Wool ney that soil he aped up around plants has, during the (lay, a higher temperature than earth not.so treated. During the niight the hilled earth becomes colder. The ex planation advanced is thatt earth which is heaped up around plants diries more rapidly than level soil. THE invalid finds in "Dr. Lindsey's Blood Searcher" Nature's great restorer. It Is wondlerful. Sold by ll (druggists. A tvriter in the fronmonger thinks after long practical experiment that the best way to test drain pipes ls to burn soiled cotton waste and sulphur, and blow the smoke into the pipes. If they leak the place in the house can be readily detected both by the smoke and the smell. Tro regulate the liver, stomach, and bowels, all you- need is "Sellers' Layer Pills." Take them and see. ~'/Mc telephone is used with great success in the scientific explorations now conduct ed in the Bay of 19aples. By its means the diver can communicate with those in the boat above without the possibility of mistake. WoMExN that have been given up to dlie have been cured by Lydia E. Ptnkhiam's Vegetable Compound. Wunv is a rosebud like a promissory notei Because it matures by falling dew. '*Rough on Raits." Ask Druggists for it. It clear. out eats, mIce , roaches, bed-bugs, fle., vermin, in sect.. 15c. "I D~on't Want a Pliaster, said a sick man to a draiggist 'can't yout give me something to cure me ?' Ilii- symptoms were a lame back an I dihu-rdered urli and were a sur, in'hacartaof htli Inw d iseas -. Tue drugglet tohal lhau to u-.o K:a ir.nVort and in a short timue at off oted a c ,mn ,.tto enre. Ihavo you thes - symnpto'ao? Then g,-t a I ox or bo tie to-day-borer.- y.i beo-'ia.. in --r ,',in. It Is the care . s r f u and s .re. - Knoille Ikepublican~ Mslsas. lhoROAN a UinLw~. Mutut ~ife Bluild.ing, 'renati aati Che&uiut ertree s. h 'ye on hand a superb aoc~k oa 'x.a line qia-say in -- monus, Which tie a-fter alt as5 t0. pal -~ aa Ptones a.. thiirslat quai.,y. p r.ect aiuxe in color a:.d shape, can be bol a for. A Case of Piles of 30 Years' Stanualang. Bos'ION, MASS., August 0, 1877. Masas. P. NKUSTAEDTRn & 0o., New York. Gentlemen:-Enclosed please find 91.00 for a box of Dr. it. Bilsboo's "A nakeets." I have been troubled with the piles lic -1849, a-id have tried almost everything that I couldl nuid, but without sucess. I have jutst boon using yoradhave derived more benenit from it than any that I have ever trie:1. P'lease tor ward me a box at once. Yours truly, A. LEDYARiD, 77 Traverse street, Boston. Samples of "Anakesis" are sent free to all sufferers on application to P. Noustaedtor & Oku a* Boad90 New York. 5iJkCD TBEAD S HE inand ;pran unand V aa I roil RHEUMATISM, I .Neur~2igia, Sciatica, Lumbao Backache, Soreness of the Chest, Gout, Quins ,Sore Throat, Swell ings and Spains, Burns and 'v Scalds, General Bodily Pains, Tooth, Ear and Headache, Frosted Fet and Ears, and all other Pains and Aches. No Prprtton on earth equals ST. JACOBS OIL t as a s fe, sure, ahn de and cheap External t Remedy. A trlal entai l but the comparatively triling outlay of 60 Cents, and overy one sufforing with pain can havo cheap and positivo proof of Its claims. Diroetions in Eleven Languages. BOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS AND DEALERS IN MEDIOINE. A. VOGELER & CO., 'iltinore. Mtd., V. . A OSTETE CE.EBRATED0 IrT. Feeble. and Sickly Perasoas Recover ther vitality by puisuiltig a cour-e if liostetter's Stoniach litters. teCl most popuin. vlgorant and alterative mne itslle 11 use1. (loinId de blity fever and apue, dyspepsla, colistipult.II, rheuatilsmn, and other nalidies are coileisly removed by it, Ask those who have tsed it whit it lals done for iten. For sale by all Driggists and dealers generally. DOES WONDERFUL WHY, CURES! ilecause It acts on tho .IVERI, 1lOW ELIS ancd KID)NEYS at the samte times. Becauso itoleanbs te systemeofthepoison-' on. humors that develope in Kidney and Uri nary DIseases, Jiliousness, JTaundico, Consti patloun, Piles, or in Rheumatism, Neuralgia, Nervous Disorders and Female Complaint.. .SEB WHAT PEOPLE SAY : aEugen B~t . Storko ention City, Kansa alclans hadbeent trylng for four years.; her o0 v-as gle uto o -s tor rniic ehysit ad that .o twas afterwards curedb b 1 K.aN B. vllaa o letor in Ceaon. Ofl. I beyonad bseilef but. Klsdney-W oured lin. that eve i yasa stiei, ta. I s dN. trous -- and other csplmications was enided bytIho use s. for* eas om.'livera.dt sy r'J ',oubles ass KdneyWi nad elm well,.hrmeiie nenr i egt tyes. swIth kldmus dlticu en r, was umahiot ~vork. Kiduey-Wo or au ltd hs PERMANENTLY CURES KIDNEY DISEASES,F LIVER COMPLAINTS, Constipation and Pies. tin cars, (snl ha ag on wlimtakes slx at eetrae, for thos thlat cassn reaadil Oo. parelt, IF-If acts with eqrual ceficlenyu fsn ell'er' for GET IT ATTllR D)IIUisTs. PIth'l $1. WVELLS. tIlCiIA illDSON & C'o. Prop'. (Will sensi the dry post-paId,) ii' Iii NGETO,I HOP BITTERS: (A Mledielne, not a Drink.). CONfTAINS8 iJOPS, illCIlU, MANDRAKE, I.'ANDELION, ANE, TiE P'LaEST ANi llBRTMEDs AIQUA S T iKS or Al.L OTuKSa Iar'ru. TH71EY CURlE All Diseases of thecStognach, flowels. It ss iver, Klsiie s* and Ulrlnsry (igm. n ' r - $IOOOIN COLD. < Will be~ pnid for a case they will nsoi ". Isrp. or for a iylI na11 pitre or inja. ts yonur al.et for ho iltp .'' 1) I. ' Is an absol,,te a~na Irresaist le nmrs- fop D.iii unaicanes, a of ot ishn, tobacco unad SitN.. Foa OisseULAR SMilH S PAT. BLIND AN) SHUTTER BOWER. An lie rs~ el n e acor2 pol. Ai nohes In every comunt y. (Ian maskssbig w.as s .mmor and Fall. T lob st andt hut rsili s i mru ont. dolls at malif r. nO cnts l.olsge. '5 s ,s el I I117 & CO., 80-i Ma'at(er Mseet,_5iisaiadetphia. Pa. 4LLEN'5 Brain Food cores Nervous Do. bilty a W er oa .Je,.raiv Organigt maey,39sFirst Avenue, N. Y. Tnose answerlnir ans innvertisement was cofe afaorupion the atuJ rtiser and the Ssemett hi lorernat (nminif t paper. B GNTS WANTED~ FOR BILiE REVISION The best and cheapost ll~tl'trate edition of the Revised Nowv Teatarnont.. MillIons of pepl0 are WaitIn tgr It,. D)o not bo decolved bthe Cheap J0hn publlshors of hnferior ediOns. 8oc that the copy you buy c0ntains 150 fino oh. gravings on steol andI Wood. Agents arc COln 1nlneJse lnng this edition. Send for flireon NATriONAl Pnns 181unM CO. nPhsld a, . IEALTH' Is, W'AL'TH1 EILTH of BODY ft 'WERTH ofI D. Radway's SIAlfilhlllhI IKS~IIT. Pro bloo!IMU mae Ucn% 008L strolg bone r g ur bones sound wIthou Carli, Sand0 yor ree c 00 0ed of Ingredients of extra lry medial prprties euenta to puiL re and v ro the b 1k4ow and 14B , oGYQUIoK,aPLWeAATe, SA"M and XRKANENT ih Its treatment and Cure. So terbl what True te 1omla't MaY 9 de s ate wheter It be 00mro a, ao t1on, ypflie 0e Sores, TumorsBolls. ior diseases of the usgs ~1ney. Bador, omb, Skrin, Laiver or Bowels, ei roi or onstitu onal, the virus of thedisease is in the BLOOD Phich supplies the waste, and builds and re airs these organs and wasted tissues of the vutem. It the blood is unhealthy, the process I repair must be unsound. The barsapari lia Resolvent not only 1 a compensaing remedy but secures the har Loalous action oM each or the organs. It estab. shoe throughout the entire system functional armn , and supplies the blood-vessels with 6 ire healt urrent of new life. The Ukin, ter a few days use of the Sarsaparillian, be omes clear and beautiful. Pimples, Blotches, lack Spots and Skin Eruptons are removed I ores and Ulce soon cured. Persons suffering rom SorfUla, 'aptive. Diseases of the Eyes. louth, Ears Le Throat and Glands, that ave a auula and spread, either fr9m un ured diseases or mercury, or from the use of orrosive sublimate, may rely upon a cure it be Sarsanarillian is eontinued a suMOient time o make its impression'on the system. One bottle contains more of the active prinol le of medicines than any other reparation. ?aken In Teaspoonful Doses. whilei otho e vui e si times as much. One Dollaa MINUTE REMEDY. Only requires minutes not hours to re lieve pain and cure acute disease. TRADWAY'S Ready Relief, in from one to twenty minutes, never fails to relieve PAIN with one thorou h application; no matter how violent or exoruc ating the. pain the Rheumatic Bed-ridden, Ifirm. r pled. Nervous, Neuraglo or prostrated withrdfsease man suffer, IADWAY'd READI RELIEF will afford instant ease . enammation of the Kidneys, Kngiamuua. ion ofthe Bladder, Inflmmation ofAu . owels, Cngecstio of the ungs, Thore Thro Dreedcult Brenthing Palptation or the Heart Ae aerics, Croup, Diph. ftein, Catarrh. influenza. Ueadneae, Toocrhe, Neural Y l ther ae.r (id Chili. Adaue Chills, Chilblains, pnd FI'eat Dites, 'raisea, Munmer pits, Nervaousness, wleepessnors, Cogt. Colds, W prains, hBines An ai Chest. ock or llbs are instantly rfe aeved. Fever and Ague FEVER and AGU cured for 50 cents. There Is net a remedial agent In this world that will cure Fever and Ague, and ether Malarous Biii. ou, sarlet Typhid, ai.ow and other fevers (aided by liadway's Pills) so quickly as HAD WAYgS READY RECLKEP. It will In a few moments, when taken accord. ing to directions, cure Cramp, Spasmis, Sour Stomacht Heartorn Sick saeache, Darrhwa Dysentery, Clil, Wind ia the owels, and ail Internal Plans. Travelers should always carry a bottle of Had.y way's Ready Relief with them. A few drops in water will prvent sickness or pains from chne of water. It is better than French brandy or bitters io a stimulant. r adI! Miners and Lumbermen should always be provided with It. All remedial agents capable of destroying life R egusa Pliee U h atils, Perfpoer uremeies. dohatgcertri - RelibleandNatual duth ing Opi ci nterayto. upeasth i~ety reated. meany graate ad with rae utn, suffrg, gulathery oeasen uortanatwhen amah Lvr Bosilda reed Bldde eravouys DReadys ieadae,'Conlst athon mos x ruitivng ini e, wihu naliuneth. tale conut nin siolmercuy imfnralt.rde RAAbsv teD followis tymptomly remedln fromt Dineavogue tht wil Instanso paint FfthyHed AVedtyo ther tomcNe a, Regul toat orEucnBaing ils Puerec t hu Irgarts, Sootking Ar Sufen-g ntios when ithin ou turai, DAlnayao Illland Datura in theIed eiiyofr peration,.elweso heSi n ys Ire ofy tatlueselgntl c oateSdi Awfoii puges regulate, puify, cllee and * ystem' Pfrom alr theevo-nald DIsorders PrthiSomchLr,2 Bwets, Pe s Blader evu repeass atheader munstiaonul our tiveks, ndeston, thepsc ofliusessn Fevr c, famaono h mayel ieamd al tae y onaing ercuye ineral ordw teioasdrugos. rauig 0'Osevetheflawing sympfretcaoms rulin frond ltter otam tho ietv rA ns.Y Cnti Wiie~aent or. thuromch, Nueaw iutrngrato theoert, thoksandgil or ,uorna Thnhtiwonsden ineaesyful oksteiess fe mdD ain r th eit e a Dermaenyo Pucer. piAtNo llooke f heinr ndEy. raNe kfo ininteid.Co t iband; Suddens Ai ew dos of Tri~s folL w rFeemahe ayto from all heR~ aboe-ad iorduers " Nals and True," l . i ndethers whreatino dilernt asseso or ie. SOLDE MTS DRUGGISTS on Vo s en CT.O, Cuch., e