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HUNTSVILLE GAZETTE. Published Every Saturday. HUNTSVILLE. * • * ALABAMA CONCERNING TUMORS. The Recognized Modern Treatment ol -Boils and Carbuncles. Within*a few years there has accumu lated evidence sufficient to satisfy most physicians that both carbuncles and boils'are purely local troubles, and of parasitic nature. In former times they ■reetfcicoasi&red of constitutional origin and the fault of the blood. The actual exciting cause is how held to be a mi crococcus, and when this first estab lishes itself in the skin the fact is man ifested by a pimple. Once implanted, the germs multiply and spread, and as the tissues around the original center or pimple become infested there is ex tended inflammation and swelling. "With the germ theory of boils practical ly established, it follows that they Urt3 contagious, and it is now accepted that they are markedly so, and that whe.-e “crops” occur it is in consequence of self-infection—“each successive boil being due to the implantation in the skin of fresh seeds or geiuns from the preceding one.” Not only by a system of. self-inoculation may a person kept up a continuous outbreak of boils, but it is possible for him to cause an erup tion of the same in others. Intimate contact is necessary in order that the essential germs may he transmitted from one person to another—sharing the same bed or wearing the same cloth ing furnishes the favorable conditions. Carbuncles,are oot identical with boils— they differ in ninny respects—but they evidently are relatives, even if some what distant, and are alike in somere Bpects. Both, it is safe to assume, are purely local and of parasitic nature. When these facts became evident to physicians, of coarse they changed their treatment. Once, in treating car buncles* the rule was to make very free jCIncisions, and a number of them, . generally quartering the abscess, and that had to be done early. Thjjh there was scraping to do, the sloughing and diseased mass being, as far as possible, removed. At the pres ent time that sort of treatment is com paratively rarely applied, except in ad vanced stages of the disease, but, in stead, as goon as the carbuncle comes under the-pbsgvyOption of a physician he, as a rhle, tries to stay its -progress by the mqans ofrsonie agents-which will de stroy the mass of germ growth. Car bolhCacidvbut slightly diluted by means of glycerine, is the most popular reme dy. That ia’injeetod into the carbuncle in a number of places for several days. Considerable pain results from the oper ation, but it generally lessens much in the course of two or three hours. The benefit of thfe treatment' is usually no ticeable in twenty-four*'hours, and in three or four days often the disease is arrested, the pain and.swelling steadily subsiding. When it is considered that undjjr the old tftate of treatment of car buncles intense suffering persisted for days and days, and recovery was delayed for weeks, it will appear that the new method is far in advance. Besides that, wl>t>n it is applied early, there need be practically little danger from the dis ease,.where once it often killed. In a very early stage of carbuncles—and it is the same with boils—it is almost always possible to abort them by keeping them soaked in some antiseptic solution. But the period when that treatment can be effective soon passes. The conclusions from the foregoing are that people who are threatened with boils or carbuncles should seek medical advice early—not wait, as they now generally do, until they think the trouble “has come to a head" and the knife is needed.—Boston Herald. • -THE TURKISH BATH. Whilo It May Be Good For Some Persons, It Almost Kills Others. I was conversing with a prominent physician concerning the case of a well known real estate dealer who was pros trated1 with apoplexy several years ago by taking a Turkish hath; and ho w-as telling me how dangerous a thing such a bath was. “I know this by experi ence,” he said, “as w5ll as from reading and observation. Some years ago I took a Turkish bath myself, and the result was a severe attack of pneumonia which confined me to my hod for three weeks. Even when I was able to get about, my health was so shattered that I had to spend a year traveling in Mexico and other Southern countries before it was fully restored. Now I do not nay that a Turkish hath may not sometimes he taken with impunity, especially if it is adapted in intensity to suit the bather's constitution; fof I have taken them my self since my sickness. Hut, I never re sign myself into.tthe hands of my at tendant to , do with me as he pleases. Any one who does that, or who has not sufficient judgment to. temper the bath to his physical constitution and present condition, runs a terrible risk every time he takes such a hath. He may es cape for years, and then lose his life by it. The human body is not constructed to stand such extremes of heat and cold, without producing weakness and liabil ity to colds and deadly congestion;.”— Chicago Journal. ---♦ • » . . ■ Working Him Again. Dinguss—Shadbolt. can you give me two fivo-dollar bills for a ten? Shadbolt (wondering where Dinguss ever got ten dollars)—I think I can. Yes, here they are. Dinguss (feeling <in his vest pocket and looking surprised and vexed)—Dash it to stagnation and back! I've left that bill.in my other clothes. I'll hand it to you to-morrow, Shadbolt. [Hur ries off with the two fives.]—Chicago Tribune. ___ —The Western editor who announced that a hotel was fitted up throughout with rheumatic tubes, instead of pneu matic tubes, has had to apologize and “refund"’ to the proprietor of the hotel. —-Munsey's Weekly. —After a man has been married a few years he never dodges when his wife throws any thing at Mm.—Exchange. . *■' PRETZELS MADE BY HAND. The Only Sort the Epicurean German Will Deign to Consume. “There is no use in trying to make pretzels hy machine,” said a Washington baker man to a reporter. “I'vo at tempted it, and it’s a dead failure. Tho Germans won’t buy any but the hand made, which, for some reason nobody has been ever able to make out, are sweeter and of a better flavor, even when the dough used is precisely the same in both. Then, again, the ones turned out by-hand have a delicious sort of skin which the machine-made lack. A curi ous thing, it is, too, since there is no difference in material, the kneading is the same, and the only variation in pro cess is between stamping with steel dyes and twisting into shape with' the hands.” “Did you ever see a pretzel made? Then just look here,” continued the baker man, grabbing as he spoke a small hunk of ordinary bread dough from a heap on the table close by. lie rolled the hunk rapidly over the boaid with both hands until it was a Iona, thin, cylindrical strip. Thon taking each end of the strip between a thumb and forefinger he curled it with two or three quick motions into the shape of a perfect pretzel. The whole process re quired perhaps four seconds, but he was not trying to do it rapidly. “But a pretzel isn't made of ordinary dough,” suggested the newspaper man. “Its material is simply flour and water with six pounds of lard added for each barrel of flour. The pretzel dough is made up just like bread dough, and the factory hand turns the pretzels out one by one in precisely the way I showed you. As fast as they are given shape, like this one I have just made, they are thrown into kettles of boiling lye, kept at the temperature necessary by steam jackets. A moment later they are fished out with skimmers and thrown upon a bed of salt. Finally, with what salt adheres to them they are picked up gin gerly and laid in ovens with the unsalt ed sides down. When they are done they are ready for consumption, usually with beer. No method has thus far been discovered of salting pretzels oth erwise than by hand, so delicately must they be handled at this stage of the per formance.” “But how are they cut out by ma chinery?” “Like ordinary crackers. The dough is rolled out in thin sheets and laid upon an endless belt, which carries them along beneath a steel die that cuts out half a dozen or more pretzel shaped pieces at each hammer-like stroke. The pretzels produced in this way look exactly like the hand-made, and, being of the same material, ought to be quite as good, but they are not. The rest of the process has to be per formed by hand anyway. I fancy that the Germans are prejudiced also against machine-made pretzels because they re gard them as against manual labor. Anyway they sell for three cents a pound less in the market than the hand-made ones bring. Pennsylvania is the great pretzel-making State. It is an enormous industry in Scranton, Philadelphia, especially in Pottstown, and all through the coal-mining re gions, which are thickly settled with Germans. The people employed in manufacturing them a»o all of that race, and in fact wherever you find pretzels in the world the German is found also. To the Teuton they are, in conjunction with beer, what ambrosia was to the gods, with nectar on the side.” —Washington Bar. IN JAPANESE COSTUME. The Countess Oyana Receives at Home in the Old Native Dresses. The Countess Oyana, wife of the Japanese Minister of War, is one of the few ladies of the court circle at Tokio who receive at their own homes in the native costume which European fashions are so fast driving out of the land of tho Mikado. The Countess prefers the com fortable and picturesque Japanese dress to the foreign costumes which the court has adopted,and this in spite of the fact that she is one of the first Japanese women educated in America, having graduated at Vassar in 1882, the only woman of her race who has received the baccalaureate degree. Stematz Yama kawa, as she was known before her mar riage, spent about ten years in this country, coming with the Japanese em bassy in 1872, and returning so thorough ly Americanized that she had almost forgotten her own language. She is re membered by her college mates as an exceedingly attractive girl, pretty — even to American eyes—tall, graceful and well formed. Tho return to her native country was tp her something of an ordeal. She came here a girl of twelve, adopted the Christian religion and the customs and habits of thought of Western civilization and went hack a marriageable woman of twenty-two with :the knowledge that her parents would immediately find a husband for her, very possibly one not at all in sympathy with her ideas. Fort .unately the chosen spouse was the Count Iwao Oyana, who was himself ed ucated in France, and as whose wife she Has taken immediate rank in social and philanthropic circles in Tokio. A num ber of Japanese women have since come to this country as students and several are here now. Miss Sfiige Nagai entered the Vassar School of Music in 1878, and made a love match with Lieutenant Uric, of the Japanese navy, who was educated by his government at our Naval Academy at Annapolis, and first met his piquant countrywoman at a Vassar fete to which a number of An napolis youth were invited. The wed ding was agreed upon before either re turned home. One of the festivities attendant on the marriage in Tokio was the amateur presentation of “The Mer chant of Venice” before the court and Mikado. Miss Ume Tsuda studied at the Archer Institute in Washington, and is now teaching in Tokio in the Peeresses' School for Japanese Noble women.—N. Y. Mail and Express. —Mr. Mason—“We's kim t' git mar ri'd.” Rev. Mr. Dixon—“Why, Sam! how yo' gwine t' support a wife'?” Mr. Mason—“We’s gwine inter d’ laundry biz.” Mr. Dixon—“Yp* caint wash!” Mr. Mason—“No, sah; but I’s gwiao t' fuaaish d’ e’ilcd clothes.”—Judge. —Endurance is more valuable than cleverness. It is the patient, steady plodders who gain and keep fortunes.*— Washington Post. —The woman who declares she wouldn t marry the best man on earth often picks out one of the worst ones.— Terre Haute Express. —It is not the treatment which a man receives that affects him in the lon«-run, It is the temper with which he bears it._ Rebecca Harding Davis. —The man who can never say “No!” is likely to get into trouble sooner or later. But when he gets there “a gen eral denial” is the first thing on his lips. —Puck. —Because a new movement is stronfi with the people, it does not follow that there is any good in that movement. The majority may bo right on an occa sion, but much of the time it is very far from right.—S. S. Times. —Of all the vanities and fopperies, the vanity of high birth is the greatest. True nobility is derived from virtue, not from birth. Titles, indeed, may bo purchased, but virtue is the only coin that-makes the bargain valid.—Burton. —Infinite toil would not enable you to sweep away a mist; but, by ascending a little, you may often look over it alto gether. So it is with our moral im provement; we wrestle fiercely with a vicious habit, which -would have no hold upon us if we ascended into a higher moral atmosphere.—N. Y. Ledger. —You will find yourself much happier in studying the good qualities of others and exercising feelings of charity and good will toward them than you w ill by criticising them. The one course will make you happy, the other miserable. Give free indulgence to every noble and generous sentiment. Rejoice in the ex cellence and prosperity of others. Keep self 'out of view and show interest in others. Sympathize with them and enter into their feelings. —In private life, and in all life, the best of motives to action are those which lie outside of self and its sup posed interests. To build the ship staunch and safe and the house firm and healthful for the sake of the human lives that will be intrusted to them, to administer justice because of its equity, to heal disease and teach sanitary laws for the sake of suffering humanity, to cherish in every employment some glimpse of and interest in the good that it is to produce in the world, Introduces a finer element into the labor and actu ally brings forth a better quality of work than can be educed by the mere hope of personal benefit to the worker. —Once a Week. How to Remove Freckles. To get off the freckles, to cause the sunburn to disappear, you have got to put on your face and neck, and on your arms, darkened by battling with the waves, a mixture of two parts of Ja maica rum to one of lemon juice; dabble it well on the surface, let it dry, and wash it off in the morning in your hot bath. Besides whitening the skin,which the lemon does, the rum gives it a vigor and makes a rosy flush come to the sur face. You will gain no good from this by doing it for one or two nights; keep it up for two weeks at least, and remem ber that when your skin has that de pressed, worn-out look that conies from sitting up too late at night, nothing will invigorate it like a few drops of Jamaica rum put into the water with which you wash your face.—N. Y. Sun Consumption Surely Cuifc To tiie Editok : —Please inform your readers that I have a positivo remedy for tho above named disease. By its timely use thousands of hopeless cases have been permanently cured. I shall be glad to send two bottles of m v remedy free to any of pour readers who have consumption if they will send me their express and post-office address. Respectfully, T. A. Slocum, M. C., 181 Pearl street, New York. ’ Toe fence owner who puts up a sigh “stick no bills” as a warning to agents for theatrical Companies would possibly do more good by making it “bill no sticks.”— Washlngton Capital. Do not purge nor weaken tho bowels, hut act specially on the liver and bile. A perfect fiver correcter. Carter’s Little Liver Pills. ‘ The man who eats four meals a day pn the steamship must be fond of thp sea board.—Boston Commercial Bulletin. The best cough medicine is Piso’s Cure for Consumption. Sold everywhere. 25c. Women, like diseases, always search out our weakest points for attack; and they generally find them.—Milwaukee Journal. A 10c. smoke for5c. “Tansill’s Punch.” Thb weather is as uncertain as the age Of a:girl over thirty.—Richmond Recorder. ' A Scotchman’s definition of metaphys* ics—“When the party that listens dinna ken what the party who speaks means, and tho party who speaks dinna ken whatho means—that is metaphysics.” “Some boarders,” said Mrs. Lever good, in an offended tone, “are hard to please. I heard young Ridley complain ing of a lack of variety of food at the table this morning, and I have hash five times a week. That ought to be variety enough for any man.” “Witness,” said a lawyer in the police court tho other day, “you speak of Mr. Smith being well off. Is ho worth five thousand dollars?” “No, sah.” “Two thousand?” “No, sah; ho han’t worf twenty-five cents.” “Then how is he well off?” “Got a wife who s’ports do hull family, sah.” _ The city of Washington is said to have been first called “The City of Magnifi cent Distances” by President Madison. It is so called on account of the wide, open spaces caused by the peculiar plans of its streets, and being originally laid out on a large scale:_ Camoens, the celebrated writer of the “Lusiad, the groat Portuguese epic, ended his life, it is said, in an alms house, and at any rate was supported by a faithful black servant, who begged in the streets of Lisbon for him. A Maine girl put a note and her ad dress in a box of toothpicks, requesting the finder to write to her. A Kansas City man got the box, opened a corre spondence, and a few days ago started East to see if the young lady was the sort of woman he wanted for a wife. A Wheeling statistician figures that It would take a train of 175,000 cars to carry the freight of the Wheeling dis trict for one year. Such a train would be 1,160 miles long, and would reach froj» Sew York t he ilissiasippi tivtr. TH® ONLY NIAGARA ROUTE. St. Louis to New York and Boston. WABASH TRAIN NO. 42—YESTIBULED. Leaves St. Louis.6:55 p. in. Arrives Niagara Falls.3:47 p. in. Arrives New York.7:20 a. m. Arrives Boston.9:50 a. in. Only through line from St. Louis to the Grand Central Station, New York via Niagara Falls. Reaches the Grand Central Station OYER TWO HOURS EARLIER than any competitor. Arrives Boston via Hoosac Tunnel FIVE HOURS EARLIER than any competitor. Is tlio ONLY Through Sleeping-Car Line St. Louis to Boston, leaving St. Louis at night. Stops at Falls View Station Expressly to give patrons the best possible view of NIAGARA. Has been for NINE YEARS the only line to New York and Boston running DINING CARS. For Tickets, Time-Tables and full information call upon the nearest Ticket Agent. There are more pictures of George Wasb ington sold in this country in a year than of any other person. For figures apply to the Fost-Oiaco Department,, jjpers Statesman. CATARRH. Catarrhal Deafness—Hay Fever—A New Home Treatment. Sufferers are not generally aware that these diseases are contagious, or that they are due to the presence of living parasites in the lining membrane of the nose and eustachian tubes. Microscopic research, however, has proved this to be a fact, and the result of this discovery is that a simple remedy has been formulated whereby Catarrh, Hay Fever and Catarrhal Deafness are permanently cured in from one to three simple applications made at home by the patient once in two weeks. N. B.—This treatment is not a snuff or an ointment; both have been discarded by reputable physicians as injurious. A pamph let explaining this new treatment is sent on receipt of three cents in stamps to pay postage by A. H. Dixon & Son, cor. of John and King Street, Toronto, Canada.—Chris tian Advocate. _ Sufferers from Catarrhal troubles should carefully read the above. ' The law permits a man to use his wile to rob his creditors. Yet in the face of this it is argued that marriage is a failure.—Bing hamton Herald.___ “ 'Mid pleasures and palaces, ttao’ we may roam, Be it ever so humble, there’s no place like home,” especially if blessed with a wife whose hours are not spext in misery caused by those dragging-dovrn pains arising from weaknesses peculiar to her sex. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription relieves and cures these troubles and brings sunshine to many darkened homes. Bold by druggists under a positive uuarantce from manufacturers of satisfaction or money refunded. Read guar antee on bottle wrapper. The cleansing, antiseptic and healing qual ities of Dr. Sago’s Catarrh Remedy are un cqualed. y And now a rival of Edison’s has come to the surface with an invention for piercing the ears without pain. No modern qpbrai house should be without one.—Puck. r West Brook, North Carolina, Sept 6th, 1SS6. DR. A T. SnALLENBERGEK, Rochester, Pa. Dear Sir—The two boxes of Pills you sent me did everything you said they would. My son was the victim of Malaria, deep-set, by living in Florida two years, and the Antidote has done more than live hundred dollars’ worth of other medi cines could have done for him. I have had one of my neighbors try the medicine, and it cured liim immediately. I now recommend it to every one suffering from Malaria. Respectfully yours, W. W. Monroe. * There is a wide difference between the best-known and the knowa best <u?A of h modern city._ _ Oregon, the I’uradise of Farmer*. Mild, equable climate, certain and abundant crops. Best fruit, grain, grass, stock country in the world. Full information free. Address Oregon Immigration Board,Portland,Oregon The highest grade of impudence—To wait in an umbrella shop for a sliower to pass over.—Fliogende Blatter. Have no equal as a prompt and positive cure for sick headache, biliousness, consti pation, pain in the side, and all liver troub les. Carter’s Little Liver Pills. Try them. DfiNfxsTs ought to make good cafflf&lgh orators; they have such an effective wav of taking the stump.—Baltimore American. A Sore Throat or Cough, if suffered to progress, often results in an incurable throat or lung trouble. “ Brown's Bronchial Troches" give instant relief. The easiest way for a good wife to get along pleasantly is to practise what her husband preaches.—Atchison Globe. Like Oil Upon Troubled Waters is Hale's Honey of Horehound and Tar upon a cold. Pike’s Toothache Drops Cure in one minute. There is a silver lining to every cloud-* the man who can't get credit Is never worried by duns.—Boston Courier. Dangerous Tendencies Characterize that very common complaint, catarrh. The foul matter dropping from the head into the bronchial tubes or lungs, may bring on bronchitis or consumption, which reaps an immense harvest of deaths annually. Hence the necessity of giving catarrh immediate attention. Hood's Sarsaparilla cures catarrh by purifying and enriching the blood, restoring and toning the diseased organs. "Hood's Sarsaparilla cured me of catarrh, sore ness of the bronchial tubes, and terrible headache.” K. SlBBOXS, Hamilton, Ohio. Hood’s Sarsaparilla Sold by all druggists, tl; six for {5. Prepared only by C. I. HOOD & CO.. Apothecaries, Lowell. Mass. IOO Doses One Dollar FOR A 59 CENT'S1 I will send lOl Secret* for laboring: people, some originally costing 91*000 each, with which any person or ordinary ability can make 91OO a month. Try it and become independent. Address J. A. WILLIAMS, 10*8 Market St., San Francisco, Cal. AMS TH13 PAPER every time you wrtto. DETECTIVES W»met in every county. Shrewd men to act under Instruction. In our Secret Service. Experience not Keces*arv. Send 2c. stamp Grannan06teetiveBureauCo.44Arcade, Cincinnati, 0. ONE ENJOYS Both the method aud results when Syrup of Figs is taken; it i3 pleasant and refreshing to the taste, and acta gently yet promptly on the Kidneys, Liver and Bowels, cleanses the sys tem effectually, dispels colds, head aches and fevers arid cures habitual constipation. Syrup of Figs is the only remedy of its kind ever pro duced, pleasing to the taste and ac ceptable to the stomach, prompt in its action and truly beneficial m its effects, prepared only from the most healthy and agreeable substances, its many excellent qualities com mend it to all and have made it the most popular remedy known. Syrup of Figs i3 for sale in 50c and $1 bottles by all leading drug gists. Any reliable druggist who may not have it on hand will pro cure it promptly for any one who wishes to try it. Do not accept any substitute. CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO. SAN FRANCISCO, CAL, LOUISVILLE, KY. NEW YORK, tl.Y. To pnrge the bowel* docs not make them regular but leaves them In worse condition than before. The liver it* the the sent of trouble, and THE REMEDY mnnt net on It. Tntt’s 1.1 ver Pills net directly on that organ, causing a free flow of bile, without which, the bow els ure always constituted. Price, 25c. Sold Everywhere. Office, 44 Murray St., New York. ELY’S CREAM | BALM Cleanses the Xasal Passages, Allays Pain and Inflammation, Heals the Sores, Restores the Senses of Taste and Smell. Try thoCURE. A particle is applied into each nostril and is agree able. Price 50 cents at druggists: by mail, registered fc cents. ELY BROTHERS. £.6 Warren St.. New York. = H^otysoKicaS =* n^^To^?.O0^v anV Kino. • • C^> • 6^0 * CA3 • cV Wnr* ro . ^ _ fOrLLOGC /StrwiRAPrH C°. Kansas CitV, /Aj’ SAVE PAYING DOCTORS* BILLS -BY USISG Dr. Horse’s Indian Root Pills, They are the Remedy that the bounteous hand of nature has provided for all diseases arising from IMPURE BLOOD, morse’s pills mm For Sale by All Dealers, W. H. COMSTOCK, BROCKVILLE. ONT. MORRISTOWN N Y I CURE FITS! When I say cure I do not mean merely to scon thee, for a time and then hare them return again I radictkl tire. 1 linvotnndr the dilw.ire „f FITS re* LEFSY or FALLING SICKNESS a life,ong study 1 .L rant mv-remedy to cure the worn cases h,,.,,,", others hare failed Is no reason for not now receiving. cure. Send at once for a treatise and a Free I Will* i mv Infallible remedy. Give Express and PostfiSL. II. «. ROOT, M C„ 1*8 Pearl Street, New York KT-HAllZ THIS PAPER, every time you write. PLAYS! PLAYS! PLAYS! FLAYS! For Reading Clubs, for Amateur Theatrical, Trm perance Flays, Drawing-Room Plavs, Fairr FGvi' Ethiopian Flays, Guide Hooka, Bpralters, l'eniomiinii’ Tableaux Lights. 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" ^ \A/ A r n M Q xhkbIst HADE. «»rr«*M. WAbUlMo 3H in.. $31: in- *: ■' "• - Farmer* A Laborer* Union Exchange, Wu-xUne, )• • IAMP STUDY, r.ook-kocpinir, Penmanship, Ari'li iSC metie. Shorthand, etc . thoroughly tn>.» ■ by mail. Circulars free. UK I AM’S COLLEGE* Luff* ’ ’ i9* fl ^ a day Horae ownpra buy 1 to JIO Cat. free. lit IN UuLi»titCo.. Holly. d~2«AM£ ini3 PAPER crery tiae you write. __„ A. N.^K. F. 1260._. WHEN WRITING T« ADVERTISERS PJ E'^ dtate that you mw the AdvcrtiMOtul *° paper. iaC moments f©? CHARMING0 WEEKLY CH!lDREKS|yppL£MENIs| the^" ^ i -FAMlLYjI^t^J See the large advertisement in a previous issue of this paper. Send for Colored Announcement and Specimen Cop*es- ^rH ‘ — THIS SLIP FREE TO JAN, «, 1890. To any New Subscriber who will cut out and send ns this slip, with name and Post Office address and SI.75, we will send The Youth’s Companion FREE to Jan. 1. 1890, and for a full year from that date. This offer includes the FOUR DOUBLE HOLIDAY NUMBERS, and all the ILLUSTRATED WEEKLY SUPPLEMENTS. _43_ Address, the YOUTH’S COMPANION, Boston, Mass.