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GEIEULL ITEMS. WIscoNsil grows timber for masts Wt 150 feet long. journ wily are old maids odd? Because they tion are unmatched. e three milesa akealeague, how many tep make a conferene? tumu WauN is a woman not a woman ? miasd When she is a belle. his c TUee are fifteen hundred and sixty expe postofloes in Iowa. word A GaRLs' school for type-setting has what been opened in Vienna. ment You genuine cockney is always fa- that mous for alf-and-'aforisma.hi is hic CsIoIrIU's epitaph: "Write me as child one who loves his fellow-men." Cprete WasN is the weather most like a crock- veric cry shop? When it's muggy. crin IT is said in Washington the almighty least dollar is almightier than ever. but IN Wall street, when abroter can't hull acit the market, he grins and bears it. cred CAI.FroaNrA gold miners have taken to estt prospecting by the artesian method. tion TaH feast of Imaginatlon-Having noIn I has dinner, but reading a cookery book. leav Do not imagine an Individual Is going and to spin a yarn because he knits his brow. vaa Goon news for husbands-Ladies wear min their dresses longer than they used to do. dise Tuort'm fine feathers make Afine birds, con fine birds don't alvays make fine feath- scat era. In 1 lI 1802 Texas had but twenty-one con- tric victs in her State Prison. In 1872 there suc were 944. ma Eoas are said to be very scarce in Ohio,u because the hens are In the habit of mis- SI laying them.a How do you know a house is often na hungry? n ecause we sae the chimney c swallow flies. He IT's a way with tailors to recommend Ins things which are much worn when you ga want to buy new. hir " MAx Ia a mystery," said a young lady an to her beaux. 'Yes, dear," sand he, "and Pr girl is amissery." sid A Niw Havrswntu pedagogue says he "A has more pupils in his eye than any other at man In the State. bc A LONDON philanthropist bequeathed P halfa million dollars to charities and a di 001 thousand to his family. - in GooD Dr. Dwight once said: "He that Tt makes a little child happy for one hour is pr a fellow-worker with God." wi Mona than 9,000,000 of briar-wood ex and other wooden tobacco pipes are fu, made yearly in this country. ve V aRoNT-where, asis well known, no a liquor is sold, has 16,000 drunkards, 4,000 jed habitual 'hard drinkers," and 20,000 dic young men just beginning to drink. si THE orange is a very hardy tree, will stand more rough treatment or neglect than any other fruit trees and is very long lived, bearing undiminished crops for a century. vs KANSAS girls in great numbers are sign- bý ing a pledge not to marry any man who to drinks. Tere isa great temperance re- tb vital going on in nearly all of the West- ni ern States. a A COLORAnO woman's triumphs are ci thus set forth: Half an acre of tobacco, di three corn fields, twenty-eight turkeys. pi and a church congregation in which she a leads the choir. in BRF.T HARTm'S stepfather is dying and tt coming to life again all over the country. to No event since the formation of the Fed- he eral Constitution has afforded such an ar- he gument in favor of the resurrectionists. at OLD topers in England feel themselves rt to be patriots and bear a becoming port fs since the Earl of Derby has sai I, speaking about the tax on liquors, " We have drunk ft ourselves out of the Alabama difficulty n during the past year." Si Tar gathering of the tribes has made little progress as yet, Palestine, according to the late census, having a Jewish popu- P lation of only 15,293 souls. Of these8,000 live lJerusalem, 4,000 In Safet, 2,000 in v Tiberias, and 400 in Hebron. n TRE Delaware peach growers honestly t admit that the prospect for a good crop this year Is as favorable as last year, when an Immense crop was harvested. The C "eyes of the world are on little Dela- h ware;" so far as early peaches go, at any rate. t TaE little postofice at Rockland, Me., a takes more foreign money orders than o New York or any other office in the coun- a try. A large number of Scotch, English e and Irish stonecutters are employed In c the granite quarries there, who take this t mode of sending money to their families in the Old World. IN regard to disagreeable and formida ble things, prudenee does not consist in evaslonorin light, but in courage. He e who wishes to walk in the most peaceful 1 parts of life with any serenity must 1 screw himself up to resolution. Let him f front the object of his worst apprehen- t uion, and his stoutness will commonly I taske his fear groundless.---merson. Tna passage, by both Houses of Con graes, of the bill authorizing the laying of the new telegraph-cable between Jal fornia and Japan gives a kind of of8cial sanction to that enterprise, and will probably insure its success. This is the last lirk in the great electric chain, and, when it is completed, we shall be able to put a irdle round the earth in a shorter time thnPack. of the winter here, with the pretense that Quebecians are in love with a temperature o dallf averale of 10 to 15 deg. below roa. ro tesB t "with bright sunshine and even a moderate wind, the city ma troas, besax, and belles, never think of missing their daily promenade simply be cause the thermometer marks 10 deg. be low aero; and we have met the most dell case women out and Mr from home when the mercury was 30 degrees below zero." Let us go to Quebec-in August. A Pebg.*Pref Blrd. A correspondent of ScIeue Gossip tells of an attempt to capture a specimen of the scageuaer-bird or "adjutant," of India, in which he failed in a most unexpected way. Oseccount of its valuable services in clearng the itreets of decayi sad pa trd matter, the bird is held in ehigh - teamby the natives, who take every pre caeos to protest It fron harm. This prevented an open attack, and poison was the emly alternative. The carcass of a pstblly-disected bat was staued wi h enough arsenical paste and corrosive sub Iate to kill twenty men, and the titbit thrown to a fock of the birds near by. One of them swallowed the whole of it at a gulp, and our student in comparative aaatomythougb hs game secure. But, thouh closey wateld for three hours, *4et eslihtst alga of uneasiness was manifested.rad at theend of this time the qreBpre lhew away with its fellows, ap Sparintly as well as the bstoftiem. The somgmeda hnants of the fock wer af terward carefully searched, bat no trace could be found of the dead body wanted; and it was concluded that, unlike other gormands, this one was not to be easily pmt at through his at'mach. A Queer Phase of Iasaity. When jurors, medial experts, and C journalists fall by the ears upon the ques- elcs tion of what tenor of action should be re- spa garded as proof or disproof of insanity, sud the public are apt to view the whole dis- it. cussion as a mere pretext for such verbal ( tumult as may either allow some criminal hat misdoer to evade moral responsibility for the his crime, or cause a possible ti anlae to the experience the opposite fate. In other pilh words, there is no abiding popular faith in I what pretend to be: scientific tests of me mental hcalth, the prevalent idea being inp that a man is either a raving lunatic, a wa pu ling Idiot, or a sane, reasonsig creature; tw his condition in any case as obvious to a wi child as to the wisest physician, and all use pretense of learned dounst in the case the veriest sham. Common scenes in modern tw criminal trials go far to strengthen at an least the vulgar clamor of this conclusion, all but it undoubtedly owes its greatest ten- ty acity to the common mind's slowness of to credulity for what every common instinct is esteems the most terrible of human asti'- be tions. Men shrink from crediting insanity rik in their own relatives or friends until it has attained a violence of demonstration cli leaving no further ground of earthly hope, w and cannot be reconciled save in the th vaguest general way to the theory that the N mind. like the body, is suiject to various w diseases, and is only exceptionally in a condition of perfect health. Yet there is , scarcely a town or even a neighborhood fr in the world without its "queer." eccen- is Stric character. whose tenor of action is no such as to denote mental disease. In the many such cases finding daily record in ti public print there are plenty of parallels to instances like the following taken from un papers of rec nt date. At Middleburg, it Pa., says the Post of that place, a man st namned Kilsworth died lately, after a local b, Y career of brief but startling eccentricity. o He came thither from Hartford Conn., ft d last spring, attired in curiouwly patched , a garments and accompanied by a dog, and hired a room in which to print for himself 14 y an incoherent pamph'et entitled, "The d Prospects of the End." From long con sideration of the passage in Revelations; a e "And he laid hold on Satan and bound him r a thousand years, after which he must be p loosed for a little season " he had become t d possessed of the idea that the season of rI a diabolic rule had begun, and that men t could avoid its influence only by abstain- t Sing rigidly from all physical rossn ss. To maintain his own ethereality, while printing his pamphlet upon a hand-press which he had brought with him, he lived i exclusively upon corn-meal and water, re fusing to touch bread or meat. Thoutc very taciturn and lofty in his manner, he to seemed to be actually Insane on this sub ject only, but died a victim to the poor J diet and hard labor imposed by his delu sion.-N. Y. World. c The Rattlesnake's Battle. g In the Aanerican Naturalist, Prof. Sam uel Aughey gives the results of his obser vations upon the use made of their rattles n- by the rattlesnake. It is the vulgar opin 0o ion that the reptile sounds his rattle for 'L the purpose of enticing birds, and some t- naturalists even are disposed to find here a mimicry of the sound made by the so re called locust, or cicada. Prof. Aughey o, does not undertake to explain all the pur rs. poses served by the rattle, but he fully he agrees with Mr. F. W. Putnam in reject ing this mimetic theory. Does the rattle. id then, serve any usefulpurpose? In reply T. to this question, the author tells us what Ad- he has himself observed. In July, 1869, ir- he was in Wayne County, Nebraska, and, ts. as he was one day investigating the natu ,es ral history of that district, he heard the )rt familiar rattle of the snake. The sound ng was repeated at intervals, and proceeded k from a rattlesnake that was calling its Ity mate, which soon came in answer to the summons. Prof. Aughey had a similar e experience the following year, and from ne these facts he is disposed to think that the ýn purpose served by the rattle is to call the )sexes together. Another purpose may be to paralyze its in victims with fright, and to inspire its nat ural enemies with terror. As an illustra tly tion of the use of the rattle for the former op Durpose, the author says that, as he fol tcn lowed through the woods of Dakota he County, Nebraska, a Baltimore oriole, he 'la- heard a rattle, and at once saw the bird By as it were paralyzed with fear. an I ready to fall a prey to the serpent. The writer le., shot the rattlesnake. He adds that he rtan once witnessed an attack of seven hogs on un- a rattlesnake. Soon after the battle open Ish ed. the snake rattled, and three others I in came to his aid. But the hogs were vic his torious in a few minutes. lies Translhstos of Blood. da Sin "The frst trial, of transfusion of blood He ever made" Denis says, "was made on a ful young man, fiteen or sixteen years old. ust 'rhis youth was attacked by a slow fever, rim for whieh the doctors had bled him twen en- ty times. He had become dull and sleepy, aly from the treatment, to the point of stu pidity. Some little warmth was felt dur on- Ing theoperation. Eight ounces of blood were taken from him, and arterial blood from the carotid of a lamb was immediate cial ly introduced by the same o nin . He will got up abeut ti n o'clock, d neduth ex the cellent appetite, and went to sleep at four and, in the afternoon. He bleed slightly from o the nose." rter The operation having succeeded, Denis tried a second, but more from curiosity than necessity this time. The author re l lates it himself as concisely as before. rity "The transfusion was efected upon a Lhat chair-porter, ofvigorous constttution, for a ty-Iveyears old. Ten ounces of blood were weren from him, and lamb's blood rine substituted. The man complained of no ma- fain during the operation, and was de a o ihtedobeyond measure with the new In be ention, which seemed to him verry Ingrn ions. When it was all over he declared lell- that he never felt better. Employment hen offering about noon, he carried asedan as ro. usual for the rest of the day. Next day he begged that no one bat himself might be taken as a subject for new experiments." Three years before, transfusion of blood had been practiced by Lower in England, bills but only on dogs. Denl repeated with 1 of these animals the experiments he had Ida, made on men. These were varied in the eted most interesting ways. He not only es transfused the bloo4 of one animal into and- the veins of another; but from the 8th to tea- the 14th of March, in 1667, he caused the 'em- same blood to peas into three ditferent tit1 dogs sceive . Granting the correct was ness of the vie~s then prevylent, he then f a realized the famous Pythagorean fable of wi h the transmigra lon f soul. The experi sub- men'er was also bent no making his dis itbit coverles generally known, proposing to by. make trials in public, and, for this pur Itat pose, he fixed for the firat day of his lee tive tures "Satbrday, the 10th of March, of But, the same year, at two in the afternoon, on urs, the quay of the Augustins." History does was not inform us whether Denis carried oul tthe his plans.-Ret'ue des Deux Mondes. ap The O's ounce of wahoo (winged-lm) bark Sf- added to a quart of pure whisky and takes "n in doses of one teaspoonful half an houi ted; after each meal, is very excellent in dys ther pepsia. A WQRI to the wise-keep so. USEFUL SUGGESTIONS. tre CLEAlIaxo WOOLEN Gaaxirrs.-To yet clean woolen garments, take a rough bof sponge, dampen it well with weakt soap- Tb suds, and rub the spots thoroughly. Try 1s it. eal CHAPPrD HIANI)s.-After washing the to hands, it is a very good practice to dust cu them with powdered starch, rubbing by them gently. This keeps them from chap- se pIERaSPIRING IIANDB.-The only effective CC' method of preventing excessive persrir ing is to mix club-moss in the water when washing them. They should be washed two or three time a day in tepid water, o with the club-moss, which need only be too used in the morning. an BEVERAOG OF FIGS AND ArrLEs.-Have us two quarts of water boiling, split six tigs. gr and cut two apples into six or eight ci slices each; boll the whole together twen- a ty minutes; pour the liquid into a basin bI to cool, and pass through a sieve, when it cf is ready for use. The figs and apples may v be drained for eating with a little boiled rice. 1s To JAPAN OIo TEA-TRAYi. - First te clean them thoroughly with soap and water and a little rotten-stone. Then dry c them by wiping and exposure at the fire. A e Now get some good copal varnish, mix it A s with some bronze powder, and apply with al a brush to the denuded parts. After o Swhich set the tray In an oven at a heat Sfrom $12 to 300 degrees until the varnish is dry. Two coats will make it equal to aI new. v e JAPANESE CEMENT. - Intimately mix a 1 1the best powdered rice with a little cold ° water, then gradually add boiling water t n until a proper consistence is acquired, be- e in ing particularly careful to keep it well n stirred all the time; lastly, it must be 1 boiled for one minute in a clean saucepan * or earthen pipkin. This glue is beauti fully white, almost transparent, for which Sreason It is well adapted for fancy paper1 d work, which requires a strong and color 'Iless cement. a ie To COLOR BLACK.-FOr a full dress, a 'i take two ounces of extract of logwood t ;and the same of blue vitriol; dissolve the t Svitriol in sufficient soft water to cover the f goods; put them in wet in suds, simmer ae two hours; then wash in three suds. of Throw away the vitriol water and wash =n the kettle. Make the dye with the ex n- tract in plenty of water; put In the goods Is. and let them simmer two hours longer, ie stirring very often to prevent spotting. '5 Rinse well min cold water, and wash clean d in suds. PLSANT TREES.-Plant trees in the gar den, along the sidewalks and roads. A e few trees in the bleak pasture will im ib- prove the appearance of ranches, as well or as serving in time for a grateful shade for lu- the stock in the long, hot days of the dry season. It is a well-establisahed fact that trees attract moisture, and everybody knows they add much to the attractive ness of a place. This is a most favorable m- time for the work; the ground is warm er- and moist, and trees set out with ordinary leas care are bound to grow. Therefore, plant in- trees-plant fruit trees, and in a few years r you can raise your own fruit; plant trees e for fuel. and your children that come after re you will bless your thoughtfulness; plant o- trees along the highways, and in a few Cey short years you can reap the reward of ur- your industry by a bnus from the board Ily of supervisors; plar.t also shade trees, ct- and when the infirmities of age come e. upon you, you can sit under your own lIY vine and fig tree, conscious of having at done your duty, with none to molest or rd make you afrald. ad, AN old coffee drinker tells an ex thu- change something about his beverage. td S all I give you a long-tried receipt? say ed for two persons? We will buy our coffee of a grocer t:at we can rely upon to give theus ure Java, and fresh browned. We ihear will only buy a small quantity-not over tr two pounds-so as to keep it fresh, have the it ground, ser.t home, a: d immediately the put into our tightly closed canister. Nhe ow we are ready for some boiling water, its which first use to scald out the coffee-pot its we are to use in making it, and see that it tat- is perfectly clean; then dip into a bowl er two tablespoons full of your coffee from foer your cani-ter; break an egg, take one ol- fourth of both yolk and white carefully he with a tcasjoon-for, it the egg is put in fird a cool place it will serve several times; ad add the egg to the coffee, stir it, pouring her in a little cold water, until you can beat te it thoroughly; then have threa or four oe cups of water boiling in the coffee-pot, on and stir your mixture of t-gg and coffee en- into it, setting it on where it is hot but ir only let it boil up two minutes, then set it- where it will keep hot, but not boil, and pour out half a cup of the coffee to clear the nozzle of the pot, and throw it in again, which will settle it; and when ood your breakfast is dished up you will have a beverage fit to set before a king I-N. 7. ada 'lmes. ver, Cheerful Predlctions. ren tpy, Dr. R. T. Trail, in the Philadelphia stu- Star, is a very cheertul prophet. He says ur- we are approaching the climax of a pes 10( tilentlal period. From 1886 to 1885 the l00( planetsJupiter, Saturn, Uranus, and Nep late tune will approach the earth nearer than He they have been for eighteen hundred cx- years. Whenever any one of the four our have come near enough for us to feel its rom influence, pestilence, famine, and ex tremes of heat and cold have been found nis the result. Now, we are to have the in isity fluence of the four combined, and he pre rre- di 'ts that in seven years from now all ore. manner of evil which grows out of at na mospheric changes will be upon us. To for- lessen this calamity, the world is urged to lood use the strictest sanitary measures, and lood by health ans cleanliness counteract the f no erfects of our unwelcome neighbors. The de- world is so much better able to care for it. In- self than it was two or three hundred gyn- yer's ago, that by care we may avert ared much of the danger. To the following nent classes he gives very cold comfort: '" The n as dissipated, the glutton, the debauchie day may calculate on being among the first ight victims. Young men who devitalize ts." themselves by using tobacoo, ioungladiee iood who destroy one half of their breathing and, capacity by fashionable dress and tighi with lacing, will never survive the perihellot had of all the large planets of the solar system ntde rn it will be best that they into - h to On what a triflm matter great result Ithe sometimes hang. ¶ome merchants, whilt rent traveling, were overtaken by a storm, sac i'cc kindled a fre on the sands of the sea shor then to warm themselves and cook some food le They used for fuel a plant they found in the def neighborhood. Next morning they asa dis.some shining particles among the ashes, ase dis- an examinaton showed that the ashes of tb g to plant combined with the sand had producer pur- a hard, vet transparent, solid. This was th lee- orign of the discovery of glass. So wit i, of Buch. The Hottentots had for years use n, on the leaves of the plantin thefrrude practiet does As soon as the redsdent English and Dute I out physicians found out its value, the know edge of its virtues soon spread over the er tire civilized world. PARKER'S COXPOUX FLUID ExTRAcT BUcau posses-es all th ark, virtues of the plant, in a highly concentrate ken form, combined with Uva L'ral, .11ni1per Ile: hour ri( ·. C'ubelis and Acetate of lPotasc'a. a dys- unite'i in such rare proportions as to obtal the proper medilinal effect of each, whii neither too much predominates. sold iy a dzruglssa, everywhere, COnxSmPTIOx.-For the cure of this dl tressing disems there has been no medicine yet discovered that can show more evidence of real merit than Allen's Lung Balam. This unequaled expectorant for curing con sumption, and all diseases leading to It, such va as affections of the throat, lungs, and all dis eases of the pulmonary organs, is introduced 1I1 to the suffering public after its merits forthe V cure of such diseases have been filly tested by the medical faculty. The Balsam is, con sequently, recommended by physicians who have become acquainted with its great suc- 3,00 cess. No I Blood Will Tell. No lady wishes to sve it said that sheY looks pale and emaciated and, she need not, vaa for she can have rosy cheeks bright eyes 7 aC and a healthy appearance by tue occasional use of Magulre's Cundurango Bitters, the g greatest blood purifier extant; also acts spe cially on the bowels, liver, kidneys and stom ach promoting a healthy circulation of the blood and effects the restoration of color and appearance in a natural way without re course to poisonous cosmetics.-&8. Lout. of Globhe. 0 Send for Circular to J. & C. Maguire, Chem- withI ists and Druggists, St. Louis, Mo., and see testimonials. THROAT AppECTrIONS AND HOARSBENESS. All suffering from Irritation of the Throai and Hoarseness will be agrecably surprised atthe almost immediate relief afforded by the use of " Browon's Bronkial 7 ocdes" LI.NG (.,tIPLAINTS BtRONCHITIS, AsTlA, Ac., are spedily relieved, and if taken in time, per manentlv cured by hir. Jayne's Expectorant. You wilt find it also a certain remedy for Coughs and Colds. Cri.t lingering cases of Fever sad Ages are just the kind to take Sihallenberger's Plls. A perman ent cure is Inumediate. Every druggist keeps them. The Amoespher ef Seprig. With every change of season we have a change in the hygienic character of the air. In the spring it is impregnated, especially in low lying, wet dia _trlits, with menhltlc vapors, which generate chills and fever, rheumstlsm. ntodigestion, billousness and diseases tf the organs of respiration. It is I therefore particularly necessary at this time of e the year to invigorate and regulate the system so e as to enable it to repel the morbid inauences to r which it is more or less subjected. The stomach Sshould be toned, the towels freed from obstruc I tions, the blood purified, and the nerves braced and strengthened This can be easily Cone. Hoe tetter's Btomach Bittes' are every where procura ble : and in the whole range of remedies and pre ventives prescribed by the faculty or recommend ed thro-gh the press, there is not one that com blnes in such an eminent degree great emflicency - and perfect harmlessnaess. II is a positive antidote - kto maunlaria Whoever takes it habitually may lrl I- breathe the atmosphere of the worst fever and 11 ague locality without danger. Damp and chiling winds make little or no impression on the orgPal zation reinforced with this powerful vegetable in tt `igorant. and consequently It is a good safeguard again-tastnhma, coughs, colds, and other pnlmo Y nary complaints. It is not recommended as a re- -ho I' edy f. r this latter class of maladit s, but simply as Goi boi Le a means of streagthening the system against the 1i erial conditions and changes which so often pro- E y dae them. As a spring invigorant and al erative Sit will be found extremely benefcial to persons rs who are peculiarly sensitive to unhealthy and at ,$ mospheric Inufuences. er j S The SCIENCE of HEALTH for April w opens with Popular Physiology, Illustrated; of Medical Systems; The Scientific Era, Methods of rd Cunre; Natural food of Infants and Chuldren; Crime, its Causes and Cure; Health s. Fashion, illustrated; Consult your Thermometer; Season fn able Dishes; General Debility; Health of Farm ers; The Man of LongLife; What iattlesnakes G are Good For. In Talks with Correspondents we m havre, Enlarged Liver; Deafness; Fever; Brain _ Food; Catarrhi: Loss of Hair; Effects of Shaving, etc. A capital number, 20 cents, or $2 for a 1 e. year. Address 8. B. WELLS, Publisher, 389 0 SBroadway, New York. 9 ee -~ Ye Otn Boys.-" Three; or Honor, Love e and Hatred," by Jack C. Guibert, and Kate er Henderson's Choice," by Will. H. Dennis, are ye the titles of two serial stories begun in the March ly number of Our Boys, the former being accom 'r. panied by a striking illustration. There are also I r, several short stories, editorials, poems, sketches, A t etc., all original and entertaining. A comic l t lustration is given on last page. Subscription WI price $1 a year. Send stamp for specimen giving m premium list. Ad dress Our Boys, Chicago. rly 'eaeat FratCI a nds a oew en Kasbnel!o In i'nly fi.. (Don tpay 6a and SO for a machine, when you can by one for $sr dpin all the varlote a; ame kinds of woek.) Ask for "'HE 5 EpTEN ng NIA ' wr~ranted. Addtress "·Centennlat" -en rat In Machine Co.. i 3- Chestnut 't., Philadelphia eat Agents Wanted rgh the nited states. fur ot, Peat ad Oldeast F ty l .dI e -Ass fee fucd'. LiCne iseignm'or-a purely Vegetable t'e'artiw and Tnpic-for Dyspepsia Constipation Debilty. )ut Sick Headache, Bilious Attacks. and afl derange set m nra of liver. Stomach and Bowels. Ask your tDrutgraist for It. Beware sill ealt j Its to -UN writin to advertsers plc aeso meIe OW epizooty Cold., e 0 Epizooty Cough.ea o f nelmete wili reslt hsCONBUMPTION!I! the: T e- YOUEL NUMUDY IS Dur ALLEN'S LFNQ BALSAM! its ex- What abs ,osthse arl. Aa mos Wool,. oIhaveis C.Ilw l md For three I1 at bM e of araeced of Sa r in- sarm extnaviy tth m prlaeae, aen 1MnM aed thlen Cal fo er Alea lams asisea. rre imo e-- th e . A Dorn . D, of L0. or0, sOryst th1 "Alen'r sL Balsam nononty all Me ya beterg at. Puerct .leuo n in every casle emy kento aeda. Ha.iToneneT inSItpead ow iat. Y lier. TE GREAT F RE Tia30 TrOat ut se itIn mydaily pratice, and with unboundd suno cess.As an expectorsnt,itis most ertarinye farhea rat iosnPIndeido er el own." the Bastianieaur AttaLl SwySaysr "t have no do twi~llo become a rem tfo taken r onthe care os all itshease of te Thos ri- s paeO D ehhb55 rn m T Dredw? Lloyd, of Ohio, ara I remy duttag the rert sas te. no v hesitancy in mying that ytn I~the s e of your Lung balsm thtlam now sIte al The eP ~i~acthoi Lelaao,sys:"Irem.m thine menttor Balabmi as~o asy ther mediL ci eorfousCnhsrt, asdr wit ilize from CeTlnltrevil InnddhV ppehsed Sie' dies hac paash~ as veil aotsdrugisa, sa tae peasre Laag Usina can be takena a fact. :em; meted estiatonuo, and be convied of it eali ;hey mertD It· is- hamls har ik mee Idlsh sulis Direesoas aeeinpea sa bottle. hl Cafl for AJllis' Lan Rbalm. bore J. *. HAE3H £ COus Pfpi'Ietdi' ood. CIXCINN.TL omot. Ithe W Wras' n by alll M dicieDalrs. the Wonder. fiU 05£Cb with and grls wated, to rsh· ube Pleasant ork ad tiecd selendidpf a tme a.nt Agents' ont~tin clnding cnrmomoUeaar a Sen at one. Sa here tice. youaswthls. Joun5~t~.AwPnblb&,er.icsgo. Il lowl- MA)EmIYMa~sVWrtIIstecS&KIc~C1I5Ck I n thenrm. P 'S. 5lrc~f Supe orb WBeasti.5cn, aRted K. A. nTRAIT, Stapheatown, h.th Y~ rcrr opr ete r He- THE GRIATb WIE AT BOSTON! mr. all Asp~endid c.,io·ed 1L'g~ravng sine r15xi5 es, htinit take w,'an the Sr. nas at It heighu. viii h seam# WhIeI pDst-patd ,'y retalrn mall, and aso ThU 16033 Itl al CtoaPast-lel. a larg and intenresigtamiZ~~!lj per fUra y·'-r, ail for 5 cm., Addynem CLOMY FANdIVN, Troy, N. II, 12,000,000 ACRESI Cheap Farms! aw T3 C As1r LAND IN MAass r. for sale by 0e 18I1 PAIFIC RAILROAD MMII, In e OAt PLArS VALLarUT. ,000,000 Ares in Omtral N ºa 1Now for .ane In trans tof ofoty tae gad upwaids a .1Y1 LAND TIN TUASS' 033017 AT S a 123 T. RO AD TAucS INTurSUT UfQcIno. MILD .ND UUALTUWL CLINATI. 133TU s am. AN Aflý M OOS WATUL. d Dada. Des pl rb m THe WEST! YheT VALLsT. Soldier. Entitled to a omeadul at 100 AMec Tn NsB? IOCATIONS foe ce010MES. FREE NoM OES70 ALL MuRsor aom ~~LdaearrALL !eýM rm rs or aosJa tt0rmra LAW t>Us ti Osst ELau. arr i Y~I Lp1 eaof R oed Loead.o Il 1 slMapl Nooing the Land. also mew edilion of DascaZrrrsva YaBLES wrI wS mw MAPs Man.u Fun3 RvunYwU3L. A d dre 0. P. DAVIS, Laed £bewmeuoier U. LP. RR. , Oxals. Nas. PORTABLE Soda Fountains, sale. S gra sadlan. S000D FIE REAY AND 13, M fasared by J. W. CHAPMAN A 00., J Madison, Ind. gr Send for ctedr. $500 IN PRIZES 0 ~ma~hJthrIo bb M .t1' . 1 R ZN wll be awarded as PUZIUMS 1h O o o produceTi-b s: m W =0 Se pose. ties of Pottoesr to OLl r- O pig w~thhC . Ch ., acnt3Da. O A New Tomato, the "ARIWO . pr peaket.'L~yl~i~or 5d. . K. BLISS A SONS,Y il taik lee, New York. SWrite for Large lnatrated Decriptive Prie List to HEA,-~o N CT n .. bouble mingle, ni zlSDad Brrech.LeeLdlSEieIhOt am GuTIJmCvolIYr5. PistolB aCof every for men or he boyarAt veryT low pRIIeT rl o- VUSewinsg to Is Inches. i ".ne t e to s Tldellr iDs SeInd tam for decril uns ive list to BABE £C00.. Young America. l. THEA- NECTAR fri W0 SAk PUte RE.W A ; DwiR Bh tH h eD s h e th S ler a rt s of amaoue to allt tUe rert oir In' At Heath t.. rP.r.bozfn n- edn for Theo-Neetor etreut ti GREATEST CURIOSITY ew··nr d. U0, we selling eedy7.ýPrie to cents.No humbu. Addres sin GE A EAMl A CO. Boto Pass ra $5 th fApe aV w les t wanted l AlElaINe a r U" rtgopIe. ro eitherwrldyogor old make re mosey at work fer adoi tr paer San free.Address. dthuro r Co. .Portlad. n. wee ;ate arefree >m- Sewing Machine Is1 35 THE BEST IN THE WOULD. Ise, Aa g r e sqýklTo.ordrc dr. IIOTEBS!MOTEBSRD Jour nem' ii Coe' pren? UaerIS. WollS "(), L TW' SEWDING Ls SYH STS, 10.TL 3 e- H oTEETHNG. Tion vaae os w ,lag :7,It otonreieve. th cild frm pin, bet ::v. ýet1 toe. d - hla MOTHERS ! MOTHERS ! Ity. OTHERS 111 Ile" rourh nt fl dto prthue MwLeS. WINi S 80KLOWRi SHelewe a . SY CeUPFO DaRLiA II C HIDRN wehuINf. Reis alabe pre peatio tole bare Ines.lts NE. ! e sunre and caD fo~r n UE IDDY "xis. VInUJW5SOHGSE, RAvln¶8the fac-elmile of "CURTIS £ PERKINS" a I tasoldbldtlntst thromihout the world. we." 3)YH VARY.Th a linen lm o of give the AMERICAN Svcu JOV3NAL. oggtsLmsg over 33 5431 ·ratesofvaiuahlereadtn~rna mtier hsndaonaelv Iflu 'eeiy Stock, Poultry Dogs. Bird., Ac, soda pskaeL of I BOO Cuzam CocurT ammron Coxa. Imported Whits head OATS and Azuarx or LrczmnCUlove, wll be mn!t FREEo to all who lead two slamS, for postag. Ad· rays: drea N. P. loran ACo, Prkeeburg, Ch~aste Co. 1 REWARD eInre ItIs p~ a~ prenel tocreteFl Jou.1 Oom'1 wA Tehpaph aollrsg. tll TE AND 01.17 SYSES. 5?. LOami 2033 w. aoaseow. rain-MiJ.. ' IProf. FOWIJR'SJ GRBEAT WORI i wfA~a sacanr we selnds eanvsmsntooka~ ~em where J~·s r U inA33.!~Ud oo I of; Medle.2dr aeha. ai hs-owa. 354. ·QYr World Renowned P ie saml made zorc Whiahe n d Mosaerhio to gnrow 51013 the m.otheet (Se without Winirn the skin. si(~re~d rend or haidnew. Senat free an receipt ...ltand l.N'. LOVISMARTINAAC(l. uS UaIrr B~ret, (RiQSQrr I~ll. ea Waste Ilam Msus leat t & e .I sad badasr.a *Ent*, Or@WN k ~U2VP 3U3) & 0 ra A.' G W ~ DEEmsTIB, SYCBCEAI A 00 6ý North Fourth tmt, >bc hlsa1 ld room fM KENg, tses a Co. $11 MARUY aSa3r5, SEE e Da C r. W. FE*n irn S BOOTS & SHOES 14 & sib Washlapon Ave., C Davis & Co's sew stoe, S H. MaENOWN.s Main TEAfý1f Also P~ar of Growlj E.P.GLEAtSON £00 PA LL I NP Be" fao II W A'l'R APPFBA F1 s e ,adf am u . etr a e S s . n es te rU U sun. o.as .e ..,. .s· se sor L LIP11OOYT, Iutsr W. wco. ( a as curs s., se. De1l&TWID Dealers i Native and Forep Rise Via Doque. ? No. 13 Breadwa, St. Laoe LUDLOW, SAYLOR & CO. 1$1 & 221 NarkA ''Meet. maZ2T * 00 FLoUR, oGRAIN ** OuNAL Commission Xerchrat3 oo00 ol NORTH LEVE. uwTAstIS M TSATs. Si J. W MoINTYRtC. rssslaetr, ***" a s.atlmes,. No. 4 8OUTr FlUTE WEr t, 5?. QtaiogZa e SPPlCetion% Co Seted. elan gecst? .I AN DELGTD"ssr would not be witht atis for ts itsmb tehebep ett.e4e heaeboveles sor t e mmtni opieeop0dilbeadctdl e tdsSea wsorr isanHnw L&!4 AOi os ac. .414 N Thrd So . a· .M tl.* WELCH& GRIMMT " Beeseau. Mass.. sad Lletrsleb. a .........ra .. .....*** ~ UFtLIOR) TO 53l 0PI ____IY SAW1 WARRANY3. ble, v roM farpdrr. sat f C3COUNTED Horl e sad samtleeows. 0L WELCH & SR Wt1!t In UB isea.sesao, swad Deteas~l ared bdAstrb eOr wrri hrurg, Pa stamp lorclreAOl ee all eoelts lcksswet tore adr CsteU. S. Pow, elpt ofi50c. tbea~l Indisemearta to btherss wtRed. Wddra-elklflffF Bib ls Ce. b·~'ttlela, Maorkestresett, arl meg a lP em a: orat t broken borzeon of h Sm be M e. mib·. Inrr theLna~ Livr. he * t mii aaoei il bed OdI5doiini "l· prevete, d.arb lfiellfti. aw-~ ·L-noU udv Srl OUrs isr hw . ror itt. Louis. iri sle b(!i~ sa SieibeWw S WaOrll·dm Adalheai 3 t SmthCtWr JR WHITTIE~dRr, 6175?~ K~(J ..uerge ...sae di ad a. mmsatsi a e prscns8 Ur~r n ~r· II