Tb Tela of Oltf kta.ka, a. youax mm writs from 6t J jtepi ,M&, to dealer is this city that be i. iotTsriaf (or sale, through stress of t-irc ituskse, a very rare book. prtaumeb; ;"ta oldest book in America. " Tq vol an is p no tad in Dutch, is to perfect ocoditioc and was published more that; 300 yean ago. The present owner .whoa latter proclaims hi illiteracy, La lievsa that he bat a veritable treasure He will be terribly shocked when he discover that his treasure la worth io the market oot more than $0. Age alone give value to but very few boosts. Yet the average person baa a, idea that it a book was printed long ago it must neossarily be valuable, and, what is curious different people differ as to the date that make a book old There are those who fancy that a volume printed ICO years ago must be esteemed very old and very valuable. Other show you with pride a lludibra s printed we will Biy in 1750, or a Bible printed 300 years ago, and these volumes sre cherished because of their antiquity. A very worthy lady living in Massa chusetts recently exhibited with an elaborate fluriah a volume of sermons bearing the date of I7S-0 a volume she revered, loved and treasured because of iU age. A few moments later he gave up to the writer without any hesitancy a charming little 1827 reprint of the New Eogland primer. Chicago Record. Spain has only a few more than 3000, 000 horses, or about ons horse to every GO people, M wt of the "cavaliers" ride on donkeys. Italy, with a human population of more than 30,00(1,000, has only 720,000 horses, but it bas almost twice as many mules and donkeys as horses. Mis Edna Lyall is at work upon a new Dovel of Irish rural life, having paid a visit to Ireland to give it local color. Frederics: Hurl bus, of Woodbridge, Va., having been spurned by the woman he loved, committed suicide. In obedi ence to bis dying reijueHt, be bas been buried where the woman who rejected bim can view hit grave-stone from her door-way. A St. Lous phvii.jinu wisely declares that only healthy people should mairy. "If I had my way," he 1 dds, "blonde, should never uiurry eiiuh other. A blonde ahould secure a brunette for a partner. If this were done, e should become more 11 1 ifu I ah n race, and itronger, and longer ived." srv TO IT that you're nut put off with iin pixr substi tute, when you usk for Pr. 1'ierce's Oolden JluJical Iiiacovery. Get It of on honest dealer. As h blood cleanser, itrenirtli restorer, aad nt-xh-lHiiHter a certain remedy in every disease caused by an inactive liver or bud blood, there'i nothing else tout's " just as good" as lbs " Discovery." It's the only medicine flH'iiWwil to bene St or cure, or tbe money is refunded. (Urn Itronk, If. C. Tin. K. V. FmacK: fMi- Sir- Twelve months ago I was hardly iiii!" t" work at all. aiiffesrd frotn nnrvniisnms und mmukiii'SS, nail atari cough. 1 can work ull Urn time now and nee. latins i"" " r- snd feel that It s all due to the a. k. d." Yoasg ijilicro! W Oy er Ton a BemUf vMeh Imnru Safety te lift of Mother and CIM. MOTHER'S FRIEND 1 Jtebs Confinement oiM Pain, W .-rnr atidBUh. etaMiiiMub!tt!.'.at ""? other's Frli as"! suffartHltmt ilteio 1 .ii,iiti1ui iiut ciperUmeaUiei IiiUiph ulUTW..i.t ' I lu mu.Ii caea.-JL. SJaua QQL,Lumav, uik J..U. I sin, 1391. asat by ernrrss, eljars prepaid, on receiptor StlM, (1.90 pur ixju ! 3. 1!i lo M' ' liera mailed tree, KADi'it i.t9i:n;ti.4tou co., ! AT ..n':m. OA, i ec;x i;f ' m. lit .i.-iista Tie Best Waterproof Goat In the WORLD I - b..?u in. vv'k i" virirTP f wrimntpd Wttf- nrorf. sihl will kn i ".I. y l:i llio hril.;i.uiorm. ins lirwi-OHMl.l. Ml K Kills a perlMt rsii i cost saw Urenraa enure a. . newcM "?"'"";'':":' ti Alai'.'ieJ ir.-.' J TOWKK. IKnUm. Mass. $io A Day Free 1 Enclose in a lell. r containing your full name ami ai'dr. ss, the ouiside wrapper if o l.olile of Smith's Bile Deans (either size). Ilvourleiier i the lirw one opened In the first morning m 'II of any day except Sunday be aent you at once. Ifiiie ail, 3d, 4ih, 5ih or 61I1, Si. Ak fur the SMALL sie. I u'.l "si in liledto all who send pnHuv.e t'.rii (sets.). Address J. Y, Smitll & Co. No, 955 Greenwich St., New York. Not a trip; iXJtSj In a barrel of , them " IsVSaifesl i...(uifc..tilr.t...Hir.i.il. SoMgngl a..Ha.aiaBwa.A.II. WilularSwkttsmUrllar ClltCHCU WAKTKU. Free prepaid out OSL OMin in. "lie "r earned o"r?".0l0 In live years. PSION, V. O 1S71, New York. af at riPirn xra t tiuvh., w t mm WAllTBU (0 IO a month sipmm TOMB Wail M.NIITMM. aSAUIwON. WU SUCKE Bssj iSonth jmp. TaMaeUwX OS I I I tJ .KfclE AND THE FARM. OfcPARTMENT MADE UP FOR OUR RURAL FRIENDS. Care and Management of Dairy Calves 4 t ore Gate Li-h Clover ma aa Auul lujtry to Wheat by Frostr-Krera;rawa for Windbreaks. Meeure f-'astenina tor Gate. In the far west a barnyard Is called by the Spanish name. corraL A gate to a corral that is proof airairiBt beinit opened by swine or cat tle should always be provided. One that is excellent for security, and that can be easily constructed by anr far : er, is shown in the illustration taken rrom tbe An erican Agricultur ist H may U of any desired width, but It over three feet wide, it should be provided with a diagonal brace, extending fro n the lower hinge corner to the opposite upper corner. Tbn gate s made of one-inch lumber, four inches wide, with bottom pieces six inches wide. The vertical cleats on the sides are double, and secured by wrought or wire nails driven clear SKUt.'KK OATI I. ITCH. through and clinched. A sliding bar, a, with pg b extending through for a handle, is notched on the upper side, and placed between two of tbe gate bars. Two cleat-, c. of lx inch stuff, are nai.ed arms, two bars on the hinge side of the gate. To these cleats a drop catch, d. i-i fastener by a wooden pin, so t: i, it will allow the sliding bar to I aver-e beneath. When the. sliding liar is pushed for ward Into a nioitise. in the post, the catch falls into the notch, and no cow or horse can possibly remove It. How to. Slake Insert Powder. There are few people who have any idea to what extent the flowers of Chrysanthemum cinarari o'folluiu are cultivated in Daluatin, for the sole purpose of making the powder which has such a reputation as an Insect destroyer. The whole of the supply of these flowers has hither to been derived from the Aut Ian province of Deltnai 1 1 and the neigh boring state, Montenegro. Trieste is the m irketto which theso flowers aie brought, and from whence tbey are distr btited to the average annual value of '40,000 to c",0,ooo. The plant is one that'ls easily cultivated in any kind or soil ami almost an7 climate. Within tiiite recent years It is said to have liecn introduced into Australia, Cul.iotuia, and South Africa, in each of w Irrli lit cultiva tion on an extended scale, lor com mercial purposes is contemplated. In tbe noigborliotl m 1 e liti it Is also stated that the plant is yrown largely, but up to the prose hi, time Dalmatia la the chief source from whence Eu rope and America draw their princi pal suppl e-. Tli h trvest commences at the beginning ol un', and in the face of the report thai the plants had suffered much from 1 1. e severity of the past winter Wo crops are looked forward to ulni much anxiety. Gardener's Chronicle. f rost Injuring Wheat. Dr. Galen Wilson gives some good practical advice in the New York Tribune about sowing wheat and clover, lie ii'lvocates u compact seed bed which experience has proven best for wheat Hut when he attempts to give the reason lie tails into error. Ho says truly, "Krost heaves clover only when the soil is deep and soft;" but he ailds, "Like wheat roots, those of clover penetrate the com pact undersoil, and frost has no ef fect." We have often seen clover roots snapped at the surface of the ground by frost, while the lower part of the root was held in frozen soil. It is not that the compact subsoil holds the wheat or clover root firmly that saves wheat and clover from winter killing. The shallow seed bed in fall with a comp'ii t st rata beneath It prevents the win- a mot from go ing deeply. . o soon as the young roots strike this hard pan they branch out horizontally. The top also does the same, nraklng the 'sp eadlng habit of grown." which all growers of winter wheat so much desired. Then, when cold weather comes this mellow seed lied is generally raised in a body with its wheat roots spread out and not much injured. The lower strata is only mellowed by freezing, and tn tbe spring the wheat roots that have wintered without in Jury strike down into the subsoil ofteu to great depths. They ought not to do so in the fall. Care of Dairy t aire. Prof, ltobertson says that breed and feed are to a cow like two wings to a bird one alone is of but little use. A rule that will apply to a ma ture cow ought to apply with full ns much force to a young calf. A calf may have descended from a good strain of animals, those possessed of good milk and butter qualities and yet be Injured in bringing up. A calf may be injured by extremes in feeding, by feeding too much of too concentrated food and by foedlng too little of poor food. We havo seon nuinoious instances of tho latter treatment, and carried a llttlo too far for the hoalth and even tho lire of the calf. As a rule, we are favor able to a natural course unless It Is too uncertain and expensive, and believe that the milk as it comes from the cow Is fullv as beneficial as any arti ficial food that can be produced; hut the Question of profit aftar a time comes la and the cream can be better employed than in making calves, so after one gets & lair start skim milk may be employed with dry ground oats The oats are fed dry so as to secure a healthy degree of salivation wblcb by aiding digestion ensures a heal thy system and ati mulates growth. A regular healthy development of a calf is likely to prove far more satis factory than an abnormal and un natural development German town Telegraph. ' Tb Teafilaa Heifer. The heifer with her tlr,t calf is but half a alf, as tbe saying goes. She Is but at tbe dawn of ber development for the purposes of the dairy. It Is at this point that tbe necessity of careful and prudent management steps in. Tbe man entrusted with the development of a cow for the Ural year of her milking impresses his defects or excellencies on her milk production ever after. At this period the heifer's teats are inclined to te small, but if the man handling her at this period is a competent person these will be enlarged to their normal si.e under his manipulation and remain so during her life This is the critical point in the heifer's career, if she is to grow into a profit able dairy cow, and should impress on the dairyman the importance of having her looked after in an intelli gent manner. She should be man aged bv a careful person who possesses her confidence In the fullest degree and whose method of treatment Is acceptable to ber. This is the point where to avoid the mistakes of the past that you committed in tbe train ing you used with your former year ling heifers. American Dairyman. Hrlei tlUs t'OWS. In selecting cows fordairy purposes, care should be taken to get them of a uniform type if possible The head small and ' lean, eyes full and mild, neck full and thin, backbone promi nent and open between joints, hips wide, legs short and fine boned, bar rel well rounded and large, deep through behind the shoulders to give plenty room for heart and lungs, ud der large, running well forward and back, teats, short, but thick and wide apart. Avoid those whose udder shows a tendency to collapse after be ing milked. Such cows are usually large milkers and may be set down as thin milkers. The skin should be soft and mellow to the touch,. covered with thick, soft hair. Do not mis take si.e for constitution. A cow weighing nine hundred pounds is a large as I care for. (Jlover as an Annual. A writer in the American Agri culturist claims a valuable discovery in the fact that spring-sown clover cut Just after harvest bas produced a good crop of seed the same season. If he had waited until spring he would not be so enthusiastic. Treating clover in this way, seeding early on rich land and cutting close to tbe ground at mid summer, be changed clover into an annual. This is some times done with other plants, beets, radishes, and carrot, but the plants after seeding will at once die. What is most. needed with clover Is to make it perennial. This to some extent can be done by entirely preventing seeding the second year. This re quires several cuttings. The plants should not even be allowed to blos som, for that also is exhaustive. American Cultivator, The Useful Skunk. The true usefulness of the skunk Is fast becoming understood. When the sun sinks low and the injurious worms begin to feed and cut the corn the skunk, holding his head down to the ground, walks slowly, listening intently at each plant; and, hearing the movements of the worm, he digs It out with his snout and quickly swallows it, of which a hundred hardly suffices for a meal. This ani mal has some disagreeable habits, it is true, but it is to be taken with all Its faults and made the best of for what it really is worth. New York Times. Farm Motes. The margin of profit in farming it too small to admit of any unneces sary waste. Incricasino the size of the pieces of seed potatoes increases tbe yield; result of three years trial. Soktkn up the collars of tbe work ing teams bv pounding with a stick and kneading with the hands. Eveuy farmer should feed his products so as to make all the manure possible, and then apply it wisely. Plenty of shade and fresh water are needed dur.ng the hot spells. Keep the water in the shade and re new tre (uently. With really good roads, the farmer six miles from town or the railroad station would find the cost of trans portation no more than one now three miles away. Tub foundation for success In live stock farming lies In the econom ical production and use of feeding stuffs. Then, given uood stock, the problem is pretty nearly solved. It has boen found at Ellersllc, Mr. Morton's famous (iuernsey farm, that one acre of ground will produce en silage for from three to five cows, while It takes two acres to produce a similar supply of hay. Tub total yield, or the yield of straw nod grain, was some fifteen per cent greater on the plata Irrigated at night, and the ratio of straw to wheat was theretoro much greater on tho plat Irrigated at night. Thk beginner Is specially warned against spending his money lor any novelties In bees unless he wishes to test them In comparison with what are recognised as the best) and can afford to spend money for such iwr-Vote THE ROYAL Baking Powder surpasses all others in leavening power, in purity and wholesomeness, and iS indispensable for use wherever the best and finest food is required. All other Baking Powders contain' ammonia or alum. ROVAL BAKING OWDER CO.. 1M WALL ST.. MEW-VaaK. .AAAAjlr. A A A The King 01 Si t honee, but slielie' bis own family. II ' and 72 children. II eps a boarding- 1 he mem here of - 'J ollicial wives, brothers and sisters ounil er 50, I he tut 2vS uncles and aunts. Thev all live with liiui. A strange appl -tree, which is koovn to have been U'.i years old, was de stroyed by a reciii s'orm. on the pro perty of M's. IJ'lit llotjlik'ss, in Cheshire, Conn. It btr fruit every yeur, but only on one side each year. The side that ixire one year would be barren tbe next. It yielded 110 bushels a side. Toek Her Fm tier's Neat. Butte county's umnt popular daugh ter today is A nnu Morrieon, wboss fa ther, Hei tf M irr'i o is one of the Boat fatuous i.-liMnicleiB on the coast, says the Hsu l'rancisco Chronicle. ''Hen" Morrisun h.-m driven the coach fron Chi rokee Kl.ii iIdwd Mjrria ravine to Orovil e fcr i! theKe many years, lie is a t;)Cil old-time aUge-dr ver, hs!e, bluff, hearty mid good uatured, who could f.ot livti imy where else but in H.e reg'ou in uim li he has spent the i'.te" portion of Ms .f. the mountain iivion of northern CiiliforDia. To him 'I' '1 Cup riiV'O , S Hainan revine and all the d ..ens 1 f it. II s in the mountains itv Hr fitm lin, i. I, .pa's fountain is to the slatuus of Kearney street. For - with it In dee" h s -pecial mission in life to I rmg d'n the gold from the 1 untuin recesses to Oroville. Few nf . I'oiii'l ettfrly drive a coach over .1 .. roa 1, but 11-11 Morrison had been t if :e so long that it lintl uever occurred to anyone that he might meet with an accident or be called away. 80 a short time ago when he was thrown from hie ouch and had hia leg brokeu there wae ilin'.reas in the community. "Who can liM ins place?" whs the main question. The many deeds of valo and kiodnees of i he old stage driver, his many bat tle?, by physical exertion and the aid of his reai'y gun, were recalled. There did not aeein to be anyone to succeed him. 15ut the stage went out the next morning just the same. When the horhee had beou hitched and all the minor details had been attended to Mies Annie Morrison, the charming daughter of 1 he unfortunate driver, jumped into the box, took up the reins, cracksd ber bip and drove sway. Throughout ber father's illness sbe drove the stage, sn 1 did it as well as Old Hen ever did. Her independence and bravery commanded attention and forced respect. Miss Morrison is only about twsnty years old, and is a refined and well educated young lady. She bad miide the trip with her father many a time and had sometimes driven tbe horses. Why should she not do so during tbe conval. scene of her father? With her to think was to act, and for nearly a month she manipulated the lines. Big 'sh in the Hudson. For a number of years the United States fish commission, cooperating with the New York commission, has b'en engaged in stocking the Hudson and its tributaiies with salmon fry, This river, though never a salmon rivsr seemed to present tbe natural condition for the establishment of the species. There are, however, according to the Washington Star, on both the main river and tbe tributaries, natural ob structions which would prevent the as. oent of salmon to the spawning grounds at the sources of the stream. It was, therefore, determined to test possibilites in this direction by continuing to hatch out and plant the fry in the bead. quarters, in the expectation that they would go to sea and on their return show themselves at tbe different ob Itruotions in tbe river. Several hundred thonsand fry have been planted in the river each season tor some yearn past; and two years ago ten thousand yearling fish from the Maine station were also planted in the river below the Troy dam. Though no salmon fishery la prosecuted in the river, and no salmon were taken only incidentally in tne shad nets, recent re. ports from E. C. Blackford, of New York, indicate the taking during the present season of more than eight hun dred salmon, varying from ten to twen ty-flve pounds in weight. With proper protection in reference to the fishing, and with provision made to permit the salmon to reach the head waters of the river, there is now no reason to doubt that tbe Hudson will become as important a stream in this respeot at is the Penobscot in Maine Mr. Hume-Tones, the Enttlish artist. is engaged upon the interesting task nf naintlna DOrtral' of Mr. Uiadstone a vnnnsxt sranddaunhter. Dorothy Drew this little blue yed msden of 3 years is 1 aald to resemble the grandfather start-1 Hnfly. 4 .1 A A A A A A A A A A A Mount Kioseo, which rises precipit ously 700 feet out of Moosebead like, Maine, is whoely composed of borne atooe sdi.' is tbe largest mass of tbst mineral in tbe known world. Tbe River St". La wren se, it is esti mated, covers 90.000 square miles; and ss nearly the whole of this area averagsa 600 feet In depth the aggregate volume of water cannot be much abort of 10,300 solid miles. It is computed that a body of water of this si.s would require more than i years to pass over tbe Falls of Xiagaara the rate of 1,000,000 cubic feet in a second. Catherine da Medici's Doctor. l'hHinelius, like many other physl- ciaus. was much addicted to pnuosopny sod imithematice, but having taken to medicine he speedily attained b great practKse. Ileciy II as dauphin and aft erwards as king wss his constant friend. Amoiu the moat grateful of his patients wss Catherine de Medici, who believed that his skill had saved ber from a state of childlessness, and who gave bim on the birth of her firstborn 110,000, order- ng that a like turn should be paid to him at the birth of each succeeding son 3r daughter. I think that Cardano iked Pharnelius bettjr than he liked Sylvius. He says be was a pale, lean man of about SO, who loved bis study mid was full of domestic affection. He wiis the professor of medicine in the universe ty and the first court physician but he must have puzzled Casssnate greatly, for he had an undisguised con tempt for court society. Blackwood s Magazine. In some parts of Mexico, tbe party in power maintaiu tnetr positions oy throwing into jail their petitical oppon ents on the eve of an election. When the election is decided, the disfanchised are released. After reading a long Congressional debate on tbe silver bill, a man in Uuxbury, Mass., coughed up a dime which he had swallowed some months before, lie evidently favors silver as a circulating medium. In the Henry mountains in southern Utah is a mound covered with the giant sryetals. Prefect prisms of selenite C feet long ate found there. In the lost ten years, 140.000 residents of the Province of Kuebeo hare emigrated. Moat of then have taken up their residence in the United States. The most populous horse country in the world is Russia. It has 20,000,000 of horsee. Tr rlrnnsv after a rood nirht's sleep. there is indigestion and stomach disorder which Beecham's Pills will cure. 26 oents a box. I know, or rather ussd to know, a village in Dovenshire in which every able bodied man used to subscribe re gularly to a common fund. It was an ancient custom and possibly still sur vives. To what purpose do you suppose that fund was applied? To making every subscriber that is, every able- bodied man in the place drunk, dead dunk, I fanoy, but certainly drunk, on cider, on certain appointed high days and holidays. Talk of tbe temptation which a great city offers to a country man to fall into drinking habits? What singular notions some folks seem to hsval-AU the Year Round. HALL'S CATARRH CURE is a liquid and is taken internally, and acts directly upon the blood and mucus surfaces of the system. Bona ior lesuiuumuis, iree. duiu The Turkish Sultan lately deoided bis 167 wives should be vaccinated. A doctor was called to the harem, and he stood on one side of a temporary wooden wall, through which a hold was bored. No outsider is ever permitted to gaza upon the faces of the hultan'g wives, An arm of each woman was paased throush the aperture, and the doctor vaccinated tbem without getting glimpse of their faces. I Am Truly Thankful For Hood's Sursanarllla. Muring the war contracted typhoid fever, and fever and ague leaving mo with ma larial and mercurial poisoning from which I havo suffered ever since, In neuralgia, rheumatism, nervous prostration and gener al debility. Much of tho time I have been unable to work, and the doctors' treatment failed to do me any good. Since 1 Mr. Btlllman. began taking Hood's Sarsaparllla I have not lost a day's work in three months, weiio tei Hood'sCures peends more than for years and am In better health than any time since the war." J. H 8TILLM1), Cheltenham, 1'a, Get Hoods. Heart's Pills beeoms lbs favorite cathartic With every one who trlei tbem. 55c. per box A miniature fort has beeoer'(d io (be play ground of the socs of tbe Ger man Emperor. It ie furnished with lit tle cannon, and tbe lads are taught to fire then, and bombard a hostile camp scientifically. One of the jtost singular prod acta of Hawaii is a vitreous lava known ea Tele's hair.'' It is a silky, filamentous substance olive green, soft, but very brit'e. It is produced by tbe wind catching the fiery spray thrown up from the great crater of Kilanea. One fact has been brough out with conspicuous clearness during tbe dis cussion on the financial stringency aad that is tbe banks are responsible for a good deal of the trouble and that they hare helped along the state of things with which tbey bare been struggling in their greed to use depositors money to the bast advantage to themselves. Io this effort tbey have encouraged Wall Street speculators and have contribu ted to the aid impracticable enterprises because there seemed to be great im mediate profit to themselves, and they haye so acted in many cases to the de triment of legitimate business enter prises. Our wbole banking and cur rency system is in a most deplorable mudd'e and it will take years to fully clear it up. In tbe meantime business will go on improving, and before many weeks the work will be so fully ovei that the panic will be regarded as an incident of the past. Any sudden change in the condition of the atmosphere is certain to bring its har vest conghs and colds. These, if suffered to run on, are likely to terminate in con sumption: but theyJiay he readily cured by Dr. Bull's Congh Syrup. Mary Osborne and Palo Alto were tbe only two animals foaled at his farm that Lelaud Stanford ever named. August 99 Flower I have been troubled with dyspep sia, but after a fair trial of August Flower, am freed from the vexatious trouble J. B. Young, Daughters College, Harrodsburg, Ky. I had headache one year steady. One bottle of August Flower cured me. It was positively worth one hundred dollars tome J. W. Smith, P.M. and Gen. Merchant, Townsend, Ont. I have used it myself for constipation and dyspepsia and it cured me, It is the best seller I ever handled C. Rugh, Druggist, Mechanicsburg, Fa. KNOWLEDGE Brings comfort and improvement an! tends to personal enjoyment when rightly used. The many, who lire bst ter than others and enjoy life more, with less expenditure, by more promptly adapting the world's beat products to the'needs of physical being, will attest the value to health of the pure liquid laxative principles embraced in the) remedy, Syrup of Figs. Its excellence is Que to its presenuns; In the form most acceptable and pleas ant to the taste, the refreshing and truly beneficial properties of a perfect lax ative ; effectually cleansing the system, dispelling colds, headaches and fevers ana permanently curing uuiuvipaviuu. It has given satisfaction to millions and met with the approval 01 me meuica profession, because it acts on the Kid Tiara T.iver and Bowels without weak ening them and it is perfectly free from ejvsry oDjecuoiiauLv iuiiuw. Syrup of Figs is for sale by all drug gists in 60c and $1 bottles, but it is man ufactured by the California Fig Syrup Co. only, whose name is printed on every package, also the name, Syrup of Figs, and being well informed, you will not accept any substitute if offered. The) Oreatest Medical Discovery of the Age- KENNEDY'S MEDICAL DISCOVERY. DONALD KENNEDY. OF ROXBURY, HASS., Has discovered In one of our common pasture weeds a remedy that cures every kind of Humor, from the worst Scrofula down to a common Pimple. He has tried it in over eleven hundred :ases, and never failed except in two cases .both thunder humor). He has now in his possession over two hundred certificates of Its value, all within twenty miles ol Boston; A benefit is always experienced from the first bottle, and a perfect cure is war ranted when the right quantity Is taken. When the lungs are affected It causes shooting pains, like needles passing through them; the same with the Liver ot Bowels. This is caused by the ducts being stopped, and always disappears In a week after taking ft. If the stomach Is foul or bilious It will causa squeamish feelings at first. No change of diet ever necessary. Eat the best you can get, and enough of It. Dose, one tablespoonful in water at bed time. Read the Label. Send for Book. ff. M. V. Xo. SS3--4S. Terk, Web, &t&iiS?T r aim J