J HOME, FARK AND UJLKDES. EgS pudding: Make n. custard ne quart of rSilk, four beaten ,S .wo table-spoonfuls of sn n flavonnp, oue table-spoonful of March I'our over stairs and away to cool. u 8el To give to soup a culiarly clear appearance, let it get cold tl en t .-?h a gallon of soup pft ,n thewhk" of on" egg. aud the shdl also; let the soun Minmcron the back of the stove fo? ten minutes or even longer, then stmin Every garden should contain a few rows of small f nut,, not only for i ful purples, bt for ornamental. On rich garden soils the product K sonVe nnes large enough to supply a faruilv SV1 Ver SmalT:irejv w-" they re. Every housewife should have a jar exclusive y set apart in which to keen cream. It should not be allowed to re main any length of time in a jar which has previously contain vinegar, apple butter, pickles, etc., unless it has un dergone a thorough washing and air ing. The expert wecder pokes a weed or iwo out of existence with his hand while his eye is locating the exact pot for the next stroke much as the mas ter of military drill keeps the next or der or two in mind while the present one is rolling off his tongue. Consid erable practice in either art is needed for perfection. Look out for Moth? If v ou have not the great luxury of some modern housekeepers, a cedar clo-et, Urcveu a chest, you must look to the garments that invite depredations from moths now. Air them and put away in cot ton bags with paper over them. Fasten the paper with mucilage, and it will be impossible for moths to get in. Colonel F. D. Curtis sav; that a good crop of was will afford from forty to sixty bushels to the. acre, and a bushel of them will go further in mak ing growth than a bush,-! of norn, be cause pt-as, being nitrogenous, supply all the tvants of the system, and make a healthful ami lirm flesh, whereas the corn goes more to. fat. which is not so good for food and makes softer pork with more waste in the cooking. He sows black-eyed marrowfats, with ground in good condition, broadcast or with a drill, using two to two and-a-half bu?heis per acre. ave the spent tea leaves for a few days, then steep them m a tin pai! or pan for half an hour: stra'n through a sieve and use the tea for all varnished paints. It requires very- little elbow polish, as the tea acts as a strong de tergent, cleansing the paint from all impurities and making it equal to new. It cleans windows and sa-hes an -l oilcloth-: indeed, any varnished surface is improved by its application. It washes win low-panes and mirrors much better ti:an water, and is excellent for clean ing black walnut and looking-gla-s frame-- It will not do to wash unvar nished paints with it. Feeding Chicken-". M One of my correspondents wnntto know why chick.- should not be fed '- -oon after hatching. Simply because the don't net-d food. The yelk-sac which "is absorbed ju-t before leaving the -hell allords sufficient nourishment J for the first twenty or twenty-four I hours. After beginning, feed often, say ' live or six times a day tor the first month or six week-: then the number hi nieais per day may be gradually di mini-hrd. until at ten or twelve weeks tiu-y will thrive on three meals per day. Fei'd early and late. The first feeding f -houlii be a- soon a pos-ible after day- l lignt. the la-t as late as they can -eo toV.at- When old enough to swallow the kernels, let the l:rt feed at nuht be wheat or cracked corn. Feed regularly not their breakfast at five o'clock one morning, seven the net. and the other meals whenever ou happen to think of it. Chicks d -landing around two or three hours at f a tii.ie chirping for food are not re markable for rapid growth. Don't feed uncooked meal, sour food of any kind, or sloppy food. Chicks may live some of them on such stuff, but" thev will not thrive. It is some trouble" to cook and prepare the right kind tood for a large number oi little chicks, but -'whatever is worth doing at all is worth doing well." Chicks f:h:it are fed generously and regularly on fre-h. wholesome, cooked food, for the first three or four months, will make beUer breeding stock, better lay ers, and better market fowls than those that worn-along through chickenhooc on scanty rations of raw meal and water. - Don't waste food bv throwing it on " th ground it the dirC or by feeding sc much at a time that the greater portion will be left. I know poultry raisers who in that way waste more food thar the chickens ait. and then grumble bc-cau-e it "costs so much to raise chick- ens." Feed each time what they will eat up clean, and no more. A few spoou.uls of chicken-food may seem like a small matter, but it is the close looking alter these small matters, the stopping of a little waste here am' a little ''waste there, that increases the credit side of the account. Fanny Fidd, m Fratric Farmer. Summer Care r Cattle. During the winter months cattle ken under protecting roofs are brougln more closelv under the eyes of their at tf ndauts than throughout the grass sea son, especially where the range of pas turage 'is extensive; and if those attendant-and their eyes are worth anything, the slightest symptom of illness or o -ir.y other event, casual or periodical, needing special attention, will be in stantly noticed. It is not necessarily so in summer, when the cattle mo-tly attend to their own wants as regard; food and water, and, excepting the cows when hand-milked, those which live out of doors are not brought undci the notice of any one. for hours, oreven day at a stretch, uule-s special provis ion is made for the frequent and sys tematic in-pection of the whole iicrd. Where the cattle are of any consider able value, and a single loss falls heav ily upon the owner, it is all the more impjrt-mt that the intervals between the lounds of in-pection should not bt kn lnu'jS.A'ationat Lice-Stock JoumaL Working a Seir Line. A tramp struck Detroit the other daj who will grow rich where others of his class will freeze and starve. It has Ion" been a wonder that none of these men seemed to know how to take human nature, but there is a man at last. He was yesterday working several street! in the northern part of the city. He made his calls at the front door. Se lecting his house, and when his riu" was answered he would remove his hat and inquire: 'Beg pardon, but is this place for sale.-"' l "No, sir." "Ah! excuse mo. I was told that it was for sale, although I could not un derstand why you would want to pan with such fine property. This is one oi the prettiest streets in'Detroit." "Yes, I think so." "The air must be sweet and pure here?" Oh, yes." IIov nice everything around your ooae is kept up! Any stranger could at once see that the family had taste and culture. Sorrv the p'.ace is not for sale." " "Do you wish to buy?" "Not exactly, but I know a gentle man who is looking for just such a place, and I volunteered to run about a little for him. 1 presume vou w,uld want at least :0.Oij0?" "Oh. my, no! my husband values the place at about SUJOO." "Only $!i,000! Beg pardon, but I hope he won't be fooIis"h enough to thmk of selling it at that figure. He might just as well get 1G,000. I .-ec that your neighbors" try to imitate your curtains. Ha! ha! 1'oor imitations? That is a grand flower vase you have there. I priced oue in New York the other day anil it was 600." "Y-e-s," she replied, pleased and smiling. If I was an art connoisseur I should like to look over your house. Every tliinir betokens that j-ou have made art a study and traveled extensively in Eu rope. By the way, I'll stey to the side entrance for a glass of water, and if the girl can spare a bit of bread and meat I'll be thankful. My Ions: walk has made me faint. Beautiful front view here taste and culture apparent even in the way this matting is nailed down on the steps. Sorry your residence is not for sale, and I'll just step to the kitchen door." He not only got a square meal, but she hunted him up a coat, hat and pair of boots, and then felt that she was in his debt. Detroit Free Press. African To'iozrapliy. Most African travelers are now con fining their attention to comparative ly small areas, and they can therefore de scribe with accuracy and miuut-ness districts which Living-tone, Speke. Cameron and Stanley were able to sketch only in broad outline. They are compelling geographers to revise their notion on many interesting questions of African topography. Mr. A. M. Mackey. C. K., who has spent three years near Victoria "Syana, writes that our maps give a very erroneous outline of the lake, and that Stanley's charts are extremely inaccurate, w liieh it. not remarkable in view of Stanley's short visit there. Siv months ago the ves-el Eleanor was launched on the Nyana, and Mr. Mackey expected with her aid. to make an accurate survey of the whole coast. The missionaries at King Mtesa's cap ital have just sent word that the lake which has long figured on the map as 1 ake Bahringo. and which tiie explorer Fischer tried to reach last year, has no existence. Stanley thought he had identified his Aruwimi lliver. the large northern a'l'uent of the Congo, with the Welle Kiver of Schweinfurth, but the researches of Dr. Junker, who i- spend ing his fourth year among the Xiani Xianis make it appear that the Aru wimi is known near its headwaters as the Xepoto Kiver, and that the Wells empties into Lake Tchad. Perhaps every atas published last year repre sented the (Quango Uiver as flowing into tiie Congo above Stanley Pool, though we are now certain that it mingles with the Wabuina Kiver before it meets the Congo. Six years ago the late Bishop Gilbert Haven wrote, what geographers gen erally believed, that hikes Tanganyika and N'yassa were separated by a dis tance "of five hundred mile-; but the missionaries who are now building a road between those lakes find that a highway two hundred and twenty miles long will connect them. Dr. Stecker has recently found tliat the Didessa Kiver, which appears on the map as an affluent of the Blue Nile, empties into the Indian Ocean; and Messrs. Dnira mond and O'Neill have just discovered that the Lujenda Kiver, which, since Livingston visited it. has been thought to drain Lake Shirwa, rises iu a lake further north whose existence has hith erto been unknown. So. step by step the real facts are superseding errone ous impressions of African geogranhy. Ar. Y. Sim. Currant Enemies. We are asked by a correspondent if there is "any remedy for worms thU eat the leaves of currant bushes." Yes: thoroughly stir an ounce of white hellebore "into a pailful of water. Be sure and get ic7e hellebore. This may be used even when the currants aro ripe, simply taking the precaution to wash the fruit thoroughly. But it is not harmful to the human being any how. Sometimes hot water, about as hot or a little hotter than the hand can be born in. is applied with beneficial results. After the fruit is gathered, if there are worms troubling the bushes applr Paris green, about a teaspoonful to a p.iil of water. Paris green is certain when it can be used with safety. II an insect eats it. it is a dead insect. But. of course, it can not be used on the fruit itself. It is probable that many of us do not pay as much attention to in sect enemies as we should. Of one thin"" we may be certain; unless we fight" such enemies they will get the better of us. Many a man is over-run with destructive injects simply because he does not look for them, and does not sec them, until they are in such force as to destroy all his fruit. West' trn Unra1. . Mildew may be removed by dip ping the stained parts into butteimillf and putting, thetn into the sun- Trimming Hedges. Very serious mistakes are often made in trimming hedges. To have a hedge look well it is important that it should be kept thick at the bottom; this can only be done by encouraging the growth exchanging stories, smoking and smil of leaves; the moment the leaves begin fog, but never looking about for anv to die on the lower branches, that mo- tt,mg to do. These are the commercial ment the hedge will begin to lose its ! travelers. Thev are at home, and when beauty, and gradually there will come ( tuwv pacij their samples and leave their unsightly gaps at the bottom of the weft-worked paths it is a good time to tieuge, nuiuu wucu uuce uiauu re cij uimcult to cover up with foliage. With a hedge properly trimmed it is difficult enough to keep all parts of it green and well filled with leaves: but with the usual method of trimming it is ery nearly, if not quite, impossible. As the great enemy to the growth and vior of leaves is shade, every effort should be made to bring all portions of other pi:shing people, the sharp drun. the hedge into the sunshine; to this end m t rid aml often Terv quicklv. uiciopui uiuran auuuiu ucvci uC permitted to overhang the bottom. To linn uic siues jei leuiuuuiL auu mi: iup P ?" square, is not only to make a stiff, un natural ami unsightiv.hedge, but it is uringirg the lower part of the hedge where it can not get as mucn sunsnine as it neeus. The bottom of a hedge sliowld always be the wiVtst, and the top should round up somewhat in the form of a 3"oimg cedar or hemlock tree that grows in the open field. This fvrm will leave the , lower branches in a position to get sun shine and air, elenipnts so necessary for the growth of leaves. It is almost the universal custom to trim a hedge with pruning shears, but if one cares more for beauty than time, the pruning Knite is tne nest, providing it be used by one who understands Ins business, and also providing natural beauty is sought for. To use the shears year after year gives the hedge a stiff, unnatural appearance, but with a knife in the iiands of one who understands natural beauty, the twig may be cut so 1 as to leave a naturjU appearance, and I yet keep the hedge in a symmetrical iorm. These remarks ai.plv more particu- larlv to evergreen hedges, which to keep in perfect condition requires even ' more care than a hedge of deciduous J trees or shrubs. One of the principal ( causes for abandoning hedges is because of the fact that they have been so trimmed that they have become unnat ural and unsightly bjects. Massuciiu- tells rloiiqhman. Harrowinir Corn. It is useless to repeat the annuttl les- son to all good farmers. But there are i vet a large number who 'do not believe j in or practice harrowing corn. They ' may believe it beneficial to harrow o"r by taking out the center teeth and then straddling t .e row. Hut none of this is harrowing corn in ihe tiue and impor tant sen-e it neeu a tiue, fclant.ng toothed harrow; tin n harrow so as to stir the soil in the hills and tear out tne incipient weeds. With this kind ol , harrow begin the work as soon as thf ' corn is planted, and keep it stirring , lively every day until the corn is large enough to stand, turning the dirt to thf ' hill with the cultivator. And do not be troubled about tearing up the corn, as there is but little danger of iuiury, even when it looks as if it were all torn to pieces. Aud do not tear harrowing toe j much. No such ca-e has occurred yet, , nor is there any probability of such an accident in the future. The harrow ir i really the greatest implement in niak j ing the corn crop, ami as the patent has ' expired on the .-lauting-toothei liar 1 rows, one can have them without pay- j ing two nunurcu per cent, royalty. ' Fine toothed harrows for corn cm be ' made light, aud verv wide, with joints so that they will fit uneven ground. With i a harrow twelve feet wide, an active I team can go over thirty or fortv acres per day, and thus the entire crop can be harrowed two or three times a week, which will be none too much. With the slanting teeth, corn ground which has considerable rubbish on it can be harrowed, but requires much more' care. By the aid of stalk cutters or even by deep and careful plowing with I the best class of riding plows, the j stalk- can be turned under so complete- I ly as to admit of corn harrowing. An? it is -o vitally important to harrow, that all farmers should provide a time to dispose of stalks, stubble or coarse manure, and hus give the harrow chance to do good service. The har row is not halt appreciated, nor is the character of the harrow needed fully understood. Tne old. heavy, clumsy harrow should be sent to the wood pile for fuel, and the light implement, with small but numerous teeth, sub stituted The real harrow should have six times as many teeth, and be three times as large as the regulation harrows of forty years ago, some of which are trying "to do service on the farms of the Rip an Winkles behind the hills, and unfrequented hollows. C. F. Clarkson. A Spoonful of Manure. Suppose one is raising a young colt or calf cr lamb or pig.whicn from any cause finds it difficult to get sufficient milk from its dam for the first few days of its xistence. Would it not get a poor start that would be likely to affect all its after growth? Would not a little extra appropriate food at such time tell upon its growth and vigor even to maturity? Apply this rea-oning to a young plant of corn, of wheat, or of any field or or garden crop. The young germ starts out. For a little while it grows and expands until the roots be- loiuc numerous enough and stretch ou! far enough to gather sap and other food fom the soil. Its first food Is the starch and other material stored for it in the seed. Xon- suppose as this decreases and is exhausted, the tender roots find more of similar food close at hand, in the form of rotted manure or other fer tilizers, to give it an extra push forward. Does it not stand to reason that these rootlets will be stimulated to larger. stronger growth, and push out further and taster into the soil, and thus be in position and strength to take up more food, to expand and grow with greater .-igor? There ara few 'oils, even on the fertile prairies, to which the addi tion of.a half-gill or even a table-spoonful of liquid manure, or of water soak ing from manure in the soil, or of some artificial fertilizer, would not have a welcome and stimulating effect, Prairie Farmer. What taii we aot endure, when pains are lessened by the hope of cure. JoJm Aabb. vmmercial Travelers. If any evidence were wanting to con vince one that business is flat it might ) be found in the knots of well-uressed s mpn who sit about the wholesale stores I rest. Thev are the happiest, most genial class in the world. With both eyes darting about keenly in search of trade they have yet time to make life a merry one. They are a very distinct class," and I often wonder they are not seized on oftcner by our rising novelists and playwrights and drawn as they are not distorted as 1'nipps. L,iKe most Thev usually all of them have several ;rong ;n the fire all the t;mtN aml keep a telescopic lookout for chances besides. Competition keeps their invention active for means to get ahead. I know of one dry goods man, who has anextenshe territory, who subscribes for more news papers "than are on the exchange list of a great many metropolitan journals. He reads them carefully, painfully in fact, and remembers what he reads, and when he reaches the town of, say. Dead Eye, Tex., or Prairie Dog, Neb., lie cantalk with merchants on local affairs just like a native. It pays him, for it tickles them. Chicago Inter Ocean. j A SPECu.i. from Waltham, Mats., ty i that 1,KX Watches are now made daily at Waltham. and titer are better in quality and lower in prica than ever before. A exchange speak of a " fatal mur der." The fiend who would commit a fatal murder would do worse. Ue would kill a man dead. Golden Days. MEDICAL TESTIMONY. IJciiLiSGTON, Vt. December IT, IMC I desire to call attention to the great re- lief to be derived from Allcock's Porous Plasters, in chronic bowel troubles, en largements of the liver, and the painful condition of the spleen in malaria. No lo cal agent can exceed their efficacy in ab torbent and anodyne properties. Wii. B. Belter, M. D. Moxtclair, X. J.. December 18, 1583. It affords me great plea-ure to recom mend Allcock's Porous Plasters and Braxdreth's Vegetable Pills as agents possessing great healing efficacy. The world-wide fame of these remedies is such as to render it almost superfluous to add a word of commendation from the medical faculty to increase their reputation. WlL P. f-TRICTLAND, M. D., LL. D. 341 EAST TWKVTV-SECOND ST.. 1 New York City, December 18, lcKJ. f Ihav;found Alloc's Porous Plas ters very'useful i i tjjo--e special diseases of women where ai.oimia is the cause of so much local pain and distuibiucj. Their combination is an excellent one, the best yet made to my knowledge, and have al ways been found reliable. A. VT. Lesser, A. M., M. D. 05 Jackson St., Brooklvn. N. V.. ) December IT. lt&S. f Being familiar with the stimulating, heal tng and anodyne properties of Allcock's Porous Plasters, 1 commend them as a most valuable aent in the cla-s of diseases for which they are intended. Tue stimu lating action when worn or the gastric region, materially aids in restoring strength and energy to digestion and the consequent building up of tissue and re storing tone to the general system. H. Arvqardt, M. D. A Wfstern woman wasdrivingthe hens from the garden the other day when a cy clone carried off her shoo I Boston Com viercial Bulletin. "Mr. Brooks, near Albany, was hope lessly attliuted with Cancer. It had eaten through his nose into in- mouth and throat. The time of his death wa only a question of a very short time. He praj ed for death, his suffering was sn great. S. S. S. lias had a wonderful effect on him. Hi im provement is so great that we all feel sure cf his beine perfectly cured in time." W. H. GILBERT, Albany, Ga. I The difference between advertising and advertiser is, the former always pays I while the latter sometimes doe not. PAriLLON Blood Cure cures all diseases oriciiiKtiuz in any impairment of the blood, as Fits of Epilepsy, Aiwinia, Sick Head ache, and Female" Weaknesses. "A rELLow feeling" in your pocket for your purse does not make you feel "won drous kind" toward the feeler. The Judge. " Rough on Corn." 15c. Ask for it. Com plete cure,hard or soft corns, warts, bunions. A OOOD many "amusements" are bores; but fLibiug is reel fun. 77ie Judge. THE GENERAL MARKETS. KANSAS Cm. Ju'y 1, 18?4. CATTLE ShlpimiK steers. ?." (W W. 5 63 V.itivc Heifers Nu'ive lows .. .. I'utcliiTM Steers. 4 2.-1 46 4 75 4 M) (ft 4 73 4 CO (a 5U1 4 60 fit 5 15 4 mi us. 4 as 1 l2 & 1 IK 74 en 7(? C7 fc 70 42 44 28 ft 2i 41 fe 43 2 :n & 40 7 W 40 7 5(1 14 & lo ll & 12 10 fj, 12 it a 12 74a feli V (A 10 15 & 18 43 H 48 1 10 & 6 50 5 40 (A 5'JU 5 10 & 5 23 2 25 t6 3 23 3 75 & 4 50 1 04'j& 1 05' !2 & U25J 52 (a 524 :',t6 31H V, & 37 15 00 il IS 00 10 & 11 4 40 & 4 75 8 23 A 5 75 C 30 & 6 C5 5 10 & 5 40 2 50 (& 3 50 5 00 & 6 HO K, & Hi fc5!4& WJi t" t K5!i M 6 53 tna si i 60 & CI IK 75 (if 19 00 5 75 (f. 7 00 5 25 Cj. 5 CO 10ic lOii 450 (SB 675 US Q, .;, 1 05 & 1 00 tU a 61': 34 & : 1C 50 16 75 ' HOGSfiood to choice heavj WHEAT Xo. 1 Vo u , COItX Xo. 2 O VTS 'n ' ltYE-Xo. 2 FLOUK Fancy, per -ack. HAY Car lotf. bright BUTTEH Choice dalrv CHEESE Kansas, new , EGGS Choice FOltK Hamp Shoulders , oiues .... ..... ........ LARD WOOL Missouri, unwashed., POTATOES Per bushel. . .. ST. LOCIS. CATTLE Shipping Steers. . . . Butchers' Steers... HOGS Good to choice SHEEP Fair to choice FLOCK XXX to choice WHEAT Xo.2red Xo.:i COKX Xo.2 mixed X v'll m V .. COTTOX Middling TOBACCO-Xew Lu Medium new leaf CHICAGO. CATTLE Good shipping HOGS Good to choice SHEEP Fair to choice FLOUK Common to choice.. WHEAT Xo. 2 red Xo. i.t.. . ......... Xo.2 Spring COKX Xo.2 UAlw " XV X XI .. POKK XewMtss XEW YOKK. CATrLE ExKrtP HOGS Good to choice COTTON Middling FLOCK Good to choice... WHEAT Xo. 2 red Xo. 2 Spring COKX Vo.2 OATS V.-tern mixed... POKK Standard Mess.... Twenty-Ire Per Ceat. Btrowtr tbma sax Other Batter Color. BCRU-IQTO.T, Vt., May 3d, lSJtt. I hereby certify that I hare examined the Butter Color prepared by WeUs, Rich ardson & Co., and that the same is free from alkali or any other substance injuri ous to health; that I have compared it with some of the best of the other Butter Colon in the market and find it to be more than twenty-five per cent, stronger in color thaa the best of the others. - I am satisfied that it is notliableto become rancid, or in any way to injure the butter. I have examined it after two months' free exposure to the air in a place liable to large changes of temperature, and found no trace of rancidity, while other kinds similarly exposed bscame rancid. A. H. SABIX, Prof. Chemistry, University of Vermont. "When the iron enters a man's soul it should nerve him to greater effort. -Iron is very strengthening. Philadtldhia Call. Glean' Sulphur Soap Is simply without parallel for wholesoms ness, and in its purifying effects. A great waste of effort The child that cries fr an hour never gets it. That wonder.'ul catholicon known as Lvdia E. Piukham's Vegetable Compound has given the lady a world-wide reputa tion for doing good. It is a living spring of health and strength. Max was made to mourn, but some mourn moie'n others. X. 0. Picayune. Whooping Cough, that dreadful afflic tion, will ba relieved at once with Fapillcn Cough Cure, The court room The front parlor. The Dial. " Buchu-paiba." Quick, complete cure, all annoying Kidney aud Urinary Diseases, $L m A "dtioll dog" i a wag with a funny tale. Pittsburgh Chronicle. Skinny Men. "Wells' Health Renewer" re stores health and vigor, cures Dyspepsia,!. The gate that turns with the tide The delegate. .Y. Y. Journal. "Rough on Coughs." 15c., at Uruzgists. Com plete cure Coughs, Hoar.-enes, Sore Throat. A very narrow aperture the crack of a whip. " Mother Swan's Worm Syrup," for fer erisbness,worms,constipation,taoteless. 25c Piso's Cure for Consumption does not dry up a cough; it removes the cause. CURES Rheumatism, Neuralgia, Sciatica I.ombazo, Barkacht, ITe&dirhe, Tootliarhp, Sore Throat, Mve!llns, Sralnr ISrulae, 11 ii ma, Nraltln. Jrot lilie. And Ail Other BODILY PAINS and ACHES. SolJbylrus.vlj.andlHMili-re eTwfc re. HltCebts aUjttle. lurvMiunsin HLniniai. THE CIIAKK.EH A. VOr.I.Ert CO.. (SucttsMirs to a. VMiiLtK a co.) Baltimore. Xd..J.S.A. PAPILLON "A CINCINNATI DRUGGIST REPORTS." Mr. Fcrd. ZucaSckr. Dru;it, No. G 6 V!ne Strict. Cincinnati. O.. wr!:es nndtr date April 7:ii 1 St. lime obtained four additional verbal testimonials for "The Rig Four l'errlcus I'up.'Ilon Remedies, from my cus tomers. Mr.LouNGratrrsays, I'a?ltlou BlJOdCtre works like a eaann G -o. C. Il.vx-nfeis, of Ik-thle hem suburb, says: papillon Blood Cure is aprtat rtlicf to him. and Is clad that he has at la.t found some thing that will do him pood." Mi-J C. E. Rlshark. Xo. 3si McMickcn Arcane, praises I'aplilon Skin Cure rery highly. She has ued three bottles. Mr. A Aim Kfcfer. cor. 3rd an 1 Martin Sts , has u -d two littles of I'apilloa Catarrh Circ. and siys. hi is positive It will cure ht:n If he keens It up," which he says, "'I will do." Mr ltcule, of whom I wrote in mr last letter, said to me this chd'sb that your "Papillon Catarrh Cure is apood remedy, because he has pim lta fair trial and has obtained most excellent, results there from.'' "NOTHING LIKE IT FOR RHEUMATISM." Mrs. Rills Stevens. JTo. SRJ South Dearborn Strct says that she ued 1'apiilun Skin Cure fur Inflamma tory Iiaei'.-natls.n. wiih th" happiest results. It re duced th; Inflammation aid swelling, and relieved the Intense pain In less than two hour; she cordially rec ommends it to all rheumatic sufferers. It Is applied by rubbing the Joints and affected parts with the remedy for some moments, the pain ceased almost Instantly, 4 THOf-IULY! FIRE U WORKS STGGI". TVe mate up special caie for I'rli afraid Fam ily uc comalnltii; a fine aa-ortiurnt of fireworks of all sorts. Our VS. OO race contain! OOprce. Our ftlO.eocax contains 4'M jut-trf. Our SlS.nO iae contain SOepIrcri. Will expni any of the aboe otet on rtcclpt of amount. So Firework scut C. O. I). C'ub In and wnd for a rate, an J we know th'j will de.lzht both jouni: and old. E. E. MEXGES Sc CO., 121 1X3 XV. Fifth Ml., Kaitsa City, Mo. 5, LIFKOFBLAI-IE, by an author of hi own election. U. J. Rant nt I.I, tne dltlnculrbed Journilist. LirKur lAIUAX.by Bk.v I'kb LEV fouKK. il yrar an officer of Conxr . Au thentic and complete. One vol., ASO pf- tie.-l portralta. S4 f-U tare llliiatnttlun. Out flu ready. Sue earn, cnt portraid. Aiiimt UUBKAIIII r.tstS.. KANSAS C1TV. MO BLAINE LOGAN. AGENTS Wanted. xvsrzF"0'rrE. EaiaWtshed. ltT3: Incorporaied. Ia For tln Cure of C'uncera. Tnaon, TJleer, Mcrofulu ind Skiv DisKA&rfi. without the aseor knircorLoisnr I1loi, and ll'tle pain. For IsmmATiiW, ctRcrLAiu a-i Krrmr.ci. addrt-as BK. F. U POXD. Anrora, Kane Co., IU. ELASTIC TRUSS Has a I'ad ditfrrent from all nth erlHcoo hate with Sir.arf. jntiiir Ibill In renter, adapts 1 1- .. m KrtiioBiipo'ltion!' oi tUe tixlr. 4 TRUSS M whHetheball7ntlx.-ruupret6a pr "V 7 back tin- intebtinca jut as a iri. ti u. ,. VT "on do" ','lti, tfce finger. With Iljrht prrmire the Hrrnia i held vcurelr day iM nleat.aBdarkdiuacurererbiui. Itinrair. duml-ii.l ch(fp. hent by malL Gn-ular-. frw. ECCLESTON TRUSS CO., 8ft Dearborn St.. Chicago' "r! fifiRA MO.Vril an board for 3 'in- Vnunr ww.Mtq or I.aille luatich cunty,t lake orden or j.aiite luaticn cunty,t lake ordetn BLAINEiNDLOGAN forthi unsar Addreti P. W. ZIEOLER ft CX. Chi cars. HL eolkvIPOPIUM HABIT GERWiN REMtOt FOX& 2E-..7X13J Br ricf S SS. 3. C H0mtAf, JST2ES0K. wiscoksih. I Advertising Cheats !!! Itha became so common to begin article, in an elegant, interesting style. "Tben run it into some advertisement that we avokl all snen, " And simply call attention to ton merits of Hop Bitters in as plain, honest terms as possible, " To induce people "To give them one trial, wnich so proves their value that they will never use any thing else." 'The Remedt bo favorably noticed in all the paper. Religious and secular, is , ,, "Havinp a large gale, and Is supplanting att other medicines. -Therein no dear ing the virtues of the Hop plant, and the proprietors of Hop Bitters have s-hown jrreat shrewdness and ability In compounding a medicine whose virtue aru so palpable to every one's observation- Did She Die? lNo! She lingered and suffered alone, plnixur away all the time for years,' " The doctors doing her no good;" "And at last was cured by this Hop Bitters the paners say so much about." "Indeed! Indeed T " How thankful we should bo for that medicine." A Daughter's Misery. "Eleven years our daughter suffered on a bed of misery, "From a complication of kidney, liver, rheumatic trouble aud Nervous debility, " Under the care of the best physicians, "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 Hop Bit ters, that she had shunned for years before using it." The Paiiests. Father is Getting WelL " ily daughters say: "How much better father is since he used Hop Bitters." " He is getting well after his long suffer ing from a disease declared incurable." "And we are so glad that he used your Bitters." A Lady of Utica, N. Y. s3yXone genuine without a ounch of green Hopson the white label. Shun alltbevilo poi sonous stuff with Hou" or "Hops" In tnett name. DOES WONDERFUL CURES OF KIDNEY DISEASES (J) AND Q LIVER COMPLAINTS, o Bfrause it arts on the I.IVKU, IIO'TELS sod KIDNEYS at the same time. Becscao it cleanses tha syste-n of the poison ous hnsaora tiat develops la Kidney aad Uri nary Ciseasea, BUisusness, Janndire, Constipa tion, Piles, or in Kneumaurcn. yenralgia. I-er vous Disorders and all Feaaic Complaint. XSrSOUD PROOF OF TU18. TV tcttt. SDTLELY CUBS CONSTIPATION, PILES, and RHEUMATISM, By causing TSSE ACTIO cf all tiie crsass and functions, thereby CLEANSING the BLOOD reatonuc the normal poorer to throw off diseaso. THOUSANDS OF CASES of the worst farsis of thc3 terrible dbeaes have been q-alcly relieved, and in a short Urn PERFECTLY CURED. FIUCE, $1. L1QUDOR DKT. SOLD Bl DRCCCISTi Diy can bo sent by mail. TEIiS, BJCHAHD50N & Co., Burlington, Vt. 3 S&4 ftUuip & Ditrj Aloiui&c fr ISM. IT IS HOT VCCKE ALL but a a tun'c aid healshr-ncwrr. and lor llimxl a:ul Skin 1i-c.im h. ami tnut!- rt rrid'nt on impure or im;sjvtr.h.'l blood. bwttYa S;h-c1Sc 1" ullliutu a rival. "Mr liatiy&!x irton:h oM broke out ttlth none kind of fklriliiiiunr. niidafirr Ijclnxtrrctti'd tle months by raj family iti) lcl it. v pl t-n up ti dip. The drug-irl-t ncoin'in.nd"dhnlft"9i-pt.inc and tbr result wa a Kratlf.ilni: as It at miraculous My child roun rot uc.l. nil traces of the dlscic N poni-. ati'l lie Is aa lav aapl." J.J KIKKLAXD, Mlndcn. Kink County, Texas. Our Treatise on Hlood and Skin LMcajct nulled fret. to applicant. Tlin b'VIFT SPECIFIC CO., Drawer 3. Atlanta, Ga. K. T. Oacc. 10 V Sd St.. iKtwiea Cth and 7th Ares. ; 1'hHadclpl.l i oacc. 1J3 Caeitnut St. Boring Wells with the Famous' TIFFIN" Well Bonng 2nd Rock DrlSing Hacklne ib very t-Touiame : $25 to $40 A -- A. r' 'AIAY Oftin Made! MAchinea Made to Sun by Horso, Hand or Steam Power. Bend for Catalogue. Address L00U1S & NYMAN, TIFFIH, (Hiio. EMES WHHE ALL USE FAILS. BeatCaucbhyrup. TasWneood. Vte la lime. Kold by druggists. "THE BEST IS CHEAPEST." RG!.LS, TURCCUCRQ SAW 'ILLS, aruPnm I nnLOnLllO ri.iTM HnlT lanePoten C!aTcfHa!ln (Scited to all (pctions. Write for FREE IHus. Parent:! aodrieestoTneAultinanftTaylor Co.. UaoaneM. Oliio. Ufl "FilTarn-Ao-ntg for Hit-Authorial Of If AI1ICU ficlal C'mpalKn BOOK. "r.a imi-; .AJTVJO IiOGrAIT. l'ro fuvly lllufttatid with Steel and Wood EngrxrlQfrs. Outfit only "ftia. Ifaiok sell tore!. WfFor every lO copli-s onfered. will tflrp premium a oomph to Gai ettccr of the V. S. rEOl'LrTS TUB. CO.. Chicago. PILES an infallible aire for rile. 1'rlce SI. from druggists, or rnt prepaid by mall Sarapl- ret. AiL-'AVAKESIM."- Makers. IloiUlU. NewVork NO Peddling delcsicc. ocrsoudqcikt HOMK KL-MNE.---M PATS YOU 300 REIT CENT. PROFIT. P.rUcuUn n:rr DRr PROCESS PH. CO,4Sl k485 Canal St-.N. Y. FARM DBAMTILE. Caulopic ted lncr Lu; mailed free Ad'ln-M C A. B1COCKETT. SudT. Kancaa C.tr. Mn. Whole and retail. Send for price Ht. liJIln ''ooiNM-nt C. O. ti WIr ruade to onl-r. fitri njiiie. to ord r. K. KUliNIIAM. 71 State Street. Chlrsce- Rl A IN C loo ax. Bos: sicd rotmiij. """l"iSixW. 15c. each; a'.per ItU, by mall. Apect wantciL O.KJ-eriPcrub'r. 131 N.vsau s;'.Y. EDUCATIONAL. B 1'M1XKN COI.I.l-:;K. InitltutP of Teaman- Rh!n.thurt Hand anil Ti lirati,ir nrrnKn fr. Address Boor Mcllraty. Lawn-nee. Kansa. LcARN TELcGnArHY r-ni ;'nfi".n,.'ucvr cluiiee e-er ottcrrd. A'LJ.U Hco N, lljr., Si-IIa, M- YALE LAW SCHOOL, iffisa. Fall term commrnrf S.'pteirih-r -tlL Forclrcnlai addniia XK'r. KKA.SCIH WATLASP. "Vnle College, Jitw llven. Conn. A.X.K. D. Xo. 985 MA J I Wfc wtM Zag-ffgwbteMMMMMM c fttBs s irjfJC.V TJtlTlXU 1 . lVF.KTWEE, plraf i yaw autc the AttrerUcmiu$ M this paptr.