Departing Day. Come away to tho western windows, Where bright at the day's decline, The hills all clothed in splendor, Drink the sunset's rosy wine ! The valley lies in shadow, And "silence reigns supreme ;" The echoes all arc sleeping Where only echoes dream. In far-off rocky caverns Where sprites and fairies dwell With mysteries around them, That man can never tell. The circling silver river, That girdles all the scene, Eeflecta the sunset's glory, In gems of "ray serene." The breezes hush their murmur, The flowers bow their heads, The birdlings 'neath the branches Nestle softly in their beds. A picture from the windows Of peace and tranquil rest ; As if God's smile had blended With the beauty of the west I wish 1 had been there ! This thirsty soul of mine Would drink in all the glory, As the hills the sunset's wine. But fast the flush is fading, The evening's gray appears, It falls around my saddened heart And leaves it full of tears. FARM, GARDEN, AND HOUSEHOLD. Mnviwr nnd Mnnnsins Manure. The importance of the care of home made manure is becoming more gener ally acknowledged as its virtues are in vestigated. The farmer finds that he cannot rely on the commercial fertili zers alone, important as is their use in the saving of labor, but the combina tions of the mineral and organic ma nures are found to be the solving of the problem of fertilization for our crops. The young farmer especially should be induced to study this and other similar questions, and to acquaint himself with the constituents of manures as well as of plants, and to avail of the lights of science and the experience of practical farmers, who give in their ex perience at the club meetings to im prove their patrimonial estates. The value of the best cow manure, as given by the chemist, is about half the value of horse manure. In phosphoric acid it is as two to three for the horse ; in potash the same ; in ammonia two thirds the value of stable manure. The same authority places the annual depos its from a cow as worth $5.15. We may estimate that by our careless and slov enly penning process, and from our scant pastures we do not get that much. From hogs we get a very limited amount of manure. In fact, in most cases none, save from the pens in which we fatten for killing in the fall. The best way to construct such a pen is over a pit, so that all excrements, solid or liquid, can fall into the pit. In such cases little or no litter need be used. When a num ber, fifteen to thirty or more, are to be penned and fattened, and especially if to be fed several months, it is well to construct a pen in the shape of a lane with a gate at each end. By this means a wagon can be driven through the pen to supply litter. This, in such a case, may be given freely corn stalks, straw, leaves, woods' mould, muck, peat, Arc, the more the better, until the whole pen is covered two or three feet deep. The manure from the hog is in propor tion to stable manure, in phosphoric acid as eight to twelve ; in ammonia as eight and a-half to six and a-Lalf ; in potash as five to twenty-eight. It is better for special purposes than any other manure, and acts kindly on all plants. Hogs are sometimes allowed access to cow-pens and stables to help the manure-making process. This is wrong, and should not be allowed. The horse, the cow and the hog should each have separate quarters, end proper ar rangements made for saving the manure sepaiate. They may be mixed to ad vantage on or before application to the soil. With very little care, the value of the manure made from a pen of fatten ing hogs will be equal to the value of the labor required to feed them, if it does not far exceed the same. IIoiiNckrcpiiiK IlintH. Wasp Sting. A lump of wet salara tus applied to the spot Ktung by a wasp will afford instant relief. The alkali property neutralizes the poison. Felons. Beef marrow, bound on and renewed twice a day, is said to be the most effectual agent for the cure of those painful visitants felons. Quality of Food. One pound of corn is equal, in real 'sustaining food, to about 3 pounds of potatoes, or 8 pounds of cabbage, or 11 J pounds of white turnips. Glazed Sweet Potatoes. Boil soft ly, peel carefully, and lay in a greased dripping-pan in a good oven. As they begin to crust over baste with a little butter, repeating this several times a3 they brown. When glossy and a gol den russet, diah. Use op Salt. A certain portion of salt is absolutely necessary to our stom achs, and digestion cannot be properly carried on without it. When taken in the food it supplies two substances an acid which helps to form the sour fluid of the stomach that digests food, and soda, which is the bile principle, and which must be added to the dissolved food before the nourishment can be ex tracted. Brown Bread of Graham Flour. Take one cup of milk ; add hot water to warm ; thicken with sifted flour suf ficient to make a sponge ; stand over night in a warm place. In the morning add half a cup of milk, with hot water, one cup of molasses, one cup of butter, one teaspoonful salt; mix with Graham flour with a spoon until all is smooth. Pour into bread-pans half full ; let stand in a warm place until the cans are almost full. Bake for an hour in a moderately Jjot oven ; have a steady fire. Hominy Griddle Cakes. To one pint of warm boiled hominy add a pint of milk, and flour enough to make a thin batter. Beat up two or three eggs, and stir them into the batter with a lit tle salt. Fry as any other griddle cake. They are delicious. Paksntp Fritters. Scrape and halve the parsnips ; boil tender in hot, salted water ; mash smooth, picking out the woody bits ; add a beaten egg to every four parsnips, a teaspoonful of flour, pepper and salt at your discretion, and enough milk to make into a thick bat ter; drop by the spoonful into hot lard, and fry brown. Drain into a hot colander, and dish. Strawberry Plants. It is stated in "Green's Fruit Grower" that the white grub will not attack the roots of a strawberry plant if half an ounce of sulphur is put under it when set out. As this destructive and unsub duable pest has evidently a rather nice taste preferring even some varieties of strawberries to others, pear roots to ap ple, and apple to stone-fruits it is pos sible that the sulphur may disgust it. The decline of well-fed plants is often a mystery which would be solved at once if these gnawers of the roots could be seen at their destructive work; and the discovery of some practicable means of getting rid of them would be a great boon, esriecially to cultivators of light, rich soil. A mixture of bone dust and ashes is said to be the best fertilizer for strawberries. IMannre for Pear Tree. P. Barry stated in his address at the Pomologieal meeting at Rochester, that he had in the corner of his grounds a little group of half a dozen pear trees standing in grass; they liad been ne glected until they were nearly starved to death. The annual growth was noth ing, the leaves small and no fruit. Iu this condition they were treated with a top-dressing of barn-yard manure, and the following season they made stout shoots twelve to eighteen inches long, with large, dark green f oilage, and some fine fruit. He added that trees standing in grass would not pay. They must be kept vigorous and healthy by tillage, fertilizers and judicious prun ing. These involve labor and expense, but he remarked he cannot grow fruit without them. In his pear garden he slackened both cultivation and manure to lessen the chances of blight, but the result was that in two years and a-half his crop was culls. Flower Fashions. The white pansey is a great favorite for corsage bouquets. When the halls or rooms are large there are grouped near the entrance large thickets of ferns. Floral fans are very pretty made of roses and fringed with lily-of-the-valley and teabuds and violets a rare combi nation. Camellias, though not so fashionable as roses, are occasionally seen in the hand bouquets. If wine is used on the table the de canters are surrounded with wreaths of small flowers. A bunch of simple heather the lan guage of which is solitude is much worn at the corsage. The center of the dinner table is some times decorated with a gilt basket filled with growing ferns. The newest flower pot is of bright burnished brass and lined with zinc, so as not to become tarnished. The creamy white syringa, with its lovely golden center, is now combined with white or purple lilacs. Heliotrope is used mostly in the black purple shade Le Negre, which surpasses all other varieties in fragrance. It is a mark of the increase of refined taste that natural flowers are now more used than artificial, especially by ladies at home. In the windows the violets, the pan sies, tulips and rose buds are piled high ; great banks of them are on their mossy beds tempting every passer-by-be it man or woman. Hampers and brackets aro now used to hold the small boquets at dinner tables, instead of the pockets and bas kets which have grown commonplace. Another pretty floral arrangement is a plate edged with blue pansies and red rosebuds and having a cluster of blue and pink hyacinths on one side and a letter in violets in the center of the plate. Suppressing the Mosquito. Professor Fontaine gives some hints for abating the mosquito pest which is sure to come with the advent of sunny days. He says, mosquitos require water for the deposit of their eggs and the rearing of their larva? or wiggletails. Therefore all cisterns should be made close and covered with close, woven brass wire setting to prevent their laying in them. No old tubs, barrels, or re ceptacles of water ought to be permit ted, and no stagnant pools left un drained within a mile of any dwelling. Then they can be killed by the cheapest and most abundant of all alkalies, com mon lime. Therefore this ought to be poured into every cess-pool and spring. A pound of strong lime to every onp hundred gallons of stagnant water is sufficient. But even a pound to one thousand gallons of a cistern of drinking water will kill them, although it witf probably give the water an unpleasant flavor and make it "too hard" for most domestic tastes. Postage stamps are great travelers, and yet the majority of them are found sticking in some corner Philadelphia onu le. Pawnbrokers do not get much froir. servant girls, as the principal thing they put up is clothes' line. , I Tt ttiaso ia A. Vrtftri-Klrifl tlJYwBTa STTOW- " w w . ......... I ! : t . . i a iii iiiii rur.ni nrhiriii i i - A STRANGE 1IISC0TERT. By Which we May Yet Hear the Sounds ot the Fires Raging in the Sua. Prof. Tyndall, of London, has just in vented a new scientific apparatus that, when properly used, gives most singular results, and shows that the wonders of the photophone have only just begun. The photophone is an instrument in vented by Prof. Bell for causing a beam of light to convey a telephonic message to a distance. In the new apparatus, abeam of light from a lime light, or even a candle, is thrown upon a common glass flask hav ing a long neck. To this is fastened a rubber speaking tube that may be plac ed to the ear, so that any sounds in the flask may be heard through the tube. Between the flask and the light is placed a circular disc of metal, having narrow slots, or openings, placed like the spokes of a wheel round the edge. When the disc is at rest, the beam of light may pass through one of the slots and fall on the flask. If, now, the disc is made to turn rap ily on its axis, the light will reach the flask in a series of flashes, as it shines through the slots one after the other. Here the curious discovery comes in. When the flask is filled with a gas, or a vapor, say the vapor of sulphuric ether, common street gas, oxygen, perfumes like patchouli or cassia, or even smoke, and the beam of light is made to fall on the flask in a series of alternate flashes, the operator, listening with the speaking tube at his ear, will hear strange musi cal sounds inside the flask. The pitch of these tones will corres pond exactly with the speed with which the disc is made to turn, and each kind of gas, or vapor, in the flask will give a different kind of note, some soft, somo loud, and some very sweet and musical. This is certainly the most remarkable discovery since the photophone, and it shows that light may be made the means of making sounds audible at a distance, even when the eye can see no difference in the light. It even suggests the idea that we may yet be able to hear the sounds of the fires raging in the sun. It may, indeed be only a hint to yet more wonderful and unthought of relation ships, between light and sound, which may be utilized as a medium of com munication. Youth's Companion. CLIPPINGS FOR THE CURIOUS. It is calculated that sixty tons of steel are annually consumed in the manufac ture of steel pens. One of the wonders of the Cathedral of Cologne is the chapel of the three Magi, which contains the skulls of the "three wise men of the East," set in precious stones. A child which had lain three and one half hours, apparently dead, was re stored by practicing artificial respiration on it four hours in Paris, recently. It is difficult to believe that thousands of people in India perish annually from the bites of poisonous snakes, but it is a well-authenticated fact. They are the pest of the country. The ancients believed that emeralds worn in a ring protected the wearer against dysentery, epilepsy and malig nant fevers. Tho occult power of the gem was supposed to be increased by engraving some astrological device upon it. Owing to tho excessive destruction of whales during the last seventeen years, it seems that shoals of honing are less frequently driven by whales near the coasts of countries that derived a con siderable annual revenue from the cap ture of small fish. In Japan corpses are always buried with the head toward the north and feet toward the south. A living Japaneso will never sleep in that position. In sleeping rooms of private houses, and of hotels even, a diagram of the cardinal points of the compass is pasted upon the ceiling for the benefit of timid guests. The editor of the Svhleische Yolkszei twig, published at Breslau, Germany, has been sentenced to seven clays' im prisonment for having revived an old charge against the Jews, namely, that they kill Christian children in order to use their blood in the manufacture of Passover bread. In the manufacture of attar of roses at Gharapore, Hindoostan, the petals of the flowers are put into clay stills, with twice their weight of water, and the produce exposed to the fresh air for a night in open vessels. The attar is skimmed from the exposed pans, and sells at 10 the rupee weight, to make which 20,000 roses are required. It is reported that a wild plant, which grows so profusely on high lands in Louisiana that the planters have tried for years to exterminate it as a pest, has been discovered to yield a woody fiber closely resembling jute, but of a much finer quality. It is claimed that the process of preparation is very simple and far less expensive than that of jute or ramie. The planters name for it is the American or Creole tea plant. It is no great thing to be humble when you are brought low ; but to be humble when you are praised is a great and rare attainment. Friendship which flows from the heart cannot be frozen by adversity, as ths water that flows from tho spring doee ot coageil in wiutar. My daughter, every bond of your life is a debt ; the right lies in the payment of that debt ; it can lie nowhere else. At the present time the country is flooded with preparations for Coughs and Colds, but far ahead of all others is Dr. Bull's Cough Syrup, that old and tried remedy for Coughs, ' Colds, Consumption, etc. mmmmmimmmmm' ' ' " " ' " " fa wm mmm . maaaa. I ' A robber's cave A burglar's confes sion. . . . A fan is indispensable to a woman who can no longer blush. The material for good soldiers must be planted in drills. Many a man who thinks himself a great gun is nothing more than a big bore. Why is a fellow with a bad cold in the head, like Niagara Falls? Because he's a catarrh-racked. Vennorated sir: You are the most miserable wretch that ever took hold of the weather crank. The six weeks following the widow er's marriage is now styled the oleomar garine honeymoon. "Keep cool and you command every body," remarked St. Just. Ho stood in with an ice factory. The poet who wrote the poem, "Oh, for a thousand tongues," was a bachelor at the time most probably. The spring poet has tied his throat up in red flannel, simply remarking, "This is the verse weather I ever knowed." Money men, of many minds, Take to "straddles" and to "blinds," Many fish come in to sec ; Many gulls they prove to bo. Wagner, the composer, affects cats. Exchange. So does his music. Three bars of it are enough to throw a cat in to forty-five fits. As a rule book-keepers are ink-lined to be pensive. Will some one kindly tell us if a blushing seamstress is not a flushed sewer ? James T. Fields won't lecture twice in the same necktie. And some men will not lecture twice in the same town if the citizens know it. When the signal corps has reported " Warmer followed by colder weather,' or "Colder followed by warmer weather,' what more can be asked of it ? Some colleges would never be heard of if the students didn't cut up in an outrageous manner occasionally and get into the newspapers. Supreme Court paying attention to two pretty women at one sitting. New York News. We should think the wo man would call that "Mock Court." Lawyers have a queer idea of judicial taste, "May it please your honor" is the way they always begin their abuse of their opponent and the king's English. LIME-KILX CLUB. No Harmony There. The Secretary announced a letter from the capital of Indiana making in quiry as to whether the Signal Service Bureau and the Lime-Kiln Club were working in harmony, and Brother Gard ner replied : "I are sorry to reply dat sich am not de case. De old burew an' dis club had a perfeck understandin'; but when dis General Hazen was 'pinted he treated all our advances wid silent contempt. I doan' say dat dis am de reason why he can't hit a rainstorm once out of ten times, an' why de wind stands dead still on his fall in barometer, but I want de kentry at large to plainly under stan' dat dis club has rmffin' whateber to do wid de Signal Burew as it am now run." A letter from the Rev. Samuel Jack son, of Port Hope, Md., made inquiries as to whether a certificate of member ship in the Lime-Kiln Club guaranteed the holder any reduction from the usual rates at the front door of a circus, and the Secretary was instructed to inform him that no reduction could be ex pected. "In fact," added tho President, "if I h'ar of one single case wha'r a member of dis club exhibits his stifficato in order to cheapen his way into a place of amoosment, I shall puree ed to amoose his name off de books wid rigid rapidi ty. A member of dis club has no mo' bizness to 'spect dat he kin work his way into a two-shillin' show fur fifteen cents dan a Jidge of de Supreme Court has, an' I want it so understood." Married for Love, The man who has married for love is a happy fellow. He is generally cheer ful, and always thinking about the dear ones at home. He prefers to live out of town for the sake of the children. He is rarely late at business, rises early, gardens a little, eats a hearty breakfast and goes to the necessary labor with a light heart and clean conscience. He often brings home pleasant surprises for his wife and children. You may recog nize him in trains loaded with parcels, which he good naturedly carries with perfect unconcern of what others think a new bonnet, music, books, a cloak for his wife ; while in another parcel the wheels of a cart, a jack-in-the-box, a doll, or skipping rope, intrude through the paper and suggest the nursery. He is brave and kind, though he makes no noise in the world. The humanizing in fluence of that darling red-cheeked lit tle fellow who calls him father brings a glow and rapture of the purest pleasure earth holds ; for the man who has never felt a tiny hand clasp his will always lack something he will be less human, less blessed than others. This is the noble, the honest, the only form of life that imparts real contentment and joy, that will make a death-bed glorious, and love see peace through its tears. It is so purely unselfish, so tenderly true ; it satisfies the highest instincts, it stimu lates men to the best deeds they are ca pable of. Not a Beverage. "They are not a beverage, but a medicine, with curative properties of tho highest degree, containing no poisonous drugs. They do not tear down an already debilited system, but build it up. One bottle contains more hoptt, that is, more real hop strength, than a barrol of ordinary beer. Every druggist in llochcs ter sells them, and the physicians proscribe) them." Rochester Evening Express ph JJ.p fitters. TTarrolness is a road-side flower, grow- ihg on the highways of usefulness j plucked, it shall wither in the hand ; passed by, it is fragrance to the spirit. Trample the thyme beneath thy feet ; be useful, be happy. - Can Coiianmpnon be Cared ? Read what Mr. William C. lUgges a merchant of Bowling Green, Va. writes under date of April 4th, IS8I1 He silys : 1 firmly believe that Alfen's Lung Balsam will and has cured con sumption if taken in time and proper care be taken of the Patient both in suitable food and clothing. Six years ago my mother was at tacked with pneumonia. Tho attending physi cian, "somo time after" told me that the dis ease had settled on her Lungs and that she had tho consumption. Not believing that a perma nent cure could be effected, but thinking I might bo able to get an expectorant not con taining opium, which would afford some relief, I enquired of a druggist at Richmond, Va., if he had any medicine not containing opium, that was a good expectorant. He then recom mended Allen's Lung Balsam which I purchas ed and induced my mother to try. Before she had taken tho first bottle, the improvement in her condition was so marked that I purchased three more bottles. The attending physician seeing the beneficial effects, recommended its continued use, and in about twelve months her lungs were pronounced cured. Upon my recom mendation infthy others who had the consump tion have been cured. I think you can claim for your medicine, the following: Expectora tion without irritation, and healing of the lungs by keeping them free from foreign substances, thus arresting and curing this dread disease. Dr. Diggcs says he writes because he wants it known that Allen's Lung Balsam is doing good. The school population of the United States is 14,596,183. Of this number 9,373,195 were enrolled in 1878. There were in that year 271,144 teachers. "Mch ! Rig IAch !" Not so fast, my friend; for if you would sec the strong, healthy, blooming men, women and children that have been raised from beds of sickness, suffering and almost death, by the use of Hop Bittern, you would say "Truth, glorious truth." See "Truths" in another column. A Michigan chiropodist offers to chir op with any man for 100 a side. If beaten he will acknowledge the corn. Have You Read It ? H. R. Stevens Book on Ensilage, the preserving of green forage crops in silos, giving his own experience and the practical expciience of 25 practical far mers 5 180 pages, clerautly bound in cloth ; price, 50 cents ; sent hy mail, CO cents. Ad dress II. R. STEVENSBostou, Mass. The new strawberry joke will take the short cake. Full' AVnriiiiiff train n Reliable Wnrner. Don't noglfet your health when Warner's Hafe Kidney and Liver Cure will surely preserve it. Decisions in law suits are rendered the same as lard is rendered by trying. One Cent will bay a Postal Card On which to send, your address and receive free 100 page Book, wliich treats of all diseases of the Liver, neadache, Jaundice, Constipation, Malaria, Dyspepsia, etc., and how to purity the Blood. Addrees Da. SAsroan, 1(52 Broadway, New York. Try "Kendall's Spavin Cure," a sure remedy for Spavins, Curbs, Ringbones, or any enlarge ment of the joint. See Ad'vt. For Dyspepsia, lsninrsno, depression of spirits and general drbiHty in their various forms, also as a preventive against fever and ague and other iutcrmittant fevers, the Ferro-Puosi-uonATEn Elixir or Cat.isaya Bark, made by Caswell, Hazard fc Co., New York, and sold by all druggists, is the best tonic; and for pa tients recovering from fever or other sickness i t has no equal. If you are hairless and eappy there is one way, and no more, by which you may be ma le careless and happy use CarV.olie," a deodo rized extract of petroleum, it will positively make new hair grow. "Kendall's Spavin Cure"' is highly recom mended by Prof. Williams, the wonderful Horse trainer. Read Advertisement. r The Greatest Dlncovcrv of the Ate. For over thirtv-fonr vears dr. tobias's Venetian liniment has leen warranted to cure Croup, Colic, Spasms, Diarrhna and Dysentery, taken internally, and Sore Throat. Pains in tho Limlis, Chronic Khemuatism, Old Sores, Pimi-les, Blotches ami Swellings, exter nally, and not a bottle has been returned, many fam ilies statim; they would not be without it even it it was f 10 a bottle. Sold by drappristR at "i5 and 50 cents. Deiwit. 4i Murray Street "Vpw York. ItESt'l.E!) VUOM DEATH. William J. Couphlin, ot Soinerville, Mass., says: In the fall of 1S7G I was taken with bleedinp of the.lnnps, followed by a severe rough. I lost my appetite and flesh, and was confined to my bed. In 1ST" I was ad mitted to the hospital. The doctors said I had a hole in my lnnijs as bin as half a dollar. At one time a re port went around that I was dead. I pave up hope, but a friend told me of Dit. "William Hall's Balsam fok the Lujsos. I pot a bottle, when, to my surprise, I commenced to feel better, aud to-day I feel better than for three years past- I write this hoping every one afllieted with diseased lungs will take Dr. Wil liam Hall's Balsam, and be convinced that cos svMiTtos can he TKKn. I can positively sav it has done morcKood than all the other medicines I have taken since my sickness. A reduction of telegraph tolla would be an excellent electric light. nsilage OF iWSi FORAGE cn SILOS. Giving My Practical Experi ence. Also the Practical Experience of Twenty-live Practical Farmers With Ensilage and Silas. Ci IYING their experience of feeding stock of all J kinds with Ensilace, Mid the j raetical results, conclusively showing the undoubted success of this process tho Ensilage of Green Forage Crops. By this process tho farmer can realize live dollars in Place of one dollar, as 1 radioed by tho old svstem of farming. Also wond rj'ul experiments of" feeding pouitrv at one-half the usual cost, on En.silaee. This book contains 120 puges. elegantly bound In cloth. Every One is Pleased With It as being the most thorough and practical work vet published on this subject, and all are surprised at he very low price. . For sale at all bookstores, all general stores and all news depots in every city and town IN THE UNITED STATES. If the work cannot be obtained of them, send for it by mail. Price of Book, 50 Cents. By Mail, GO Cents. Send Postoffice Order if convenient. Address H. P. STEVENS, Boston, Mass. ESQiJELffi i a a rn a ni 11 1his engraving represents the Lungs in a health; What the Doctors Say ! D3. FLETCHER, of Lexington. Missouri, says "I recommend your 'Balaam' in preference to any other medicine for coughs and colds." DR. A. C. JOHNSON, of Mt. Vernon. Hlv writes of some wcndeiful cures of Consumption in bis place by the use of "Allen's Lans Balsam." DR. J. B. TURNER, Blountsville, Ala., a practicing physician of twenty-five years, writes : "It is the best preparation tor Consumption in the world." For all Diseases of the Throat, Lungs and Pulmonary Organs it will be found a most excellent Remedy. AS AN EXPECTORANT IT HAS NO EQUAL. IT CONTAINS NO OPIUM IN ANY FORM. J. N. HARRIS tL CO., Proprietors. CINCINNATI, O. For Sale by AA Druggists. Sold bv W. H. BROWN h BRO.. BALTIMORE. S3 CELEBRATED Ui Why Snfler Needlessly With the convulsin?) f nsmodic tortures of fever aud apne and bilious remittent, when Ifoftetter's Stomach Bitters, acknowledged to be a real curative of malarial levers, will eradicate the cause of so mucn Miftcrimr- No less etlet tivc is this benignant alterative in cases of constipation, d;. speiia, liver complaint, rheumatism, and in general debility and nervous weakness. For sale by all Druggists and Dealers Rrnerall; CONSUMPTION CAN BE CURED! m fln a i s 9 WH. FOR THE LUNGS. Cure CoKMUiupf inn. folds, 1'iiriitnniii:!, In fl'.ieiizii. ISr;--.rhi;il Diilicult ieM, I i roach hi, llo:t I'scucss, AMlima, Croup, Whooping C'onuli. nnd nil !)i:iMcs of the 11 refilling OnrsiiiM. It woollies and betjt-t i!tp Membrane of I lie lUUjix. in!l:i:irri :;n:l poi'.oned by the disc;ic. :uil prevent 111" liiirb: swrals nnd liuhtne-i ilel itM the rhct v:ii-h accmiipaiiy it. ('oiis;iiii;iii(i!i i not u liic'trnbii malady. IIALI.'S IJALSA.U will euff y:!, even tiioiigli lroli'!sinu:il aid fail. PHEAPEST Hacnnlay'fe Mistorv ol EnarlanihSlareellmd Vols , cl;th. p.ilt, euW 2.l:. U RlMKSl Chambers" Encyclope. ua. iu inrce o vol umes, cl-'tii. K.320 pages, 4.INM engrav ings, former price handsomely bound in cloth, hlsck and told, only JO cents. Talnc's History of English Liter- IN THE nuire, 1 naunsome Umo volume,! IIVORLD Other books equally low. Fuit dei-erif.tire tatuiogue Free. MANHATTAN BOOK CO., P.O. Boa 4580. l West 14th St., Now Vork. Payne's Automatic Engines. iMrxe power witi le.fuel nnd icater than any otiiei Engtne built, not fitted with an Automatic Cut-off. Send for Illustrated Catalogue "J," lor Information & Prices. B. V. Payne & Soss. Box 860. fornins'. N.Y I? 1Q -Q mLBQm CQHF0TJST) OF PTJSE COD LIVEB OIL AITD HUE. r3?i,!i "-irc?W snflerinc from a Couph, ( old, Asthma. Bronchitis, or any of the va rious pulmonary troubles that so otten end in Con sumption ? It so, use " Wilhor'x Pur? oil-hirer Oil unit Lime," a sate aud sure rented v. This is no quack preparation, but is prescribed by the medical lacul t. Manut d only by . B-WiiJion, Chemist, Boston Sold by all rtruptiists. This romarkaois nr-ni-cine yrV.l cure Spavins. Splint, Curb. Callous, Ac er any enlargement, and will rrniovc the bunch without blistering or caus ing a sore. No rcmrrit ever tliccovtrrd equals itio' ": ' Ping the lameness and re- 'inffhAhiin.ili fi! c 1 A' ;u- Ijtrnicd circular giving positive proof, and yout ent by Dr. li. J. Kendall & Co.. Enosburg Falls. Vermont 1 1 1 n i r D ye is the SAFEST l and Best: it acts iustanta i neously, producing the most natural shades ol L Til SI fir nr T4r1TIT,1- rl nan r, !., oivi.i ; is easily RIST AflfiRfl'Pam,lud: a standard prep niO i nUUnV W aration and a lavorile on OT T XT 1 T- l x- every well-appointed toi let lor lady or gentleman. 3 lid by Druggists and ap plieu bvHair Dressers.De lor. 93 William St., N. Y.. C. N. CRITTENTOX, Agt, Kook tor Tliremliermen Worth $25. For sale for 25 cents. Thuesherman's Bookkeeping, including all blanks needed to make settlements with customers. Monev refunded if not entirely satisfactory. Address The Aullnuin cfc Taylor Covipany, Mansfield. Richland Co., O. LAND! LAND!! LAND!!! Over 1,000,000 Acres. Mild Climate. Productive Soil, Low Prices. Easy Terms. Special inducements to actual settlers. For maps, circulars, &c, giving particulars free, address THOMAS ESSEX, Land Commissioner, Little Rock. Art. rftRTrrann renin rIC II L C UL. mam m m r m r w - El s3lmni 4 a Used and approved by the leading PHYSI CIANS of EUROPE and AMERICA. The most Valuable Family Remedy .known. 60BX5. SXHT DISEASES. RHEUMATISM. CATARRH, HEXO&BHOIDS. Etc. Also for Cough. Colds, Cere Threat, Crmp mrxjj mem. zo ana ou cent sues fUKAKD KEDAL AT THE PHIf AXMX.PIS2 SILTS HDA1 AT TUB PAIU8 Battle Creek, MichiS JtAHOTAOTUBEBB OF THE OKW THDFfiUEBA viikn0 - Traction and Plain Enein. rors. U management. ofctoccSf2M broad vammiy given on all our STEAM-POWER SEPARATOPa Finest Traction Engine and I'lain rC'"' ever seen in the American market -"uiej A multitude of special features an mm for 1881, together with miperior qualm,, ivon and materials not dreamed of bv other mov1 Four sizes of Separators, from 6 to 12 ilT0 Capacity, "or steam or horse poicer. ult Two styles of " Mounted" Hnrse-Poverij 7 500 U00 ?ct ?f Sheeted ULnm! constantly on hand, from which is built comparable wood-work of our machinery TRACTION ENGINES Strongest, most durable.and efflcien t ever iJ hmwo. ot xvt ao uwne irower. Farmers and Thrcbernien are invited in Wvestigate Moan matchless Thriiiiifr Machine tt Circulars eent free. Address -"-"mery. NICHOLS, SHEPARD & CO. Battle Creek. Michigan, An Open Secret. The fact is well understood that the MEXICAN SUS TANG LINIMENT is by far the best external known for man or beast. The reason Tyhy becomes an "open secret" when wo explain that "Mustang" penetrates skin, flesh and muscle to tho Tcry bone, removing all disease and soreness. No other lini ment does this, henco nono other is so largely used or does such worlds of good. RHEUMATISM, MRALGII. No other preparation h:ts enred o ?n?.:iy oasos of these distrceshifr ' complaints as icsv?.'s Extract. Pond' Extract I'laclpr C.'.": cent?) is invahutUe in these diseases, Lumhairo. lv,;ns ia JJ:ir-k or Ki!i etc. Pond's Extract Ointment ecu!"), for wwhea removal of clothins inoavt nient. is a jjr.-.it L'.p in relieving inllaniinat-iry caws. Sold hy a!! (ir:;; jists. "The Voice of the Stars, OR THK Effects of the Coming Perihelia,'' A PAMPHLET OF 3D r.Uii.S, BY PROF. C. A. GRIMMER. PRICt 25 CT-S. Stamps T:! ( ii. Th? Tnnle snpi Iil. E. B. LEWIS' Mows Agency, Kv.i .Iii-c-, ( ill. CELLULOID EYE-CLASSES. representing ine choicer eciecteti TortoiM SheU and Amber. The lightest, hanl; met and strongest known. Sold bv Opticians and Jewelers. Made by SPENCEIl OPTICAL MF'G CO., 13 Maiden Lane. N. Y. A POSITIVE CURE , Fur Kxii si listed Vitsility. Nervous or Miyicnl Dchiiiiy, !r. KICIMtD'S KKSTOKATIl K i'lLI.. Tliis c.-U li:at-l French Keiiicly is m,i,',,v, hy t!u .Vi a it-ray of .MiMiicinc of Paris. :ui'l liv tur ! Iiratfi jihysViaiss. Sir H. Thompson. Ir. p.;i. v I. Ir. I'iii-vaiicr. lr. Kaapail. an.i the uieat -!i.-m:M I :'i- ;"' tliers fSeml l"r circular. Sent per nia:l r.i 1 n receipt of price. Boxes of o'l. .50. Ii. I.. I!" I Sole Aent iov the I n teU States. Beekmai! M-. V Semi for fae-simile Letter from celeM lr. I''S- AGEXTS WANTED FOR REVISION The best anl cheapest illustrate.! edition of t.i" Revised New Testament. Millions of peotle arc waif inetorit. Po not be deceived 1- the ('In ap l"Hn pritmshors of inferior editions. See that th copv yon buy contains 1 SO tine engravings nn sterl and Apents are coining money Bellinjj this c.liti"". ,,im for circulars. Address National PmusniNfi Philadi l. liia. Pa. FANCY ADVERTISING CARDS. Send 5c. for Set Gold Cards. Two s. is four sets:$5c. Handsome Cards I.V.. all difl' f io: la desisn:s: printed, with cnfalosme. ST. NIt'HL.s OAKI) CO.. News P.lnel,-. Newport. R. I CIV WHY WASTE MONET! Tounr mn or oH. If you want a Luxuriant moustarhe, flowinc fTQ whisieri or a hfrnry crowth of f.air on bald W hearts, or to THICKEN. STRENtiTHKN and INVIGORATE the HAIR anrr..r don't b tinmfc-icwd. Trythfat Spanish licoTrrr hvh lias NKVKfl VET FAILED. Send ONLY SIX CENTS t Ir. J. ' .A LEZ. Bos 104;', Huston, Masa. U.-naic i f a:i it.vi jna. GLASS BALLS .Twlr count to the trade. Address rent Western tiiin Work. Pntsbursr.Pn. . lATANTEl) Airents in ever- town and cmintv t" fell the Stuart & Wallace Pat Rubber Anil-Pat tier for Carriage Shile Com liv.ir. SelV at sr.'ht. pie sent b'- mail. "."e. T. Ti:i vn- van. rntt-i Pa. E MPLOYMENT ---IUtfS it US AUo SALARY ppt inth. All EX I'KNf K n dvnnced. WA CiESpiompt 1 y ln i 1. tlAt. a A', ft... tiifi fol-rr kit.. f'inciniiHll. G Of 111 Sn lp.imn Wnnlri! io sell our fir--clitss lat-M'l!iicr. poods on comna-sion. a si b lidid chance to make money. Send stamp tor t n:i .V par- ticulars at once. Phoenix Steam nPub.Co.,arreii. B N Ii 1 Sk I I f Outfit Free. Address P.O. VICKLLTt Uf I I 1 Augusta, Maine AUENTS VANTKI lor the Best and hastest SellinR Pictorial Boofcs and Ribles. Prices re dnced 33 ier ct. National Pub. Co.. Philadelphia. i miA AllVfrtr Tk.nl"or; Arei!:lin "o' 1C : I."W nllhhl r prices, onion carriage mtg cq., Cincinnati. ). catah k:;ki:. Yftl 1 N fi MFW Irii Teleprai .hy ! Karn t lUUKU r!tNa m011tn. Graduates f-'V?"a paying offices. Adrs.VALKNTiNEl?Kos.,.TanesviiIf ,is.- CQQQayearto Agents, and expenses, ! ? 3 3 9 rop A(lrs Y. Swain v Co., A"f jsH. Out at Iietl!l'l'i:il(llli.l'r.;l. 1l.'.w A O Catalogue. So. PARIS BOOK CO.. Chicago, III X Chromo Cards latest stiles with name. P'c. 1 paid. G. I. Heed k Co.. Nassau, (Kens. u . ij 25 Largest and Prettiest Chromo CaH-: ':. v'rJi name. 1c NASSATT CART) CO.. N-''i.J nren n v tjs r'J IQ IL. LU II iWVtZ Articlesrfrom pur Vaseline each as Pomade Vaseline, Vaseline Coll Cream, Vaseline Camphor Ic Vaselino Toilet Scat3, mn aoperlor to J tlmiiar one VASEM CONFECTIONS. An agreeable form cf tais ing Vaseline internally. For the Treatment oil WOTODS. BURNS. CUTS. CHILBLAINS. and Diphtheria, etc or all our goods. 25 CEITfS A EXPOSITION. DIBLE WUPOflJTION. C0LOATE&C0.,N.X