FARM, GARDEN, AND HOUSEHOLD. Recipe. Lemon Pudding. one leinon grated, rind and pulp, one cup of sugar, one cup of water or sweet milk, four eggs, three tablespoon fills of melted butter, two tablespoonfuls of flour. Lino a deep dish with pastry crusts, pour the oustaid in, bake thirty minutes. Beat the whites of three or four eggs to a stiff froth, sweeten, spread over the top of the pudding, and let it brown slightly. To Cook Rice. To cook rice so that the grains will be whole and tender, wash it in cold water until the water looks clear, then cook it rapidly in boiling water for fifteen minutes, after which drain and place the covered saucepan on the back of the stove to steam until the grains crack open and are tender, which will be about fifteen minutes longer. Breakfast Herring. Place the her ring over a eteamer and heet them well through, touch them up with a little butter and have a dish of well steamed potatoes ready, and it will make a meal. Chop the herring very fine, mix it with mashed potatoes and a beaten up egg, and fry in a little butter, and it will make a nice potato cake. Shreded Codfish. Mix it for fish balls or cakes and it is excellent ; use it with egg sauce and milk and it will make a dainty dish, or combine it with beaten up eggs, adding a spoonful of flour, and frizzle in a little butter, and it will make a savory and nourishing kind of omelette. Sliced Smoked Beef. Mince it fine and sprinkle it into a salad, or mix it also with potatoes and eggs for a cake, or use it with a spoonful of flour and eggs for an omelette, or heat it by steam through and eat it with a caa of warmed up peas or a dish of stewed onions and potatoes. TrespnswiuB'on llie lunu. The season is approaching when fruit pickers will be tramping through the fields and treading down the grass, and it may be well for them, as well as for persons upon whose lands they trespass, to know that there is a law against it, and that trespassers of this kind may get themselves into the limboes before they are aware of it. From Bennett's "Farm Law," recently published by Hoyt, Fogg & Donham, we quote some passages bearing upon such cases, which we advise people to look over : By the laws of Maine, the wilfully trespassing on the land of another dur ing the summer and fall months, is made a crime ; and any constable or other officer may arrest the offender on the spot and take him before some proper tribunal for sentence. If a per-, son's object in coming into your prem ises is to steal fruit, that of itself is a crime, although he does not accomplish his purpose ; and you may put him out by force, after notice to leave, using no unnecessary violence. Berry-picking on the land of another is clearly con trary to law. And not only is the tres passer himself liable to the landholder, but all who buy and consume the berries 6o picked are in danger. The blueberrv establishments of Jonesport in this state were compelled to pay more than a thousand dollars to the ownars of wild land, over which the berry-pickers had long roamed without leave or license, and the company had paid for the ber ries in good faith." If this could be recovered for trespassing on wild lands, how much more are those liable who go for berries into the enclosed field or pasture of another. Jonesport (Me.) Journal. Swaruiing of Bee. A lady correspondent of one of our cotemporaries reminds the bee-raiser that this is the great swarming month in the Northern and Middle states. Al though many, who use movable frame hives, may prefer artificial increase, yet few would be willing to dispense altogether with natural swarming. What a pleasant excitement is produced when the tocsin is sounded, "the bees are swarming." The rattling of the frjing-pan and the keg, and ringing of bells, is thought by some to be a neces sary accompaniment, in order to settle the swarm. If it does no good, it does no harm, and serves to ease their feel ings. As soon as a swarm is fairly clustered it should be hived before the scouts re turn who have been sent out to find a suitable home. If they have clustered upon a limb of a tree which the owner is willing to cut off, it is easily done by sawing it off with as little jar as possiblo, and laying it in front of their future home. A little smoke may be used to drive them in. The hive should be cool and clean and placed in the fchade. A new swarm will often desert a hive if left in the sun after hiving. Where the owner has a hive of comb, free from moth worms, it should be given to a new colony, for while they are building one pound of comb, they will store twenty pounds of honey. Miscellaneous Kotes. A practical farmer suggests that per haps corn-stalks, cut into three-eighth or five-eighth inch pieces, might be dried in the sun and prove as nourish ing as if stored in a 6ilo. Certainly it would not cost much to find out by ac tual experiment. On the extensive seed farm of Messrs. Londreth & Sons not a chicken is to be found, but a large number of guinea fowls are allowed the freedom of the grounds, which destroy insects of every kind, and are considered invaluable in this respect. With regard to breeding for sex, the New Orleans Democrat sajs it has been assured by old dairymen that they never failod to secure heifer calves if they in troduced the cow to the bull when her udder was fully distended with milk. Women as Dentists. A half-grown girl sitting in a dentist's chair, a fall, portly sister of charity bending over her, while a lady on the other side was operating on her teeth, was the scene in the oftice of Dr. Eliza beth Morey, the only female dentist in the city, who, after completing her work, said : "Yes, I am a dentist, for I fill teeth, and that is the principal work which entitles any one to call himself or herself a dentist. There are some female attendants in dental olHces in New York, bnt none operating in the dentist's chair except myself. They cannot be called assistant operators, as, in order to be such, they would have to assist the principal in filling teeth and iu various other operations of the pro fession. The duties of lady attendants are to hand water for rinsing the mouth, napkins and instruments and occasion" aliy to hold a nervous lady's head or hands, or to quiet a frightened child in the operating chair. There are nine or ten women registered as dentists, but not practicing. I am the only lady in regular practice. I learned dentistry from my husband, and in conjunction with him have practiced it for fifteen years. He learned dentistry from Chapin A. Harris, M. D. He died in 18tS0, and was called by the profession in America the father of dentistry He founded the first dental college in the United States. I have invented several things which the profession have so far ap proved of as to adopt into general use. For instance, I was the first to invent the skeleton tooth. One of my patients, a lady, had a tooth that was only about one-third the size of the rest. I called it a 'pin' tooth. It was perfectly sound, and 1 did not intend to pull it out, for the first principle of dentistry is to save, and not to destroy, teeth. I therefore made a tooth coiresponding in size to the others, and fitted it over the pin tooth, leaving it intact and making the set perfect in appearance. What are called 'crown' teeth are on the same principle. That was about twelve years ago. There are three distinct branches of dentistry surgical, mechanical and operative and I am as fully master of them all as any man in New York." When asked if 6he thought women were fitted for the profession of den tistry, she replied: "la my opinion they are better fitted to make good den tists than men. The latter use too much force. They will often crush a tooth in pulling it out. When I am obliged to draw a tooth I take it out whole. Men are perhaps better adapted for the in vention and mechanical part than women. It is very injurious to delicate eyes to work with a blow-pipe before them, for fine gold requires a high de gree of heat. Dentistry is an arc that demands not only constant practice, but constant study, for things are daily oc curring that require some new inven tion. Out of five hundred cavities not more than two will be alike. Therefore, women who want to become dentists should possess inventive faculty." "There is a wide field in dentistry for women, and I should like to see some philanthropists found a school in which women could study by themselves, though I caDnot see why they should not study in classes with the other sex the same as lady students of medicine and other sciences do, for dentistry is a science and one as old as the pyramids. It was first practiced by the barbers of Egypt. Celsus and Herodotus filled teeth, but not with gold ; that is a mod ern American invention, and requires skill of the highest order. Amalgam filling can be done by the merest tyro." "Is your practice confined to any par ticular class ?" "I have a large practice among ladies, but my husband has still larger, for the reason that many women object to be ing treated by one of their own sex, say ing they have no confidence in women, but I think their prejudices would be easily overcome, as it has been in the case of female physicians, if ladies knew that practitioners of their own sex had graduated at a regular dental college. My husband prefers ladies as patients, while I prefer gentlemen. I find the former nervous, frightened and distrust ful of my ability, while gentlemen seat themselves in the operating chair with an appearance of the greatest confidence, undergo the operation without a groan or a quiver, and when it is over they get up, pay their money without a mur mur and go away contented and pleased, that's the kind of practice I like." New York Sun. A Boy's Coolness and Courage. An instance of coolness and courage in a boy is reported in a letter from Wakkerstroom, in South Africa. The garrison made a raid for the purpose of capturing some cattle, but was com pelled to retreat into camp. While fall ing back a youngster about .fifteen years old was thrown from his horse, which ran off and left him. Finding he could not escape from the Boers, who were in close pursuit, he lay down behind some stones on the slope of the hill. A few minutes afterward, four of the enemy came galloping up, when the boy let fly, knocking one out of his saddle. The three men who were with him, thinking in all probability, they were running into an ambuscade, wheeled and bolted for their lives. The boy than crept on his hands and feet to the top of the hill, took to his heels and escaped. There is no necessity in nature for the alarming disasters so prevalent and the sudden deaths so common. A healthily constituted man or woman ought to wear bright until three scoro and ten. Arthur Sullivan and the Duke of Edinburgh are together "sailing the ocean blue." HUMOROUS. Although no soldier desires a flog ging, yet they all hanker after stripes. A good many people don't know any better than to use parlor matches in the kitchen. Greensboro, N. C, has a paper called the Daily Buttle Ground. We suppose it is a domestic issue. A new definition : A jury is a body of men organized to find out which side has the smartest lawyer. "Why do these quacK doctors wear their hair long?" asked one man of another, as a q. d. "passed. "Did you look back at him?" "Yes." "Well, that's what he does it for." The revised New Testament is already doing good work. A Philadelphia woman knocked her drunken husband down stairs with a copy of it. For sale by all booksellers. There is a man in New York who makes his living by turning red noses white. In the same city there are sev eral t housands who make their living by turning white noses red. A late fashion article says that dark greens are very much in favor this spring. Dandelion greens with vinegar fringe, held in place with a box pleat ing of fat pork, are also in favor in this section. History of Diphtheria. The great prevalence of diphtheria among us for the last few years may render a brief history of it of general interest. Most people think it a new disease. It is new only in name. This was given to it about half a century ago, and is from a Greek word meaning leather, and describes the leather-like membrane which so generally forms in the patient's mouth. Instead of its being a new disease it is among the oldest. In the time of Homer it was known as the Egyptian disease. Aretams, a celebrated Greek physician of Cappadocia, who flourished about A. D. 80, regarded it as coming to his own country from Egypt or Syria, and hence called it the Egyptian or Syrian ulceration. In 1557 it appeared in Holland, and the next two centuries it extended over Europe and spread to North America. It was studied and described by many different observers, though it was often confounded with such diseases as scar latina, etc. It was not until the present century that accurate investigations into its nature began to be made and published. Bretonneau led the way, laying the results, iu two treatises, before the French Academy in 1821. He was the first to apply to it the name diphtherias. He maintained that diphtheria was only an intenser form of croup. - Since his time the disease has re peatedly broken out as an epidemic in France, England, Holland and Germany, where it has been carefully studied by numerous investigators. Yirchow studied it anatomically, and showed that the exudation took place into the substance of the mucous membrane ; while in croup it lies on the surface. The appearance of the disease as an epidemic in Munich during lSG-t and the following years afforded many op portunities for experimental and micros copical researches. At this period it was that Oertel and Hueter claimed to have made the discovery that the false membranes, mucous membranes, and other tissues and blood of diphtheretic patients contained numerous vegetable organisms, among the smallest ever discovered, and that these organisms, one of whose characteristics is their rapid and prolific multiplication, are the essential element in diphtheria. Youth's Companion. In a Siberian Prison. A political offender gives an interest ing account of his exile in Siberia : When we were locked up for the night, our cell suddenly assumed a more home like and comfortable aspect. Night is the only time when a convict feels at home in his prison. During the day he is always on the alert, always expecting a sudden irruption, an unwelcome visit from the efficers on duty. But as soon as the doors were locked everybody sat down quietly in his own place, and almost every one got out some work. The room was suddenly lighted up, as each man had his own candle and candle stick, the latter being frequently made of wood. The air grew worse as the night advanced. In one corner a group of men squatted around a small piece of carpet which served as a card table. There is in almost every cell a convict who is the fortunate owner of a square bit of carpet, a candle, and a pack of horribly greasy cards, all of which articles are designated collectively by the name of "maidan." A maidan is let for the night for fifteen copecks. The men always gambled high, each player lajing down before him a hand ful of copper coins, and never leaving the game till he had either won or lost everything. One of the poorest of the prisoners was employed as sentinel, and mounted guard in the passage, ready to give the alarm to the gamblers in case the major or one of the officers on duty should come in. Not unfrequently the poor fellow had to stand for six or seven hours on a bitter cold winter night in a dark passage, listening attentively to each noise or sound from without, for sometimes the major caught sight of the candles from outside, and burst into the prison like a whirlwind. In such cases it would have been too late to put out the candles, hide the maidan, and pre tend to be asleep. However, as a neg ligent sentinel was always cruelly beaten by the irate players, such interruptions were comparatively rare. These card parties frequently lasted all night, How BuUlon Is Tested. The manner in which the gold re ceived at the United States Assay Office in New York is treated is described as follows : The method is to take the gold on deposit from the bankers or others who send it, and to give them a check on the sub-treasury after an assay had been made. Each deposit of gold is melted and cast into bricks in every case before the assay is made. Two small quantities are then chisseled off from two different bricks and sent one to each of two men in the assay room. Here seven graius and a half of each quantity are carefully weighed out by each man on a separate pair of scales inclosed in a glass case. This seven and a-half grains corresponds with a French weight which has been divided into a thousand equal parts. Each of the two assayers works separately, but in a similar manner to the end of the assay. . Their results must agree to within a very small frac tion. Each adds to the weighed gold a definite quantity of silver. This is done because the nitric acid to which it is to be subjected will not ferret out very small quantities of silver that are envel oped in the gold, but if a large amount of silver is melted up with the gold the acid can follow it into the mass and eat it all out. The weighed particles of gold and silver are then wrapped up in a little sheet of pure lead of a known weight that is first twisted into the shape of a cornucopia to receive them. This pellet of gold and silver and lead is then melted into a cupel, a little porous white cup made of the ashes of bone pith. A draft .of hot air passes over the melted mass, and this oxjdizesthe lead, and the presence of the oxydized lead for some unknown reason aids the oxi dation of the copper mixed in the gold and carries it down with it in a simi larly mysterious way into the pores of the cupel. There is left a little button of gold and silver lying in the bottom of the cupel. This is hammered to knock off the scales of oxide that cling to it, and then rolled into a ribbon nearly half an inch wide. Tnis ribbon is coiled up and put into a little platinum cup the size of a thimble and set into boil ing nitric acid. The bottom of the platinum cup is perforated so that the boiling acid may enter and get a fair chanco at the silver. It will not attack either the gold in the ribbon nor the platinum of the cup. The coil is boiled ten minutes, and then lifted out and boiled ten minutes more in fresh acid Ttv thi timo tlio silver ... . ; , . iii! all eaten out of the ribbon, and the is gold is left porous, which makes it so brittle that if it is pinched the little coil will crackle into pieces in the fin gers. It is accordingly subjected to just enough heat to cause the particles to adhere. This little coil is now pure gold. It is unpolished and of a dull creamy color. Not a particle of the gold has been lost, but nil of the alloys have ! been removed. It is again carefuliy weighed. Suppose that whereas it originally weighed 1,000 according to the system of weighing explained above, it now weighs only 873. This shows that the metal brought in to be assayed contains 873 parts iu 1,000 of gold, or, in other words, 87 3-10 per cent, of it only is pure. All gold is melted before it is assayed, and having been assayed it must be melted again in order to be refined. An additional quantity of silver is added to it for the same reason that has been ex plained in the process of assaying. It is then melted and granulated by flirt ing the molten gold from a ladle upon the surface of water. The idea is to make the gold fall in a sheet on the surface bo that it will break up into little flaky masses. This granulated gold is then dried, and for convenience of handling is pressed into cheese shaped masses. These are cut up and the pieces are put into boiling oil of vitriol. The acid easts out the silver and copper, which turns it blue. This blue liquid is drawn off with a siphon. The boiling is repeated several times, varying in number according to the purity required, after which the gold is me ted and run into brick-shaped masses to be carried to the treasure room. The blue liquid which contains the copper and silver is run into a tank, and weakened with the addition of water, the effect of this simple process is to cause the acid to let go of the silver while it yet clings to the copper. The blue liquid is now allowed to stand in a lead-lined tank, in which are suspended also many long strips of lead. On the lead beautiful blue crystals are formed, with points as sharp as needles, and whose scratch is poisonous. These crystals are blue vitriol, or sulphate of copper, and are sold as such for the making of paris green and other chem ical products. Dan't Whip a Frightened Hosre. It seems to be a characteristic failing of most coachmen to lay the lash upon a horse that exhibits fear at an object in the street or beside the road. Mr. Bergh, President of our Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals, says in the organ of that society, what every reasoning being ought to know, and that is to never whip your horse for be coming frightened at any object by the roadside, for if he sees a stump, a log, or a heap of tan-bark in the road, and while he is eyeing it carefully, und about to pass it, you strike him with the whip, it is the log, or stump, or the tan-bark that is hurting him in his way of reasoning, and the next time he will be more frightened. Give him time to smell all of these objects, and use the ridle to assist you in bringing him carefully to those objects of fear. Vanity Fair says that England is be ing rapidly renuced to a fortress in the ocean, without self-supporting food powers. SUBJECTS FOR THOUGHT. Better break thy word than do worse in keeping it. It is in the power of the meanest to triumph over fallen greatness. The power of eloquence is sometimes superior to military force. Better a soft heart and an iron hand than an iron heart and a soft hand. He who ; e fuses justice to the defence less will make every concession to the powerful. We take lessons in art, literature a thousand things ; but that high sense of honor, man's obligation to man, is for gotten. (Battle Creek, (Mich.) Daily Journal.) Upon being spoken to concerning St. Jacobs Oil, our fellow townsman Mr. Theodore Wakelee, said: I had been suffering with rheumatism, and obtained the greatest relief from the use of St. Jacobs Oil. It has also been used in my family for some time, and has never been found to fail in giving prompt re lief. According to Dr. Weideholp, fungus growths in cellars may be combated either by burning sulphur or by pouring two parts of concentrated sulphuric acid over one part of common salt, and so closing all openings as to prevent any escape of the vapor. (South Bend Evening Register.) When certain powers are claimed for an article, and everybody testifies that it does moro than is claimed for it, to gainsay its worth is useless. This is the substance ot the St. Jacobs Oil lecord. Clara Louise Kellogg will reach the United States in August, and King Kal atau in October. A Wise Deacon. 'TVaeou Wilder, I want you to tell me how you kept yourself and family so well the past season, when all the rest of us have been sick so much, and have had the doctors running to us so loiij,'." "Jro. Taylor, the answer ia very easy. I used Hop bitters in time and kept mv family well and saved large doctor bills. Three dol lars' worth of it kept us all well and able to work all the time, and I will warrant it has cost you and most of the neighbors one to two hundred dollars apiece to keep sick the same time. I guess you'll take my medicine here after." See other column. Dr. Mary Walker is by all odds the best compromise candidate for Senator. She is a compromise between man and woman. Buffalo Express. Spring and Summer Diet. Oroen lruit and bad vegetables, which are part icularly pleutilul at this season of the year, almost invariably disorder the stomach and superinduce Cramps, Cholera Morbus, and what is worse, Diarrliu-a and Chronic Dysentery. People who tit-sire to preserve their health hhoiild be exceedingly careful alnmt their diet at this season, and at no time should thev be i without a supply of Perky Davis' Pain Kil- Lri! "-' afet, surest and speediest remedy fr an troubles of the stomach and bowels. All druggists sell it. Prince Bismarck says world's fairs are largely responsible for spoiling the world, and is obstinately opposed to the holding of one in Berlin. Yi:i:i.tixe is not a vile, nauseous compound, whirl) simply purges the bowels, but a safe, '! a-,!i' iviuedy which i sure to purify the bio. :nid thctvhv n-ctore the health. A young man of Foxboro, Mass. bought a bicycle at Attleboro and started to ride home, but fell off and broke hi3 neck on the way. "The UoAh Help tl:oM- who help themselves." and Nature inva riably helps those who take Warner's Safe KiiLioy and Liver Cure. x-sje GREAT GERMAN REMEDY FOR RHEUMATISM, NEURALGIA, SCIATICA, LUMBAGO, BACKACHE, GOUT, SORENESS cr THS CHEST, SORE THROAT, QUINSY, SWELLINGS AKD i!i!i! SPRAINS, FROSTED FEET AKB EARS, BURNS SCA.Zi8, General MjPaiE TOOTH, EAR ahu HEADACHE, AKD ALL OTHER PAIRS AN1 ACHES. fill!' No Reparation on earth equals Si. JACOBS On. as a SAK. si: rk. simple and cheap External Remedy- A trial entail but the comparatively trifling outlay of BO Cents, and one suffering with pain can have cheap and pontfre proof of it? claims. DntXcTiOKS H ELXTOK LAR6VA6XB. SOLD BY AIL BRU801STS AM IEALIIS IN MEBICffiL A. VOGELER & CO. JialHtnore, Md.. V. B. A. T AGHERTS WANTED FOB BIBLE REVISION The best and cheapest illustrated edition of the Revised New Testament. Millions til neouiH am wh.il- ing tor it. Do not be deceived by the Cheap John publishers ol inferior editions. See that the copy yon bay contains 150 fine engravings on steel and wood. Agents are coining money selling this edition. Send tor circulars. Address National PuBussnro Co., Philadelphia. Pi DR.SI1AUP'S LIQUOR SANGUIKARIA. This is the Prescription of the late Dr. Sharp, of Mississippi, I who successfully used it in a practice ot torty years throuphout the Sonth in the treatment of Piles, Fistulas, Fissures and kindred diseases. Chron. ic Dysentery also cured. The formula has been given in the Medical Journals of Mississippi, hence its reliability. Druggists will supply you. Price SI. Db. Shabp Manufacturing Co., Baltimore and New York. Cyclopedia War. The great Library of Universal Knowledge now completed, large tvie edition, nearly 40.000 topics in every department of human knowledge, about 40 per cent, larger than Chambers' Encyclope dia, 10 per cent, larger than Appleton's. 20 per cent, larger tban Johnson's, at a mere fraction ot tbeir cost. Fifteen large Octavo Volume", nearly 19,000 pages, complete in cloth binding, SI -It In half Rus sia, S'20; in full library sheep, marbled edges, 835. Special eras to clubs.. $10,000 REWARD SfiK5SSt and August. Send Quick for specimen pages and full particulars to AMERICAN BOOK EXCHANGE. John B. Alden, Manager, 7J4 Broadway, New York. PILES Factory Facts. Close confinement, careful attention to all factory work, gives the operatives pallid faces, poor appetite, languid, miserable feo'ings, ixor blood, inactive liver, kidneys and urinary troubles, and all the physicians and modicine in the world cannot help them unless they g-t out doors or UhO Hop Bitters, made of the purest and best remedies, and especially for such cases, having abundance of health, sun shino and rosy cheeks in them. Nono need suffer if they will use them freely. They cost but a trifle. See another column. South America is sending great quan tities of canned tongue to the London market. j " Bed-BogritoacSYs, j rats, cats, mice, ants, flies, insects, cleared out by "Hough on Rats." 15c, druggists. What is beautiful! WICabbolixe, a deo dorized extiact of petroleum, as now improved and perfected. Clear as spring water, delight fnlly perfnmed and will not soil thelinest linen fabric. Makes the hair grow on bald heads. Pube Cod Liveb "Oil" made from selected livers, on the seashore, by Caswell, Hazard & Co., New York. It is absolutely pure and sweet. Patients who have once taken it prefer it to all ethers. Physicians have decided it superior to any of the othor oils in the market. William J. Coughlin, of Somcrville, Uass., says: In the fall of 1876 I wa3 taken with blkkdikg .he X.UNG3 followed by a severe couxh. Host nay a.-petito and flesh, and was confined to my bed. Iu 1S77 1 was admitted to the hospital. TIio doctors said I had a holo in my lung as big as a half-dollar. At one tim a report went around that I w as dead. I Rave up hope, but a friend told me of DR. WILLIAM II ALL'S BALSAM FOR THE LUXGS. I got a bottle, when, ti my surprise, I commenced to foel better and to-day I foel better than tor thrao years past. I write this hoping every one afflicted with Diseased Lungs will take DR. WILLIAM HALL'S HALS AM, and be con vinced that CONSUMPTION' CAN" BE CURED. I can Ksitively say is lrn dom nioi'ft good than alj the other medicines I have takes since toy -ichness. WAHudAiAU fun iii iaAUS AXD NEVER FAILED To CURE Croup, Spasms, Diarrho?a, Dysentery and Sea Sickness, taken Internally, and GUARANTEED perfectly harmless ; also externally, Cut?, Bruises, Chronic Rheumatism, Old Sores, Pains in the limbs, back and chest. Such a remedy is Db. TOBIAS' VENETIAN LINIMENT. No one once trying it will ever bo without it ; over 600 physicians use it. If thaseTseven girl twins all live, what an extensive mother-in-law their mother may some day be. Purifies the Blood, Renovates and Invigorates the whole System. ITS MEDICINAL PROPKKTIF.S APT. Alterative. Tonic. Solvent and Diuretic I Reliable Evidence. Vegeline j a : Mr. H. It. Stevens: j Dear Sir I will most cheerfully :-A) VpflPf itlP ' m? testimony to the great unmix r ot. J have already rc-civetl ia favor of yotu great and good medii'ine, Vegetino. f;z . . ,. ; I do not think enough can be t.aid iii Vefjetine ' i,s praise : for I was troubled over U i years with that dreadful disease, fa- i tarvh. and had such bad conghu Vonptmo 5 "111" that it would se ns as though 1 cycilllc ; never could brr-athe anv more, and ; Vegetiue ha, cured m- : and I do fee! ; to thank God all the time t hit there i. Vefjetine jBoodainedu-in" as Vcsotinc-. and I J ; also think it one of the best 5ue.iicines j for coughs and Avak. sinking feeliucs if ! at the stomach, and advise everybody Veqetine : to take the Vegetme. for I can assure them it is one of the bc-nt medicines ) that ever whs. MRS. L. GO HE. Corner Magazine and Waluut Streets, j Cambridge, Muss. GIVES HEALTH, !STIIK.GTII & APPETITE. Vegetine Vegetine Vegetine Mv daughter has received urc&t ben efit from the use of Vezetino. Her de- I cliniug health was a source of creat VeQetine i anxietv to ail her frieitds. A few bot a , ties of Vegetine rertored her health, j strength and apretit. vegetine InJinniC0. Iw'ilJj jiRie As.,ui, i boitou. Jlass. Vegetine IS SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS. Card Collectors. 1st. Buy seven bars DOBBINS EIjECT.RIC SOAP of your Grocer, 2d. Ask Mm to give you a bill of it. 3d. Mail us bis bill and your fall address. 4tb. We will mail YOU FREE seven beautiful cards, in six col ors and gold, representing Shaks pcare's "Seven Ages of Man." t. L. CRAGIN & CO. 116 Sonth Fourth. Street, PHILADELPHIA, PA. feeble and Sickly Persons Recover their vitaMtv bv pursuing a course of Hos tetter's Stomach Bitters, the moat popular invieor ant and alterative medicine in use. General debil ity, lever and ague, dyspepsia, constipation, rheum atism, and other maladies are compietelv removed by it. Ask those who have used it wbat it has done for them. For sate by all Druggists and Dealer generally. uoiioia EicyciB. A pennanect practical road vehicle, with which a person can rM tnrw miJea as easily & he could walk one. Send 3-cent stamp for Si-page cata logue. TUB POPK M'F'O CO., 8M Washington St.. Boston, Masa Bootwalier Engine, Compact, Substantial. Safa and Easily Managed, QUA K ANTE ED TO WORK WW AXI G1VK FDU POWKB CLAUUED. See our low price for En ffineand Holler complete, ii Horse Power 8vS4i 4 l-S .si- 1 mM " iAA JAB. LEFFEli & CO- fferln Rena for oar new ramDhlft J4. ObU, ffegetine PERRY DAVlg I A SAFE AND surj REMEDY FOR RheumatisR!. Neuralgia, Cramps, fihftloro Diarrhoea, sentery. prams Bruises, 1 Burns AND Scales, Toothache F.ISt rAI,K BY AM, ORi Iists. Battle Creok, WichigS JIAKX7FAOT02ZE3 OF THE ONLY. GESCIXT" Traction and Plain Engines and Horse-Powers. QO YEARS SSfc u management, or location, to "lack vpai broad warranty given on ail our ywit. STEAM-POWER SEPARATORS and Complete Steam Outfits of mci,'? qu,utiM. Finest Traction Engines and Plain Engines ever seen in the American market A multitude of special features and improvement for 1881. together with superior qualities ;n tontruc tion and materials not dreamed of by other makers. Four sizes of Separators, from 6 to 12 horw capacity, for steam, or horsepower. Two Btylcs of - Mounted " Horse-Power?. 7 Ififi flfMi Feet of Selected Lumber fU V W (from three to six ytan air.dried) constantly on nana, from which is built the in comparable wood-work of our machinery. TRAATIAM f-ftlftMMZ'Ck Strongest, most durable.and e'Jicien t ever TtxJI made. 8, 10, 13 Horse Power, t Mil Farmers and T&rer.Rermen pre livrtwi tJ Qivestiirata this natchies ibrtsshiiis Machinery. Circulars sent free. Arlciress NICHOLS, SHEPARD & CO, Battle Creek, Michigan c For Two Generations The good and staunch old stand-by, MEXICAN MUS TANG LINIMENT, has done more to assuage pain, relieve snfferim?, and save the lives of men and beasts than all other liniments put together. Why? Because the Mustang pene trates through skin and flesh to the rery bone, driving oat ail pain and soreness and morbid secretions, and restor ing the afflicted part to souni and supple health. Payne's Automatic Engines. Reliable, Dura Me nm! Economical, : r-v-nlsh a hrmf pmrer iviHi $ - fwl '"' Cfr '" in- other Enqinfbuii', not filled with an Antomatio Cut-off. Seiid lor Illustrated Catalngno "J tor Information and Trices, ii. W. PANfc k sONs Box m. Coming, X: CELLOL EYE-CLASSES. representing tbo choicest selected Ton-owe Shell and Amber. The tightest, baivleuiste and strongest knows. Sold by Opticians Jewelers. Made by SPENCER OPTICAL jaTG CO., 13 Maiden Lane. N. Y. PERRY' i safe aS' i ke. rtnnl For Worms. Worm Fits and V.rro WO D M Fever. Sold dv drnsarists at 25 its. it ii v it ill 6eilt w maii on receipt of inct. TC A JOHN A. IEKV. I CA. 025 Sbuwmirt Avenue. BoMon, :'S!,' iofstndnf of M TIlKNKWrAl-EV FREE. AlW to E. TOUItJEE. .Boston.' Ma-s. . LARGE iTofits made in StooLsT S'itfOwill waW; '25 to S? 50 weekly. 10 siiares upwards bo;u;iD on 1 to ft lwr -nt. marffin. t'orrcs'"'!' r.i c !! ' ted. TUCKEK & CO., i-i'i Wrt vl--t St., .. a V'iV- CI Y WHT WA8TI KOXET! Tmrne men or o. 9 1 tt ,nn want a Luiuri&nt moTutacha. tos. W h,i, or to TIUOKKS. tnHEN;fHKS TPO whvken or s tntj "rrowt!i of hair on tal'l ar.d fctf IMVHiUK.VIS the 1IA1K. nv!TF 1v,n'l nun.iirT.. .Lis.,"'' Tnthcmat Scaniah diwscr-r, !iich has NKVfcR VET 7S3fS.--J FAILED.- Sfr.dO.NLT SIX CISTS to Dr J. il LSZ. Bat 1649. Boston. Hum. Keware of all : natations flHEAPEST "ROOKS iH THE TflORLJ u fc-rtrtWI MANHATTAN BOOK CO , 1 W. 14th St., N.T. P.O. 4ft Rifles, Revolvers, Sliot-Gnns. !!r UU lUU .! I.Hnec -Intlll'M II. J ohnMon, Great Western Gun W'ks.Pittsburgb.lji ALLEN'S rtrnin Food-cures Xenons VeiM? h Weakness oi Gen'tve Organs. l-all Dr.ippL' Send for CirTrto Allen's PharVv. 31 .'I First av.-Vj. it b I. si", - tt UIUUIU. uinuium-o Paving offices. Adre.V alesttxk Bhos., J aucs vj.L-l' IADY Agents want d in ev r-.' State and Counts h i J Rubber Sjcialtipa lorLadi s. Qui' h; H. profits. Address G. Brinefcerimff, 14 1 Fulton . A liENTa WAVi-nOiwr merest 'E.'Si: A-SellinK Pictorial Books and Bibles. Pnees re dnced 83 ler et. National Pr.K Co.. Philael""a.J, UP An APHP Is SOW POSITIVE .Preven- ardintr.-Eltirant su tes.and sinRlerooms.Mcd erate prices, Mite. COX, 144 Madison Ave,. . i Ha A a a SJV E

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