• 1 WT Keiaarkable Experience# AT sevgtfi o'clock Snnday morning crape hi&ffby the door of tine dwelling v. No. 123 liary street, a thoroughfare b# A «tire#N Carpenter streel AND Washing it, ton ureMie, fai the Second Ward- The *•' who knew tye rtory of a I? i'. \ painful illness said: "Poor tu. Mr. SckracV has gone at last!" Word sent to the aoctor that he need at- •'" tend his patient no longer. The under taker was visited. In Old Swedes' *fT#ort)i Dei) Church Mr. Schrack* 8 I* 4^ath was announced, and the Sunday- '* Sctool scholars commented upon the trttdrntih: of the teacher they had learned to love. «1 < «Iev«* o'clock, four hours later, the crape was torn down from beside &e dwelling in Mary street. The or- "gder for the undertaker was eouoter- .1* nanded. The doctor was told to hurry to his patient. The Sunday-School scholars in Old Swedes' Church were ;* about passing a resolution of condo- «fi fence with their teacher's orphaned boy. when the pastor, Rev. S. B. ^ Sjtmes, was handed a piece of paper bearing the single word, hastily writ- *' tjtin; 14 Revived.'1 The neighborhood was soon thick with rumors, all having fbr their purport the coming of the V dead, to life. Among those who bad an iiikling of the facts it was generally M agreed that somethingnot far short of a s miracle had happened. The story is a remarkable one. • :f J.' Harry Schrack, once a- wealthy merchant, lost nearly all his fortune , a by indorsing the notes of others, who were either Migrates or were themselves fortunate. With his only son, his wife and two children having died, he iias for some time past resided in a neat little house on Mary street, above Front. For the last four months he t>»( has been seriously ill, with nervous spasms of the heart. During the latter ' part of last week he himself gave up all hope of living, and the attending physician, Dr. James H. Cantrell, ex pected his patient's death momentarily. Apparently Mr. Schrack died at twenty minutes ofs seven o'clock on Sunday morning. His limbs became "*J; cold and rigid, his lips colored purple, and around his mouth was the blue hn mark? generally supposed to betoken !Mi death. A hand mirror was placed over ^ his mouth, but its shining surface was n„ not dimmed. His friends and neigh- bors who stood around pronounced him dead and grieved for him. A lew 1 hours afterward the body was com- *•»: pletely stripped that it might be pre- eh for the undertaker' snands. Be- " fore washing the corpse it was neces- sary to remove it from the bed. A neighbor, Mr. Charles Shankland, lift- ed the body, when, to his alarm, he distinctly heard a feeble groan. A hur ried examination developed the fact that the man was not dead. The body ..was wrapped in blankets and bottles of t JttQt water placed between them. Mr. /Shankland hurried for the doctor, and, 11 Returning quickly, acted under the in structions he had received until the doctor arrived. In a short time Mr. Schrack had regained consciousness, apd was sitting up in bed, but more than that, the man who before was ly ing at death's door, and who was ter ribly afflicted with disease, was almost as sound and well as ever he was in his life. Mr. Schrack dreaded the idea of having his peculiar case being made J* public, but, if the particulars were to be related, he said he would prefer nar rating them himself, so that the state- - ment might be correct. A Times rep- t" resentatave yesterday found him sitting up in bed, with a bright color in his cheeks and looking like anything but a corpse. He is a young man, probably it* thirty years of age, a good talker and 1* intelligent. He spoke in a hoarse whis per, not the result of his illness, but caused by his catching a slight cold in J ooapequence of the perspiration he was thrown into by the remedies employed to revive him. He spoke earnestly of '! his experience, but was vivacious and smiling, and at times joked about the expressions of the doctor when he « found him alive. He tells his story as follows: .i " Last September I had a terrible at- * tack of hemorrhage of the lungs, and gince then I have not been able to do anything, except for one period of weeks. My health at times was fair but three weeks ago I felt that I was going fast. My flesh left my body. My entire appearance changed. My appetite was gone. Everything I swaf- *1 lowed was at once thrown off my stom- j a£h. Last Thursday a week I found I would have to give up. I felt as though the power of action in my limbs was leaving me. I was fearful of going to bed, and so I sat in a chair for three days and three nights. I then made up (my mind that I would have to die, ana fl asked to be put to bed. Wednesday , night I was taken with something like I a chill and. spasms at the heart. After coming through that I seemed to revive until last Saturday. Every hour during that dav I experienced a change. While the right hand would be purple the left would be white. When the left hand became dark the right became white again. The entire left side of my body : was numb and almost useless. About J nine.o'clock on Saturday night my eye sight began failing me. I lost my hear ing and my speech became thick, my tongue being greatly swollen. I had fully made up my mind that I had to die. At about four o'clock on Sunday morn ing the tips of my fingers became like lead. My sight was now entirely gone. ? My stomacn was terribly swollen and greatly inflamed. Each succeeding cramp was more severe and reached higher up into the stomach. All the ; passages of my throat seemed to be • closea. Shortly before seven o'clock I asked to be moved to the foot of the bed. My head had scarcely touched the pillow when I exclaimed: •; " Throw me over!" and then--I found myself in another land. The vision I looked upon was the most beautiful that man ever saw. It would be impossible for me to give a description that would do it justice. My first feeling was that of falling down a great height, and then I found myself in a valley. I walked along until I came to a terrible, dark, black, river, at sight of which I shuddered and feared. Before me and beyond the river was a black cloud. ' Oth ers were walking over the river, apdj although I dreaded it, something urged me on and I felt that I had to go with the others. As I got near to the dark cloud it became bright and beauti ful, and expanding it opened and dis closed the most beautiful sight. The first I saw was Jesus. I saw a great temple and a great throne. I saw my little boy, who was drowned two years ago, and my other dead ohild. I saw my dead wile; but I could not touch them. I saw people whom I had al most forgotten. I saw my old gray- haired grandfather, who died when I was but two years old. There were many whom I looked for, bat I ,did not see them. " Then the vision began receding, and I never can describe the terrible disap pointment I felt when I found myself again in bed. 1 felt, indeed, grieved. It was eleven o'clock when I regained consciousness, and st once I felt- «« though my life had been renewed. I was a new man. I had not then, nor have I now, an ache or a pain. My eyesight, my hearing, and my speech had fully returned, and I feel now as well as ever I did in my life." Dr. James H. Cantrel, the attending physician, said that Mr. Shrack was attacked with nervous spasms of the heart. " I expected his death at any moment. He was in such a condition since Sunday a week that I did not dare to make an examination of his lungs, as I knew he could not stand it. Mr. Shrack told me that during the four hours of his unconsciousness he had but one foot on earth, and he was very sorry that I had brought him back, because he was so happy where he was.1'--Phil adelphia Times, Jan. 29. - * T . Hp-: Habit Hakes the Woman* ̂ MRS. MYRA CLARK GAINES, having es tablished her claim to $85,000,000 worth of property in Louisiana, is about to enter upon proceedings to establish her claim to 16,000 or 17,000 acres of land in Missouri. She doesn't need the land; there is only a possibility that she will ever secure it; but litigation is with her a matter of habit, and this new step would indicate that she cannot be contented or happy without a quar rel about land and other property on her hands. A business man who has been intense ly active for thirty or forty years cannot be easy in retirement. He is lost with out the care, worry and excitement in cident to the management of business complications, ana more often than otherwise such a man returns to the work and worry of business life, and falls, when he does fall, in working harness. Much the same spirit must animate Mrs. Gaines in her present ac tion to recover lands in Missouri. She has been so long a litigant that to be in the midst of litigation is, for her, as we have said, the only chance for content ment or happiness. Her talents and her energies have been for so many years devoted to establishing her claims to property whose ownership was in dispute, that she has an irresistible in clination to continue in the business. Myra Clark, when a beautiful young woman of twenty-five, made the dis covery that she was her father's heir, and as such the rightful owner of val uable property in New Orleans. This was nearly half a century ago, and she entered at once upon what proved to be the work of a life-time, ana made her the most famous litigant in the world. In 1882, as Mrs. Whitney, she took the first steps to prove the existence of a will making her the heir of Daniel Clark. She wras just twenty-four years in establishing the fact that such a will had been in existence, and in this time had burled her first husband and mar ried a second and buried him. Then her legitimacy was denied, and it took some years to establish the fact of her father's marriage to her mother. This accomplished, she in 1856 filed in the Supreme Court of the United States a bill in equity to recover valuable prop erty then in the possession of the City of New Orleans. After a struggle of eleven years the Court decided the case in her favor. Many minor suits fol lowed, and last year she gained the crowning victory that substantially es tablished her right to all the property claimed. ; Forty-seven years after she discov ered certain important papers in an old trunk she stood before the world the {jersonification of persistent and tire-ess energy, having vindicated her fa ther, defended her mother, and estab lished her own claims. It was expected then that this old lady of seventy-three, having fought so good a fight, and hav ing accomplished so much, would be willing to rest on her laurels. But she was unfitted for a quiet life. Like the warrior of old, she sighed for more worlds to conquer; like the re tired business men of to-day, she was uneasy as a fish out of water. Forty years poring over old documents and dwelling on the intricacies of disputed titles has so bent her nature to the work that investigation and disputation had become necessary to her existence. The decisions of the courts last year having left nothing in New Orleans for her to quarrel about, she gladly seizes the remote possibilities in Missouri. The picture of this old lady, of more than the allotted threescore and ten years of human existence, entering up on such a work is as striking as the now historic tableau incident to her first appearance in court- The one marked the dedication of a high-spirited and courageous woman to the accom plishment of what seemed a hopeless undertaking. The other shows that the habits of life and thought, encour aged by the struggle that ended after so long a time in success, have made for her a second nature, with inclina tions and longings as strong as were the aspirations of her young womanhood. --Chicago Inter-Ocean. --Potter's American Monthly pub lishes, in its department of 44 Notes and Queries," the following statement con cerning what is called a 44 Fourth-of- July Family," living in Allentown, Pa. The parents, Mr. and Mrs. Barney Ward, have been married a little more than ten years, and the births of their eight children have succeeded each otF^er in this regular order: July 4,1869, a daughter, Bridget, living; July 4,1871, a son, James, dead; July 4,1812, a son, Barney, living; July 4,1873, a son, dead; July 4,1874, a son, Charles, living; July 4,1876, a daughter, Mary Ann, dm; USEFUL AND SUGjf&FLYB. SUGAR IS an admirable ingredientin curing meat and fish. THE mud blockade Pecember taught the world that agriculture wa? the corner stone of all outer industries. Cut off Hie ffarmen* store? frOfn the world for six months îdiiWonld near ly perish.--Ibwa StafcRefistsr. if WESTERN Ne# Tork farmer Is credited with the noteworthy remark that he once carefully observed the effect of the application of stable ma-] nure which had been saved under( shelter till needM**4ar use, and he con-; eluded that one load of it was worth about as much as two loads of that ex posed in the us|ial wasteful way; which is scarcely stating the case too strong ly . _--SxCtidiiy€: THE more usual adulterations of honey are with various forms of starch, as of those of the potato and wheat, and with starch and cane sugar. Other adulterations sometimes detected are chalk, plaster of Paris and pipe clay. The starch is not only added for the sake of weight and bulk, but to improve the color of a very dark honey, and to correct a sharp and acidulous taste which old honey is apt to acquire.-- American Cultivator. IT'S a good plan to square up with everybody at this season, even if the money to pay is not on hand. We ought to know just how we stand with the world, just how much we owe to each and how much each owes to us. These old accounts that stand along year after year are bail things, and they are an intolerable nuisance unless they are run over occasionally so that they may be kept straight between man and man.--Rural New Yorker. THE managers of a few creameries in New York have adopted a new method in management of their milk. As the new milk is received, night and morning, at the creamery, it is run into large vats, and at once heated to 140 degrees or above, by driving steam into the milk. This drives the odors out and enables them to keep the milk twelve to twenly-four hours longer than it would without heating. As soon as the heating is done, cold water is run around the milk and through it a series of horizontal tubes in the middle of the milk, the top tube being just below the cream, to be out of the way of skimming. Thu3 by cooling the milk at the outside and the middle, it is rapidly done and the cream hurried to the surface. THERE is a tendency at this season to feed too much grain and get the horses too fat. This is done at the expense of muscle, because an animal kept con stantly at work will not get 44 hog-fat" -the food going to furnish tissue and muscle used up and destroyed. Not so with an animal kept in a stall and given no exercise, except perhaps, that ob tained while being led to water. The amount of grain fed should be reduced, and a plentiful supply of hay Itept in the racks at all times. When possible, the horses should be given the free run of the yard every day. If only given their liberty occasionally, they are too apt to run and jump to an excess. Many valuable animals have been lost by rupture or a fall obtained through giving exercise to exuberant animal spirits.--Cor. Chicago Tribune. farms are best fitted for, What they can do Mit, and persevere in that--year by year becoming more proficient, more experienced and more successful.-- American Agriculturist. , tenon of the Times* -H TAOT ignorant, unskilled, and un faithful workmen, in all branches of in dustry, are the first to be sent adrift when times are dull. Men well trained, of suitable education, and honest ^hearts, are yet in demand and always be. Competition in evefy branch 0$ industry is close and scrutinising, and the raw material in the shape of ignorant or careless workmen, clerks or operators are not in demand. Every branch of business and every laborer has to compete with fct»« talent, and skill of the world. A boy ignorant of the mercantile business, and having established no reputation for honesty and fidelity, need not expect to be chief clerk at once. A young man who has spent his life in idleness, or in robbing watermelon patches, and hen's roosts about Christmas times, and who de lights in spending his evenings at sa loons and his Suivikys at fishing or horse racing, need not expect the former to {dace him in responsible places on his arm or pay h?m for trying to do that which he knows nothing about. The days for ignorance in farming have passed. No father should now sup pose that his son or daughter can com pete with the talent of the world with out thorough attention to and knowl edge of £he business of his intended oc cupation. Railroads and telegraphs have brought the world's skill and com petition to our doors. The solution of the labor question is a preparation for the labor sought. It is a mistaken no tion, if a man is not skilled in anything else, he can farm. That folly has filled all our agricultural districts with igno rance, poverty and bankruptcy. It is seen in poor stock, lean horses, un- painted houses, filthy door yards, weedy farms, poor crops, unpaid debts, squalid children, with want and woe written all over family and premises. Thus far the world has sadly erred in its standard of talent and experience for a farmer. Not merely the owner, but all the hands, as in a factory or machine shop, must be skilled in the business, or waste and want follow in their tracks. Nearly all the idle in the cities, whom the patriotic editors are trying to drive out to the farms of the country, are totally unsuitable and use less on the farm. They know nothing about it and would expect wages while going through an apprenticeship. It is a pity the world, and especially edi tors, can never learn that farming has to be managed and operated by skill and experience. Raw hands are of no more use on a farm than they are in a watch factory or as operatives on a locomotive. Intelligent brains and honest hearts yet have plenty of em ployment.--Iowa State Register. Oowwrnrriow.---For tttecweaf tjbi»diat*ese- merit than Allen's Luay Balneal ; TMs mated expectorant for carta and all disease* leading toft,« of the throat, lungs, and d pulmonary organs, U introduced to tag public after Its merits for the em M SUA diseases turn been folly tested by the nedfeal Hie Balsam is, consequently, recom- by physicians who have become ac- I with its great success. The Fault of American Fariif. 44 THE oldest inhabitant" does not re member a winter that began so favora bly as the present one. To plow on the last day of the year, with the weather like that of May, while the cows are pasturing on the meadows, is, for the Eastern and Northern States, some thing remarkable. Fortunately, there, has been little harm done by the ex traordinary • mildness of the early win ter; and much of the spring work has been put in a very forward state. This is a great help; a farmer, unless he can be ahead of his work, must labor under many disadvantages. Of all men, the farmer most lives for and works for the future. He plows and sows months be-, fore he reaps. His young stock always appear to him as the future matured animals, and H is of these that he thinks, and not the young creature which he feeds and nurses. He must plan for years -ahead;- when, lie breaks up a sod he has in his mind's eye the field again in grass five or six years hence, and the work of all tliose years is to Insure a good meadow then. No man needs to be more patient than he, nor to wait more cheerfully for good or ill, he knows not which, that may be fall him. And now that winter seems hardly to have begun, we are already anxious about the spring, which will be at hand in a month, ana planning what shall be done about this or that. The management of properly-regulated farms should be planned, once for all. There should be no changes, except those regularly recurring which arrive year by year, and which tollo »v one an other as orderly as the changes of the seasons. The great fault of American farming is this constant desire for change. We change our farms as we change the fashion of our coats. We rarely think of them as homes which our children shall occupy after us. It is the same with our stock, crops and manner of farming. As the fashion comes up, or any new thing or idea is talked about, we cast aside, or leave the old and take up the new. We do not take time to learn the value of what we have, or that there is good in eyery- thing, if we only persevere and bring it out. We take up dairying, for in stance, trying all the popular breeds of cows, ana leave that to take up hops, tobacco or fruits. Then we go to grain-growing, and finally begin to think the West, or the South, or orange- growing in Florida, is more desirable, and try to sell out; in the meantime we give no heart to our business, and that necessarily languishes. There are jnany exceptions, but this is the rule. We hear it talked over wherever farm ers gather, and read of it in reports of farmers' clubs and conventions. This is unprofitable. The farmer should bo conservative, steady, patient, persever ing and contented if he would he a suc cessful and happy man. While the whole world depends upon him for food and clothing, he can never fail to have profitable employment, or find a market for his c5i"opg,. The )$8t farmers are those who' discover what their How the Judge Repeated the Joke. SOME years ago a case was called for trial in Cumberland Superior Court. Among the witnesses on behalf of the State was to have been one Sara Mooney. She was not found in the court-room, and her name was called in due form from the Court-House win dow without effect. Whereupon, the State Solicitor, the late Hon. Robert Strange, who was fond of a joke, even of a pun, turned to the Court and said: 4'May it please Your Honor, the testi mony of this witness is not material, and we will go on with the case with out Sara-Mooney." Of course, the law yers laughed at the pun, but the Judge didn't see it, and cracked never a smile. There were no railroads in those days, and few stage coaches, and Judge and lawyers traveled from one court to an other in McKetlian's buggies. On the road to the next court, in the Judge's own county, there was quite a proces sion of lawyers in buggies following the Judge's lead. The Judge called a halt in the middle of a stream to water his horse, and, in the thoughtful mood in cident to that process, suddenly aston ished his brethren of the bar by burst ing into laughter both loud and long. He explained that he was laughing at Judge Strange's good joke. Arrived at, home, through with his toilet-, and seated at supper, his wife, as wives will, asked of the incidents of his jour ney. There had been none of interest, he said, except the good joke gotten off by their mutual friend, Judge Strange, at Cumberland Court. '4 And what was that, my dear?" 44 Well, there was a case in which one of the witnesses was named Mary Mooney. She could not be found, and Judge Strange, amid shouts of laughter, said: 4 May it please Your Honor, we will goon with out Mary Mooney.' " The good lady pondered awhile, and said she did not see anything very funny in that; and, after a little thinking, the Judge said that he did not either, then, but tnat he had seen it while watering his horse.-- Raleigh (N. C.) Observer. --The citizens of Albany have wit nessed the strange spectacle of a fire- hydrant on fire. Things are not what they seem, any more than a wooden leg can ache.--Detroit Free Press. Apples •! Gold In Pictures of Silver* "A word fitly spoken is like apples of gold in pictures of silver." When the body be- comes diseased, the mind is thereby necessa rily influenced. National wars, State dissen sions, neighborhood broils, and family differ ences., are more frequently than otherwise the result of diseased and disordered constitu tions. When the body is suifcrinjr, the mind, acting in sympathy, will become irritated and perplexed. "VY hen the physical system is in health, the mind perceives things in their true light, and the disposition assumes a very dif ferent phase. Nothing more directly tends to destroy the happy, cheerful disposition of a woman, and render her peevish, nervous and fretful, than a constant endurance of uterine disorders. The diseases peculiar to woman take away the elasticity and buoyancy of health and reduce her body and mind to a mere wreck. Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescrip tion is a rml peacemaker in a family. No woman suffering from uterine disorders can afford to be without this remedy. The Favor ite Prescription saves unnecessary doctor bills, prevents divorces, wards off suicides, brings back buoyant, joyous feelings, restores the woman to health and her family to happiness. It is sold by all druggists. \ 'f; Bbeimatiim Quickly Oarti. . "Dur&ng's Bheumatic Remedy," the great In ternal Medicine, will positively cure any case of rheumatism on the face of the earth. Price 91 a fcotfci*. Sold by all Ornffgirts. Bend for onolai to Helphenstme 4 Bentley, Washington. IX & bculty. mended fuinted •n Bully --tom We claim that there is greater ----~T M onifomiityinthe prodnction of good bnpi, biscuits, cake, etc., tn the ntte ffi DOOLKTS* YKAST POWDKX, and that the arfeictai inede withitaremore whpleaomeand digestible than If made faith m other kind of yeast or bakimr powder. Test it by the only reliabieaadU ̂ ful test, a trial by the oren. We alao that it is Just as represented, and Just what the peblic expect It to be by the name ncder which it is sold. _ , gaftiitrtos lelettm t• Texas* All persons desiring information relating to Texas, should at once subscribe for the 8k Louis TBXAH, an abfr-epndected weekly jour nal, devoted to the Commerce of the South west, making Texas Interests a specialty. It publishes mote reliable details about Texas than any other paper in the country. Its sub scription rates are $2.00 per vear. It is pub lished at No. 808 Market street. St. Louis, Ma Mothers, nvotkers, Rlothfri. - UON'T FAN *<> PROCURE MBS. WINSLOW S nto S*HCP for all diseases of teething in chil dren. It relieves the child from pain, core* wind colic, renktes the bowels, and, by giring relief end health to the child, gives rest to the mother. TK* "PouLTRr WOFXP," Hartford, Conn.,« the leading magazine of its class, $1.25 a year; IS superb CHKOHOS mailed for only 75c. additional. AD fowl-breeders should have it. Subscribe now for 1818. It is best and cheapest. 10c. sample No,, , . _ BTOTKBISO cured by Bates' Appliances. Send for description to Simpson & Co. .Box 50J6,N.Y. mmm THE COIAT BIPOD ftimnci All SIWMM wt tko Blootf.--IT Vesettoe wtll relieve pain, deanae, purify, and aire such dtmases, te- •torinff the padent to perfect health after trytaidtifer- «ot physicians, many remedies, soffertn* for yearn. Is It MteoMluhepnoC, If yea am a mflner, you can be cored? Why Is this medicine performing such 1 cores? It works In the blood, In the drralstlnethi flan truly be called the Ormt Blood dlor" Ttoe great source at dlseaMorlrinaKstn the blood; and BO clne that does not art directly upon It, topurUy and renovate, has any Just claim opon public attention. Tegetlae la Raid fcy All Branlda. ASS the reeovmfl dnMPtfcs, batons snfler- era, vtatms of fever and agne, the mercurial dis eased patient, how they leeamred health, dMir- ful uttrHs and mod wppc ttte; they will tell yen by taking SIMMONS' UNA BMVLATOK. Tile Chcafcat, Fanat ul Seat Faadly •«*letaM> ««& the W»rH t DTSFKFSU, CONSTIPATION, Jaundice, . SICK HiunACKK, Oollc, Depression of STOMACH, Heartburn, etc., etc. This unitvalled Southern Remedy Is warranted net to oontaln a single particle of llumi, or any Injurious nlasial aubstanea, but to PURELY VEGETABLE, eaatalnlng those Southern Boots and Herta, wMtik aa Unwise Providence fom In countries tefoere liver Unaaea most prevail. It will ««n all Utac c«UB*a fcjr IlfraBKemrat of* tli* I.iver Baweli. ' The STMPTOMB of liver Complaint are a bitter or bad taste In the mouth; Pain In the Bade, SMes or Joints, often mistaken for Rheumatism; Hour Mtoamek; Leas of Appetite; Bowels alternately costive and lax Hfladaehe; Loas of Memory, with a painful aenaatloa o< having failed to do something which ought to have been done; Debility. Low Hplrlta. athick, yellow ap pearance (A the Skin and Eyes, a dry Cough, often nua- taken for Consumption. Sometimes many of these symptoms attend the disease, at others very few: but the lit vm. the largest oiyan In the body. Is generally the seat of the disease, and if aot Regulated In time, great suffering, wretchedness and DEATH will ensue. I can recommend as an effleaclous remedy for disease of the liver. Heartburn and Dyipepsla, Slmmona' liver Begulator. JJSWU O. WOMDXR, 1025 HABTKR STREET, ASSISTANT POSTMASTER, PHILAPMJ'HIA. "We have tested Its virtues, personally, and know that for Dyspepsia,Biliousness and ThroUStngHeadacheit Is the best medicine the world ever saw. We have tried forty other remedies befora Simmons' liver Regulator, but none of them gave us mom than temporary iwM: but the Begulator not only relieved, but cured us.'*--Bo. ^FUJWUNI AMP MESSKNGEIS, Macon, GA. •AHtJFACTPKED ONLY XT 4. H. ZEILIM % CO# rHlLADELPHIA« 14. J»ls> #l.w. MMIraliDraggisto. 4 vM ; *ft§ me*rn««S&,fr fi aad Vmm. POHDH EXTRACT CURES Ml«», blind and Weeding; luteaniuatloiM and CoaiMtlen*, Enlartemeats. , POXBt EXTRACT IN VALVARtE M$jraent«rsr and Rheauattsm; Inflainsw% fjoffi of Kyiw and Bjrellda; Inflammation of Ovartaaj Vaginal Iieaeerrkea; V»rlc«*<B Vetaui 8w* Klpplea. f© FA1UKKKS -Pond1* No Stoefc "" r, no livery Man dan afford to S«» without It. It Is uaed by all the leading livery Stables, Street Railroads and first Horsemen In Mew York City. It has no equal for Sprains, Harness or Saddle Chaf-Ings, Stiffness, Scratches, Swelling^ Cuts, lacerations. Bleedings, Pneumonia. Colic, Diarrhoea, Chins, Colds, etc. Its range of action is wide, and the relief It affords is so prompt that it Is invaluable In is well M will nover be * . imitated. The genuine article hs" the words PonS'i Ex.- every Karm-yard as Let it be tried once andyoi . CAUTION I road's Extract has been as In every Farm-house. >u nrlll never be without it. tract blown in each bottle. It Is prepared by the •nlr atrMM llvlinv who evt'r anew hew to prepare It properly. Bcfuse all other preparations of witch Basel. This is tho only article used b; Physicians, and in the hospitals of this country sad Europe. _ . HIMTOK1 and VTMW of Pond'* EttraM. la pamphlet form, sent free on application to POKD'tt EXTRACT CORPAXY, 98 MaldS* Lane, New York. L Table Book ui Mutnj irittaetic, HY LYDIA HASH. This little book Is the best in use for beginners in the stady of Arithmetic. It takes the learner through Long Division, and, in Its carefully-prepared questions and ax* ample*, It leaves no point untouched which is neccRsary for the scholar's complete mastery of this draaitment of knowledge^ It, In fact, exhansts the subject, and no teacher who has once used it wtll ever think of chanting it for another. IUhasalfto the additional recommendations of being small and inexpensive Apply to the au thor, 88 Broad steeet, Elizabeth, N. J. Price 15 cents. No charge made for noetage In maiMng the ttooheL Hershey School of Musical Art, At HMrakey Music Hall, Chicago, 111. All brandies of MUSIC, MODERN T.ANOUAGHS and ELOCUTION taught. Unusual facilities offered. Con certs, Classes la Harmony, Sight-.singing. Italian, Elo cution, etc., free to all pupil*. Send for Circular. i?IjOCIrrio îs'r'S jornm l -i gives choicest standard and new pieces for professional and amateur Readers and Speakers, lo cents o! any newsdealer or by mail. . _ JESSE HANKY & CO.. 11» Nassau St. N. Y. YOIJKtt MJ3M can cefc a thorough preparation for business cheater and bitter at the liaven-port Business College thr.n anywhere t.ise in ttieW est. Send for circular toD-RUdU bridge, Davenportjowa. oiWJiK.vr has nevei failed to cure Jf KI K % .00. L. schell & Co., Maiden. M. Y Aersnts Wanted, to sell the best pump in America. Ever} owe a younif fire-nn^Iue. ( in-u ^ bwb v tars and price-list free. AtMress W M. MUKFIN & CO.. 158 So. Peorla-st. Chicago NEURALGIA One box, by mail, $1.0 PUMP | W- M. MUKFIN i -* f MReadeStNT - - - - I OF YO«* OWN. IfistklBpEffiW ONLY miOOUAR FOR AN ACRg $40 kwv fill CAN BK MADE TSEQL K Every Day! _^SfVTM,HL Using the Tnriur WSIXBOUHS and XOCK DaixxiKeMsh ernra. The Wh«teeH done by h<wsa. Mo Pirtant £ 3* r°y_ wepth tKRRB. DonHi v: v'&s pub Cox^h, Cold, or Sore Throat, Begatree Immediate attention, aa neSleet^' < _ "•'* often timed reaalts In some ineuaM Jma®|: A, . 4 IBM. BROWN'S BRONCHIAL VROCHCS . v a atmple asm* ily> and wffl almnrt • >; fMlaUy K>** lan«dbtte ielid> FOIP SIT AIX cmsmsrs m* 4aata#' | pints cod *iveb| OH ATO MP, T« G»a«aaiBllves.-!laaf havg bM ham to give tlmr testimony tn favor of the use ot " Winers nm CM Zlrsr 0(1 ml Mat.' ence haa proved It to be a valuable ntuedy f or «w dlsMsesoC thel HkiTST 8otd >» dmgglita generally. _m THB 8CIINCC IF LIFK •* ••TARVSEMHWATIOW. ••• KncUah tannage, written to ax'--' rtenee^towEom was awarded a totiMilaUottal NEMcal Assoc* _ ml and very expensive steel-piate engravings, fhreeta AlMtfl MEM MfeAaa KAMllnahla »saaa3idlnaie M satenslve attd jkonM practice. Bouodta *1 The authorla a noble benefactor." Ap Illustrated i_ nlesenttoall oe receipt of Scents for postage. Thai Hiar may be consulted on all diseases requiring " and axsedeao* MUir--• Da. WTH. PARKER. No. 4 Bulflnch-st. Boston. »r MMfit AOKiritt TAKE XOTICE. BETSEY BOBBET COME AG fcew Bsek Ready ftr Afeats, Bar JOSIAH ALLEN'S WIFE: Samantba at tin Centennial. and on teray to wit .all glasses^. Bopncjtrip.ttcki Chieageaad return free to pui3hasers. »nfl M 5LANI» CORPAIY. i'Mcage, or Cedar 1 idstoh 81 ... leivwaT^ , lead qpawwlssteadf. ww inran mm DIBH SS£&Sr£SSt' In-iuppi PeterAmg,* 3^y winter pr l̂tabiy. * . tJciurr, AUlatea, Ok Address/. WORK FOR AL HAIR „_om oelebra salary exper* 'S&'JgSSgStf* m. BUINIUB. 323 «'«« Hmaos Sr., Cna«> A limited ntimher of Reliable a Men, who are willing to work an a to act as traveling s:ili«sii>en fnr the side Address, witit st; i BartcluT,2l2 Maiu-st, YOUNGMEN! Address ALK)TI\£, Bansgrr, Janesvllle. Wis. Learn TEU^aRAPHY here and earn 1 to 1100 a month. salary while learn in?. Situations 'furnished *.•. -- Hi I-I\ in each State for the Jicrvler. and tore*. WANTED crime. Pay lit -- -- . and European Socrct Si'iTico Co., Cincinnati. Ohio. gat criine. Pay libta-al. lucl<>t>e stanip and addrws Amer- ^ r-# #9C a day sure made by Agents selling C I '-tnii *. Gntvona, Piclom .1 Chfoiao OtfSa. Sjjj - ...... UK MnprTrwovih RS.MUl ( t r NSc. UluMntM CMaloc«* fMc. J. H. SOrVOHl)^ »JNS. II atua. QeM'lMnted Watches. Cheapest in the known world. SAMPI.E TO AeKKTB. Address A. COULTKII & CO.ChleagOkBl. PIANOS Retail price f000 ottly f360L AT jsaeaBg5»s!igJlt; J,A Wa*te« •w best-selling artlclsy In the world;l ssmels '/^TAddiyss GOLD! Agents. daJflfflK WANTE gALEaEBM for whnlrtal* LUwnl Mtaryt cxiwi.m> paij. A>i>lre>a R. At.o.,bos 1364,Cineitiaati,Ohio. MMM Revolvers sent free for examination. Price iUflM list frcft Great Wesfn UunWorits, Pittsburgh,Ba, DIP Wages Summer and Winter. Samples free. Oil] Nation^CopyingC&, 300 W. Madisons^Catfeage. ^ I A H H O U R during spare time. Nocapitalre- 9 squired. Sample mailed free. J. w.sntfttjpauitbwjll 2» g SflMixed Cards, Snowflake, Daratak, no WS with name,10e. J.lCnWw & Co, ,Nassau,N. Y. ORElegant AseortedCards, with nmm,post- iWpaid.for 10c. Chadsey a aaaburg CtudhamaKtacJPt • E Fsahtonabte Cants, no 3 alike, vrithoaa^ Cg 10c., postpaid. OBRL BKEDfcCa, Nwwjtt FA LABOB Mixao CABM, with name. 19B. nil 40laaBS8l8o.i» styles AotiuaUaaaM cans 10a. U** Agen>%njfcl«»o. DOWPaca. Brtstut.Osiaa. A. N. K N«SS-«MS mm irciTiJto te ,t«» k*. •Wf 0»*»,