i ' KOTHER'g WOBKi jiklnjr, ittirl"!, and breitSnflfc Wishing, MtnbiBg, and tr*nlnc. Ripping, tandog, and mending, Catting, basting, and »tittibinjb Haft: ng the old like new; Shoestrings to lace. Face to waab, ^p::|Bnttona to sew. jfity, : And the like of such; • • JStockingS to darn I',.?':" • »jWhile the children plap|. : *tortea to Ml, .'ears wipe away, 1V" Makin* hem happy - .The livelong day; ^ ii a thus frrm morn till nigm; aaTa that a mother's work Is light? tl. At erenJnp fonr *§* Xilttle lorms In white; ' Prayer* all paid, .JAnd the last good-n: ^Tneking them oafe f. In each downy bed. •%# 0'« r each head. That the dear Father In Heaven will keep Safe nil my darlings, Awj.ke o'" asleep. I think the old adatictrueeTerw easy to labor tor those tint - Z . 1IL ' Ahtne! dear me 11 often say, Aa I lianpthe tumbled clothes awfty; And ti.e tear drop* start = While my burd -nert heart 5,, s AcbfB for.the mother across the way. ^here, oh, wher»i are '! ' • Her nestlings flown? J • All, all are gone, *\ • ..v Have one alone] - '• K«1 led th'Ir garment# :•* . . 'i •.With tenderest c* re, ; ; • Unpressed the pillow -• * - And vacant the chair. > • .• * .No ribbons to tie, No fac-R to wash, ' No hair all awry; • No merry voices •" /• *• ' To hu«h into rest; *• God save them! V ; He took them! And He knoweth best; . ahl tlio heart anpuishl the tcarsthat fall! Ms mother's work 1« the hardest of all! • --Philadelphia Sunday Republic. SWINGING ON SOMEBODY'S GATE. ®"^Oh, where is my darling boy to-night®*: v. Kings a poet in plaintive song. iW^Pe're not quite certain that we are right i And may be we miirht be wrong, Bmt we tirnrily believe that the boy is out late. Because be is swinging on somebody's gate, #omel>ody's pate--nh! veil do we know What the joys of that pastime are! • We'll never forget--'tin years av o Since we fwnng on that wooden bar; Nor did we inspect that the hand of fate Was cnt stretched while swinging on ioine- bedy's gate *r.:4S»»e o'd, old story, bnt ever new-- •Her fat her appeared on the scene, ;i®is locks wet with the falling dew, *4# looked like a monster marine, jraa the buildov--oh, we can never relate What happened when swinging on somebody's gate. Don't worry abrnt yonr boy to-night, ^ Or siKh out y<ur soullet in rhyme; « : For tiie chances, he's all right. And will have a jolly good time. For he won't go astray, though he stays oat late, As long as he's swinging on somebody's gate. •--Exchange. Our Ivories, A V-"-- Facts and Fictions in the Philosophy »f Tooth-Growing. Some old folks cat their teeth when hat advanced toward centenarianism. An old woman living near New Haven cut an incisive troth in the lower jaw •when 75 years old; it confirmed a strange hallucination with which she had long been possessed--that she had been dead and was come to life again, "with the usual infantile carrer of teeth ing, etc. Another lady living in Phila delphia about a dozen of years ago cut an entirely new set of teeth when about 80 years old, after having been many years toothless. In 1832 a woman in Richmond cut eight new teeth in the 87th year of her age--thus winding up a toothless period of many years. A dame of Boston, after being toothless from 70 to 90 years of age, cut several new teeth. Edward Progers, aged 96, died in 1713 of the anguish of cutting teeth, and had several ready to cut which so inflamed his gums that he died thereof. As if to take revenge for these dupli cations, or rather triplications of teeth ing, nature sometimes requires us to dispense with dental apparatus alto gether. At a Loudon cemetery there is the following epitaph: "Elizabeth Cook, a poor woman, aged 86, and who never had a tooth, was buried June 11, 1798." On the other hand, some folks greatly exceed the orthodox number of thirty-two. Dampier, in his account of the Philippine Islands, says: "The next day the Sultan came on board again, and presented our captain with a little boy; but he was too small to be serviceable on board, and so the cap tain returned thanks and told him he was too little for him. Then the Sul tan sent a bigger boy, which the cap tain accepted. This boy was a very pretty, tractable boy, but what was wonderful in him he had two rows of teeth, one within another, in each jaw. None of the other people were so, nor did I ever see the like." The pearly teeth of the poet and nov elist would not be valued by some of the Eastern and Polynesian nations. The Chinese blacken their teeth by chewing the fruit of the areca, or betel nut. The Tonquinese and Siamese beaux and ^belles, in bringing about the same re sult by nearly the same means, almost starve themselves for three or four days, while the dyeing is going on, lest the food should disturb the dye. The Stinda Islanders sometimes blacken all the teeth but two with burned cocoanut, covering the two excepted teeth with thin plates of gold or silver. The Ma cassar people sometimes pull out two front teeth in order to supply their place with teeth of pure gold or silver. Two Italian girls, twins, have been known to have had natural teeth of a light red rose color--both the milk teeth and those which succeeded them. The charms, omens, signs, panaceas relating to the teeth constitute quite a formidable item in folk lore. In some parts of the country there is a super stition that if you put on your right stocking, right shoe, and right trouser leg before the left you will never have toothache. To driuk out of a skull taken from a graveyard; to take a tooth from such a skull and wear it around the neck; to apply the tooth to your own living but aching tooth; to pat a double nut into your pocket; to pare your finger-nails and toe-nails, and wrap up the parings in paper--all are charms against the toothache. If you catch a mole in a trap, cut off one of his paws, and wear it as a charm, you will soon see the effect, provided a right paw be used for a left tooth, and vice versa. When an aching tooth is ex tracted mix it with salt and burn it There is a certain custom of calling the toothache the "love pain," for which the sufferer is not entitled to any com miseration--whether he (or she) fully assents to this may perhaps be doubted. Many other items of tooth lore have no connection with toothache. For in stance if the teeth are 6et wide apart there will be good luck and plenty of traveling for the fortunate possessor. "When a tooth is drawn, if you refrain from thrusting your tongue into the cavity the new tooth to grow in its place will be a lucky one. A letter written in 1713 by a lady to her son spoke of th« efficacy of wolves' teeth to assist children in cutting my do some people's teeth come put more readily than others? The reasons for this are probably many. About the middle of the last century leter Kalm, a Swede, visited the United States and wrote sensibly about what he saw. flo observed a frequent loss of teeth among settlers from Europe, especially woman. After dis cussing and rejecting many modes of explanation, he attributed it to hot tea and other hot beverages, and came to a general conclusion that "hot feeders lose their teeth more readily than cold feeders." He also noticed that "the American Indians have better teeth than the whites." He accounts for the difference in this strange way: that the reds keep the mouth shut, whereas the whites keep it open. JThe teeth, he says, require moisture to keep their surfaces in good working order; when the month is open the mucus membrane has a tendency to dry up, the teeth loose their needed supply of moisture, and thence come discoloration, tooth ache, decay, looseness, and eventual loss of teeth. He scolds the human race generally for being less sensible than the brutes in this respect, and the white race specially in comparison with the red. We keep our mouths open far too, much; the Indiah warrior sleeps, hunts, and smiles with his mouth shut, and respires through the nostrils. Among the virtues attributed bv him to closed lips one is excellent-- when you are angry keep your mouth shut. There is reason to believe * that the Greeks and Romans knew something about false teeth. Martial, in one of his epigrams, says that Thais' teeth were discolored, while Lecania's were white. Why? Because the former wore her own teeth, whereas the latter wore those of some other person. There was an old Roman law which al lowed the gold settings of false teeth, or the gold with which they were bound, to be buried or burned with the de ceased. There is also some indication that the Greeks were not to extract teeth and to fill up decayed teeth with gold. The Sunda Islanders at the present day are in the habit of employ ing their old women to dress up the teeth of the youths and maidens at woo ing time; the canine teeth are filed to a fine, smooth edge, and the body of the tooth made concave, or they will notch the edge of the teeth like a fine saw, as an additional means of beauti fying. An imperial toothache once made the fortune of a poor barber. The late Sultan of Turkey, Abdul Aziz, having a touch of toothache one day, sent for the court physician; he was hunted and could not be found. The domestic hurried about Constantinople and at length found a poor, ragged, barber-surgeon; they took him to the palace and furbished him up. He drew the offending tooth, and soothed the pain of the Commander of the Faith ful. Whereupon a nice house and $60 a month was awarded to him. During the days of body-snatchers, when graveyards were subjected to pil lage for supplying anatomists with sub jects for dissection, the teeth from the dead bodies formed a frequent article of sale to dentists. Sometimes graves were opened for the teeth alone, as be- ing small and easily concealed articles. The making of artificial teeth is a trade in which a large amount of in genuity is displayed, both in the adap tation of new substance and in the mode of shaping and finishing. When artificial teeth began to be made, in stead of using the natural teeth of dead persons, tbey were made of bone, or the more costly kind of ivory, fiom the tusks of the elephant, rhinoceros, hippopotamus, walrus, or narahcl. If only a single tooth were wanted it was customary to cut a bit of bone to the proper shape, and tie it to the next tooth by a ligature of wtre. It is still found that tusk bone possesses the best combination of properties. It com bines, as a learned authority in the dental world tells us, "lightness, strength, and solidity, with a natural appearance and a certain congeniality to the mouth, possessod by no other material, whiqh render both partial pieces and pntire sets at once the most useful substitutes for the lost natural teeth." The mechanical dentist must be a genuine workman. Wlun he is tbout to make bone or ivory teeth he cuts a tusk into pieces and shapes each piece by an elaborate series of mechanical processes. Sometimes, for a customer who has plenty of dollars to spare, he will make a whole set, upper or lower, as the case may be, out of one piece. He saws his block of ivory roughly to the size, and then, with infinite pa tience, files and graves it into shape. He has at hand a model of the patient's gum and works to that model with ex actness. The teeth are not separate pieces; they are cut into apparent rath er than real separation, like the teeth of a comb. An artistic workman will take care that the teeth shall present some of that irregularity which our natural grinders always exhibit; a learner falls into the mistake of mak ing them too good. Many persons do not like to wear dead people's teeth-- there is something uncomfortable in the idea; there is. also frequently a germ of abcay in such teeth, and these two reasons led to the custom of mak ing artificially ivory teeth. Ivory, with all of its excellences, becomes discol ored, and hence the chief motive of making teeth of certain mineral or veg etable compositions. There is, in fact, a sort of triangular duel going on among the ivory dentists, mineral den tists, and vegetable dentists, each class fighting stoutly against both of the oth ers. Whether yonr dentist really makes the teeth which he inserts in your cranium is a question he does not deem it necessary to answer. In truth he very rarely does anything of the kind. There are certain dealers who sell sets of teeth, half sets twos, or threes, singles or doubles, front or back, top or bottom, finished or unfinished, as well as all the apparatus and tools re quired for the dintist's art. And some of these dealers themselves are sup plied by manufactures who conduct op erations on a considerab e scale. TM United States is ahead of all other countries in this art. A recent computation makes the number of ar tificial teeth fabricated here as high as 6,01)0,000 annually--symbols (according to some folks' notions) of 6,000,000 at tacks of toothache. In one of the larg est and most complete factories, where.; mineral teeth are made, the ohief in gredients compr se feldspar, silica, and clay; those of subsidiary character are sundry metallic oxides, to produce those tints of discoloration which are necessary to make the imitation a good one. The feldspar, sdica, and clay are ground to an impalpable, powder un der water, then dried and made into a paste. The teeth are cast in brass molds, varied in size and shape to suit the requii&nents of the moatli. A special kind effMWte, to fotattb* enam els is first put into the mold with a small steel spatula; the platinum riv ets, by which the teeth are to be fast ened, are adjusted in position, and then the paste forming the body of the tooth is introduced until the mold is filled up. Next ensues powerful pres sure and drying. When removed from the mould the tooth goes through a process ca'led biscuiting (analagous to a particular stage in porcelain man ufacture), in which state it can be cut like chalk. It is then sent to the trim mer, who scrapes off all roughness and unnecessary projections, and fills up a'>y depressions which may have been left in the operation of moulding. A wash called enamel is made by select ing various ingredients more fusible than those of the tooth, grinding them to tine powder with water, and apply ing the thick liquid as paint by means of a camel's-hair pencil. The tooth then goes to the gummer, who applies a gum composed of oxide of gold and other ingredient*. At length heat is applied. The tooth, when dried, is put into a muffle or enameler's oven, where it is placed on a layer of o:ushed quartz strewn over a slab of fire-resist ing clay. Alter being exposed for a time to an intense heat the tooth is taken out and cooled--and there it is, beautiful forever.--Brooklyn Eagle. TIM Water Sappiy of (he Ortart. In the principal Indian cities it is no longer necessary to drink boiled water, owing to the excellent supplies fur nished by the public water works. In Jaffa the water is intolerably blackish. In Routschuck the muddy Danube is filtered and sold to the native Bulgar ians. In Vienna the water works are very extensive and the water the best I know of, being nearly ice-cold on the hottest day. In Aden the public water supply is obtained by condensing and distilling common sea water by means of large engines. This unpalatable pro duct is then sold for as high as eight cents a gallon. Rains are too rare to be depended upon. Filtered rain wa ter is used in Jerusalem, and if you want enough for a bath you must pay for it extra. This suggests the matter of baths. Whatever the resident Oc cidentals in the Orient may be mt>rally, they endeavor to be physically clean. Usually a room in a hotel includes a special bath-room adjoining, and nearly every bed-room in a private house is similarly equipped. A morning bath is regarded as a matter of necessity, and an evening bath as a barely dispensa ble comfort. Even the first-class rail way coaches in India are in many cases equipped with bath-rooms, with Bhower- batlis, so that you may take your reg ular ablutions while whirling along at full speed. Many of the railway depots are also provided with baths, so that you may utilize tedious waits by cleans ing yourself. The Japanese bathe to excess, using such hot water that fatal syncope is an occasional consequence. With the Japs a bath is a sensuous luxury. They de light in relieving themselves of super fluous clothing. On the other hand, their neighbors, the Chinese get inside as much cloth ing as possible, and are never seen in the streams with which their country abounds bathing or swimming. The Ma lays and natives of Aden, many of them, are scarcely less than human ducks. A bit of silver cannot reach the bottom of the sea before they have it. The Hindoos and Brahmins bathe --es pecially in the Ganges--as a religious exercise, smearing the body with oil first if they can afford it.--Correspond* ence of Chicago Inter-Ocean. Indian Jngg ers' Wiles. The one class who interested me pu* ticularly in India were the jugglers. My investigations lead me to state pos itively that the most remarkable stories, told about them are fictions, based upon the flimsiest foundation of fact. Let us take, for instance, two per formances, the mysterious basket and the mango-growing tricks. I have seen both oc tht m over and over again, and have found the same easily-detected frauds to exist in every case. The baa* kets are bell-shaped have a false bot tom, between which and the exterior wall of the basket there is ample room for a very small child to stow itself away. "The spectators are not allowed to touch or even to come very near to the basket, and in a causal glance at the interior one is not apt to detect the false bottom. The basket is placed over the child, who squats upon the hard ground, and after saflicent time has elapsed for the youngster to crawl into its place of concealment, the jug gler horrifies the audience by passing his sword through the basket, and then upon upsetting it shows that the child has dissapeared. Meanwhile, a dupli cate child, that closely resembles thfl first one, enters upon the scene from the background, and the wonderful trick is completed. The famous mangoi growing trick is even sillier than this.; You have, of course, read how a man o£ mysterious arts plants a mango seed in. a flower pot, and then makes a dwafec{| fruit-bearing tree spring up from that seed. The facts of the case are simply these: The seed is planted and the pot is then placed under a sort of tent, whose voluminous folds must not be|; touched by any but the juggler. The latter then waters the earth in the pot| and does a lot of manipulating while* his hands are concealed in the tent. Meanwhile a fellow juggler is perform-l ing a series of tricks to amuse and dis tract the attention of the spectators, When juggler number one has had time to change the pot for another that ia hidden in the folds of the tent, he opens! one side of the canvass a little and the second pot can be seen with a half-; grown mango tree in it. After anotherj interlude of the same sort, the tent door; is again opened and a third pot is dis-* closed, which contains a little tree bear-: ing a mango.--San Francisco Call. The First Families. Indian squaw (visiting her daughter! at the Indian school). "Who are those two girls you were playing with?" "Indian pupils. Their names are Edith and Ellie. 1 little girls." "But they are white." "Yes, ma." "Where do they come from?" "Ed th is from Boston and Ellie from Philadelphia." "Just as I supposed. How often must I tell you never to associate with such folks?" "Why, ma, what is the matter with them ?" "The idea of my children--my chil dren--stooping to recognize suoh crea tures! Be more exclusive. ^Rem em ber vou belong to one of the old fami lies." « "But don't th^jr, ma?" "Of course not. They are mere foreigners whose' ancestors came over with Miles Standish and William Penn."--Philadelphia Call* - - - - - . _--,-- . be» corneas famous fortbetr tTprivMPtanos as tbey have Ion* been for their world-renowned Cabinet Organs. Having experimented sev eral years at great expense, and with the a» sistanceof probably as able aoorps of experts as can be found to any factory In the world, hey bave succeeded in producing a piano which has elicited the warmest encomiums from the best judges. The distinguishing feature about It is an important improvement In the method of "stringing" the piano, wtaloh originated in their own factory. The strings are secured by metalHo fastenings, instead of by the friction of pins set in wood, as has been the case, and the advantages re sulting are numerous ana highly important; among them are the following: Wonderful beauty and musical quality of tone, far less liability of getting out of tune, greater re liability in trying climates, and greater solidity of construction and durability. Mason & Hamlin have made 150,000 organs. Tbey can hardly expect to make as many pianos, but they will doubtless be called upon to make a very. large number -Hosfoii Traveller. ' Vegetarianism.. A new refinement of vegetarianism has been devised. At a recent vegeta rian banquet in England, after the usual amount of distensive food had been con sumed, a malcontent had the courage to observe that if we left off rearing ani mals for food it would interfere with clothes. He was, however, instantly confuted in the most practical manner by a true vegetarian, who arose and as serted that lie was completely dressed in material which had involved no bfc>od- guiltiness whatever. A ootton velvet een coat, dark linen drill waistooat, cor duroy trousers, and lawn-tennis shoes constituted the array of this friend. He also committed to the statement that "he had never tasted animal food in hie life." 1 "Wj The Stinging fcawUH In the gnllet known as heartbnrn, is snch a common source of annoyance that it deserves something more than casual mention as an inci dent of dyspepsia. Its direct cause, so far as is known, is the evolntion of gas in the stomach, which rising in the throat bears with it particles of undigested food mingled with vitiated gas tric juice. The acid of the latter stings the membrane as it rises. For this invariable and most unpleasant manifestation of dyspepsia, Hostetter's Stomach Bitiers is an infallible rem edy. It should be taken before meals, when it not only promotes the secretion of gastric juice and prepares the stomach for the reception of food, but gives a hearty relish for the latter. It must not be supposed that its occasional use will remove the cause of this symptom. Chronic dyspepsia if an obstinate malady, anil requires tiinj to remove. Whether taken to obviate this, or for fever and ague, rheumatism' or constipa tion, use the Hitters persistently. Lirrr.F. boy blew: An Indiana baby, born during a tremendous wind storm, has been named Cyclonia. Ha; Congress would be a shorter name and quite aa appropriate. Important. When you visit or leave New York City, aave Baggage Expressage and Carriage Hire, and stay at the Grand Union Hotel, opposite Grand Central Depot: 600 elegant rooms fitted np at a cost of one million dollars, reduoed to $1 and upwards per day. European plan. Elevator, Kestanrant supplied with the best. Horse cabs, stage, and elevated railroad to all depots. Fami lies can live better for less money at the Grand Union than at any first-class hotel in the city. WHM is a man out ot date? When he's a weak (week) back. A. Splendid Dairy is one that yields its owner a good profit through the whole season. But he must sup ply the cows with what they need in order i'cr them to be able to keep up their product. When their butter gets light In color, he must make It "gilt-edged" by using Wells, Rich ardson & Co.'s Improved Butter Color. It gives the golden color of June, and adds 5 cents per round to the value of the butter. IT takes only about two seconds to get up a duel. YOTTWG or men suffec^fkom nervous debility, KMS of memory, premature old age, as the xeftdt of bad habits, should send three letter stamps for illustrated book offering sure means of cure. Address w orld's Dispensary Medical Association, Buffalo, N. Y. . Tire more you contract a cold the neater it becomes. HorsTord's Acid Phosphate AS A BRAIN FOOD. Dr. B. F. Newcomer, Greenfield, O., says: "la- eases of general debility, and torpor of Aind and body, it does exceedingly well." Bona one asks: "What is rarer than a day in June?" and we answer, "Boarding-house beef." LTTJIA B. PIMCHAM'S Vegetable Compound Is a most valuable medicine tor ladies of all ages wbo may be afflicted with any form of disease peculiar to their sex. Her remedies are put up not only in Hqutd forms, but also in Pills and Lozenges, in which form they are securely sent through the mails. War does a woman's home dress outlast all others? Because she never wears it out. A Cave of Pneumonia. Mr. D. H. Baruaby, of Owego, N, Y., says that his daughter was taken with a violent cold which terminated with pneumonia, and all the best physicians gave tbe case up and said she could1 live but a few hours at most. She was in this condition whon a friend rec ommended Dr. Wm. Hall's Balsam for the Lungs, and advised her to try it. She ac cepted it as a last resort, and was surprised to find that it produced a marked ohange for the better, and by persevering in its use a cure was effected. A Wonderful Substcume. • The results which arc attending the ad ministration by Drs. Markov & Falcn, llflfl Oirard St., Fhila*. of tKetr TftaMslug remedy for chronic dfsect**. give surprises to patients an 1 physicians •vtrr day. If you have any ailment about which you ate con cerned, write for Information about their treatment, it will be promptly sent. ' If Success be the true test of merit, it is a settled fact that "Brown'g flitmchial ZVoolkes" have no equal for the prompt relief ot Coughs, Colds, and Throat troubles. Sold only in bores, Price 25 cts. The "gleugh of Despondency" In which you arewallowingon account of some of those diseases peculiar to you, madam«,and which have robbed you of the rosy hue of health and made life a burden to you, yon* can easily get out of. Dr Pierce s ••Favor ite Prescription" will free you from all such troubles, and soon recall the rose-tint of health to your cheek and the elasticity to your step. It is n. most perfect specific for all the weaknesses and Irregularities peculiar to your sex. It cures ulceration, displace ments, "internal fiver," ben ring down sensa tions, removes the tendency to canccrons affections and corrects all unnatural dis» charges. By druggists. 8WEBT are the uses of adversity, but most people prefer sugar. » / Mm IK* U »It tlon aansMMMBtSfinal •dtotlM Cbaan< DR. SAGE'S Catarrh Remedy cures when ev* ery other so-called remedy^ 1 ails. WAGONER'S music--Gee! Whoa! Haw! Get up there, darn you! WAKTKD--Salesman for each County, S75 month and expenses. Goods sold by ssmp'.< Eend stamp. LA BELLE MFG. OO., Chicago, 111. PERSHMS to J-'oldiers and Heirs. Send stamp for Circulars L. BINGHAM. Attorney, Washington, D. C. or Short-Han^ and Type Situations famished. IROS.. .IwMTille. Wis. "JOHNSON'S CYCLOPEDIA, selling at cut rates. Send for particulars. A. J. JOHNSON a OO™ 11 Great Jones street. New Tort. CI 4YIHC" Th® new remedy for all disease* of iLMMC the akin. Instant relief for all itching or horning. Art jourdrngglat for it. or send for circular to proprietor, A. M. LEDGER. Germ an town, Phila., Pa. PATENT? ind-lMk FIB. K. S. ft A. P. LACK*, Satsat Atfya, Washington. D. C. Young Men, Read This. THE VOLTAIC BET.T CO., of Marshall, Mlclu, offer to send their oelebrated ELECTRO-VOL* TAIC BF.LT and other EI.KCTIUC APPLIANCES on trial for thirty days, to men (youns? or old) a filleted with nervous debility, loss of vitality and manhood, and all kindred trou bles. Also for rheumatism, neuralgia, pa ralysis, and many other diseases. Complete le iteration to health, vigor, and manhood guaranteed. No risk is incurred, as thirty days' trial is allowed. Write them atonoe for illustrated namnhlet. free. BLESSINGS come In many forms, and some times in disguise, but Athlophorus. the new and successful specific for neuralgia and rheu- irntisin, comes to perform exactly what is promised for it--to limber stiffened joints and reinvigorate the muscles swollen by disease, and it never fails. Price, |1 per bottle. If your druggist hasn't it, send to Athlophorus Co., 112 Wall street, N. Y. FOB DYSPEPSIA, INDIGESTION, depression of spirits, and general debility in their various forms; also, as a pre v« litive against fever and ague, and other intermittent fevers, the " Ferro-Phosphorated Elixir of Calitaya," made by Caswell, Hazard & Co., of New York, and sold by all druggists, is the best tonic: and for patients recovering from fever or other sickness it has no equal. No POISONOUS drugs enter into the composi tion of Carbolme, a deodorized extract of pe troleum, the natural hair restore raud dressing, as now improved and perfected. It is the per fection of the chemist's art, and will, beyond a peradventure, restore the on h--ils QQNSUMPJION. ThafttpMtttVVKBMTIOrUMtbOTldllMMlbTiM tM ot etMi of tbt wont kind and of long MudlnfhiTS botn cured. *o«troncl* ray faith knlU«fflC*CJ,thftt I will Mild TWO BOTTLES FREE, together vltn ft VATX'ABl.BTREATISEon thlsdUoaso tO*Any sufferer. G ivo express and P OtRddr PB. T. A. SLOCUM, 181 PcarlSt.t Now Tor*. C A. REED & SONS PIANOS. New Piano Catalogue! Now Organ Catalogue! *9-Mailed Free. KEK1>'S X'KMIi.E OF MUSIC, 130 State Street. CHICAGO. & R The Oldest Medicine in the World is probably Dr. Isaac Thompson's elebrated Eye Wate This article is a carefully prepared physician's pre scription. and has bi>en in constant use for nearly a century, and notwithstanding the manv other prepar ations that have been introduced into the market, the snip of this article is constantly increasing. If the di rections are followed it will never fail. Wo particu larly invite the attention of phvaicians to its merits. * " ~ ~ _ , N. Y. John L. Thompson, Sons & Co.. Troy, Sawing Made Easy. ifflfiiMnr mmnraioBAwnro MACHOS 8ELW OIsT TEST TRIAL nworii«u«Mri». AbOTOf MeansawlOKsaM*an4 Zmtsente saving or hkw and --«r. Write UhMtratea catalogue inS brilliant oolora, tlnated po«ter In ft oolori. JU* tor'lii ^OOa,(A)»6 State Bt, Chisago. BL always < • Send stamp tolyna,' MASON&H AMI too 8TVI.ES HISHEST HONORS AT AU. MUTJMetftll CX> HIBITI0NS FOR StVfNftCi YKM& Only Aaaericmn Organa Awarded soefc at aatyw Far Cash, Easy l*s|wssli er KmM. Upright FiaagLitiL Improvements no* of infc most pure, raOne durability; especially avoiding Ual lone. JUostnaedCataloffBet fie*. * MASON A HAMLIN OMAN AM PIMM 9k, '*33 - - Seal " S, 5.8, l# and » cents eaoh. 10, IS, 30 and 36 centa each. CHICAGO NEWS CO.. C. B. Beckta, Kaftfcr. (For Bight Y«ar* Managrr 137 Madiaon-at., - to an OHIOAlCO. R. U. Lorillard's OHimg Plig Xavy Clippings, and that IiOrtllard's Baifc tbe best and cheapest, quality considered I Geo.E.Brown&Go. AUBOltA, IIX. CLETELA5D BAT * ENULI$H IftRAIT HOI Sxadr Also OLSTEDf CATTLE* LISB B 9B&ESL AngtesMaaa) I PONIES. sbles us to procure from the district* in England and Holland. and terms liberal. 49T8end tor lofflie No. IS. aaniKXTtOS THIS I 11 • S » nam luita HOW TOWTIATC i mutnwiatst Sayene.--F•aaatwitma elastly on" C.N.C WHEN WHITING TO AO VI J* .please any you saw tlie ads IxtlUaiMMMCi Iff !••%("' UTH'SEiOMPAHIQN Ssi • ;*<i - For Young People and the Family.--68th Year, HPHE COMPANION has now attained a weekly circulation larger than that of any other literary paper in the world. Its steadily increasing success imposes an additional re* islbfllty upon its conductors to deserve the appreciation and encouragement of American parents. It will its abilities, and all its resources, to make the young people ot America manly men and womanly WOOQ& i 1 1 T < Illustrated Serial Stories i i i, it \rti i ,sciiU c 8TORY for Boys, by MY BROTHER PRANK. A Serial Story, by SERIAIi STORY for Boys and Girls, by • COUNTRY COUSIN. A Story for 6irl0, " ADAM JUNIOR. A Serial Story, % SUSPECTED. A Serial Story, by SERIAL STORY for Bad Boys, by J. T. TROWBRIDGJL Mrs. OLIPHANT. ' ALPHONSE DAUDET. EDGAR FAWCETT. GEO. MANVILIIE PENN. v FRANK R. STOCKTON. O. A. STEPHENS* }: 2* « I Travel and Biography EETTEM FROM SPAIN, by LOUISE CHANDLER K0XTLT0N. BUSH LIFE in Australia, by ABCHIBALD F0BBES. L2TTXB8 FROM PEB8IA, by S. G. W. BENJAMIN. FAMOUS AMBASSADORS and Their Triumphs, by JAKES FART0N. IN THE HEART of the Sahara. Incldeota and adventures, during a tour la the gnat Africaa desert, by COMPANION AUTHOR* at Hone. Chatty de. script ions of the homes of James Payo, Thomas Hardy, Mrs. Oliphant, and other English ooatrib. tttws to ihs CoaraMoa. S> ]L WHBB. WM. H. RiDinre. Tares of Adventure 1 ̂ THE LIGHTHOUSE Keeper'# 8torias, by JUSTIN CARBICC- HUNTERS' TALES of the Red River Country, by F. W. CALKINS. - * C, A YOUNG IMMIGRANTS Journey to Colorado, by D. L. mmnim IN THE F0RE8TS OF VENEZUELA, by . W. T. B0BHADAY. UP THE TRAIL. Cattle-Drlvlngon "the breaks" of the Llano Estacado, Kansas, by •tiJItit M. HZflW.- MY ENCOUNTER with the Blaek Flags. Aa li* - •" eldent of the French conquest of Tonkin, V IBDBI MXUUSB.. AMONG THE SAVAGES of Patagonia, daring aa ' expedition to tbe great native apple orchards at the Southern Andes, by llSp • ^TORI t ' / $3,000. Prize Stories If early aevea thousand manuscripts were sent in competition for the CoKramoir prizes o(* '93,000 offered for the best Short Stories, many of them by eminent writers in both Europe and Awtortpfr For mght of these* Prizes bave been awarded. They an dellf htflil stories. These stories, wlt|| others selected from the seven thousand sent, will be a feature of the coming rolome of the CowamoKi' if f, I^MlSTRy" ^JtRRYHui instructive and Entertaining AN KILE'S Escape from Siberia, COL. TH0S. W. KNOX. STORIES OF MILL GIRLS, by AN "OLD OPERATIVE." THOSE TERRIBLE PARISIANS, or the Sanger. ons Classes of Paris, by JUNIUS H. BROWNE. CLEVER THINGS DONE by Journalists; or the strategies of News Gatherers, by JULIUS CHAMBERS* ODDITIES OF JAPANBB LITE, from a Japanese S.ARAKAWA. tp| Humorous and Other SkeMies ELLIOTT RIBSL * ?4MUNCLE XSMW AMONG THE "CRACKERS," by THE GENUINE PLANTATION NEGRO. HUBM* out Sketches, with original negro Bongs, by THREE SHARP FELLOWS. The career of thvss boys who thought themselves "smsrt," and who ' made three "sharp" ventures, and are now living , with other "sharp fellows" in three large stasis buildings, by I^AJftocniJ ik .ia v t. Science and Education names They are sncU nice! P0EM3~ (ENMl !jTltOWBR|| JL LETTER^ Tgjicriii A remarkable series of articles by Eminent Writers will be given on tho following subjects* 7AHES ANTHONY FROUDE, <» PROP. TYNDALL, on L PROF. MAX MULLER, on *1 W-'AM CANON 7ARRAR, on ̂ PROP. T. STERRY HUNT, OH \ RICHARD A. PI E. P. WHIPPLE, on E. A. FREEMAN, on JAMES PAYN", on The Study of History** * popular Science for Young People ̂ Tho Cultivation of the Memoryv The Study of English literature* The Chemistry of Sea and Lands ' Star Clouds, and Other Articles J* Precocious Boys in HistoryJ | Children a Thousand Years Ago* Bchool Life in the English Lake Country. •» *4- v £ Natural History THE RIVER WOLF, and Other Papers, by ( FELIX L. OSWALD. TAME OOCKROACHE8, and Other Papers, by REV. J. G. WOOD. THE WILD HORSE and His Wanderings. ARABELLA B. BUCKLEY. FISHING ON DRY LAND, and Other Cariosities of Natural History, by PR0T. C. F. HOLDER. A BEE'S BRAIN; The Songs of Insects; Insects Useful to the Farm; and Other Papers, PROF. A S. PACKARD, Jr. Etiquette and HeiiAVi 4lv! THE MISUSE OF MEDICINE, by DELU8I0N8 CONCERNING HEALTH ETIQUETTE AND HEALTH. A ssHsaaf Xbpu%' by the editor of "Doa't." PICKED UP BY AN AMBULANCE. A graph* . account of the treatment of Street Accidents in thg. fiB.: New York Hospitals, ALEX. WAINWRIGHX. SPECIAL OFFER It yon wUI cut ont this slip and send It to as with your name and pott-oBee addreas sad Sl.lft (In Money Order or Postal Note or JUfMsrcd Letter) we trill Iw to - ONLY ONCE Address iYWl CO., Publishers, 43 Temple Place, Boston, Maes. [MEN - '7" •MaSSi;