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Literary Revolution and
Universal Knowledge.
An Encyclopedia in 20 yols., over 10,000 pages; 10 per cent, more matter
Ilian any Encyclopedia ever before published in this country, and sold, hand
somely and well bound, in cloth for $lO, in half morocco for sls, and printed
on tine heavy paper, wide margins, bound in half Russia, gilt top, for $20 —an
enterprise so extraordinary that its success, beyond all precedent in book pub
lishing, may be fairly claimed to inaugurate a Literary Revolution.
Library of Universal Knowledge is a reprint entire of the last
(1879) Edinburgh edition of “Chambers’ Encyclopaedia,” with about 40 per cent,
of new matter added, upon topics of special interest to American readers, thus
making it equal in character to any similar work, better than any other suited
to the wants of the great majority of those who consult works of reference, and
altogether the latest Encyclopedia in the field.
Specimen Volumes in eiiher style will be sent tor examination with privilege of return
on receipt of proportionate price per volume.
Special Discounts to all early subscribers, and extra discounts to clubs. Full particu
lars with descriptive catalogue of many other standard works equally low in price, sent free.
Leading principles of the American Book Exchange:
I. Publish only books of real value.
11. Work upon the basis of present cost ot making books, about one-half what it was a
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allowed to dealers.
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V. Use good type, paper, etc., do careful printing, and strong, neat binding, but avoid all
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VI. To make one dollar and a friend is better than to make five dollars and an enemy.
Standard Books.
Library ol Universal Knowledge, 20 vols. #lO
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Works of Virgil, translated by Dryden, 40c.
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February 13, 1880.
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Faithful attention given to collections and all
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January 5, 1878.
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SURGEON DENTIST,
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July 10, 1875.
L OLD AND RELIABLE. I
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[Debilitates—lt is B S S
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feplpii
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MTO #6OO A YEAR, or #5 to
#2O a day in yoar own locality.
No risk. Women do as well as
men. Many make more than
the amount stated above. No one can fail to
make money last. Anyone can do the work.
You can make lrom 50 cts. to $2 an hour by
devoting your evenings and spare time to the
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STINSON & CO., Portland, Maine.
jj|An A WEEK in your own town, and no
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Portland, Maine-
A Universal Language.
The question of the expediency of a
universe 1 commercial language has been
a theme commanding the attention of
the first literati of Europe and America,
notably within the last ten years, but
much discussed anterior to that period
The files of the English quarterlies, In
ternational Review, Chambers' Journal,
and the English and American news
papers of the past decade, afford ample
evidence of the importance which is at
tached to this subject. A significant
step, regarded at the time as such, as
tending to inaugurate a movement to
ward the adoption of the English as
the universal language, was that taken
by Mr. Arinori Mori, the Japanese min
ister, a lew years ago, embodied in his
proposal to substitute the English
language, with modifications, to
suit the peculiar national wants
of Japan, for the native tongue ot the
Japanese. And about that time, when
the subject was being agitated here and
abroad, President Grant said in one of
his messages: “I believe that our
Great Maker is preparing the world in
His own good time to become one na
tion, speaking one language.”
In 1872 a writer in Chambers' Journal
said: “We consider the prospects of a
remote future generation as regards their
coal, which we are now using extrava
gantly, so we ought not to be termed
utopian if we propose a method by
which our successors will have but lit
tle trouble in learning languages. A
committee of the scientific men of all
nations should be formed, which should
decide on a language that shall be
termed the universal language. This
language may be one at present in exist
ence, or one based upon an existing
language.”
I hav finally got so that I ain’t at all
sertainov wat I kno miself, and am git
ting less sertain ov wr, others say they
kno. —Josh Billings.
A Hihilist Prison.
A Paris correspondent of the London
Telegraph says; A short account of the
celebrated casemates of the fortress of
St. Peter and St. Paul, in which the
Nihilists are confined immediately after
their arrest, will, I doubt not, be pe
rused with interest by your readers.
The writer, a St. Petei-sburg correspon
dent, obtained access to the casements
by a special order of one of the grand
dukes. The casements are hollowed
out under the Neva, and directly under
the ramparts. Their only window, a
little square hole protected by a thick
barred grating, raises but a few inches
above the level of the river. At stated
distances there are iron doors opening
into halls filled with sentinels, who,
with loaded rifle and fixed bayonet,
keep watch and ward over the unhappy
tenants of the cells which open upon
them. As for the tiny prisons, they are
very narrow quarters, square, with
stone walls and floors, and fearfully
damp, the water constantly drop
ping about in all directions. A chair,
a table and a pallet of white wood
form the only furniture. One of the
pallets was found to be covered with a
bed of straw horribly foul, but even
this, poor luxury as it was, must be
considered an exception. The visitor
was allowed entrance to a few of the
cells. Their tenants were pale; they
rose as he entered, according to order,
but regarded him with a fixed look of
despair. The writer was shown the
famous cell in which was incarcerated
the Princess Tarakanova, daughter of
the Empress Elizabeth, who fell a vic
tim to her rival, the Empress Catherine
11., grandmother of the present czar.
This unhappy woman perished in the
cell under the most dramatic circum
stances. The Neva, swollen by the
melted snow, suddenly rose, and the
rushing torrent, dashing with over
whelming strength against the tiny
window, broke in and tilled the cell with
water. The princess was drowned.
The cells of the great state criminals are
lined with mattresses, and rings of iron
are placed in the walls, to which many
of them are bound when they are not
strait-waiscoated. The guide in
formed the writer, among other things,
that these unhappy men were askell
every quarter of an hour if they were
present. Whenever they failed to re
ply they were barbarously punished.
He also states that in the wall of the
emperor’s room is an invisible door,
communicating with a little passage,
very nai-row, and leading to a subter
ranean gallery, hollowed out under the
Neva. The gallery leads to the fortress,
and, in case of a revolution or of immi
nent peril, the czar could disappear in a
few seconds from the Winter palace, and
in a few minutes after find himself in
perfect safety in the fortress of St. Peter
and St. Paul, the guns of which, in a
short time, could reduce St. Petersburg
to ruins. The palace of the Czar Paul
1., which is now the engineers’ school,
was similarly provided; but when the
assassins entered his room lie had not
time to fire, and was stricken down at
the very moment when he was about to
disappear behind the secret door, v. liich
was already open.
How Herring are Boned.
A correspondent of the Boston Tran
script writing from Eastport, Me., says:
Another new and interesting work is
that of boning herring. A New York
house has an extensive establishment
here, giving employment to some
seventy persons, mostly females. The
present capacity is 14,000 fish per week.
An excellent account of the process and
business I quote from the Journal oj
Commerce :
The fish are placed in numbered bar
rels, holding about 2,500 herrings each,
and at suitable stands, numbered to cor
respond, sit the girls whose deft fingers
are to remove all but the eatable portion
of the fish. Large sharp shears are
used to cut off the heads, bellies and
tails, and with a sliort-bladed knife the
golden yellow skin is stripped off, and
the half of the nicely-smoked muscle
detached. The backbone and its ad
hering ribs areas quickly removed from
the other half, and the prepared meat
goes to other operatives to be bunched
and tied.
The prepared halves are rapidly
bunched in a ring guage, and secured
by knotting with fancy twine, the ob
ject being to pack the fish so closely as
to retain their freshness and flavor.
This object islfully secured by this pro
cess, which, simple as it appears, is the
most important feature of the whole
process, and in its entirety is secured
under letters patent of the United States.
No. 207.980, issued to Mr. George Peters,
the manager of the Eastport establish
ment, September 10, 1878.
The boxes are now lined with tin foil,
and live of the bunches just described
placed in each, and carefully covered
with the upper layer of tin foil after
which the covers are closed.
Perfect cleanliness, method and ac
curacy are apparent throughout the es
tablishment, and, as the work is paid
for by the piece, the operatives are
busy, intelligent and contented in ap
pearance, the work going on with dis
patch, although the amount of noise and
bustle is singularly small.
It is intended soon to ship the fish in
the bunched form in barrels to New
York, thus saving largely in freight,
where they will be packed in boxes.
Razor blades ate forged from cast
steel, the bars being roughly prepared
to one inch in breadth and a sixteenth
of an inch in thickness. The blades are
heated in a coke or charcoal fire, and
dipped into the water obliquely. In
tempering, they are laid on their backs
upon a clear fire, about half a dozen to
gether. and they are removed one at a
time, when the edges, which are as yet
thick, come down to a pale straw color.
“Deer at any price!” yelled the hun
gry traveler, who ordered venison for
dinner. —New York News .
A SUGAR CAMP.
How Maple Sugar la Mode—An Old-Fash
ioned Camp Deacrtlaed—Bom* Statta
tlea, Eu.
Vermont is the State which eclipses
all others in this industry, producing, as
it does, from eight to ten million pounds
annually, while New York comes second
and Ohio third.
As in all great industries, the march
of modern improvement has done a
great deal toward facilitating the mak-
ing of maple sugar, and yet the more
modern the apparatus, just so much it
detracts from the romance of the sugar
camp of our grandfathers. But there
still remains a great many of these
primitive institutions, and to such a one
we will introduce the reader.
Now the proper location for a “sugar
bush ” is on a hillside sloping toward
the south. By a “sugar bush” we
mean a small forest, the majority of
which, as a matter of course, are rock
maple.
The season for making maple sugar is
when winter ends, and ending before
the trees commence to bud, and at the
time when the farmer can do little else
in the way of work. To insure a good
“run of sap,” the weather should so
arrange as to freeze at night and thaw
in the daytime.
When the season comes round, the
farmer and his boys or hired men com
mence to prepare for work, and this
means considerable. Four or five hun
dred buckets—sometimes a thousand
(the number is only limited by the size
of the bush or the wealth of the farmer)
—must be gotten out of the barn,where
they have been stored away since the
last season, and thoroughly scalded out
and “coopered up.” If buckets cannot
be had, home-made “troughs” are
used, and the “ milk-pans.” Then the
iron and wooden “ spiles ” are gotten
out and cleaned up. These are little
aqueducts, driven into the tree, which
leads off the sap into the receptacles
Then all these things must be hauled to
the “ bush,” where considerable work
must be done preparatory to the sugar
campaign, which will soon commence.
The “arches,” where the sap is boiled,
and which have been covered up with
snow all winter, must be shoveled out
and repaired. These arches are built of
stone and are about nine cr twelve feet
in length, open at the top and at one end,
while at the other a low chimney is
built. On the arch proper is set a large
pan, in which the sap is boiled, thus
making it, in operation, a complete fur
ace.
Largeh ogsheads are then set in posi
tion, lrom which runs a long leader to
the pan wherein the sap is boiled. If
hogsheads cannot be had, a large tree is
felled, from which is hewn a large
trough some forty or sixty feet long,
holding, perhaps, two hundred pails of
sap.
When everything is in readiness and
the proper weather arrives, the farmer
commences his operation; fires are built
in the arches and everything is ready.
The farmer with an auger bores a hole
about an inch in depth and half an inch
in circumference in a tree, and then di
rectly under it he drives an iron or
wooden “spile;” then the bucket is
placed where it will catch the sap, and
in a few moments it commences to drop.
In a great many instances nothing but
an axe is used in tapping a tree, which
is done by skillfully chipping the tree
diamond-shaped, and on an angle of
forty-five degrees.
Some people have an idea that the
sap flows from the tree in a stream, but
it is not so; it is a continual drop, drop,
drop, all day long, and all night, ton, if
it does not freeze. And yet, notwith
standing the slow manner in which the
tree yields its life-blood, each tree has to
be visited two and three times a day, as
the buckets, pans or troughs would run
over.
Thus, in the manner described above,
several hundred trees are wounded and
their arterial life demanded until such
time as nature warns and compels man
to cease. The sap is then gathered by
men or boys, who wear what is known
as a “sap-yoke”—a piece of wood nicely
fitted to the shoulders, with arms, from
which are suspended wooden hooks, and
on which are hung the pails of sap in
being carried to the boiling-place.
Sap, as it comes from the tree, is
nothing more than sweet water, which
the more you drink of, the more you
want to drink, but which is very debili
tating in its effects on the system, dry
ing up the blood. Cattle are passion
ately fond of it, and if by any manner of
means they get into a sugar bush dur
ing a “ run,” they continue to drink of
the fluid until its effects are fatal.
Around the arches, or where the sap
is boiled, is where the greatest interest
centers, for it is here where, over a
steady fire, the sap is “boiled down”
to syrup preparatory to sugaring off.
This is where all the romance, ecstacy,
and a “good time generally” is had,
and which is looked forward to with
satisfaction by both old and young.
When two or three hundred pails of
sap have been boiled down to the con
sistency of syrup, then a ladleful of it
is dropped on the snow. If it becomes
“ waxy,” it is all right for eating, and
everybody gives their undivided atten
tion to this pleasant duty until they are
satisfied, and then, after a little more
boiling, the large pan is taken from the
fire and the contents made into sugar,
which is done by turning it into vessels
of a proper shape, it previously having
received a thorough stirring, in order to
“grain” it and make it white, where
cools, and it is then ready for market.
Often these “sugar bushes” are near
a stream, where, at night, congregate
scores cf the countiy lads and lasses,
and, with skates buckled to their feet,
go skimming over the field of glass, un
til such time as the sugaring off is an
nounced, and then all gather for a merry
time around the glowing fire and eat the
warm sugar. This is where the romance
comes in, because nothing is more at
tractive than a rosy- cheeked girl with
flashing eyes struggling with a mouth
iul of sugar wax.
The production of maple sugar and
syrup has taken a prominence In the
great woi Id of commerce little dreamed
of years ago.
Comparative statements show that
the quantity produced in 1850 was
34,000,000 pounds; in 1860, about 40,-
000,000 pounds. The unusally large
quantity produced in iB6O was on ac
count of the high price of the sugar of
commerce and the very favorable season
for its manufacture. The States of Illi
nois, Indiana, New Hampshire, Michi
gan and Wisconsin now produce about
1,000,000 pounds each. The quantity of
syrup made has averaged 1,000,600 gal
lons during the past ten years, Ohio pro
ducing the largest quantity. The quan
tity of maple sugar produced in 1879 is
uncertain, but an authority estimates
the quantity at 17,000 tons. — New York
Market Index.
Words of Wisdom.
Pleasure comes through toil and not
by self-indulgence or indolence.
When one is fagged, hungry and de
pressed, the worst seems most prob
able.
You cannot churn happiness out of a
che3t of gold ;it will never come. You
canncft make unfading crowns of fading
flowers.
When people have resolved to shut
their eyes, or to look only on one side,
it is of little consequence how good
their eyes may be.
Look not at the darkness, but at the
light. Enumerate not your .trials, but
your blessings. Cultivate cheerfulness,
not despondency.
While his mother lives a man has one
friend on earth who will not desert him
when he is needy. Her affection flows
from a pure fountain, and ceases only at
the ocean of eternity.
To dream gloriously you must act
gloriously while you are awake; and to
bring angels down to converse with you
in your sleep, you must labor in the
cause of virtue during the day.
It is easy to tell when others are flat
tered, but not when we ourselves are.
and every man and woman will lend
firm belief to the soft nothings of the
/ery man they believe to be an arrant
latterer, when others are in the case.
A Faithful Hound.
The story of a dog is given by the
Reading (Pa ) Times and Dispatch : The
owners of the faithful hound are a man
and wife, each sixty years of age. He
was born deaf and dumb, and she be
came deaf when about 9lx years old.
He converses in the sign language, and
she is able to hold extended talks with
a few intimate friends by watching
closely the movements of their lips
She also somehow manages to answer
callers’ inquiries. They have a pet dog
that is an essential element in their do
mestic life. As neither of the old peo
ple can hear, the dog becomes by its su
perior instinct the means of eomiuuni
cation. When the door-bell rings it
will go up to its mistress and pull her
dress, then run before liei toward the
door. The dog has learned to know the
time of the arrival of the milkman who
serves them, and can distinguish the
sound of the milkman’s bell. The dog
will sit in the attitude of attention, with
head up and ears thrown forward as
soon as it catches the first notes of the
bell, and will wait until the milk
man has driven in front of the house be
fore it moves. At the ringing of the
bell it will go to its mistress, and by
signs or pulling her dress announce the
milkman’s arrival. She fully under
stands its movements, and preceded by
the dog goes to the milk wagon, ob
tains the day’s supply and returns to
her domestic duties.
During the year 1879 5,000,000 bushels
of corn were converted into glucose in
the various lactories in the United
States.
we often hear people say, there is only one
good congh medicine and that is Dr. Bull’s
Cough Syrup, it is cheap too, only 25 cents
per buttle.
A Household Weed.
A book on the Liver, its diseases and their
treatment sent tree. Including treatises upon
Liver Complaints, Torpid Liver, Jaundice,
Biliousness, Headache, Constipation, Dyspep
sia, Malaria, etc. Address Dr. Saniord, 162
Broadway, New York city, N. Y.
The Voltaic Belt Cos., Marshall, Mich.
Will send their Electro-Voltaic Bolts to the
afflicted upon 30 days trial. See their adver
tisement in this paper neaded, “ On 30 Days
Trial.”
Vegetink— By its use yon will preveni
many of the diseases prevailing in the Spring
and Summer season.
Straighten your old boots and shoes with
Lyon’s Heel Stiffeners, and wear them again.
A CAIU>.-To all who are suffering from the erro i
and fnil's ftions of youth, n rvo 6 weakness, arlvdecav
10-s of nianh od, etc.. I will s nd a Recipe that will care
you, FREE OF CHARGE. This great remedy was dis
covered I'., a mi-sionary inSnuh America. Se-<1 a self
addressed envelop- to the Rev. JOSEPH T. INMAN,
StiUion I), New York City.
Consumption Cured.
•An old pliyslcla-, retire! from p active, bavi" g had
placed In hie hands by an East India missionary the fo
nnila of a simple veg table remedy for the speedy an
permanent cure for Consumption, Bronchitis, Catarrh,
Asthma, and all Thioat and Rung Affections a'soa posi
tive and nidi al cure for Nerv. us Debility and a l ner
vous Complaint , after having te ted its wonderful eurn
tJ'e powers in thousands of case*, has fe t It his duty t >
make it known to his (Ufferlng felkws. Act- ntei by this
motive and a desire to relieve human suflorlng, I wit
send free of chaige to all who desire it, this recipe, in
German. French, or English, with full directions for pre
panng and using. Sent by mail by addressing with
stamp, naming this paper. W\ W SIIKRAR, 1 ill
Powers’ Block. Rochester. N. Y.
How to Get Sick.
Expose yourself day and night, eat too
much without exercise; work too hard
without rest; doctor all the time; take
all the vile nostrums advertised; and
then you will want to know
How to Get Well,
Which is answered in three words—
Take Hop Bitters! See other column.—
Express.
When exhausted by mental labor take
Kidney-Wort to maintain healthy action
of all organs.
DrBULL’S
COUCH
SYRUP
The German government hag recently
rechristened no less than 68u places in
Alsace-Lorraine, giving them German
names in the place of Irench. The
official journal explains that the names
were originally German, the same as
are now assigned, and that under French
rule they were simply translated.
Vegetine
Purifies the Blood, Renovates
and Invigorates the
Whole System.
ALL WRITERS, AND THEIR NAMES
ARE LEGION, SAY THAT TO
HAVE GOOD HEALTH
roo MOST HATE PORE BLOOD.
Reader, Have You Got Scrofula,
Scrofulous Humor, Cancerous
Humor, Cancer, or Any
Disease of the Blood f
You Can Positively be Cured.
Thousands of Testimo
nials Prove It.
Druggists, Chemists, Speak, Indorse
and Recommend it as the Best
and Only Reliable
BLOOD PURIFIER.
Mo'.'trial, Jan. 29,1830.
n. R. St*vebs, Eq.: Dar Sir—l do not ;ike to write
testimonials for advertised medicines bat the gr at bet e
fit that so ninny of my customers have obtained from the
use of VKGKTINE comp Is me to say that with an expe
lience of over twenty-five years, both n Great B itain
and this country, 1 have never k..own such a usefu
emedy placed before the pub ic.
J. D. L. AMBROSE.
Assistant of the Apothecaries Company of London, Mem
ber of the Pharmaceutical Society of Great Brtain.
Licentiate in Pharmacy of the College of Physicians
and Surgeons,
Corner Notre Dame and McGill Streets.
Vegetine is Sold by All Drngglsts.
wnJosToraiPOum or
PURE COD LIVES
Loil ASP LIME. .
To Consumptives.— tinny hare been
aappy to give their testimony in favor of the use of
tVn.Bon's Pure Cod-I.ivf.r On. axd Live. E.\]>erieiic
tins proved it to be a valuable remedy for Consumption,
Asthma, Diphtheria, and all dlsenaes of the Throat and
l.ungs. Manufactured only by A. B. Wii.bor, Chemist,
Boston. Sold by all druggists.
Acme Library
of Biography.
Twelve standard books, at one time, published at SI ,af>
each, now issued in one beautiful, good tvpe, neatly cloth
bound volume, for AO cts., and postage, 8 eta.; containing
"Frederick the Great,'' by Macaulay; “ Robert Burns,’
by Carlyle; “Mahomet," by Gibbon; “Martin Luther,’
by Chevalier Bunsen; “ Mary, Queen of Scots," by I.ama:
tine; “Joan of Arc.” by Michelet; “ Ilannibal,” by Thou
Arnold; “Ca'sar,” by Liddell; "Cromwell,” by I.amai
tine; "William Pitt,” by Macaulay; “Columbus." b
Lamartine; “Vittoria Coionna,” by Trollope. Send fo
“The Uterary Revolution," free, and mention this pape
when you write. A MIC It II AN BOOH fc.\-
CII tWCF, Tribune Bunding, Ulttv York
P AGENTS WANTED FOR THE
IT’TII'RT & Y
HiSTORYoFTiiEWORLf
Kini.rucing full mi l authentic accounts of every ■ ath i
>t ancient an I modem t mes, and intruding a history <
the ris and fall of the Greek and Ooman Umpires, tlj
middle age , the crusades, the fe da system the reform
lion, the discover an 1 sett emcnt of the Xew Wor (LfL
etc.
It contains ft; 2 fine his'orie 1 eng avings and to tit
most comple e History of the World ever pubil hed Sent
for sp cirne pages and extra terms to Agents. Address
Naimsii, Publishing Cos., > bi adelpilia,
.s gtoiJfjEß
I Pino's Cure for C.'onsnmp-
H i lon is also the best cough tned O
H eine. Dose smnll.-bottle §j|
9 large. Sold everywhere. ‘iHc M
I Warranted to first buyers.
JOSEPH C. TODD.
Engineer and Machinist,
PATERSON, N. J., AND 10 BARCLAY ST., N 1
Flax, Hemp, Jute, Rope, aud Baggi g Ma. h n n
Steam-engine- and Boil rs of everv des—iption: llcistiir
machinery lor Mines, Ac. Ow er an 1 exclusive inanufa •
turer of the new Pet 1 t Baxter i o table Engine. Thes
engines are a lmprovemcn over the old s'yle. an
are admirably adapted for all kinds of agricultural an
mechanical purposes. Semi for descriptive circulai
Addresas shove.
FEM ALES^'
J J - J *J"*X*** CATHCLIOON
will positively cure Female Weakness, such as Fall
lug of the Womb, Whites, Chronic Inflammation or
ulceration of the Womb, Incidental Hemorrhage or
Flooding, Painful, Suppressed and Irregular Mens
truatlon, Ac. An old and reliable remedy. Send pos
tal card for a pamphlet, with treatment, cures and
certificates from physicians and patients, to How
arth &Bn Hard, Utica, N. Y. Sold by all PruggLta
>l.so per bottle.
>BR AT TlTe B O Rtf Vt _
EVERYWHERE known and prized
NATRONA V
Js the best in the World. It is absolutely pure. It Is th
best for Medicinal Purposes. It is the best for Baking and
all Family Uses. Sold by all Druggists and Grocer*.
PENN’A SALT MANUFACTURING C0 M Phil*.
OH 30 DAYS' TEIAL
We will send our Electro-Voltaic Belts and othe
f.iectrlc Appliances upon trial for 30 (lays to those afllictet
with Nervmu Debility and diseases o] a personal nature
Also of the l.iver. Kidneys, Rheumatism, Paralysis, a<
A litre cure guaranteed or no pay.
Address Voltaic I*elt_ >., Marshall, Mich.
EXTKRIVAL OIT, for Sprains. Strained Muscles
Swellings, Frost Bites or Chilblains, Scalds, Burris
Rheumatism, Stiflliess, etc. Excellent for Si rains Swell
ings, Strains or Stiffness upon Horses. Never has failed t
cure when tried. Write for testimonial. Frost Bite,
cured In 01 c day. Spruins n tlir e davs. Sample box.JHti
by mail. I.iberal and s.-ouuts to dealers.
J. 11. CAS’I EULIN E, Morristown, N’. J.
V#h Year. Only Si, Postpaid
i ’ A Pure Paper for the Family Circle.’
“Splendid Mural Stories for Children.'
“Excellent Muse in each Number.'
“ Fine Stage Department for Schools.'
Sample Free. 110 Monroe St,Chicago
YOUNG
FOLKS’
RURAL
WANTED!
Bruce <fc Cos., the well-known Portrait Paint
®rs, Uftnt dii to exhibit their celebrate*
work in this locality, ltare Situation offered. AddreM
BKLCK k CO., li t Genes e Street, Auburn, IV. Y
2PML
t /V/ I Ulliii nwrttcU*** *f tm tbu uy other iiwtrßßnt
t its Iti*. A mr* of tana* may bo ptavod oa Ik. A child of 12 vaar* oat
wor * H. LaoirootioM rn. For 0 Ujm will mmd o GOLD PLATED
BAMPLE ftoo ter umty 15*. Alvar or ataaepo. Tklo barely pay* cost of
packing ood B—Uoi. Wo tol Ao ikjo to toff rod moo tbooa. Afoot* wuatad ovorywhovo.
f 1.00 FORli CTSa AddnoSMITI'S VALVE ORGAN CO., Paioafmo, DL
A TOU.NG MAN OB OLD, ~
HV, (• ** * i.i.ni.t M ...
fro-lh .r l.r .. V
bdd h...U , u lisckM. ■ 11l |>H
JIW J w.tH til. b.ir -a, - do.' t la (7-
YOUNG MEN
■ month. Every graduate guaranteed a paying situ
atloa. Art drew R. Valentine, Manager, JanesvilleTwia.
U/AWTrn Afentt for the Wonder of tho Af, the Russian Firs
** MIE 1 kU l*roof Lamp Chimney. Bif profits. J. WORTH kCO
R"i -M?. *t. Louis, Mo *
HAW To Make Tour Own RCBBEh
lIU W STAMPS and IIVKS. Catalog"
free. T. N. HICKCOX, 51 Cortiandt Street, New York.
#7O A WEEK. sl2 a day at home eaally made. Co*
'r **• Outfit free. Address Tack A Cos., Augusta, Mali
20 Superb Rosebud, Chromo Cards, or 20 all Floweed
Motto with name, lOc. Nassau Card Cos., Nassau, N.Y
REID’S Eft SEEDS W
IK'^Wn
| PERMANENTL^gjf^C
Hkidney DISEASES I
y LIVER COMPLAINTS M
si Constipation and Pi| es 1
□ IT HAS nm**lß
■wonderful W HY7i
fl POWER. mUil
U BECAUSE IT ACTS oi fl
■ LIVER,THE BOWELS AND
■nets AT the same time 'if
□ “• ca I u clean*®* the J
■the poisonous humor* that dJy!u of U
■in Kidney and Urinary dlsea... ° p *i
nlousness, Jaundice, Contin!:, Bl| ‘l
I I Piles, or In Rheumatism, ?*C2 on 'n
Mand Female disorders. ,Ura! ial|
1 KIDXET.WOETDadrTT.. . .
■ pound and es. be sent by . U
yOnepsckasewlllnuke.lxqt.of*,,,, . R
Ixt1 xt nxrowry
■ Buj U*t the Drnggbta. p rt ,. „ * I
I L TOLLS, HCHAMSCIT* CO., [l
LJS Borllngrton, yj
WtilafloCimWCiii
DON’T DESPAIR because all other remc’ .
foiled; but try this remedy and you v . -g >., , '•
It will can when all others fail.
DIRECTIONS
FOB USING
Mill l LIS Ml!
ACCOMPANY each bottle.
For Sale by all Medicine Deni,,,,
FRAZERAXLE GREASE,
I THAT .S JUST j f ssouLPtst I
I WHAT I SHALL I FfUZERSMiIf I
FO R S AI, E 11V
Awarded the MED A L HONOR at the Cent cm*
no l ]*mis Expositions.
whicago. FRAZER LUBRICATOR CG„ New Id
I'AKLETONS HOlSKllOi.li
ENCYCLOPAEDIA.
Tbe aaost valuable sisgie Book evei print*! ;
tfeaesry of Knowledge. There his sever befoev w,
(bllahed in one volume, so much lucfn! tofonwi..,
tm every aubject. B- autifuliy illustrated, pric* 15
A Thai* Library in One Toil me.
and Sold only by subscription. tbeN*v
IU A6k.INT | '•'•ok le sel, ever ktgiwk. Ttriadi
J ad ires*
Q. W. CARI.KfON k CO., Puhih-brn.XT tty
SAPONIFIER
.s the “Original " Concentrated Lye and Pelia:i! Fix
Soap Maker. IL act mis reva..pany each Can for’.in "i
II aid. S ft and Tcdii ( <.'•!> v ll •-
weight and stren rth. Ask yoi.r grower for S.P '.M
--FI I It, an ! t.ik: no otherr.
’EMN'A SALT MANUFACTURING CO.. Ph
C. GILBERTS
STARCH
This Claim-House Established 1865.
CVew Law. Thousands of Soldiers and brin fjititej
Pensions date back to discharge or death, fwl*w*
Address, with stamp,
GEOUGE E. LEWOIS,
P. Q. Drawer 325, Washington, P 6
R. W. PAYNE & SONS, CORNING, N. '■
AKSTim-IXIIEU IH4V,
Patent Spurk-Arresting;hn
gines, mounted andonssiai
boilers. Eureka Safety pc*
can’t be exploded. t
with Automatic Cut-uni
From $l5O to $2(000.
Send for Circular.
PETROLEUM ?T A fillT fßill JELLY
Grand Medal If UV|l I | ll] |l Silver
u K p x hia VilAfiLltod £&
Thl* wonderful substance is acknowledged by F t
dans throughout the world to be the best renie .__
covered for the cure of Wounds, Burns, Kheumn
Skin Diseases, Piles, Catarrh, Chilblains, Ac.
that every one may try it, it is put up in 1> an !
bottles for household use. Obtain it from your drnsf
nd you will And it superior to anything yon n T '
Med. -
BEATTY
J§fg|!? T ?S!4B2
Sew
knee swells, walnut case, w arnt'd C years, stool & foff
w PianoSfKtoolf eofer&book, SI ii* to free
rou lnr be sure to write me. Illnstratcd Xewspap* , rit v.
Address DANIEL F. BEATTY, Washington, >" jU
I mljnn&gq;
Estabi.iskud 1846.
Taf outs procured in tho U.B. and all foreisn j
eoantrios, in the quickest t imeand beet man- I
oer. All paten to taken through this rffre j
receive a gratuitous notice in the Fried. ‘
4mn'in, which has a larger circulation than I
all papers of its class published in the l • S. I
combined. Terms Moderate. PEmpldets of I
information, and consultations free. Address I
MUNN At CO., 37 Pabu Bow, New Voss. I
County Bonds!
Missouri, Illinois an! HiiJi-u* t
rownsldpDefaulted H ji spur ha. lat lst
Sami A. Uiylord, M 1 oiu*.
_ _ For Hateltbig. rr i’
/yY\ They weigh from 12 t" 1 ‘ '■.•* c
six months old. I sent i
/hfLLIM ton. Miss.; 12hatched. - T
i Ll'J'JiU L°f Hens. Also Vegetable' ‘ .
\ A Ajcwre tor Coughs, Colds, nd<
in its first stagf-r. Su'd t s y
Ment’n this pipi-r. L. K. 11. —'
r PIIE Ihichese White Grape by the ' -
A Hi.so each, and Urge, profuse rl |.-'.
Strawberry, Ceiywa.ro, S2 per di z. Send i- .
tion. A. J. CAYWOOD A SON, Marlborout- FE
A FEBIIO-TYPE or Carte de
XX copied to a Life-sized Photograph h * N \
HOLLA RS by ROOKAVOOD, 17 Union Squa^
i’7'7’7 A YEAR and expenses U Agent*.
eg? tf 7 4 Address P. O. VICKEI i. AozushhJl—-
u \ 1)\IU Vor Sale. Send[for
r AKiUn STAPLES A CO., HanrgMjgt
PCC A WEEK in your own town. Term* ana
free Address H HaLi.rrr A Cos.. Port.anA_.—
qCt t n a* ?n per day at home. Samples wortl> F- '
SD 10 Jtdreas Stimsom k Cos.. Portai •
fA TTXTG Revolver*. Catalogue
VJT U Great Western Gun Works, Pittsburgh.
F
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