three t novo an. ' Fidelia In Chicago Tribune.) "I think." ntid a man whose snowy hair, Depp-wrinkled brow, and faded ey Hetraved a cloae approach to death. "That the blh of heaven In peace must lie That we long to reacn its iboroa because We'll never again know care or toil, But rest in Hut aruia thro' end law days. Away from all sounds of earth's turmoil " "I think," laid a youth with flashing orbs, And a form erect in strong, young pride, "That we yearn to be with God because Tn Hi home we shall all be satisfied. No more will we know the longing for hope, For a fame, for a love, we ne'er can reach, Like the wave that are striving far out at lea But can never caress the shining beach." "I think," mild a winsome, blue-eyed girl, "We wikh to flv bevond the skit That there we may drain to its deepest dcpthi The cup of loving In paradise. He will pim us clone to Hi tender heart, The souls that are joined with Him above; And I know that heaven is heaveu because" 'tis tilled with the sweets of a boundless love. " A CRITICISM OF THE THEODORE THOMAS CONCERT. Chicago Herald. "Undorntand this classical stuff?" in quired a Michigan avenue gentleman of a young woman. "Not a bit of it. It'i the fashion, and people take it as they do mock turtle soup. This musical enthusiasm has to be cultivated. Now, I can stand it seven nights in tho week if I am left baok here with somebody to talk to, but chain me down in one of thoc Lttirs near the front for throe coi, ' utive symphony nights and I'd be worth a "whole ward at the county insane asylum. I believe that eight-tenths of this musical taste is nflcctcd. It s nice place to come to; the ladies like it bless their dear hearts, thev can edU' cate themselves to liking all kinds of bete-noires, as they clearly demonstrate when they love us. loung fellows come here to talk with their sweethearts and old follows come here to see the jrirls, too, but if Thomas thinks that his pel lets of allegros, andantes, finales, scherzos, obligatos and the rest of the blank verse series go down like straw berry short-cake or soft-shell crabs, he is doing his judgment a very great in jury. Now, a programme of ballads, songs without words, selections from light operas, or ball-room melodies, or even popular church ' hymns, played by Thomas and his fifty men, would, I'll wager, pack this house every night in the week. I'm nothing of an enthusiast in Christian doctrine, but, bless my heart, if there is any melody that trans ports me from the sordid, world-worn cares of every-day life, and shows me to my sometimes better, self it is the melody of 'Rock of Ages.' 'Home, Sweet Home will do it or ' ay Down Upon the Swanee lUver,' or I don't mind being stirred up with the martial notes of 'The lied, White and Klue,' and I think the majority of my friends and acquaintances will back me up. SWEDES AT HOME. F. D. Millet in Harper's Magazine. Shut your ears to the sound of men's voices, and yon cannot believe you are in Sweden, J. lint gay little log house in the distance with its singled roof, the cattle sheds and barns, the well sweep and curb, the stone walls and post-and-rail fences, might be transported bodily and sot down in the bark woods of ninny a state, and never bo noticed for the difference of a single stick of timber or the fastening of a single stake. Let the door open, and the geography changes by magic. A little child totters out into sunlight. It is dressed in a single long garment of yellow home spun wool as bright as the petals of the buttercups or the dandelions, from under a close-fitting cap of vermilion hue straggles out a mass of flaxen hair. A stout leather apron tied under the arms and over the shoulders protects the dress from the chin to the toes of the clumsy little shoes. A half-dozen other children dressed exactly the same troop out after it, and following them, t'10 mother, with a curious pokesnu-bninit of bright red rivalling in brilliancy tic crimson of her homespun apron, carries a pail on each arm to milk the cows lowing at the pasture bars. The father comes to the door of the barn to say a word as they pass. But for his leather apron shining - with wear you would take him for a New England farmer of Continental times, with his low shoes, knee-breeches, long waistcoat and felt hat. The ever equalizing influences of modern science have not yet reached them, and they live and feel much the same ai their great-grandfathers did before them. FROM THE MARBLE COW. New Orleans Cor. Globe-Democrat "We returned to the Trianon just as the sun, looking like an immense ball of fire, was sinking into the sea. Madame Bonnacazes hoped I had en joyed myself. "There was one thing," she said, "that I had not seen, and travel where I might, I would never have an opportunity to see it again." "What is it, madam?" "A milk saloon." Well, it was worth seeing. Every table, every counter, every piece of statuary was of white marble. The floors, walls, ceilings, curtains, every thing was white. The Creole girls who waited on the customers had the whitest complexions I ever saw. They were dressed in spotless white, and on their left shoulder was a bunch of white jacqueminot roses. Standing upon the counter was a life'-sized statue of a Jer sey cow; by the side of the cow stood a middle-aged darkey with white hair, and a woman with a sweet face. I did not understand the mechanism of the business, but this woman drew the milk into the white cups from the marble cow. She acted just as if she was milking. Ara told me that the white lady owned a dairy outside of the city, and that she had originated the idea of the marble cow. Afterwards Mons. Bon nacazes told ine that the woman had milked a million from the marble cow. Swift: Old threadbare phrases will often male you go out of your way tofind and apply them, and are nau.seons to rational hearers. John Burroughs calls Herbert Spencer "the intellectual clearing house" of the nineteenth century. two Guineas and four men A Nreae faaaaal latere. ' the Ore) haunt r the Oceaa. New York World. 1 Four gentlemen were seated at a table in the smoking-room of the .earner AiiutKtt, oi me uuion line, on her recent remarkabln trin ri. sea was running heavy, and the sinok- UK-room steward found it a delicate matter to ulu.-n a p1hhi r.,i i.it.. i, r - O . H UVIUD UU lore each of the four gentlemen and to uiiuui a me complementary ginger ale otherwise than on his head. The con versation turned on the extraordinary speed the steamer was making, and led to a bet. In "covering" the wager of a sovereign upon a trivial matter one of the four gentlemen took from his purse b"'"w me reign oi MUiiam and iuary. "There QTfl only turn fif ilwiiit iy AV . . ' - " w All A- wtence, he said proudlv, Vaud this piece is worth a hundred timos its face value. Had I the other the collection of two would be simply invaluable to numismatists." He luid it on the table as he spoke, and in a moment after the coin had dis appeared. Nobody saw it fall or glide ir 11.. in. t . - r - vu uio tame, isooouy saw anybody else take it. Its nwnor unr,.l,o,i i,;A -- - "'RM and low; his three companions and the vnM.v itviffiru mm. uuier persons Were in the COninartmnnr. anil vnt tlm coin could not be found. These four meu had been strangers to each other when tlm vnvnra lumon 1 hey had been five days out and were rapuuy neanng port. The owner of the valuable coin was inconsnlnhln. him. picious, and profane by turns. - j. a ten you what is the best thing to no. sain one ot inn inrtr - ha nn n is not on the floor; it cannot have rolled through the ceiling. Somebody here must have it. Lot all nf na ha searched. All agreed but mm o-nntlflmnn uhn i..,,...' . .. P V. " . nuu iiitnerto saui nntimur Ha iwiui. tively refused to suffer such nn imlio- nitV. Whon it Wnl Rll TP-Out. ..I tn liiin that where all others agreed no single persons ought to ooject he simply de clined, made his bow, took his drink aione and lelt for his state-room. Ihe good ship Alaska ploughed on to lier sixth dav. anil irut attar li plefing it Fire island was sighted. The gentleman who liml rfiwuil tn lu searched had been put in Coventry; the tnree oiners w in sat nt tlm tnhin with him uiunininiiHlv annnoctAd him But just as the pilot came aboard the AiasKa me gentleman who had lost the miitiea found it HtlYkinir in tlm nnln nf liis boot, where it had been wedged ever since ne naa nrst displayed it. He was OVerioved at his discover? and nnxinna to mane amends lor his suspicions. "But," said he to the gentleman who Vlttfl llfllHAil tn ha anal-.hn,1 n - - v. . ..v U - V. . . V 1 1 V.J TT . VU earth did you not agree as we all did to bucii a simple test r mat would have seiiicd me matter instantly. "Ao, it wouldn t, answered the other, "Why not?" "Because fnrrwliioi'np- liia nnran tlinra , ,4 0 j- '' ' - " is the only other coin of the kind in the ii it worm same uaie, same color, worn tne samel That is the reason I refused to bo searched, for nothing on earth would have made you believe this was not your own coin had you not been so uckv as to recover it" As the Alaska steamed intn .unrt. a BOcial class removed all traces of nn- pleasantness. running- the Alligators. A reporter for The New Orleans Picayune has been investigating the alligator, its uses, commercial value, eto, The following are some of his observa tions : The edicts of fashion have sent hun ters into the tropical forests of Borneo and Java to bring back the plumage of birds ot paradise to decorate female head gear. To-day these same imperial edicts send the hunter to the swamps and jungles of Louisiana to procure the hide oi the alligator for slippers to . 1 . XI. - il. - .1 . . A 7 cKnua iiio uiuiiiy ieei 01 iair women tml to make sacuels and bin's in which to carry their haudUei-eliMs and pocket money. Tho most fashiennblo material for small valises, sivLels. hand bags, portmounaies, and the like, is the skin of the American nliigutor, and in all the gulf states, from Florida to Texas, these saurians are hunted to supply the demand. This fashion has not been in vogue for a very long time, but for the last throe years the slaughter of the al ligator has been carried on with great activity. Besides the hides, there are other products of tho alligator utilized for commercial purposes. The teeth, which are round, white and conical, and as long as twt joints of an average fin ger, are mounted with gold and silver and used for jewelry trinkets and for teething babies to play with. All teeth of the alligator are of this class of coni cal tusks, with no cutting or grinding apparatus, and hence the animal is forced to feed chiefly on carrion, which is ready prepared for his diges tion. The oil extracted from this creature as a high reputation among the swampers for rheumatism, being given both inwardly and externally, and is produced to supply a limited demand. How Jlosby Escaped. "CarletonVBull Run Letter. My note book is full of incidents nar rated by the veterans of both sides and by the citizens. "1 had command of a company. said Maj. Fishenar, "and was out on the picket line. I heard horses hoofs. It was about 3 o'clock, the night before Chantillv. I was close by a. pair of bars leading into a road, and the hoofs were coming down the road in the woods. "Beady! Aim!" and twenty musket- nien aimed at the bars. Three horse men rode up. "Halt!" "I surrender,'' shouted the middle orsoman, throwing up his hands. The other two wheeled and lied. I could not give the order to fire, for I should have killed my prisoner. One of them escaping was Alosl iy, as he afterwards informed me. Iu the United States there are 120 newspawrs edited by colored men. The Haaafortare of Rradj-Hade lloaaea. Scientific American. A correspondent paid a Tisit not long ago to a city in Maine, where a large es tablishment is located for the produc tion of those ready-made houses, and he says that few have any idea to what ex tent this business has been carried, or to what perfection it has been brought. In the establishment to which we refer, dwelling houses are made, like boots and shoes, iu any quautity, and of any size or style, and for any market in the wido world. Not long since this con cern received a single order for fifty houses for Cape May, to bo deliverod speedily and iu complete finish. These houses were to be, not sheds nor shantiej, but regularly ordered dwellings; and .they wore made accord ingly and so delivered, and contain hundreds of occupants at this moment. An order will be received for a f 50,000 hotel, or an ornate, Freuch roof cottage for a fine country estate, and thete ave as easily and expeditously f urnished as an ordinary boarding-house for a country village, or a barn for a ranch in Kansas or Colorado. Do not suppose that only a coarse, rough frame is thus sent out to be trimmed into shape on the spot w here it is delivered ! On the contrary, the house is complete when it leaves the factory, and as ready to go together as is a musket when it leaves the armory at Springfield, all the parts being found, even to the knobs for the doors and the screens and shades for tho doors and windows, according to specification. Gr3at trains of freight cars stand waiting about, and are freighted almost daily here. The re fuse trimmings and edge cuttings of the lumber are carted off to a neighboring pulp mill, and there speedily turned into material for paper or other pro ducts. Machinery for almost every con ceivable use in connection with wood is at hand, and house materials, of any kind or size or shape, seem to drop out like meal from a hopper. In a recent instaneo where a large building was furnished for a southern order, the parts were thus made, and when put together in the city where the building is now standing the length of the latter w as found to vary not the eighth of an inch from the original specifications, although its length on the front num bered hundreds of feet. Every inch of this building, from the sill to the last shingle, was sent ready prepared from this factory, and "set up" as ready and almost as quickly as a nail cask. When l.uzar Was Inventel. Clinton Montague In The Household. The exact date of the inven tion of sugar is lost in the mist of fable. How ever, sugar is said to have been known to the Chinese 3,000 years ago, and there is not much doubt but that the manufacture of the article was carried on under the Tsin dynasty '10d years before Christ. A strong claim for priority has been made for India. Prob ably the Hindoos learned the art from the Chinese, and from India the knowl edge was carried further west. Three hundred and tweuty-five years B. C, Alexander sent Nearchus with a large fleet down the Indus to explore the adjacent ' countries. hen that oflicer returned from his expedition, he brought to (ireecean account of honey, (sugar) which the Asiatics made from cane, without any assistance from bees. This was the earliest idea the western nations had of sugar, the Jews, F.gypt ians, Babylonians and Oreeks knowing nothing of its use. As late as A. D. 150, sugar was prescribed by Galen, the famous physician, as a medicine. Before the discovery of America. sugar was a costly luxury, usod only on rare occasions. During the wars of the Boses, about 1455, Margaret Paston, wife of a wealthy country gentleman of INorfolk, wrote to her husband, begging that he would "vouchsafe" to send her a pound of sugar. 4s 'a' aB t'ie .veftr 1700, all England consumed only 20,- 000,000 pounds in the course of tho year, but since tho consumption has greatly increased, 20,000,000 hundred weight now being used by the English people. Ihe procoss of refining sugar was not known in England previous to 1659. That was probably an invention of the Arabs. A enetian merchant learned the secret from the Saracens of Sicily, and sold the art for 100,0M) crowns. Varieties of Wood Palp. Chicago Tribune. In the first stages of the manufacture of wood pulp for paper, poplar was ro gatded as preeminently adapted for the purpose, and for a considerable time it was thought that only that wood, bass wood, and a few other kinds could be ground into a suitable pulp. Now, however, machines are made which turn out pulp with equal facility from all kinds of wood. The longest fibre is made from willow, basswood and poplar ranking next, respectively. Cedar, fir, und hemlock are said to work about alike; maple has a fibre shorter than that of either spruce or pine, and is quite hard to grind ; birch is very hard and grinds quite short. Poplar and buckeye pulps remain white for a con siderable time, other woods changing color; birch becomes pink, maple turns purple, and basswood takes on a reddish hue. For International Copyright Mark Twain writes that he is 47 years old and does not expect to live long enough to see international copy right established, but his great grand father struggled for the right, and it is his unworthy great grandson's hope and prayer that as long as his stock shall ast the transmitted voice of that grand old man will still go ringing down the centuries, stirring the international heart in the interest of the eternal cause for which he struggled an I died. The Ktnpld Fellow. Exchange. " Gazd upon that pure, beautiful evening star, and swear to be true while its light shall shine; s weir my love; swear by Venus," exclaiuicj a .Boston youth in impassioned accents. "How Htujiid you are," answered the Boston girl, "that is not Venus. Tho ri'ht as cension of Venus this month is 15h., 9m., lier declination is 17 dtg 'ZZux. south, and her diameter Ls 10.2. imiB PR7BEB The Strongest and Best! THOMAS PRICE Anlrt(cChemliit.pronomiin thelilANT HAK1NU 1'OWHKH iiwlr oue-tlilnl tmutitr Uiu tiij M on th 1'kIIIo (Wl Kt t'RAXi-iM-ii, S,.tcniWr M. 1881 H. R B0TI11N. I'Ml.lenl lMhln M f'iCo : Diak Sir: Aflr carrfiil snil ouniiiUw eliomlcwl iitjl of m ran nt ;int linking Wiwitrr, r-nrchutnl lif m In opan nivkrt. we find tnt It dim n.'l cm. Uln tluin, clil iliiiihte, terra .ill or nr li'lurt. out iilatanrea, 1ml U pure, hmltlitul Cream Tu tu Hkli. Piwiltir, and uob can r-cl'.'.od It to ooiuumera. H T wF.NZKijL ro , We oiinctir' Auaijttio CliemUt. KHKVKRT.Y rni.n.M. l.. J U MKAKS.M l. H-lthOm( Al.KRKDW I'KRhV. M D.,1 Mi W A IMH'OI.ASS, M. 1)., J-Kr Al'U. ALEKS, M. V.. )ot J I. MKARS, M U. Hi-allh Offloer. Ipnihen of Han 'rattrlMo buanl Ileal 10. Mnaararlured bj Ibe BOTHIN M'F'O COMPANY, 17 anil 10 Main Street. San FraucUco. TUTTS P8LLS TORPID BOWELS. DISORDERED LIVER, and MALARIA. v , From thuse sources arluo thruo-fourtns or Die dlmoaca ot the human race. Theao tymptoimi Indicate tbelrexutenoo : Loss or Appetite, Vowels costive, tUck IUed ache, fuUneaa after eatlna;, aversion to ciertlott of body or mind. Krnotatloa of food, Irritability- of temper, how spirits, A feellnff of hartna; neglected some dntjr, luluea., Fluttering at the Heart, Dots before the ere., highly col ored t rine, CONSTIPATION, and do mand tlio use of a rcmndy that acts dl rootljr on the Liver. AsaLivormoUlclnoTlJTT'S PILL.8havonoo.iunl. Tlielraotlononths Kidneys and Skin 1 also prompt ; removing all impurities through those three ear cng.r of the system," producing appe tlto, sound digestion, regular stoolsji olear slOuandayigorousbodv. TCTT'H PILLS cause no nausea or griping nor Interfere with daily work and aro a porfeot ANTIDOTE TO MALARIA. Bold every where, ario. OlUre.44 Murmrbt.,N.Y. TUTTS HAIR DYE. Grat Hub or Whiskees changed ln atantly toaGlossr Black by a single ap plication of this Dtb. Sold by Druggists, or sent by express on reoelpt or Offlre, 44 Murray Street, New York. 0TT't MANUAL OF USEFUL RECEIPTS FREL (QAM The experience In the tmatmant ot Canoer with Swift's Rpeclno (S .8.8. ) would enem to warrant ui In saying that it will cure thU much dreaded eoourie. Fenuoaeo afflicted are luilted to correepuud with ua, I believe Swift's Rpeclfio baa tared mj Ufa I had vir tually loet uae of the upper part of my body aud my arm from the poisonous etfecti uf a large cancer on my neck, and from which 1 had luffereil for twenty yean. S. H. 8. ha. rt-llewi me of all soreness, and the poison Is being furoed out of mjr system. will knih he well. W. U. KOMaoN, Daiiiboro, Ua Two months ago my attention was called to the case of a woman afflicted with a canoer on her shoulder at least live loobe. in oircumference, angry, painful, and Wing the patient no rest day or night f r lit mmilha obtained a supply of Swift'. Specific for her. Hhe bat taken 6 bottle, and the ulcer i. entirely healed up, only a rery .mall acab remaining, and her health It hotter than for 6 years past; aeeins to be perfectly cured, Kiv. Jehki 1L CAxrBKLL, Columbus, Ga, I liars tern remarlubls results from use of Swift's Rpeclno nn a cancer, A young man here hat been afltioted tin yean with the most angry-looking eating canoer I erer taw, and was nearly dead. The first bot tle made a wonderf id change, and after dre bottles were taken, he It nearly or quite welL It It truly wonderful. M. F. C'HUMLiv, M. 1)., Oglethorpe, (ia. Treatise on Blood and Skin Diseases mailed free, TmHwrrr Pacific Co.. Drawer 3, Atlanta, Ga N. Y. Otttoe, 169 W. J3d St., bet. th and 7th Avenues. The Emperor Louis Napoleon smoked mil)- the finest chrass the world could pro duos. Prof. Horsford says the Emperor's ciirart were mnde specially for him In Ha vana from leaf tobsooo grown In she Oolden Belt of North Carolina, this belnn the nnett leaf grown. Black well's Bull Durham Smoking1 Tobsooo Is made from the tame leaf rued In the Emperor's direr., is sbeo lutely pure and Is uaqucifonabjly the best tobsooo ever offered. Thackeray's sifted daughter, Anna, Is ber Sketch of Alfred Tennyson, in Uarptr'i JfmfAly, tells of her visit to the great poet She found him smeking Btackwell'i Bull Durham Tobsooo, sent him by Hon. James Ruatell Lowell. American Ulnlster to (he Court of St James. In these days of adulteration, II Is t com fort m smokers to anew that the Bull Dun ham brand la absolutely pure, and made from the beat tobacco the world produces. Black well't Bull Durham Smoking To bsooo Is the est! and purest made. All dealers have It. Nona genuine without to trade-mark of the Bull MAGNETISM The Fountain of Life. Nothing known to science equals our Mag netic Shields for the cure of Consumption, Diphtheria, Wright's Disease, Epilepsy, Paralysis, Lumbago. Rheumatism and Female difficulties. Our Magnetic Vest has no equal on earth for the cure of Consumption, Dpspepsla and Paral ysis. Our Kidney Belt cures all diseases of the Kidneys and Pplnc. Our Magnetic Insoles cures lameness and Rheumatism in feet and ankles, and keeps your feet warm. Try a pair. il.OOto any address by mall. Send for price list of our Appliances and book, "ITaln Itoad to Health. Free. Good agents wanted in every town on the Pacific Coaat. pa h, TI'CKKR, General Agent C'IiIi oko Mmrnetic rihlcld Co. PACIFIC OAHT nnAXC'll, No. 106 Post Street, fan Francisco, Cal. Fotaluma Incubator! arxr-iKiKiLATtiui. Gold MfMSUver Medal and 1! First P-emi'inff cr other. HaHesall kiuiisef Err. All bizta. i'ricM from Hi up. 8atiNrt;r.r tiianptMvL A'l.lrtss HKTA1 l il A I.V LIiATOU CO., t'etiluma, Cal. Ik' :id lor tinu.ara, fin-uLirs Kree.Tl IB COMPARATIVE WORTH of BAKING POWDERS. E0TAL (Absolutely Pure). -- '" CbUKTYJ (Alum Powder) ' i iiiniisss Bl'iroUD'S (Phosphate) froth aw - -i mm IXFOBD'8, when fresh nmntipu.i .m i i n.,.i Lijiiii.ii.Miii.inuna BKDiiEAD's mmmttmaumatmmmmmmi CHAM (Alum Powder) i uairn t ii un nuinauia AIIZ0M (Alum Powder) , CLEVtUND'8 PI0NEKH (Sao Francisco) . CZAB PB. PRICE'S 8X0W FLAKE (droll's, 8t. Paul) UWIS' COXGBKSS IIECKEB'8 GILLET'S HASFOBD'S, when not fresh. AXtlKEWHACO. (contains alunA (Milwaukee.) " Kefal." BILE (Powder sold loose) C3 BCBf OBD'8, when not fresh.. .g$ REPORTS OF GOVERNMENT CHEMISTS As to Purity and Wholesomcness of the Royal Baking Powder. " 1 have tested a package of Royal Baking Powder, which I purchased In the open market, and find It composed of pure and wholesome Ingredients. It Ii a creao of tartar powder of a high degree ol merit, an', iloca not contain either alum o phosphates, or other Injurious substances. E. O. Lots, I'd.!)." " It It a scientific fact that the Royal Baking Powder Is absolutely pure." "U.A.MoiT,l'h.D. I have exumined a package of Royal Baking Powder, purchased by myself In tho market. I Hud It entirely free from alum, terra alba, or any other Injurious sub stance. . IUnkt Mohton, Ph.D., Preslduutof Steyeni Institute of Technology." " I have analysed a package of Royal Baking Powder. The materials of which It Is composed are pure aud wholesome. 8. Dana Hayes, State Assaycr, Mass." The Royal Baking Powder received the highest award oyer all competitors at the Vienna World's Exposition, 1H73 ; at the Centennial, Philadelphia, 1870 : at the American Institute, and at Blate Fairs throughout the country. . Mo other article of human food has ever received such high, emphatic, and uni versal endorsement from eminent chemists, physicians, scientists, and Boards of Health all over the world. NoTf. The above Diagram Illustrates the comparative worth of various Bakli Powders, as shown by Chemical Analysis and experiment mado by Prof. Schedler. A one pound can of each powder was taken, the total leavening power or volume in each can calculated, the result being aa Indicated. This practical test for worth by Prof. Schedler only proves what every observant consumer of the Royal Baking Powder knows by practical experience, that, while It costs a few cent per pound more than ordinary kinds, It Is far more economical, and, besides, affords the advan tage of better work. A single trial of the Royal fluking Powder will convince any fair minded person of those facts. While the diagram shows some of the alum powders to be of a higher degree of strength than other powders ranked below them, It is not to be taken aa Indica ting that they have any value. All alum powders, no matter how high their strength, are to be avoided as dangerous A Hki.iaiii.k MuniciNlt-Our readers are aware that the Times very rarely editorially endorses or rec.uinmrmlH what aro known as putent nieilli-lnes, as it does not frequently happen that we can have imwIUvu knowleileo of their merits; but having individually UHcd "Ammen's Cough Myruii," and heard so much in It prulnu, we llilnk the manu facturer is dninu; good iu plui-liiir so vul uuble a medicine on the murket and we are doing irood in aHxiHtliiK to make it known. It alxo allurd tit plcntmre to commend Mr. Ainnien lo the craft ev-erywliere,-ITimeg, Jacksonville, Oro Kn April IS, im. Animen'H('otiKhSyriip wc believe Inst what it is reprcHcnted to bo, aud will do all tluit its owner i-lniiiia fur It, and Is certain to come Into imivernal iinu hh soon as its merits become known. -IAI-bun)' lleruld, Ort'Kon, Octobers. IrlHl. AMMEN'S COUGH SYRUP. Ammen's Cough Hymn Is really a meritorious article, and It la fur super ior to remedies of a stnllar character. Give It one trial and you will be satis fied that we know whereof we speak. IKdltor "Monitor," San Francisco, No vember 16, 1K81. Our little girl had the croup. We used Ammen's t ongh Syrup. It cured her. Have also used It for colds, always with succchh. It is a wonderful medicine, and every family where there are children should keep It in the house, as it is the best, and a safe family reinedr.-ll'ub-llsber Courier, San Joae, Dec. 21, 182. The proprietor of the Times has used Ammen's Cough Syrup in his family and knows It to be an excellent remedy for coughs, colds or lung complaints of any kind.-San Joae Times, Jan. 1. 1882. I bsr. a jxisltlt. rnl tut im atwn dlsuss; by ita ih tbowaod. oi rH 9 ha worn kind and af onm tuadl.j bar. bm carad. lndanl,a.tro.rl.nTlaldi tlu.lflcacy.UiatlwIllMlidTWO SOTTLCa fHSS. lo tMw wllb aTl,riBLS THIATISa n Uil. Uasasa.ta awauSanr, OiT.Kapns.andr. O.addma,- ' t, t. A. iUKMU. IN faarlSU k.wTbrh. HALL'S PULMONARY BALSAM Tl'e het remely In uae for COIT.IIS, Cfll.DS, ASTHMA, HltON IIITIM. ISFM KNZA. (T'.OCI'. IMTI'IKNT CONSlMCTKIN, andall TllltOATand IX' Ml TltOUHLtS. Sold liv all (Irnci-'iHiH for B cmw. J, ll,l..tH:SA ll.. Iroirletora. 417 Hannome Street. M. F. &f.9 A ii Bi , Pi GOiJSUuPTIOn A prominent physician said he thought it was the duty of the proprie tor of Ammen's CoiiKh Syrup to (five the formula to the medical faculty, so that they could prctu-ritie and uae it without violating the rules of the pro fcHKlon, for, "for no many of my palicntt praise It to the sklea, and turns have come under in v nlwerviition where It has been remarkably bcnchVlul, that I know It iniiHt Indeed he a wonderful discov ery In medlcul science," rorteravllleTTal., April 10. 18K2. Mr. Itoliert H. Annum. Sir-1 have been selling your valnulile Cough Syrup for the laiil twelve months. The pant winter wo had the womt epidemic of meales, whooping coiikIi and colds I ever huw, and your Couch Syrup sold ln'tler than any counh medicine I hud in the limine, KijH'et tonlwnya keepagood supply In my store. Itemiectfiilly yours, 1'. F.CllAI'MAN.lM-UKlgst, A M M E N S c G H S Y R U P WaUonvlllo, Cal., Feb. 7, 1882. I recommend Ammen's Cough Syrup In preference to ull others, as I know Its merllH. O. A. MORKIIKAD, Druggist. t'hlco, Cal., Jan. 10, 1882. I receive high recommendations from Burchuera of Ammen's Cough Syrup, ales liiereiwlng. J. M. FHANK KITEL, Druggist. Amnion's Cough Syrup cures colds, coutcliH, bronchitis, whooping cough, and nil dliica en of the throat and luntA Ai'knowli'.lg. I the bent; recomineii led by eler.rynieu and editors; proscribed by physie aiis, aud endorsed by all who have used it. PIANOS. PIANOS 1,000 Kew and Baton d-hand Flano. halt prioa. riannaSiftaiiil up. AnU ' lano raaury. !Ha aoaiUa Hi., a. ff I AZELTOX PIAKOM, BRXHAlt Plaao., Htaodard Organ., Bliaot Muaio, and M uaieal Meroliandlsa of erery draoriiitlun at tua Mattel Music Mlore, ISA Market lil reel, Has Fran. Cisco, Hod fur our oataloru. of 10-ornt muala. UHA. M. KATO, A. M.BEN HAM. . IMANOA-Deokar Brna., H.hr Drat., F.inaraon. and J. and 0. Fishor. Musical Merotiaudias. Oriaua Maaon, Hainlln Chaaa, Kotilw I 'has.,137 Postrlt.,H.I PISrf3 rEE0V FOX'CATAKKH j t'-lH:'ryr-1''1'. 1 1 Easy tons. A certain curs. Not eipens've- Three months' trealment In one package, Uond ftir tiold bi the IrVad, ljeailaclia, Dlulnena, Hay Fever, Aa. Flfly cenla, Jly all Druggist or by mall. E. T. lIAiU.LTl.NK. Warn man. Warren, Pa. N. P. N. U. No. 10.-8. F. N. U. No. 87. so LDrj?&m?izzfc&is I.H.H1LSTEADS Balf-ragulatuis Incubator! From $20 np. Bend for descrlp ',e price list, eto. Thoroughbred Poultry and Kggs. !J 101 1 Broadway, "3 Oakland. CAL RUPTURE Abfulfly earnl In SO to W dtji, by Dr. Hrrrvf Ptlcol Muneiid iClMtLa TruM. Wtmiitrd tlseoniySleotrloTrUsHi tn th world, knlirrlv ditftrantfram othen. Perfect ReUiner. fend U worn ihthoMs.ndc(iiirurtniKltIs.iKl Amy. Cumt tne rrnowwu nr. 4. winnii nw Yiirt, tnd hundmli of Athrra. Nrw Illus4ratedpeua nlilrt tVee. contnlriln full infnnnt ion. NETIC ELASTIC TRUSS COMPANY. . . r-uueiiio tu. cor. A-es-rnj. dua j rsuioieoo, iu tor Unuule eipntwiy fur therureof dervnK'n'ntl of the (rnr.t.vBonran, There 1 no muuke abuaft tint 1 1 nt rum-t.t, the coo tinuoui itrum of 1:1 1 TlilOITY pirmeaiuiir tlir.ii.Kti the parts mint rvsiors tlwm to hroiilif a''Oon. lu not eonlo'itnl i,.is with Kl.-rtro IVIU Mvmi. dto run all IIU Imm li-iul tot". It tafia tiipONKsiKK-ino rnriKa imilainirlvlii lu.l irfri!Mllon. uililrw CImwv KlwU ks Uclt Cvu W Vt atUuwW ut., cU.at.'Oi IU. i- i.tifii pt.;-fr'.v!;,i II H. rVI r. mi Ja J SI ' e Tl-M aJSWSM II ' at JLaV 111 l..r s