Newspaper Page Text
A MEDICINE, NOT A DRINK.
High Authority!
Hop Bitters is not, in any sense, an
alcoholic beverage or liquor, and could
not be sold, for use, except to persons
desirous of obtaining medicinal bitters.
3KEEN B. IUUM,
U. S. Cotn’r Internal Rev
WAsnofdTo- ..0., Sept. 34,1879.
Dear Sir—W liv don’t you get a certifi
cate from Co). W. H. W., of Balti
more, showing how lie cured lnmsolf
of drunkenness by the help of IIop
Bitters. Ilis is n wonderful case. He
is well known in Rochester, N. Y., by
all the drinking people there. _ lie is
known in this city, Cincinnati, New
Orleans, New York; in fact, all over the
country, as he lias spent thousands of
dollars for rum. I honestly believe his
card would be worth thousands of dol
lars to you in this city and Baltimore
alone, and make thousands of sober men
by inducing the use of your Bitters.
J. A. W.
Milton, Del., Feb. 10, 1880.
Having used Hop Bitters, the noted
remedy for debility, nervousness, in
digestion, etc., I have no hesitation in
Baying that it is indeed an excellent
medicine, and recommend it to any one
as a truly tonic hitters. Respectfully,
Rev. Mns. J. H. Ellgood.
I declined to insert your advertise
ment of IIop Bitters last year, because I
then thought they might not be promo
tive of the cause of Temperance, but find
they are, and a very valuable medicine,
myself and wife having been greatly
benefited by them, ana I tako great
pleasure in making them known.
Rev. John Seaman.
Editor Home Sentinel, Alton, N. Y.
Scirio, N. Y., Dec. 1, 1879.
I am the pastor of the Baptist church
here and an educated physician. I am
not in practice, but am my solo family
physicinn, and advise in many chronic
cases. Over a yoar ago I recommended
your Hop Bitters to my invalid wife,
who has been undor medical treatment
of Albany’s best physicians several
years. Slio lias been greatly boncliicd
and still uses the medicine. I believe
she will become thoroughly cured of her
various complicated diseases by their
use. We both recommend them to our
friends, many of whom have also been
cured of their various ailments by them.
Ret. E. R. Warren.
Cured of Drinking.
A young friend of mine was cured of
nn insatiable thirst for liquor that had
bo prostrated ills system that lie was
unable to do any business. Ho was en
tirely cured by the use of Hop Bitters.
It allayed all that burning thirst; took
away the appetite for liquor; mado his
nerves steady, and ho hns remainod a
sober and steady man for more than two
years, nnd has no desire to return to Iris
cups, and I know of n number of others
that have boon cured of drinking by it.”
—From a Leading Railroad Official, Chi>
cago, III.
Wicked for Clergymen,
“ I believe it to bo all wrong and even
wicked for clergymen or other public
men to bo led into giving testimonials
to quack dootors or vile stuffs called
xnodicincs, but when a really morltori-
ous article is mado up of common valu
able remedies known to all, nnd that all
physicians use and trust in daily, we
should freely commend it. I therefore
cheerfully and hoartily commend Hop
Bitters for tho good they have done mo
and my friends, firmly believing they
have noequal for fumilv uso. I will
not be without them. Rov. -,
Washington, D. (J."
1 good
N. Y., a strong temperance man, suf
fered with kidney trouble, neuralgia
nnd dizziness almost to blindness, over
two years after be was advised that
Hop B1 tters wot d cure him, because
he was afraid of a: prcjudici d against
the word "bitit.. .” Since his cure lie
says none need fear but trust in IIop
Bitters.
My wife and daughter were mado
healthy by tho use of Hop Bitters, and
I recommend them to my people.—
Methodist Clergyman, Mexico, N. Y.
I had severe attacks of gravel and kid
ney troubl 3; was unable to get any
medicine or doctor to cure mo until I
used Hep Bitters, and they cured me in
n short timo —A Distinguished Lawyer
and Temperance Orator of Wayne county,
FRAZER AXLE GREASE
FOR NSI.I! IIY AV,1, IMVI.IItS
Awarded the MEDAL OF HONOR nl the aniemtal and
J‘aris Ecimitton*.
Chicago. FRAZER LUBRICATOR CO. NewYork.
V°u Have rcail till* notice about twenty
time* before. Hut did you ever *ct upon the bukkus-
tton so often mads, nnraoly: To ask any boot and slioa
dealer for boots with (Jooilrlch’e l'atent Deve
nter Meet Hi vet Drotcctcft Sole I Guaranteed
to outwear any Sole ever made, ir you have not, do so
the very next time you want boots or shoes with soles
that will wear like Iron aud suve repairB, and don’t you
buy any other.
My references are any Sewing Machine Company
their agents In this country.
]» Church St.,Wo re este , r,Ma^. W aSf > l > « K So C ^Ave
flhli-nim Til **
REMEDY FOR CURING
Coils, Colls, Bmciitis, Asttaa,
CONSUMPTION,
And sH.Throat and Lung A Sections. Indorsed by tt*
Prto, Physician*, Clergy and Afflicted People.
V
TRY IT.
YOUB REMEDY IS
iLumoMin
Sol J byJill Medicine Dealers.
RED RIVER VALLEY
2,000,000 Acres
Wheat Lands
best in the World, for Mile by the
St. Paul, Minneapolis & Manitoba R.R, CO,
Thwe dollar! per *;» allowed the settler tar break
lag end ailtiTattoo. For particulars apply to
D. A. MoKINLAY.
land CemmlwHloner, mt, Pent, Ktan.
YOUNG MAN OB OLD,
W -'“’tec ,
Some Interesting Postal Figures.
A Washington Tost reporter asked
Joseph H. lllackfan, the superintendent
of the foreign mails at the postofiice de
partment, how the amount of business
done by the United States postal depart
ment corresponded with that done by
other countries.
I have had but little time to make a
comparison,” said he, “ but from a gen
eral knowledge of the reports of Euro
pean countries, I think tho comparison
favorable to this country.”
“ Upon what basis should a compari
son be madeP"
“Upon the basis of population. Our
report is based upon a population of
47,000,000. There passed through the
mails, according to our report, 2,215,-
108,124 seperate packages of mail mat
ter, which would mnke an average of
forty-seven pieces to each inhabitant.”
In tho matter of letters—how does
our showing compare with other coun
tries last year?”
“Very favorablo indeed. The United
States originated 866,593,572 letters,
while Geimany, with a population of
only 4,000,000 less, orginated but 504,-
067,781; Austria, with half our popula
tion, but 170,003,500, and Russia, with a
population of 93,000,000, 94,206,058.
ranee, with a population of 37,000,000,
originated 424,772,000, while Jupan, with
population of 34,000,000, had but
27,009,791, less than ono letter to a per
son.”
Mr. Blackfan proceeded: “ Italy, pop
ulation 28,000,000, 140,868,384 letters;
Hungary, population 16,000,000, 64,454,-
060 letters; Belgium, population, 6,000,-
000, 64,201,254 letters; Spain, witli a
population of 17,000,000, makes a good
showing in having originated 78,841,275
lotters.”
"In tho matter of postal cards, how
does the comparison hold?”
“ Largely in our favor. The United
States originated 276,440,710. Germany
lend all Europe with but 104 224,002.
Austria originated 29,307,500, closely
followed by Franco with 29,567,000,
whilo Italy used hut 17,243,800, Hungary
10,264,250, and Spain but 007,087. Even
Japan originated 11,002,700, whilo Rus
sia, with her immense possessions, only
used 2,621,530."
“ Have any of tho European countries
what are termed return cards?"
“Yes; a number have. I recall Ger
many, Belgium, Italy, Netherlands,
Swedon, and perhaps some others.”
“ What of newspapers?"
“Wo lead all other countries by a
largo majority. In fact our figures o f
748,018,0(0 newspapers and magazines
stamp us as the leading reading people
of the globe. Germany had demand for
but 401,729,830; France, 210,575,000;
Austria, 66,747,600; Italy, 77,201,670;
Hungary, 20,625,233; Spain, 37,253,784;
Russia, 77,439,059, and Japan, 34,-
500,000.”
“ Do other countries make uso of tlte
mails as a sort of package express?"
“Oh, yes; but in this branch of tho
mail service, ps in most others, we lead.
The figures are: United States, 22,034,-
456; France, 12,521,000; Italy, 7,602,150;
Germany, 6,776,330; Austria, 3,007,700;
Hungary, 1,429.368, and Japan, 134,293. ’
“How about books, circulars and
miscellaneous mnttorP”
“Franco is the only country that ap
proximates to us. She sent through the
mails 237,391,000, while wo sent 300,-
845,480. The oilier European countries
arc below the hundred millions."
ONE HUNDRED-DOLLAR BEES.
(•ntherlnir Oiieenn In Cyprus anil In the
Holy Lianil—Some Interest lull Infor
mation About Decs.
D. A. Jones, a member of the Cana
dian parliament, recently returned to
his liomi at Beoton, Ontario, from the
island of Cyprus and the Holy Land.
His visit t.iere was for the sole purpose
of securing queen bees from those coun
tries. His apiary in Beeton is very
largo, and lie liaB others in the United
States. He also established an apiary
in Larnica,Cyrus,which is now in charge
of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Benton. Writing
from Palestine to a friend in New York,
Mr. Jones said of his journey: “I have
been delighted with my trip through
these parts on account of finding a very
superior race oi bees—a race that I feel
santuine, when tested, will prove a
boon to America; and as I am the first
to import them, I hope to get enough to
America to et li s race established
there in purity. There appears to be
but one race of bees in the Holy Land,
but they vary in oolor and in some
other respects, and on this account I
have procured some from almost every
part. Those I obtained in the valley of
Sharon, Jerusalem, and all about the
hills of Judea, also east of Jordan and
the Red sea, were sent on mules, camels
and asses to Jaffa, thence by steamer to
tho apiary at Larnica. Tlioso I got on
Mount Lebanon, in Herman, Da
mascus, nnd in fact in all the
northern part of Syria, were taken
to tho coast and shipped at
Bcyrout for Larnica. Just now I am
getting a supply from northeast of
Damascus, nenr Palmyra, nnd they seem
very fine. I have also received a num
ber of bees for Professor Cook, of Lans
ing, Mich., lor examination under the
microscope. In some localities they re
fuse to soli mo bees. I have with me a
stock of small vials filled with alcohol,
into encli of which I place a few bees.
These excite tho curiosity of tho natives,
and they wateh my .every movement.
The dangers of traveling are very great,
as I am forced to go to distant points,
quite out of the ordinary routes, to
carry out my object. If my losses nre
not too heavy, I will surprise ths bcc-
keopers of America with this new race
of bees. I find it less difficult to secure
bees here than it would bo in ordinary
seasons, as the crops wero a failure in
Palestine and Syria last year, and star
vation makes somo more willing to sell
their bees than they otherwise would
bo. If I ever get out safo from those
tribes I will liavo no desiro to return,
even should I find a superior race in
some other locality. I will hire tho
natives instead to come to mo, and let
them run the risk of having fine bo
for mo to select from, and pay them
such sums as will induco them to per
form that work. In fact, it will be
quite impossible to evor do more than
to get a few stocks to breed from, as tho
cost is so groat. In some instances eacli
bee could not be got nnd laid down
safely in American for less than $100
All I have will surely average that
sum.”
Bonnets nnd Jewelry ns Necessaries
ol Lire.
This is difficult to answer, because the
amount allotted varies with the styles of
living, the husband’s means and other
circumstances. A Maine lady recently
took her little child and wont to Europe
on an extended pleasure trip, and the
husband's lawyer objected that ploasurc
travel abroad could not be deemed neces
sary. The judge refused to decide this,
nnd said it was for tho jury to deter
mine whether,taking into view the moans
of tho husband and tho health of the
wife and child, they would allow the
expenses of such a journey. Not many
yearsagoa wife bought a gold watch
and other jewelry to tho amount of $175
Tho husband argued that these things
were ornaments, not necessaries; but
the jewelers proved that the husband
keptajfast horse and wore diamonds,
and tho court decided that if a man
marries lie engages to support a wife ac
cording to liis Eoeial conditions and
wealth; and if they enable him to keep
a horse and wenr diamonds they may
well make it necessary that she should
have some moderate ornaments. A
Georgia milliner sued the husbnnd of a
lady for a bonnet which she had refused
to tako because it was a “ botch.” The
husband proved that she was well sup
plied with bonnets, and that she had in
tended to give this one to a iriend. The
court said he was justified in refusing
to pay for it. A hat might be neces
sary to a lacly herself, but making pres
ents to one’s friends was not necessary.
But how about Christmas, New Year,
and birthday presents? If a lady in
society orders these little things, can
her husband refuse to pay for them?
HANCOCK. {*•»*,
o .huleu. Itieuthea 1
“ ‘I **J wh*l«, it* | ••
A onlj BIX moU for Ik*
,, . •****»! ku ii*T*t
Un^bL'WONCALU,
tyon Portrait*, 12x15
‘ by mail. Also other ran*
Agents Wanted. GEO.
till Nassau st., New York.
$66 ln 50 V r k ■■ •• •’■wn. Term, and *5 Outfit
fret. Aildrcee it. Baum * Co.,Portland, Maine
The Home-Made Man.
The home-made man knows no tiling
of club life, but little of style and still
less of affectation. His hours away from
business he enjoys in the company of
his family. He reads tbe news of the
day to them, and they read the litera
ture ©f the day to him. His clothes do
not fit supremely well, but there are no
needless ventilators in his stocking
heel, and no buttons missing on liis
shirt collar (make a note of this). He
doesn’t “mingle” promiscuously with
the^musses, andjinduJges injfew luxuries.
He cares for a garden patch or he pushes
the sweat from his brow with a lawn
mower. He is not above a game of
croquet with liis children—he had just
as lief quarrel with them as with any
body. But after all, he has engrafted
upon him the fruit of common sense.
He is ah excellent citizen, voting with
intelligence; gentle and kindly as a
neighbor, loving and trusting as a
friend. If there were more of him it
would be better for the world.—New
Haven Register.
Mr. Jones brought witli him 200 hives.
He placed them on exhibition in London
before liis departure for this country.
They wore viewed there hy the Baroness
Burdctt-Coutts, Sir John Lubbock, Mr
Terry, of tho British museum, nnd John
Hunter, of the Times.
Upon arriving in New York Mr. Jones
said:
“ Notwithstanding 1 have gone to the
antipodes tor my pets, I cannot safely
pass any opinion upon them yet. I am
tho first man in this country who lias
collected Cyprian and Holy Land bees in
their native abode, ar.d comparatively
little is known of them. The qu jobs are
strong, hearty bees, able to go long dis
tances, and maintain their own against
a superior force. All that I may say
turther would be only conjecture. It
will tako time to test the superiority of
their breed as honey producers over that
of tho Italian or Ligurian queens."
Mr. A. K. Blood, of Massachusetts
was the first beekeeper that introduced
Cyprian queens into the hives of tills
country. His were received three years
ago from somo friends traveling in the
Holy Land. There were few in number
Beekeepers who inspected them believed
that they promised much. Next year a
Fort Plain beekeeper introduced Llio
Cypiians into liis apiary, and they pro
dueed such results as to cause a sensa
lion among beekeepers and to lead to
the trip of Mr. Jones. The Cyprian
queen is lively and of a very light yel
low color under its body. This often
approaches a straw color. She
ferocious when attacked and resists
vehemently. Her workers are much
more hardy tnan either tho Italian or
the black bees. It is said that in Cy
prus she will live for six years. The
Italian queen’s existence is confined to
three or four years. Her other points
are yet to be tested. Her drones also
arc superior to the ordinary Italian
drones.
Besides the Italian queen, the little
black, large brown and gray queen bees
are natives of this country, and have
thrived over since they were brought out
by the pilgrim fathers. A good queen
will lay 3,000 eggs in a day. Queens ar
hatched in fourteen days, workers in
nbout twenty-one days, and drones in
about twenty-four days. Among the
successful beekeepers of this country are
General Fitz John Porter, who has his
apiary in Morristown, Colonel Landreth
and S. L. M. Barlow, Esq., of Glen
Cove. There are apiaries on the tops of
large buildings in this city, and in the
yards of many suburban residences
Bees find many feeding grounds in this
vicinity. There are so many rare trees
plants and ilowers cultivated here that
the honey gathered is rich in color and
sweetness.
Bees fly high in the city. It is neces
sary for them to pass over the tops of
tall houses to escape injury from
the thousands passing along th
streets. Yet they often drop to the
sidewalk and add to their store from
syrup, molasses, sugar and other sweet
substances. The yield of honey this
year will not be so large as it has been
in former ones. In California, which
is a large honey-prcducing country, the
crop this year will not be one-half as
large as tlio crop of 1878. The yield
from counties in this Slate will be much
smaller than during forme r years. The
bumblebee stores her honey in the
ground, and beekeepers get at it only
with difficulty. When it is collected it
brings fancy prices.
The Baroness Burdett-Coutts, who is
president of the British beekeepers’ as
sociation, has written to a merchant in
NewYork for information as to the man
ner of hiving bees and storing honey
in this country. The Prince of Wales
has an apiary.—New York Sun.
Extraordinary Marksmanship.
A Doctor Ruth and liis wife recently
gave a wonderful exhibition of shoot
ing with the rifle and pistol at the
Brooklyn driving pnrk.
Dr. lluth is a Western man, wears liis
hair long under a broad-brimmed white
hat, and has a volvet shooting-jacket
alter the style of Western riflemen. He
is tall and free in his motions, tossing
his repeating-riile about as thougli it
were a mere wand. Mrs. Ruth is a lady
witli a very much tanned complexion
and the carriago of a backwoods
woman.
Mrs. Ruth began the banging and the
hitting by aiming witli a pistol at glass
balls, and they were shattered in almost
every case. With the pistol held side
ways there was a miss or two more, but
generally every shot told. When tho
pistol was inverted and the aim taken
belov/ instead of above tlio lino of fire
there was no apparent loss in the per
centage of hits. When tho ball was
hung hy a string and set swinging Mrs.
Ruth stood eighteen yards off and made
a clean break on her first shot. The
rifle was then handled through tho same
scries of shots, and tho usual amount of
grace with which all women handle
guns was apparent. When the balls
were thrown up in the air Mrs. Ruth
stood n good distance off and shattered
dozen out of the fiiteen, and this
feature when encored was equally ns
good.
Whilo the lady shooter etiatted with
the lady spectators Dr. Ruth began to
show his ability as a snap shot. The
sights of the rifle seemed to bo of no
special assistance to him, for when they
were covered by a cord| lie used the
weapon on balls placed on a stand and
again at the glass spheres thrown into
tho air wilh wond<r(ul effect. Some
balls were thrown on the ground a
dozen yards oil', and the doctor, niming
at the ground below a ball, would send
it spinning up into the air and then
rapidly unloading and loading his piece
would hit the ball on its descent. This
double shooting drew out plenty of ap
plause. Again, when tho balls wer
thrown up the rifle was given a turn
about after the manner o f a flail-handle,
and it fell into position soon enough to
enable a breaking shot to bo made on
the ball. Balls thrown from side to side
wero hit, whether coming from the
right or left. When tired of breaking
glassware Dr. Ruth picked up a frag
ment of glass and stepping off a dozen
paces held it off in liis lingers, whilo
Mrs. Ruth, picking up a small-bore
rifle, took careful aim and the glass was
shattered into powder. With an or
dinary visiting card held in his mouth,
and turned so as to show a side, Dr
Ruth permitted liis wife to put several
bullets through it, the pair joking mean
while with each other, the shooter tell
ing the target to draw back liis nose a
little as it was too shining a mark and
distracted her sight. A loaded cartridge
was laid on a bit of plank some yards
off, and Mrs. ltutli fired a bullet at it
and exploded it. Dozens oi other and
similar ways of testing the quickness ol
sight and steadiness of nerve of the
shooters were improvised, nnd generally
it was found that everything fired at
was hit almost overy time.
Why Wc Eat Oysters Raw.
Doctor William Roberts, in liis inter
esting lectures on the digestive ferments,
writes: Our practice in regard to the
oyster is quite exceptional, and fur
nishes a striking example of the general
correctness of tlio popular judgment on
dietetic questions. The oy3tcr is almost
the only animal substance which we
cat habitually, and by preference, in the
raw or uneooked stalo; and it is inter
esting to know that there is a sound
physiological reason at the bottom of
this preference. The fawn-colored
mass which constitutes the dainty of
the oyster is its liver, and this is little
less than a heap of glycogen. Associated
with tho glycogen, but withheld from
actual contact with it during life, is its
appropriate digestive ferment—the
hepatic disease. The more crushing of
the dainty between the teeth brings
these two bodies together, and the
glycogen is at once digested without
other help by its own diastase. The
oyster in the uncooked state, or merely
warmed, is, in fact, seif-digestive. But
tlio advantage of tuis provision is
wholly lost by cooking; for the heat em
ployed immediately destroys the associ
ated ferment, and a cooked oyster lias
to be digosted, like any other food, by
the eater’s own digestive powors.—
London Medical Record.
Exaggeration. !
Some habits are so unconsciously
practiced thut a movement to mend
them is the only way to detect them.
Tho beam in one’s own eye is less no
tieed than tbe mole in another person’
eye.
A family while at the breakfast table
one morning pledged to observe the
strictest veracity for that day. A mem
ber oi the lamily telh the “conse
quences.”
As a first fruit of the resolve, we asked
the one who suggested it:
What made you so late at breakfast
this morning?”
“Site hesitated, began with, “ Bsc uso
couldn’t—” and then, true to her com
pact, said: “The truth is, 1 was lazy
and didn’t hurry, or I might have been
down long ago."
Presently one of thorn remarked that
she had been very cold, adding: “I
never was so cold in my life.”
An inquiring loos caused the last
speaker to modify this statement in
stantly with: “ Oh, I don’t think it was
so cold, after all.”
A third remark to the effect that
Miss So-and-So was the homeliest girl
in the city,” was recalled as soon as
made, the speaker being compelled to
own that Miss So-and-So was only
rather plain, instead of being exces
sively homely.
So it went on throughout tho day,
causing much merriment, which was
good-naturedly accepted by the sub
jects, and giving rise to constant cor
rcctions in the interest of trutfl.
One thing beenme more and more sur.
prising, however, to each one of us, and
that was tho amount of cutting down
which our most careless statements de
manded under this new law.
An “anxious mother” writes to a
medical journal to know why a baby
sucks its thumb, and the .nodical j nv’na
uses up a halt column ol valu io.e space
to explain. It might liavo covered the
whole ground in a few words by the fol
lowing simple sentence: Because it
hasn't anything better to suck.—Middle-
town Transcript.
INVESTMENT BONDS.
Bold Bonds
7
Per Cont,
WILL CURB
Scrofnla, Scrofulous Humor, Cancer, Cancerous Humor,
Erysipelas, Canker, Salt Hhcum, Pimples or llumor
lu the Face, Coughs and Golds, Ulcers, Bronchitis,
Neuralgia, Dyspepsia, Uheumatlsm, Pains In
the Side, Constipation, Costiveness, Piles,
Dizziness, Headache, Nervousness,
Pains 111 the Back, Faintness at the
Stomach, Kidney Complaint*,
Female Weakness and
Oencrul Debility.
This preparation 1b scientifically and chemically com.
blncd, nnd so strongly concentrated from roots, horbs and
barks, that Its good elicits ore realised Immediately aftel
commencing to tuko It. Tliero Is no tliwiase of the hunifin
system ror which the Vtotrisi cahnut ho used with r*n,
r*cr SArr.Tv, as It does not contain any metallic com,
poind. For eradicating the system of all Impurities 01
the blood 11 has no equal. II lias li-vcr failed to eflbct a
cure, giving tone aud strength to the system dobllltatcd
by disease. Its wondeiful .lleits upon tho complaints
named nre surprising to all. Monynavo been cured by
the Vkof.tine Hint have tried many other remedies. It
can well be tailed
HE GREAT BLOOD PURIFIER.
Remarkable Cure of Scrofulous Face.
Westminster, Conn., June 19,1379.
Mr. IT. R. Stevens: , „ . # ....
Dear Sir-1 can testify to the good effort of your Medi
cine. My little hoy hud u Scrofula sore break out on nil
head as large ns ftfpiarterof n dollar, nnd It went down
his face from ono ear to the other, under his neck, nnd
was one solid mass of sores. Two bottles of your valuabl#
Vkgkhm. completely cured him.
Very respectfully,
Mas. U. n. TIIATCnna.
Tbo bond nnd musol* producing malt, tho
norvo-qnioluig hop, tho auporh malarial anti
dote culisaja, and other precious ingrcdianU,
combined without lornienUvtion, are tlio in-
Kredionts ot Malt Ilitlere, prepared by tho
Molt Uitterg company, Boston
In France tlio children attending 30,-
000 primary schools, in the rural dis
triots, receive instruction in tho culturo
of the soil.
In thoso days of oloso eoonomy, when you
do not wish to sond lor your pbysioinn so otlon
keep Dr. Bull’s Baby Syrup in the houso and
It will save you many an anxious moment.
Plant your neighbor’s cats early
One undor each fruit tree will help your
crop nnd do your neighbor a good turn
besides.
Know tho truth. Ely’s Cronm Balm posi
tively euros oatarrh, by causing discharge and
healing; not by drying up. It is also a cure
lor hay lever and catarrhal doalnesi. A
remedy ol real merit. Price 60 cents.
Elizabeth, N. J.. 8opt. 30, 1879
Messrs. Ely Bros., druggists, Owogo, N. Y
For liny tovor I am pleased to recommend
Ely’s Cronm Balm, having boou a sull'erer lor
ton years. Tho balm entirely rolievod me
Iroin tho llrst application. Upon going trom
home n short timo nnd nogicoting to tako
tho romody with mo 1 had an utlaok. After
returning homo I immediately resorted to it
and lound instant relief. 1 did not begin its
us*nntil tho soason was advanced. I believe
had I began earlier 1 should not have boon
troubled in tho least. Have stood heat, dust
and droits, os well as during olhor months in
tho year, _ J. Coi.lyf.ii, 118 Broad St.
Safe nnil lie Haiti*.
A. W. Brown, M. 1)., ot Providence, R. I.
suyo: “I have used limit's Uumody in mj
praotico for tho past 1G years, and chcorliilly
recommend it ns being n safo aud roHable
romody.” All diseases ol tlio Kidnoys, Liver
Bladder and Urinary Organs aro cured by
Uunt's ltemody. Tn'al sir.--, 75 cents.
Aro Von i«oi 1» l.ooil llolthl
It tlio Livor is tlio source ot your iroublo,
yon can find nn absolute romedy in Dll. San
FOltn's Liveii InviaoitATOit, the only vegota
blu cathartic which nets directly on tho Livor
Curos all Bilious diseases. For Book address
Du. Sanfoud, 102 Broadway, New York.
Dr. Flack, lor thirty years one ol the niOBl
succeBslul eduentors in tlio count! y, otter
greatly reduced rntos lor beard and tuition in
our advertising columns. His school is located
on the Hudson River and in the most hen thy
aud beautilul location. Bolter Write t.ml < O'er
what you can all'ord to pay, and get liis reply
Tlie VoUnlo licit Co , Marshnll, Mich.,
Will send then- Elcotro-Voltaio Bolts to tiio
afllioted upon 30 days’ trial. Soo their adver
tisumoul in this paper headed, “On 30 Days'
Trial ”
Vkoktine is acknowledge! by all classes ol
people t o lio tho best and most roliablo blood
purifier in tho world
Frit
l eo. American Drier Oo,, Oliambei sburg
Get T,von’s Patent Heel Stiffeners applied
to those now boots buloro you run them over
DATED A I’ll It. 1, 1830, AND DUE IN
Bonds of SHOO and $1,4)0(1 each.
Principal null Interest Payable In Cold i„
Aew York.
UNION TRUST CO., NewYork, TRUSTEE.
Length of Hoad, lOi) miles; wholo Issue ot m,^.,
Ulie.OUU,being *7.000 nor ml o.
Location of Komi—frail City of Fort Madison, Iowa
Mississippi lllvcr, to City of Oscalootn, Iowa.
Interest payable April lBt and October Ibi.
Far sate at M amt accrued Inters.,
With each $500 amt $1,000 Ilona th'V.
will be given ss a bonus tlOo and tiiin
re*i>cctlvely lit full paid capital stock ,,
tbe Coniimny.
Applications ror Bonds, or for further Information.
Circulars, etc., shou’d bo mado to -
JAMES M. DRAKE & CO., Bankeri
Itrcxet Hnlldlng. at) Wall St.. BI.V. 1
NYU D-No an
WARD'S
Fine Shirts for'tQ
Hiding Money.
The fact that Spain, though chrono
logically in the nineteenth century, is
really living in the seventeenth, is illus
trated by the following from Temple
Bar. In old Spanisli houses there is
generally a very cleverly-contrived
secret receptacle for money, akin to the
“ secret drawer” of the English desk.
Even now this secret cupboard is much
used, the Spanish idea of security being
(an idea founded on bitter experience of
many years) to cage the windows in
iron bars, lock up the house at night ir
winter, look at the money, and then say
in security and self-congratulation:
“ Why, I am very safe; all I Jove end
all I need is contained within the four
walls of my casa.”
There is a vast deal ol distrust of
banks and government securities, and
a great holding to the proverb: “No
friend save God, and a dollar in your
pocket.” And now with the middle
class there is no banking of money.
The bankers, to begin with, give no
interest as a rule; and so, just as in
Scotland in the troubled year of 1650
the goldsmiths were the only bankers, so
now, in Spain, the gentry constantly
hoard their money in their own houses;
somo put their jewelry and plate in the
“montea do piedad.”
THE MARKETS.
HW TOUK
Beot CJsttle— Med. Nstlvos, llvowt.. 07lift 07'I
Calves- Common to Extra State 0bft otl^
Shocp..,.., 04 ft OS*.
Lamb* 04*.ft 05*4
Bogs—Live b5>ift 111 i
Dressed 07 ft 07
Floar—Ex. State, good to fancy.... 4 40 ft o Oo
Western, good to fauoy 4 40 ft 7 0)
Wheat—No. a lted 1 OH ft 1 08 L
No. 1 White 1 OH lift 1 OHM
Bye—State 84 ft
Barley—Two-Bowed State 6S ft
Corn—Ungraded Western Mixed.... B1 ft 52J<
Southern Yellow 64 ft 6.V<
Oats—White State 48 ft 44
Mixed Western— 118 ft 48
H»y—Medium to prime 01 ft 1 05
Straw—long Bye, per owt 00 ft 05
Hops—State, 1879 95 ft oo
Pork—Mess,now..,..,. 15 80 ftlfiio
Lard—City Steam 8 00 ft 8 37>d
Petroleum—Crude........ 00%ft071< Hcflued 08*,,
Batter—State Creamery 21 ft 20
Diary 17 ft 28
Western Imitation Creamery IS ft 22
Factory 14 ft 19
Oheeeo—State Factory 09 ft 11 %
SktmB 05 ft 07
Western PKjtfft 10%
Eggs—State and Penn 17 ft 1744
Potatoes—State, bbl new 1 60 ft 2 09
BUFFALO.
Flonr—City Ground, No. 1 Spring.. B 50 ft 6 00
Whoat—No. 1 Hard Duluth 1 04Hft l 05
Com—No. 2 Western 44?.ft 46^
Oats—State 41 ft 42
Barley—Two-rowed Stale 65 ft 70
BOSTON.
Beef Oattlo—Live weight. 06 ft 0554
Sheep 05 ft 0614
Hogs 05’ 4 ft 03V
Flour—WlBConBln and Mlnn.I’at 6 60 ft 8 60
Corn—Mixed and Yellow 64>4ft 57
Oats—Extra White new 41 ft 45
Byo—State 1 00 ft 1 00
Wool—Washed Combing & Delaine.. 48 ft 49
Unwashed, “ ** 35 ft 30
WATERTOWN (MABS ) OATTL* MARKET.
Beef Cattle—live weight 03 ft 04u
Sheep 0414ft 05)4
Dmbm 05 ft 0514
06)4ft 05 y,
PHILADELPHIA.
Flour—Penn, good and fancy 5 25 ft 6 00
Wheat—No. 2—Rod 1 09 ft 1 09
Bye—State—now 75 ft 75
Corn—State Yellow 63kift 51
Oats—Mixed to ft 37
Butter—Creamery extra...,. 25 ft 20
Cheese—New York Full Cream 12 ft 1214
Petroleum—Crude 08)4<a07>4 Boflned 08U
VEGETINE
ritF.l’AHF.D BY
H. R. STEVENS, Uoston, Mass.
Vegetine is Sold by all Druggist».
CELLULOID
EYE-GLASSES.
representing tho cholccat acleetod Tortoise-Shell awl
Amber. Tho lightest, hantlsoincat, and strongest known.
Bold by Opticians and Jewelers. Made by SPKNGBB
O. M. CO., i:i Maiden I .fine, New York.
’S’UAOTR -Sir
“iKiSBr II iluulilliD .sis.
Ttita wonderful auhatanre t« fteknowl*d«od l»y phyat-
elntiH throughout tho world to be the best remedy d'~
IVI .1 cent
bottles for household iiobtain it from your drugglat
and you will Hud It superior to anything you have evei
need.
Punted dn actions for self measurement
and Piice Lists free by mail.
E. M. W. WARD'
381 BROADWAY.
■ . NEW YORK.
Ctirlu
_ _ _ _ UTIOUWf
will poaltlvoly euro Femalo WeakBoaa.Buoh aa FkIL
hi* of the Womb, White*, Chronlo Inflammation
Oloeralion of the Womb, Incidental Heinorrhairem
F looding, Painful, Suppreuset' nnd IrreguUr I?,**
truatton, Jto. An old niul reliable remedy. n,»nu m
tal card for ••pamphlet, with treatmeut, eureiauit
osrttfleaUs from tdiynlotana and patients, to Rom
arth ft Mallard, Utica, N. Y. Sold by all UruggUh-
^1.50 per bottln. _
Republican Manual f
CAni'AIun OF 1SHO. HIMory, I’rtnctpH
Early Leaders, and Achievement* of the Jlepubllean Putt
with full biographies of AND AIN
t. Ay ti. V. sSmai.i.ky. of the New York TVi&wh,
wanted by every Intelligent voter. The hostof
all arsunals from which to uinw ammunition forcnmraigQ
An eleguut cloth-bound volume at a fraction of tbs
coat, riles. OO cents; poatags, 7 centa. Circular
free. For sale by the leading bookseller ln «tmi
A MICHIGAN BOOK. KXCHANUK,
Tribune Building, New Yort
KIDNEY-WORT
The Great Remedy For THE LIVER.
THE BOWEL8,nnd the KIDNEYS.
i profit orpans firo tfio Nntunu oleimRenof
thoHyt tem. If they work veil, health will boner-
feet, If t* i y ltceomochipped, dreadful dlneawit nre
doYolojkod iK'enuM' t lio Mood 1h poisoned with the
i that y'iould_liavo been expelled naturally.
tstoro tho natural action,
. Thousand have been
raJe bynUDrupgt. •:
lull may bo. K<
C.GILBERTS
STARCH
SORE EARS, CATARRH,
Many peop’e are afflLted with those loathsome
•Ut very few tvei get well from them; this ta owing U
tmpr par treatment only, at they are leadlljr curabia to
p operiy treated. Thu is no bile boaat but a fact l hav«
proven ovar amt ove** again by my treatment. Send fa.
my little Hook, flte to nil. It will tell you all about thew
mkttrra ami who 1 am. My large Rook, 376 pages, octave
price, tk J by mall. Addn*as
l>il. C. L HUOL.UAKKIlt Aural Surgeon,
Beading, Fa
ill
JJESTEY&CS BRA.TTL.F.B0R0_VS_
This Glalm-flouae ICataiiiiahed I HOB.
PENSIONS.
New JaHW. Thousands of soldiers and heirs entitled.
Pensions date back to discharge or death. Time limited.
Addrct*, with stump,
NIOHNK IS. LKMOItr,
P. O. Drawer Washington, I>. C,
FKOM THE FARM
TO THE
PRESIDENTIAL CHAIR
This Is the ohoniiost anfiomy comp'cteaml authentic
Llf" "f He". Garll ■ il. Il tMi’i" s fine sled nortrul n uf
Grleht I n I Arthur,anil Is Inilnrsed hy their most lutr
inaie Min s. Hew, e.,,i •• tnlclijx'ii i.y " linluitliiis.
AKrntx IVmiti'il 81111I fur drculais rontalnlng *
Xu.i iley ilptloii uf the WU1K mi,I osirn terms I" Audits.
A'lhress Kstiu.sai. I'i u, PilllsUriphlS. I’a.
B. W. PAYNE & SONS, CORNING, N. Y.
KH'lfllU.lMUir.D 114 40,
Patent Spark-Arresting Kn
ud lies,mounted and on skills.
Vertical Kngines with wro’t
boilers. Eureka Safety pow
ers with Sectional boilers—
can’t ba exploded. All
with Automatic Out-O
From si 50 to $2,000.
Scuil for Circular. Stat*
wbero you saw this,
r Aim:* Anp STOUE-KKEPBBS—Yo»
1 J can sat Choice floods di. nil, hy writing on a
Festal fur our Price l.lst, which enables you tu order
liy mail the best way, un.l sec t ie many klmlsuf Aler
dmnitUc we keep for Bale ut surprisingly low prices. Wt
sen.l samples of Hamburg*, I aces, lllbbons, Fringes, etc.,
If requested. We sell Wholesale and llelnll for Cosh
down. A new combination system enables us to quote
very closo prices. We have $1, $'l ami *6 packages ot No-
tlons which cannot be bought for twice the money else
where, all wunted lu ev. y family. -Muncy rotuineil If not
satisfactory.
iiutitiumv a nvTTon,
fill Trcniont atreet, Boston, Mass.
AdK'Vl'S WARIT1SI- to sdl the I.1FF. «iF
GEN. JAS. A. GARFIELD
liy Ins comrade lu amis and personal Iriend. Gen. J. *
hlllsni.V, an author of wide celebrity. This work It
eomrlrle. authnMi, too-priced. Fully illustrated.
Pos tlvily the lest and cheapest book None other official
Send ,)«ie. at once for outfit. We give the best terms.
Act quick and yon am coin looney. 1IPMIIAKD
BltCs., l’ub«.,7a:i Chestnut St., Philadelphia, Pa.
END for our New Cnlcndnr of the
New England Conservatory of Music.
S15.00 to $20.00 for 20 lessons in classes.
Students in tho Conservatory Course can
pursue all Enolish branches fiike.
,E. TOUKJEK, Memo IIall, Boston.
jftO f! J*olishcd hSrnnltc monuments fron
BAN. 1-ree on hoard ship to any purt of Amer
ica- lu cr ntlons accurate and beautiful. Plans anti price!
free. JOIIN IV. l.KIUll-:, Sculptor, Aberdeen, Scotand
CAN MAKE r> Pit It DAI
sr.nuso null ksw
Platform Family Scale.
Weighs nccurnte’y up t<» 95 11m.
Its bamlsnmo u]»i earuiuc It#'
sight |o bnuhokt fjH'rs. llotatl prki
**A. Other Family .Scabs weigh*
Ing 2A lbs. ennuot be bought for 1pm
than $r>. A r*uu‘ar 1100.11
i*oii Aurciviw
rrltory given. Terms niul rapM
prise oh! A get.Is St ml for pj
&(JAFK pa. 1S7 W. mil St., Uti
n.t*vvtici«iv%rv INSTmTTF. (e*ubllihe:l IMP),
c
Chuutaiu/wi /diV region. A well-en ‘owed and riia
ful seminary for holb sexes. Tbe usual I It* rttl v Ibj4ib
men is aud a my flout lading Commercial School .uni
Music Department. ;Vji (Idlerent Hiudenta last year, Pm
atr, motmUln-sprlng water, good foot! ami careful ni|*r*
vl»kn. No deaths in 30 yen's. Endowments such tint
we will receive a student (total expanse) for I Term
for *30; lor 1 year* $1*50. Catalogue sent fiei
ou application to tbe Principal, FKOK. J. T. NOW AKbS,
D. L). Fall Terra opens Annual 90.
CLAVERACK COLLEGE
AND HUDSON HIVKli INSTITUTK,at (Jl..vtiutk,N.1,
Ihrt emU’s from Hudson and eight fmn Caiskhl. Oik
of the lie .s' bu- o ssful am largest Iwwirdlng schools In tbf
country. Fits Hoys thoroughly for coll* ge. Full (loll it
Course for Women. Art, Languages an I Musl«‘, special*
ties. 11 Instructo s; 10 Department*. li»2d year "pchi
September 0. Pupbs eight years nnd upward r- ct*ivt-L
Terms great y reduced. Veronal ca;e in piimary.
Address, for CnUlogun nnd t"rm« in dllfurcnt dtpait*
ments that wl j meet the wants of every one,
_ Kiev. Al.oNZ.i FLACK, Ph. D., PrcsMent
TESLEYAH DH1VERS1TT,
MIIMHaKTOWIV, cuniv.
Three four-year courses—ClaRSlcal, Tj»tln-Selentlflo, and
Scientific. I arge range of eJectlvo studies In each courm.
Fine Museum, Laboratory, and Observntory. Post-grailu*
ate com sea In Literature nnd Science. No prepoatnry o(
professional courses. Fret Scholarships for iu-llgcutan*l
muriU>rloii' student*.
Kill ranee F.xambialton, Sept, Of it*
For Catalogues address WAI. NORTH h’H P..
Secretary of Faculty.
3 Oi 1 Ii tic Id. Vt. Kxpe
tfUlur. W . Al. llL MHAl Ul
SAPONIFIED
Is the “ Original H Concentrated Lye and Reliable Family
Soap .Maker. Directions accompany each Can tor inaklnr
Hurtle Nnfi and Toilet Noup quickly. It Is ful
weight and filn-nuth. Ask your grocer for NAl'OAl 1
FI Kit, amt take no otherr.
°ENN'A SftLT MANUFACTURING C9-, PWI».
DANIEL F. UKATTY'S
ORGANS
17-STOP ORGANS
5uh-hass A Oct. Coupler, boxed A shipped only *117.7.5
New PmuoB *IU5 to 11,01)0. before you biivsn In
urnment he sure to see iny Mid-summer oiler Uludrow.
free. Andrew DANIEL F. BKA'lTY. Weslilngloii, X. 1
IMPORTANT TO AGENTS.
T11R LIFE OP
GEN. JAS. A, GARFIELD
Ity hid pers mil friend, MAJOR 1HJNDY, Editor A’- l
Moil, is tli** only edition to which (Jen. (JarfleMh*<
given personal attention nr facta. Beautifully illn.-trated,
printed ami bound. Full length steel portrait by Mail,
Troiii a picture tuK«n expressly for this work. Activi
Agents Uaiiti d. Liberal terms. Send A 1.(10al
once for complete « uttlt. A. S. DAUNTS k CO*
“ :w York. ^
I A l lit William Street, New ’
NATRONA
BI-
SOM
s
$777
A YEAR and expenses to agents
Outllt Free. Address
P. O. VICKERY, AugUata, Maine.
3359
A MONTH J AGENTS WANTED!
7r» Dost Selling Articles ln the worid; *
L "”! vo-free. Jat Dkonson, Detroit, Mich.
$5 to $20 ? c r, ,lay at J lomo - ■
r Address Stinson 4 Co.,
$72 f W , KEK - * 12 a 'Iny »t home easily made. Costly
. Outllt free. Address Tiiue * Co., Augusta, -Maine.
D IVOllGEK, In any Stale, without publicity. Send
stamp for the law, II. It. SIMS. Chicago. 111.
tithe hsst In the World. It Is nhsetntety pure. It HIM
best for Medicinal Purposes. II Is the best r,« llsklng ami
*11 Fimlly UseB. Sold hy all Druggists and Grocen.
PENN’A SALT MANUFACTURING CO., Phils.
ON 30 DAYS’UAL
Wc will send our Electro-Voltaic Belts and othrt
Electric Appliances upon trial for :k) days to those a III Idea
with Net Vitus Debility and diseases of a personal nature.
A so of the Liver, Kidneys, Rheumatism, Paralysis, He*
A sure curt ffuarunteed or no pay.
Address Voltaic licit Co., MarHhall, HIIcU^
MUSTACHE * WHiSKEp t s ,
Allti CLUillr^r. lh*l jolo'fti r-nt r“ >■
lto3 pi*. Thr«* wmI*only Mtonlihr*»U.
I**uu^lil! U "FhiiYluiite UUtMM
THREE NEW NOVELTIES
Toy Rooster and Beetle, price ‘JTjc.; Toy Cat nnd Wong
price SI,V\; Mouse Scarf Pin, price 20i’. Samples nwi'J"
to any address on receipt of price, in currency or po«a B «
dnmpa. A* A. 1LVV1S, Natrium* IV. H*.
Learn Telegraphy Mi
earn 940 to #100*
jrndunte guaranteed a paying mu-
VOUNC MEN
■ month. Kvprv (?rmlnnt/> m
qtlon. Adili css R.
9 H a a Morphine Mnblt Our*J Ini*
AGENTS WANTED
Address UKTAI, BTltlP OO., Fremont', Ohio.
1V1AI LH LL b O
t ’ AWARDED
IHighestHonqrs
'5 AT ALL THE GREAT
n | Worlds Exhibitions
SV| FOR
Ms Thirteen Years,
- NO OTHER
i ^American Organs
^HAVE BEEN AWARDED
SUCH AT ANY.
- * U N R IVA LLE D"
PRICES A*®*
i5l.$57.$66484s
TO$500 p
AND UP WARDS S
ALSO
foreasyPaymehts
45 PER MONTH FOR
I2M0NTHS,0R$6J8^
PER QUARTER FOR
10 QUARTERS/*" UPWARPSu.'fe
CATALOGUES FREE3£
111 V R FRAf
AB IN ET ORGANS
MASON &. HAMLIN ORGAN C