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Old China.
The ceramic craze still rages in Lon
don. A collection of old china belong
ing to the Earl of Lonsdale was recent
ly sold at auction, when an o and Chelsea
vase, with deep-bluejground and medal
lions of Chine.se figures, and eight small
medallions of exo'tic colors, brought
$2,800. A pair of vases with covers,
also Chelsea ware, brought 12,100.
Three Oriental jars lacquered black and
gold, sold for 12,635. The Dresden was
very fine, and one dinner service sold
for $1,485. An exquisite tea service
was bought for $655. One day’s sale
amounted to more than $.’16,000.
. A young lady was sitting with a gal
lant cap.ain in a charmingly decorated
recess. On her knee was a diminutive
niece, placed there “ pour les convenan
ces.” In the adjoining room, with the
door open were the rest of the company.
Hays the little niece, in a jealous and
ve-y audible voice, “ Auntie, kiss, me,
too.” You can imagine what had just
happened. “ You should say twice,
E.hcl dear; two is not grammar,” was
the immediate rejoinder. Clever girl
that.
.. It is dangerous to ask a woman idle
questions when she is adding up a gro
ery bill.
LIVER
llti-. important organ weighs hut about three
| pounds, and all the blood in a living person (about
! three gallons; passes through it at least once every
j half hour, to have the bile and other impurities
I trained or filtered from it. Bile is the natural
purgative of the bowels, and if the Liver becomes
! torpid it is not separated from the blood, but car
| ried through the veins to all parts of the system,
..nil in trying to escape through the pores of the
'skin, causes it to turn yellow or a dirty brown
(color. The stomach becomes diseased, and Dys
pepsia, Indigestion, Constipation, Headache, Bili
lousucss. Jaundice, Chills, Malarial Fevers, l’ilcs,
j,Sii.k and Sour Stomach, and general debility fol
llow. M>khfi.i.'s Mhi-atinh, the great vegetable
[ discovery Tor torpidity, causes the Liver to throw
II off from one to two ounces of bile each tune the
I blood pa Sts through it, as long as there is an ex
• sot bile; and the effect of even a few doses
| upon yellow complexion or a brown dirty looking
j .kin, will astonish all who try it—they being the
I first symptoms to disappear. Lite cure of all biti
j ous diseases and Liver complaint is made certain
I by taking Hepattnk in accordance with directions.
| Headache is generally cured in twenty minutes,
| and no disease that arises from the Liver can exist
S if a fair trial is given.
' SOT.I) AS A SUBSTITUTE FOR PILLS
.BY ALL DRUGGISTS.
Price 25 Cents and SI.OO
LUNGS
J The fatality of Consumption or Throat and
j' Lung Diseases, which sweep to the grave at least
' j one-third of all death's victims, arises from the
II Opium or Morphine treatment, which simply stu-
I pefies as the work of death goes on. <IO,OOO will
* i be paid if Opium or Morphine, or any preparation
| of Opium, Morphine or Prussic Acid, can be found
I in the Globb Flow er Cough Syrup, which has
Loured people who are living to-day with hut one
f remaining lung. No greater wrong can be done
[ than to say that Consumption is incurable. The
[Globs Flower Cough Syrup will cure it when
| all other means have failed. Also, Colds, Cough,
I Asthma, Bronchitis, and all diseases of the throat
and lungs. Read the testimonials of the Hon.
I Alexander H. Stephens, Gov. Smith and Kx-Gov.
i Brown of Ga., lion. Geo. Peabody, as well as
I those of other remarkable cures in our book—free
Ito all at the drug stores—and be convinced that if
you wish to be cured you can be by taking the
| Glouk Flower Couch Syrup.
Take no Troches or Lozenges for Sore Throat,
I when you can get Globk Flower Syrup at same
| j price. For sale by all Druggists
{Price 25 Cents and SI.OO
BLOOD
|' Grave mistakes are made in the treatment of all
| diseases that arise from poison in the blood. Not
| one case of Scrofula, Syphilis, White Swelling,
, Ulcerous Sores and Skin Disease, in a thousand,
i is treated without the use of Mercury in some form.
, Mercury rots the bones, and the diseases it pro
vinces are worse than any other kind of blood or
skin disease car, be. • Dk. Pemberton’sStillin-
Igia or Queen's Delight is flic only medicine
! upon which a hope of recovery from Scrofula, Sy
jphilis and Mercurial diseases in all stages, can be
! reasonably founded, and that will cure Cancer.
510,000 will be paid by he proprietors if Mercury,
(or any ingredient not purely vegetable anu harm-
I jless can be found in it.
1 j Price by all Druggists SI.OO.
Globe Flower Cough Syrup and Merrell's
j Hbpatine for the Liver for sale by all Drug
gists in 25 cent and £I.OO bottles.
• A. F. MEERELL & CO., Proprietors,
PHILADELPHIA, PA.
STILLING! A. ™ ™GLOBE FLOWER SYRUP. ■■ HEPATINE.
45 Years Before the Public,
THE CENUINE
DR. C. McLANE'S
CELEBRATED
LIVER PILLS,
FOR THE CURE OF
Hepatitis, or Liver Complaint,
DYSPEPSIA AND SICK HEADACHE.
Symptoms of a Diseased Liver.
*pAIN in the right side, under the
I edge of the ribs, increases on pres
sure; sometimes the pain is in the left
side; the patient is rarely able to lie
on the left side; sometimes the pain is
felt under the shoulder blade, and it
frequently extends to the top of the
shoulder, and is sometimes mistaken
for rheumatism in the arm. The
stomach is affected with loss of appe
tite and sickness; the bowels in gen
eral are costive, sometimes alternative
with lax; the head is troubled with
pain, accompanied with a dull, heavy
sensation in the back part. There is
generally a considerable loss of mem
ory, accompanied with a painful sen
sation of having left undone some
thing which ought to have been done.
A slight, dry cough is sometimes an
attendant. The patient compiains of
weariness and debility; he is easily
startled, his feet are cold or burning,
and he complains of a prickly sensa
tion of the skin; his spirits are low;
and although he is satisfied that exer
cise would be beneficial to him, yet
he can scarcely summon up fortitude
enough to try it. In fact, he distrusts
every remedy. Several of the above
symptoms attend the disease, but cases
have occurred where few of them ex
isted, yet examination of the body,
after death, has shown the liver to
have been extensively deranged.
AGUE AND FEVER.
Dr. C. McLane’s Liver Pills, in
cases of Ague and Fever, when
taken with Quinine, are productive of
the most happy results. No better
cathartic can be used, preparatory to,
or after taking Quinine. We would
advise all who are afflicted with this
disease to give them a fair trial.
For all bilious derangements, and as
a simple purgative, they are unequaled.
BEWARE OF IMITATIONS.
The genuine are never sugar coated.
Every box has a red wax seal on the lid,
with the impression Dr. McLane’s Liver
Pills.
The genuine McLane’s Liver Pills bear
the signatures of C. McLane and Fleming
Bros, on the wrappers.
Insist upon having the genuine Dr. C.
McLane’s Liver Pills, prepared by Flem
ing Bros., of Pittsburgh, Pa., the market being
full of imitations of the name McLane,
spelled differently but same pronunciation
jfarm and plantation.
FARM .YOTCN.
The main point in successful tree
planting is to select medium sized trees,
s') as to secure good roots. Keep the
roots from exposure to sun and wind
while hanling, take pains in setting and
mulch liberally.
Charcoal is good food to mako hens
lay. Burn a few corn cobs, and wfF
them out as soon as they are in coal,
Feed to hens and soon their combs will
turn red, and their busy tones will be
heard, and eggs increased.
It is said that, boiled hams are much
nicer to stand in the water in which
they were boiled until cold. The out
side does not then turn black and,dry up
as it does when taken from the water to
cool; but remember to remove the lid of
the kettle, so the steam may escape.
A practical farmer writes that for kill
ing lice .n cows or hogs, he has always
found the following application succese
ful: Take the water in which potatoes
have been boiled and rub it over the
skin of the animals to be treated. The
lice will ba dead in two hours and no
further progeny appear.
This is the time for whitewashing.
A good article of whitewash can be made
by slacking two gallons of white lime
in five gallons of hot water, in which
one pound of rice has been boiled until
it has all dissolved. Cover closely while
lime is slacking. Add one pound of
salt; use hot.
A homestead bill bas been introduced
in the lower house of the Missouri leg
islature exempting from execution 160
acres of land, not exceeding SI,OOO up
in value; in cities of a population of
40,000 or upward, eighteen square rods
of ground, not exceeding the value of
$3,000, aud in cities or towns of less
than 40,000 population, thirty square
rods of ground, not woith over $1,500.
Perfect drainage is the real foundation
of agricultural success. Food crops for
man or beast will not grow on wet soils.
Even rice, which is popularly supposed
to be an aquatic plant, must be planted
on land which can, when necessary, be
thoroughly drained, or the results will
be unsatisfactory. The labor ol drain
ing land seems, to the unthinking farm
er, to be useless work. It is the come
stoue, the initial step to prosperity.
If time and circumstances permit, corn
may yet be planted with good results.
The spring has been so dry and cool
that late planted grain will doubtless
overtake and perhaps outstrip the early
planted in growth. This frequently
happens. Soak the seed twelve hours
before planting, sprinkle it well with
plaster or ashes, or both, while planting,
cover lightly with mellow soil, and
there will need be no grumbling at re
sults.
Mr. McAfee, superintendent of the
University of Wisconsin experimental
farm, informs us that for three years
past he has grown lima beans without
p ties or stakes, persistent pinching back,
after they reach the desired height—
about that of a common bunch bean.
He is confident the crop is very percep
tibly earlier. r.d thinks it is increased
in quantity—the.plant being checked in
its growth of vine, expending its energy
in fruit production. On the farm we
saw some so created that they were well
loaded with fruit.
home hint*.
SPONGE CAKE.
One cup sugar, two cups fbur, one
half cup milk, two eggs, one teaspoon
cream tartar, one-half teaspoon soda.
VEGETABLE SOUP.
Peel and slice two potatoes and two
turnips ; chop fine a small piece of cab
bage ; use a large spoonful of butter; put
it all into three pints of cold water, boil
slowly two hours.
SfRGHUM CAKE.
Three cups of flour, one of butter, one
and a half of sorghum molasses, on e
tablespoonful of ginger, one teaspoonful
of soda, one cup of sour milk and two
eggs. Bake in a moderate oven.
KISBES OR DROP CAKES.
One cup of butter, two cups of sugar,
three-fourths cup of water, one-half
teaspoonful soda, two eggs, four and a
half or five cups flour; dron them on a
tin, and put a lump of sugar in the cen
tre of each.
LEMON BUTTER.
One and a half cupfuls white sugar,
whites <sf three eggs, yolk of one. grated
rind and juice of a lemon and a half, or
two small ones ; cook over a slow fire 20
minutes, stiring all the while. Very
nice for tarts, or to be eaten as preserves.
HAM BALLS.
Mince very fine cold, cooked ham
(that which has been boiled is best,
although fried ham will answer, if net
salt), add an egg for each person ; stir in
a little flour, and make into balls. Dip
into egg, and then into grated bread, and
fry until of a nice brown.
MOCK MINCE PIES.
One cup of chopped raisins, one cup of
sugar, one cup of molasses, one cup of
vinegar, one cup of water, a piece of
butter the size of an egg, one teaspoon
ground cinnamon, one of cloves and a
little nutmeg ; let this come to a boil;
roll fine eight small crackers and stir
them in. This will make three common
sized pies.
ASPARAGUS AND EGGS.
Cut twenty-five or thirty heads of as
paragus into bits about half an inch
longj and boil fifteen minutes. Have a
cup full of rich drawn butter in a sauce
pan, and put in the asparagus, when
you have dra ; ned the water from it.
Heat together to a boil, seasoning with
salt and pepper, and pour into a but
teied bake dish; break 5 or 9 eggs care
fully over the surface; put a bit of
butter upon each; sprirkfe with salt
and pepper, and set in a hot oven UDtil
the eggs are set,
HUNTINGTON PUDDING.
One pint milk and one half cup rice,
put into a tin and set in a pot nearly
half full of boiling . water; keep the
water boiling until the rice is steamed
soft enough to yield when pressed with
the thumb and finger ; then add yolk of
two eggs, a little lump of butter, and
the grated rind of a lemon ; turn into a
pudding dish, beat the whites into a
stiff froth, and stir in half a cup of
sugar and the juice of.the lemon ; spread
the frosting on the pudding and put
into the over to brown.
RAILROAD CAKE.
Take two eggs, three quarters of a cup
of sugar, six tablespoons of milk, one
and one-half cups of flour, three table
spoons of melted butter, one teaspoon of
baking powder; reason with nutmeg.
First, beat the white of the eegs to a
stiff - froth ; then add the yolks, next t e
sugar, then the milk and flour, in which
is sifted the baking powder, and last the
three tablespoons of melted butter
The batter should be very soft, as it is
very like sponge cake. Bake one-half
hour.
MILK ROLLS.
These rolls can be served hot or cold.
They are made with one pound of flour,
one ounce of butter, one ounce of sugar,
a full teaspoonful of Baking powder,
about a pint of milk and a pinch of salt.
To the flour add the salt, sugar and but
ter, and mix well by working with the
fingers. Then introduce the baking
powder and m.lk, and knead quickly.
Cut the lump of dough into six or eight
pieces, form into rolls, cut each roll
slightly over the top twice, and place on
a slightly floured pan, and bake for
fifteen minutes in a very hot oven.
When done, brush the top with the
white of an egg or milk, sprinkle with
fine sugar, and place it in the oven for
one minute.
lENTIL SOUP.
Take a pint and a half of’lentil; pick
thoroughly, and let soak over night;
take them out, and put them on to boi!
in three quarts of cold water, without
salt ; slice six potatoes, and put with the
lentils; boil for three hours; add of
smoked sausage, one half pound cut in
slices; salt, pepper, and an onion,minced
fine ; some chopped parsley, some celery,
and boil for one hour longer; before
serving, brown some cubes of bread,
and put in the plates; if not thick
enough aid a little flour; if too thick
add a little water.
CORN MEAL GEMS.
Two cups of sweet milk, one cup of
wheat flour, and about two cups of corn
meal, two tablespoon*uls of melted but
ter, one teaspoonful of sugar, aud last add
two teaspoons of baking powder. This
when mixed should be s, rather thick
batter, and drop easily from the spoon.
Have your gem irons well buttered, and
hot upon the top of your stove, drop in
the butter and place directly in the oven.
These will be found a nice, wholesome
dish for your breakfast, and quickly and
easily made. The bright appearance of
this gem adds a lively color to the table.
BOILED ASPARAGUS.
Cut your stalks of equal length'reject
iug the woody or tough portions. Tie
in a bunch with soft strings—muslin or
tape—and throw into boiling water
slightly salted. If very juicy and fresh
it is well to tie in a thin muslin t@ pro
tect the buds; boil fast, from fifteen to
twenty minutes. Just before is is done
have two or three slices of bread toasts
ed ; dip in the asparagus liquor to moist,
en them; butter well, and lay in a hot
dish ; drain the water from your aspara
gus, and ,heap it upon your toast; add a
little more butter, salt and pepper, and
serve hot.
Book Makers at English ISaccs.
London Society.
The principal bookmakers have their
regular stations in the ring where they
mayjbe readily found]by their custom
ers; and as they stand there with a
pleasant smile on their faces, the old
nursery rhyme, “ Ducky, ducky, ducky,
come and be killed,” always comes for
cibly into my mind. Avery clever set
of men they are, aud some of them have
really intellectual faces. Most wonder
ful calculators they arc, too ; the power
they have to tell at a glance how much
they have got in their books, and the
way they can subdivide the odds at a
moment’s notice is most extraordinary.
A marked contrast to these great book
makers are the small would be book
makers, who rush all about the ring,
bothering anyone they see who has been
betting, or they think likely to bet,
offering the most absurd odds as an in
ducement. The first day of any race
meeting, these gentry abound, but by
the end of the week most of them have
disappeared, having retired, i su pect,
into the outer ring, and here rascality
does flouiish. Strangely enough, in
passing through it, you seem to be fa
miliar with most ot the betting men’s
faces, but you cannot at first remem
ber vhere you had seen them previous
ly; when suddenly it flish9s across you
that yon saw the most of these faces, or
their own clothers’, in the dock at the
last criminal assizes; or if you have been
over to Portland or Dartmoor prison, or
any of that sort of places, that you have
seen them there. How so many of them
exist seems hard to discover ; but I sus
pect whenever they have drawn their
victims sufficiently, as they consider,
hey bolt before the race comes ofl.
A Happy Medium.
“ Where’s mamma?” cried blue-eyed
Bessie, junning breathlessly into the
room the wilier morning. “Never mind,
you’ll do, aunty, I only want to know
snnething; is my pa rich?”
“ Not very. Why ?”
“Ga 1 ’cause Benny Bend and May
Monk and Kate Kinsley are out here
telling about their pa’s, and I didn’t
know about mine.’ 1
“ Well, Bessie. 11l tell you. Your pa
is not too ri< h. and not t>o poor; he is
just comfortably well off.”
The child stood for a moment, look
ing thoughtfully, then repeated over and
over to herself, “Not weddy rich, not
weddy poor, jest eomferble,” and went
out.
Presently her mother came in, Bessie
following her. “ Well, Bessie,” said
she, “ have you been a good girl to
day ?”
“ No, mamma.” *
“ Why, Bessie, I hope you have not
been a bad girl?”
“ No, mamma,” said the little thing,
“ Not weddy bad, not weddy good,
jest a eomferble little girl,”
A A
Sunday Reading,
r ~
God Knuwrlh Beat.
Some t me, when all lile’* leaeoni hare been
learned,
Aid tun and atari forevermore have eet,
The thing* which our weak judgment* here have
epurned
The thing* o’er which we grieved with laahea
wet—
Will flash before us out of life’s dark night,
Ai atara shine most in deeper t nt* of blue;
And we shall see how aU God ’a plans were right,
and hoe what eeerntd reproof was love most
true.
And we shall see how, while we frown and sigh,
God's plans go on as best tor you and me,
How, when we called, He heedtd not our cry,
Because His wisdom to the end could see.
And even as prudent parents disallow
Too much of sweet to craving babyhood,
So God, perhaps, is keeping from us now
Life’s sweetest things, because it seemeth good.
And if 'ometimes, commingled with Ufe’a wine.
We find the wormwood, and rebel and shrink,
Be eure a wiser Hand than yours or mine
Pours out thi* potion for our lips to drink.
And if some friend we love is lying low,
Where human kisses cannot reach his face,
O, do not blame the loving Father to,
But wear your aotrow with obedient grace!
And you shall shortly know that lengthened breath
Is not the sweetest gift God ssnds his friend;
And that sometimes the sable pall of death
Conceals the faire*t boon His love can send,
Jf we could push ajar the gates ol life,
And stand within, and all God’s workings see.
We coull interpret al this doubt and strife,
And for each mystery could find a key.
But not to-day. Then be content, poor heart!
God’s plans, like lilies pure and white unlold ;
We must not tear the close-shut leaves apart—
Time will reveal the calyxes of gold.
And if through patient toil we reach the land,
Where tired feet with sandals loose may rest,
When we shall clearly know and understand
X think that wo will say : 1 God knew the best.”
(Tiriat In Us.
Christ is our example; but he who
supposes that Christ’s work consists
simply in furnishing us an example ha s
a very inadequate idea of what man,
needs and of what Christ is. It is true
that we have some power of copying, by
observation and n, the conduct of
those that are better than we are ; but it
is .also true that the lives which are
mainly the result of imitation are defec
tive and unlovely lives. “ That peculiar
character,” says Dr. Mozley, “which we
admire iu another, would become quite
a different one in ourselves could we
achieve the most successful imitation.
The copy could never have the spirit of
the original, because it would want the
natural root upon which the original
grew. We ought to grow out of our own
roots; our own inherent propriety of
constitution is the best nucleus for our
own information.” This, then, is what
we need—the healing, the quickening
the replenishing of our spiritual life. It
is not a model to grow by; it is “more
life and fuller that we want.” That is
what Christ came to bring ; I am come
that they might have it more abund
antly.” By faith in Him we are made
partakers of? His nature, and thus the
very elements of virtue in us are rein •
forced. The tulip bulb does not need a
full-grown tulip to look at that it may
learn liow to blossom ; it needs to feel at
its own heart the warmth of the sun and
the moisture of the soil. Not Christ be
fore you as an example, but “Christ in
you,” communicating to you the vital
izing energy of His own eternal life, is
the power of God unto salvation.—[Sun
day Afternoon.
Cbolr or CnnKresatlon'l
Dr. Holland, in a discussion of church
music iu Scribner for May, writes as
follows:
For ourselves, we are very much afraid
of the movement'toward congregational
music. The tendency thHS far has been
to depreciate not only the quality of
music in the churches, but the impors
tance of it, and to make public worship
very much less attractive to the great
world, which it is the church’s duty and
policy to attract and to influence. The
churches are full, as a rule, where the
music is excellent. This fact may not
be very flattering to preachers, but it is
a fact, and it is quite a legitimate ques
tion whether a churoh has a right to
surrender any attraction that will give
it a hold upon the attention of the
world, especially if that attraction is an
elevating one, and in the direct line of
Christian influence. Congregational
singing is well enough iu its place and
proportions, but very little of the in
spiration of music comes through it. It
is, indeed, more of a torture than a pleas
ure to many musical and devout people
The ideal arrangement, as it seems to us ;
is a first-class quartette, made up of
soloists, who take a prominent part in
the public servics, with a single choral in
each service given to the congregation to
sing. In this way. the two offices of
music in public religious assembles seem
to be secured more surely and satishtc
torily than in any other.
Influence of Religion.
People .talk about religion being a
restraint upon men. In some senses, it
is a restraint. But this is not its chief
idea. There are in men certain destruc
tive tendencies—passions, appetites and
inordinate affections, which need the
curb; and religion operates as a curb
and reins them in. But it has other and
larger uses than this. Fetters aud cords
and gags do not repress it. It plants
more than it uproots. When the work
of correction is ended it has only just
begun its operations in the soul, opera
tions which will continue in force etern
ally. Negatives do not express religious
duty. We love to think that religious
life means the growth of all faculties,
and not a slow strangulation of them.
Rsligion no more cramps a man than
wings do a bird, or fins do a fish. Piety
is not a ship at anchor on a level sea ; it
is a ship in motion, with every sail set
and swelling with wind, and the waters
around it crested with white. Christ
ianity makes a man active, vibrant,
tense. Great injury has been done
religion by teaching people to regard it
as A mild form ol slavery, in which peo
ple consent to be tied up that they may
not hurt themselves or others. But
there is no such religion as this, at least
in the New Testament. The gospel
Christ taught is a gospel of liberty. It
is a stimulant to man’s energies, not a
narcotic. It makes him a doer, not a
hearer.—[Wayland Hoyt.
Real and Apparent Happineas.
If we should look under the skirt of
the prosperous and prevailing tyrant,
we should find even in the days of his
joys such alloys and abatements of his
pleasure as may serve to represent him
presently miserable, beside his final in
felicities. For I have seen a young and
healthful person warm and ruddy under
a poor and thin garment, when at the
same time an old rich person had be*n
cold and paralytic under a load of sables
and the skins of foxes. It is the body
that maaea the clothes warm, not the
clothes the boJy ; and the spirit cf man
makes felicity and content, not any
spoils of a rich fortune wrapt about a
sickly and uneasy soul. Apollodorus
was a traitor and a tyrant, and the world
wondered to see a bad man have so good
a fortune, but knew not that he nour
ished scorpions in his breast, and that his
liver and his heart were eaten up with
specters and images of death. His
thoughts were full of interruptions, his
dreams of illusions; his fancy was abused
with real troubles and fantastic images,
imagining that he saw the Scythians
flaying him alive, his daughters like pil
lars of fire dancing round about a caldron
in which himself was boiling, and that
his heart accused itself to be the cause
of all f hese evils.
Does not he drink more sweetly that
takes his beverage in an earthern vessel,
than he that looks and searches into
his golden chalices for fear of poison,
and looks pale at every sudden noise k
and sleeps in armor, and trusts nobody,
and does not trust God for his safety,
but does greater wickedness only to eF.
cape a while unpunished for his former
crimes? “ Auro bibitur venenum ’’.(poi
son is drunk from golden vessels”), No
man goes about to poison a poor man’s
pitcher, nor lay plots to forage his little
garden made for the hospital of two
beehives, and the feasting of a few Py
thagorean h-rb*eatere. They that ad
mire the happiness of a prosperous, pre
vailing tyrant, know not the felicities
that dwell in innocent hearts, and poor
cottages, and small farms.
Can a man bind a thought wPh
chains, or carry imaginations in the palm
of his hand ? Can the beauty of the
peacock’s train, or the ostrich plume, be
delicious to the palate and the throat?
Does the hand intermeddle with the
joys of the heart?—or darkness, that
hides the naked, make him warm ? Does
the body live, as does the spirit ? or can
the body of Christ he like to common
food? Indeed, the sun shines upon the
good and the bad ; and the vines give
to the drunkard as well as the sober
man ; pirates have fair winds and a calm
sea at the same time when the just
and peaceful merchantman hath them.
But although the things of this world
are common to good and bad, yet sacra
ments and spiritual joys, the food of the
soul, and the blessing of Christ, are the
peculiar right of saints.— [Christian.
A Tramp Dodge.
San Francisco Post.
It was a sad looking tramp, with a
pained expression of face, that entered a
Sutter street bar-room the other day
holding in his hand a small, battered, red
cannister. “ Look at this,” he said son
rowfully, “ I went into a gunshop and
begged for something to eat, and the
mean man handed me his can of powder.
He said I could go shooting—a starving
man go shootiog ! Just think of it.”
“ Well, mizzle 1” reported the bar
keeper, who had just set up four fancy
drinks for a row of customers.
“ I pledge you my word,” said the
vagrant, holding Hie can within an
inch of the open stove, “ I’m so miser-,
able I’ve almost a mind to blow myself
up.”
“ Dare you do it?” said one of the by
standers, winking at the crowd.
The wretched party gave a sad, linger
ing look at the pouied out liquor, that
he might ne’er behold again, and tossed
in the can. The yell that the whole
crowd gave as they started for the other
side of the street was heard on Tele
graph hill. When they filed in about
ten m routes after the empty cau did
not explode, there was four empty glass'*
es on the counter, the luuch table was
an empty mockery, the till looked like
a savings bank on the day after a really
large deposit.
. When dull days settle down upon
European capitals, some half-wited fel
low borrows a pistol and goes fo< th to
shoot the king. He is rareiy successful,
but a week’s holiday is granted, with
full pay, to every body, the city is lit
up with Chinese lanterns, and, on the
whole, the people hardly know which
is the better man, the would-be atsassin
or the king.—[New York Express.
Ayer’s
Sarsaparilla
&For Scrofula, and all
scrofulous diseases, Erysi
pelas, Rose, or St. Antho
ny’s Fire, Eruptions and
Eruptive diseases of the
skin, Ulcerations of the
Liver, Stomach, Kidneys,
Lungs, Pimples, Pustules,
Boils, Blotches, Tumors,
Tetter, Salt Rheum, Scald
___ Head, Ringworm, Ulcers,
Sores! Rheumatism, Neuralgia, Pain in
the Bones, Side and Head. Female
Weakness, Sterility, Leucorrhoea, arising
from internal ulceration, and Uterine
disease, Syphilitic and ‘Mercurial dis
eases, Dropsy, Dyspepsia, Emaciation,
General Debility, and for Purifying the
Blood.
This Sarsaparilla is a combination of
vegetable alteratives Stillingia, Man
drake, Yellow Dock —with the lodides
of Potassium and Iron, and is the most
efficacious medicine yet known for
the diseases it is intended to cure.
Its ingredients are so skilfully com
bined, that the full alterative effect of
each is assured, and while it is so mild
as to be harmless even to children, it is
still so effectual as to purge out from the
system those impurities and corruptions
which develop into loathsome disease.
The reputation it enjoys is derived
from its cures, and the confidence which
prominent physicians all over the coun
try repose in it, prove their experience
of its usefulness.
Certificates attesting its virtues have
accumulated, and are constantly being
received, and as many of these cases are
publicly known, they furnish conviftcing
evidence of the superiority of this Sar
saparilla over every other alterative
medicine. So generally is its superi
ority to any other medicine known, that
we need do no more than to assure the
public that the best qualities it has ever
possessed are strictly maintained.
PREPARED BT
Dr. J. C. AYER it CO,, Lowell, Mass.,
Practical and Analytical Chemists.
SOLD BT ALL DBUGGISTS £ VERY WHERE.
WEDDINGS.
Wbt They Qffpr la the Way o. Pomlbll-
Mm,
Weddings offer women an eligible op
portunity of getting up a good family
quarrel. AH the ladies of their connec
tion are in a flatter of excitemeut, and
are far from being mistresses of them
selves. In the inevitable confusion of
large hospitalities, some distant aunt or
near cousin is certain, like the cross
fairy who was not asked to the christen
ing “to take ofience.” The aimless ex
citement and flatter now find something
fresh to work upon, and settle down into
good, steady animosities. “ Marriage,
and death, and division,” says the poet
rather cynically, “ makes barren our
lives.” Marriages generally beget divis
ion, or rather, in the general excite
ment, some old grudge is brought to a
head and bursts. When the happy pair
return after the honeymoon, they are
lucky if they do not find that they have
to take a side in a leud, and range
themselves under the banner of Aunt
Jane or Aunt Matilda. All this is the
result of the curious, inexplicable pas
sion with which people who do not care
a pin for a man or woman throw them
selves into their matrimonial affaire.
One’s birth does not disturb society;
one may be christened and confirmed,
and the world is calm. Our great
achievements, if we ever perform any,
interests every one more than our kins
folks. We may even commit crimes,
and find that scanty notice is tafien of
the offence, relations confining them
selves to saying’ that “ they always
looked for as much.” We die, and our
intimates are unmoved. Wcy, then,
can wo not marry in peace ? Why do
people seem to become anew and strange
sort of beings of intsrestjto all men, as
soon a3 they are engaged to be mar
ried ? There must be some mysterious
reason for these things, and philosophers
may seek it in the remote history of the
race. There, however, they probably
will not find it, as weddings in the re
mote history of the race were an unre
garded episode, in which the lady was
hit on the head and dragged quietly
out of the camp. Nor will the philoso
pher be more happy if he “ looks with
in his own bosom, and listens for the
whispers of consciousness.” His con
sciousness has nothing to say 'on the
subject. If he be a married philoso
pher, he knows that he always forgets
all about it when he is told that any of
his friends are aboutJto enter into the
state ‘of matrimony. He knows that
he looks on that as entirely their own
affair,jand neither history nor experience
can inform him why his fellow-creatures
put themselves into such a flatter.
Mankind has always been so constitu
ted that many things which are natural
remain inexplicable to the philosopher.
We do not think that even Mr. Herbert
Spencer has tried to solve the problem
connect! and with the popular interest in
weddings.
Silmalme the Nlagjclsli Kl-lneya.
In addition to its tonic and cathartic prop
erties, Hostetter’s Stomach Bitters exerciser
a beneficial influence upon the kidneys and
bladder, when they are inactive, by stimula
ting them to renewed exertion, thus reopens
ing, as it were, a sluice for the escape of im
purities, whose regular channel of exit is
the organs of urination. Among these are
certain abnormal and inflammatory elements,
productive of irreparable injury to the sys
tem if not entirely expelled. The kidneys
and bladder themselves are also benefited
by this stimulus, as their inactivity is usually
a preliminary to their disease and disorgan
isation. They also experience, in common
with other portions of the system, the potent
invigorative effects of the Bitters, which
f urthermo-e corrects disordered conditions of
the stomach, bowels and liver.
The Cultivation of Moses.
“Roses are her chec ks,
And a roie her lips. ’
The best way for ladies to cultivate this
rare species of roses is by studying and prac
ticing the rules of hygiene, as taught in the
People’s Common Sense Medical Adviser,
only $1.50. Address the author, R. V. Pierce,
M. IX, Grand Invalids’ Hotel, Buffalo, N. Y,
If suffering from those painful weaknesses
incident to the female organism, use Dr.
Pierce’s Favorite Prescription—a never
lailing remedy for these complaints.
Safety, efficiency and reliability are the
three cardinal virtues of a remedy, whether
in the hands of a physician or in those of the
people at large. For the cure of all malarial
or miasmatic diseases, such as Chills and Fe
ver, or Intermittent Fever, Dumb Chills and
Chronic Enlargement of the Spleen,we have
such a remedy in Dr. F. Wilhoft’s Anti-Pe
riodic or Fever and Ague Tonic, the compos
sition of which has been published bv its
proprietors, Wheelock, Finlay A Cos?, of New
Orleans, and is approved by the medical
profession, and for sale by all Druggists.
Carefully avoid the use of rasping cathart
ics. They weaken the bowels and leave them
worse off’than before. Use instead that salu
tory, non-irritating aperient and anti-bilious
medicine, Dr. Mott’s Vegetable Liver Pills,
which will not only achieve the desired ob
ject, relaxation of the bowels, without caus--
ing pain or weakening them, but promote
digestion and assimilation and depurate the
blood. The pills are sold by all druggists.
CHEW
' The Celebrated
“Matchless”
Wood Tag Plug
Tobacco.
The Pioneer Tobacco Company,
New York, Boston, and Chicago
Mason & Hamlin Cabinet Organs are cer
tainly the nest of this class of instruments in
the world, and at the prices at which they are
sold, which are only a little higher than thone
of very poor organs, they are also cheapest.
For coughs, colds and throat disorders,
use “Brown’s Bronchial Troches,” having
proved their efficacy by a test of many years.
25 cents a box.
The Mendelssohn Piano Cos., No. 21 East
15th street, N. Y., sell Pianos at Factory
Prices. Write for a catalogue.
Smoke Pogue’s Sitting Bull Durham Tobacco*
Chew Jackson’s Best Sweet Navy Tobacco,
A BK your druggist or storekeeper foi Osinnn’i
I>lrrti‘ i K.niedy It is the best.
* month-agents bei
h 11< lling articleajp the world; one samp.
kjl free. Address Jig Bronson. Detroit, Mich
<Mfl to <M Ifin invested inWall-street Stocks niauei
tpiU IU vpijUuUfortmies overy month. Book sent
Gee explaining everything. Address BAXTER
TO.. Bankers. IT Walt klreei. New Aoilt
£23 tn £SO Ojudictcusly invested in Wall st. lays
tne foundation tor substantial fortunes every week,
aud yie'ds an immense perceitageof piottts hythe
New York Capitalization System of operating in
Stocks. Ifu 1 explanation on application to spams,
Brown & Cos., Banker-, 2i> A2B Broad et., N, 1 .City,
DR. CRAIG’S KIDNEYCURKforaiI kidney dis
eases. A Biire remedy, failures unknown. Send
for circular. Noyes Bros. A Cutler, St. Paul; Lord.
StoutburgA Cos., Chicago; A. Smith, London; W
Maddox, Ripley,o.; E.Cary. Des Moines; F.Stearns
Detroit. The most popular medicine of the day.
m-n 1 (1 —Choicest in the world—lmporters’ prices
I H AX —La-gest Company in America-staple ar
-1 HUM. tide—pleases everybody—Trade continu
ally increasing—Agents wanted every where—best
inducements —don’t waste time —send for circular.
RO h’T WKIiIiS, <3 Vesey st .N. Y P. O. Box 12,-7.
AGREAT OFFER ! and OKUANN
at Kv raiirillna! J Lo* Price* for ah.
Spleudld Orcns, $35 S4O: 5 ktaps, 8H.7
•to Ss<>, <to £55 •>! $O, II do B*s, 12 do
8?0, 13 do gW 7-Oof-’* SMjuore and Pp.
right Pianos. sl*s to *l3O, 7 1-3 do gl4,
not uod six nionilts. Warranted live
years. Agents Wanted. Illustrated cat
alnffuen mailed. VI n>e. Ic.per page.
HOBACP. WATERS * SONS. Manuraetu
....and Dealers, 40 east I4tb street, New
York.
. TKUTII 18 SHOUT YT
/ mmßk \ Profsnor Marti tw*. the rrsv*. SpatlaS. /
fil eval ntas. the t.ms and place where yea /
Will first to eat, and the date of mama**.
Address. Prof. MARTINB2. 4 Proriw* IWOA
88.. Dostoa, Maw. TU %• *w bmmbag I
The Gospel of Joy!
THE GOSPEL OF JOT SKRTSKte
beauty fot Gospel Meeting*. (’imp Meetings, Deve
tional Mentis** sod Sunday Schools.
By R*v„ Sampsi. Aomas and S. H. Srscs. It
contains a, large number ol i ew and very interior
H vines and Tnne*. Tits general stylo is Tory chter
fut and bright, a- bent* a collection that has so
much to any and sihg about
•’Glad Tidings of Great Joy.”
Both words and music are of an elevated charac
ter, commending themselves to persons of refined
tasts, and ng measure” so prevalent
in many recent com positions has been carefully
a'oided.
Price S5 eta., for which epecimeu copies will lie
mailed to any addreta.
see Decoration Day Music in the MUSICAL RE
CORD, S cts.
GOOD NEWS I
sands ef friends. Do not fail to examine and try it.
There are 2TO Scags, in the com position or selection
of which s’eat taste and ability have been dis
play* and. Examine also " Shining River ” and "The
River of Life,” two standard books ol great beauty,
OLIVER UiTSON & UU., Boston.
C. H. IMltaon A Cos. J. E. Iril.on.t Cos.
.M3 Broadway, N. Y. 923 Chestunt st,,Phit.
TO
Emigrants
f‘o r
ARKANSAS, TEXAS, KAN
SAS, COLORADO, OREGON
Oii CALIFORNIA.
IF you war t to know all about tho South-West,
West, or North-West, with Maps, Time Tables.
Rates, the Best Uoutts, Ac., Ac., pleate write to or
call upon
C. A. HASLETT,
Nouthern Agent, "Iron Huun-
I 111 II Kmute.” Clialtaiiooga, Tern,
For Two
Generations
The "ood and staunch old
stand by, MEXICAN MUS
TANG LINIMENT, has done
more to assuage pain, relieve
suffering, and save the lives ot
men and beasts than all other
liniments put together. Why?
Because the Mustang pene
trates through skin and flesh
to the very hone, driving out
all pain and soreness and
morbid secretions, and restor
ing the afflicted part to sound
and supple health.
B^l|
‘‘Screw tho linger as tight aB you can, that’s rheu
matism ; one turn more, that’s gout,” is a familiar
description of these t.'o diseases. Though each
may and Does attack different parts of the system,
the cause is believed to he a poisonous acid in the
blood. Purify this by the use of
Tarrant’s Seltzer Aperient.
It will do its work speedily and thoroughly. It is
the great friend ot the sufferer from rheumatism
and gout. SOhe BY ALL DRUGGISTS.
First Established ! Most Successful:
THEIR INSTRUMENTS have a standan
value in all the
LEADING MARKETS
OF THE WORLD
Everywhere recognized as the FIN BS'-
IN TONE.
OVER 80,000
Made and In use. New Designs conffantlj
Best wprk and lowest prices
Send for a Catalogue.
Tremcnt at,, opp. Walta St,, Boston, Mas
WARNER BRO’S CORSETS
"AS. III' rectivvd tne Hlslu st Medalsi the nvenl
PARIS EXPOSITION.
?jf*’ ; Xlli'l.E ii:IP!• ORsEI
MAmPMm health *'coßsr
Mi
WARNER BROS.. 351 Broadway, X. I
*■** gqw*|ls embittered by Dropsy, Kidney.
Is* Ii gl HI |Bladder or Urinary Complaints
mm H 1* lH Bright’s Disease. Gravel or Gen
If II Ilia jeral Debility, take
II IlliyT'S kehkiit.
ran V €>(V3 Retention of Urine Diabetes,
1 § ¥ 1111 I Pain in the Side, Back and Loins.
8,1 f r ('Excesses and Intemperance, are
Ull JJ ured by MUST'S itEMEOY
d" o ®* l All iseases ot the Kidneys, iila
der and Urinary Organs are cured by Hont’s
Remedy. Family Physicians use Ilnn.’tKcni
edy. Seed for pamphlet to
\VM. K. CLAKKK. Providence. R. 1.
QAPONIFIEK
Is the Old Eeliahle Concentrated Lya
FOR FAMILY SOAP MAKING.
Directions accompanying each can for making
Hard. Soft, and Toilet. Soap quickly.
IT IS FULL WEIGHT AND STRENGTH.
The market is flooded with (so-called) Coaeen
trated Lye, which is adulterated with salt ani
resin, and iocm’Z make soap.
SAVE XOKZr, AND BUT THE
Saponifieß
MADE BY-THE
I ennsylvania Salt Manuffc ££(**
ILQSON & HAMLIN CABi.t£T ORGANS
Demonstrated best by HIGHEST HONORS AT ALL
WORLD'S EXPOSITIONS roa TWELVE YEARS:
viz: at Paris, il7; Viknsta, 1873; Santiago, 1575;
PiiiLAPKneHiA, 1878; Pabts, 1878; aud Grano Swf.b
ish Gold M rival, 1878. Only American Organs vei
awarded highest honors atanvanch. Sold for cask
or installments, Illns'raled Cntnlngues and Circulars
si i h n* w stj b-s and prices, sent free. Mason A Han
lin Organ Cos.. Boston. Sew Yoas. ©i Chica-s*
Tk|e Ooqs'titutioTi of tl|cl r r|ited states
A copy of the Coiiatltnllon of the I nltco Staten, with nil the t raendments e mpete,
nsatlv printed and bound, 24 pages, *’ Pocket Edition,” will be at ni FtsfcE to sny apj llcant on rtc.ipt
of a Tlirec-eent p©.taf,e stamp. Address
GEO. P. ROWELL & CO.,
Newspaper Advertising Bureau,
10 Spruce Street,
NEjW YORK
CQQfin* V*AU. Hew 4 Make M. Age.*
COE iOAUE, *(. Ll*. Mo.
A Month and expenses guaranteed to
■ 4 agent*. Outfit tree. Shaw A 00. Augusta, Ms
(7 *l ,,r and expense* to agent*. Outfit
4 4 4 free Address p. O. Vicke - *. Augusts,M#
ARTISTS’ MATERIALS. Wax Good*. Shade*,
fin Ila I 9 et . A. H A BBuTTA Cos.
I >OWKRFCL Telephone Magn-t*,2sc. earii; dia
ptiragme, lfc. Tel. Mag.Co.. Msrchantviilr.N J
FOCHET OHTIOgART.iHIOM word*, and
lr. Poele'a Health Monthly.one year.SOo.
MURRAY HILL PUB ( ()., H K. Hath at. 11. Y,
U/AIITFD AGKNTS to *ell our immense *tock
**Hlllll#olW atchee and Jewelry. For partie
lar* tend st amp to U mos St’rri.v Oo.Topoka. Kansas
nTITTTIf SATSRS easily cured. By one that
I! I II i 111 used it for 13 years. Address
Ui lUill JOS. A. OCRS, J.
ftllllM Habitant! Skin IWm. Thousand*
BlrllfWl‘'"red. Lowest prices. IK M fail io
** ■_* Wl* l write. Dr.F K.Marsh Quinr-- ..Orb
PAT—With Stencil Outfits. What costs 4
Kiln ot*. sells rapidly for so cts. Catalogue A re.
810 s. M. SpgucKa, 112 Wash'n St..Boston.Mesa
SODA FOUNTAINS- *J- ' .0.71*7 .
Shipped ready for aw. For catalogue, Ac., address al
Chapman A Cos.. Madiaen. Ind 3l aV±U O O
■■■■■■■BHBKBKK Sure relief a cipiTV a
KIPPER S PASTILLES, 1 :
‘ Mas*.
1 ifkAHKNTN WANTED in the South
-1 ‘ M m JViera and Weston States for the grand
est triumph oftbeage. lIM per month and expenses
Wit outfit free. AGENTS' BUREAU, Louisville, K>_
YOUNG MENr^ n
mouth. Every graduate gnarauteed a paying
Janesville, Wi*
Ah nil{■§ [By B. M. WOOLLKI, Atlanta,G*.
111 ! U 111 R*lial>le> evidencegiven and reVieiu e
11 uisTv |to cured patieuts and physicians.
■ 1 llalUl l Send for my book on The Habit and
“C U K Kiits Cum. Free.
msamsßassEm
>\e will pay Agents a Salary of |WO r r month and
eipenor allow a large commission . *ll our now
ami wonderful invention*. Wemennwhn army. Ham
pie fret. Address Bit\RMAN it CO., Marshal I, Mich.
W KXLLT STIXL BARB HKNCB WIRI W
V li*te muter patents of IMB and all W- W
¥ for* It. Sand for circular and f*rio* lift, W
’ to Tho*m Wins Hanot Cos.. Chlcairo. f
P AGENTS WANTED FOR THE
ICTQRIAL
HISTORY OF the U.s.
The gteat interest in tho thrilling history ot our
country makes this the fastest selling book ever
published. Prices reduced 33 percent. It is the most
complete history of the U. 8. ever published. Send
tor extra terms to ageni* and see why it sells so very
fast Address Nat’l Publishing Oo , St. Louis, Mo.
The NEW YORK sun
DAIEiT. 4 page*. SB cts. a month; * .50 a year.
NUN HAY. 8 pages. BI.WO a year.
WEEKLY. 8 pages. Ml a year.
THE SUN has the largest circulation and Is the
cheapest and most Interesting paper in the United
States.
THE WEEKLT NUN 1* emphatically the
people's family paper.
I. W . KNOLAND, Publisher. N. Y. Citv.
Soldiers-Pens! oners.
W e publish an eitht- page paper— ‘TIIK NATION
AL TBIBU NB," oevoten to the interests of Pen
sioners, Sold lcrß and Sailors and the,r heirs; also
contains interesting family reading.
Price, BO cents a year—special inducements to
clubs. A proper blank to collect amount due niu'er
new ARREARS OF PENSION iIILL. furnished
gratuitously. to regular subscribers only, and such
claimsfil ed in Pension Office without charge. Jaun
ary number as specimen c< py free. Send for it. GEO.
IC. LEMON A OO.; Washington. I).0. Lock box !l‘A
A HI'NTS WANTED FOB
“BACK FROM the MOUTH OF HELL,”
By one who has been there 1
“RISE ami FALL of the MOUSTACHE”
By the Burlington Hawk* ye Humorist.
Samantha asa P. A.and P I.
By Josiah Allen’s Wiie.
The three brightest and best soiling books out.
Agents, yon can put these books in everywhere. Best
terms given Address for Agency, AMERICAN
PUBLISHING CO.. Hartford, Ct., Chicago, 111.
■■■i H AA ■ AHEAD
Tr ®L“ SSL B ALL THE TIME
*9 BSP™ /RIM 1 The vory best goods
'lijflws Jv*m *a direct f,om the Im
™ porters at Half tho
usual cost. Best plan ever offered to Clnb Agents
and large buyors. ALL EXPRESS CHARGES
PAID. New terniß FREE.
The tat American Tea Coiopaay,
voey Mlreot, Now Tor .
P. O. BOX IJUS.
F CURED FREE!
An infallible and unexcelled remedyfor F's.,,
or FallingtilrknesN, warrantin'
■ flail to effect speedy and PERM t
■ I *‘A Pree Itolllr” of my es
-8 AT nowned specific and a valnabl*
■ ■ Wr Treatise gent to any sufferer seen
ing me hi* Post-office and Express address.
DI4. IT. Gr. ROOT,
IK! l*ai i. Nt., New T *•*'
MOUER’S W COD-lIVER OIL
la perfectly pure. Pronounced the boßt by the nigh
est medical authorities in the world. Given highest
award at 13 World’s Expositions, and a*. J’aris, 1878.
3ol(l by Druggists. VV.H.Nrhicflvlin & Co..N. Y
Sr
9HBF:Supplies for Lodges, Chnplers,
nnd Commnnderies, m.-ummet
r umi by M. C. bit ley <t <<>■, Colum-
ZjgßeSr fct/.v, O. Send for I'rii e Jjints.
WW flffif'Knights Templar Uniforms a Specialty,
jF Military, Society, and Firemen’s Goods.
COTTON SEED HIJLLER
ANU FEED-M14.il -4>MBINID.
For Plantations and Oi l Mil .
rS L Used by Planters, the Jil Mill, in
ltdlrU row Orleans and llirotigli the
Jyß country. Send for Clrcoiuis and
Judges’ Report. Pay for itself n a
VUguiw few weeks
' ii. KtHNWHi Kir.
mm&m
Is used lrom Maine to San Franci co, bringing
with it joy to many mothers. WOvLRICH & CO.
on every label. Take no other.
■RffigS
ftjz Seven Sliot^O
Full Nickel W
a 1 ted, Hteel Bar- lv b
B Arel ifc Cylinder,
Killed Barrel i Fluted
Cylinder KKVOLVKtt A
o W The CHICAGO LEDGER
W NIX MONTHS for TWO
DOLLARS. We warrant
Yy ft this beautiful Revolver to lie
< Jjy / the beat ever offered for the
V ■ money. It 1b no cheap cast
iron pistol, bnt manufactured of the beat English steel,
and finished equal to the highest-priced Revolver in the
market. We have sold 6,000 of them since the first of
June, and have just contracted with the manufacturer
for 10,000 more. Our guarantee accompanies each Re
volver. Cartridges to fit them can be obtained at any
general store.
THE CHICAGO LEDGER Is the Largest, Best and
Cheapest Family Paper in the United States. It is
printed upon large, plain type, and can be easily read by
old or young, ana should be in every household.
Remember, every purchaser of one of these Itevolv.
•re gets THE CHICAGO LEDGER for (1 months, post
age paid. Addreaa THE LEDGER, Chicago, 111.
WHEN writing to advertisers, please say y,m s~
the advertisement in this paper. fc.N.F.—l
For Beauty of Polish, Saving Labor, Cleanliness
Durability and Cheapness. Uncqualed.
AIOKSK liiMJS, Proprietors, Canton, Mass