The Butler herald. (Butler, Ga.) 1875-1962, September 30, 1879, Image 4

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Farmer. MESTIC RECIPES. KID TOMATOES. , Benson with pepper and •alt, and dust flour over them. Put a lump ef butter in the pan and bake until brown and well done. BREAKFAST RELISH. Put bread crumbs into a saucepan with cream, Rail and pepper; when the bread has absorbed the cream break in a few eggs, beat well and fry as an ome* let. CHOCOLATE PUDDING. One quart milk, four eggs, eight tea* spoonfuls of chocolate, and twelve tea* spoonfuls of bread crumbs; sweeten to the taste and boil a few minutes, then put into the oven and brown. BLACKBERRY WINE. Measure the berries and bruise them; to every gallon add one quart of boiling water; let it stand twenty-four hours, stirring occasionally; strain off the liquid into a cask; to every gallon add two pounds of sugar; cork tight and let it stand until October, when it will be ready for use. CHICKEN SALAD. Boil or roast a nice fowl. When cold cut off all the meat and chop it a little, not very small; cut up a large bunch of celery and mix with the chicken; boil four eggs hard, masb and mix them with olive oil, pepper, salt, mustard and a gill of vinegar. Beat this mixture together, and just before serving pour it over the chicken. FR08TED FRUITS. Take large, ripe cherries, apricots, plums, or grapes; if cherries, cut off halt the stem; have in one dish some whites of eggs, well beaten, and in another some powdered sugar; take the fruit, one at a time, and roll them first in the egg and then in the sugar; lay them on a sheet of white paper, in a sieve, and set it on top of the stove, or near the fire until the icing hardens. TAPIOCA CREAM. Three tablespoonfuls of tapioca soaked over night in one quart of milk. Beat the yolk of three eggs with one cup of sugar, and add to the tapioca and milk, and boil all together in a vessel Bet into a kettle of boiling water. Stir it con stantly until it is thick like cream. Beat the whites of the eggs to a stiff froth and stir into the custard while hot. Flavor to the taste and set it on ice un til ready to be eaten. MIXED PICKLES. Soak small onions and cucumbers in salt and water ten days (one pint of barrel salt to one^half bushel of pickles); cabbage, cauliflower and string beans. twenty*four hours in brine. To four gallons of the best vinegar put ene pint of syrup or molasses, one red pepper, Bpicee and mustard seed, if you like; scald all together, and pour on the pickles while hot; rinse the pickles after the brine, They will keep the year round. RECIPE FOR HARD SOAP'. • Take 1J gallons of soft water, 3 pounds of sal soda, 1 pound of unslacked lime; add the three together and let them come to a boil; take it from the fire and let it stand till it settles clear; then drain off liquid from the lima, and add three pounds of clean grease to the liquid ; put it back on the stove and let it boil to the proper thickness, say fif teen minutes. One ounce of essence may be added if desired. TO COLOR WHITE bILK BED OR CRIMSON. For one pound ot silk take 3 ounces alum; dip at hand-heat one hour; take out and drain ; while making a new dye by boiling ten minutes cochineal 3 ounces, bruised nutgalls 2 ounces, and cream of tartar J ounce in one pail of water; when & little cool begin to dip, raising the heat to a boil, continuing to dip 1 hour; wash and dry. POP CORN BALLS. Pop the corn, avoiding all that is not nicely opened; place A bushel of the corn upon a table or in a large dripping pan; put a little water in a suitable kettle with 1 pound of sugar, and boil as for candy until it becomes quite waxy in water when tried as for candy ; then remove from the fire and dip into it sixor seven tablespoons of thick eum solution made by pouring boiling water upon gum arahic over night, or some hours before; dip the mixture on differ ent parts of the corn, lifting up and mix ing until the corn is saturated; then take up your hands full and press together like a school-boy making a snowball, being quick lest it sets before you get through. CORN BEER WITHOUT YEAST. Cold water, five gallons, sound, nice com, one quart; molasses, two quarts. Put all into a keg of this size; shake well, and in two or three days a ferment ation will have been brought on as nicely as with yeast. Keep it bunged tight. MUSKMELON PICKLE8. Take ripe muskmolons, remove seeds and peel, and cut in pieces. Put into a stone jar and cover with hot cider vine gar ; let them stand until the next day, and pour off the vinegar; heat and pour on them again. Do the same every day until the fourth day. Weigh the melon, and to every five pounds add three pounds of white sugar and one quart of the vinegar, and spice to suit. Put to* gether, and simmer till tender. The next day but one pour off the syrup and boil it down so there will be just enough to cover the melon. WATERMELON CAKE. White part.—Two cups of white sugar, 1 of butter, 1 of sweet milk, 8* of flour, whites 8 eggs, 2 teaspoons cream tartar, 1 of soda—dissolved in a little warm water. Bed part.—One cup red sugar, J cup butter, $ cup sweet milk, 2 cups flour, whites 4 eggs, teaspoon cream tartar, } teaspoon sods, teacup raisins; be careful tJ keep the red port around the tube of the pan, and the white around the edge; requires two persons to fill the pan. WHITE CAKE. One cup sugar, \ cup butter, } cup sweet milk, whites of 2 eggs, 2 teaspoon* fuls baking powder, 2} cups flour. Chocolate Frosting—One cup brown sugar, 1 egg, 1 cup milk, \ pound cboco* late, 1 teaspoonful vanilla; cook to con sistency of paste. How to Do Up Your Hair. The Boston Transcript thus discourses on a subject of paramount interest to the sex which wears its hair long, and thus offers capabilities for artistic triumphs in the way of hair-dressing : If a dozen soft fingered puff* make a pretty crown and a mist of golden hair lie on the fore* head, there are many persons who will scarcely notice that the shape of the head is ignoble, and that the faint eye- brows are drawn above cold and mean, ingless gray eyes. If a heavy braid of dark hair peep beneath the curtain of the bonnet, and crimps shade the brow, who stops to notice that the nose is of the kind which dog fanciers think a fine point in a lap dog, but which human beings usually dislike in themselves. Envious women may and do wonder “How much of it is her own ?” and mar ried men may and do coolly condemn the folly that sacrifices future good for the sake of present prettiness ^ but young men admire with a tender faith that is touching, and the very women who make sarcastic comments imitate as far as they can. The crimps, the waves and friazes are not real as a rule, and hence the righteous wrath of the married 1b usually wasted, an 1 the cases of most women properly come under the juris diction of the censor who declare false hair immoral. The defense against this is that it deceives nobody, except fool- ish young persons, and that it is less in jurious to pin on an ounce of puffs and crimps than it is to braid, and curl and wave one’s own tresses. Ourly hair is almost invariably the material of these articles, although the princess braid is straight. This is a three-strand braid not too heavy to look natural, ends in three little soft curls, and may be arranged in an infinity of wayB. The braids of curly hair are so made that they can be fastened higher the head, and drop low at the neck, while they are fastened by a clasp of jet, Rhine crystal or gold or silver. The comb is very often only a comb in ap- pearance, being composed of a single row of balls, mounted on a hair pin, or a feather-shaped ornament, heading one long cutved tooth by which it can be thrust in anywhere, and made to l ave the appearance of doing au infinity of things. The hair is still w rn low on the fore head. and is usually parted, although some ladies prefer an unbroken array of frizzes, the Gracioza wave, which gives the effect o» waved locks, lying straight across the forehead, as if combed up from each Bide, or the “everlasting” wave, in which the hair is woven in scallops, and remains unchanged by any of the accidents that play havoc with scallops made from one’s own hair must be confessed that these are not very becoming, but they do not suggest gum arabic or sugar and water so forci bly as do scallops made from hair actu ally growing on the head. The “extrav aganza” curl, a heavy tress curled about half its length, is still worn, and is becoming if well adjusted. In frizzes the prettiest is what is called the wave epingle, which is light, has a transparent parting, and ends in small, natural-looking curls that do not straighten when wet, but curl all the tighter. The parting of these waves is woven of white hair, so as to show the skin of the head perfectly; and the naughty girl who has worn out her hair with hot slate pencils, and hairpins, and elastics, and similar applications, can cut it or have it shaved off if she choose, fill the space that it once occupied with the wave epingle, and learn wisdom while her own hair grows. THE LIGHTKEEPER'X DAUGHTER JGHTE Never • fairer maiden lived Than bonny, blue-eyed Alice; Her heir »ai like the daffodil*, Her brow like lily's chalice. Within the llghthouee, from a babe She'd dwelt and known no sadness, But sv’ry night'dreamed happy dream*, And woke each day to gladneea. And closely crowding round her home The eplrlU of the water, With many a shill end eea-plant rare And ocean-jewel sought her; For brighter far than ana or atar They held the keeper's daughter I But eelled a ahlpfrom foreign lands, And a handsome lover brought her; He came to see the lighthouse grim, And saw the keeper’s daughter I The eve the wedding-day was set Her father’s tecs waa clouded. And e’en the light that burned on high Seemed halt In darkness shrouded. And sad the wind moaned when the maid 01 her old Irlenda bethought her— And leaning upon the door, looked out Upon the moonlit water, Where whlspera low went to and fro Anent the keeper’s daughter. “Farewell 1" she cried; "when night is gone I shell no longer terry, But hie to town, at early morn, My own true love to marry And bending low, a klse she threw— "Good-by, my waves, forever,’• But eh 1 though passed the night away, Her wedding day came never— For from the flashing, silvered foam White arms reached up and caught her, And drew her down to dwell among The spirits of the water, They could not bear to pert with her, The keeper's blue-eyed daughter 1 — lMadge Elliott In Buldwln’s Monthly. Classically Drunk. Some Ancient Monsters. Professor Cope, of Philadelphia, who is spending his Bummer leisure in Cali fornia, gave the other day to the San Francisco academy a description of two fossil animals. One of theee was an enormous vertebrate somewhat resembl ing an aquatic kangaroo, whose neck was nine feet in diameter, whose hind legs were twenty feet long, whose spinal verttbi* were fifty-six inches across, and which must have been seventy-two feet long by measurements carefully taken. This animal could walk in forty feet of water and catch its prey with its fore paws. He described another simi lar monster found, whose spinal verte bras were six feet across and whose hind legs were forty feet long, with carnivor ous teeth placed in the upper and lower jaws like shears, so as to cut up animal food by traversing each other in the most perfect manner. The bones of the lower half of this animal were solid and very heavy, to keep its feet down in the water, while bones in the upper half of its body were built in honeycombed layers as thick as pasteboard, strong, but very light and buoyant In water. This monster must have been considera bly over 100 feet in length. Both ani mals have large And powerful tails like kangaroos, and when catching their food in the water must have appeared as if on three-legged stools, the tail acting as an equal support of the tripod. Providence (B. 1.) Journal. The lights were out, the streets were still, and all other presences were silent in the presence of the peaceful night. And at this time the soft hut slightly unsteady tread of a man waa heard ap proaching the station. He took a chair near the door, dangled his legs over the chair's arm, hung his peacked hat on the toe of his boot, and in a low voice ad- dreeed the officer: “I was here a year ago and listened to the song of your cricket under the mat there, and I want to hear it again. That cricket comes into my life exactly. He sings and all his green comrades sing of the dying summer. There are a million of these little mourners under the leaves to- night, and they all have one soDg of pen sive sadness. There is a cricket in my heart. There used to be summer there I am a sort of an old cricket myself. I •rawl into the natural formed grape grottoes on the highway and sing my ownsad song there. Speaking of cool, wild graperies reminds me that I am athirst. Say, Sergeant, can’t you send a sleuth messenger to the Club of the Purple Cluster and tell the vinous triumvirate that are crowning their chaste and marvelous brows with beautiful chaplets to send me, not an old Roman punch even, nor a Grecian amaranthe julep, but a tod, a mere modern tod. Tell them I am al ways with them, and I often commune, when on my promiscuous pilgrimage i with their disembottled—pardon me, I mean disembodied—spirits; I see their faces rapt and purpling with the blood of the broken-hearted grape of the Garter stream. But say, Sergeant, my blood is turning into the channels of melancholy. This must not he. Here are three coins. I put one into wine, and the world flushes up for me; a second coin, and I own that block there, I am mayor ot Pawtucket, “I walk on thrones;” a third, and I near raptuous music, I float on fair rivers, my old coat becomes as the garment of a great ruler; I put my warm heart against the cold marble of the world, and I warm it with its generous glow. The world is no longer a marble tomb to me. It opens, and enchanting forms come forth and eon brace me and bid. me go on. The gates of eternity open with a majestic welcome to the man who defies fortune and dares to grandly live it out.” “But those are not coins,” said the officer, “they are but tons.” “Well, buttons, so let them be— ah! that song again, the song of the cricket. Officer, let me sleep here under the magnetism o/ the mighty midnight heavens, and let the lady crickets sere nade me.” Conversion of Food Into Stiniu lants. There is hardly any article of food in general use which has not somewhere been converted into a stimulant by the process of fermentation. What else are whisky, rum, beer, etc., but fermented or distilled bread, the bread corn diverted from its legitimate use to produce an artificial stimulant? Potatoes, sugar, honey, as well as grapes, plums, apples, cherries, and innumerable other fruits, have thus been turned from a blessing iuto a curse. The Moors of Barbary and Tripoli distill an ardent spirit from the fruit of the date palm, the Brazilians from the marrow of the sago tree and from pineapples, and even the poor ber ries that manage to ripen on the banks of the Yukon have to furnish a poison for the inhabitants of Alaska. Pulque, the national drink of Mexico, is derived from a large variety of the aloe plant, the sap of which is collected and erment ed in buckskin and sloughs into a turbid yellowish liquor of most vicious taste. Cheese, in fact, is nothing but coagu lated milk in a more or less advanced state of decay. Sauerkraut is cabbage in the first stage of fermentation, which when completed yields quaes, the above mentioned Russian tonic. Cbica, a whitish liquid whfch in Peru is handed around like coffee after meals, is prepared from mafzs or Indian corn, moistened and fermented by mastication. It is stated that two men who have lived within three miles of each other in the scacoast town of Rye, N. H., for COMMUNITIES AND COLONIES. Scattered through thirteen States, branches of oight main bodies, are sev enty-two communities, whoso central idea is that of holding all things in oom- mon. They number some 6,000 persons, owning, perhaps, 180,000 acres of land and $12,000,000 of property. The Icari- ans are French; the Shakers and Per fectionists are Americans, although the former were organized by an English woman; the remainder are German. The Ebon-Ezers of Aurora call tliom- themselves “Inspiretiouista," thoir pres ent leader—a woman—claiming to speak by divine inspiration, and this claim runs back over a century with them in Germany, before they bocame oommnnal. The Separatists oamo from Wurtem- berg, under btress o! persecution on ao- count of their religions views. The Shakers, who are the oldest and most numerous of alll the groups, were organized by an Englishwoman named Ann Lee, who, while in prison for her religions manifestations in 1770, claimed to have had a special revela tion’ from God, and was dirootod to come to America. She arrived in New York, with eight others, in 1774, and lived in the woodB until 1780, when some unusually affected subjects of a revival in the neighborhood happened to wander to her. Her professions of snpernatuial, and even miraculous,-pow ers were kept up, aud she is still colled “Mother Ann ” by the Shakers, and ven erated by them as a sort of patron saint. The Shakers and the Rappists or Har monists are celibates, and it is an ex traordinary fact that the latter, after several years of communal life, and while many of them wore living in the marriage relation, doliberatoly aban doned it, a few who wore unwilling tc do so withdrawing. The Perfectionists at Oneida, in New York, aud Walling ford, Ct., have what they call a com plex marriage state, o~ery woman being considered os morrf&u to every man. They say that tliera is “no intrinsic difference between property in person and property in things,” hence their communion extends to themselves as well as to what they have acquired, and the relationship between the sexes is os free as consent can make it, except that any disposition to a permanent associ ation between the same two persons is repressed as being a manifestation of “selfishness.” The Communists upite provision for the wants of this life with peculiar re ligious notions which might bo called fanatical but that they are entirely free from a spirit of intolerance. Some are Spiritualists in the ordinary sense of that word; some look very soon for tho second coming of Christ and tho end of all things, while others believe the sec ond coming already past; thdy believe in a special nearness of God to them selves; they have thoir own hymns, lit eratnre and observance, and seem to be moved by a desire to separate themselves from the world. The Perfectionists profess to aim at complete siulessness, and some individuals among them even claim to have attained it. All the Com munists are good citizens. They break no laws; they add nothing to the public charge on aoconnt of pauperism and vice; they are all non-combatants, and do not even attempt among themselves anything beyond moral suasion, but al low those to withdraw who become in subordinate. They have neither defal cations nor breaohes of trust, and their honesty in all commercial dealings is os proverbial as their shrewdness. The morality of their life is unimpeachable. This must be admitted of even the Oneida body, with the exception of their peculiar institution, which is worso than the Mormon practice in its demoralizing inflnenoe, and justifies the present agi tation against them in the central port of that State. The Oneida people are manufacturers mainly, agriculturists incidentally; the rest are agriculturists mainly. AU have shown au extraordinary aptitude for in vention and for economizing labor. The Shakers, who are particularly weU- known by reason of their numbers and their many colonies, have a large vari ety of trades, and tlio work of all com- munistio societies has an established reputation for both uniform exceUence of quality and honesty of quantity. The Icarians, in Iowa, were led. by a Frenchman, who spent sixteen years in trying to realize a pretty dream of what he could do in founding a society if he had half a million of money; so his fol lowers began with 4,000 acres of land and $20,000 of debt. To escape from the latter they finaUy surrendered the former, and, after hard work and bitter economy, were able to redeem 1,936 acres of it; they are now independent but reduced iu numbers. The Bishop HiU colony, in Hlinois, once having 800 members and some $800,000 of property, was broken np by inefficient leadership and the trouble of debt, and their town is faUing into decay. But the societies generaUyhave rigidly adhered to the rule of having no debts and getting property only as they earn it. None of the communes are rich in tho ordinary sense of the word, and they do not try to be. Wisconsin’s Pioneer Female Lawyer! Lavinia GoodseU, who has attracted a good deal of attention in 'Wisconsin by drawing up a biU to the State Legis lature providing that no person should be refused admission to the bar on ac count of sex, aud securing its passage, seems to be possessed of nnusual ener gy and of decided talent for law. She owes her sueoess and reputation entire ly to her own unaided exertion. Some time ago she was employed here on a fashion journal, but, conceiving that she could do something better, she re- X ed her position and went to Janos- 1, Wis., where her aged parents re sided and needed her assistance. Ar rived there, she determined that she would not settle down to washing dishes and making over-gowns, as most women do. She had long had a fancy for law, and had convinced herself that she possessed a business head. There fore she began to study law, kept at it for three years, applied for admission to the Oirouit Court, passed a brilliant ex amination and was admitted. She gained her first eases, and, one of them having been oarriod to the Supreme Court, her right to plead there was de nied on account of her sex. She re viewed the Supreme Judge’s decision in a legal journal and got the better of him in argument, and then went to work upon the Legislature, with the result already known. Some of the ablest lawyers in the State admire her acumen and learning, and deolare her to be a bom barrister. She is repre sented as entirely feminine, notwith standing her profession, and one of the best of women in all the duties of life. New York paper. Westward the star of cheese-making takes its whey. A Bad Bond. GolleyBond eloped with a neighbor’s daughter in Bartlett, Tenn. Her father S ursued them on horseback, and, as ley traveled in a heavy carriage, soon overtook them. Bond refused to givo up his bride, and, when the old man tned to take her by force shot him through the heart. Then he mounted the dead man’s horse, seated the girl behind him, and fled; but she insisted on returning to whore her father’s body lay, and he permitted her to do so, him self escaping to Texas. Ho was subse quently captnrod, but the tragical end of the elopomout had orazod him, and he goes to an insane asylum instead of to triaL labdalni nad Avoiding Fever and Asae. Of all ohronio diseases, fever and ague is perhaps the least conquerable by the ordi nary resources of medicine. There Is, how ever, a remedy whioh completely roots it out of the system in any and all of its various phases. This celebrated antiperiodio is veg etable in composition, and is not only effica cious, but perfectly safe, a thing that can not be predicated with truth of quinine. HoBtet- ters Stomach Bitters is, besides, a most effi cient means of defense against malaria, as it endows the physique with au amount of stam ina whioh enables it to encounter miasmatio influences without prejudice to health. Per sons about to visit, or living in foreign coun tries, or portions of our own where intermit tent or remittent fevers prevail, should not omit to lay in a sufficient supply of the great Preventative, both to avert such diseases and disorders of the stomach, bowels and liver common to such localities. An Important Uroluiln Geology has shown us that nature accom plishes her greatest revolutions in the earth 1 surface conformation slowly. Every year the river makes its channel deeper, the glaoier wears a deeper gorge in the Alpine rook, and the ooean tide deposits the sand it has crum bled from the rooks upon whioh it breaks. We note the earthquake and the devastating hurricane; but these changes are Bt gradual man seldom observes them until the channel has become overhanging cliffs, or a mountain has disappeared before the icy stream, or the ooean has given us a Florida. Thus it is in disease. Our attention is attraoted by aoute diseases, as fevers, cholera, etc.,while chronio diseases (often the most dangerous in result), being slow in their development, ere seldom noticed until they have made an almost in effaceable impression upon the system. Per sons believing themselves comparatively healthful are ofttimes the victims of these . tv beco presence when relief is Diseases of the liver and stomach commonest of these chronic affections. Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery and Pleasant Purgative Pellets are never-failing remedies fomthese diseases. They produce a healthful secretion of the bile, prevent in digestion by regulating the bowelB, and i: part a vigorous tone to the whole Bystem. That Quinine will cure Chills and Fever is well known. But it is strange that the other febrifuge principles contained in Peruvian powerful than Quinine, and .. any annoying head symptoms like bussing in the ears. This fact is proved by Dr. F. Wilhoft's Anti-Periodic or Fever and Ague Tonic, whioh is a preparation of Peruvian bark { without quinine, according to the declaration of its proprietors, Wheel- ook, Finlay A Co., of New Orleans. put in order with Dr. Mott’s Vegetable Liver Pills, a supremely effective and safe alterative, cathartic and blood depurent, which promotes thorough bilious secretion, a regular habit of body, sound digestion and nervons tranquility. It is the best possible substitute for that terrible drug, marenry. For sale by all druggists. Pablio speakers and singers will find “Brown’s Bronchial Troches” benefioial in clearing the voice before speaking or singing and relieving the throat after any exertion of the vocal organs, For coughs and colds the Troches are effectual. 25 cents a box. The Mason & Hamlin Organ Co. are pro ducing superb instruments at very low prices; not much more than prices of poorest organs. Highest honors at every world’s exhibition for many years, and two highest awards at the last and greatest at Paris this year tell the story of their superiority. Crooked boots and shoes can be made straight as new ones with Lyon’s Patent Heel Stiffeners. Sold by shoe and hardware dealers Chbw Jaokson’s Best Hweet Navy Tobaooo 13300ft I5to|aog» -Choicest in the world—Importers' prices -i nrgest Company in America—staplo ar< Iclo—pleases everybody—Tra-io coutlnu- aH^bioteastog—Agentstwanted everywhere—bosl R U B’TW K L L8°43 Vo ?e y °s t, ."n . V 6 . n p!o r . b””-—' AGENTS ggjgys. “«« BUFFALO „ BILL.’ Fit A Si K B. BMW, The Weekly Sun. s ^ ° a ° 1 ° d "•*' “»»* FOR HALF A DOLLAR Address -TBK SUN. N. Y. City s Catabllskied 1*6.3. Pensions THE SIMGIN8 CLASS SEASON JUST CUT. | nc ■ W* uoeeu. Book, i-nuai to any of tin- largeet ones. As a Bing- lng school Bonk, botter than the clioaper and smaller ones, since it lias much more jnudo; that Is, 1!« pages of new Songs and Oloee, and 150 pages of >•: Metrical Tm $777LrA7f^TCY l .'i?.:CTa..?-".if: llom' inlifr also THE VOICE Of WOUHIlll*P9.no per doaon. recently advertised; JORNhON’8 kKW M r.THOD for flinging Claeses, au excellent book, •6.00 per doaon, and L. O. Emerson’s OR WARD, •7.60 j*r dozen. Send f r specimens, catalogue or JUST OUT. STtDWTS' LIFE *" Pl.M, with Introduction by Chaulxs Duntav Warn- NBB. lift or tho iolllost of college songs. A capital hook for social singing. OfT^TA Month and expenses guaranteed in UP # • agents. Ontfltfree. 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CELEBRATED SALVE A SURE RELIEF FOR THE SUFFERER. A Vegetable Preparation, Invented In tho i?th century by Dr. William Groce. Surgeon in King James’army. Through its agency hr 9 and woundB that iddress with stamp, UEOKGE K. LEMON, I®.Washi- glow. IS. C. TEASSsiss ■ m m porters ft Half th- asnal oost. Best plan over offered to Ciiib Asent- and large buyers. ALL EXPRESS CHARGE!- PAID. Now terms FREE. 81 aud 88 Ves«y fttreet. New York. P. v. Box MSS. CURES WOITKDS, FROZEN LIMIW, SALT RHEUM, C ■AI.lkJdKS. 'scald heads, chati-ed CANCER* SCALDS, R UR NS, CANCERS, ADI’ESS, PRICE £i CENTS A BY MAIL 33 CENTS. Three dozen Boxen (1-1 gross), will be sent TO PEDDLERM, .STOREKEEPERS, DRUGGIST* (cxprcMsage paid), on receipt of 84.00—about cloven cents a box. BOSTON, MASS. YOUNG MEN .’sniSlTBU*: sUnsttomAd 3ron^?^enHnAVao*JaB|esyt^e^s Dlu S.M.8peaosr. Ill Waah’nst.,Boev>n.Mass. •2.500 A YKIR V.iSJfiT.’JS A"i!S — * agents, Over 200 agonts are now making — 1 - sijd Siam p_ tor pat^cnUrs. k, Mfl'ton. 8 Nortlmmbcrland AGENTS. READ THIS :;rr:r, 61050 E$i“— Slot »roportlonal returns everyjsreok on stock of liens of Hh — ••• '^potteHwioIi isssiis Nl W °|AfvmtlM^^^erics^tov^jsr^-- tta.lOO wa«f> Ps* i Sr. Ifatobiifi I Uterine t OATBOLIWH positively cuTo Fem&lc Weakness, such as Fall* f tho Womb, Whites, Chronio Inflammation or •ration of tho Womb, Incidental Hemorrhage or Hllng, Painful, Suppressed and Irregulnr M-»ns- itlon, &o. An old and reliable remedy. Send j>os- •nrd for a pamphlet, with treatment, cureslnd ideates from physicians and patients, to How i & lialinni, Utica, N. Y. Sold by all Druggists— WARNER ( Mgt *°P A RI»'^X POHIT1 ON. rnrMUrl/falll'sdRift tr.erch«nU. WABWKB BROS.. «fl» ErnniwsT. N. T - P AGLNTS WAimJ FOR I HE ICTORIAL HISTORYoftiieWCKM *» It contains 678 (Ins historical engravings qpd 1800 large double column pages, and is the nff j* complete History or the World ever published. It sells at sight. Send for specimen pages and extra '.terms to agents, and see why It sells faster than any other book. Address NATIONAL PUBLISHING 00., S’. Louis, Mo UmOH ft HAMLIN CABINET ABHANS. WONL^^XPO.nl'ffoNSfolTWELtfi'tliA® viz: at Paris, 18T.7? Vienna, :&73| Bamtiaso. Itlfl: Pint adelpiiia, 1870; Paris, 1878s and Grams 8we»- or installments. lUuftriUtd Catalog*** and Circulars A PRINTING-PRESS GIVEN AWAY RfcStttiDS SI.23. 01.50 Take no ot WOOLBIOn St CO. on o i MILITARY I Firemtn’i Caps. Belis, end 8hirfg. STww'SSSHS MAh I THINK e cured by HUNT’ Thore Is no core Ibr Bright’s Disease of the Kidneys or BUd- der and Urinary Complaints. They are in error. HUNT** REMEDY cares these diseases General Debility, Diabetes. Painsin the ligek, Loins or Sldo, Dropsy. G.avel. Disslpatlcn, and all diseases of the Kidneys. Bladder r * ld«r and Urinary Organs UKMfeDY. Family pbysl- r’l REMEDY. Send for rescribe RUNT ° WM. K. CLARKE. Providence K. I. F CURED FREET An infallible and nnexcelled remedy for Fits. I Toasts it me his Psst-cfflcsand Express address. DR. H. <5. ROOT, 'WPwJVk * RAPONIFIER Is the Old BeUnble Concentrated Lye FOR FAMILY SOAP MAKING. Directions accompanying each can for making Hard, Soft, and Toilet Soup quickly- IT IS FULL WEIGHT AUD STRENGTH. flooded with (iKpcalled) " ' ruted with : l Lye, whlcb 1b SAVE HUNKY, AND BUY THE SaponifieR .Organ <HET ! BEST! U«ufactorygRjiJTLEBORC.yT PDBUBBEBB UNION. AT aiftD, Langell’s Asjhmu Catarrh Remedy; * l ™«6icd twenty yc»r. between life and death with ASTltXA or PHTHISIC, -T. ,re, ‘y d J* ,h0 . mo “ * m l ncnt Phyileion* with mu receiving any benefit, f ~.m~;iVLv. °i. M “"**• r‘ experimcnton mvaelf. I had bccume ao bad that I was weroao Intel * th {"^ .chair day and nlsht, (training for my breath. My lufTerlrgs p | “3«r^l*^^y^^aureeurefOTjSHl5AlS'M^^^ ,, "^ , off« 0 ^allam“S^ guarantee I pnpoao to anv^iann^iuully'aMl’ocf.Tnc'r'uilng'on^thlnl (bVeontonla of a package, (In either ASTHMA or t'ATAURII) to return the remaining two-third* to tho •nd you one tr/al package o/tSarSZ’ 8hou^youVdnjj|gLi ^faff to "keep t'hla micdy, I have aiJargo^iuppl^on,nSeipt°f < ^ rou ^ on> . •LOO ger Package. ••r g B. D- BKDWKI.L, ftA-oVLasoau., Dear * Address Orders to D. LAN GEL L, {3TMd'I^AnYw'Uoi£" Offices, N^Yur’i.