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MARBLE MARBLE
A. R. ROBERTSON,
DEALER IN
HONDHEHTS, H&BBLE & GRANITE BOX TOMBS
HEAD AND FOOT STONES.
Cradle Tombs and Slabs of all Sizes. Specimens of work on hand and ready lor lettering.
A R. ROBERTSON, Athens, Ca.
PROFESSIONAL & BUSINESS CARDS.
|}R. N. B. CASH,
NICHOLSON, GA.,
Tenders his prolessional servioee to the sur
• ounding country. Rheumatism, Neuralgia,
and the Diseases of Women a specialty.
February 13, 1880.
C. HOWARD,
ATTORNEY AND COUNSELOR AT LAW,
Jefferson, Ga.,
Will attend faithfully to all business entrusted
to his care. Office—Colonel Thurmond’s old
office, near Randolph's corner.
h. simpkins,
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
lUrmont Grovk, Jackson County, Ga.
Faithful attention given to collections and all
other business. Clients’ money never spent,
but promptly lor warded.
January 5, 1878.
jjR. W. S. ALEXANDER,
SURGEON DENTIST,
Harmony Grove, Jackson County, Ga.,
Will be at Jefferson on the first Monday and
Tuesday in each month, and will continue his
stay from time to time as circumstances may
Justify. Terms low, lor cash, and work done
in a superior manner.
July 10, 1875.
Bl
SURE CURE
FOR
Coughs, Colds, Sore Throat, Bron
chitis, Asthma, Consumption,
Aud All Diseases or THROAT and LVXG9,
Put up In Quart-Size Bottles for Family Use.
Sciontifloslly prepared of Balsam Tolu, Crystallized
Rock Candy, Ola Rye, and other tonics. The Formula
Is known to our t est physicians, is highly commonded
by them, and the analysis of our most prominent
Shemist, Prof. G. A. MARINER, in Chicago, is on tbs
label of every bottle. It is well known to tho medical
profession that TOLU ROCK and RYE will afford the
greatest relief for Coughs, Colds. Influenza, Bronchitis,
Sore Throat, Weak Lungs, also Consumption, in the in
eipient and advanced stages.
Used as a BEVERAGE and APPETIZER, it makes a
delightful tonic for family use. Is pleasant to take; if
weak or debilitated, it gives tone, activity and strength
to the whole human frame.
(CAITTiniVr DON’T BE DECEIVEG\
'-''XX fU A -I V’i' • by unprincipled deal- \
ers who try to palm oh upon you Rock and Rye in ■
place of our TOLU ROOK AND RYK. which Is I
the only medicated article made, thn genuine hav- M
ing a GOVERNMENT STAMP on each bottle./
LAWRENCE * MARTIN, Proprietors,
111 Madison Street, Chicago.
*+> Ask yonr Druggist for- it!
Af,K your Grocer for It!
IjV Ask your Wine Merchant for It!
IVChildren, ask your Uammn for It!
tirSnld by BRCGGiSTS, GROCERS and
WINE MERCHANTS everywhere.
FARM, WARDEN AND HOUSEHOLD.
Mixed F ed Best for Animals.
No animals do well for any great
length of time on any one article for food.
The natural condition of all our domes
ticated animals is to roam at large and
make their own selections from the
abundant varieties which nature has
provided. We frequently speak and
write of the excellent feeding qualities
of one or another variety of fodder, but
in the experience of feeding it will be
found that in the first change from one
kind to another wo have an increase of
milk, although the change may not al
ways be in favor of the most nutrition.
Anew variety tempts the appetite, and
the extra quantity which the animal
consumes will more than compensate
for its less nutritious character. It is
generally said for a horse that is work
ing in heavy teams corn is preferable to
oats, but for the driving or riding horse
oats are better than coin. With this
statement we disagree and prefer a mix
ture. Oats produce more muscle, corn
more fat. A horse fed on oats is
quicker in its motions and more restive
but fed on corn is steadier and more en
during, hence the benefit ot mixed feed.
Nowhere is the advantage of a mixed
feed more apparent than in milch cows,
for, milk being a product that requires a
fair proportion of all the elements re
quired for the production of an animal,
it is evident that all the elements will be
necessary for making milk. But some
times we make a special effort to pro
duce an extra amount of butter; then we
must feed an extra amount of food which
contains an excess of oil or fat. We
find if we are feeding the best of hay,
if we add a little meal we do not increase
the quantity of milk so much as the
quantity of butter. The German chem
ists have for some time been teaching U3
that to obtain the best results in feed
ing we must have the supply of carbo
dydra’es (fat and heat producers) and
albuminoids (flesh producers) so evenly
balanced lhat on 3 shall consume the
other in the animal economy, though
this cannot always be practicable on ac
count of the different conditions of the
animals. One that is being fattened
will consume a larger portion of carbo
hydrates than of albuminoids, and the
latter will be lound making richer the
manure pile, although food is furnished
largely in excess of fat-producing ma
terial. In growing animals flesh and
bone producers should be in the ascend
ancy, and in milch ccws, as already
stated, the eleaxents should be well
balanced. The evidence that no one
production of nature is all that is re
qnired in the animal economy is fur
nished in the fact that no one produc
tion is adapted to all the requirements
of the animals or all that is required
from the animal.
No person has any higher apprecia
tion of rye and corn fodder than the
experienced feeder. Yet we do not
think that these ted alone are equal to a
mixture. Rye is valuable because it
comes when it is desirable for the cows
to have a change; but there is a won
derful difference between the addition of
a few quarts of brewers’ grains and a
quart of bran, mixed, and a pint of
meal, in the production of milk. We are
compelled to feed rye alone because no
other forage crop is available, or we
would not do it. If we could have a mix
ture of barley, oats, and clover with the
rye, we shoild have a superior fodder.
Pasture gras?,or rather grasses,excel,ton
for ton, either rye, barley, oats, clover,
corn fodder, or any like crops, because
pastures yield a combination of grasses,
all varying in their composition and in
their time of maturing; but the differ
ence is this, that we can obtain a ton of
any of the fodder crops from less than
one-tenth of the ground required for the
pasture grasses. Still, it is undesirable
to feed any one forage crop when we
could feed three or four mixed, or alter
nately. A mixture of grasses make a
more profitable hay than any one kiDd.
Clover and peas are good to alternate
with corn fodder. Clover, which is
rich in albuminoids, will produce a
large quantity of milk. Sweet corn fod
der is rich in sugar, starch, and fat, and
will add to the milk the butter and sugar
elements, and so on. But we have said
enough to illustrate our position as to
mixed feed being b33t for animals. —
American Cultivator.
Recipes.
Milk-Yeast Bread.— Take one cup
ful of milk, add hot water to warm the
milk; mix sifted flour to make a thin
sponge; let stand over night in a warm
place; in the morning add one half cup
ful of butter, and flour to sufficiently
stiffen for bread, kneading thoroughly;
fill pans half full, and in a warm place
allow the loaves to rise to the top of the
pans; bake in a steady oven, not too hot,
one hour.
German Flummery. —Half pint o
milk, two ounces corn starch, two of
sugar; boil until moderately thick.
Flavor with lemon or vanilla; beat the
whites of four eggs to a snow, stir in
lightly, turn the whole into a jelly mold
(any dish will answer) that has not
been wet with milk; let it get coot and
firm; serve with any fruit syrup, boiled
us tardor whipped cream.
A Nice and Simple Dessert.— Take
half a pint of rice, which must be put into
a little cold water and boiled until
nearly soft; now pour into it a pint of
rich milk and boil ggain, stirring it al
the time; sweeten with half a pound of
sugar, and season with a little rose-water
to your taste. Dip blanc-mange molds
in cold water, and fill with the rice,
which should be cooked to the consist
ency of stiff mush. It will harden in a
short while, and turn out prettily upon
a flat dish. Eat with preserves and
cream, cream, sugar, and nutmeg, or
syllabub; custard even may be used for
variety’s sake.
Preserving Batter Fresh.
A discovery is announced which
brings anew element into the calcula
tion of the future of the trade in butter.
On July 21, of last year, Mr. G. M.
Allendcr, the managing director of the
Aylesbury Dairy company, put a churn
ing of butter to the test, treating it in
accordance with anew patent brought
before him. The butter, in a muslin
cloth, was placed in a firkin without
particle of salt, and every precaution
taken to insure that there could be no
tampering with the experiment. The
firkin remained on the premises at St.
Petersburg place, Bayswater, for three
months, and when examined on Octo
ber 24 it was as sound and sweet as
when first put in. Pra dically this buttor
was exposed to the atmosphere during
the whole time, seeing that air found free
admittance into the firkin. Withou
treatment the butter would have gon
completely putrid; but on smelling and
tasting it on Friday it was found per
fectly sweet, firm and so excellent in
flavor that it was as if only made the
day before. Experts in the business,
both ia this country and in Ireland,
have had samples, and pronounce, so
says the Times, the preservation won
derful; the only difference they find be
ing that newly-made butter (and this
first rate of its kind) has a peculiar
aroma not quite equaled in the pre
served butter; while the latter is con
sidered a little “dead,” so that just a
trace of salt in it would be an improve
ment. Ig is not possible to estimate the
gain of being able to displace from our
tables and from our cookeries the ob
jectionable salt butter, the change be
ing especially grateful to voyagers on
shipboard, and to countries such as Bra
zil, which import the whole of their
butter. One great feature of the trade
in future will be the purchase and stor
age of butter in summer when prices are
low, for sale in winter, when prices
rule higher—with considerable effect to
ward equalizing the two seasoned prices
Ito consumers. —lrish farmer's Gazette.
Werds of Wisdom,
Everyman is bound to tolerate the act
of which he himself sets the example.
Is beauty vain because it will fade?
Then are earth’s green robe and heaven’s
light vain.
It ever is the marked propensity of
reckless and aspiring minds to look into
the stretch of dark futurity.
There are peculiar ways in men
which discover what they are through
the most subtle feints and close dis
guises.
None are so seldom found alone and
are so soon tired of their own company
as those coxcombs who are on the best
terms with themselves.
Hints for Hot Weather.
The following directions have been is
sued by the New York board of health,
but may prove useful in any locality:
nursing of infants.
Over-feeding does more harm than
anything else; nurse an infant a month
or two old every two or three hours.
Nurse an infant of six months and over
five times in twenty-four hours, and
no more.
If an infant is thirsty give it pure
water, or barley water; no sugar.
On the hottest days a few drops of
whisky may be added to either water or
food; the whisky not to exceed a tea
spoonful in twenty-four hours.
FEEDING OF INFANTS.
Boil a teaspoonful of powdered barley
(ground in a coffee grinder) and a gill of
water, with a little salt, for fifteen min
utes; strain- Then mix it with half as
much boiled milk; add a lump of white
sugar the size of a walnut, and give it
lukewarm from a nursing bottle. Keep
the bottle and mouthpiece in a bowl of
water when not in use. A little soda
may be added.
For infants five or six months old give
half barley water and half boiled milk,
with salt, and a lump of sugar.
For older infants give more milk than
barley water.
For infants very costive give oatmeal
instead of barley. Cook and strain as
before.
When your breast milk is only half
enough change off between breast, milk
and this prepared food.
In hot weather, if blue litmus paper
applied to the food turns re I the food i3
too acid, and you must make a fresh
mess or add a small pinch of baking
soda.
Infants of six months may have beet
tea or beef soup once a day, by itself or
mixed with other food; and, when ten
or twelve months old, a crust of bread
or a piece of rare beef to suck.
No child under two years ought to eat
at your table.
Give no candies; in fact, give nothing
that is not contained in these rules
without a doctor’s orders.
SUMMER COMPLAINT.
It comes from over feeding and hot and
foul air. Keep doors and windows
open.
Wash your well children with cold
water twice a day, and oftener in the
hot season.
Never neglect looseness of the bowels
in an infant; consult the family or dis
pensary physician at once, and he will
give you rules about what it should take
and how it should be nursed. Keep
your rooms as cool as possible, have
them well ventilated, and do not allow
any bad smell to come from sinks,
privies, garbage boxes or gutters about
the house where you live. See that
your own apartments are right, and
complain to the board of Jiealth if the
neighborhood is offensive. When an
infant is cross and irritable in the hot
weather a trip on the water will do it a
great deal of good (ferryboat or steam
boat), and may prevent cholera infan
tum.
The Lightning Flash.
The sr.me stroke of lightning that
killed Mrs. George Williams, of Wil
liam 3town, Va., burned up two barns
with a large flock cl turkeys and a lot of
swine.
Iu King George county, Va., William
Scott, aged twenty-one years, and Daniel
Scott, aged fifteen years, both colored,
were recently instantly killed by light
ning.
George Morris, of Old Freedom, Mo.,
was killed bv lightning while at work in
a wheat field.
Just after leaving the harvest field
near Dayton, Ohio, two boys named
Hovey and Smith were struck by light
ning and killed. They had taken shelter
under a tree.
While tying his horse to a telegraph
pole, in Carpe, Ontario, to seek shelter
from the rain, a boy named Sproule,
fourteen years of age, was struck by
lightning and instantly killed.
Albert Robley, of Carrollton, 111., was
almost home, but concluded to stop
under a tree near by until the shower
was over. A flash of lightning ended
his career a moment afterward.
When lightning visited Independence,
lowa, it struck a cow belonging to
Charles Leslie,which was standing near a
wire fence, killed her. then straddled the
wire, and followed it for half a mile,
splintering every post.
After a storm at Louisville, Ky., the
bodies of William Prinz, Alfred Jones
and John Ball, all colored farm hands
of E. G. Miners, were found in a field
near a tree under which they had sought
shelter, killed by lightning.
Th.e little son of A. G Christopher, of
Winchester, Ind., was instantly killed
by lightning while on the way out
of a harvest field, in company with his
father. The entire party received a
shock, but sustained no serious injury,
excepting the boy.
In Hartford county, Md., lightning
struck a large tree on the farm of Mrs.
McCormick and split it into kindling
vood. It knocked the child of Peter G.
Hermann, a near neighbor, out ot a
chair, and gave the mother a shock as
if from a giant galvanic battery, but no
one was killed.
Cooking by tlie Sun’s Bays.
In regard to the much talked of use
of solar heat for industrial purposes,
Mouehot gives an account of his addi
tional expex-imcnts in this direction, in
which he asserts that his smaller pieces
of cooking apparatus have never failed
to work during sunny weather. Some
mirrors of less than half a square meter,
constructed with all desirable perfec
tion have sufficed to roast half a kilo
gram—or about one pound—of beef in
twenty-two minutes, and to cook, in an
hour and a half, stews which required
four hours of an ordinary fire of wood;
and in half an hour to bring three
fourths of a liter of cold water to the
boiling poin\ which latter corresponds
to the utilization of 9.5 colories per
minute per square meter, which may
be considered a remarkable result in the
latitude of Paris.
Coffee as a Disinfectant.
The Foonah Observer , a paper pub
ished in India,states that recent experi
ments made in that country have proved
that roasted coffee is one of the most
powerful disinfectant?, not only render
ing animal and vegetable effluvia in
nocuous, but actually destroying them.
A room in which meat in an advanced
state of decomposition had been kept for
some time was instantly deprived of all
smell on an open coffee roaster being
carried through it containing a pound of
newly-roasted coffee. In another room
the effluvia occasioned by the clearing
out of a cesspool was completely re
moved within half a minute by the use
of three ounces of fresh coffee. The way
in which coffee is used as a disinfectant
is by drying the raw bean, then pound
ing it in a mortar, and afterward roast
ing the powder on a moderately-heated
iron plate until it assumes a dark hue.
The coffee must, however, be pure, as
chicory possesses no deodorizing power.
FOR THE FAIR SEX.
The Fan.
For what intrigues of love and flirta
tion is not the fan responsible? What
aid it has lent, not only to the courtly
dame who is at home in the science, who
neither opens nor closes her fan without
malice prepense, but to those untutored
souls whose blushes rise unbidden,
whose unschooled regards express joy
or regret too openly, who are only ap
prentices in the art of fascination! “For
the Spanish woman,” says someone,
“ all the maneurves of love are hidden
in the folds of her fan,” but it is not
necessary that wc should travel so far
to learn the craft; one might affirm that
Nature herself had instructed her child
ren in the manipulation of the fan, and
that a pretty woman who docs not know
how to wield it effectively would be no
less a miracle than “ red roses blooming
through the snow.” Indeed, all nations
and generations appear to acknowledge
the services of this little affair of the
toilet, which has descended to us from
the dusty antiquity of the East, and
have lavished upon it whatever richness
or skill they could command. It has
been carved, like lace-work, in ivory
mother-of-pearl, and the sweet-scented
woods of India; enriched with the
feathers of strange tropical birds—per
haps from the wings of the roc; the
most splendid stuffs of the looms, the
rarest cobwebs of the lace-workers, have
been pressed into its service; goldsmiths
have wasted their invention upon it,
and artists of renown have wrought
their dreams into its decorations; as far
back as sages sang or legends reach the
fan has done duty, no doubt; while
sculpture has not disdained to chisel it,
amidst other circumstances of kingly
pomp, in view of the fact, perhaps, that
it was once an attribute of the purple,
unshared by the vulgar. And what
pictures does|not conjure of all that is
gorgeous and barbaric ? —the flirt of a fan
invokes the ghost of the Assyrian mon
arch, with his women bearing great
feather plumes; the Grecian courtier
with his fanning slaves passes before
our mind’s eye; we see great Augustus
reposing in the shadow, cooled by at
tendants; the priests of the middle
ages guarding the sacred elements
with fans, and in fancy we catch the
melodious tinkle of their silver bells
echoing through the centuries. This
elegant trills was formerly as indispensa
ble to a lady’s costume as her gloves,
one variety doing duty in the drawing
room, another on the promenade; and
even in this utilitarian age we regard it
with favor, not only as a legacy of the
past which can call up visions, but as a
pretty trinket to keep idle hands from
mischief. — Harper's Bazar.
Fr.ahion Kotei.
Stomachers are superseding waist
cats.
Red cotton parasols are carried in
Paris.
Ice-wool shawls continue in favor this
season.
White lace is used to trim cream
colored gowns.
Pea spotted hosiery and gloves look as
if blistered.
Gold lace appears as a border on many
of toe new mantles.
Turbans, or something very like
them, are affected by many English
dowagers.
Turbans and bonnets in which gold
and bronzed straw is used grow in favor
steadily.
Long kid gloves may wrinkle, but
Lisle thread should fit almost as closely
as one’s skin.
The best Tuscan lace is made by hand,
but that which contains silk is woven
by machinery.
Several vests of different colors ar
worn under some of the Jerseys which
lace across the front.
Straw lace is not only used to trim
velvet bonnets, but is made into fans
which are lined with red silk.
Poppy colored veils will be pretty for
winter, if the fancy for them should last
until the cold weather.
Sashe3 of feather-edged ribbon are
especially pretty for white dresses trim
med with a great deal of lace.
Catherine de Medici's fashion of wear
ing a roll of wadding just above the top
of the sleeve has been adopted in Paris.
Vegetable gauzes in Madras gingham
patterns have been introduced in Paris.
They are expensive and will not bear
wetting.
The silk plaitings placed below the
hem of dresses should be about an inch
and a quarter deep, and the white frill
should fall below it.
Copper trimmings and fringes are
used on some buff mantles, and copper
is mixed with the cream-colored goods
that sometimes trims black gowns.
Oriental Physicians.
The Oriental physicians are the great
est quacks in the world. Take the fol
lowing specimen of their profoundity:
An emir, supposed to have the heredi
tary gift of healiDg, prescribed for a
patient, an upholsterer, lying at death’s
door with the typhus fever. The next
day he called to see his patient and
found, to his astonishment, for he had
given him up, that he was much better.
On inquiring into the particulars the
convalescent told the emir that, being
consumed with thirst, he had drank a
pailful of the juice of pickled cabbage!
“Allah is great!” cried the emir, and
down went the fact on his tablets.
The doctor was soon after called upon
to attend another patient, a dealer in
embroidered handkerchiefs, who was
ill of the same disease —typhus fever.
Of course he prescribed a pailful of
pickled cabbage juice. The next day
he heard that the sufferer was dead,
whereupon he made the following entry
upon his books:
“Although, in cases of typhus fever,
pickled cabbage juice is an efficient
remedy, it must in no case be used un
less the patient is an upholsterer.”
It was evident to the Eastern sage that
his patient died because it was his mis
fortune to deal in handkerchiefs instead
of sofa coverings.
—Prof. H. R. Palmer has recently re
ceived the degree of Doctor of Music
from the University of Chicago.
Not eo Basilj Fooled.
Chambers' Journal recalls an anecdote
which is related of a certain Edinburg
professor of natural history who was
engaged in delivering a course of lec
turers on geology, but which had a re
sult different from what was anticipated.
One day a chosen band of his students
acquired possession of a brickbat,
which they painted a variety of specious
hues, and placed among the other fos
sils and rocks on which their master
was to discourse. The professor illus
trated his lectUTe by reference to the
specimens before him on the table, say
ing, for example, as he went on, “This
is a piece of volcanic trap-rock, or
“ This is a piece of granite.” At length
he came to the mysterious stranger with
the gaudy livery, and after taking it up
in his hands and examining it atten
tively for a few moments, he proceeded:
“ And gentlemen, this is, I am sorry to
say, a piece of foolishness.”
A similar story is told of an American
prof* ssor whose specialty was entomol
ogy. Some of his students, wishing to
test his knowledge, prepared a hug with
great care, making it up of the wings,
legs, etc., of the different insects. Carry
ing it to the professor they said: “ Pro
fessor, here is a strange specimen that
we have found. Can you classify itr”
The professor studied it a few moments
and then said, quietly: “Gentlemen
this is a hum-bug.”
The invalid’s hope and strength beyond all
ot' er remedies is Malt Bitters.
Experiment has shown that if 50,000
pounds, once applied, will just break a
bar of iron or steel, a stress very much
less than 50,000 pounds will break it if
repeated sufficiently often. Wrought
iron will crystallize and break easier
than cast iron. It is well known that
wrought iron, subjected to continuous
vibration, assumes a crystalline struc
ture, and its cohesive power is much
deteriorated thereby.
Fickle In appetite, irresolute in mind, and
subject to melancholy, try Malt Bitters.
It is claimed that anew Swedish gun
(adopted by the Swedish navy) is even
more deadly than the Gatling. It can
be carried up into the maintop if neces
sary.
For all the ailments of small children there
is no better remedy than Dr. Bull’s
Syrup All Druggists sell it. Price only 25
cents.
The New Haven police quickly que.lcd
a street fight by throwing water on the
combatants with a fire engine.
Dr C. E. Shoemaker, the well-known aural
surgeon of Heading, Pa., off. rs to send by mail,
Sue of charge,a valuable lilile book on deafness
and diseases of the ear—specially on running
,-ar and catarrh, and their proper treatment
giving leit re-.ccs a.ul testimonials t iut will
satisfy the most eke, tical. Address as abovo.
Arc Vou am in l.ood Health 1
It the Liver i- the source ot your trouble,
vou can fir, in remedy in Dr. Sjlh
foud’s Liver In vibrator, the only vegeta
ble eaihaitic which *• t* directly on the Liver.
0; re“ ail B : hoas dia-ases. For Book address
Dii 'i afford, lfi‘2 Broadway, New York.
Vegetine is not a stimulating bitters which
creates a fictitious appetite, but a gentle tonic
which assists nature to restore the stomach
to a healthy action.
The Voltaic Kelt Cos.. Marshall, .Mich..
Will send their Electro-Voltaic B Its to th
afflicted upon S’ 1 da\s’trial. Sec their adver
tisement in this paper headed, “On •‘JO Days
Trial.”
Prevent crooked boots and blistered heels
by wearing Lyon’s Patent Heel Stiffeners.
Daualifers. Wives and Mothers.
Dr. MARCH ISl'3 UTERINE CATHOLICON will
tlvely cure Female Weakness, such as Falling ot the
Wotnb, Whites. Chronic Inflammation or Ulceration of
the Womb, Incidental Hemorrhage or Flooding, Painful,
Suppressed an.l Irregular Menshuation, fcc. An old and
reliable remedy. Send postal card for a pamphlet, wiU
treatment, cures and certificates from physicians am!
patients, to IJOWARTH A KALLARD Lnca. N. Y
Sold hr ah Druggist— sl V>nw < ,t tJ
THE MARKETS.
NEW YORK
Beei Cattle—Med. Natives, live wt.. 08#<4 10
Calves—Common to Extra State 04#(4 06
Sheep 03#(4 05#
Lambs 05 (4 07
Eoga—Live...... 04#(4 05#
Dressed 06#(4 (6#
Floar—Ex. State, good to fancy 4 05 (4 009
Western, good to fancy 4 t-0 <4 723
Wheat—No. 2 Bed 1 15#4 1 j 6
No. 1 White 1 18 @ 1 18
Rye—State 86 <4 88
Barley—Two-ltowed State 63 (4 65
Corn —Ungraded Western Mixed 45 <4 49#
Southern Ye110w............. 68 (4 68
Oats—White State..... 47 (4 47
Mixed Western*, 33 (4 36
Hay—Retail grades 95 <4105
Straw—Long Rye, per cwt..... 1 15 @ 1 15
Hops—State, 1879 25 <4 34
Pork —Mesa, new 13 55 @l3 75
Lard—City Steam. 7 10 <4 7 10
Petroleum—Crude ....... 07#(g07# Refined 10#
Butter—State Creamery 16 (4 22
Diary 17 (4 19
Western Imitation Creamery 12 C 4 17
Fact0ry............. 12 (4 16
Cheese—State Factory 07 <a 1)
Skims (4 (4 65
Westeru 06 (4 08#
Eggs—State and Penn 15#(4 36
Potatoes, Early Bose, State, bbl old 60 <4 62
BUFFALO.
Flour —City Ground, No. 1 Spring.. 6 50 (4 6 00
Wheat—No. 1 Hard Duluth *, 110 @ll2
Com—No, 2 Western 44#<4 44#
Oats—State 41 (4 42
Barley—Two-rowed State...... 65 <4 70
BOSTON.
Beef Cattle—Live weight.... 05 (4 (5#
Sheep 05 (4 05#
Hogs 05# <4 05#
Flour —Wisconsin and Minn. Pat.... 650 (4 6 50
Corn—Mixed and Fe110w...... t3 (4 66
Oats—Extra White 41 <4 45#
Bye—State 100 <4 1 00
Wool—Washed Combing & Delaine.. 46 <4 47#
Unwashed. “ “ 35 (4 36
WATERTOWN (MASS ) CATTLE MARKET
Beef Cattle—live weight 01#<4 06#
Sheep 04# (4 04#
Lambs 0 #@ 06#
Hogs 05 #9 05#
PHILADELPHIA.
Flour—Penn, good and fancy 5 25 @6 00
Wheat—No. 2—Red 1 14#<4 1 15
Rye—State 80 <4 80
Corn—State Ye110w.... 50 (4 52
Oats—Mixed Is#<4 36#
putter—Creamery extra..... 25 <4 26
Cheese —New York Full Cream t9#<4 09#
petroleum—Crude 06# (407# Refined 09#
OAOO
•' • - . -i .• *
■ • ' ' • • - " ■■ •
V W
i A. ii .A
AA TTTTHKAH ! Hurrahl From Mexico to Maine,’
JZL the Great Campaign Song. Price, 35c„ mailed
by music dealers, or the Chicago Music Cos., Publishers.
||lf|P|| A MOUTH ! AGENTS WANTED!
% Jvfßgl 7.5 Best Selling Articles in the word; e
VW 4# sample/kee. Jtr Brqbsom, Detroit, Mich.
Yonng Men wanted for mercantile houses, hotels, res
taurant-, stores, seaside resorts and steamooats. Call or
address Manhattan Agency, 1440 Broadway, N. Y. City.
5 MILI.IOU Plants t Wi‘.l pack to reach you
fIADuAPF safely at Si..TO per 1.000. Also
vaD DaVIL Celery at x2.SU per 1,000. Cata
log ue^rM._lh_iVTll^ghas#_La_Pluine L LaciCa_Co IL Pa ; _
Try THE NEW YORK OBSERVER
® TRUTH & MJCHJvi
Mi • Of yo*T f,tt N v <m9 . I
bMKiorwjfe.iint.aisof p!*M
SSSssi
Vegetine
Purifies the Blood, Renovates and
Invigorates the Whole System.
ITS MEDICINAL PROPERTIES ARB
Alterative, Tonic, Solvent
and Diuretic.
Viomm Is made exclusively from the Juices of ctre
fully selected barks, roots and herbs, and so strongly con
centrated that tt will effectually eradicate from the system
every taint of Mcrofula, Scrofulous Ilwmor.
Tumors, Cancer, Cancerous Humor, Ery
sipelas, Salt Ilheum, Syphilitic Diseases.
Canker, Faintness at the Stomach, and all
diseases that arise from Impure blood. Sciatica,
Inflammatory and Chronic It lieu mat ism,
Neuralgia, Cent and Spinal Complaints, can
only be effectually cured through the blood.
For Ulcers and Eruptive Diseases of the
Skin, Pustules, Pimples, Blotches, noils.
Tetter, Scald Head and Ringworm, Vecetike
has never failed to eflect a permanent cure.
For Pains In the Rack, Kidney Com
plaints, Dropsy, Female Weakness, Leu
corrhoea, arising from Internal ulceration, and
uterine diseases and General Debility, Vecetik*
acts directly upon the causes of these complaints. It In
vigorates and strengthens the whole system, acts upon the
secretive organs, allays inflammation, cures ulceration and
regulates the bowels.
For Catarrh. Dyspepsia, Habitual Cos
tiveness, Palpitation of the Heart, Head
ache, Piles. Nervousness, and General
Prostration of the Nervous System, m
medicine has ever given such perfect satisfaction u the
Vegetine. It purifies the blood, cleanses all of thr
jrgans, and possesses a controlling power over the nervoui
system.
The remarkable cures effected by Tiotrnti hate
Induced many physicians and apothecaries whom we
know to prescribe and use It in their own families.
In tact, Vmetiki is the beet remedy yet discovered for
the above diseases, and la the only reliable BLOOD
PCRIFIEB yet placed before the public.
Ycge lne ig Sold by all Drags Ist g.
'MATnSITTERS'
TRADE MARK
MALT AND HOPS^
DYSPEPSIA is the prevailing malady of c villsed life.
It lies at thebott mof one half our nr sery. It is
the rock upon which ma-,y of our bu iness venturi s have
Iplit It con Is the min t, weakens the body ar,d preys
upon 111 vitality. Where shall we find relief from this
piorhid. melancholy m sery ? MALT RITTERS ! A Food
Medicine, builds up enfeebled digestion, regulates the
Dow of the gastric juices, dissolves and assimilates evety
article of di-1, an t cun s a thousand morbid forms as
sumed bv Dyspepsia. Prepare tby the MALT RITTERS
COMPANY. Said everywhere. MALT RITTERS COM
PANY, Rost n.Mass.
TT "fkTT Itching Humors, Scaly Krup-
Lf * 1 |\| tions. Scalp Affections, Sait
IV 5 1 Rheum. Psoriasis, Scald llea-l,
Ulcers and Sores inf sllibly cured
niQPAqcq bv the Ccticura Remedies,
LiIJLH jl j. which have performed miracles
of healing unp iralleled in medi
cal history. Send for Illustrate 1 Treat se, containing
testimonials from every p ,rt of the Union. Prepared by
Weeks & Potter, Chemists, Boston, Mass. Sold by Drug
gists.
*A MEDICINE WITHOUT A RIVAL.”
CURES WTIEN ALL OTHER MEDICINES FAIL,
ns it acts directly on tlie Kidneys, I,iter, and
Dowels, restoring thc-m at once to healthy action.
HUNT S REMEDY is a safe, sure and speedy cure,
and hundreds have testified to having been cured by it
when physicians and friends had given them tip to
die. Do not delay, try at once HUNT'S REMEDY.
Send for pamphlet to
IVM. K. CLARKE. Providence, It. I.
Prices, 75 cents and 51. 25. Large size tho
cheapest. Ask yotir druggist ft r HUNT’S REM
EDY. Take 110 other.
“BEATTY”
of Washington, new jersey,
SEIjXjS
14-Slop ORGANS
Stool, Book & Music, boxed A shipped only 5859 (1.
New Pianos SIOS to S> ,©'*<. Before you buy an In
strument be sure to see his Mid-summer offer illustrated,
free. Address DANIEL F. BEATTY, Washington, N. J.
Are sold by all Hardware and Harness Dealers. There
is no one owning a horse or mule but what will find in
this line of goods, something of great value, and es
pecially adapted to their wants. COVERT M’F’G CO.,
West Troy, N. Y., Sole Manufacturers.
This Ciaini-Douse EstablUhed 1803.
PENSIONS.
ffew Iziw. Thousands of Soldlen and heirs entitled.
Pensions date back to discharge or death. Time UsnftoA
Address, with stamp,
„ „ „ tiEOltttE E. EESfOUr,
P. Q. Drawer 32a, Waahtngtep. P. Q.
of X leeding
U B Blind, Itching, or Ulcerated
Piles that DelSing’s l’ilo
B Remedy fails tocure. Gives
S S immediate relief, cures cases
| B of long standing in 1 week,
3 tj and ordinary cases in 2 days.
miUIHJ CAUTION tv..”;:,;:;
wrapper has printed on it in black a I'ile of Bone* and
fir. J. P. Miller' signature, Phila. 81a bottle. Sold
by all druggists. Sent by mail by J. P. Miller, M. D„
t'mnr., S. W. oor. Tenth and Arch Sts., Piii’ada., Pa.
PETROLEUM n IIIT TITII JELLY~
Grand Medal II II \ 111 |U Silver Medal
at Philadelphia Bf ft Bl Ik 81 1 IV It * Pari.
Exposition. V IaUUJuIiVJU Exposition.
This wonderful substance is acknowledged by phyat
clans throughout the world to be the best remedy dis
covered for the cure of Wounds, Burns, Rheumatism,
Skin Diseases, Piles, Catarrh, Chilblains, Ac. In order
that every one may try it, it is put up in 15 and *5 cent
bottles for household use. Obtain it from your druggist,
and yon srill find it superior to anything yon have ever
need.
ON 30 DAYS’ TRIAL.
We will send our Electro-Voltaic Belts and other
Electric Appliances upon trial for SO days to those afflicted
with Nervous Debility and diseases of a personal nature.
Also of the Liver, Kidneys, Rheumatism, Paralysis, Ac.
A sure cure guaranteed or no pay.
Address Voltaic Bolt to., Marshall, Mich.
’Y\7’ABITED— Agents everywhere to sell our goods,
v v. by sample, to fami les. We give attractive presents
snd nrst-class goods to your customers; we give you good
profits; we prepay all express charges; we furnish outfit
Tree. Write for particu are.
PEOPLE'S TEA CO., Box 5045, St. Louis, Mo.
VOUNG MEN eamVtO to^lOOs
■ month. Eveiy graduate guaranteed a paying situ
atlon. Address R. Valentine, Manager, Janesville, Wls.
ADIIIII Morphine Habit Cured in 10
fIIHIIIM to -day. Jiopajr till Cored,
111 B mil Dr. J. BiSfHXKS, Lebanon, Uhltx
$777 On^ee^^* 10 ** 11 *
" " " P-O- VICKERY, Augusta, Maine,
nnM IT f? Refor ® yon bny any Kleo
|fw ' I trical Belt, Pattery or Medical Appliance
owl* B address Dr. Dye, Box 1649. Boston. Mass. I
66 A WEEK m your own town. Terms and *S OatAt I
frs*. Address a. Hanutn A Od* Portland, Mains, 1
Important to the Fair SexJ
*3 ipppt 11 1
Ir ~ p | I
THE GREAT ENGLISH
hoeor whites,) Painful .Menstrua*V? o ** Lwl
nan Diseases, Absent MenatruiUocul
as female weakness. The?K
for yoara os a periodical and reecho avl'-l- j
Druggists everywhere. Price Soid^S
for $5.00, sent by mail free of post-ii^ ol " sir v r *§
j X!!f ONLY HIDiCINEi
That Acts at the Same lime on I
THE LIVER, L
THE BOWELS,
and the KIQNEYs f
Those great organs are the natural <ajT* I
ors of the system. If t hey work wel , L
TERRIBLE SUFFERING,' I
I Biliousness, Headache, Dyspepsia, Jann [
dice, Constipation ami Piles, or Hid- Rj
ney Complaints, Gravel, Diabetes, f
Sediment in the Urine, Jlilky •' I
or Kopy Urine; or Rheu
matic Pains and Aches, I
are developed because the blood j s poisonl
with tho humors thab should have w, P
expelled naturally.
kidney-wort
will restore the healthy action and all these I
destroying evils will be banished; neglpr I
I ihem and you will live but to cuiTor.
I Thousands have been cured. Try itandyou I
will add one more to the number. Take it I
andhealthwllloncemoresiaddenyoarheart I
I Why suffer longer from the tormert I
| of an aching back ?
Why boar such distress from Con- 1
I stipation and Piies?
Why be so fearful because ofd’s-1
ordered urine ?
Kidnky-Wort will cure you. Try a pack' |
age at once and he satisfied.
Ili is a dry vegetable compound and
One Package makes six quarts of Jledirin*. I
Yov.r Druggist has tt, cr trill get it /<* j
you. Insist upon having it. Price, 51.01. I
WILIS, EICHASSSO3 & CO., r::prlet:n, j
| (Will ten ! yo-t p-iM.) Rurilngtna, Yt. ij
REMEDY FOR CUftSNC
Cgeils, CoMs, BroncMtis, istlii
CONSUMPTION,
And s.’l Throat and Lung Affection". Indorsed by Us
Piess, Physicians, Liergy and Afflicted People.
s m3T IT.
YOUR REMEDY 13
mm in ii
Sold by all Medicine Dealers.
OFmeShntar|g|
' P r in ted' and rest^ortsf^^
- <__ ' •:K&-'■’. ■
e.m.&w.wmd,
381 BROADWAY. '
FRAZER AXLE GREASE.
FU SALE ill Aid DRaINEI ,
Awarded (As HMD A L Or HONOR at t fe t
Paris Exposition.
Chicago. FRAZER LUBHICATCR
O'DTTTII/r By B. M. WOOLLEY, Atlanta,Gi
JT A U JJI Reliable evidence given, and refer-
Habit eDC * IO CU!e( *
_.. _ _ Send for my Book on the Habit and
CURE its Cure. Free.
Mount Vernon Place Church, llev- ff.lPi
Harrison, D.D., Pastor.
CnirLAix House or IlE,rnE3ENTiTivts,'>
(Offlce-1,093 Ninth St.. X. w.) >
WasHiscfON, D. C*., June 21, 1330.1
I have had opportunity to observe the actionof 'YcoD
LEY’S OPIU.M ANTIDOTE in several cases, and Make
pleasure la testifying to its merits, as a 1 TOii pt, agreca v
aud permanent esaipe from one of the most t
calamities that can utllict the human ra<*. 1 da'; “
doutit that it deserves all that has been said of it b> >
who have been delivi red from the bondage of the op-on
Habit. The proprietor is a Christian gentleman,
uprightness and reliability a-e knoven f
TO Maj. B. M. Woou.it, Atlanta, Ga.
RED RIVER VALLEY
2,000,000 Acres
Wheat Lands
bwt In tb* World, for mI by tb*
St, Paul, Miiflsepelis J Mauitoia R.R. CO-
Tbrw* dollars per acre rJlcv sd tho sMOor hr
iaC ead ouitivaSkoo. For pa ‘ienlari applf •*
D. A 1 IcKiKLAYL^
Lead Cemmlesu a f, hi, Pawl, MM*
NATRONA?
U the best is ttt World, nii ibiolateiv pre- It
Deit for Medicinal Purposes. It Is Die best for l,a nf IOU
til Family Uiea. 3old by all Druggists and Grocers
PENN’A SALT HANUFACTURING CO, Wi!a
C GILBERTS
STA RCH
SAPONIFIES
Is the " Original - Concentrated Lye BD -nit:?*
Soap Maker. Directions accompany eachL an tor
II Hr ft. Soft and Toilet Soap quickly
weight and strength. Ask your grocer for SA* u
FlEIt , and take no o there. .
PENN’A SALT MANUFACTURING Coj!!i
The Koran.
A curiosity to every one, and • 1
to all students of History or HcIIZ
rnE KORAN OF MOHAMMED; translated Ron*., ,
Arabic by George Sale. Formerly publ shed at *-
new, beautiful Tj-pe, neat, cloth-bound edition, v
35 cents, and O cents for postage. Catalogue 01 uw
standard works, remarkably low in price, with exm* .
to clubs, free. Say where you saw this ad\e.t-s
ksiEicia Book Kxchabg. Tribune Building, h- j —-
COPY PAD. , mjke oE ®^
equal to those sold f>rs2 to $5. for one-t bird the
and Re eipts for SO kinds of Ink. cß colors '*** Vf'TejiS
turn mall. Address 11. BLEDSOE, P M . AlvarajO;
*7O A WEEK, fti 2 a day at borne easily md-
W* A Qntflt free Address Taca k Oo- Aarv***- -
tR to .419 (1 P*r day at home. Samples worth I*
10 Ai4Ttm Bno A Cos., PortUsd-