Newspaper Page Text
AGRICULTURAL
*= • -- - '
I,ot idle Ambition lior bauble pursue,
Wh 1# \\ isd< nr looks down with disdain,
The borne oi the Farmer lias charms ever
new,
Where health, peace and eouipelence’reign.
Tuble ot Wellils nntl meas
ures.
fiuthtia. Lha. | Tiuihelt. Lha.
Wheat, 60 I Buckwheat, 62
Shelled corn 66 I Dried peaches, 38
Corn,in the ear 70 I Dried apples, 24
Peas, 60 I Onions, 57
Kve, 66 I Salt, 60
Oats, 32 Stone coal, 80
Bariev, 47 | Malt., 38
Irish Potatoes, 60 I Wheat bran, 20
Sweet Potatoes, 65 | Turnips. 65
White Deans, 60 I Plastering hair, 8
Castor Deans, 45 | IT.islacked lime, 80
Clover Seed, 60 J Corn Meal, 48
Timothy Seed, 45 ! Fine .Salt, 66
Flax Seed, 66 I (Ironed peas, 25
nemp Seed 45 | Cotton Seed, 32
Blue Grass seed. 14 |
Intelligence Among Farmers.
We have just !ai<l flown an ex
change in which w e noticed n state
ment.that as class, there was no oc
cupation whose members did so lit
tle to keep themselves informed on
those i- alters most intimately r lated
to them, as the farming population.
Wc believe that the assertion is too
sweeping in char cter, hut unfor
tunately for agriculturalists and
the country at large, there is too
much truth in it. Asa class, far
mers certainly do not devote the
time they should, to papers, hooks,
etc. Many of them do, and from
jhoir ranks have been furnished
some of the most prominent and
useful business men of the country
But such instances are exceptional.
Farmers think that they have no
time to read. They are too tired
at night, and it is necessary for
them to go to bed with the chickens
(in point of time) in order to rise
with them in the morning. When
Sabbath comes, thev mav go to
Church in the forenoon, hut the af
ternoon is spent in sleep, visiting,
looking at the crops, or-—in any
way save reading. Tho children
are sent to school during a few of
the winter months when they can’t
work in the field but in the long
months of toil and mental activity
which follow, that which is learned
at one school is generally forgotten
before the opportunity conies round
to attend another Is it any won
der, this being the truth, that far
mers’ sons rarely evince any taste
for study and intellectual cultiva
tion ?
These remarks do not apply to
all farmers, but a little reflection
as to those among bis own knowl
edge, will convince any of our read
ers that, generally speaking, they
arp true. Further; it is a-morti
fying fact, that takingJinto consid
eration the small number of these
papers ami the larg* proportion of
the fuming population, with the sin
gle exception of religious journals,
we believe that there is no class
of papers in the country which are
so poorly supported as those en
gaged in agricultural interests
Further still, we believe that pub
lishers o.f newspapers everywhere
will testify to the fact, that when
farmers determine to economize on
account of “hard times,” they not
unfrequently begin with the stop
page of their paper.
Wo ure glad to believe that, this
condition of things is rapidly
changing for the better. The old
order in the West is fast passing
away. We rejoice in the belief
that the time is not far distant
when farmers, as a class, will corn
pare favorably, ir. intelligence,with
way of the learned professions
[St. Louis Journal of Agriculture.
♦
The Secret of Yankee Pros*
peril e.
Under this head the veteran edi
tor ®f the Mobile Register, lion.
John Forsyth, has this to say :
A southern man. after having
made a flying trip through the New
England States, comes back filled
with astonishment at what he has
seen, and perfectly discouraged
with his own section of the coun
try. There he saw little villages
sticking in the midst of barren and
.uninhabitable mountains, with no
eurroendings to support them,
evincing a spirit of life and pros
perity unknown to our large towns
—the recognized trade centres of
our best agricultural regions. And
in the country be saw little farms
producing like first-class English
gardens, though on soil originally
too poor to have grown bear-grass.
: and in situations that a Southern
man never would have thought ca
. pable of being converted into a
1 goat pasture. The people, as a
general thing seemed contented
and prosperous; and if he had in
quired into their circumstances he
: would have found, strange as it
may appear, everybody in these lit
tle villages well off ami making
money, and the little farms, with
their stone piles here and there,
| and their stones constantly work
| ing to the surface to be ral l ied off
into other piles, and their annual
calls for fertilizers to the extent of
one hundred and fifty dollars and
reflects that they are per aero, actually
clearing their owners from one to
three hundred dollars on every
acre inclosed. No wonder that lie
is discouraged when lie looks from
this picture upon our favorably lo
cated to.vns, and notes their inac
tivitv. their poverty and geneeral
dilapidation, anil upon our broad
and fertile acres, really, in very
many instances, not paying the
expense of culture.
One would naturally conclude
that there must he some secret con
nected wi,h all this, and so there
js. At the village station the close
observer would notice plies of cot
ton bales, a circumstance culu
lated to create no particular inter
est in the South, but there, thou
sands of miles away from where
cotton should he giotvn, it woui *
tako the form of mystery. Step
ping out upon the platform in quest
of a solution, his ears would he
greeted by a sound as of a water
fall, having a peculiar humming ac
companiment-spindles. The case
would he made plain—the strange
little village would be recognized
as a manufacturing point, and t lien
fie wo ild know t at wo in a far off
section were <j‘g .'ing its prosperity
from our soil—feeding it into a
vigorous .ife upon the very food
for which our towns were starving
and asking it nothing in return;
actually shipping our cotton at our
own expense, anil then, in order
that it might grow fat on its busi
ness, buying its fabr.es at its own
profitable figures, and paying
transportation on them to our
homes. What a kind-hearted peo
ple we Southerners must he !
Then for the secret of success
among the farmers. Passing thro'
the country with his eves upon.{the
close observer would at the proper
season soon have his attention ar
rested by an improved mower
sweeping ovor the meadow under
the exclusive management of a
youth of, say sixteen, and accom
plishing moro in a day than could
in that tune he worsted out of a do
zen freedmen with their scythes
A little later and he would see the
younger brother of the youth turn
ing the hay; and then in due time
would come a still smaller hoy with
a rake, followed by a trio of little
fellows having all sorts of fun as
they, with a hay fork stored away
the crop in the hay loft.
In everything done on the farm
in New ‘Engl and, this same plan is
resorted to. If the soil must lie
prepared, instead of setting a dozen
freedmen at it with their mules and
plow's to sweat through a week ns
we would do, out comes a machine
managed by a hoy or two, and in
an incredibly short space of time,
the job is done and well done. A
lot of seed is to he sown that would
give our hands a long, tedious
task ; but there a stripling with a
seed sower puts U down exactly
right and in very short order.—
And when the crop is ready to he
hoed, instead of charging it with a
black army read}' to play for pay,
a boy harnesses his nag to a horso
hoe, takes his seat as in a sulky,
and rides about over the field hoe*
inc several rows at a time. In
n
short, New England works by ma
chinery, und therein lies the secret
of Yankee prosperity. She has
simply changed places with us
she owns her labor. If it were oth
erwise, or, iu different words, did
she have to work" on out pkan. and
depend on our kind of labor,an i did
wo not in the goodness of our heart
give her the profits on our products
a few years would find her entire
ly depopulated, a happy hunting
ground, upon which the red man
might pitch.
Drunkenness is an egg from
! which all vices may he hatched
Tree Culture.
Under the act of Congress offer
ing I GO acres of prairie land in the
V\ estern States to any person who
will plant forty acres of the land
with trees and cultivate them for
eight years, about 1,100 persons
had taken up 176,000 acresofland
in Minnosota up to January. By
the effort of the State and of asso
soeiated individuals it is estimated
that 20,000,000 trees are now be
ing grown in Minnesota besides
those planted under the Congress
ional land grant. A report on tho
subject sa vs thaf the cost of plant
ing and of cultivation is marvel
ously small, in many cases not ex
ceeding two to five cents a tree
The patents for the public lands of
fered hv Congress are not issued
until the end of eight years of con
tinued cultivation of tha trees.
—- ■ •
The Xcw Ihill.v Ynrdcn
[Once a Week.]
We have been permitted to in
spect anew Dolly Varden dress.—
The starboard sleeve bore a yellow
hop vine in full leaf, on a red
ground, with numbers of gray birds,
badly mutilated by the seams lying
hither an l thither in wild dismay
at the approach of a green and
Vdack hunter. An infant class was
depleted on the back and in making
up the garment truant scholars
were scattered up and down tbe
sides and on the skirt ; while a
country poultry fair, and a group
of hounds hunting, badly demoral
ized hv the gathers, gave the front
a remarkable appearance. The left
sleeve had on it the alphabet in five
different languages.
————SO • ff* ■
Women require more sleep
ihati u en, and farmers less than
those engaged in other occupations.
Editors, reporters, printers and tel
egraph operators require no sleep
at all. Lawyers can sleep as much
as they choose, as they will thus be
kept out of mischief. Clergymen
aie allowed to sleep 24 hours, and
to put their parishioners to sleep
once a week.
—“Everything has its use.” said
a philosophical ptofcjsor to his
class.
“Of what use is a drunkard's
fierv red nose?” asked one of the
pupils.
“It is a lighthouse,” answered
the professor, “to warn us of the
little water that passes underneath
it. arid to remind us of the shoals of
appetite on which wo might other
wise bo wrecked ”
Childhood is like a mirror,
catching and reflecting images all
around it. R ‘member that an im
pious oy profane thought uttered by
a parent may opera'e on a young
heart like a careless spray of water
upon polished steel, staining it. with
rust which no after scouring can
efface.
—Wo ought, in humanity, ,no
more to despise a man for the mis
fortunes of the mind than for those
of the body, when thev are such as
he can no.t help. Were this thor
oughly considered, we should no
more laugh at a man for having his
brains cracked than for having his
head broke --[Pope.
A pious young lady of New
York was endeavoring to impress
upon h r Sunday School scholars
the terrible effects of the punish
ment of Nebuchadnezzcr. She said
that for seven years ho ate grass
just like a cow. Just then a small
boy asked: ' Did he give milk ?'"—
Don't know the lady's reply,
—lt smooths away cares and
difficulties to be in harmony with
those around us. To speak kindly,
encouraging words to a wife or hus
band, makes the day seem brighter
and any fate more endurable.
—Welcome evermore to gods and
men is the self-helping man. For
him all doors are flung wide ; him
all tongues greet, all honors crown,
ill eyes follow with desire. -[Em
erson.
—Josh Hillings says: *• When a
youug ii.iiq ain’t good for anything else,
1 like tew see him carry a gold-headed
cane. If he can’t buy a cane, let him
part his hair in the middle!”
♦ mm
Actions, looks, words, steps,
form the alphabet by which you
may spell Characters.—[Lavatev.
Busy yourself not in looking
i forward to the events of to-morrow;
but whatever may he those of the
days Providence may yet assign
you,'’neglect not to turn them to
advantage.— [Horace.
Emulation looks out for mer
its, that she may exalt herself by a
victory ; Envy spies out blemishes,
that she may lower another by a
defeat.--[Colton.
—Few men know the force of
habit. A cobweb—a thread—a
twine —a rope—a cable. Venture
not upon the first, the last is near
ly past human effort to sunder.
- -►- --
Tie who will fight the Devil at
his own weapon, must not tvnnder
if he finds him an overmatch
[Sot th.
People seldom improve, when
they have no other Model hut
themselves to copy aftc. [Gold
smith.
-
—Value no tuan for his opinion,
but esteem him according as his life
corresponds with the roles of piety
and justice. A man's actions, not
his conceptions render hitn valua
ble.
The gates of Heaven are low
arched ; wo must enter upon our
knees
I.itvvN ReliJlisig to liews|)iipcr
silbsci’ipneus and Ar
rearages.
1. Subscribers who <lo not give express
notice to the <■< .rary, are considered
wishing to continue iheir subscription.
2. If subscribers order tne discontinuance
ot their periodicals, the publishers may
continue to send them until all arrear
ages are paid.
3. If subscrdiers neglect or refuse to take
their periodicals from the office to which
they are directed, they are held respon
sible i 1 itil they have settled their bills
and ordered them discontinued.
4. If subscribers move to other places
without notifying publishers, and :he
papers are sent to former direction,
they a e held responsible.
3. The Courts have decided that, “refusing
to take periodicals from the office, or
removing and leaving them uncalled
for, is primt facie evidence of inten
tional fraud.”
6. Any person who receives a newspaper
and makes use of if,whether lie has or
dered it or nut, Is Held in law to be a
subscriber.
7. If subscribers pay in advance, they are
bound to give notice to the publisher,
at the end of llieir time, if they do noj
wish to continue taking it; other
wise the publisher is authorized to send
it on. a iid the subscribe** will he respon
sive nubt express l vice, with pay
ment oKUI arrearages, is sent to tbe
publisher.
HIDES,
GREEN ' ■> DRY,
Wanted
J N Exchange for
SHOES tossl
LEATHER.
For first-class Hides, we wiil give the
highest market, price. What we mean by
First-! 'lass hides is, those clear of holes
and taken ton healthy animals. Murrain
hides can not be rated as first-class.
Persons wishing to sell their Hides as
first-class, must not. Veep 'hem tili they are
partly destroyed hv worms.
We have a supply of Bark now on hand,
and hope our customers will cover up and
take care of their hark until we can make
room for it at. onr yard.
We have as good stock as can he found
anywhere, and remember ours is a home
enterprise.
BROWN & MONCRIEF.
tireenesbnro", Ga., May 27, 1875.
ALFRED SIIAW
KEEPS constantly on hand in Grccnes
boro’ and Madison, a full assortment
of
ROSEWOOD and MAHOGANY
M ;r : ■'lhS : 'v
Y wtaammmm ijjuwik for t
IS l) RIAL CASES,
and imitations f -the same. Also,
NGTiLHi CASKETS,
of all grades.
In beauty, durability and price, these
Case- and Caskets will compare favorably
with any to he found elsewhere.
i\ V. \OIMO\
Is our authorized Agent at Greenesboro’.
NOTE.—AII persons indebted for past
purchases, are requested to come forward
and settle their bills
AfiFItKII SHAW.
March IP, 1875—Sms
T IBKL FOIE IIVOICE F.-Iu
I J Greene Superior Court, March Term,
1875.
Scott Kimbrough vs. Lucy Kimbrough.
It appearing to the Court, hy the return
of the Sheriff that the Defendant in this
case is not to he found in said county of
Greene, and it further appearing that her
residence is unknown and that ui st prob
ably site resides out of the State, it is or
dered hy the Court that service in this case
be perfected on lie.' by publication of this
order in ihs Greenesboro’ Herald, once a
month for four months previous to the uext
Term of this Court.
A true extract from the minutes of the
Superior Court, April 29tli, 1875
may6m4 Isaac It. Hall, Clerk.
.lob Work soli
cited.
EXCLUSIVELY.
AUOTJST'A., - GEORGIA,
J\\ ITKft the people of OREENFBPOFCH Gif, and the country at large, when
t ey come to to call at his FIRST-CLASS
BOOT ANB SHOE HOUSE,
Where (hey can find everything they require in the way of prime Eliots of every do
scription ; not from the Cheap Factories of New England, but made to order by the
best makers in flail hi ore and Philadelphia.
Every article nld. warranted in the strictest sense of the word, and reclamation
made when work does not rive full satisfaction.
One Price, and STRICTLY Fair Dealing, the Rule of lb Rene.
No ‘'ltrummers” employed—the character of the goods lie sells, and the extremely low
and uniform pri es at which he sells, is his best recommendation.
Come to where you may have a positive certainty of being honorably and fairly
dealt with.
oxk I‘rice...xo ruinnsi iis Fr'pi.oYFi?—stasis
REALI.Vf. os: \A\E.
PETER KEENAN,
January 21, 1875—tf Central Hot'l Clock, AUGUSTA, Ga.
AND
them >; l Icals,
PATENT HEIUCINES,
FINE PERFUMERY,
TOILET ARTICLES, WIN
DOW GLASS, all sizes, LAMPS
and I,ANTEUN'S.
SM'ZST'S .%ISIIiX SEEKS.
KEROSENE OIL,
WHITE LEAD, Colors, IJN
SEED OIL, BRUSHES, Ac.,
For sale by
.Holm A. liirifiSn.
Physicians’ prescript ions caief uily
dispensed, april 8, 187 ; ”-ly
s E w' D ° \ 5
Rank the highest for Durability, Perfect Work, amt
Ease of Operation. They are the inert silent, 1 ight
rannlng atul serviceable, ltie easiest to sell, ami most
willingly paid for, and answer every reipnrnnent in
the family Rnd manufactory. Liberal teiUii l to
A genu*. Address,
Poweitle” Sewing Mnrhfno Cos., New-Tor*.
Comprise a large and v.-rl and rtn.ei t of Patterns
for Ladies’, Misses’, and C iklreii'b Ciarineiits of foreign
and domestic designs, by the most accomplished
Modistes. Thev are ti e most perfect thting. most
elaborate,nr.d vet the most simple pattens ever pie
rented to the public, ami take the lead v herever In::o
--diieed. A ots Wanted. Send for lllubtiated Cata
logue. Address,
“Domestic” Suniiur Mnoliino Cos., NeTT-Vorfr*
OrroTro to F pipov, Lit k tvpic and Art.
A thoroughly r liahie, w 1 aid prntu Ic 1 Inforniaat
concerning natters ( ] asliion in a i its c!en:trtnients{
a repositorv of choice an i entert.-rning liter:.tur*. Jiand
soniv illustrations, art criticisms, etc., it--., and a Journal
specially adapted to the wants if the 1k re-circle.
Teruu, pur year. Speclmeu copies free.
One Dollar given Away to every subscriber in
the celebrated "b"iue*tic" Pater Fashionh as pre
mium. Cunvasstrn ic anted everywhere. Address,
“Domestic” Ilonthly,
“ Domestic 99 Building, Scn-Tork.
April 8, J“*i o — iiis
VARIETY STORE"!
FAMILY GBOCERIES,
BAR-ROOM AND BILLIARD SALOON,
Corner Main and Broad Streets,
GREENESBOBtV. - “ GE< RGIA.
W. 0. Cartwright,
Always keeps on hand a full assortment of
Family Gri oceries,
and the finest brands of imported and
domestic
LIQUORS AND SEGARS.
ITis Bar is always supplied with pure im
ported London Porter, Bass’ Alt*, French
Brandy. Holland Gin, Jamaica Rum,
Wines and Champagne; and
GENUINE CINCINNATI LAGER,
always fresh, besides all qualities of do
mestic Liquors.
OTT”:'all anil purehase your Groceries,
imbibe pure Liquors, smoke fine Segars.
play a game of Billiards, and be happy.
TV. C. CARTWRIGHT.
Corner Broad anJ Main St’s.
March 25, 1875.
M M M H M
THE ‘MATCHLESS’ BURDETT ORGANS
ARK MADE AT
J^rir 9 Penn*
Hfc3“Seml to the Bartlett Organ Company, Erie, Pennsylvania,
for Circulars. april 8, 1875 —6ms
15 iffP WTT " TU*B,
kpH^C^^uSlAll
D. ?T~j~A' : 'N'k '"7~..
i > a £.'.*A "# I*.* A jiiJL.kiU.
ihij publishers having determined t
change the commencement of the Vol
umes of the
Sural Carolinian
FliOM OCTOBER To JANUARY,
Volume VI. will contain Fifteen Numbers,
tetobe , 1-174, to December. 187.5, inclu
•five. so that all pejsons subscribing or re
lewitig their subscriptions ilnring the Ins:
hroe months of 1874 will have
Fifteen Lbntlis in a Year’s Sub
' AiPT'O i, FOR WHIBt THEf FAY CSLY TWP
OatLABS. O.OY AFiTHUiIt DOf OSTO
BES AND SQVJM3ER REMAP) 051 NASD, SC
THAU TO SFCJHE THE FULL SfSEFIT CF TH*B
OFFER, SUBSCEIPTiGRS SHOcLD COME IN AT
CROE.
The RURAL CAROLINIAN is the lead
ing Agricultural Journal of the South. Pub
lishers and Editors are all Southern men.
and it is devoted exclusively to the inter
ests of Southern Agriculture. While it i
not the paid organ of the Patrons of Hu
bandry, or of any Society or set of men, it
has been the most powerful advocate for
the establishment of Granges in the Sent
and its influence has contributed greath
to the present prosperity of the Order.
D. 11. J \CQIJRS, Esq., of Charleston.
S. 0.. Editor-in-chief
CHARLES R. DODGE, Esq, of the De
partment of Agriculture, Washington, lb
0., Entomological Editor.
Rlliii LIII COAIRIBI TOID
Col. 1). WYATT AIKEN. Washington. D.C
HENRY W- K A ’/ENEL, Esq . Aiken, S. C
Rev. C. W. HOWARD, Kingston, Ga.
Col. N. 11. DAVIS. Greenvill, S. 0.
RURAL CAROLINIAN—S 2 Fer tarn.
Address
WALKER. I TANS k COGSWLL
Publishers, Charleston, S. C.
Publishers of the Herald will
furnish their paper and the “Rural Caro
linian” for §3 35 per annum.
Fits Cured Free!
/\ NY person suffering from the above
disease is requested to address Dr. PRR E
and atrial bottle of medicine will be for
warded by Express,
FREE !
The only cost being the Express charges
which, owing to my large business, an
small.
Dr. Price has made the treatment of
FITS ri: EPILEPSY
a study for years, and be will warrant a
cure by the use of his remedy,
Do not fail to send to bun for a trial hot
tie ; it costs nothing, and be
WILL FSRE TO!*,
no matter of bow long standing your case
maybe, or bow many other remedies may
have tailed. Circulars and testimonials
sent with Free Trial Eiellle
Be particular to give your Exp: ess, as
weli as your Post Office direction, and
Address,
Hi nils. TANARUS, PISICI2,
67 William Street, NEW YORK.
Feb. 18, I*7s—ly
Special Notice.
rp
I HE Stockholders of the Greene County
Fair Association are hereby personally no
tified that unless they pay up their pro
rata share of-n execution I bold against
sail Asstciation, i will he forced to havo
executions issued against them severally,
for their proportional parts of said cent
Capt. W. M Weaver is au horized to re
ceive and receipt, for moneys so paid.
feblßtf JAS. N. AIIMOR.
i Til!
T WILL sell LIME for agricultural pur
-1 poses, OX TIME , and on terms to suit
purchasers. F. YS. K.IYO.
[ Fsb 25. 1875 —1m
Dr. J. YVallior’s California
VilHMrar Dittors nro a purely Veg
etable preparation, made chiefly from
the native herbs found on the lower
ranges of the Sierra Nevada mountains
of California, the medicinal properties
of which are ex tract t ch therefrom with
out the use of Alcohol. Tlio question
is almost daily asked, “What is the
cause of the unparalleled success of
Vinegar Bitters?” Our answer is,
that they remove the cause of disease,
and tlio patient recovers his health.
They art t;ie great b ood purifier and
a life-giving prine.ple a perfect Reno
vator and luvigorator of the system.
Never before in the history of the world
has a medicine been compounded pos
sessing the remarkable qualities of
Vinegar Bitters in healing the sick
of every disease. They nre a gentlo
Purgative as well as a Tonic, relieving
Congestion or Inflammation of tha
Liver and Visceral Organs, in Bilious
Diseases.
The properties of Dr. Walker’s
Vinegar Bitters are Aperient, Dia
phoretic, Nutritious, Laxative, Diu
retic, Sedative, Counter-Irritant, Su
dorific, Alterative, and Anti-Bilious.
Druggists X Geu.AKts.. sau Fi hucihco, Ualitor*
uia. ft cor. 6f Wnusiugtou k Charlton Bts. N.ST
Sot ' w ' ‘. tf ... -t Dealers.
Oratef'ul Thousands proclaim
Vineoar Bitters the most wonderful
Invigorant that ever sustained the sink
ing system.
No person can take these
Bitters according to directions, and
remain long unwell, provided their
bones arc nut destroyed by mineral
poison or other means, and vital or
gans wasted beyond repair.
Bilious, Remittent, and In
termittent Fevers, which are so
prevalent in the valleys of our great
rivers throughout the United States,
especially those of the Mississippi,
Ohio, Missouri, Illinois, Tennessee,
Cumberland. Arkansas, Red. Colorado,
Brazos, Rio Grande. Pearl, Alabama,
Mobile, Savannah, Roanoke, James,
and many others, with their vast trib
utaries, throughout our entire country
during the Summer and Autumn, and
remarkably so during reasons of un
usual heat and dryness, are invariably
accompanied by extensive derange
ments of the s omaeh and In r, and
other abdominal viscera, in their
treatment, a purgative, exerting a
powerful influence upon these va iou*
organs, is essential. There is no
cathartic for the purpose equal to
Dr. J. Walker’s Vinegar Bitters, as
they will speedily remove the dark
colored viscid matter with which tha
boweD aro loaded, at the same time
stimulating the accretions of the liver,
and generally restoring the healthy
functions of the digestive organs.
Fortify tlio body against
disease Ly purif in:; all its fluid*
with tb • Better t. N ep:d • ,de-can
lake held of a sy i A thus tore-armed.
Dyspepsia or Indices!ion,
Headache, Pain in the Shoulders,
Cough.:, Tightim: s of the Cheat, jDts
xiiic.-'s, Sour Eructatiom of the Sto
mach, Bad Tart" in the Month, Bili
ous Attn ■ as, P, 1. i at .on of the. Heart,
Inflammation of w Lungs. Pain in the
region of t :e Kidneys, and a lit ndrefi
other painful symptoms, aro the off
spring! of Dyspepi: a. One bottle will
prove a be*:' • guainubof Us merits
than r. lengthy advertasmneut
Sci’Oiiihi, or King 8 Lvil,
White Sw' lling-', Ulcers, Erysipelas,
Swelled Neck, G;*:tr", Scrofulous In
fiiummtioii''., Mercurial aifectiot'.s, Old
Sores, Eruptioes of the Skin, Sore
Eyes, etc. In IK so, as in all otlwr
constitutional Di e o , , Dr. Walker's
Vinegar Birr: iw havo shown their
groat curative powers in Iha moat
obstinate and intractable oases.
For Its thus: Biatcry or Chron
ic IDlCllSißltisin, Gout, Eiiioua,
Remittent and Internbiiont Favors,
Disoases of the Blood. Li or, Kidneys
and Bladder, these Bitters havo no
equal. Such Dixonkes aro caused h 7
Vitiated Blood.
Mevhiutica! Dlsnsscs.—Fr
-,0”8 engaged in Paints and ?,!ijirrnlri,
suoh as Plumbers, Type-t etters, Gold
beaters, aui Miners, as they advaneu
in life, are subject to paralysis of tha
Bowels. To guard against this, take
Dr. Walker's Vinegar Bitters.
For Skill Distbi’-iOS, Eruption*,
Tetter, EaU-liheuin, Blotches, Spot*,
Pimples. Pustules. Boils. Carbuncles,
Ringworms, S -fid-head, Horo Eyes,
Erysipelas, Itch, tjeurfs, Discoloration*
of the Skin, Humors and Diseases of
tlio Skin of whatever name or nature,
nre literally dug up and carried out of
the system in a short time by the use
of theso Bi tors.
Pin, Tapp, and other Worms,
lurking in the system of so many thou
sands, are effectually destroyed and re
moved. No system of medicine, no ver
mifuges. noanthelminitics will free the
system from worms like these Bitters.
For Frniiile Complaints, in
young or old, married or .sin le, at the
dawn of womanhood, or the turn of
life, these Tonic Bittera display so de
cided an influence that improvement
is soon perceptible.
Cleanse (he Vitiated Rlood
whenever you find its impurities burst
ing through the skin in Pimples, Erup
tions. or Sores : cleanse it when you
find it obstructed and sluggish in the
veins ; cleanse it when it is foul : your
feelings wdl tell you when. Keep the
blood pure and the health of the sys
tem will follow.
li. 11. 11l IIOStI.D & >..
pin. \ cor. of Wliaeingtou Charlton Bta.,N.Y.
Sold by all Ilrut/tfists and -Dealer*.
October 15, 1874 —ly
lured.
To the Editor of the Herald,—
Estkbmeo Frikkd :
Will you please inform your readers
that I have a positive
< lire for Consumption
and all disorders of 'he Throat and Lungs,
and that, hy its use in my practice, 1 liav.
cured hundreds of cases, and will give
lor a case it will not benefit Indeed, so
stroii" is my faith, I "ill send a Sum
llo free, to any sufferer addressing me.
Please show this letter to any one you
may know who is suflering from these dis
eases, and oblige.
Faithfully yours.
I>r. T. F. BI'KT,
G 9 William Street, Ni.W YORK-
Feb.!**. 1675—6 ms ~