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FARM AND GARDEN.
taking Milk.
VT. \V 'I ay lor, Utah Co., U. T.—« ben
a cow leaks milk, the only remedy is to
take the milk three times a day, and re
lieve the pressure on the udder. The
causa of the trouble is that the spinchter
muscle at the end of the teat is toe wear
to resist the presojre of a full udder, and
the difficulty in the way of preventing it
is that the udder and teats are too tender
to resist any increase of pressure without
causing a worse trouble.
on . -
Florida for Stock Rearing.
Wm. H. Heiser, Northumberland Co.,
Penn.—Florida is not a suitable State for
sheep rearing on account of the almost
entire absence of grata for pasturage.
The best southern locality for rearing
sheep is the mountain district of North
Carolina, whore the winters are mild, the
summers cool, the water abundant and
pure, and where there are no awamps.
Sheep are kept out all the winter there,
and do well.
<>
Ruta ltagas for Horses.
M. L. Tolvstad, Spink Co, Dak.—A
horse has a small stomach, and must be
fed with concentrated food chiefly.
Nevertheless, a change of food to succu
lent vegetables, as carrots or ruta-bagas,
is often desirable, but only small quan
tities should bo given. Four quarts of
sliced rutabagas may be given to a horse
two or three times a week with benefit,
but it ia not advisable to add any meal
ar grain with the roots, lest the fowl
might ferment in the stomach and pro"
duee colic.
Clover as a Fertilizer.
E. Watson, Morgan Co;, 11.—Clover
is an useful crop for plowing under as a
fertilizer. But it is a waste to plow in
the tops, which should be cut for hay
and fed, and the manure spread on the
land, the sod only being plowed in.
Clover is usually sown on fall grain, Carly
in spring, but it may also be sown iu the
fab by itself, or with white turnips, not
1 ter than /August. It will then bo strong
enough to stand the winter, especially if
the turnips are left to protect it Thu
first year it is cut for hay, and the after
growth may then be plowed in for wheat;
which does best after clover.
Walks and Talks on the Farm.
‘ Few Farmers.” said the Doctor, “ap
preci te the va lie of a rich piece of grass
land, it is not msrely that such land will
produce double the amount of grass, but
you get the grimi when most needed. You
got a good bite early in the spring, and
during a severe drouth, when other pus
tules ate d ied up, this piece of land will
t'e green nd produce the richest of rich
grass.”—“ I think I understand what you
iu. i.” said the Deacon. “It is like
putting three horses to a plow; on tho
lighter and sandy portions of tho field,
two horaUH would do tho work, but on the
heavier portions, they have hard work to
get through, and it is these parts that
«eed the best plowing. But plowing with
two horses is not so serious a mistake as
using poor points. I know a man who
•pends more Vmo in writing than he does
tn plowing. He says ‘go,’rather than
‘come.’ He starts his man at plowing,
and as it happens to be sandy land near
the gate, and the plow goes iu deep and
turns up a nice furtow, he goes baek home
thinking it is all right. He doos not
know that ns soon as the plow strikes hard
ground, it skims along the surface two,
three, or at most four inches deep. '1 he
points are good enough for the sandy
knolls, but too much wont to take hold
of the clay.”— American Agriculturist.
A. New Bee Plant.
It would perhaps be more accurate te
say, a new use for an old plant, as a cor
riMipeudeut of “The Garden" (London,
Eng.), recommends the well-known and
popular Siebold’s Ftono-crop (Sedum
SicboMH), as a plant te be grown for bee
pasture We do not remember having
seen any of the Sedums mentioned by
our apiarists aa of value in furn.shing
either polen or honey. This Japanese
Bteuc rop is perfectly hardy, at least
near New York, and is the most orna
mental of the large genus te which it be
longs. Its numerous stems, s>.mutinies a
foot long, are trailing or a most prostrate.
On this account it ia often grown in hang
ing baskets, and in pets and pans; it is
more frequently seen as a house plant
than a hardy one. It has several excel
lent qualities for a bee plant, being easily
piopagated, and thriving in poor soil; it
. is also a capital rook plant, and endu es
the longest dreutns w.thou’ apparent
injury Its clusters of purplish pink
flowers are produced at the end of each
stem in the autumn months, and last a
long time. Its Lte blooming particularly
commends it for apariaa use, as it comes
at a season when honey-yielding flowers
are scarce. The plant is k<-pt by florists
generady, and msy be propagated by
breaking up the plant and ae ting out the
stems singly, or the stems may be cut into
pieces two inches or less long, and rooted
iu the usual manner.
<— ■— ■■
One of the dry goods stores of San
Francisco has lost a customer, one of
the handsome clerks has lost his situa
tion, and all through his miserable edu
cation at the telephone. The lady in
question is deaf and carries a litttle tube,
with the usual mouthpiece, to speak
into. The other day she came up te the
counter, and as a preliminary to the con
versa tian touching her proposed pur
chase-, she put the tube to her ear aud
handed the mouthpiece to the clerk. He
immediately put his month to it and
called out, “Hello 1” and before he
recollected himself the customer had
flounced out of the establishment.
RUSSIA IN CENTRAL ASIA
A GEOGRAPHICAL IIISMRI PTION O
THAT PART or TIIK COUNTRY.
Iler Proarew Across the Deserts and Over J
the Ureal Oases ol Turkestan.
A little east of the narrow tract now
in dispute between Russia and Afghan
istan is that extensive protuberance
called by the natives The Pamir, or The
Roof of the World. This wonderful
plateau, furrowed by deep valleys,
through which flow the bead streams of
great rivers, is the loftiest in the world,
and stretches away for some hundreds
of miles from 10,000 to 15,000 feet above
the sea. It is an elevated isthmus con
necting those almost impassable moun
tain systems of Asia, the Thian Shan
and Altai on the north, with the Hindoo
Koosh and Himalayas on tho south.
Here history places the cradle of the
European races. Hero lived our Aryan
forefathers, who, leaving the Pamir
slopes, followed great rivers westward,
and finally pastured their herds in
Europe.
Hither are returning now their de
scendants, the Slavs and Anglo-Saxons,
sooner or later to contend for the
supremacy of Asia upon the historic
ground from which their primitive pro
genitors are believed to have migrated.
The Pamir sent its waters west to fer
tilize the Turkestan desert, gave the na
tions a passage way through mountain
barriers along its streams that poured
eastward into the Tarim and southward
into the Ganges and the Indus, nurtured
the civilization that Genghis Khan and
Tamerlane founded in Turkestan, aud
made possible the advance of Russia into
Central Asia.
Though Peter the Groat dreamed of
extending Russia’s power far beyond
the Caspian, it was not greed of con
quest or commerce, but the need of de
fending herself against barborous neigh
bors across the Ural that first turned
Russia toward Central Asia. Ivan 111.
put an end to the terrible Tartar inva
sions that for centuries wasted half of
Russia and laid its chief cities in ashes.
But his successors did not free Russia
from the pest of pillaging Kirghiz and
Turkoman tribes until they established
the Muscovite power in the large terri
tory between the Ural river and the
Aral sea. They sank wells in the Ust
Urt plateau to facilitate the operations
of their army, marched against the
turbulent Kirghiz, and after several
hard campaigns they subdued these two
million nomads, who, for over twenty
years, have paid their conquerors with
out a murmur their annual tax of three
roubles a tent.
Beyond the Kirghiz steppes that bor
dered Russia stretched far eastward
across tho desert two belts of verdure,
through which flow two great rivers,
tho ancient Oxus and tho Jaxartes,
now known as the Amu-Daria, and the
Syr-Daria. The one rising on the
southern and the other on Hie northern
slopes of the Pamir, hud for ages dis
tributed over their banks alluvium borne
on rapid tides from their headwaters,
creating long and continuous oases in
the midst of tho most desolate desert of
the world.
Her line of forts along the left bank
of tho river lengthened year by year.
She made the river her ally in her war
fare upon the khanates. Twelve years
after the first Russian gun was leveled
at the walls of the first town in Kho
kand, this rich khanate, including its
metropolis, Tashkent!, became the Rus
sian province of Ferghana. Then
Bokhara, after a bitter struggle, lost its
independence. Two of the three khan
ates of Turkestan were now gained, the
Syr-Daria, from its month to its sources,
was a Russian stream, aud the Musco
vite arms were once more turned
toward the Oxus. Gen. Kaufmann's
attack upon Khiva was crowned with
success. The khanate was added to the
Russian conquests in Turkestan, and
the Oxus passed into Russia’s control.
Here were rich lands aud populous
aud half civilized nations. Here were
the routes to inner Asia, caravan roads
that led to China, the highways over
which (treat camel trains from Bokhara
md for many years borne to Orenburg
and Astrakhan their loads of cotton,
ilk, skins, and shagreen leather to ex
change for Russian hardware, chintz,
aud guns. Here was a chance for vast
expansion of Muscovite power and com
merce. Russia's motive was no longer
self-protection, bnt tho subjugation of
the khanates of Turkestan aud the ex
tension of trade.
Her expedition against Khiva in 1835
was disastrous. The bitter cold of the
Ust Urt plateau ruined Perowaki’s army.
Russia, repulsed iu her attempt to ac
quire the Oxus, turned to the Syr-Daria.
After she planted her foot upon that
liver, her forward march was slow,
steady, aud persistent.
Liberia.
“Liberia is on the west coast of Afri
ca,” says the Atlanta Constitution. “It
contains about 30,OOOsquaremiles. The
soil is productive and the climate better
than anywhere on the coast. The Gov
ernment is republican, and owes its
origin to the American Colonization So
ciety, which in 1820 sent over some
negro colonists. In 1847 the declara
tion of independence was made and a
constitution adopted. The President
holds office two years. The republic
has passed through nothing but discord
since it was established. It borrowed
$500,000 from England in 1871, and
has paid no interest since 1874, the
Government being bankrupt. In 1880
the republic annexed the kingdom of
Medina, a very rich country. The
population is composed of about 18,000
civilized and 700,000 uncivilized negroes.
The country is not prosperous.”
“What explanation have you to of
fer?” asked the Judge. “I found the
pocketbook.” “In the gentleman's
poeket, I suppose.” “Yes, sab; cf 1 had
said I found it somewhar else deu evii
m.njed folksea (nought hab said dar
was somefin spishous about transac
tion.”— Texas i>iflir<gs.
NOTES AND COMMENTS.
A remarkable trade was made Satur
day, in Macon, Go., if we may believe a
pajier of that city. A certain merchant,
I sold a suit of clothes, a pair of shoes
I and a hat for $5, and made $1.35 by
i the trade.
“Ought we let our hens lay on Sun.
day ?” a sister asked me, and I said,
“Yes, but you ought to give the Sunday
eggs to missions,” and she did it. So
says a clergyman who tells the story in
a religious paper.
If there is any law in New York city,
says a local paper, Buddensiek, the
builder of the fallen tenement houses,
should be given an opportanity to study
solidity of architecture from the inside
for a time long enough to appreciate it.
According to the Rutland Herald
no Vermonter ever said “Varmount” ex
cept in imitating outsiders. The local
pronunciation of the name of the State
is that of the scholar except for a ten
dency to neglect the “r” aud make it
‘Ve’mont. ”
In the police court of a Missouri
town, the other day, several “young
ladies and gentlemen of the highest
social standing” were tried and fined
for disturbing public worship. The
offensec onsisted in writing notes and
and talking in church.
Young man, if you are ambitious
don’t try for a clerkship at Washington.
Take warning from the career of the
oldest clerk in the Treasury Depart
ment. Appointed iu 1847 at a salary of
$1,200, he is now getting sl,4oo—a rise
of S2OO in thirty-eight years.
A unique and nicely written placard
has been placed over the stamp window
in the Post Office, of a western town,
which reads: “Lick your own stamps.”
It would have accorded better with the
rules of the civil service if the Post
master had begun with “please,” says a
local paper.
The will of the Hon. Thomas Bege
of Franklin, Pa., provides that should
any of the officials of the Bank which
closed up there become conscience
tricken and conolude to return to his
xecutors the $55,000 they stole from
him, lie bequeaths that sum to the ceme
tery of his town.
A lady not a resident of tho new
city of Lisbon, Dakota Territory, had a
house and lot there, and tho city ordered
her to build a sidewalk by it.
She neglected or refused to build it,
aud tho city built the walk and sent
her a bill for SIOO. Her gentle spirit
waxed wroth and she went there, tore
down tho house and took it away on
the cars aud told them they might have
the old lot. “There, now.”
The white brick now made in Franco
from the immense accumulations of
waste sand at glass factories is likely to
prove a valuable industry. The process
of production consists in Hubjeoting tho
sand to an immense hydraulic pressure
aud then baking iu furnaces at a high
temperature, so as to produce blocks of
various forms and dimensions, of a uni
form white color, and of almost pure
silex. The product is unaffected by
the heaviest frosts or by the sun or rain.
A South Carolina citizen thus looks
the problem iu the face when he asks;
What is to become of us ? With the
morphine habit making a host of liars;
the quinine habit a ghostly band of
neivelcws, would-be suicides; the tobacco
habit giving us a tendency to cancer
and what not; tho whisky habit taking
people by crooked ways to early
graves; the money habit tilling the coun
try with avaricious speculators, thieves,
and bank robbers; tho oflioosoekiug
habit turning honest people away from
honest work to getting an office, it does
seem we are generally iu a bad way.
The Bonos of Christopher Columbus.
The subject of discussion among tho
representatives of all the civilized pow
ers in the world, who are requested to
meet at the city of San Domingo, Sep
tember 18, 1885, will be the bones of
Christopher Columbus. The question
connected with these remains of the
great navigator has lately reached sn
acute stag<v, and it hits become necessary
for the honor of those concerned that it
should lai settled promptly; aud as Spain
and San Domingo are not prl, ted to
declare war about it, the dispute is to
be referred to a congress. The difficulty
has arisen in this wise:—Columbus died
May 21, 1506, at Valladolid, and bis
body was deposited in the Franciscan
priory there. In 1513 it was transferred
to *he Cathedral at Seville. The dis
coverer having expressed an earnest
wish to be buried at Haiti, iu San Do
mingo, his mortal remains were con
veyed there iu 1550 (forty-four years
' after his death) and interred in the
Cathedral. When the island was taken
in 1795 by the French the bones were
removed by the Spaniards to Lorenzo,
in Havana, and were placed in the
Cathedral there on January 19, 1796.
The Spanish Academy of History de
fends the thesis that they are there still,
while the Government of San Domingo
maintains that it succeeded in burying
tho bones with due honor iu the Cathe
dral of its capital on September 10,
1877. The latter position is supported
by a learned and lengthy disquisition
which has been officially communicated
: to all the powers,who are now requested
i to send representatives in a congress to
■ examine the facts and decide the qnes
: tion once for all. — Detroit Free Press.
• - 1
A colony of infidels was founded five
years ago iu Barton county, Missouri.
| A correspondent of the St. Louis Globe
j Democrat, who spent n day and a half j
, in the new town called Liberal, says that
' the experiment is a failure; that the
town, instead of keeping pace with other
towns of the same age, has fallen far be
hind them, and instead of being the
' happy, prosperous community it pr m
ised to be, is shrivelled, contracted, torn
in two by dissensions, aud iu a condition
where only prompt action in behalf of
j its friends toward a complete reorganize
; lion will save it from disintegration.
THE SPRING FASHIONS.
Combination Drene* tor the Ladles— Two
Fabrica iu a Dress.
(From Harper’s Bazar.]
One of the caprices of the season is
that of combining materials that seem
incongruous in one dress, but the man
ner of arranging does not change, tho
preference being still given to plain
fabrics for the basque and drapery, with
striped or figured stuffs in the skirt.
For demi-scoson dresses there are skirts
of striped moire and satin showing olive,
blue, aud red lines laid over in pleats,
and the over-dress of dark blue woo] of
rough surface, with a vest of the striped
fabric; for midsummer there will be can
vas striped skirts with a basque and
drapery of China crape. Mohair with
canvas, alpaca with India silk, Benga
line silk with wool lace, and dresses of
lace made over watered silk are also
fashionable combinations. One of the
new suggestions for street costumes is
the use of dark blue lustrous mohair
with a vest aud fan pleatings in the
skirt made of India red siik crape; blue
velvet ribbon is used double like a bind
ing beside the vest aud fans, aud silver
eyelets are placed in this ribbon, with
silver cords run through them. An
other toilette that will be worn in the
first warm weather is a dress of light
gray mohair with the pleated skirt
hanging plain, aud a fan front of eight
or ten pleats of white canvas (etamine)
set in from belt to fool; the sides of
the skirt are plain like panels, with a
piped fold if the mohair bordering
them, while tho back hangs in box
pleats; the short polonaise is very
slightly draped, arid has a vest of white
pleated canvas. The English mohair
goods cau now be found iu most of the
large shops in either single or double
Widths. White mohair or alpaca with
small red and blue Pompadour figures
is being made up by the modistes in
afternoon dresses for ycUug ladies to
wear at the sea-si le and mountain re
sorts. Some velvi t of dark shade to
give character to the dress aud white
bison laces are the trimmings. Another
combination is that of soft satins in
bayadere stripes around the skirt, with
plain surah for the over-dress; the new
Bicilionne poplins also come in a plain
shade for the basque, with velvet strqies
around the skirt; ecru Sioiiienne with
blue velvet stripes on the skirt makes a
handsome costume for visiting aud for
day receptions, while a simple dress for
a young lady has a skirt of Algerienne
striped satin, with the basque and sash
drapery of dark olive green satin small.
A favorite way of combining two
fabrics in every part of the dress is that
of putting a single widtli of the figured
goods down the back aud the front of
the skirt, while tho sides are of plain
goods, laid iu pleats toward the front,
and n full breadth of this plain fabric is
placed each side of the figured goods iu
the back; the tlnee back breadths then
hang straight and uro gathered to the
belt, while over them as drapery are
two pointed wing-like pieces of plain
material, aud there are short himbre
quin-like draperies on the sides and
trout. Tho basque of such a dress
should be of plain goods, with aV
shaped piece of the figured stuff set in
the front and buck, and arranged iu
folds or pleats ou the collar aud cuffs.
These V-shaped pieces are inserted—
not set on—and are especially becoming
to those who have short waists, ns it
gives the appearance of length and
slenderness now in favor. Another
fashton, also becoming to stout figures,
is that of striped stuffs for the basque,
such us moire and satin stripes each tin
inch wide, or the new canvas goods
that have stripes of velvet or watered
silk, while one of the most tasteful
novelties is ecru pongee striped with
brown, red, or blue velvet. The skirt
then cau bo almost entirely of the plain
fabric, witli merely borders of tho
stripes, or else fans of it set in the sides,
or in tho way described above for a
single front and back breadth.
All that was Left.
As you pass through Virginia, over
and beyond Arlington Heights almost
every hilltop has a history. I noticed
a little hill out of Alexandria. Here, in
1861, was a fortification covering Alex
andria and the Orange and Alexandria
Railroad. Here, after the first Bull
Run, I saw the first straggling zouaves
from Ellsworth’s regiment. They were
gunleas and hatless.
“We are all that are left," they said.
“All the rest were killed. That terrible
Black Horse Cavalry cut us all up,
and— ’’
At the end of the Long bridge I saw
a few hundred more zouaves.
"All killed but us,” they commenced.
"The Black Horse Cavalry—”
In Washington, a few hours after
ward, I presume I saw 500 zouaves.
“Yes,” they said, wringing their
hands; “a few of us escaped, and—”
Two weeks afterward a call was made '
in New York to reorganize the zouaves, :
when 1,200 responded to the roll call.
“You see,” they said, “we had orders
to fall back, and as no one counter,
manded them, we fell back clear to New-
York.”
o
Mortified. —The Grand Jury of
Coweta county, Fla., is “mortified to
find that the sale of spiritous liquors in
our county has been tar iu excess of the
necessary wants of the people for medi
cal purposes," and it further asks the
Legislature to so amend the law that
“each licensed druggist be required to
advertise once a month in a newspaper
published iu the eouuty the names of
all persons who procured liquors dnriug
the previous month, and the quantity
porch>«•'■! bv each.”
a If You Telephone
For the doctor, and find he is
out of town, just ask your
druggist to send you a bottle of
Ayer’s Sarsaparilla.
It will relieve all those tired
feelings, and prevent serious ill
ness.
Mrs. M. M. Lewis, .4 street, near
Potceß, Lowell, Mass.: I suffered from
Headache, Indigestion, and Debility, and
was hardly able to drag myself about the
house. Ayer’s Sarsaparilla hits worked a
marvelous change in my case. I have
taken less than two bottles, and now feel
strong and well as ever.
Ha * n ’ . Mrs. S. Embosy, 11 Xewton Place,
1 V? ’ II 1 Holyoke. Mass.: For more than two
JJ| n | '&• years 1 have suffered constantly from
11 (“J / Headache and Indigestion. A little over
I I . -A-pi/igY yz- \ a month"ago a friend urged me to try a
L—I A\ \ V bottle of Ayer's Sarsaparilla. I did try it,
11- xjlW/v '' Ki L a nd before I had finished the second
i KJ A Vn'i-' bottle, my headache disappeared, my ap-
S \ V /N ' tfl petite returned, my food digested proper-
■iv (,\N I J /J 1 I ly. and my health was completely restored.
ii|X, J y Mrs. S. Fiske. Chelsea. Mass.: I have
\ I been troubled with severe Headaches, for
\ \ * years, but since taking Ayer’s Sarsaparilla
VZA 1 “ Copyrighted. have not had an attack.
Ayer’s Sarsaparilla,
» Prepared by Dr. J. C. Ayer & Co., Lowell, ilnss. Sold by Druggist*. Pnce ti; tlx borue*, $o
Female Toker Clubs.
A Washington letter in the Boston
Traveler says: The craze for playing
poker has broken out among fashionable
ladies in Washington. The doings of
the Army Poker Club, where the lives
and reputations of so many officers have
been blasted, are a matter of general
knowledge aud gossip, but during Lent,
when it was so wicked to dance, the fair
dames have consoled themselves with
the clatter of the chips and the excite
ment of "the draw.” It is stated that
one young society belle recently lost
over S2OO at five sittings. This is quite
a large sum in a game where betting
above twenty-five cents was prohibited.
The favorite game among the young la
dies, however, is the “penny ante, five
cent limit.” This is almost exclusively
confined to ladies who have only a lim
ited or moderate amount of pin money
each week, but there is said to be a heap
of fun for the spectators. Very few
gentlemen are admitted to this game.
A much more refined and respectable
form of amusement has been established
for their enjoyment. The poker parties
where both sexes play do not use vulgar
chips or still more vulgar money; that
would be carrying the matter too far.
Elaborate and costly favors are pro
vided, paid for, of course, by the gen
tlemen, and then the entire party sits
down to a game of “freeze out.” This
is a very popular and entertaining style
of amusement and is played quite ex
tensively. Some of the lady players
have become adepts at the game. One
of the most demure-looking young
misses in town recently defeated an
“old stager” at a party given at a cer
tain fashionable residence, aud when, a
few evenings later, he came back for his
revenge, she won enough kid gloves to
last her a year.
Lost his Way.
It is said that a Lewiston boy who
recently obtained a situation in a store
in Boston started out ou the appointed
morning to go to work. He had hardly
reached the sidewalk when he recalled
that he had forgotten the street and
number aud could remember but part of
the firm’s name. He began to hunt.
He huuted nil day. He rode this way
and he walked that. He tired scanning
the signs. He asked everybody. It
was no use. It was as much us ever j
that he found his way back to the board
ing place. He didn’t find the store that
day or the next. When he did find it it
was too late. The place was filled, and
a memlier of the firm suggested that his
habits could hardly be regular enough
to suit them in auy capacity. The |
Lewiston young man the next day j
started for home. Zctcisfon (Me.) \
Journal.
♦
Onions.—Tho great value which till- ,
iug adds to land is shown in the case of j
the onion tract at Chester, in Orauge I
county, New York, which once was a !
worthless piece of ground, bnt is now
said to be worth SI,OOO per acre. Last
season 120,000 bushels of onions were
grown on there meadows, and were sold,
it is stated, for more than $120,000.
This season’s crop is expected to be
larger.
LlhMn the Pnil« Sewers,
is possible,for a short time to the robust,but the
majority of refined persons would prefer im
mediate (h ath to existence in their reeking
ntmosplwTe. How much more revolting to
be in one’s self a liviiff setrer. But this Is
actually the case with those in whom the in
activity of the liver drives the refuse matter
of the l»ody to escape through the lungs,
breath, the j orcs, ki<hieys and bladder. It is
astonishing that life remains in such a i
dwelling. Dr. Fierce’s “Golden Med
ieal Discovery” restores normal to I
the system and renews the whole being.
Nurture your mind with great thoughts. To !
l>elieve in the heroic makes heroes.
“ Koiikli ou Hhlm.’’
Clears out rats, mice, roaches, flics, ants, bed
bugs, skunks, chipmunks, gophers. 15c. Drug
gists.
Jealousy:—The homage paid by inferiority to I
merit.
Now is the time to prevent and cure Skin
Diseases, and to secure a white, soft and beauti
ful complexion use ••Bekson h Aromatic Ajj m
Sulphur Soap.” 25 cents by Druggist, or by
mail. Wm. Dreydoppel, Philadelphia, Fa.
If any one speaks evil of you, let your life be
so that no one will lielicve him.
“ Itouffh on Caras.*’
A«k for Wells' ••Hough on Corns.” 15c. Quick,
omplete cure. Hard or soft corns, wai ts, bun
ions.
Sleep: The thief that robs us of our time,
giving us lu alth in exchange.
‘Her face so fair, as flesh it seemed not,
But heavenly portrait of bright angel’s hue,
Clear as the sky, without a blame or blot.
Through goodly mixture of complexions due.
Ami in her cheeks the vermeil red did show.”
This is the poet’s description of a woman
whose physical system whs in a perfectly
sound and healthy state, with every function
acting properly, and is the enviable condition
of its fair patrons produced by Dr. Pierce’s
i “Favorite Any druggist.
Clouds Tho curtains of light, as sorrows
are of joy.
Heart Pains.
Palpitation. Dropsical Swellings, Dizziness,
Indigestion, Headache, Sleeplessness cured by
“Wells’ Hvelth Renewer.”
When you speak to a person, look him iu the
face.
I'he purest, sweetest and l»est Cod Liver Oil
in the world, manufactured from fresh, healthy
livers, upon the seashore. It is absolutely pure
and sweet. Patients who have once taken it pre
fer it to all others. Physicians have decided it
superior to any of the other oils in market. Made
by Caswell, Hazard A Co., New York.
The value of an autograph depends upon what
it is annexed to.
Chapped hands, face pimples and rough skin
cured by using Juniper Tar Soap, made by
Caswell, Hazard A Co.. New York.
Throw Away Trnsses.
and employ the radical, new method, guar
anteed to permanently cure the worst cases
of rupture. Send two letter stamps for ref
erences. pamphlet and terms. World’s Dis-
Sjnsary Medical Association, 633 Main Street,
uffalcr, N. Y.
The pauper population of England exceeds by
some 100,060 boilw the entire population of the
great colony of New South Wales.
“ Buchu-Paiba.”
Quick, complete cure, all Kidney, Bladder and
Urinary Diseases, Scalding, Irritation, Stone
Gravel, Catarrh of the Bladder, fal. Druggists.
Franklin: An investment in knowledge always
pays the best interest.
Important.
When yon visit or leave Nevr York city, save bac<sge.
eipres“H|re and *3 carriage hire, and stop at the Grand
Union Hotel, opposite Grand Central depot.
fioO elegant rooms, fitted up at a cost of one million
dollars, .*,l and upward p«-r day. European plan. Ele
vator. Restaurant supplied with the best. Horsecars,
Uat'eß and elevated railroads to all depots. Families
can live better for less money at the Grand Union
Hotel than at any other first-class hotel in the city.
—WARNER’S
TippecanoE
THE
/ok
it"
[copyright to ].
.TONIC
THE CAMPAIGN TOKEN OF 1840
[ooeYRIQHTtO ]
J 3 I TTER S.
SATISFACTION GUARANTEED.
H. H. WABNEE & CO. Rocheiter, N. Y
FOR
GENERAL DEBILITY,
WITHOUT AN EQUAL
81.00 A. BOTTLE.
H. H. WARNER & CO., Rochester, N. Y.
Mrs- R. C. BATTELLE, Waterloo, N Y., suffered
for ma ty years from severe stomach disorder, de
prr. sion of spirit*, prostration and
’ ut was r. stored to health by Warners Tii-rzcaHOfi,
Tho Best.
FOR
MAL-ASSIMILATION
01-- !•'<><>!>.
1 81.00 A BOTTLE.
H. H. WARNER & CO.. Rochester, N. Y.
I Rkv. .1. PIKE POWERS Owenton, Kr., cnro.l hi»
♦on of dvni[w'|«sia amt in d-.txMnillatinn of food, head-
I ;u he and dizziness, with Warn- r’s TfppEuaNoE, Th*-
Iksit,
Wc-rlus of Good.
Probably no other woman In the World re
ceives so many “letters of thanks’’ as Lydia E.
Pinkham, of Lynn. Mhjs. Mrs. B ,of En-
field, N. H,, says: “I will simply say that
your Vegetable Compound is all you recom
mend it to be. It han done me Worlds of
(jood. n Another lady writes from Ottawa as
follows: “I have just to-day bought the sev
enth bottle of your Vegetable Compound,
have used two boxos of Pills and several
packages of your Sanative Wash, and think
it but right to tell you how much good 1 de
rived from your medicines. They are a rry
ular God-send. All the pains and aches
have almost disappeared, my stomach is mw h
| stronger, too, and I feel myself improved
j every way.”
French Wine Coca
The Great Promoter of Health '
and Longevity.
COCA WINE curesand prevents Mental and
j Physical Depression, Loss of Memory, Insom
nia, Loss of Appetite, Emaciation, Dyspepsia,
Female Weakness, Sexual Debility, Kidney
Diseases, Neuralgia, Sick Headache, General
Nervous Debility, Muscular Relaxation, etc.
COCA WINE, as a general Tonic and Invigo
rator, has no equal. It gives power to the brain
and strength to the entire nervous system, firm
ness and elasticity to the muscles and richne**
to the blood. Every invalid, though beyond the
reach of other remedies,can take WINE COCA
with possitive benefit. In the most hopeles.-
cases it will give strength and vigor, and pro
long life, and activity lor the duties of hie.
For Professional men, such as Lawyers, Min
isters, Doctors, Students and Writers, the Coca
Wdne is indispensable, renewing all the nerve
force, giving energy and vitality to both rninu
and bo<!y. All afflicted will find Coca Wine a
delightful remedy.
For Female Complaints, such as suppression
Chlorosis, Dysmenorrha*a, Sick Headache, cold
hands aud leet, etc., the Coca Wiue is a pre
eminent cure and preventive.
Send for Pamphlet, which will give you fur
ther information in regard to the wonderful
properties of the Coca plant aud wine. For sale
by druggists.
J. S. PEMBERTON & GO.,
Sole Proprietors and Manufacturers,
j ATLANTA. GA.
MARK IT DOWN THE PLACE TO GO I
Lea’a Springa. Grainaer ( 0., I’. Tenn.,
Elevated, romantic, cool, h«altay. 21 miles from Knox
ville. only 11 miles from McMillan’s, on the E. T. A Va.
R. R.,by daily hack. Clialybeate, White and Black
Sulphur Water® ; hot and cold sulphur baxixs ; tine
mountain and cave scenery; new additional buildings;
good table fare, reasonable rrices; usual ama&eme U;
fdeaiiant society. Semi to Ji. J. lluglies, Prop’r.,
or descriptive pamphlet.
ATIYTTWff* HABIT. Sure core in 10 to »»
II 111 a | Ufa Suiitari.im treatment,
IB 88l lai Umdiciues by express 15 years
BB ■ 18l Iwß established. Book free. |>r.
I - w -*- ™ Marsh, Quincy, Mich.
1 1 ' ' . ' _i ~
BBk B nl9 M fl ■ Mrs. Akma Ramp, nf Belair, Ga.. under date of Nov.
-S* (mI ISM. c ays. " I have been using your wonderful rem- 4
L : jz Aksl gr W awfl edv, Bradfield*s Female Regulator. in my fatr.liv a ’ w
W W a » Arm ■ long time, and I would to GM that every afflicted
w w woman in vur land know of its wonderful virtu-"and
1 curative powers as I do; there would be a great deal
less suffering among our sex. I ain sun 1 1 would have
been bedridden for life had it not be< n for the Rego.
K.UU.T- MJ vun- MMa - VM ■ m
Send tor our Bonk on Diseases of Women, which U W ai ®b S’ ■ «®acs
b^..k.U cmt a^,An.. to . O K jsest ± ncnct
For sale by all Druggist*.
PENNYROYAL
“CHICHESTER’S ENGLISH"
The Orlclnul »n<l Only Genuine.
R»f.- and »tw»v» reliable. Beware of W orth leaa Ira!t*tloe«.
*‘Cblcbe*ter’o En«lUh n the boat made. Indispentabia
TO LADIES. Taci«*<*c. ’ forparticular*,teati-
gaof Madleow Pa.|_ ■ ■■■bV j
«<■ has taken the lead !a
the sales of that class of
remedies, and has given
almost universal satrsfac*
among the leading Mede
SMITH
Bradford. Pa.
ScM by D ■ .lEgtsts.
I . Gained in Weeks, i
10 and ITRPO of (VhttXr Uh,
Mra.ra Craddock A Co.. USi El e b.. Ph .»...Pl.:
Gentlemen— Please send me twelve bottle* of Da.
H Jambs’ Caxnabis Ixdica, one each of Pills and j
Ointment, for a friend of mine who is nM expected <
to lire; and as yonr medic nes cured me of t on- ;
kv mitt ion semethre • years ago.l want him to try
them. I gained fifteen pounds while taking rhe
firs: three bottles, and I know it is jus: the thag
for him. Respectfully. J. ' . HULL,
Lawrenceburg, Anderson Co., Ky.
LACE REMNANTS
stales Lacec. Tummings, Ac.,
whiah can be txngbt at one-half t rice.
T. E. PARKER. Lynn. Mass. |
FIVE HTODRED VIRGIIfiA FARMS FOR SALE, j
I Mills. Store*. Hnu<?s, L '« Mineral and Timber :
Lands. J. F. WiNGFIELD Jk KELSEY, Ja
sti raace aad iteai Estate Agents, Liberty, v a
D A TCU Elegant packages 4 Silke an 1 Batins
' sent far ?•'. DruLr iderr Silks.
WORK., doz- A G. BASS ETT. 11-n hester. S Y.
t/BDinnnE*i <?"?•*•»!«•• B<>ok
I lAnlUUvtuE. Gruis Ajeucy, ISOFzlrOa Sk, K. Y,
Narrow Escape.
* * * Rochestbb, June 1,1883. “Ten
Years ago I was attacked with the most
Intense and deathly pains in my back and
—Kidneys,
‘•Extending to the end of. my toes and to
my brain 1
‘‘Which made me delirious!
“From agony! ! ! !
“It took three men to hold me on my bod
at times!
“The doctors tried in vain to relieve
but to no purpose.
Morphine and other opiates!
“Hal no effect!
“After two months I was given up to
die! 1 ! !
“When my wife
heard a neighbor tell what Hop Bitters had
done for her, she at once got and gave m«
some. The first dose eased my brain and
seemed to go hunting through my system for
the pain.
The second dose eased me so much that I
slept two hours, something I had not dona
for two months. Before I nad used five bot
tles, I was well and at work as hard as any
man could, for over tliree weeks; but I
•worked too hard for my strength, and taking
a hard cold, I was taken with the most
acute and painful rheumatism all through my
system that ever was known.
“I called the doctors again, and after sev
eral weeks they left me a cripple on crutches
for life, as they said. I met a friend and told
him my case, and he said Hop Bita rs had
cured him and would cure me. I poohed at
him, but he was so earnest 1 was induced to
use them again.
In less than four weeks I threw away my
'crutches and went to work light y, and kept
on using the bitters for five weeks, until I
became as well as any man living, and have
been so for six years since.
It has also cured my wife, who had beea
sick for years: and has kept her and my chil
dren well and healthy with from two to three
bottles per year. There is no need to be sick
at all if these bitters are used. J. J. Berk,
Ex-Supervisor. J
“That poor invalid wife, sister, mother,
“Or daugher! ! ! !
“Can be made the picture of health!
“with a few buttles of Hop Bitters!
genuine without a bunch of greeit
Hojis cm the white label. Shun all the vilo;
stuff with “Hop” or “Hops” in
their name.
Ml! 4
BEST TONIC. ?
This medicine, combining Iron with pure
vegetable tonics, anfckly and completely
Cure* D.vMprpnin. Indigmtlon. U enkueM*
1 tnpare Blood, .Hnl«tria,< IHIIh and Fevers,
and Neuralgia.
It is an unfailing remedy for Diseases*** the
Kidneys and Liver.
It is Invaluable for Diseases peculiar to ■
W<»rnen, and all who lend sedentary lives.
Itdoesnot injure the teeth,cause headache,or ,
produce constipation— Iron medicincndo.
It enriches and purifies the blood, stimulates
the appetite, aids the assimilation of food, re
lieves Heartburn and Belching, and strength
ens the muscles and nerves.
For Intermittent Fevers, Lassitude, I<ack of
Energy, <fcc., it has no equal.
The genuine ba-s above trade mark and
crossed red lines on w rapper. Take no other.
JUrtr ohlv bv BROWS t HFHI( Al < 0.. RHTIHIiKK, MP.
J®®
‘ I l Hi I
Th« "Helf-Tramping Cotton Pres’, complete, salf-
Bnpporting, ready f<< belt. Prlrr, N1.»O. ‘I
satea one-halt of the labor, is quickly and ewalj
erected. tak*« little room, is simple, strong and dur
able. The cheaoebt, as well ns the bc«t Cotton "reef
made. Twelve Kuhmh* joUaer yortabl# ol
detached. Price, -o.
PItOGHESS MACHINE WOftWR, A
.Merldinn,
“VIBRATING TW.EPHOJIR.
« Gives splendid satisfaction. No exor
bitant rental fee to pay—Sold outright
. end to woik ni -elyon lines
» within its compass (» miles), or money
■IJH refunded. Constructed on new and
IjfeH scientific principlss; works entirely by
vibration. Twooi three nn-nths' icn-
■wß tai fee to the Be'-i Telephone will buy
9m| outrirht a complete private line. It it
>■•-“-1 Me only PRACTICAL and BKLI
ABLP. noa-eiectrie Telephone made.
if and warranted to give satisfaction,
I | otewey AGEKTB can
tnake immense profits and get si! ths
work they can do. No previous evpc
ricnce required. Where! have no agents j
Te>phcces may bt ord-red direct for private use. Circulars <
fceo/ H T. JOHMSON
XOJ s. Lr vision St., Buffalo* W. »■
fllO Introduce and sell tos trade th*- woll-kn ;wn an 1
I c«l*-brxt«‘l Cigarsof tb- NEW YORK i HA\ ANA
CIGAR COMPANY. lab-rai arrangeinants. Bai-AR« g
•r CoMMisaiox paid to tha nght tuan. For fartn*»
•articnlars and terms address, at once,
The New Yerk A Havana < ijnr C«., M
57 Broadway, New 1 ork.
eR. U. AWARE "
THAT
Lcrillard's Clinax P’ug
bearing a red tin luv; t har Ixirlllard’X
Koar Leaf tine cut; that Lortllordli
Navy Clippings, and that Lorl’lard's Snufis,ar*
the best and cheapest, quality considered ?
ASK THE OLD FOLKS WHAT IT MEANS.
■OB Sit" I ATFRTI The beant Ifni art
SI LI F" IA I c <s 1 • of making r flow
■ MLb L> ers and tissue pap r fancy
s I 3 w-rk. for home decorations. T»-
■ ■■ sues and flow>*r materials sold. InMruc
* ?ion Book and Price List, mailed. 10 cents.
LEWIS & t’O., 2_E. 14th St.. New York<
Profitable Employment
And light home work for Ladir-, pent anywhere
t by mni. Simp'* and etnrtlv bona-tido. No *
’ jeg n > ffiampa Addr- s W it,SON »fc OAV
i Fall River, .Mass.
a ALL IMPERFECTIONS
of the Face, Hands at Feet, Superfluous
Hair, Moles, Warts, Freckles, Muth. Red
Nose, Acne. Bl'k Heads. S ars, Pitting
and treatment. Dr. John Woodbury,
37 N. I’ear! St., Albany, N. k.
• - - Established ,?70. .s ad luc, fur bouK.
Nl nPOOS NC ChloraTand
HI U n r n 3 Bl Eopium Habits
EASILY CVRBB. BOOK FREE.
DR. J. C. HOFFMAN. Jefferson. Wisconsin
M sioTO S2O A DAY mile
■ If V outate for nianufacturiug Htencils
11 M I Ker Checks and Rubber stamps.
11 || I Catalogue free. S. M. SPEM ER,
UAvM A u- a St.. Bos’, a. Mass.
■ifiMai'SSMlfHPO?™
Keeping Teeth Perfect and Goms Healthy.
-
SURE
QI aim! A Dili A Great English Gout and
Dlall 5 rIHS, Rheumatic Remedy.
Ovai Box, Sil.Of); round. uO cia,
AXBiII&A .Morphine HnbuX uren in 1U
■ to 20 days. til! cured.
VI I Wfwl Db. J.6tkfhbns, Lebanon, onia **
CLOCKSSSSStLWKS .
t SURE PREVENTIVE
tut!, sending $2 to DR. KENNEDY. Acbsrt., N Y.
A. N. U .....Twenty-two’Sa
W.