Newspaper Page Text
domestic matters.
Window gardening with geraniums, calceol
arias and mignonette will keep flies out of the
room.
Common oil varnish is resin four pounds,
beeswax one-half pound, boiled oil one gallon ;
mix, with heat; then add two quarts spirits of
turpentine.
The quickest way to expel foul air from a well
is to heat a bar of iron red-hot, and lower it
down in the water; the sudden formation of
steam is efiected.
From the Tobacco Leaf we learn that ’Squire
Outlaw recently lost fifty fine hogs from eating
sprouting cockle-burs. There ought to be some
way of outlawing these cocklt-burs.
Black Polish on Ieon and Steel.—To obtain
that beautiful deep black polish on iron or steel
which is so much sought after, it is required to
boil one part of sulphnr in ten parts of oil of
turpentine, the product of which is a brown
sulphuric oil of disagreeable smell. This should
be put on the outside as slightly as possible,
and heated over a spirit lamp till the required
black polish is obtained.
Beautiful Black colob fob Bronze. A strong
concentrated thin solution of nitrate of silver is
required for this purpose. It should be mixed
with an equal solution of nitrate of copper, and
well shaken together. The pieces which re
quire coloring are dipped into this solution and
left for a short time. When taken ont they
should be equally heated till the required black
color makee its appearance.
Pbotection Against Rust.—For farm imple
ments, having metal surfaces exposed, for
knives and forks, and other household appara
tus, indeed for all metals liable to be injured
by rusting, we know of no simpler, more effec
tive application than that furnished by the late
Prof. Olmsted. Take any quantity of good lard,
and to every half pound or so add of common
resin an amount about equal to half the size of
an egg—a little more or less is of no consequ
ence. Melt them slowly together, stirring as
they cool. Apply this with a cloth or other
wise, just enough to give a thin coating to the
metal surface to be protected.
“Putrid water is often the only kind by which
the cow can slake her thirst, and yet it is pro
ductive of disease. We have a law to prevent
watering milk, and yet the farmer is not prohi
bited from permitting his cows to quenoh their
thirst in the most filthy and poisonous water.”
The New York Iribune says : “It is folly to
keep old sheep. They should be turned off to
the butcher while they are in their prime. It
does not take half as much to fatten them then.
When they get old and thin, in order to put
them in condition to slaughter, the whole super
structure must be rebuilt. Four sets of lambs
are all a ewe should bear. This will bring her
to five years, and tbiB is an age when, with little
extra care, she will round up to a fine carcass.
Exceptions may be made when the breed is
in resorting to aotive vermifuges, and especial
ly those villainous purgative compounds called
vermifuges, but which might more properly be
called child-slayers.
When a child has any of the special symptoms
usually charged to worms, or when it has gener
al derangements of health, instead of giving
purgative vermifuges, give good wholesome
food, and especially unbolted flour bread and
baked apples. In addition to this, it should
have plenty of exercise and pure air, with a
daily tepid or oold water-bath, regulating the
temperature of the water by the vigor and the
reactive powers.
Some preparation of iron may also be given,
and for domestic use. there is nothing better
than finely powdered anvil soales in syrup. No
vermifuges should be given unless worms are
actually seen and even then it is better to rely
mainly cn the hygienio means indicated above.
If vermifuges are used at all, let them be only
of the milder and safer class, such as common
salt, santonine, pink root, oil of worm seed, or
something of this kind, which will not kill the
child while killing the worms.
Thbead Wobms. —These are very small white
worms inhabiting the lower bowel. Nothing
should be given into the stomach for these, as
they can be readily reached and expelled by
means of injections of lime water, sweet oil, or
oarbolic soap.
The following suppository is said to be infal
lible in such cases: Take santonin twelve
grains, cocoa butter, a sufficient quantity to
make four suppositories, (or little oblong balls)
the size and length of the first joint of the fin
ger. Introduce one into the bowel every night.
Jno. Steinback Wilson.
Historical flutes.
Trinity Church, New York, was built on its
present site in the year 1696.
The oity of Havana was surprised by pirates
and reduced to ashes in the year 1538.
Israel Putnam was born in Salem. Mass., in
the year 1718, from wbenoe he emigrated to the
State of Connecticut
Napoleon III. and Victor Emanuel first came
Into power in the same year, 1849, and died on
the same day of the year. January 9th.
Oregon was organized into a territory in 1848.
In 1853 it was divided and the northern part
was framed into a new territory, named Wash
ington.
A great and decisive battle was that of the de
feat of Charles XII. by Peter the Great at Pul-
towa, A. D., 1709. which secured the stability
of the Muscovite Empire.
The cultivation of coffee in Cuba is modern,
having been introduced there so late as 1769. by
Frenchmen from Martinique, where it was cul
tivated forty years earlier.
Fifteen years before the revolution, the wife
of Washington kept sixteen spinning-wheels
m - . running, and saw the fabriosmade in her own
scaroe, and the blood is more valuable than any- i under her own direction.
thing else.”
Wobms in Childben.— So common is it for
children to be infested with worms that some
very sensible physicians have come to the con
elusion that their presence is a natural condi
tion in childhood, and that they become ^source
of trouble only when they aooumulate sulicient-
ly to cause irritation in a healthy child Ijf mere
force of numbers; or by aggravating Coases
arising from other causes. In the l»^»}i«'£^
the Idea iB, CuA th« «onu> becoU9 ii—
restless by reason of the diseased conditqfi of
the child in which they have found a habit&ion,
and in their attempts to escape from their un
congenial quarters they add to the irritation of
the disease, whatever it may be. The position
that worms are natural to children in health
was advocated by Prof. Dugas, of the Medical
College of Georgia, when I was a student more
than thirty years ago, and for a long time I was
disposed to aooept his teaching, in view of the
extensive prevalence of these pests of childhood.
But, a better acquaintance with the laws of
health, and of the oauses of disease has greatly
shaken my faith in the correctness of the views
of the learned profession in this respect; and I
am now convinced that worms are not natural to
healthy children, but that their presenoe is due
to a morbid state of the stomach and bowels,
the result of improper diet, snob as indulgence
in unripe and overripe and half-rotten fruits,
pork and other gross and indigestible food.
And not only is improper food a cause of that
condition of the stomach and bowels whioh is
favorable to the existence of worms, bnt exces
sive eating, filling the stomach at all hours be
tween meals beyond its digestive powers, doubt
less has as much to do with the existence of
worms in ohildren as the use of unwholesome
food. In other words, the quantity of food eaten
by ohildren has as muoh to do with their expo
sure to, or freedom from worms as the quality.
If children are fed on milk, graham bread, rice,
good ripe fruits and vegetables, all these being
taken in reasonable quantities, and at regular
seasonable hours, they will not be likely to be
troubled with worms. Ths oongenial dueling
place of these parasites is in the stomach and
bowels of ohildren whose digestion is deranged,
thus furnishing the unhealthy secretions on
whioh the worms subsist. Keep the stomach
and bowels of a child in good condition and
worms will not remain in him for want of pro
per food. Should any find entrance they will
make their way out of their own accord, or they
will be starved out Thousands of ohildren are
physicked to death every year with patent
vermifuges given for the expulsion of worms
which are either not present or if present sre
to be gotten rid of not so muoh by the use of
worm-destroyers as by good wholesome food
that will restore the digestive organs to a healthy
condition. For this purpose there Is nothing
equal to graham bread and baked apples, if the
child is old enough to take suoh food. And it
is a fact worthy of special notice that worms
hardly ever become troublesome except in
children who are weaned, and who, therefore,
are indulged in suoh articles of food as cause
that derangement of the digestive organs whioh
has been indicated as necessary to the existence
of creatures whioh live and thrive only on the
morbid products of indigestion. Now as to the
symptoms of worms, nothing is more fallacious.
Worm-doctors, and the nostrum-venders give a
long list of symptoms whioh are regarded as in
fallible, suoh as rubbing the nose, a white ring
around the mouth, turned lips and eye-lids,
dilated pupils, prominent abdomen, starting in
Bleep, grinding the teeth, craving appetite,
enlarged pupils, frequent spitting, foul breath,
furred tongue, and so on. A moment’s reflec
tion will oonvinoe any one that any or all of
these so-called symptoms of worms may and do
arise from various other causes, and that, not
one or all are sufficient te prove the presenoe
of worms. Yet, nothing is more common than
the dosing of ohildren with active purgative
vermifuges on the appearanee of any one of
these symptoms; and even in the absence of
any one of the numerous symptoms attributed
to worms, children often have “Spring physic”
administered to them on base suspicion, infliot-
ing in this way on them more injury than the
worms oould or would do, if present. The
truth is, there is put one single reliable sign of
worms, and that is the sight of them in the dis
charges. In the absence of this kind of evid
ence neither mothers nor doctors are justifiable
I Mexioo was a faithful province of Spain un-
1 til 1808, when revolution was commenced
against the home government, but Mexioan in
dependence was not attained until 1891.
Cuba has been known to Europe since 1492,
bearing the names of Juana, Fernandina, San
tiago, and Ave Maria, having found refuge at
last in the aboriginal appellation.
In 1700. th**e_w_ere but four printing presses^
in the Colonies of America, the first newspaper
being issued at Boston in 1704. In 1741, Erank-
lin published the first magazine at Philadel
phia.
Fremont was sent out to explore the Rooky
Mountains in 1842. with a small party, and on
the 15th of August of that year he planted the
stars and stripes on the highest peak of the
ridge.
The first permanent settlement in Ohio was
made by New Englanders, at Martetta, in 1788.
In the same year, Matthias Denmen bought the
land on whioh the oity of Cincinnati now
stands.
The battle of Yalmy, A. D., 1792. in whioh the
continental allies, under ths Duke of Bruns-
wio, were defeated by ths Frenoh under Du-
mouriez, without which the Frenoh Revolution
would have been stayed, was an important his
torical epoch.
At the battle of Palo Alto, May 8th, 1846, Gen.
Taylor commanding the Americans, with 2,300
men, attacked the Mexicans 6,000 strong, and
in five hours drove them from the field. Amer
ican loss, 9 killed and 44 wounded; Mexican
loss, over 400 men, mostly by artillery fire.
The whole population of the thirteen colonies
in 1760 is estimated at 1,700,000, Massachusetts
and Pennsylvania being the most populous. To
day, we estimate the population of the United
States at 45,000.000. There were, at the time
referred to, 15,000 slaves in the New England
States.
Cheif Justice Chase wrote this sentence in
President Lincoln’s Emancipation Proclama
tion: 'And upon this act, sincerely believed to
be an act of justioe, warranted by the Constitu
tion, upon military necessity, I invoke the con
siderate judgment of all mankind, and the gra
cious favor of Almighty God.’
Irish bogs have been celebrated for ages as
simply immense basins of liquid mud of no va'
lue, and the land they occupy has always been
considered as lost, and the material held in bo
lution is believed to be the product of trees, or
vegetable products, of a vastly remote epoch.
Bogwood is simply trunks of ancient trees satu
rated in bo^s for undefined periods, till they
are charged with elements that not only give
them a very hard texture, but an exceedingly
black color susceptible of a beautiful polish.
Candles equal to wax, ornaments for ladies,
hubs for wbeels, and various articles for thj
toilet, are formed from these ancient produc
tions of primitive forests.
About 1830 a peasant qirl, being in service in
a tradesman 's family at Elbesteinitz, in Bohemia,
beguiled herself one Sunday afternoon in her
kitchen by endeavoring to invent a new step,
which she tries to adapt to a village song.
While thus disporting herself, she was surpris
ed by her employer, who, quite interested,
made her repeat the experiment the same even
ing in the parlor, where Joseph Neurda, an
eminent musician, happened to be present, who
noted the air and step. Not long afterwards the
new dance was danced at a citzens’ ball in the
town, and in 1835 came into fashion at Prague,
where in consequence of the half-step which oc
curs in it was called the Polka, which means in
Tcheqne, half. Four years later a band cf Pra
gue musicians brought the dance Vienna,
where it had a great success, and in 1840 a danc
ing master of Prague, named Rabb, danced it
for the first time in Paris.
A Flobentine Home fob Obphan Girls.—
“Salvatore Ferretti, a Florentine, and eduoated
for the Church, preferred Luther to the Pop'e,
and the Bible to the Mass-book, and became a
Protestant layman instead of a Popish priest.
Before Italy had won her political freedom she
had no religious liberty ; and if Ferretti did not
want to testify to the sincerity of his faith by a
life-long imprisonment, he must leave the coun
try betimes. He did so, and took refuge in
London. Here he established a small home for
the orphans of the exiles of ’48, beginng with
two little girls whom he took into his own fami
ly, precarious as his means of living were, and
gradually raising his numbers up to fourteen—
fourteen human beings whom he thus nobly res
cued from the destruction and degradation of
the London streets. In ’63, when Florence was
one, Ferretti returned, bringing his children
with him, and founded the female orphanage
which now bears the name of Collegio Ferretti
—at 10 Via del Gignolo, fuori di Porta alia
Croce. The indefatigable secretary is an Am-
ercian lady. Madame Rianeiardi, 15 Piazza
d’Azeglio, Florence ; and to her all iDquiri’es,
etc., should be addressed.
“Set in the midst of the vineyards and olive
gardens of the Val d'Arno, about a quarter of an
hour’s drive from thrown, this pleasant, sim
ple, homely institution is well worth a visit—
and something more. The house and grounds
have been bought, and the property is vested in
the hands of some American gentleman as
trustees. Before this was done, Signor Ferretti
and his orphans were being perpetually ‘moved
on.’ turned ont here and driven away there by
zealous landlords with whom were the sym
pathies of the prieslj, who naturally enough
disliked the doingsm tbis heretical philanthro
pist who got holdprof lost lambs, and brought
them up in his ownj’octrines. Now the place
is a permanency (in
institution has a b]
ing for fifteen yen
has been only one]
that of poor little
herited oonsumpti
and sheltered he-'
octrines.
1,4 property ; and so far the
Mine. It has been work
ed in all this time there
tn among the children—
a Spelta, who died of in-
ten years of age ; while
a^-yo been educated
r VXVent! out into the world
tunate still on that memorable night, I won a
heart, and the love of two sweet little creatures
whom it would not be so easy to carry to-day.
able to get their 1 r^iu living by honest and ho
norable means. AL'^y are teachers in schools ;
many are nursery gL/erneeses, maids, or other
domestic servants, recording as they have intel
lectual ability. t
Snatched l^om the Flames.
Holes of J’ruucl.
Atta-cf-roses was discovered by aooident
The wife of an Eastern mogul bad a small canal
of rosewater, and as she was walking one day
upon its banks, she notioed a thin film upon
the water, which proved to be an oil made by
the heat of the sun. The Egyptians were very
famous in the manufacture ot perfumes, and at
the museum in Alnwick there is some ointment
preserved in an alabaster vase wich still has a
very powerful odor, notwithstanding it must be
between two and three thousand years old.
The Female Medical College of St. Petersburg,
has now 470 pupils—Jewesses, 19 Roman Cath
olic Poles, and 11 Protestant Poles ; the rest be
long to the Greek Chnroh. Pupils for this col
lege come from all the Russian governments.
They belong to the middle class, and are gener
ally between twenty and twenty-five; very few
are above thirty. Seventy-eight of those now
studying are married. The course lasts for five
years, and the pupils have to undergo a regular
routine of study, and to pass many examinatons.
If a man gets a reputation in Persia for excel
lence of skill in a handicraft the Sbah, it is said,
sends for him to work for the court very low.
lately a Potter in Khorassan succeeded
in manufacturing a sort of porcelain resembling
china, and his fame soon reached the Court.
When the Shah sent for him the poor fellow,
knowing his fate, sold all he had, scraped all
the money together, he could get, to raise a
bribe for the Prime Minister, and entreated
him to tell the Shah that the right man had run
away, and he had been put under restraint by
mistake. The Minister pocketed the bribe, and
had the potter released, who vowed he would
never make another bit of china, or attempt any
kind of improvement.
There is no ory more terrible than that of
‘Fire!* in the dead hour of night, when silence
and darkness reign supreme, and when all the
house is wrapt in profound slumber. I was
once traveling in the West when I accidentally
became acquainted with a widow lady, who,
with two beautiful children was journeying in
the direction in whioh I was going.
I never saw a mother so passionately fond of
her children as she was; nor did I ever meet
so sweet a pair as little Julia and Edward, who
were twins, and so muoh alike that were it
not for their attire, and the oolorof thaireyes
a stranger oould scaroely tell them apart. T
could see that the vary.soul of Mrs. Marsden
as the lady was called, was wrapt up in them;
and was not surprised on our arriving one
evening at a point where the passengers were
obliged to remain over night at a small town
on the route, that she begged I would con
duct her, and her sweet children to the best
hotel in the plaoe, and permit her to place
herself under my charge. As I was well ac
quainted with some of her family and as she
had been at school with my eldest sister,
bad great pleasure in plaoing my services at
her disposal, and soon saw her installed at a
comfortable hotel, where I also took up my
quarters.
At a somewhat early hour, after bidding me
goodnight, she retired to her chamber with
her precious charge, and was soon, as she after
wards informed me, lost in sleep.
I sat up until quite lat) looking over some
papers of importance, and had only just gain
ed my bedroom, and begun to undress, when
1 fancied I heard a slight crackling noise. I
listened and was about to confess io myself
that the room was becoming hazy, as if from
smoke, when the ory of fire rang suddenly
through the building. In an instant I sprang
into the hall, where, to my utter dismay, I
saw Mrs. Marsden in her nightdress, rushing
hither and thither like a maniac and cry
ing alond for her children, while the flames
were beginning to find their way into the pas
sage.
She had been suddenly awakened, and for
getting in her confusion where she was, rush
ed forth in search of her little ones who al
ways slept in a separate room when at home,
and that she now in her oonfusion and alarm,
never supposed were in the bad from which
she had just leaped.
Everybody was rushing down stairs pell
mell without heeding her, when she caught a
glimpse of me, and rushing forward, fell faint
ing at my feet. In the twinkling of an eye I
caught her in my arms, and rushing down in
to the narrow hall, I placed her in charge of
an elderly gentleman and some ladies who
were standing on the sidewalk. I then rush
ed up stairs, and by the very light of the
wains-cotting perceived the chamber door, from
which she had issued. I bounded forward and
in another instant, and while the flames were
encircling us, I snatched up the twins, and,
wrapping them In a blanket, escaped from the
burning apartment with them, and placed them
in safety by her side just as she had become
oonsoious. I shall not attempt to describe what
followed, or how that mother made several at
tempts to kiss my blistered feet, and hands.
Fortunately I lost but little through the acci
dent, having plaoed my papers and money in an
inside pocket of my vest, whioh I had not taken
off before the alarm was given, and more for-
THC PHYSICAL PARADOX.
It has been said that “the blood i« the source of life.’'
It is as truly the source of disease aud death. No life,
that is to say, no healthy tissue can be generated from
impure blood, no organ of the body can normally per
form its functions when supplied with impure blood.
The fluid that should carry life and health to every part
carries only weakness aud disease. Klood is the source
of life only when it is pure. If it has become diseased
it must be cleansed by the proper medication, else every
pulsation of the human heart sends a wave of disease
through the system. To cleanse the blood of all impu
rities, use Dr. Pierce'a Golden Medical Discovery ana
Pleasant Purgative Pellets, the most ett'ectual alterative,
tonic, and cathartive remedies yet discovered. They are
especially efficient in scrofulous diseases.
Why Will You Allow a cold to advance ir: your
system and thus encourage more serious maladies, such
as Pnuemonia, Hemorrhages and Lung troubles when
an immediate relief cau be so readily attained ? Bosehee’s
German syrup has gained the largest sale in the world
for the use of ('oughs, folds and the severest Lung Dis
eases, It is Dr. Boschee’s famous German prescription,
and is prepared with the greatest care, and no fear need
be entertained in administering it to the youngest child
as per directions. The sale of this medicine is unpre
cedented. Since first introduced there has been a con
stantly increasing demand and without a single report of
a failure to do its work iu any case. Ask your druggist
as to the truth of these remarks. Large size 75 ceuts.
Try it and be convinced. 196-c,o w-8t
We speak knowingly when we assert that Hall’s Vege
table Sicilian Hair Renewer is the beat article of the kind
sold on the American Continent. Personal trial has
demonstrated this, and the article is an elegant and
cleanly one, without which we think uo toilet complete.
Messrs. Jobnstou, Holloway & Co., B02 Arch street,
Philadelphia, are the agents for the article, aud when our
Philadelphia friend? return from Cape May, they should
certainly procure some of it. We know of no such arti
cle extant for the hair, and thus speak in sucii decided
khd emphatic terms.—Ocean I-’oam, Cape May, N. J.
A Partial Blockade
Of the main avenue for escape of refuse front the human
sjstem is utterly subversive of regularity among the
other organs. Let constipation become chronic, and,
leaving out the imminent danger of mtlanmitiou of the
bowels and their total obstruction occurring, jaundice is
almost certain to ensue, the liver is liable to become en
gorged, the blood and urine are poisoned by the bi e,
which also vitiates the juices of the stomach, and other
unhappy consequences follow. Hostetter’s Stomach
Bitters, a prime touic alterative, prevents or remedies
these results and their cause, as the case may require,
and is aiso signally efficacious iu overcoming flatulence,
heartburn, and variable as well as constipated action of
the bowels. It renews nerve power, improves the appe
tite. stays the progress of early decay, relieves the in
firmities of age, and is a pleasant appetizer.
An Astonishing: Fact.—A large proportion of the
American people are to-day dying from the effects of Dys
pepsia or disordered liver The result of these diseases
upon the masses of intelligent and valuable people le
most alarming, making life actually a burden instead of a
pleasant existence «,f enjoyment and usefulness as it
ought to be There is no good reason for this, if you will
only throw aside prejudice aud skepticism, take the ad
vice of Druggists ai d your friends, and try oue bottle of
Green’s August Flower. Your speedy relief is certain.
Millions of bottles of this medicine have been given away
to try its virtues, with satisfactory results in every case.
You can buy a sample bottle for 10 cents to try. Three
doses will relieve the worst case. Positively sold by all
druggists on the Western Continent.
197-e.o.w-7t
Consumption Cured.—An old physician, retired
from practice, having had placed in his hands by an Bast
India missionary the formula of a simple vegetable rem
edy for the speedy and permanent cure of consumption,
bronchitis, catarrh, asthma, and all throat and lung affec
tions, also a positive and radical cure for nervous debil
ity and all nervous complaints, after having tested its
wonderful curative powers in thousands of cases, has felt
it his duty to make it known to his suffering fellows.
Actuated by this motive and a desire to relieve human
suffering, I will send free of charge to all wuo desire it
this recipe, with full directions for preparing and using
in German, French or EngI4«h. Sent by mail by addresal
ing with stamp, naming this paper. W. W. SHEKAK (
197-e.o.w-5m 149 Powers’ Block, Rochester, N. v
Headquarters for Supplies,
THEO. SHUTTLES,
Wholesale dealer iu supplies for Auctioneers, Canvass
ing Agents. Street men, Gift Enterprises, Peddlers and
dealers generally". Catalogue mailed free.
20# X. Fourtii St., ST. E.OFIS, MO.
tf.
r HE SUBSCRIBERS still continue to carry on the busi
ness of ENGRAVING ON WOOD in all its branches.
Their facilities are such that they are enabled to execate
all orders promptly and in every style of the art, upon the
most reasonable terms
A Ukinds of book illustrations, views Of buildings, ma
chinery, landscapes, portraits, societies' seals, druggists'
lablt, euspaper heads, billheads, etc., etc., drawn and en
grave in the most approved manner
N. ORB A CO,
•■'3 John Street,
New York
tf.
Dr. John B. Brooks,
HOMCEPHATHIC PHYSICIAN,
HOT SPRINGS, - - ARKANSAS.
Aclucrtiscmcuts.
$72
A WEEK. $12 a day at home easily made.
Costly Outfit free. Address Truk A Co., Port
land, Maine. 208 to 258
PATENTS
FOR
INVESTORS
HOW TO OBTAIN THEM. Send for circular. No
charge unless patent is obtained. No charge for making
a preliminary examination to determine if an invention
is patentable. There are many inventors who have filed
applications in the U. S. Patent Office and through the
ignorance of the inveutor or his agent many valuable pat
ents have been rejected. In these cases a re-examina
tion, made free of charge unless successful iu obtaining a
patent. Write and have your case re-opened.
Kefer to inventor in all the - tales, the present com
missioner of patents and to the officials in the U. S,
Patent office. Address
II. J. Ennis,
711 G street, Washington, D. C., Solicitor of Patents.
199.1y Box M
DH. jVI. w. CASE’S
UYER REMEDY
AND
BLOOD PDJUim
TONIC Sc CORDIAL.
This is not a patent medicine, but i9 prepared
under the direction of Dr. M. W. Case, from his
favorite prescription, which in an extensive
practice of over 27 years, he has found most
effective in all cases of disordered liver or im
pure blood. It is
ANTI-BILIOXJS.
It acts directly upon the liver, restoring it,
when diseased, to its normal condition, and in
regulating theactivity of this great gland every
Other organ of the system is benefited. In
Blood Diseases it has no equal as a purifier. It
improves digestion and assists nature to elimi
nate all impurities from the system, and while
It is the cheapest medicine in the market it is
also superior to all known remedies. While it
is more effectual ILtn Blue Mass.it is mild ami
perfectly safe, containing nothing that can in
the slightest degree injure the system. It does
not sicken or give pain, neither does it weaken
tiie patient nor leave the system constipated,
as most other medicines do.
T1 /N„ Liver Complaint, Dys-
Xv WttXwB pepsin, Billons Fever,
Headache, hick Headache, Water.
Brash, Heart-Barn, Sick Stomach,
Jaundice, Colie, Vertigo, Neuralgia,
Palpitation of the Heart, Female Weak
ness and Irregularities, all Shin and
Blood Diseases, Worms, Fever A Ague,
and Constipation of the Bowels.
In small doses It Is also a sure enr
for Chronic Diarrhoea.
T nkentwo or three times a day It p
vents Yellow Fever, Diphtheria, So.
let Fever, Cholera and Small-F ox.
•vrntrr rrA TJV Use Dr.Case’s 1,1 v
UAi.rvA.w7.Remedy and Bio,...
YOUR OWN Bnrllier, a pleasant
T «nl«, and Cordial.
i DOCTOR Anti Bilious. It will
save your doctor bills; only 25 eta. per bottle.
It is the most effective and valuable medicine
ever offered to the American people. As fast
as its mer’ts become known its use becomes
universal in every community. No family
will he without it after having once tested
its great value. It ha9 proved an inestima-
Messing to thousands who have used it,
bringing back health and strength to thosa
who were seemingly at death’s door. Prepared
-t the Laboratory of the
HOME MEDICINE Co., Phil. Pa.
Price por bottle 25c. Extra large sice 75c."
«3,For sale by all druggists CiEXTH
General stores, mnd Agents.
WANTED.
For Sale by Hunt, Rankin & Lamar, Wholesale
Agents, Atlanta, Georgia.
tf-
MONEY JN) LOAN.
THE UNITED STATES HOME AND DOWER ASSO
CIATION, OF PENNSYLVANIA.
Incorporated 1871.
CAPITAL
PAID CAPITAL
Charter Perpetual.
i - $ l,000f’>0.
... 400, >00,
Receives deposits for accumulations, issues certificates
of deposit for annuity and dowry, grants long term loans
on city, town, farm and church property, at from 8 to 6
per cent, per annum.
fc5^“Offlce Gulf Department, A’lanta, Ga.
E. A. WHITCOMB, Manager
203—215.
CARDS, all Uhromos. or 25 styles. Snowflake, Da-
Mv mask. etc., with name. 10c. NASSAU CABD CO,
mask, etc., with name, 10c.
Nassau, N. Y.
K A Perfumed, Chromo, Lace, etc., CARDS, in Case
(Iw name in gold, 10c. RAY 4 CO., K. Wallingford, Ct
dh Z z A per day at home. Samples worth $5
■Jptl H? tP"*"free. Address STinson 4 Co. Pobt-
LiSD, Mains. 208 to 258.
a week in yonr own town. Terms and $5 outfit
tJpOO f r ee. Address H. Haluct 4 Co., Portland, Maine.
0:
I U M
HABIT
CURE
By B. M. WOOLEY, Atlanta,
Ga. Reliable evidence given
and reference to cored patients
and physicians.
Send for my book on The
Hsb : t and Cure. Free.
Office No. 33J* Whitehall St
Mrs. J. R. GREGORY,
ARTIST.
STUDIO—Corner ALABAMA and BROAD STS.
ATLANTA, • - GEORGIA.
Portraits from Miniature, to Life Size, in Water
Colors, Crayons, or Oil.
|ai M IITCn CANVASSERS of intelligence
VV Iw I Eb and good character in Georgia
and adjoining States, for the publications in New York.
MESSRS. D. APPLETON 4 CO.,
Money ia made and good is accomplished in this work
JOS. VAN HOLT NASH,
Gen. Manager for Georgia,
aud adjoining States,
44 Marietta St, Atlanta. Ga
Dll STAINBACK WILSON’S
Hygienic Institute * Turkish Bath,
Loyd St., op. Markham House, ATLASTA, Ga.
Clhronic Diseases treated with wonderful success. Di-
rectious for Home Treatment. Send for circular.
208-tf
WANTED.
B Y a young lady of some experience,
teacher in a school, or Governess iu i
erences given if required. Address,
208-3t.
a situation as
i, lamily. Bef-
E. C. G..
ClarkesviUe,
Texas.
THE BEST REMEDY
FOR
Diseases o! tie Tiiroat and Lungs.
Ayer’s
Diseases of the pulmo
nary organs are so prev
alent and fatal, that a
safe and re liable remedy
for them is invaluable
to every community.
Ayer’s Cherry Pec-
- toijal is such a remedy,
[and no other so emi
nently merits the confi
dence of the public. It
is a scientific combina
tion of the medicinal
principles and curative
(virtues of the finest
('drugs, chemically uuit-
>,ed, to insure the gresL-
„ _-J£'est possible efficiency
PECTORAL. an ‘l uniformity of re
sults, which enables
physicians as well as invalids to use it with
confidence. It is the most reliable remedy
for diseases of the throat and lungs that sci
ence has produced. It strikes at the foun
dation of all pulmonary diseases, affording
prompt and certain relief, and is adapted tc
patients of any age or either sex. Being
very palatable, the youngest children take
It without difficulty. In the treatment of
ordinary Coughs, Colds, Sore Throat,
Bronchitis, Influenza, Clergyman’s
Sore Throat, Asthma, Croup, and Ca
tarrh, the effects of Ayer’s Cherry Pec
toral are magical, and multitudes are an
nually preserved from serious illness by its
timely and faithful use. It should be kept
at hand in every household, for the pro
tection it affords in sudden attacks. In
'Whooping-cough and Consumption
there is no other remedy so efficacious,
soothing, and helpful.
The marvellous cures which Ayer’s
Cherry Pectoral has effected all over the
world are a sufficient guaranty that it will
continue to produce the best results. An
impartial trial will convince the most scepti
cal of its wonderful curative powers, as well
as of its superiority over all other prepara
tions for pulmonary complaints.
Eminent physicians in all parts of the
country, knowing its composition, recom
mend Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral to invalids,
prescribe it in their practice. The test
of half a century has proved its absolute
certainty to cure all pulmonary complaints
not already beyond the reach of human aid.
Prepared by Dr. J. C. Ayer & Co.,
Practical and Analytical Chemists,
Lowell, Mass.
SOLD ST ALL SBUOG18TS XVSBTWHXBS.
EAR DISUSES!
Rr* C. E. Shoemaker’s Book on Desfnrm and .
DiKrssfM mf the Ear and AiTiDDII
their proper treatment, eepe- If A I ARYlfl 1
ciall j Running Ear. How to get immediate relief |
di—ses,and a sure.
from all annoyances of these
harmless and permanent care. A book every
family should nave. Rent free to ail. Address
Pr.C. E.SHOEMA g am, A uralSu rgeon, Read ing.Pfi