Newspaper Page Text
nsill U Habit fnre<S df B . M.Wooilit
lvl« Atlanta. Ga. Reliable t?T. .encfr
giren.and reference to cared patients and physicians
Send for ror book on the habit at d Its care—FKgjE,
THOUGHTS FOR SUNDAY.
He Trio waits at the gates o£ - by-and-
by enters at the gates of never.
True wisdom, is to know what is best
worth knowings and to do what is best,
worth doing.
We enjoy ourselves only in our work,
our doing; and our best doing is our best
enjoyment.
Sweet is the breath of praise when
given by these whose own high merit
claims the praise they give.
7!vat. without humility is like a ship
Self-Collected in .the Face of Heath.
ISjraccse Herald.];
At Medina, Peter Gersbacker, a rail
road man who resides in this city, had
'an almost miraculous escape from being
crushed to death under a freight train,
with which he was braMng. While
making a coupling in a moving
train his foot caught in the guard-rau
and he was unable to extricate it. The
train continued to back, and if be bad
thrown himself outside of the rails, as
most persons would have done, both
legs would have been crushed. Instead,
he threw his body between the rails
under the moving train and, as the
brake-rod passed over him, grasped it
and was pulled along with the train.
His right foot was crushed, but his
nerve cud not leave him, and the injured
member was drawn from the boot. . The
train was soon stopped and he was ex-
tricated. Bis foot was dressed and he
,[W;a£ brought home, to-day. His com
panions Bay it was the most remarkable
case of presence of inirid which they.
A Strange Romance.
That “truth is stranger than fiction ”
is once more aptly exemplified by the
following curious narrative, which
reaches the Nazione from its corre
spondent at Lucca: “Some years ago a
native of .Casamaggiore emigrated to
America, leaving behind him his wife
and two ohildren. Shortly after his ar
rival in the States, where he promptly
found lucrative employment, he sent
100 lire to the priest of Ms native place,
to be by him conveyed to his family. A
few months later this remittance was fol
lowed by a second of 1,000 lire; and at
subsequent periods other sums were for
warded in the same manner, to the total
amount of 25,000 lire, or £1,000. The
priest, however, to whom this money
was transmitted put it in his own
pocket. One day, having come to the
conclusion that he had derived suffi
cient profit from his. agency, he sent
for the woman and informed her, with
many consolatory reflections, that her
husband was dead. -About the same
time he wrote to the^emigrant, stating
that the latter’s wife and children had
succumbed to an epidemic wMch
had all but depopulated Casa-
maggiore, and inclosed in bis
letter an official qjllaficBie of their
death and bnrial. It appears that, after
a while, the enngrant,.believing himself
to be a widower, married again. He
prospered in bnsinelBbeMme a wealthy
man, and a few months ago determined
to visit the place of his birth. In due
time he. arrived with his second wife
and‘family at Casamaggiore, where he
HOUSEHOLD ECOSt/ET,
To Rhmove Dandruff.—Wash the
liair thoroughly in rain water, with a
good deal of borax dissolved in it.
Pumpkin-pie Made of Squash.—
Take a good-sized crooked-necked
squash, one-quarter of a pound of but
ter to a milk-pan of squash. Sweeten
to taste. A bottle of cream; one quart
ofmilh, unless tod thin. Season with
mace, a little nutmeg, brandy and rose
water- One dozen eggs and a little
salt—eggs beaten.
A Cube fob Stammering.—A corre
spondent says: Go into a room where
yon will be qniet and alone; get some
book that will .interest but not excite
yon, and read for two hours aloud,
keeping your teeth, together. Do the
same thing every two or three days, or
once a week, if very tiresome, always
taking- care to .read slowly and dis
tinctly, moving the lips, but not the
teeth.
A Nice Dish.—Two eggB, one pinto!,
milk, bakers’ bread—as it is more
porous—cat into thin slices; dip the
bread into the batter and fry each Bide
brown in bntter. Then boil one cup of
sugar in two cups of water, and, after,
adding vanilla or lemon flavoring, pour r
over the bread, and cover dish so as to
steam and keep hot It is well to re-.
serve part of the sauoe to put on each ■
slice when serving.
To Make Bock Oakes.—Break ax
eggs in a basin, beat them till very
light; add one pound of pounded sugar, I
and when this is well mixed wifhtheeggs
dredge in gradually half a pound of
floor; add a few entrants. Mix all well
together, and pint the dough with a fork j
on tiie baking-tin, making it look as
rongh as possible. Bake the cakes in a
moderate oven for half an hour. When
done allow them to cool, and store
them away in a tin canister in a dry
place.
To Soften Habd Watbb.—Take two
pounds of washing soda and one pound
of common lime, and boil in five gal
lons of water for two or three bonrs;
then stand away to settle, and dip ofl
the dear water from the top and pat in
to a jng. Gan be used for washing
dishes or cleaning, and one teacupful in
a boiler of olothes,put in after the water
is hot,willwMten the olotbesand soften
the water, without injury to the hands
or clothes. I use an old iron pot to
make it in.
Sweet Potato Pudding'.—Ingredi
ents: Two pounds of raw sweet potato,
half pound of brown sugar, one-third of
a pound of bntter, one gill of cream,
one grated nutmeg, a small piece of
lemon-peel, and four eggB. Boil the
potato well and mash thoroughly, pass-
• M .1 tliannnl, A *.«**)*.«*■ il/\ iff
NATURE'S REMEDY
Alar In the forest the rode cahins rise,
And send up their pillars of smeke.
And the tops of their columns are lost in the *M«,
O'er the heads of the cloud-kissing oak;
Near the skirt of the grove, 'where, the sturdy n
The axtSl the old giant sways,: *
And echo repeats every blow as it Mgs,
Shoots the green ana the glorious maixe.
There buds of the buckeye In spring are th» firM,
Anfl the wfflow’s gold hair theffappears, ;
And saowythe cups of the
By the red hud, with pmk-tiated tears;
And striped the bolls which the poppy holds up,
For the dew and the sun’s yellew xm .
And the brown is the pawpawj* ahade-ulfwsfmiisg
In tlie^woods, near the tun-lorlng'maize.
When through the dark soil the bright steel el fb»
plow :
Turns the mould from its unbroken bed, •
The plowman is cheered by the finch on the bough,
And the blackbird doth follow his tread.
And idle,"afar on the landscape descried,
• The deep-lowing kin* slowly graze,
And uihhHng the grass on the sunny hillside, j
Iht Cam Bipod Pui
RICH selli g our Rub er Printing Stamps
Samples free. Cojk j BiSseil. detained. U.
|!» week.*!'.' a day at Borne easily made Co
■outfit free/AddreisTai aA Co . AcgC5ta.
$10,000, Mai!e ifr5 e ro f or 05 Cts.
*** __Z. Sie.OOO wll J l-e paid to Any
SAFETY
LAMP.
——S.S.Newton’s Safety Lamp Co.,
- . - rr . 13 w, - : ;';tohnr, yew York.
Factory and Office, Binghamton. N. Y.
Tarbobo, N. 0„ UTS.
Du. H. B. Btkyiss:
Dew Sir—1 feel rery grateful for what jour
valuable medicine, Yegetixb. has done in Sty
» . I wish to express my thinks by informing
the wonderful enre of my son; also to let
you know that Yegetinx is the best medicine I
tree saw for Chills, Stokes, Fever and Ague. My
lorn was sick with measles in 1873. which left him
With Hip-joint disease. My eon suffered a great dad
ef pain, all of the time; the pain was so great he did
nothing but cry. The doctors did not help him a
paitlcl*; be could not lift his foot from the floor; he
Sould not move withont cratches. I read your
advertisement in the “ Louisville Courier-Journal,*
that Ysoims was a great Blood Purifier and
Blood Food, -i fried one bottle, which was a great
benefit. He kept on with the medicine, gradually
gaining. He has taken eighteen bottles in all. and
be it completely restored to health, walks without-
arotchee or cane. He is twenty^years of age.^I
iect to *CbilS. Whenever he feela one’ coming on,
be eomee in, take* a dose dr Vegetisx and that is
lb* last of the Obill. Vkg e-tixz leaves no bad effect
upon the system like moat of the medicines recom
mended for Chills. loteerfnlly recommend Yxos-
Hw for such complaints: I think: it is the greatest
medicine in the world.
without a rudder—liable to be stranded
at any moment.
You need not tell all the truth unless
to those -who have a rightto know it all.
Bat let all yon toll be the truth.
A PBOMisE is a just debt, whieh you
must take care to pay, for honor and
honesty are the security.
Never respect men merely for their
riches,butrather for their philanthropy;
we do not value the sun for its height,
but for its use.
2* The Sunday is the core of our civili
zation, dedicated to thought and rever
ence. It invites to the noblest 'solitude,
and to the noblest society.
In most, quarrels there is a .fault on
both; sides.. A quarrel may be com
pared to a spark, which cannot be-pro
duced withont a flint as well as steel.
If a man has a right to be proud of
anything, it is of a' good action done as
it ought to be, withont any base interest,
lurking at the bottom of it-
The highest point outward things'
can bring nnto- is the contentmentoi.
the mini; with which no . estate can be
gmm
Thebe is no
life; therefore 1
be sworn, before —„ —
pany, not to say a word of themselves
till the meeting, breaks up.
Get Irabtlie truth once uttered, and ’tia like
A star new-torn, that! drops into its place, «'
And whieh, ‘'nee circling in its placid round,
Not all the ttuinilt of the earth can shake.
Newton found that a star, examined 1
through a glass tarnished by smoke, was
diminished into a speck oi light. But
no smoke ever breathed so thick a mist
as envy or detraction.
I have seldom seen much ostentation
and much learning met together. The
sun, rising and declining, makes long
shadows; at mid-day, when he is highest,
none at all.
-Do not think of knocking out another
man’s brains became be -differs in.
opinion- from you. It would be as
rational to knock yourself on the head
because you differ from yourself ten
years ago.
Genitjb looks to tbe cause and life;
it proceeds from within outward, whilst
talent goes from without inward.
Talent finch its models and methods and
work. Genius is its oWn end, and draws
its mearis and the style of 'its arcMtec-
ture #om within, going abroad only for
audience and spectators, as we adapt
our voice and phraBes to tbe distance
and character of the ear we speak to.
All your learning of all literature would
never enable you to anticipate one of
its thoughts or expressions, and yet
each is natural and familiar as house
hold words.
Mexican Newspapers.
Tbe Detroit Free Frees thus humor
ously descants upon newspapers in Mex
ico : A small daily sheet called a news
paper in Mexico, costs $12 a year. The
paper is about the size of a theater pro-
Thousands oi Soldiers and heirs en i
or dM ‘ h ■
C.
.A i. - -
-. I •‘Gnarfflan AngeL”
There to not a Paris vintner with a
mark of self-respect under his. waist-
K>at who has not at least one "guardian
ingel” in his employment The “guard-
tamangel?’ is a cherub of plarid temper,
(n smock shirt, ears insensible to vitu-
geration, arms Btrong enough to pariy
♦nd support, honesty that can see gold,
silver and copper without remembering
hocus-pocus.* When, by oft wetting his,
throat, a customer grows limp and so
Imaginative ap-to see streets, houses mid
Iamp-ppsts dancing a grand galop in-
• YfcBKTXHi.—When tbe b*r*vl h« nomes lifeless and
itegn&nt, aitbrr from of wYatheror of di-
want of exercise, iFrv^iil^r.aift. or from any
otbOr cause, ttao Vegktine will evurw the bloody
oarry off the putrid tmmon*. tbe stomach,
r®S®aie aad lmpan »loue of vigor to
armed knights set a monarch at naught,
the day-god to his gaze,
d every mom from the battle that’s
A the green ranks of the maize.
—OmcbmaH Commercial.
MX H. R. STEVENS:
. Beer Sir—We have been selling your remedy, ths
for shout three years, and take pleasure
S ending it to onr enstomers, and In no
here a blood pur-.fis* would reach tbe
t ever failed to iSed'% cure, to our
It certainly Is: the; ns phis ultra- of
M. 0O_ Druggie*/ "
letting Up In the Morning.
Ion goes to bed with his mind
ide up to rise in the morning at
poor, without whicbj all estates will be
> real life but cheerful .
valetudinarians should 1
e they enter into com-
his old acquaintances, a little beggar
boy followed him, importuning him for
alma. Somethingjn the child’s appear
ance arrested his attention. He asked
the boy his name, and: found him to be
his own son. Further inquiry soon
feriial expressly to prevent him from r
walking home, the' guardian angel thenr
i makes Ms appearand, rifles his wpt.
oountryman’s pockets, draws the weak
arm in his, walks the brainlesa fdlow
home, gives Ms wife all the contents of
the pockete, and carries away her bless-
hut.—S&ribneFs Monthly.
Attention is called by a German
scientist to the fact that the poisonous
preparations employed for the destruc
tion of verinin could be easily replaced
in the market by others equally effective
and altogether free from danger’ He
suggests for the destruction of flies por-
pur paper spread with a mixture of
sirup and black pepper, the latter being
a deadly poison for flies. When used
it requires simply to be moistened and
spread on a plate. For rats, he re
commends squills, cut into cubes, then
thoroughly dried and pulverized and
made into brittle, porous cakes with
common paste, adding a little starch.
When used they need simply be satu*
rated with hot grease.
The meerschaum has exploded at
last. We knew it was only a question
of time. It had a Bochester mail at the
other end of the stem, and he Imd filled
Textile Is Sold by all Druggists.
Briflrafer time, whenever that may be.
He kiiws very weUhe ought to do it,
mid that it will be better for him in
every way if he does do it- Intrenched
in .lids, virtuous resolution he falls
hsleep; but when he awakes a dull sense
of inertness weighs him down, and if he
stops to'think about getting up, he finds
that’that inclination 'has usurped the
place of reason, and that if there is one
thing under the sun more ridiculous
than another, it is the idea of getting
out of ;bed just then. The hour of
rising has not so much to do with the
difficulty as is commonly thought. No
doubt, when the mornings are dark, and
cold and dreary, the difficulty is in
creased, and to some people it is inex
pressibly disagreeable to turn out of a
warm bed into tbe cbill of a wintry at
mosphere. But, nevertheless, we are
very milch disposed to think that where
there is any difficulty of the kind, it. is
in the main the same whether we get up
at 3ix o’clock or nine. There b a plunge
to be made at last even by the most in
veterate lie-abed, and the only reason
why he gets up at all is because he feels
he must make the plunge. Directly we
begin to think, we are almost sure to
lie abed ; but when we refuse to think, ,
we are much more likely to get upi
The weakness of resolution which soma
experience in their waking moments is
not unfreq uently to be accounted for by
the Wild Cherry en bles itto be aMimdbted
meet delic.lv stomach, insures
Of ♦bn, oil (MM np thA
cao -os inci ease of fleeh and strei
tbe m<at--£nrineiit.;pl^>c>a£kMu
ialist in z ulk. Affections baa I
hundred aMMUrcffeSFS "iBere
. IMS
labs. Circulars and >aluaLIe
relieres
elicited the fact that his wife and two
obildzen were living, but in tbe utmost
poverty and distress. The reverend
embezzler, when'confronted with Ms
victims, offered to refund the 25,000
lire; but the affair had come to the
knowledge of the police authorities,
who refused to permit any compromise,
and arrested the holy man, against
whom proceedings have been taken by
the state. Meanwhile, bis unfortunate
ex-parisMoner finds himself- saddled
with two wives and families, between
whose claims upon Ms affection and
Bnpporii there is, equitably speaking,
nothing to choose either nr&j^London
Telearavh.
Fay of French Legislators.
It may not be uninteresting to onr
readers to give a glance at the different
deliberative Assemblies wMch have suc
ceeded each other in this country since
1789. In that year the number of
representatives was 774—nine per de
partment and three extra. Each mem
ber received Iff-francs a day, and thus
the Assembly cost 13,832 francs daily,
or 831,968 francs a month for twenty-
four sittings. The whole, session of
nine months, therefore, required 2,987,-
622 francs. In addition, 51,390 franos
was allowed for the Bureau, making a
total of 8,038,922 francs. The members
of the Corps Legislatif, which, came
after the Representatives of the People,
had 10,000 francs eaoh’per session, with
the obligation of having a carriage for
two legislators. Under; the Restoration
the Deputies received no pay; 'The
Beautiful Illustrated
Description of Bcses. Plants, Bnlbs. Flowers
Seeds, etc., lent tree upon appl cation.
Address • JflEMPHlS ELOBAL CO„
Memphis, Tennessee.
Address all oxders to O. G. .
tu/in» Chemist 1539Gh«atnnt
IS BECOMME.WD
’ by Nunt, in Hospitals. ’
BV EVEBVBODT.
DA IN |/II I CD is ASBBE CTTBEFOi
Congha, Sore Ibroal
PAlN-KlLLER^SSSfSK
lij:. C. E. SlidK51 AKER
Sntgeon of Reading, Pa.) gi
treatment of Deafness and
he welbimown Anral
is ALL his time to the
UseaSeszjf. tbe Ear at
[■ven him a national
ning-Bar GiiQ Catarrh.
Jkon the Ear. ita Di»-
We W n-soH^M
Electric Appliance!
afflicted wlthNerrc
itaic Hells and other
jj for 8p| days to thos
and di -eases ef a per
ir. Kidneys, Kbeu ma
ire guaranteed orn
qMWgrihaKJUelu
BEST UNIMENT HADE.
avroi saw bt all medicine dealers. - ®*
Free-; AMufeicttl jbarnai.add’BF.BHEmU..Erie.Ha
SAPONIFIER
WEEKLY NEWS (
it with a No. 22 cartridge, i
Mm down and sat on him.—N.
mercial Advertiser.
It the Old Reliable Concentrated Lye
FOR FAMILY SOAP M1N6.
Directions accompanying each can for making
Hard. Soft.' and Toilet Soup qclekly.
IT IS.TVZh WEIGHT AND STRENGTH.
The market is flooded with (so-called) Coneee-
trated. Lye,.which is adulterated with salt anc
resin, and won't moke soap.
SAVE MONEY AND BUY THE
■Centsa
'Included.
Kisnet Complaints.—In- diseases of (he
kidneys the Veoetine gives immediate relief.
It has never failed to core when it is taken
regularly, and directions followed. In many
cases it may take several bottles, especially
eases of long standing. It acts directly upon
the secretions, cleansing and strengthening, re
moving all obstructions and impurities. A
great many can testify to caret of lung standing
having been perfectly cured by the VegetiKB,
even after trying many of the known remedies
Which are said to be expressly fur this disease.
A Bon., bold 3/ *.'*•
Abook on tbe Liver, it? diseases and their
treatment sent free. Including treatises upon
Liver Complaints, Torpid Liver, Jaundice,
Biliousness, Headache. • nhsripation; Dyspep
sia, Malaria, etc. Address I>r. Sanford,' 162
Broadway, New York Citv N Y
the fact that they are then almost inca
pable r of thinking except in a distorted
way. It may appear ridiculous to those
healthy, bird-like risers, who invariably
awake with mind and body alike com
pletely invigorated; but it is certain
that a great many persons awake with a
sense of weariness, a beclouded mind, a
feeling of being only half alive, which
although their sleep may have been
sound and have really done them good,
arid although they lose these feelings aa
soon as they are fairly astir, yet on first
operiing^eir eyes render them unfit to
think at rill. Any motion to rise is sure
to be negatived if put to the vote; the
orily way in which reaolntion can help
them is by being concentrated in an im
mediate unthinking effort of will. Itie
a. way of overcoming the difficulty that
is more practicable than it may at first
seem, and amounts to this: that it is fax
easier for some to get out of bed without
a Moment's delay, than it is to do so de
liberately, just as it may be more easy to
take a fort by sodden assault than by
regular siege. And so the advice we
give to every one -who finds it hard
work to get up in the morning, bat wants
to. master the weakness, is—make up
your body to it, and turn out instantei
without a moirientfs parley.
BoB lngersoll as a Jury Lawyer.
On one occasion, years ago, be was
I engaged in Illinois as counsel for a
I farmer who had quarreled with a
B neighbor and shot Mm dead. The evi-
K derice was plain and direct on that
■ point, though there was nothing to
■ show that the prisoner had not believed
r;that he was acting in self-defense.
; k 'When lngersoll was addressing the juty,
he drew a pathetic picture of the pris-
R oner’s wife and children—he bad de-
dined to allow them to be present at tbe
trial, as a less sagacious advocate might
have done—waiting in eager expectation
Rfor his return, confident that he would
be acquitted of a crime which he would
not and could not have committed
except to save his own life, so dear to
his family, so necessary to their protec
tion and support. “I see the wife now,”
continued the shrewd barrister, “stand
ing at tbe door of her home, the sunlight
on her hair, straining her eyes after the
figure of the man dearer than all the
we rid to her. I see Ms little boys
swinging ok the gate with smiles about
®their lipif, gazing down the road, watch-
♦s ing for their beloved, innocent father,
and sure that he is coming. They are
aU ready, the dear little feUows, to
jump down, run after him, leap into Ms
anus, and kiss away Ms sadness—the
| shadow of his unfortunate deed—while
. ?;tbey cry, ‘Dear, dear father, we knew
you would come!’ And, gentlemen of
the jury, you who are yourselves bas
il bands and fathers, wont yon let Mm go
home I” The members of the jury were
listening with wet eyes, and leaning to
ward the eloquent advocate. The fore
man—a big, brawny, simple-hearted
’J farmer, the tears on Ms son-burned
cheeks—was so carried away that, think-
Ming the question addressed personally to
him and demanding answer, exclaimed
in a choking voice, “Yes, Bob, we’U let
ihim go home?” lngersoll had not half
completed his argument, but he knew
that that was the supreme moment, and
’ sat down. The prosecuting attorney
-: made a long speech in reply, but it was,
of course, entirely vain. The jury,
After being out five minutes, returned a
Unanimous verdict for acquittal
$APOiWSEB
• MADE DY THE
Pennsylvania Salt Manuf’g Co,
PHILADE1.PHIA.
, . . mEm»Av, <ni|e«so.in.
gramme, and there is no mad straggle
to find its columns. If they get the
murder np in the 26th ward a week after
its occurrence, they think they do pretty
well, and then, as a general thing, the
murderer has to caU around and .write
it up hiiriself. The morning papers are
promptly delivered at 8 o’clock, Dut the
editors or printers don’t lose any sleep
on that account. The paper for next
morning is aU printed and ready for de
livery before 6 o’clock the evening be
fore, and then the editorial ; staff
and printers—two men, as a general
thing—go home happy. Sometimes one
man is editor, compositor,- proof-reader,
printer, mailer, in fact the whole estab
lishment. He lives in Ms printing-
office, generaUy in!-the upper story,
while the press if down stairs: Some of
the large papers that rule the country,
as it, were, have as many as three men
on the staff, and one printer wilh several
type-setters.. A small engine runs a
press-that will print about 400: papeirs
an hour They consider this, a big thing
in Mexico, and they point with wonder
at the gigantic enterprise of the com-
’ A-ipaper
Litem of
sr .it hap-
liows i ex-«
Wanted.
Shkbman & Co., Mcrsh:*JU Mich., want an
agent in this county at «»nee, at a saliry of
(100 per month ami expense** paid. For full
> particulars address as above.
Nothing is uglier tliuu j* crooked boot.
Straighten thein -7.is Stiffeners.
Young go west,leam Telegraphy. Ads
dress R. V.<1 ntrnp. Manager, Janesvire, -Wis.
Stuttering eur*d b.v iiatea' latent Appliances. Send
for description to*Simpson & Co , Box 2235, N. Y
CAkLETON'S household
beeo published in one volume, so much useful infor
mation on every subject. Beautifully Illustrated,
price S2.50. A Whole Library in One Veiume.
•rn c a.uva fSoldoalyhy .ubEcription; the
TU AuCreTal easiest book to sell ever known.
«w**™ , W| Termg ,e tc ., address
— 1 Terms, etc..address
G. W. CAKLBTQM AO<».. Bubllshera, N. Y- City.
of the second empire absorbed. 3,530,-
000 francs. In 1871, the Assembly at
Bordeaux was composed of 750 mens
here, who were paid 750 francs a month,
or 9^000 francs a year.- Tri^jjflftrmeiP
they did not sit.
President was reduced at this perlodtel
70,000 francs, and the. Quedftra to 15i-
000 francs. Since 187& the Chamber
is dbmposed of 548 members^irieln^infi''
the representaSvem9fte Fserioh colo
nies. Each member has a fixed; allow!
ance of 750 francs a month.: The Prea-
’Luther,”
work of artists. Briefly,
tinng secures much bette
most respects than onr own,
re accomplish onr results on
f of labor, and so make tbe
cheaper. But there is also a
mion," xree, ana nrennomm
AMERICAN KOOK
pened, arid in other ways
traordihary energy. As only about one
in ten persons criu read in Mexico,-the
newspaper business is not one in which
monstrous fortunes are accumulated in
a few years.
15,000
ID GUIDE.
1- These great organs are the natural ciean v
| of liie evetem. If itiey work.well.health
will fc ; .porfcoi: If f.wy ^become clogged,'
- if d!ee'}Constipation and Piles, orldd-' -
. ney Complaints, Gravel, Diabetes, | . . .
, Sediment in the Urine, Milky
or Kopy Urine;, or Elien- 1 .
I " ' -"matlcTafns'aifd Aches,'
are devijlopca because the blood IvpoisonJd
v/ith the humors that should hare. been
cxdcUcdnaturally.■ : : '
ICie^EY-WO^T' ■
will restore the healthy action and all there
destroying evils will be banished.; neglect,
them &il yon will live but to uifTt-r. , •
Thonsandshavebeoncured. Tryit.-.nd you
will add oneno-e to Vr.e number. Take it
and healtli wHioacemoresladden your heart.
Why sufTsr longierfromthe torment
: ^V^pSr’eSbhdfetrecs from Con
stipation anti Plies?
Why ba co fearful becsuco cf dis-
ordoredarihe? ,
JSSSST’ ft'fa
I: is a dry vtaetadle compound and ; ;
One Package makes six quarts of Medicine.
Your Druggist has it, or vm get U for
you. Insist uionhavlng it. Price, $1.00.
W3LLS, .EBH±2D303 ft CO., Prstrieto,
j prri j-ndrrapmA) BuriluBtou, Vt.
such .as
’« Messenger-
CParis).
ties down to a dull, sluggish existence;
with littie emjoyment in the present,
and few hopes for the fntnre. He eariis;
bnt littie, and is very seldom ‘able to
keep cow, pig or cMokens; and, al-
tborigh he has a hand in producing
most of the ordinary necessaries of life
for Ms employer, he himself must buy
nearly everything he eats from the
grocery—even milk, bntter and eggs.
Occasionally he has a littie garden
where he may raise a part of Ms veg
etables. He fives very frugally, and
seldom indulges in tbe luxury of meat.
If the American laborer lived as closely
as Ms English cousin he might layby
a part of Ms wages. Onr greater vari
ety of diet seems to give ns no advan
tage, however, for onr English arid
About Going West. ' t6
The class of men who ean gd West, or
* The Longevity of Icebergs.
Karl Weyprecht, in bis work on tbe
Polar sea, discusseri^fte longevity of
icebergs. Icebergs 1 tab subjected to
disintegration after somewhat tbe same
mariner as rocks. They are full of cre
vasses, into wMoh the water formed by
melting penetrates. In winter this
water freezes, and by its expansion all
through the glacier a rapture of the
mass ensues. “It is MgMy probable,”
he says, “that most of the icebergs afloat
in winter ore in anohMLeondition that a
very slight cause" is sufficient to make
them burst because of their state of in
ternal tension: Every polar traveler
can tell how a shot, the (Laving in of an
ice anchor, or any other -.sudden vibra
tion has brought about the catastrophe;
cases have even occurred in wMchthe
sound of the voice alone was sufficient.
An iceberg is always an unpleasant
neighbor.” So many are tbe causes
wMch tend to destroy icebergs that the
author concludes that “no berg exists
wMob ooold withstand them more than
ten years, and'that commonly the fife
of a berg if much shorter.” However
this mayjie, doubtless the much larger
GKET TH3E‘ BEST
$TiR&V|ljtBtjggbEft
$to;a new country, and succeed, are those
who are strong to labor,"who have plnc^>
and energy, arid who possess enongh'
means to give them a good start. * *
Bu% haying determined to go, what
is trie next ; step,? Personally inspect
the localities to wMch your thought^ ate’
tuyned; Do not invest a dollar on tfie v
recommendation of others. Better.L.peqd;
all . needful time and . money‘te- thori-i
j wjefl-1>ageB.--2000 Engravings.
! HOVB PAGES COZOBEJO PLATES,
. .Containing * SUPPLEMENT of •ra
- 4600 NEW WORDS and Meanirigs,
rii-iiiini A MS ' W
Biographical dictionary
Health of Horses.
The health and comfort of horses have
>f late years been greatly improved by
he better construction of stables. They
ire made more roomy arid lofty, and
jrovided with means of thorough ven-
ilation. In many new stables lofts are
Be away with, nr tile floor of the* lofts
s kept well above the horses’heads, arid
imple shafts are introduced to convey
iway foul air. By perforated brioks
md gratings under the mangers and
ilsewhere round the walls, and also by
►ay windows and ventilators, abundance
if pure air is secured for the hones;
rhile, being introduced in moderate
mount and from various directions, it
iomes in withont draught. Too much
Iraught is almost an unknown stable
oxnry. To secure a constant supply of
rare air, horses require more* cubic
pace than they generally enjoy. Even
rhen animals are stabled only at night,
rmniTnmn of 1,200 oubie feet should
e allowed. In England, tbe newer
avalry barracks give s minimum of
,500 feet, with a ground area of folly
inety square feet per horse, and the
est hunting and carriage horses have
xore room.—Journal of Chemistry.
A certain young man brought Ms
Sauced down from the country to see
.e bights. One day, while they were
tssing a- confectioner’s, the swain
v iced in the window a placard hearing
a announcement, “ Ice-cream—one
,OCK» agents
of over: 9700 NAMES.
gH^jked Mera.
oughly acquainting yoursefi with j tim
per da> aihonitf. Sampitw worth 2:>cr&
M CMtft-env .t* ( V. lid >1 f-
Pnb!L<hers’ Union. Atlaritn,
Oc COn pertly teUiomtj.Samplenworm
vp&jH) 'Pjdu Address Stinson A Co-.l'urUuua. Me
$66
The most essential thing needed; by
the emigrant .is “pluck.”i Go deter
mined to wfnr' Do not He‘frightened by
a single disastrous season. Thousands
turned their backs to Kansas and ;Ne-
r-y. Hi -FSli?#?
Cafcirrb, ,,IIoai|ei
braska after a grasshopper year, who to
day heartily wish themselves back there.
Remember there are bad years and hard
places for fanners everywhere, and
“ havirigput your hand to the plow do
not look back.” Why should a young
man settle - down on a worn-out farm for
a life-long struggle with debt that will
make Mm sordid and old before Ms time,
simply because he happened to be bora
there? A popular writer has compared
such a one to “ a hen sitting on an eeg-
ATLANTA, CA.
Successors to the Southern JS'euspajper Union
—iOPFLI ZEE—
Grand Medal II R \ M I M t silver Medal
at Philadelphia 1 ttuLLIH L at Park-
Exposition. - Exposition
This wonderful. snss.tance is acknowlodged by
physicians throughout the world to bo the best rem
eay discovered for the cure of Wounds, Burns
Bti- nmatism, skin Diseases, Piles. Catarrh, Chil
blains, Ac In. order that every one may try it. it is
put np in 15 and 2» cent bottles for household use.
Ever Wade—Price, 40 Cents.
Stock: furnished and Rollers (ast of all Styles and
sizes. No need »f rending men ds, as we keep all
kinds. When ordering grreei act diameter 01 roller.
News end Book Inks, also CelorcdTJo--. Ink con-
Hanily on hand. Send fur price-list o, i: k-.
wMch they are
~jT"fe Abtil; 6 sVAil i Lb! K/H Ir»c
Pictorial
A HIST08¥»«*W0Wr.
It contains 672 fine historical enaravings and
I860 laige doable c lumn pages, and is the most
con-.ple ifi-tcry of the W. rid ever published. It
ells at sight. Send for specimen rages and extra
en>s to agents, ana see why it sells faster than
any othsr book. Address,
'—y-.K
np as follows: “Greeley is an excellent
leader writer; he understands public
sentiment as well as any man I know;
but he makes fearful mistakes the mo
ment he approaches political economy.
I admire him as a journalist, but as a
political economist he is beneath con
tempt. Indeed, it is not too strong to
say that on the subject of. political
economy he is simply..an idiot, and
alwws wifi beJ'—FMadelv hia Times.
Da. Lelia Bidell sa]
the thinking part of h"
woman the feeling part.”