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WOTTOERFCL POPULARITY OF THE
hEXOW.YEO MEDICINE.
of US* A«* -
No medicine introduced to the acoorded public
has ever met with the success
to Hod known^curativc Bitters It stands to-dav the
best article in the world.
It* marvelous renown is not due to the
advertising it has received. It is famous
bvreason of it* inherent virtues. Itdoce
all that is claimed for it. It is the meet
powerful, speedy and effective agent
known for tlie building up of debilitated
systems The following witnesses are
offered to prove this
Wkmt KBM for mm nut M/
Coshocton Station, N. Y., j (
December 28, 1878. {
Genta_A number of oeonle had l>een
ns.Dg m.r ltoters here,
effect In fact, hail one case, a lady of over
seventy vears, been tick for years,
and for the past ten year* I have known
her she has not been able to ta around
half the time. About six months ago
she got so feeble she wa* helpless. Her
old remedies, or physicians, being of no
avail, I sent to Deixisit, forty-five miles,
and got a bottle of Hop Bitter*. It had
such a very beneficial effect on her that
one bottle improved her so she was able
to drew heraelf and walk about the
house. When she had taken the second
bottle she was able to take care of her
own room anti walk out to berneighbor’s.
and has improved children all the time derived siuoe.
My wife benefit and their also have
great from use.
W. B. Hath* way,
Ag’t U, S. Ex. Co.
An r.nthu.iMiie bWinm
Gorham, N. H., July 14, 1879.
Gent*—Whoever you are I don’t know;
lmt l thank the Lord and feel grateful to
you to know that in this world of adulter
a tod medicine* there is one compound
that proves and doe* all it advertises
to do, and more. Four years ago I had
a slight shock of l«lsy, which unnerved
me to such an extent that the least ex
ritement would make me shake like the
ague Last May I was induced to try
Hop Bitters, l used one bottls, bnt did
not see any change; another did sochange
my nerves that they It used are now as both steady as
they write, ever but were. good to taka right hand* hand
to now my
write** this. Now, honest if yon continue to
manufacture as and good an ar
tide as you do, yon will accumulate an
honest fortune, and confer the greatest
blessing on your fellow-men that wa* ever
conferred on mankind.
Tim Brncn.
A llutheitd a IratlwoMy.
My wife was troubled for years with
blotches, her face, which moth patches and pimples on
nearly annoyed the life
out of her. Hbe spent many dollars on
the thousand infallible!?) cures, with
nothing but injurious effect*. A lady
friend, of Syracuse, N. Y., who hod had
similar experience, and had been cured
with bottle Hop.Bitters, ha* made induced her face her to try it.
One s* smooth,
fair and soft a* a child’*, and given her
such health that it seems almost a mir
acle.
A Member op Canadian Tarwament.
A Klcls lady's Etperienee.
l traveled all over Europe and other for
doliamiii eign countries at s health cost of thousands of
stuirch of and fouildit not.
and I returned restored discouraged real and disheartened,
wa* spirits les* to youthful health
and with than two bottles of
Hop Bitter*. I hope others may profit
by my experience and stay at home.
A Lady, Auoobta, Me,
Ouevkuand, O., Oct,. 28, 1879.
My better half is firmly Hitters impressed with
toe ..,.c idea idea that that your your Hop Hop Bitters is is tlie tlie on
scutial thing to make life happy. Him ha*
used several bottle*, and I would like to
have yon send me a dosen at lowest prices,
B, Pope, HecretArv'
Plain Dealer (To.
HptuNaMKM), Inn., Boot. 3, 1879.
Gents—I have been taking your Hop
Bitter* and received great help from
them. I will give yon my name a* one
of the cured ®ufferer*. Yours,
Mrs. Marx F. Brunt.
Tlie Wooden Hat.
Somewhere about th® year 1770 a trav
eling millwright, foot aore.aud with the
broadest Northern Doric accent, stopped
A at Watt Soho, at the engine factory ‘ of Boulton
and asked for work. His iuqicot
waa little better than on® ot t>«Kgary and
pew looks, and Boulton had bidden him
godspeed he to some other shop, when, a*
was suddenly turning away aommfwlly, Boul
ton called him hack.
“What kind of a hat’s yon ye have on
your head, me mon?”
“It’e just timmer, sir.”
“ Timmer, me mon? let’s look at it.
Where did you get it?”
“I just mail® it, air, my ainael.”
“How did you make it?”
*• I just turned it in tlie lathie.”
"Bat it’s oval, rnou, aiul the latlie
turn* toing* round."
"A weeT; I ju»t gar’d Die latliie gang
aiuther gait, to please me. Ida laug
CT J& k,-o mu |f 55’^di waii r “ T^r “
muukJe IUi»
adp. M
By his inborn mechanism the man had
invented an oral lathe and made his lmt
and the hat made his fortune Boulton
waa not tlw man to lose so valuable a
disk help, thus the after famous Williau Mur
hght^ the D^Xr origumtor of smt^Id locomotives ^rv^ an,!
miderBoulton * Watt, imiilled and in 17S4 made
lie firet vehicle by steam in
England, and with the very hands an
hrmn-cuuniag ”—American that had produced the
“ timmer hat Machinist
HalliK’jaafioD of the Sense*.
ProfeMor Maudaley , , remarks, , in . a re
rent lecture, that one striking wholave feature
ohrerved by medical men had
»max ttje ^ cmmiot be ootmuc* ^
that the they ree the sounds
thcT hw, a.ud the thor p^roeive. SuTtoe
Uve no real existence, am
renaations they receive are the result of
timr exwted nerves. It frequently h«i>
r>«n* ( UK) that a person who suffws frtuu
hallHouiation in rrej>-, i of on® sense has
the other* unwreotod. and ts, on all otlM»r
matters, perfectly eitbw normal. Hailncina
fnim an idea on
Meh the mind haa dwelt, appearing **
•tnethuig exterior, or trom excitement
"""^KrgmgU*. Hunter, and some H is others said tow of
’
wkSTbrSiS^*"*"*^ •««««.
IW. M*k*s, of Philadelphia stated
«f areoaot maatuicaf hill the 1 .,
stitute Umt he made ^sTstarhloh tome
terns of the »«xl«W
locomotives ftiitet could b. driven bafore the
retttnfuftal would cm become «h» tires of th® dnv
tog wiHssla so «r,wt a» u,
cause toeta to burst TttoMmlvulatem*
that which Urn wore limit approsimste i/mnwI <g»lv (he Ammj
tsffh<ssl>.f wmi« notch *
par w hour.
FARM NOTES.
PnARTKB scattered over the floor* of
the fowl houses is » powerful absorbent,
[hTdreSJ^.meiT J*’ ?* which orire. from
R S Your hen ® ,n . the evening . yon
, -
xheVtoTta ^ «ure to to stick to “tta their
“ e " Dmta -
. this , . oountry
were never
™ thw or > * ^ey ^different are this about season. scllinn Nothing their wool de
* lrable *>« bought in Wisconain for
l««a than forty cento per pound. In In
diana fine wool is held at fifty cento.
In some parte of France rye is largely
employed for green feeding, bnfc of Jate
farmers are substituting barley, which
apj>eani to be better relished by stock.
It ia sweeter and somewhat more tender
^ nutritive ^* e P® value no< ^ is 0 \ very different development, fol
"lien young, it contains but six part in
°“® hundred drp matter, and twenty-one
a ‘ x>1lt “‘teen day* after coming into ear
The San Francisco Rural Prrsg tells
of * bp"ge farmer in Merced County, Cal.,
who is “a mechanical genius a* well.”
Among shops, his recent constructions, in his
own swath thirty are feet a grain-header that cuts
a dining-room wide, a canvas-sided
wagon for thrashers, and a
horse-feed ear for thirty horses, with
boxes around the outside for feeding
grain, and a rick for feeding hay.
There is no class of people now so hard
to preach to as old church-goers. They
were neople of but one book, and that
was the Bible; but they were thor
oughly posted in it. They knew what a
good sermon was. A congregation of
farmers now ia of about the same cliar
good after as they were then. They are n
deal harder to satisfy than New
Yorkers. Yon can't give them any
“chaff," and, if a minister has a poor
sermon, I should advise him not to
preach it to them. ”— Ezckunae.
A correspondent of the Ohio Farmer
gives the following sensible advice about
pastures: There are thousands of acres
of pasture that wili require at least tlireo
acres and to carry it needs a cow through the sum
mer, tliat it will no argument to show
be profitable to exjiend ser
eral dollars per acre to reduce this to two
acre* for a cow. I am more and more in
favor of mixed grasses and heavy seeding
for permanent pasture*. Whore I sowed
ouly clover, the third year the ground
was bare; but where I sowed orchard
grass, bine grass and timothy with tli e
clover, it ia better now than it was the
first year.
A deception successfully practiced on
a number of farmers is known as the
“butter contract.” A couple of well
‘ lrwswl follows drive ter the house of the
’’’'pecteNl victim and make an engage
m,,n * W! “' ' l, m *° hike all his butter for
at high . A written
B yeer a price. agree
nlm ’*' ls ,,‘ n ,nlM 'e and in due time the
"contract is returned in the form of a
wmer J u, h“ bfl<J is bound by a to third pay. party, The safest which plan the
*• make no written contracts with
** rm W‘rn who thus suddenly turn up and
°* w b ,,ra nothing is known,
A oorrbhI’ondrnt informs ns that,
while on a visit in the fall to a friend, he
he w ' 1 -* daily surprised obtained. to see the number of eggs
He had but sixteen
hens, and the product, per diem averaged
thirteen eggs, Ha was in the habit of
K' v ' n R. on every alternate day, a tea
*P°onful niixerf and with s quarter of cayenne pop
l H ' r > hen obtained soft food, and took care
each her share. The
1 tried, *]poriment when of it omitting found the that tapper the was
was number
“4 eggs wa* reduced each trial to from
fi vo ® *>* daily. Our correspondent be
haves that the moderate use of this stiiu
ulant not ouly increases the number of
“W*: but efiactually ward* off diseases to
which chickens, are subject,— German
taen Telegraph.^
The common disease In cows and
sheep which and appear* by watery blister*
<m **»« feet between the daw® of the
lu >of, followed by raw spots which tin*
difficult to heal, is known as aphthous
f, 'vcr. Sometimes it is accompanied by
*’J ln dar blister* on the lipa and tongue,
when it » called foot tuid mouth disease,
“ '* t* v *r, or blood disease, and ia con
te P°»* »'«1 troublesome, but not serious,
“»« cosily submit® to treatment, as fol¬
lows: Give one pound of salts, and
when that has operated, give one ounce
of hyposulphite of soda, duly; wash the
T 0 ** with water and soap, and drees
them with an ointment, as follows, viz ;
* * our ou ! lcw °f h u ’d *nd one ounce
°> , , P #nilac * ti tegother, and of
one ouuoe
of °°Pl>*r (verdigris), and stir
<>«noe thoroughly, of turpentine and while and still stir fluid until add poJd. one
Keep for use. The ointment is excellent
for any raw sores or galls, and may 1 h«
usefyliy kept in any stable.
liOUKKkEF.PF.HS’ IIEI.TA.
Bouthriin Frikii Hominy. — Warm
Mine inviled hominy left over from the
or day'before; rich milk, ailfl piece to it of a tumbler butter, two of cream well
a
teateu egg*, and a little flour; fry iu hot
butter.
Lamb Chops with Spinach.— Trim tha
chops neatly, boil them parfectlv, put *
1 “" < ' ->»« them,
“ Ul Ulem iu * —1
pcaa. Pnt little white paper ruffles
«■* *keehopa.
( orn-Fritters. — 1 ako half a down
. rare of earn, out it from the oob.
“»*» ®»* »P with two eggs, a cupful of
NWPPt wlL and enough flour to
* *oft tatter. Drop a tablosixioti
f«l at a time into boiling-hot lard.
Hick Wafflrh Beat together a pint
“f milk, the yolks of thiw aSp eggs, two
“«noes of butter and half of
'boreughly aim tailesl rice, sprinkle a little
*»>♦ a half teaspoonful of soda into s
pint of flour, and then sift it in. Beat
thoroughly, and bake in waffle-irons i„„,
Boston Tf Brown R««*n lure,' TV
cutv, Indisn mral flciir ,me
rve-mrel miSe,' ^ (ti-t nc telsiRK i' 1 ssX om, talf ^d m ’th^ n of
( ^ . (Vl i ^l I*l?^d mu^nt TL^t . i ,
a bttle iiJ ^
SR? which uiiiKt v#*rv ♦ . r) ttto't •
* place s.irml
warm to rise in the linking tut,,
p *i„ M da p,, , viu j v t( , r<>> , , Irte-te
To make it more like the genuine
which is bale d in a brick oven sUkuu it
four hours, and tlien take in a sin*
an hour or more. It can be made will,
the same measures without scalding th •
Indian meal, by mixing soft with warm
w «t«r to allow the in, id to awell live
meal does not sw«U much
ch.,^7 Brown Onion arid Btkw Tnk« 11'
suet tncltin *
and jwrtially brown them, sprinkle a lit
flour over them and stir w,ll. .d.W
warm water to make gtuvy. Put iu t>ep
l’* >t w> ' 1 *sU» »nd whs lever (nece*
l Ul «> w.th a little kulnr,
Utvr, ^ you require, or l.rewn Uw«e alsi,
**•"•»; k*t aiarnwr about ten
minute* <* and then place carefully
|Mtah«w ou Uw tot* 1 This
*•*« wuat getdly stmuiw till done and
mfi h* sUmsI atewt. that the past..*. Tf
owl what* I few apoaMful *
catchup to be added some minute* before
serving. It is light of digestion and
very nourishing for summer,
Steak Pudding.—T his is a digestible
nourishmg di-h for wcjrk-p^ple. Make
of flne-choppec *uet, flour and
warm water; “2^ place round basin; cut
EITire in stnoe, and ^ put ?° m me with .^ ver wane 01 fine
onion, pepper, salt and a little
moisten with some warm water
» nd clo *° "P with crust If you have no
*J* wner ** no > «P*? P*»°« snd » tnv P at «‘ b ** m la tte on it, bottom that of
so
“ 19 Hteam from the boding water below
cook* , the pudding. When well done,
which yon will know by the knife ooming
rln , ^ ^f om V?™?** ^ ie 6 enwt, ^ take ,^ out, place on a
* own * an °P e ? a
l l 1 ut ^ ? flma11 P l f°° b jtter
a r , 8 cou ^. e ^ of catchup,
a » d , a ^autiful , jr gravy will run out round
A ’Galtor Story.
A month later I visited Lake Jessup
with Judge Emmons, of Jacksonville.
The judge was a wonderful marksman,
as full of fun as a eyesight magpie; but failing. he was
getting old, and his was
One day we killed a monster on the edge
of a marshy oanebrake. He had splen¬
did teeth, and the judge wanted to se¬
cure them as mementoes. The painter
of the boat was tied to the reptile’s leg,
and we towed him across an arm of the
lake to solid ground. A small ax was
borrowed from the house of a “cracker”
near by, and we concluded to decapitate
the prize, boil the head and remove the
teeth. The ltody was so large that wo
could not draw it upon the shore. A
stake was cut jaws and the pointed reptile, and pinning driven
through the the mud. of The prob¬
him into water was
ably two feet deep. The judge drew out
a sheath knife, and was about to make
an incision when he was cautioned by a
barefooted negro who stood on the bank
watching the operation with curious eyes.
“Better git shut o’ aat ah gatah, shuah,”
said he; “ ’twell he be done gone dead."
"Oh, good Lord,” exclaimed the judge,
“he’s been dead an hour. If he was
alive do you reckon he’d allow us to drive
a stake through him.” “No gatah am
dead till de sun am gone down,” the
darkey observed The judge laughed
and passed me the knife. I inserted the
Made in a bullet hole near the shoulder,
and cut a gash diamond-shaped in the flesh, following scales the
trend in the lie
neatli the skin. Judge Emmons stood
near the. monster’s tail, The knife penc
trated the quivering As flesh, anil waa
stained with blood. quick as a flash
the tail shot from the water and the
judge was knocked fully ten feet. The
reptile raised his head, stake and all, and
sailed out into the lake like a submarine
1 1 uttery. fortunately Judge Emmons unhurt. lost his The glasses,
but was inci¬
dent, however, convinced him that it
was dangerous to fool with a dead alli¬
gator until after sundown .—Florida Cor¬
respondent o f the N. Y. Sun.
Let Mining Stocks Alone,
The time ha* been that when a man
failed at everything else he went into the
insurance business, and was a roper in
for sumo insurance company that had an
abiding influence. faith in his cheek and wind
Late years the insurance busi¬
ness failures, has sought men who were not total
and now, when a man gets on
the down grade he goes out West to make
him a fortune, and in a few months you see
back at his old haunts with a satchel
full of the most gorgeously printed min¬
ing stock that ever was, and to hear him
talk all you have to do is to pay a fow
cent* on a dollar for this stock and at
once the stock will go up and make you
so rich that you can t get up alone. It
is estimated that there are a hundred
thousand patriots traveling through the
country them when inducing old friends who knew
their word was good, to invest
in mining stock. Hundreds of men who
ought to know better allow themselves
to lw» elected President* of atmosphere
mines, mines in their mind, and because
certain people have confidence in the
afore* aid Presidents, they invest. In
nine cases in ten, the parties never see
their money again, the man who get* it
lives high for a time, and then goes to
thedoga. last Belling mining stock isaboutthe
deal. The many friendsof Gen, Grant
are lators not pleased that he haa allowed specu¬
to use his name as President of a
mining company, though many will in¬
vest in the stock because Grant is at the
head of it., when the chances are that he
knows no more about the prospect of the
mines than the man who blacks liia boots.
Poor people should let stocks alone, by
a whim large majority. Tlie time is coming mining
a man who offers to sell
stock will be hooted by boys and bit by
dogs.— Peck's Sun.
lost Countries Found by Coins.
In citing the historical information de¬
rivable from coins, tlie geographical facts
we acquire from them are of equal im¬
portance. A ease was stated some time
ago how an island of the /Egesui, which
had been lost, was discovered by means
of a coin (the piece not bigger than a
half-diuie), proved and how recent soundings
the existence of this isle. There
was a lost city which owes its place to a
coin. For over a thousand years no one
knew where Pandosia was. History told
and that he established a mint there;
but no one mild put their finger on Pan
,Pr Eight yeara ago a oom came un
' f.v** of * numismatist There
were the letter*. Pandora*, inscribed on
butwhat was tatter, there waa an em
b'em. indicative of a well-known river,
'’^^withthe ^ Then aameoertaintyaa everything was if the re
hp mjtlncalcity, \'een an was atlas, atone* and Pandowa, given its
^ ^ ' 'n ,p Now. a
, ] 1!1 \ ", hftu •' 11 v t ' ^ hl< 1 u, '“ *’' lat *' a for a doul.tful artistic . ment. pomt
mvtcheuehanced. in lustory or geogrephy, it* worth is very
I ins silver coin, whicii
n “t weigh more than a quarter or a
'svaus,, it cleared up tlie mvNtcrv
<* *"***+ was worth to the British
for M«^um it *1,000. the prire that they yvaid
~ “
SyntjiathT.
w ^ <* ia *beir <h “ quick sympathy. «^nn* «f worn They
are preeminently gifted with tW rapnl
uup.v^aionalulity (,rt with their that surroundings. puts them Many 01
rt, PP
endowed, however, lack the *us
tained force that gives cohesion to char
The iuftuancee withdrawn that
’"'biTl forto the emotion, the purpose,
'^rne with it logins to flag. There im
pulaive and mrmfwtliirere with rejoice with thev the
”*ppy mourn the sad;
K"e b“;-“”S‘r smile for smite and tear tor b ar;
j 2.l?3 u “- ,ta! ' ,0 7
f** jr0 "* WMi t * je ‘dfieet of your jrer or of
■ ««^ng totheni. for he
}i H 7\ or *fl'^f*tion hiianirt eutemhuto
T l^rtbe :
‘ i.T .T'.rdi ^ 'be moment, <0 Ibw tJ “ kuwluf >
, .l.-’J P !u!, *' t T ,1, ' r
''‘’b Bwpimt themjtuicteHi of the
Irt ful ** better than laugh
aimh* il in*? ijf*iui m tuihip
Homs That Can Count.
There ia not much stimulus to mental
activity in a life of clodding instances on a street
car track, and yet are known
where horses have taken a lively carrying interest
in the road, the method of on
the business, and especially that portion
of it which involves their time and labor.
They have thought it all out, and have
actually been able to tell the number of
trips assigned for their day’s labor and
when it ends. When a horse is able to
tell how much work is required of him
each day, and when his day ends, the
achievement passes beyond the range of
mere animal instinct and attains the
plane of reason and intelligence. Horse
car driver* tell marvelous stories of the
intelligence displayed by the animals
under their charge. A driver on one of
the Fourteenth-street cars is strongly of
the opinion that horses know how to
count If this rather unusual statement
is questioned, the driver simply says:— going
“Well, if they don’t, how are you
to explain this?” and then he goes on to
say that each car makes nineteen trips a
day. There are four horses used, three
making five trips and one four trips. At
the end of each trip the car is driven in¬
to the stables and then turned upon the
turning table. After the car is turned
the horses are changed if it is the proper
time, before the car starts back on the
trip. The horses will make the four
trips going in and out of the stables
without any difficulty. At the end of the
fifth trip, if for any reason it is necessary
to send the car back, it is almost impos¬
sible to get the horse out of the stable.
He holds back, resists, and it requires
the united exertions of several men be¬
fore the animal can be induced to move.
The horse has kept a strict count of the
trips, and knows that he has finished his
day’s work thing and ought to go to his stall.
The same occurs if the attempt is
made to make the horse that has only
four trips take an additional one. With
the drivers and stable-men, who fre¬
quently witness such exhibitions, there
is a firm belief in the mathematical
abilities of the horse. The street-car
men also tell an interesting yarn about
the hill horse that works on the hill be¬
tween New York avenue and H street.
His time for stopping work is very irreg¬
ular, and he is sometimes taken to the
stables with one car and sometimes with
another. But the horse knows perfectly
well when it is the intention to take him
to the stable, and when he comes to the
top of the hill, instead of stopping he
starts off on a run. If the time for his
going home was at all regular this singu¬
lar intelligence might bo explained, but
whether it is early or late the horse
knows when ho is going home. Until
that time he plods along steadily, and
has never been known to make a mistake.
One of the drivers explains it by the fact
that the hoy who has the horse in charge
usually sits on the dash-board, with feet
on the outside, while going up the hill.
But when the boy is going all the way to
the stables he gets all the way in the front
platform. The horse sees that the boy
has drawn his legs in instead of dangling
them on the outside, and by the inductive
process of reasoning ho concludes that
i t ia time for him to go home. He accord
ingly goes. he Another horse always shies
when passes a certain corner after
dark, because some fouror five years ago
he was frightened at that plaoe.— Wash¬
ington Post.
Ole Bull, the Violinist.
Ole Bornemann Bull who died recently
in Bergen, Norway, was bom at that
place, February 5, 1810, and was conse¬
quently his seventy and one-half years old at
death. His father, a chemist, destined
him for the church, and placed him at
the University of Christiana in his eigh¬
teenth year. Hi* passion for music
could not be repressed, how aver, and he
went to Cassel in 1829 to study with
Spolir, dial but liis reception not being cor¬
he proceeded to Gottingen and com¬
menced the study of law. Thence hn
went to Minden, where he fought a duel
in which his antagonist was mortally
wounded.
He then went to Paris, where he was
reduced to such great straits that ho at¬
tempted rescued to drown himself, but was
A lady who saw in him a like¬
ness of her dead son, took him into her
house and enabled him to make his first
appearance as a successful violinist. His
life henceforth was a round of successes,
and up to 1852 he had made tours of the
whole civilized world, built a theater in
Bergen, married a Parisian wife and
amassed a fortune. Lawsuits then dis¬
sipated his wealth and he came to
America, purchasing one hundred and
twenty laud thousand Potter County, acres of Pennsylvania, uncultivated
ut
where he established the Norwegian
colony of Oleana.
The colony, however, was not a suc¬
cess, and in 1854 he took lease of the
Academy ot Music in New York, but the
venture turned proved Europe, disastrous. He then re¬
to and in 1869 revisited
the United States, where lie has since
resided most of his time, and where, in
1879, being then a widower, he married
a young American girl. He left the
United States within the past year for
the hom®of his childhood, where he now
finds • grave.
»«* »•«» *»•> *>««..
A learned German says: “ In sleep
*ny position exoept norfii and south is
disagreeable, bnt from east to west al
™ost intolerable, at least in our hemis
phere it is otherwise. The cause erf this
m phenomenon that great magnet can obviously which be ia found formed only bv
the earth with its atmosphere, A. e„ ter
wwtnai magnetism. This magnetism
exert* on certain pereons, both hearty and
otherwise, who.are sensitive, a peculiar
tofluence wonderful enough to disturb
their rest or in the ease of diseased per
sous vliaturlnug the circulation, the
nervous functions, and tlie equilibrium
"f the mental powers. There are per
sons whom I kuow. the head of whose
bed is to the north, and who, usi’ial in order to
wake early, reverse their so^ posirion
m led trem that of north to but
witiioui umterstamluui: the raison aw^ whv
»«ffond earlier, that they being reuld always
the sleep related to*me more broken l
have had it that, a, a mil
Aw? pstiente hospital highly in Russia, there were
of sensitive natures who
eomjielled "ere rapidly tiiem recovering. to be movcl When to necessity another
n
"* ll S of the building they did not get on
jowell; ^ setting m in, fact, and prostration it found soemed advisable to
was
to get them back to their former wards as
beds »» possible, the where the heads of the
were to north I have heard of
borsi's going blind through changing
their poaitiun from uortb t«,south to tom
...........
The _ Mormon Temple.
The Mormons are still j>eggit»g away
*t their new temple. It is now twenty
55" **“ lt ^
mki has bean expanded, and it i* <krv.
tourtli coustructel <xmipl«to4. of Th* Utah btfiklimt »** lav
when »*>' nm»h<\| wul be toe granite, mi l
edifice, tlie finest finest ciim, »
kind, if America. not It will building of any
'W».iW0 111 complete tlie require F-”*
to tempi
i tike titer.
• Healthfainess of Milk.
ti c ® e rushes to grow fleshy, a
pint . of milk taken before retiring at
night will soon cover the scrawniest
bones. Although nowadays we see a
good many nexhy persons, there are a
great many lean and lank ones, who
sl g“ * or *-“ e fashionable measure of
improved plumpness, and health who would be vastly
in and appearance
could thenr figures be rounded with
good, solid flesh. Nothing is more cov
nothing by thin women *“■?*>» than a full figure,
^ *> "?
provoke the scandal of the clipper
builds as the consciousness of plump
ness in a rival .
In cases of fever and summer com
plaint milk is now given with excellent
results. The idea that milk is feverish
has exploded, and it is now the physi
cian’s great reliance in bringing through
typhoid patiente, or those in too low a
state to be nourished by solid food. It
is a mistake to scrimp the milk pitcher,
Take more milk and buy less meat,
IjOOK to your milkman; have large
well-filled milk pitchers on the
haveBOUtKl
nesn taKh and save doctors bills.
Da. Bull’s B&bv iell Svrup of is in good demand- only’
everybody 25 spenki it. Thence is
cent*.
----------
In London 58,460 women are em
ployed as milliners and dressmakers,
26,375 as shirt-makers and seamstresses,
14,780 as taiioresses, 10,724 as machin
ists, 5,272 as book-binders, 4,699 as boot
makers, 4,360 as artificial florists, 3,718
as boxffiakera, 2,852 as upholsteresses,
not to mention a large number in various
other industries.____
Are Yon Not tn «Jood Health T
If the Liver is the source of your trouble you
can find an absolute remedy in Db. Sanford's
Lrvra In vwoBATOB, the only vegetable cathar
£?S£
ford, 162 Broadway, New York.
The Vttllnlr Belt I u . .Vlaralinll. VIIt-It.,
Will send their Electro-Voltaic Belts to the
afflicted upon 30 days’ trial. See their adver¬
tisement in this paper headed. “On 30 Dave’
Trial.”
Or. C. E. Shoemaker, the well-known aural
surgeon of Heading, Fa., offers to send by mail
free of charge a valuable little book on deafness
and diseases of the ear, especially on running
car and catarrh and their proper treatment—
giving the references most skeptical. and testimonials that will
satisfy Address as above.
Veoetine is acknowledged by all classes of
people purifier to in be the the world. best and most reliable blood
Straighten your old boots and shoes with
Lyon's HeelStiffeners, and wear them again.
sS^SJPSSfte^SSsa! See
the Suppressed Uterus. Incidental Hemorrhage or Flooding, Painful
and Irregular Menstruation, Ac. An old and
reliable treatment, remedy. Bend postal card for a pamphlet, with
cures and certificates from physicians and
patients, to IIOWARTH .t BALLARD, Utica, New York.
Sold by all Druggists -tl .50 per bottle.
—
DPBULL’S
8A8V
SYRUP
**A HBlCin WITHOUT A bitai ..* 1
HUNTS
REMEDY
TI11S GKKAXEST
KIDNEY AND LIVER MEDICINE
, EVER KNOWN.
HUNT'S REMEDY has saved from linger*
tig di.o..e ndtoft hundred, who b.ve been
*'hu 'NT’S REMEDY cure, all Disease®
nonce ond Retention tf Trine.
HUNT’S REMEDY enconrnge. sleep, crestes
»n health appetite, braces up the .jntem, and renewed
is the remit.
HUNT’S REMEDY cures Pain In the
Side, Back, or Eeins, General Debllitr.
Female Diseases, Disturbed Sleep, Loss
of Appetite, Bright’s Disease, and all
Complaints of the Urino-Genital Organs.
HUNT’S REMEDY quiokly induced the
Liver to healthy action, removing the csu.es
that produce Bilious Headache, Dyspepsia,
Sour Stomach, Coattveness, Piles, Ac.
0 Stomach By the ^ uee of HUNT’S--- REMEDY the
and Bowel* will speedily regain their
strength, and the Blood will be pertectlv purified.
HUNT'S REMEDY is purely vegnible, and
meets a want never before furnished to the pub¬
lic, and the utmost reliance may be placed in it.
HUNT’S REMEDY ls prepared express¬
ly been for the above diseases, and has never
known to foil.
° n « trial will convinco yon. For Sale
. an Druggists. Send
WM. for Pamphlet to
E. CLARKE, Providence, B. X*
Prices, 76 cents, and $1.26 (large size).
IS RFAOMMElfDED
* T IXs£& SStt ■thES&Sw"'
—
n PAIN .,„ n.HLER .... , JLJ nULPflut
“2*^52^ «•»■*»•. cs»i««5£
PAIN ™ KILLER'* *1* 'ISSUSTfZm THE BE * T ft RKX Jt
ln *'•*
*
-
ywwism.lt Ti*
BOSt Liniment Made t
iuS orm,yutm ^uni.
*rr„r a*iv s. «u w«iicinr n,«i,„
FROM THE FARM *
to the A
rKwSUtWIIAL DD H I PU OH ASH A ID
c.. p? - ^ V. t>* ih*n mo*i tnu
fUi \ ^rv 1 * ! l " 7!“ K atl ' 1 **!?*
’ V’— ' 1 ” — p *
- KIDNEV-WORT
The Great Kemetijr tor THE LIVER,
THE BOWELS.and the KtOMEYS.
i dovui blood wiihtho'
;v . the i« rojscacd
‘ wttns off the diwet u. Tb r ?sand naw* U en
, gnarq ad ta&r bo. 1 or sale by ell Drufgista.
tlfcLLilLtllll nn ■ ■■■ Ain
” W ’*“ UL ‘ UIU
eye-classes
Her «seating the choicest selected Tort^iee-Shell and
Amber. The l ghteet, tiand*oat*»t, snd stroageet known.
by Opticians and Jewelers. Mad- by STSUCKX 0.
M. CtT., |,T Madden Lane, New fork.
Tu Mai.. RH P.r * !>•>
nint. .cl ■*—
Piattrrm b*m.ly Scale.
I n# evurtl UJF ' •'V lb* : »
v>7. V, . *-.<
BKMSW for «t.» \ rv
H®.
IMS # v iit net:
Humor Tn the Family.
Good humor is rightly reckoned a most
valuable aid to happy home life. An
equally good and useful faculty is a sense
of humor or the capacity to have a little
fun along with the hum-drum of life,
We all know how it brightens things up
generally ion, to have a lively, witty compan
things, gggg the ridiculous points oi
and who can turn any annoyance
into an occasion for laughter. It does a
great deal better to laugh over some
mestic mishaps than to cry or scold over
them. Many homes and lives are dull
because they are allowed to become too
deeply impressed with a sense of the
cares and responsibilities of life to recog
n ize its bright and especially its mirthful
side. Into such a household, good tat
dull, the advent of a wiitv
friend is like sunshine to a" cloudy day
While it is oppressive to hear people
constantly striving to sav funny tilings
it-is comfortable, little fun is seeing* to make, what a bright!
ener a an effort to
have some. It is well to turn off an
patient question sometimes and to regard
it from a humorous point of view, instead
Of becoming imtated about it “What
is the reason lean never finds clean
sllirt? ” exolaimed » good but rather
impatient husband, drawer. after rummaging wife
through the wrong His half
looked at him steadily for a moment,
inclined to be provoked, then with a
comical look, replied: “I never
guess conundrums; I must give it up. »
Then he laughed, and they both laughed,
and she went and got his shirt, and he
felt ashamed of himself and he kissed
her, and then she felt happy; and sc
what might have been an occasion for
hard words and unkind feelings, became
JUSt tDLfi Contrary, 4il tlirougll tuC ilttlO
vein of humor that cropped out to the
surface. Some children have a peculiar
fueulty for giving a humorous turn to
things when they are reproved. It does
just fis well oftentimes. Laughter is
bettor than tears. Let us have a little
more at home.
Mb. Tennyson once found himself sur
rounded by a throng of ladies who were
more than usually gushing. He availed
himself of an opportune pause to remark
that he looked upon women as the flow
ersof the human race. “What a sweetly
pretty idea ! How poetical!” exclaimed
a chorus of silvery voices. “Yes, ladies,”
continued the laureate, “ and the reason
I think so is because they never shut up
except when they sleep. ” Poets are now
at a discount in that circle of culture.
INftSTmENT rarSftSH’Sm "™BS
GnmUnunc
Furl Madison IHortlwustern RailwayCo.
ore,
* n ■««*•*.
UNION TRUST CO., NEW YORK, TRUSTEE,
Lenfth of Road lOO milt**; whole igsue of Bond*.
$7 Location 00,000, of being Road— $7,000 from City per mil. of Fort Madison, Iowa,
on
Mississippi River, to City ot (Waloosn, October Iowa.
Interest payable April 1st and 1st.
F«r »al» al 95 slid aw* o«mI inferest. with
earls $500 himI $1,000 B«md there will b«
kiven a* a lionu* $100 and $200 respectiTely
In full paid capital k ur the * ompauy.
Circulate, Applt cations Ac., should for Bonds, be made or for further information,
to
•TAMES M. DRAKE & CO®, Bankers,
Drexcl Building. 29 Wall St, N. Y.
PENSIONS
NEW LAW. Thousands of Soldiers and heirs enti
lied. Pensions date back to discharge or death. Ttme
timiUd. Address with stamp,
GEO. E. LEMOY,
P. O. Drawer, 395. WaihLiglon, D. €.
veu ■ month. rc *lTery G crRdnateguarant«B'l M EN r„ r ^«S paying *it- n 2
Valentine, Manner. a
atttion. Adr\ B. JanoaviJlc. >Vi«.
§79 * f u * Outfit weeilt, free. 912 Addrew s day at Txo* home A Co., owiilv made. Maine. Costly
Augusta,
C.GILBERTS
STARCH
Bl-CARB.
SODA
U th. be.i in the World. It u .b.olut.1, pure. It i, th.
b * ,t for Medicine! PurpoMn. It 1. the be.t for Baking
sad sU VsaiUy Um., *o,d .,1 DrnggUU .nd Grocr.,
PENN’A SALT MANUF. CO., Phila.
WNI. H. BURGESS,
RICH Mill ARB, N. C»
Sol. Manufactur er of th 13 moai
Cotton popular Press,
The most convenient and durable
Press in the world for steam or
horse-power the Wooden Gins. Sierew Uh^aper Press. than
500 B«J« in three minutes.
Circulars Free.
B -fmsm us ,NE ? S U n:IV| RS !TY;
1 VP
Sr no c AT A LOG u SEP
--------- —
V u I P’« “«»»«* as-... ■.%
Acju .
till. a HANCOCK i'aaik **
VI
*7 tu« h»b. j. »•. roRvtv
vS*&*£*%££ a»*u
m ''*S5XSfr
uta nnu ’ Atlanta, Ga.
WARD'S
Fine Shirts for
foF'srii'nvi.i'.ur-rn ent
: Lislr frfo Uytakii.
E.M. &. W. WARD,
38l BROADWAY
riCw YORK.
MAS O N &* HAMLIN
ZEBBB ____I LE S S - FRANZ LI SZT - UNR IVA D”
plGHESTHONORS < AWARDED PRICES 3
L 151. $57. $66 $84
AT ALL THE GREAT TO$£00
i & Worlds Exhibitions - AND UPWARDS;
FOR ALSO
t Thirteen Years. for $5 easy Payments K
PER MONTH FOR m
s NO OTHER t! MONTHS,OR
UAmcricanOrgans PER QUARTER FOR '
ve B HAVE BEEN AWARDED o QtMms/o. iipwAm^M FREE.^g
SUCH AT ANY. CATALOGUES
'MUSICIANS OEN YAUY REGARD THEM AS UNEaiiai trM-'irii rnnria r r uii ma q
CABI1VET ORGANS
»HAMUN ORQAN CO,boston NLW-yQftK a CHIC AG 1
A Waiter.
“ Will you please pass the milk. Miss
Brown ?” asked a young man of a fidgety “Do
old maid at the supper-table,
yen take me for fie waiter, sir ?” she an
swered. “ Well, s he added, “ as no
one has taken you thus far, and you ve
waited so very long, I should think you
were one.”
---------
MATURES REMEDY.^.
. mmmM
'lie 6 uat Bibob
WILL CURE
>» «• F.c.congh..ndcoid.,tn«r», Bronchia.,
conSSjSKni, i'SS, kiU, ”
"SM Kidney complaint*, ZZTJ?
* stomach.
barks, that its good effects are realiz'd immediately efter
hie Mood u h»n« -qua*, X MuT^tiZZ failed eir.ct,»
it h»» never to
„«
tan well be called
mrrp iDb nnp Uuljfll im moon DLUuD Ttnmprnn iUuuuiU,
Remarkable Cure Of Scrofulous Face,
Wkstmikstm, Cos*., June 19 , 1979 .
Mk jj h W-i b . testify
ear can to the good effect of your Medi
^
hi* face from one ear to the other, under bin neck, and
™v2im?™ Smi.utSy'OTrMhtS?* Very reiptctfully, 1 ** ° f J0Ur ,lUa *'
MKS ' “’ R. THATCHER.
• | |^| j? "
PBEBABBDBT
H. R. STEVENS, Boston, Mass,
Vegetine is Sold by all Drug gists.
$66SMr , ;‘.rH. r HT , T° ivrn. Term* and Outfit
L s t it CO., Portland, Main*.
$360j88®£$fe Amenta WantHL
lea in the Detroit, world; a Mich. Ram
NSON,
$5 to
pANIEli P, BEATTY’S
ORGANS
17-Stop ORGANS
Sub-bass 4 Oct. Coupler, $1,000. boxed Before & shipped buy only $97.75. instru¬
New Pianos $195 to you an
ment be sure to eee my Mid-summer oner Ultutrated,frte.
Address, DANIEL F. BEATTY. Washington, N. L
ANTED- Agents everywhere to sell our goods, by
»nd profits; first-class goods ail to your customers; we give furnish you good
fit free. we Write prepay for particulars. express chargee; we out¬
PEOPLE’S TEA CO., Box 5095, St. Louie Mq,
m iWSSraitfiK’SrtaS'isr, truth • »«rr«»( pwtBCf is.asiatrsa r,f *o«t future ko»- | mm
fssbss Wads, wia,jaltisUof n*m..tim.*s4 plsre
M
OAPONIFIED
Istlie “Original” Faihilv Concentrated Maker. Directions Lye and M
» M i ? liable f?oap
mJB Soft tofoviipanv ami Toilet earn Can &<»»}» for making quickly. Hurd, It is ■ H H ™
full weight "and strength. A»k jour grocer foi
SAPO.MFIER, and MANUFACTURING take no other.
PENN’A SALT CO®,
PHII tADEIiPHIA.
PETROLEUM at Grand Exposition. Philadelphia Medal VASELINE Silver Exposition. JELLY. at Paris Medal
This wonderful substance is acknowleded by physicians
throughout for the the Wounds, world to he the best remedy discovered
cure of Burns, Rheumatism, Skin Dis¬
eases, Piles, Catarrh, Chilblains, Ac. In order that every
one household may try it, it Obtain is put up it in 15 and 95 cent bottles for
use. from your druggist, and you
Will find it superior to anything you have ever used.
Republican Manual.
€JAMH*AION OF 1SA0. Hintory, Principle*, Early
Leaders, and Achievements of the Republican P*rty, with
hill biographies of OAKFIEED AND ARTHUR.
By wanted E. v. by dmallbt , of the New York Tribune. A book
senals from every which intelligent draw ammunition voter. The best of *11 ar¬
to for campaign use.
An elegant cloth-bound volume *t a fraction of tbe usual
cost. Price 50 cents; postage 7 cents. Circulars sent
free. For sale by the leading bookseller in every town.
AMERICAN BOOK EXCHANGE.
Tribune Building, New York.
_
ON 30 DAYS’ TRIAL
We will send our Electro-Voltaic Belts and othe
Electric Appliances upon trial for thirty days to thoM
afflicted with Aervoxu Debility an d due met of a per tonal
nature. Also of the Liver, Kidneys, Rheumatism, Pa¬
ralysis, Address Ac. A sure cure guaranteed or no limit.
Voltaic Kelt Uo., Man Mich.
$ W • 7 7 I 7 lo. 4.0™'“t.,X.“5Si5L VICKERY, Auguato, Maine. E
LANE & BODLEY CO.,
CINCINNATI,
MANUPACTPRERS OF STANDARD
PLANTATION
Stationary- machinery,
and Portable
STEAM ENGINES
Ogus.
EANE A BODLEY CO.,
John * Water Sts. Cincinnati, O.
To Consumptives.
T ,°£*?’ W ild Cherry 8 emulsion Bark, the or moet cod palatable lives combination oil ani
of tbsse renowned remedies extant. An uneoualtd reme
dy for Consumption, 8 crofula, all Lung affections. Ner»
winch *ous Debility, ihe Cod and Liver all wasting diseases. The manner in
Oif is combined with the Wild C her
ry. enables it to be assimilated by the most delicate stom¬
ach insures complete digestion of the Oil, tones up the
■ystem. relieves couch, causes increase of flesh and
« well-known r «nfth. Endorsed specialist by the Lung most aflactionsnas eminent physicians. used it is A
in
over two hundred cases, and says “there is no combine*
tion equal to it foi Consumption, 6 crofula,” etc. Thou¬
sands of sufferers need and desire to take a combination
of Cod Liver Oil, but have been unable to do so. They
will find that they can take this preparation readily ana
with excellent results. Price, One Dollar per Bottle,
Six Bottles for Fire Dollars Circulars sod valuable in*
formation to all sufferers *ent on free receipt of a descrip*
tion of case Address all orders to
C. 6. A. LODUK, Manufactaring Chemist,
639 Chestnut 6 t., Philadelphia, Pa.
WATCHES
OPIUM BSWLHS known knd.ur. Rem< 4
,.
NO CHARGE
for treatment until cured. Call on or addroee
DR. J. C. BECK,
112 ioh* Str.it, CISCHSlIl OHIO.
Pohli.h.r.' limoB, Atl.nl., U........Thirly-wi.-JV)
ACENTS GENERAL WAltTEDto seTr1 L
HANCOCK,