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GOSSIP FOR THE LADIES.
Ill* t'ir*l l,o*e.
1 remember
In Uretiutjon September,
W« Slily-two.
arere Mti at!,
u» ;
And ih. nsoettiKT
Arad-lit*!. Happened times
On tbe m*d
(Seutimentel
I Episode),
«u Ton uartlu*. lily;
were
Ton wet* bluablnf—
to wee I;
I m emltten,
to wet* you
(1)1 Hire that'a wrlitea
t* true);
An* money J
Not* bit
Hetber fimuT,
WttB'tll?
Vow. we pUshted— pair)
How Happy dillKbted
But People were! fetlier—
your
To be euro—
Tbimsto U rather
And Premature; mother—
your
Streucr to any—
Wee eaotber
In the w*y.
Tibet * Leaven
Venlebed then
O'on I were erven,
That wee ten)!
Veer* w ee many
1 *jfn—
) 00 * let eny
Bodjr know.
Hr, Whittier on XVoinitii ttullrttfe.
Our writer and poet says: “ The so¬
ciety of the future must l>e noted on
more directly In bringing by women than that of t he
pant. the out of the aensi
V'ibtieH they must take a leading part.
Woman suffrage I regard tut an inevita¬
ble thing and a good thing. Women in
pnblic life will bring it up more Ilian it
will bri i Ihem down. There will bo
conaidttrablo floundering Mm society
would become completely adapted fairly to the
complished change, but after it ahull lav order the ac¬
and in working
work of society will go on without nny
deterioration, anti with a gain in purity
of motives and unselfishness of law¬
makers and administrators. I fear its
effects in large cities, where bad women
will come forward. Women are so in¬
tense that bail women will lte worse in
public life than bail men. But the diffi¬
culty is in the nature of the city."
A Word to the I.IrW.
Now that you are it is being courted, you
think, of enurae, all very well, and
it will las nieer when yon get married.
But it won’t. He thinks he’s going to
keep on this high pitch of love all the
time. But ho won’t. He doesn’t know
himself, and you don’t know him. When
In* sees you as many times a dav ns ho
wants to, may las more, when he sees
your bead done up regularly every morn¬
ing in curl papers and the bloom is all
off tin* rye ; when your home contains a
good deal of wash-tub, cradle and cook
stove, he won’t stand in front of the
bouse for one hour, out in the cold,
watching your light in the window.
He’ll lie thinking rather of getting out
of the house. Young woman, protract
this courtship as long as you can. Let
well enough alone. A courtship in hand
is worth two marriages in the bash.
Don’t marry till Christmas after next.
“Kindred and IffHiil).''
The Protestant Episcopal Bishop of
Albany, with the N. Y., lias published a pamphlet
above title, or “ God's Law of
Marriage,” in which he tries to show
that a man should not, under any cir¬
cumstances, be allowed to marry his
dead wife’s sister. To urge, lie says,
that such a marriage is “the sweetest
and most natural thing ” for a widower
is mere sentiment und “often sickly
sensualism poorly disguised under a thi'u
veil ; and against it. is to la* set up the
fact that tin* impossibility of marriage
establishes blessed relationship firmly the of sacred the wife's and most- sister
iu the family. The very name by which
the relation is known involves the cer¬
ter-in-law—i. tainty of this protection. in the law She of is a sis¬
e., God ; os
with our good whom, English because defines marriage it, a sister,
is imp*,
sible, the wise intimacy of a brother's
relation in possible and safe."
A Ntotlirr nud llAUghicr*.
I once met (it w as at a garden party )
a plished clergyman's women wife—a who graceful, introduced accom¬ her
—
three daughters, all so much after the
mother’s type that I could not help ad¬
miring Yes theta. "
** she said, with a tender pride,
“ 1 think my girls are nice girls. Ami
so have useful, too. We are not rich, and we
nine children. So we told the el¬
der girls that they would have either to
turn out and cam their bread, or stay at
home and do the work of the house.
They chose the latter. We keep no
and servant—only clean. My a girls char-woman take it by to turns scour to
b© cook, housemaid and parlor-maid. In
the nursery, of course (happy mother
who coaid say ‘of course 1' ] tiiey are all
in all to their little brothers and sister*. ”
But how about education I” I asked.
Oh, the work being divided among
to many, we find time for lessons too.
Some we can afford to pay for, and then
the elder teach the younger ones. Where
there's a will there's a way. My girls
are Book i lot ignoramuses, them or reel uses either.
at now."
And <s I watched tlie gracious, grace¬
ful damsels, in their linen dresses and
straw hats—home manufacture, but as
pretty —I as any of the elegant toilets there
saw no want in them ; quit© the con¬
trary, They looked so happy, two—so
gay and at eaee !
*' Yes," answered the smiling motlier,
“it is liecaus© they an* always busy,
Tiiey never have time to pet slid mope,
especially alsiut themsrh i *. I do believe
girls my girls are the merriest and happiest
alive.”
1 could well imagine it—Mrs. MafocA
(Yaik, in Batar.
Woman** Opportunity
The downfall of this or that unhappy
person may be oommonly imputed
speculation oc mialortune to business or
to other causes ; but the origin of the
great bulk of f these these disaster*, disasters, if if carefully carefully
h' 'Ugh W heve, t out in and and vended, vended, will will expenditures lie be found, found
w e extravagant
in every-day life. American women
have a task set before them to which
they willing should forthwith put an earnest and
hand. It is to return so far a*
may lie to the old and frugal ways, the
forehanded and saeacious domestic man¬
agement of their grandmothers. Bv ex¬
ample, no less than actual saving,thev
may do « world of good. Lot them show
their husbands that they an* determined
to oppose wasu-nu and unseemlv outlay
“» a matter of principle. The family
may be able to afford such an outlay to¬
day, but may not be able to afford it to
morrow.
A useful lesson is to be had here from
the King who insisted that his children
should plies to be girls taught well a trade; aud tins ap
tell what as liis future as to boy*. emuiustaaui* No__ >
can
may be. Item© of the richest noblemen
in England are alao tiie pooreat because
of the constAntly-increaAod demand npon
their resource*. Poor Bichard may not
t>e the beet guide in the world in every¬
thing, domeattic but he i* certainly a safe one in
economy. There i* no earthly
need do, for doing always alway* what what otlier other people
or thinking If peo¬
ple but dare will aay. to inaiat American on t>ecoming women honae- will
wivea of the good old wort, of regulating
their home*, not of necessity of aa others
do, but aa their own nenae right and
length of puree justify, with an eye to
the future as well as the present, there
will l>e fewer breaches of trust ami
broken fortunes in the business world
1) crcat tor than in the ten sad years that
have lieen, as well as much sounder, be¬
cause much safer, enjoyment of life
among business men.
Wh*t We (all “Terr* Flrma.”
The river* of the sea, apart from the
astonishment and wonder which their
stupendous the mind proportions must arouse in
of the student of nAture, pre¬
sent themselves to us os a subject of
paramount interest, when we consider
the part which they have played and are
still playing in the building up of the
the tojimost layer of the solid earth crust, condi¬ in
perpetual changes of climatic
tions, and iu the distribution of vegetable
auimal life over the surface of the
advance planet, and lust, uot least, in the recent
of ocean navigation, by which
the inhabitants of the most distant lauds
have been brought into dose intercourse
with each other. Tho erosive notion of
current* constantly tends to alter the
configuration ing land of tlie coast lines, l>y tak¬
ing away it elsewhere. in one place and deposit¬
tities of Again, immense the quan¬ riv¬
sediments carried by all
ers of the world into the sea are taken
up tied by of the currents and spread over the
the ocean. Geologist* tell us
nt that present nearly all, if not has alt, at the time dry been land
the bottom existing of the one assertion
at sea, an
confirmed by the fact that tho strata
which compose some of the loftiest
deposited mountain in ranges have long evidently been the
floor of the ages ami still past retain upon the
ocean,
remains of the animals which disported
themselves iu the sea* of former days.
What we are still in the habit of calling
“ terra tiriua " is proved by modern ob¬
servations ami fulling to lie in constant motion, ris¬
ing like the heaving breast
of some mighty beneath monster, whose arms tho
stretch far the waves. lJy
action of the subterranean forces, as yet
unexplained, depressed vast areas of the earth
crust are below or lifted up
above the level of the sea, and we are be¬
ginning the maxim, at last to that understand there tlie truth
of is nothing sta
V>le in the universe of created things ex¬
cept the unstable .—Science for Alt.
One 11 ii ml red bashes on Ihe Haro Back.
M. 8. Hoot, of this city, a gentleman
whose veracity will not Vie questioned in
this community, gives us the following
statement of a scene which he witnessed
a short time since in the eastern portion
of this county : “I was at Ciunpo. An
Indian had been found guilty of break¬
ing into the house of Mr. Herrick and
stealing some blanket*. He was tried
before Justice of the Peace Gnskill and
turned over to the old Indian Alcalde and
sixoliiefs for punish merit. They sentenced
him to receive 100 lashes. They were
just getting ready to tie him up us I
started for dinner, after putting out my
team. The prisoner wa* a large young
man, six feet high and well proportioned,
lie was tied up iiythe wriste with a long
rope, and the rope was passed through
the springs of a high seat on one side of
a wagon and over tho other side, the
victim being drawn up so that his feet
would just, touch the ground. His feet
w a* spread ami each lied to the wagon
spokes, hijis. His and Shirt his body was tied at tho
was removed, and then
a stalwart Indian administered the pun¬
ishment with u leather lariat., by whirl¬
down ing it round his head and bringiug it
witli his utmost force upon the
naked IkhIv of tho prisoner. Tlie blood
poured from the writhing man’s back.
After a strong man had administered
fifty task strokes that he gave he was so for exhausted another by fiend, the
and way Indian,
a who younger more muscular
continued the infamous torture.
ami Fifty the lashes had already been laid on,
young devil continued to cut
into the flesh fifty 1111111 * more. I spare
a recital of the awful shrieks and cries
of the poor tortured creature. When
the 100 lashes had thus been adminis¬
tered, the Indian Alcalde told the ulmost
d.ving would niau to leave the country, or he
lte hung if he ever came back.
Mr. Gwkill says; 'After one of these
Indians him been whipped once he will
never steal again ; it makes a “good In¬
dian ” of him.' This prisoner when let
down fell to the ground, and could not
move without support from his sister.”
—Aim JLHcga Union.
_
A Voracious Eater.
A remarkable feature of eating and
drinking Hungarian against time and is said reported have by the
performed press, to tieen
in Groaswardieu. by u youthful Magyar resid¬
ing This surpassing
trencherman laid a wager, ami is de¬
clared to have won it with several min¬
utes and au omelette to spare, that he
would, between the hours of UJtO p. ui.
and midnight, devour the following
comestibles, that it lieing clearly understood
there would be a full portion of
each dish in succession, any two of
which portions may be estimated as oon
stitnting a hearty meal for a full-grown
adult blessed by nature with s lively ap¬
petite : lioast beef with papriea sauce
aud potatoes ; s Vienna veal outlet with
}syur» : a fillet of beef witli dumplings;
grilled fried purk with pumpkins ; half a fowl
iu batter ; bubble and squeak; a
lieefstcak witli poached eggs; fried
calves’ liver; calves' brains and kidneys:
pickled veal; stewed beef; a broiled
goose liver and a frieaseed fowl with
carrot*. He not only contrived to atow
away all the articles enumerated in this
down comprehensive menu, washing them
with two quarts of ly»©r. four hot
tie* of old wine and three of aerated
w ater, but when he had clean'd the last
of liis appointed dishes—the dock dial
theu marking 10 wmute* to 13—he
asked for a three-egg omelette, WhicU
vanished down his threat Mont the
hour struck.
Just before visiting the menagerie,
Johnny had a passage at arms witli the
young atiut who assisted at his toilet,
and with whom he flew into a rage. Ar¬
rived at tlie menagerie, Johnny van im¬
mediately with iutereated litlie bv a strange foreign
animal a long, body. “Wist
animal ia that, mamma?” he asked, “It
ia called an ant-eater, my son.” After
a long silence : “ Mamma, can't we
bring Aunt Mary here some day ?
Bare.
A Brooklyn butcher has an intelligent
German derk who is trying to learn En¬
glish by lookiug up in the dictionary
every word he hears but does not under¬
stand. explaiu what A lady customer, in her effort to
cut of meat slie wanted,
she ami why her slie beef wanted cooked it. mentioned that
ate rare. “ Bare?”
he repeated. “Bare? Vat iah date
G. yw; I know. H-e-r-c—very seldom,”
Distressing Condition of the Russian
^*****^1'
™ The „ . correspondent of the
nusaiAn
tion Tempt tlie sends demoralization, a frightfully-vivid descrip
of the drunken
ness, the misery, and poverty of tlie
Russian people. His accounts are fully
confirmed by a series of articles in tlie
Golot. Tlie Russian writer doubts
whether the peasantry have been gain
its— whether they have advanced in civ
ihzation—since their emancipation in
1861. Assuredly they are no longer
sold like cattle; their children are no
longer taken from them ; they are not
(logged, nor are they subject to the dis
cretionary his bailiff. arbitrary Nor power they of driven the noble
or are in
herds to work for him five or six days in
the wood, week. less But credit they than have less land| The less
before.
landlords, their owners, formerly pro
tected them against the police, who now
jiouuee upon them for various kinds of
imiiosto unknown to them before. Then
they hail but one master; now they are
subject to the Mayor, to the tax-gather
or, to the Chief <d the Commune, to
the tribunal of Zemstvos, to the Judge,
and to other tunetionanes Against
their exactions, arbitrary ami frequently
illegal, they have no appeal. With then
vaunted self-government they have less
secunty and order than before All the
Iiojmjs which were raised by their eman
cipation have been dispelled; they have
fallen into apathetic discouragement, all
because they who are charged with the
administration of affairs are not ani
rnated with the Czar’s liberal intentions,
After having granted a somewhat too
extensive autonomy, the authorities
sought to impede its development. The
rural police and other functionaries were
invested with arbitrary powers to impose
fines and jienalties. Additional vexa
tious restrictions were imposed in 187-1,
and the disheartened peasantry, seeing
fallen the hopelessness into the of their plight, have
most degraded drunken
ness and its attendant misery. Multi
tudos who wero well-tv-do peasants have
seen all swept away from them—their
cattle, their homes, and all; they now
grovel like the boasts of the field, where
shelter can bo found. M. Kochelef, tbe
author of these articles, insists that the
state must improvements; begin by enforcing agricult
turnl t.ie moral utul in
tellectutu development of the peasantry
would follow, were the tribunals to be
reorganized have confidence so that the peasant could
in the integrity of liis
arbitrutors.
Wanted to Live In the Stars.
He Very near ua sat two young people.
wore tho face of a man who shave*
three times a day, and that white neck
tio had never seen the starlight before.
There was jiearl powder on the shoulder
.if his eout, and a tender, dreamy look in
her lovely eyes. They sat and looked
up at the stars, and they didn’t care for
any oartli, solitary thing any nearer to this
softly; “Mortimer," Mortimer”—-his she murmured,
to be Mortimer, “ though name couldn’t appeared learu
I
whether it was his front name or his
after name—“Mortimer, dear,” sho
said, “if we could only live apart from
this busy and sordid, unsympathetic
world, in one of yon glittering orbs of
golden else, radiance, each living ajmrt from alt
base only things for of earthly other, life, forgetting tlie tho
coarse
greed of the would world and its animal in¬
stincts, that be our heaven, would
it not, dear ? ”
And Mortimer, he said that it would.
“ Where, heart of my own,” he said,
and his voice trembled with earnestness,
softened “ my own radium*- darling Ethel, day through all the
of the and all tho
shimmering tenderness of night, out
lives would pass away in an exalted at¬
mosphere above tho base-born wants of
earthly chattering mortals, crowd that ar.d far beyond the
lives but for to¬
day, our ken—" lives, refined beyond tho com¬
mon
Ami just then the nuui witli Hie gong
enmo Ethel’s out. burnt Mortimer, ho iwwlo a grub
at and a plunge for the
cabin skirts with door. her Ethel other just gathered dear her
hand, jumped
over the back of her diair and after
him, and away tiiey went, clattering
down the cabin, upset a chair, ran into
a good, sweet old Quaker laity, aud
banged a bad won! out of her before
who had time to stop it; down the stairs
tiiey the rushed, collar.d table, a couple of chairs
at nearest feed a waiter, mid
opened the campaign of without skirmish¬
ing. I am a man uoaree mold and an
earth-liorn appetite mvself, and I
wouldn't find good live hoteyn iu n st ir so long as I could
a America ; but long,
long \>efore I could get seats at Ihe
table for my family, Mortimer and Ethol
had two blue-fish, a little rare beefsteak,
some corn-bread, a plate of hot cakes,
two laded eggs, amt a bunch of onions,
and the waiter had gone out to toast
them some cheese.— Burdette.
Abolishing Bog Lntin.
Au attempt has bean made on the otlier
side of t he water to nlioliah the dog Latin
hieroglyphics writing used bv lor physicians ill It
has been prescriptions druggists.
nsserttxl that this hideous jar
goti, together with had penmanship, blruiders has
tH>eu responsible for more fatal
in making up prescriptions than cixre
lesaness or ignorance on the part of the
druggist. niiu-te'cnth Doubtless in the “cultured”
century it seems supremely
ridiculous to commence directions to a
druggist, with ** It,” which is the trans¬
formed sign of Jupiter, and, of course,
iui invocation to that planet to exercise
a favorable influence over tho subsequent
course of the dose to lie swallowed.
However, with most people think the “R”
the down stroke is a contraction
for “ lhviis',” while they do not profess
to understaud (nor is it desired that they
should understand) the cabalism which
covers tlie rest of tlie sheet: “K. Spir.
Sinit. ziii. Sue. Deni. opt. zii. Liq. Lun.
exji. q. s., ml. zviii. M. et Sol. sec. ar
tern . Sig. Ij coch. mag. sum. intorvello
brev.” Who would Mippoee that this
recting w as only a Hudibraacan method of di¬
tliat the untie at should take a
powerful glass However, of whisky punch on going
to lied ? the obscurity of the
words is just one of the reasons whv
tiiey ar»> so dear to the practitioner, ft
is not advisable that crechety or nerv¬
ous people should always know what
they are getting.
Th* Sallotel, tHtigland) borough ana
lv»t reportetl to tlie Towu Councit lately
the result* of hi* examination of KMOm
man]de* of “onfermented wine.” One
“nuijiie consisted of sugju , tartaric *eid,
sonic aud salicylic acid, some coloring mat
ter, artifictally-maite a quantity of cqqwr. Another
was tamed an alcohol article, ami in.n-
1 Wine of the Tem]renuice One, labeled “Select
«h contained large Fraternity,” of aUviuil.
a amount
Only one sample wax pure, and was
what it waa reiirveeutixl to be.
1 hav* auffrred Hem * kidnev difficulty for
the past ten years, eccentpeiirefi with MTVOM
•paaina, I to as'iaus gave me bnt temiKjrarv re
^rv at Warner " 1 *fter a Safe uaiug Kidnev |W and and eua-hatf t.iver bett tea
cure, int
uervoiu ajiaema wet * naf trWu twin. at My a**
*e .. .veers, | cws*mmeu>t tl>t* areal ramd. ts
altsuffeniw from nrra. ua icmblea.
keetuu. Pa. Maa. IU*r Rmsx
nustrinuAiK TiKUin.
a ni**aa*i«n »r in* a>v» navi h«bi ef
in* colored r*rt«r.
i** w Tork
Every sleeping-car special is nominally in
charge of a conductor, a gorge
ous lieiug, with an ornamented cap, who
disappears from view when the train
starts and is not seen again sleeping-car until morn
ing. Tlie real despot of the
is the colored porter, who, as soon as the
conductor has gone into another car to
make himself comfortable, assumes un
limited authority. Tlie moment it is
dark, he puts his passengers to lied. No
matter how anxious a passenger may lie
to sit up until ten o’clock in order to nur
sue an innocent conversation with a
young lady, the jKirter approaches him
and remarks: “ We want to make up the
lied, now, sah !” With thfe abjectness of
spirit characteristic of American travel
ers, the unfortunate man never dreams
of disputing the porter’s authority but
rises promptly and balances himself un
easily against a neighboring berth vffiile
us bi^ u put m order. The object of
the fmrter m thus requiring his oasseu
g«rs to go to bed early is easily per
caved. Hie sooner they are bed out himself of the
way the sooner he can go to
What to him is the wail of the wretched
raveler who is thrust into a stifling berth
hours before he can by any ixissibility
go to sleep? What cares ho for the dis
appointment of the young man and the
young woman who hail expected to enjoy
each other’s society during the evening?
He knows that if tie orders the passen
gers to go to bed they will not dare to
disobey him, and his own personal corn
fort is the only object which is dear to
him. As soon as the passengers are in
bed, the porter takes away their blackening shoes,
not necessarily with a view to
them, hut as a guarantee that they will
u, >t get out of bed without permission,
These shoes he takes to his private bed
at the end of tlie car, where he spends a
little time in mixing thorn, and then pre
pares for sleep. As a rule the porter
does not snore, because he holds that the
duty of snoring properly however, belongs to the
passengers. happens, If, as sometimes
no passenger volunteers to
snore, the porter demonstrates the fear
ful power of the African nose by snoring
with a sustained vigor that no ordinary
traveling nose can hope to emulate. Be
f <>r © going closed to sleep the porter has, of
course, all the ventilators if it is
summer, and stirred up the fire if it is
winter, tints making sure that his vic
tints shall suffer from heat and gain as
little What sleep with as the possible and for their money.
heat the noise the
passengers before twelve rarely o’clock, manage by which to fall asleep
time the
porter, refreshed by his nap, rouses him¬
self aud begins his midnight round. He
stops at every berth, and, shaking the
sleeping him: Was passenger, it wakes sah, that him up to ask
“ you, was want¬
ing to get out here ?” Of course, no one
wants to got out, ns the porter perfectly
well knows, but it is a jiart of his fiend
ish system to wake everybody at mid¬
night, and thus prevent them from for¬
getting their miseries iu sleep. When
his midnight round is finished the porter
returns to his den and takes a sound nap.
Long experience waked lias taught him that a
passenger who is up at midnight
will fall asleep again at three o’clock a.
m. o’clock, Accordingly, he sleeps begins until nearly
four when he with malig¬
nant delight the process of getting his
passengers out of lied. He informs every
one that “ We’re most there, sah !”—
without attaching the slightest meaning
to the word “there”—and that “We're
waiting sah!” The to put them beds away now,
meek passenger, believiug
that he must be at the point of arriving
at the station where breakfast was to be
had, dresses hurriedly, spends half an
hour in a general shoe exchange with his
fellow travelers, aud then finds that
has throo long hours to wait before
can have any breakfast-. At this
he generally ill loses his patience aud uses
language which regard to sleeping-car
ters can not be defended by
tere moralists; but, nevertheless,
the porter comes to him and
fifty cents him for without having daring mixed the
lie pays to hint
lie deserves the most ingenious
that the ablest inn nisi tor ever invsritod
A Cincinnati dyer went We insane
political excitement.- suppose
more he read the madder he got.
Thk thongljtleiixnrow of people it to grett
regur-a to w»tohfalne*« Reaiu.t Oolite, etc.,
in-re it uot tor the wonderful curative
of 3>r. Bull's Cough Syrup, we should
at the fate of iu«h.
f-’i.OOO will l>o forfeited and paid by the
Bitter* Company if Hat Bittkx*. »
medicine prepared by them, does net excel, in
fair eompoUtive oxamuiatlon all other 00
pouiul* uow before tho publio celled
-lour Ekxiirr, do you »dmir* th® rosy tint* of
table complexion? T.ivei Powder, Poi taline, or Tahlcr’s
will remove Mllownew
of tuipart th* * blood healthy alow, lit mann ing
and arousing an ingetiv* liver.
Pric® of package 80c., sample bottle 28c.
mle by all di-nggisw._____
Tbe Vullelr RrlUa. »*r*lial>. Mlrb..
Will send their Electro-Voltaic BeliJ to the
afflicted upon 30 days’ trial. Ilee their adver¬
tisement iu this paper headed, “On 30 Days
Trial.”
____
Orr Lyon's rnlcnt Heel stiffeuers applied to
those new boots before vou run them over.
SfAt.aaiai fevers can be prevented, also other
miasmatic disease®, inti^o by occaaionailv oldest using Dr.
ik/nfonCt Itver rater, the general
Family Medicine, diseases which is recommended as a
cure for all caused by a disordered
liver. Eighty-page book aent free. Address
Dr. San foni. 162 Broadway, New York.
Em:rsu raw.-- Rheumatism ia a diaeaae of
the blood. The blood ill this dine**# ia found
to contain an exceaa of fibrin. Vegefin* seta bv
conTcrbnf tbe blood from it* diaeaaed condi¬
tion to a healthy circulation. One bottle of
Vegetine wilt it give relief; lie but te effeot » perma¬
nent ear*, luuat t*k*u regularly, and may
lake aeveral bottlea, eapeoimlly in cases of iong
standing. Try it. and your verdict will b» tbe
»ame as that of tbouaands before you, who aav:
“I never found ao mnoh relief as from th» use
of Vegetine,” which is compounded exclusive!*
of barks, roots and herbs.
“On now mt Back Aches!"— How often
hear it raid. Well raey the victim complain,
for the kidneys sre suffering; and when that
t he case there is always danger-great often end danger. fa
Kidnev dtseastw, if let run, too
ls. There is. however, a sure cure for them.
Hunt's Remedy » a medicine that does not
to cure kidnev, b ladder, liver and urinary
plaint*. Even Bright’s IHsease, the terror
physicians, is cuml by Hunt's Remedy,
great kidney bfrckscho and liver before medicine. it terminal** Try it.
cure tout id 8 qd 8
ttung worse. Sold by all druggist*. Trial
wnte.
DfBULLS
l r i m
SYRUP
How an Arab Lady Re mimes Herself,
the floor of the tent or hut, as it
may chance to be, a small hole is exca
vated sufficiently large to contain a com
mon champaign bottle: a fire of charcoal
or 0 f gimply glowing which embers is made
within the hole, into the woman
about to be scented throws a handful of
dr ug s She then takes off the cloth or
•<topee” which forms her dress and
crouches naked over, the fumes, while
gjje arranges her robe to fall as a mantle
from her neck to the ground freely like the a tent,
gi, e begins to perspire in hot
ad - bath, and, the pores of the skin being
t j ms opene d and moist, the volatile oil
from the smoke absorbed. of the burning perfume time
js immediately By tlie
rhe fire has expired the scenting her process
^ completed, redolent and both with incense. person and
p er robe are
Blowing the Horn,
The Atheng (G a.) Banner reports that
J £ Athens had a law forbid .
di ® t e Mlo of liquors in quantities less
tha a quart 4 , Whenever a man came
, a nd bought ,f a quart f he could not,
f dri k it al so tlle bar-keeper
wonJd go * to the door and blow a blast on
acowh ro ’ mi tbe i oa fers all around town
w hnf) ten to help ^ the purchaser dis .
‘, o{ his waspurchascl/the rt lien any bir-keepiT chanc6)
£ (dlon £ ’ [
, d b]ow ram , g ho n ’ and tlieu he
. -1 would bav to each ot her . “Nouse
t . o jmi- r y so v„ ne s got ot a „ gallon. „„n nn »
,
-
Vegetine
WILL CURE RHEUMATISM.
Rlienmatism Is a Disease of the Blofffi;
to Cure Rheumatism it must be treat
ed as a Blood Disease.
Rev. WNI.T. WORTH,
IUeo;n!!..Vc**tma for Rheumatism end Sciatica.
Fall Riti*, Mas?., May 13, 1879.
Mb. H- K. Snmnrs:
Dear Sir -For tome year* I h*ve boon, at times, mu tch
troubled with acute attacks of Rheumatism. I especially
nufT/red tortntve from Sciatica. By the advice of inicn is
who knew the bero-flts conferred by Veqktive, I t»egau
its us*, ami since thst time I bhve'nadno avta-k like those
I pi vviously of th« suifer#*d. trouble, P'or some occasiounUy time }»s*st I faint have iutima* had no
return wiiich disappeared »*xf.*ept taking fe wdose, h of the Vro
tion, I also take pleasure on in recoiding » testiruo
KTtNE. my ouy in
f»V( >r of it. excellent effect in Abating an invetentt e Salt
Rh- ttii«um, made end tin I count Respectfully, it no smut! pleasu'r. WM.T. to tiave WORTH, been thus
free.
Pastor First M. F. Church.
Vegetine
Has Relieved and Cured Sufferers of
Rheumatism by the Thousands.
READ THIS:
If You Have Rheumatism Take the
Medicine that Will Cure Ton.
Bcilkk Switch, J*nsinos Co.. Ind , \
May ly, IS79. J
Ms. H. R. .St*vk«m:
Dtat Si r ~Hiving in manufactured our family received by gr I eat tbougi benefit ht
from :ht» Vxoktin* you, i
wc-uid give you the facts of the case, hoping it might inept
toe *y« of some suffering one, who might thus be relieved.
I h*v«a grandchild hud .bout ten ettack yeats of of rheumatism, age, who. two and years for
ago or over, a severe
two lung years w*s under the cure of aa good fl physician
as »v*- have i:t thiscouutv, find vet all this time grew worse,
til! we deformed, gave her up, and ana thought told »Vie by must doctor die. that, She if was she
much we were a
lited, she would always be deformed; but thanks to Veg
rusk, she Lest is to-day December perfectly abandoned well, and a* all straight Imp*} of aa Ihe r.n
nnow. we
doctor doiug »r.y thing for her, and commenced using
Veoxtikx, according to your directions. When the first
bottle was used up we could not sec much improvement;
but we coutinuea on the second bottle, and could see
Sri’.UI e change for good. She took wix bottles, and, thank
God, a complete cure was effected iu eve it respect.
Yours truly, G. BURGESS.
Vegetine is Sold by all Druggists.
W \U
IT . - ’ J?i
Fitters
Meets the requirements of the rational medical philoso¬
phy which at present prevails. It is a. perfectly pure veg¬
etable remedy, embracing the three important properties
of a p.event!re, a touic, and ao alterative. It fortifies the
t>ody against disease, invigorates and re-vitalixes the tor¬
pid stomach aud liver, and effects a most salutary change
a the entire system, when in a morbid condition.
For sale by all Druggists and Dealers generally.
First-class Agents ti send
for terms anil circulars foi
two new books, the most
saleobie subscription books of the season.
A “ Bonanza ” for wide-awake men.
SOUTHERN PltBilSKlNG CO.,
Bm lit, Kti Orleans, La..
Sore Ears, Catarrh.
bat few affUoted with these loathsome disease*
very ewer get well from them; this Is owingU
ms; 1 :
X mil. BOui ' 375 P * £ “' 0CUI0 '
DB. C. E. SHOEMAKER, Anrsl Surgeon,
Koadinx. Fa,
turners; t^s^s^ssrss^ largest stock in the
ssuSsSssifS coun-
1 ? rvI' O. E Box ' WBLL6 , “' 4560.
V-/ J’ a
toEsssssS
nllii
PEU.’^ANeNTLY CURES j
kidkey diseases,
I LIVER complaints,
Constipation anti Piles.
POWER, JUlLi
U BUVEIf.TiIK UECA «E it ACTS ON TBE
Sl.VKVsi nattULw AND KID.
AT THE SAME TEWDS.
«tne!3oic<wo U Secauco it cicsnscs tho system of
jgin gidnoy js humor®that a&veiope
nrsd Jaundice, Urinary h rcieee, Bil
P*!ce. oi in Phoumausm, Conttipotion, Mauralela
and (-emc.ia disorders.
|0 *.|mvka T-XT.-y.' yr wtU nuU.iy of
XV 3MOW
1 M«y f. «t th- OrsggUiA si.ea.
t * ua> rttnitte*.
8 I-'”*'•*£*«>»» Vt.
f*J Ak torso M\\ on on>, 3
\\X : ‘‘r
Umbrn Haas ( .
The Oldest Freemason Alive.
Mr. Parkinson, of Brockway, native St. County Clair
Countv, Mich., and a of
Down, Ireland, in a letter to a brother
Mason, writes: “I am the oldest Mason
in America. I was initiated on the 27th
of December, 1813, in Lodge 1,609,
which met in Clough, County Down, in
those days. The Lord has blessed me
with long life, good healthy and comfort
in my old age. We have five sons and
five daughters. I have seen them all
married, most of them very comfortably, and
with thirty grandchildren living five
or six dead.”
_ _____
Prehistoric Wheat.
Jim Havwood has made one important that
discovery “in liis life, and that is
wheat was raised in this country long be¬
fore the advent of the adventurous Cor¬
tez. Jim bases his discovery upon a
kernel of wheat which he dug the out Pecos of an
adobe brick in the walls of
Church ruin. The grain was as hard as
a rock and was so well preserved pocket-books that it
wore a hole through three
before Jim got tired of it. He threw it
away for its general uselessness .—Las
Vegas (N. M.) Optic.
_
Vermont takes the lead in the produc¬
tion of maple sugar, producing from
8,000,000 to 10,000,000 pounds annually.
New York comes next, producing one
third less. Ohio comes third, and pro¬
duces about half as much as New York.
The States of Hlinois, Indiana, New
Hampshire, Michigan and Wisconsin
produce annually about 1,000,000 pounds
each.
“ Mv cousin, whom I sent you lasl
week, doctor, is an imaginary invalid,
isn’t he ?” “ Of course he is. The fel¬
low lias a constitution which defies all
our rcm.e-ii&i”
WEAL77/ THE
/ OC\\KE'f STOHEyi^s.
5?
CD SB
cr: mm Co
X U> r tWi y/
^SM’S^
+k: ftb “Y i "Tf £ "9 i Agents. A TEAR Outfit and Free. expenses Address r t«
CfJ B I to. VICKERY, Augustn, Maine.
$66 f* week in your own town. Term, and $r. Ou-.fll
YOUNG MEN
.te guaranteed a paying situation. Aduiesj
V ALEN TINE BROS.. Manimera, Janes ville*
_
SIOO PRESENT!
For a Machine that will
Saw as Fast and Easy
os this one.
- - I .
This Is the King: of Saw Machines. It
saws off a 2 foot log: in 2 minutes.
20,000 in use. The cheapest ms-chine
made, and fully warranted. Circular free.
United States Manufacturing Co., Chicago, III.
OPIUM SSESetSS
J PEM 'A/aJkI A LES S Oi.73CUl.02! * =>
will posltlv ly cure Femah Weakness, sueii na Kib
lug U icurathm of the Worn!), of Womb, Whites Incidental Chutmic Iahnnunntlon HemorrJia «vj
t he ;:v o
FIg «llng, Painf.’.l, Supi-'TYsfieil Irregular 3i: •!H
tniatton. Sc>\ An old uml reliable remedy. &?nripo<
talearafora taiupMec. witli treat men t. cures an
2 ertlUrates front physician* aud patients, ro H<»w
arth & Hillard. L'tle.F. N k bv an
*„ ,f»
A GOOD SAW MILL
For $soo.
io P r^^. n Yp.“n'ar.f'L S ^ d ..‘ 0 SffiB
r
power from
1,500 to 4,000 Feet
el lumber can be cut in a day. A product 25 to 50 percent,
greater than can be cut with any reciprocating saw mill
with the same power. Tbe mills are complete except
•aw, and will be put on tne cars in Cincinnati for the low
nrioe of 9200, and warranted in every particular. Saw
Mills of ail sizes, Engines, Boilers, Shafting, Gearing, Ac.
Illustrated circulars scat free.
LANE & BODLEY CO •9
John and Water Sts.. Cincinnati, 0.
3 Literary CENTS eaoh, formerly Revolution*
*itlay’s A 1.00 to 11.25 each: I. Mac
Life of Frederick the Great. II. Carlyle’s Life or
Aobert Burns. Ill, Lamartine’s Life of Alary Queen ol
^cots. 'ach, formerly IV. Titos. #1 Hughes’ 50 each: Manliness I. Arnold’s o! Christ. Light ’5 CTS.
of Asia. Ii.
Goldsmith’s Vicar of Wakefield. III. Baron Mnnchuus
iii'a Travels and Surprising Adventures. For falX
CEXlNi Bunyan’s Pilgrim’s Progress. Illustrated cata¬
logue B.^Aldeu, sent free. AMERICAN BOOK EXCHANGE, John
Manager Tribune Building, New York.
ENCYCLOPEDIA
ETIOUETTE! This and BUSINESS
is the cheapest only complett and reliable work
goo Etiquette all aud Business duties and Social life, Fcnns. sod ho It tells how
the perform beat odvantnge tbe various all occasion*. of w to appeal
o*Y
Ac<>it!s Wanted,—8etid for cii circulars containing
s full description of ihe work and ex Ha terms to Agents.
ArMraw* WATmKAI. PriSMSHIXO » Co.. Atlanta. Gw
70,000 SOLD YEARLY.
Tbe growing popularity and usetnlneu
Of CABINET or PABEOK OBfiAVS I*
•bown bylh. fact llxat sKVOTY THOU¬
SAND are sold yejtrly in Ihe United Main.
The best are tbe
MASON & HAMLIN
ORGANS
which hav* been awarded siobxst sia-nacTioa rot nr*.
0 MTIUTKD aDPKEIOHITT at RTS&X 0,1 of the GREAT
WORLD'S Industrial Exhibitloa. for thirUen yeara.witA
rit on* «i n$l« txceptitm.
NEW STYLES
Ar# ready thia «p*9on with Important Improvamenta.
FOR LARGE CHURCHES, splendid organs, with great
power and variety, at *370, *4*0, *390, and leas trie*.;
FOR SMALLER CHURCHES, SCHOOLS, Ac., *AJ ts
**00and upwards. SUPERB DRAWIXO ROOM STYLES
at *300 to *510, and upwards; A GREAT VARIETY ol
SMALLER ORGAN'S of equal ezceUonea, though isa.
capacity,or in plain ease., at *31 to *8u0 aud upwards.
Also famished vox kostklt or 'iga&ts&ly ratsxsTs, *5
sad upwards.
IVl. organ, an certainly annealed in excellence, \d\ile fit.
preee art set mscA hjKcr than than yf eery let—v» vestm
mtntc.
Be ft
ted
nous and prices, Includmg new at vies, ana much useful
lnformatioa for the purclioaer of onv or sah, wbicli will be
rent iVw end pott-paul. MASON A HAMLINORGAN CO.,
rS !
^
cr
Ufi£ : fifj _ —
TM
C2 Bfl ATTLEBORO
c BONE 8 ET
BOURBON TONIC
b is iMasiiss « »m mm as* «k«r la. Mala, waa • ,«r. «M Ben.
tmty waas,. —ua ne wisihui >»*•« sat iavsihl. as* hare. A
.siuhl. has, * ns*. skstsMsu as® UiHtsu Msalesl, stelreklf *tor**4
is -ash Irsaklts u F— fraa iftpoym a, Malarea, au. DalwaM wa— »•*
i-warkae Wargym.* aa* pitaiu, wwa-.il a areas, aa* Iks b**la at
a-ary ip aai a.taa will ta* M a (I sure I la<c«aaut.
CHAMBERS & BROWN,
LOCUfTlLLA **a
CENTS WANTED!
:j. Ysiitm tixUt axij ft AoS.,iSS:C
SAPONIFIED
r, this “Original” Cooo»otr»t*4 I.j*iu>d ■ ■
ft jcnoronLi/eBoi cin 1 > ft I
■ for malt anleElj. In* Hard, ■ ■
and Toilet »o*P ll 1 .
fall weight and atranglh. and take other. Aik J«M (roMt Hi
tSA PENN’A POni'IKK, SALT MANUFACTURING ne CQ*
P HILfAPELPHIA.
PETROLEUM ELLY.
Grand Medal 6ilT.rE.Mi4
At Philadelphia .t Pam
Exposition. Expoaitioft,
Thl. wonderful ■aUtanc i. .cknowleded by Dbyaiei.ni
Ihrougbout the world to be the best remedy discorer^l
for the cure of Wounds, Bums, Rheumatism, Skin Dim
Maes, Piles, CsUrrh, Chllblsins. Ac. In order tl?»t eeorf
oa® may try it, it is put up in 15 Mid 25 cent bottles fo#
household 'us.. Obtain it from your druggist, and yo«
"4U hod it superior to anything you h.7. .T.r us.d.
NATRONA BI-CARB. SODA
t» the best In th» World. It it nb.olut.ly purn. It 1. tkft
hoit for Medicinal Purposes. It ta tbe beet for Peking
nad nil Fnsdly Use.. Sold by nil Druggist, end Grocer*.
PENN’A SALT MANUF. C0„ Phila.
^GILBERT'S
STARCH
AND
spaetlilv cured by DU. HECK’S only known an
sure '-Komt'dy. M> CHARGE lor treatinet
until cured.' Call on or address
Dr. J^C. BECK. 112 Jclin St*. Cincinnati, C_
DANIEL W. BEATTY*®
ORGANS
u-srops, SUB B4S« A OCT, COUPLER.
Ft? I K SET ONLY $ 65
ll id JS 1) 8
PI ATSTOS .
8120 up. Catalogue
Nent «»i Tidal Warranted. Free*
Address, DANIEL F. BEA1TY. Washington. N. i
ON 30 DAYS’ TRIAL
We will send our Electro-Voltaic Belt, end otbs
Electric with Appliances upon trial for thirty dars to tho.
afflicted Also JS'ervout the Liver, Debility Kidneys, end diseases Rheumatism, of a persons
nature. of Pa
r.lysis, Address Ac. Voltnif A sure sure Belt ovaranleed €»,. WarsH.ll or no pay. Mic h.
,
Ib79 fc Outfit * we*»k, free. $i2 Addrese a day at Taux home A Co., euily Augusts, made. M CostiJ ain#}
To Consumptive8.
JlJ X ODER’S Wild Cherry EMULSIOH Bark, the OF moet COD palatable LITER comhinetles OIL AE9
of these renowned remedies extant. An unequeled remet
dy for Debility, Consumption, Scrofula, all Lung effeotione, Ne»»
vous which and all wasting diseases. Tbe manner Is
the Cod Liver Oil is combined with the Wild Chet
ry. enables it to be assimilated by the most delleale stom¬
ach, insures complete digestion of the Oil, tones up the
svstetD. relieves cough, causes Increase of flesh and
•trenpth. Endorsed dj tbs most eminent physicians. A
well-known specialist In Lung affections nos used It la
ever two hundred cases, and says “there is no combina¬
tion equal to tt for Consumption, Scrofula,” etc. Thou¬
sands of sufferers need and desire to take a » combinatioa CO
ef Cod Liver Oil, but have been unable to do so. Thet
will And that they can take this preparation re eadily and
with excellent results. Price, One Dollar pe or Bottle,
Six Bottles for Five Dollars. Circulars aud valuable ini
formation to all sufferers sent on free receipt of a descrip*
ken of case. Address all orders to
C. G. A. LODBR, Manufacturing Chemist,
639 Chestnut St.. Philadelphia, ra.
rtfs loo o Uye'ar'giyaggisrMas: A MONTH. Agent* WantrdL
$5 to $20
gl :fef§5 WMM mi
rm MS
GfLLOLOm
SYb-CLASSES
P.epresentlnf the thoieest selected Tortoise-Shell end
Amber. The li(hteet| handsomest, and stroncost known.
Sold by Opticians and Jewelers Made by BPXK01B O.
W CO . IS Malden Lane. Wew York.
PENSIONS
NEW LAW. Thousands of Soldiers and heirs enti¬
tled. Pensions date back to discharge o» death. T tms
limited. Address with stamp,
GEO. E. LE!HOF f
P. O. Drawer, S30. XVsulil ifflon, 1>. C.
gALESMEMWANTEfc fe4r,om) I^CIGARS men TO
TO DEALERS-il
Vr»;scndit : 1 h your application.alaf jB ^^ I
Bgsjfar 5 tmi ix 3 «. Htaiup to insure
answer, b, i USTLJft & TO.
Cipcin neti. Ohio.
o
-rx/r &S2S2r,£JW2& IX. lIOOVEBv ' l ’‘
Philadelphia, ra.
■. 1 a /WARD’S
Fine Shirts for
WBSMA
NEW YORK.. ; , .<r
P I S 0 ’S C D S E&saauss
give away FA>. 10, li«0. The firat 536, onf will recelreljn.
r* t co. 83 etuis. Addr«u P. 0. Box Boston, Maas
.4§lr pfolucfncth#* uicsl
R!ST ADORO’sSSCSS’S MMMtppoirued toilet for I^dv
or
Gent lemon. BoldbvDrng
B>SU and applied b'v Hair
'’roMcre. Depot 98 Wii
l»am6t., JCY
C K rBlTTEeVTON, Ag’t,
___
AT.A \f 4L ’ A*® (own EEMAEE and AUEVI*"WASTED
tiKluKrtiUoBinnr. in every city, to eeti Da. Raonas’ Ei.ac
Circular. Addre«a TerriiorTteeiired. (iend/oc
W H. BROWN,
No. 98 Tremont St., Boston, Maaa.
rnb lishere' Union, Allsata, G»—......Fortj-.cren.-TO
msssr* 6-nd address 27 bebool far