The Dalton argus. (Dalton, Ga.) 18??-????, June 03, 1882, Image 4

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A Tale. When Wh«itriii«nMn<* snid A woman moved i® like a river troubled, ( e faintly expressed the condition of a nan. woman, or child who is obliged to I >a'-k up. bag and baggage, on the Ist of ( • he merry month of Alav and remove to i new place of tdiode. From the middle >f April to the last of May. the average nan of family wishes that, by some •<»rt of metamorphosis, he could be i •hanged to a chipmunk or a gopher so I hat he would live in a hole in the ground, and let the world with its rents and taxes jog unheeding by. Along toward the latter part of April he lays in a bountiful supplv of co urt-planter, and begins trying a little family swearing, i just to get his wife accustomed to it. ' In the meantime, both he and hi* rood i lady have been searching high ano low 1 for a new house. The) have invaded a hundred houses and sought bubble : French flats ev-*n at the mouth of the deadly sewer-gas. They have spent their substance in riotous | advertising. - mght for happiness ; in house-renting agencies, and night ' after night have they returned from I their shoe and bootless search and gone I to bed supperless—she, with her cold 1 feet in the small of his ba k, to dream of a ten-room flat with all the modern im- 1 provements. and he to swear at May- | day. high rents and tin- col<lne®s of the I aforesaid feet. Thus it goes on until at last a house is found. He generally I chooses it in sheer despera* ion, and it is 1 accepted by her with some tears ami a g real deal of pout. Then the moving begins. About a ■ week before the moving-day arrives they iiegin to pull up the carpet. She takes , I - row driver, gdown in a corner., jabs aimless!} at a forlorn :nd *•3l her-beaded tack on the third bare. . • <-.■ hits it three or four times, but it (lodges out of the way, and she succeeds in taking all the skin off the knuckles <>f her right hand. With a howl of pain si,*» throws the screw-driver through a mirror, and says something which s >unds like "Sam,” but isn’t Then her better two-thirds laughs like ~ a fiend, and says taking up a carpet is one of the things for which man was especially or dained by a kind and far-seeing Provi dence. She seats herself on the piano sto >1 and sucks her crimson knuckles while he. with the smile of conscious superiority on his dust-begrirumed face, takes off ids coat and vest, picks up the offending screw-driver, and sa\s: "My dear, you should not attempt what you know you cannot d>. You should be prepared for a -cidents, and when they i>;n*, take them philosophically.” S<> saying, he kneels upon th ■ carpet, and, holding the tack and adjoining carpet in one. hand, inserts the point of the screw drfr<*r under the head of the tack and attempts to pry it out. After a few lunges he makes a more vigorous one, lx*caii®<' he hears a titter from the piano stool. The point slips and he gouges about a quarter of a pound of flesh out of his left hand, while the fiend on the piano-stool foig.-ts her own troubles a id fairly crows with delight as he executes an impromptu war-danc which would have made the heart of a Zuni Indian green with wuvy. 11? lias recourse ta arnica and plaster, after which he flies savagely at the carpet, and with one pull rips up an entire side, the tacks still re maining to the floor and mt king the edge of the carpet look like a cabbage-board. For the next six day - the house looks a if a monkey and a parrot had Uen en joying themselves there whilethe family wen* at the s-aside. When he comp' in late at night be walks through a plate glass mirror which 'lie ha* p a -e l oppo site the door. and when eros-itig the front room he engage- in d idly combat with a hat-rack. mistaking il for a burglar. Then she screams, and a neighbor turns in an alarm for the police-patrol. When quiet is restored he ha* tlie satisfaction of knowing that his neighbors think the landlord caught hirn trying to "jump” his April rent. When the m -wing real h commence' he has an economic streak and gets along with only one truckman, who gets an advance, on account, out of the twenty dol.a? -. he is going t > get for his four-block job. and in the space of fifteen minutes hi* is hopelessly and aim lessly saturated with the drink which cheers and also inebriates. Husband and wife work like tigers all the morning, she undoing nearh everything he does. She pick' up in her arms a length of 'tove-jitpe. a lifter, two pillow-case® and three of his linen collars, and makes for the front do. ir. They live up-stair®, and onthe w av dow n -he manage- todropone of the pillows and the pipe, and reaches the truck with a fiitcen-and-a-half ineh linen collar, which she to'Ses into the empty wagon. He. fol lowing behind her with a step ladder and a wash-tub, trips up on one of the pillows ail d takes a "header dow n below. ' bringing up at the bit tom with hi' face jammed inti one end of the stove pipe. About this time las language would not be admitted into anv known version of the Bible. The little woman places a mirror in the bot t unof the packing-box, and then gently drop- a flat-iron in the coal-scuttle in <>n lop >f it. and wonders what it was that cracked. After unscrewing the legs of the piano he places the instru ment at the head of the stairs, and gets in front of it t < "ease her down,” a» he -ay -■ The piano-forts. huwevar. aiaris >f its own accord, and comes down with him on top of it. It go -out of the front door with a rush, and breaks iu pieces against the hind wheel of the truck, leaving the uufiutuJi;>:. mao iu a ma." of cords, wires, pedal' an I strings, with his right heel in the middle of the "Moonlight Sonata, and his nose firmly imbedded in the march from "Fatin iUa.” At-length he is extricated, aa 1 the wagon i® ovly loaded with torn curtains, broken furniture, and smashed crockcry. Arrived at the new abode, ' the wife of his bosom helps him to carrv the thing' in. handful at a time. As he is striving to carry an Eastlake book case up the stoep steps, she aids hiribv standing at the top and repeat inf. My only books Were women’* look® And folly’s all they taught me. rhe climax is eapjied. however, when h? and the obejoyful tri <knian are en deavoring to carrv the kitchen stove up the back stain® The lining of the stove comes out and covers him’from head to foot with brick-dust and rust. He wants tn sign hi- new lease for twentv-five years if he can.—Chicago Timet. ' —An Aliens, Gx. man asserts that be nas not siept fo r S j x years. Whtw ! FARM AND FIRESIDE. ■■■ —There are 70.0(W pounds of pepper- ' mint produced annually in th? I’nited ! .Stoto'*, sad of this amount two-thirds is produced in Wayne County, N. Y. —Deeply-rooted crops, as wheat, re-1 > clove? ami mangel, are those be®t fitted | to ri’-i't dnouth, while shallow-rooted crops, as grass and turnips, are those ■ that ' jffer most from it. —A correspondent of the Fr.ui ■ carder, who has “tried a great many r medics for cabbage worms,” finds nothing equal to cola water dashed on liberally'. “Faithfully followed it will ; save the cabbage.” —The Chinese have, introduced a new variety of radish into California that ob- i J ains i remarkable size and still remains ; tiimder. Specimens are in the San Fran cise.i market that are twelve inches in rircirmference and weigh two pounds. —Cocoa-nut jumbles are very delicate | , for tea. Grate one pou*l of cocoanut, I mix with it thrr?-qnar.er«: of a pound of sugar, three eggs and two tablespoon fuls of sugar; Ixtat all well together, then ! . drop on buttered tins and bake. —This is a good time to destroy tht 1 eggs of the tent caterpillar, as the clus j ters of them are more easily seen now that the leaves are absent. As they are i usually glued closely to the small twigs, ' ; the best way is to remove them with a i knife.— Chicago Journal. —Corni-olis are very valuable, espe ■ eially after they are reduced to ashes They contain a great proportion of pot- i ash—about twenty-five per cent. —and j the ashes can lie either used for making I 'i>ap by leaching them or spread on the I soil. Cobs furnish a quick, hot fire.— St. Louin Clohc. —Pie-Plant Pudding. Wash and cut the pie-plant in small pieces, cover tbs j bottom of a pudding dish with it. then put in a layer of bread crumbs an d plenty ' of sugar, and so on until the dish is full: add a little water, and only a little, as the pie-plant is very juicy. Make a j sauce to eat with this of melted sugar, I flavored with cinnamon.—-V. F. Post. —The parsnip) stew of our mothers is still, to many, the only true w ay to serve this vegetable. To make it. take thin I slices of pork (fat streaked with lean,) I let it boil for an hour, then add five large parsnips washed, scraped and cut in quarters lengthwise; lei these boil for half an hour, then add some potatoes, also cut in niece®. \\ hen the potatoes are done all will be. Remove the vegetables, and thicken the gravy in the kettle with a little flour; add pepper and salt, and a small lump of butter. Pul the pork and j vegetables on a large, deep platter, and I pour the gravy over them.— N. F. Post. —Pea-Nut Gaudy.—Tie* thick pea-nut ! candy by the confect inner® i« made ! by removing the shells and 'kill' from roasted nuts, putting them an inch thick in a buttered tin pan. and pouring over them sufficient sugar Lxiiled to a caramel I point to hold the nuts together, but not to cover them: directly after sugar has i reached the degive of boiling indicated ■ in the preceding receipt, it begins to i burn; at this moment the sugar-boiler I must be taken from the tire, set at once I into a pan of cohl water to cheek the | boiling, and the caramel, as the boiled i sugar is now called, is poured over the I nut': whitesngar i- I<>be used in making ' this candy.—.V. F. Tiuut. Is the Pig n Filthy Animal! The little animal that leads all our ex ports of animal products, and is likely to I hold this lead for year® to come, should I n'>t be charged with faults that belong ; primarily to his keejiers. The pig is i called the filthiest of our domestic ani mal®. but this i' made iii'eparalile from his surroundings in most cases. The pig is a wonderful machine for the produc tion of pork, bacon and hams. He is the greatest utilizer of food on the farm. He la»s up in his body twenty per eent. of the dry substance of his food —a feat ■ not performed by any other of our do mestic ahimals—and proper provision . should be made for the disposal of his ex l crelinn. The tidy dairyman cleans his ■' cow stable every day, and some twice per I day; but his pig pen is not cleaned till his pigs are likely to be submerged. Are , the pigs or the owner chargeable with the filth? Some years ago we tested the pig's disposition to keep clean where the op j portrnity was given, by placing in his ’ I pasture a shallow bath of clean water. ‘ ■ This privilege was eagerly used, in pref i I erenoe to wallowing in a mud hole some ■ few rods ofl. This shallow bath was I filled with fresh waler three limes per I wt ik, and it was notiised that the pigs ■ ■ seemed always to eujoy the renewal of the water. This certainly indicated a 1 nice discrlmation in cleanly habit®. The writer has also placed pigs upon a slatted ik»or, which would allow th* > liquid and much of the solid to g< 1 ihiwjgii. and the balance was in .st v ' trodden through. On one side of tin j»en was a strip of tight floor, four feet j wide, with the trough placed upon il against the side of the pen. ami upon these plank was placed Isaldingfor tb< pigs Tlrw si Kin learned tht* ti'i- of the ■ slatted part of the pen. and would gc ! there and drop. Tne slatted floor is el ‘ crated fifteen inches above the bottom. I so that the ex t Lien works through tht slats, anti ine pen and pig® are kept clean. A dooi is hung on a hinge, so a® i to be turned up and allow the manure to ; be cleaned from under the slatted part- ■of the floor. The pigs, in this ca'e, i keep quite uJt*am. without any labor bein? teatowed upon it, except to remove the i manure, once a month, from under the ; slatted floor. The writer ha® found pig® just ;i' ready to keep clean as any other animal when | the opportunity is afforded them to do ! so. Get the fanner take the same pains to keep him clean as he does in the case I of other domestic mfimals. and he will find the pig as cleanly a® anv of them. Ihe pig is a very profitable animal, and when w e consider that it return- us. from exportations alxmt $110,000.000 ]>er animal exp .rts, it v.ould >■ cm that it deserves to be treated with as much con sideration as we give to our cows and i horses —£ tee Stock Journal. . Empress Elizabeth of Austria gives immense ® tms from her privat ion une in chanty, but the recipients of l r j' ls l ihe same begrudge her the pleasun of her hunting jaunta, on wiueii she wastes so much pioney that Lhev would like thenjsefves. The Great Russian Duel. There have been few episodes in his history so exciting, so continuously dra matic, as the duel between the Rus sian Czars and the Nihilist Secret Com mittee, which has now lasted three years, and involved two generations of sovereigns. The struggle between th** I Hohenstauffen and the Popes, though res< mbling it in the apparent inequality of the combatants, was an open one, and was waged on definite principles, for comprehended ends. The Popes, though yielding spiritual power, were as visible as their adversaries, and near ly, if not quite, as responsible for their acts. The Nihilist Committee is invisi , ble, irresponsible, and offers no condi tions which can be considered. It is like the bad hero of a fairy tale, whose strength, naturally above that of hu manity, is quadrupled by the gift from some evil spirit of invisibility to be as sumed at will. Though one of the strongest and most unscrupulous of hu man agencies, the Russian Secret Po lice, with the resources of a first-class St ate at its disposal, has been engaged in the search for years, the governing power of the terrible Secret Society ha® "**t been detected, far less rendered powerless. It was thought that it had been paralyzed by some of Count Igna tieff’s arrests, and indeed the commit tee seemed for an instant to hesitate; but recently it has again burst into furi ous and most menacing activity. It has never, it is understood, relaxed its poli cy of terrorism, as is sufficiently proved by the precautions taken by the Czar, precautions almost of despair, and re cently it has given terrible proof that these precautions were not unheeded. The committee habitually uses two re sources never before available on such a scale, and, armed with these, sets at defiance the most elaborate and far reaching precautions. It knows how to utilize that strange peculiarity of the Russian character, the existence in it of the spirit of self-sacrifice dissociated from moral rectitude, and finds every where agents who are ready to threaten, torture or kill, and to involve the inno cent in the doom of the hated, yet who are also profoundly indifferent to their own lives or liberties and risk death or imprisonment in Siberia with a courage which, if they were not murderers, the world would pronounce admirable. In Russia, and Russia only, assassins have the martyr spirit.— Lcjnlon Spectator. —At the next Concord School of Philosophy, to be held this summer, the programme includes the following light and airy discourses, to-wit: “Socrates and the ITe-Socratic Philosophy;” “Fichte’s Wissenschaftlehre,” “Gnos tici-m and Ne< -Platonism,” and “The Descending Scale of Powers.” It will be quite a treat to stay away from the Concord School of Philosophy this sum mer.— Norristown Herald. —A recent dispatch from Odessa to the London Times says: “The poorer .lews are said to be marrying here at the rate of 150 couples per day. They imagine that if they are married land will lie given them free in America or Palestine.” A rhTslclan’» Advice. Don’t expect to cure constipation of the bowels, dyspepsia, indigestion, etc... by the use of severe cathartic medicines Relief thus ob- I tained is only temporary; when the reaction i comes the disease has a firmer bold on the di gestive system than at first. The practice of taking cathartic medicines is thecause of a great amount of unnece»sary suffering. The dose must !« increased from time to time until digestion is impossible without their use. and the liver and tiowels eventually be come a mass of corruption that death only can relieve. The way to permanently cure weak and imperfect digestion is to purify the blood and strengt hen every i art of the body by the u®c of such tonics as Yellow Dock. Sarsapa rilla, Juniper, Iron, Celery ami Calisaya. ail of which ingredients enter into the composi tion of Dr. Guysott’s Yellow Dock and Sarsa parilla,’the Queen of all health renewere. It Increases tl.e p >wer of enduraneeand c >unter acts the pernicious effects of physical or mental exhaustion. A Baooxi yn man advertises a powder to ‘ cure cats and dogs of s imnatnbtuism." It is put in a gun Brooklyn h,.iyle. Mu Sidmit McNannt. of New Richmond, 0., writes: “My lungs were weak, my breath came quick and short mv heart palpitated, my dreams disturbed me. my blood was poi soned with sc'ofula; my back ached, I hsd dvspepsia, my kidneys were affected. I could not work nor could I even eat with comfort. Life seemed a burden; rheumat sni was in ev ery joint; I suffered from piles; urination was pamful and full c* sedim-nt. I thought I could neret get well, but Dr. Guysott’s Yel low Dock and Sarsaparilla has removed all wy afflictions. ’ ’ _ Wur is a dead ben better than a live one? Because she wdl Jay wherever you put her. Stinging irritation, inflammation, al! Kid ney ( o:i:; lah’ts, cured by •’ Buehupaiba." JI. - Car wnitri.s pails, -wash b " Is. and even bricks are made from paper. Now why don’t s >mc <nc go to work and make leather out of b larding-bouse pie crust. It wouldn't require a part .vie of t.,uniug. If v u w shtoknow the climate of any high mountain, why g ■ to it and climb it.— ' Caiuruiy N tht. We as euL— f-'ro Prrs*. First lady—“ Dear me. I never saw Mrs. Pott® look so pale.” Second lady—" Nor 1; ■lie's probably been out in the wet without an umbrella.” —.——. • A method has Uei n discovered recently bv which good walking shoes can l>e mate from leather. This will have a tendency to relieve the great strain on the pasteboard' market,— i Chicafft Timet. < —. , A New York writer says the humo.-x-ts I have had their day. Yes. it is undeniable t :at i there is a marked wane among them —A’. J”. ' It was a clever girt who. when tier brer. ■ wli ■■ . bud :ul to •• meak out - ■; her vh the -b.iuid da, replied: *D writ'., and fear not.” Mtn of intellect stand by their idea:- .F.ssi- ; psie i men fall ly their rye dears; and men I ■ with extravagant wives arc ruined ’ v their . high dears. The it -t >n Adivro-'r has diswwred that . if a iiui'i applies 1: -i f di.igently to getting , juice out of an orange he generally sucks- i seeds. Arabei.i a—“Oh! I do bo love a big dog’’’ Ge> >rgi wit ha t iniu •-f s irease,'. •—■ Ob !o - >a't | I wish I was a big dog’” Aralieiia—“Dou't worry—you’ll grow.”- ' '< < Tr me. A 'Hobmaker advertises a so 't-pad that i will relieve pains in the foot. The old style > foot-pad us* 1 to relieve you of i v- rything vou had at-out you.— Philadilph a Bn ‘■What is the national B'!'i"y cu< stlon?” pompously exclaimed an rat-r, .:ida squeak <ug v m toe audience i'esjgiiiJed; •• It a, , •Have you got a Lila. ” There sea compl-int from England leather is found in American sausage. This show s careless iess on the part of our sausage makers in the Eastern States, but out west here, where brass collars are worn entirely, no ■ such trouble i® found v :tii sausage. See that the words “Wisconsin sausage ’ are blown on ti e sausage ulster, and you will never oe troubl -d with leather.—Tick’s Sun. Workingmen. Before .von tx-gin v-ur heavy spring work after a winterof relaxsti -a, yoursy-tem nei-ds cleansing and strentheuing to prevent an at tack of Ague. Bilious or Spring Fever, or some other Spr.ng sickn 'S’that will unfit you tor a season's work. You will save line, much s: kness he ! great expense if you wjll use one b ttle of Hup Ritters in your family this month. Don t wait— Burlington “2 iM afraid of the lightning.” said a pret ty giil to her lover. "Quite natural,” he re plied, ’ when you have a heart of steel." ” It is a great art to do the right thing at the right time.” The person subject to de rangement of the kidneys or liver has a p-o tective duty to perform in purchasing a pack age of Kidney-Wort. It invigorates these organs and by its cathartic and diuretic effect, cleanses the whole system of all bad humor* thus being "just the thing." What's In a name? That which we cauli f .vi i by ar ■ other name would taste as good. —Cvurltr-Jourwd The young man or woman who must for sake sciciety because of mortifying freckles, tan. tetter, pimple* and itching exoriations of the face, should use some of Dr. Benson’s Skin Cure, It cleanses the scalp and Is good for the toilet Dr. Benson's Celery and Chamo mile Pills, so widely and favorably known as a sure remedy for all kinds of nervousness and headaches, are al»o for sale at all druggists. Inquirer: What is the most scarce Ameri can coin? Don't know, sir; dollars are quite scarce enough.— Post. Personal. The Voltaic Belt Co., Marshall, Mich., will send Dr. Dye's celebrated Electro-Voltaic Belts and Appliances, on trial for thirty days, to men (young or old) who are afflicted with nervous debility, lost vitality and kirdred troubles, guaranteeing complete restoration of vitality and manhood. Add; ess as above. N. B.—Noriskis incurred, as thirty days trial is allowed A gap in the carvir.g-knife betokens that a spring chicken has been in the house. — Boom trany. Sick and bilious headache, and all derange ments of stomach and bowels, cured by Dr. Pierce s “Pellets —or anti-bilious granules. 25 cents a viah No cheap boxes te allow v aste of virtues. By druggists. Whenever a lot of girls strike it is safe to ask : “Who is he?” — Boston Post. tTT" Hoods, scarfs ribbons and any fancy articlescan be ma e any color wanted with the Diamond Dyes. Scarlet, Cardinal Red, and ! all popular colors. Who invented the steam-er.gine? Watts his name. Two-Thirds of a Bottle Cures. Dr. R. V Pierce. Buffalo. N. Y. : Bear Sir— -1 (have been taking your “ Favorrte Prescrip t on' for "female weakness.” Before 1 had taken it two days I began to feel stronger. I bare taken but two-thirds of a bottle and be lieve I am cured. Gratefully, Mas. H. G Lovett, Watseka, 111. Experience tea hes that it does rile an a: list to ask him: “Wbat will you take for i that frame with the p.cture thrown in?’’ It the mother is feeble it is impossible that her children should tie strong. Lydia E. Pink ham’s Vegetable Compound is a perfect specific in all chronic diseases of the sexual system of women. Send to Mrs. Lvdia E Pinkham. 223 V estern Avenue, Lynn, Mass., for pamphlets. “The proof of the pudding is in the eat ing,” but it’s the proof of the pie that mad dens the printer.—s pringfitoi News. v Throat, Bronchial and Long Diseases a specialty. Send two stamps for large treaties giving self treatment. Address World’s Dis pensary Medical Association, Buffalo, Ji.Y. r . 5t hen Mr. F.sh had his cbildreh's por traits painted they were spoken of as sardines —little Fishes done up in oil.—X Y. Graphic. Don’t D e nthehouse. ’ Rough on R*ta.” 15c. Clears out rais. mi e, flies, roaches, ted-bugs. Wht is the early grass like a pen-knife! Because the spring brings out the blades! Redding's r. is a Salve is an invaluable dressing for infiaioed and sore joints. Price 25c, Alt Grocers sell National Yeast. Try it Try the new brand, “Spring Tobacco.” CCC EEK ■■ our own town. Terms and Jluu t.’> outfitfrei Audr* H.Halleu &Oo..PorUu>U Me Dr. Dodge, Gov’ni- Surt<-on, St Loul*. treat* Piles, Rupture auu Pis ..a »,ifi success RBS Dicksuu st Gif)' J’-" • P 'i.aLcit. Nnmethine New for WI U LGENI'S. »L, YongeS C->.,St.Louis, Mo. a "h-sgents wanted-90 be. t • p ,to « ’ n» I ’-er. ■>. J„j Bronson, Detroit, kilch. £R’»?')n? cr r-atb me. Samples w rt,h $5 • J Hl »£Ufree. Acktress SnHBON & Co. Portland, Me. gte ' M' 'T't ant board tn vour county. Men < or bn < Pleasant Bu- irieei Addr-ee NF ■ • p o. z I.ULKE d C.u .Box L'A Chicago, ill. Dllf'f'lrC*” f'ea’--- M edi um Work. Low hUhhlrop ‘ vs. ncarrtasimeq W Wl.l I > *vO.,vincinnati.O Catauoges fits. - - » <lay at home easily made. 4/lw osuj outfit fre«. A tress True a i\>. Augusta. Ma Ilberai Trset, Mistakes of M >»es and A poetic*. J ft-ud niaiup for price* to Dr. Dodge, Leghcgn. Kaa. 111 1 f* ” ■ ■ ’’‘ S ”h £ ULLtrf 3' ■'■ ?•••■*; nus V”' THE AL LTMAX A TAYLOR CO, Mansfield. O. OPIUM eating U1 lUlfA’l ‘ <-ure SENTFRF.I Ds . wv • * V MA 15 000 r? RFEIVTEHS now nae cur a>w IvivUU Filer- ’■ kinds nfs>, ws.no tber wt ->t •« ~o Ag a s. Address E KllTti ® BRO.. New Oxford. Pa UIPrQ/ * ' OVEO ROOT BEER ea I Fa. & O '-•*■ ■■ »s -»-, ? ■g ._ adr :c • >! leaome. ,pa-i •< ■ ■ mptrsnrr iwv. - si c-ukx-'-i. ,< nl h« « ■- tete jG-e ’lorphlne Habit ( nred In !• iJ F- i: *® **“•’ * !«».'’ ati*« o, ••I IVI v I a>m. j . .■ntifmind, LebßDon, UT bouiaßda of reference* from persons cured. IffiiJESSEJAMES B L., n ’ 3 ' ’*■•*» Be'-l n.-n a,. '.neXwwnp- B, other* nd StrauJr’n oftb-b -hr h’,„J ■ omn. - ‘ f ovivt em. r n ° bL’.V /\ , A<’»N -I t* Wax TED. Hl 1 ' MAKIN, "incinnatl. Ohio. I 5 X w® 1,1111 p . ■ .j• m h ■' •'' or e . ■ • t: ■. •• ir- << ■ - ral 'i • tot** I.- in the aridf *■ r.vfWTv sn ' rl ■ r- ■ rrer-g ] ’ •«*■. i»• * ■ • i\ \ a i.l dx»ii t. ’ ■ F s FOf >D i *c«n h r ’ f; ■»«€•!«■’iwhoaUthrvrr. Inet •cf?.* c» nts, Sw itnU. t- ■ f 1 7S, bwinf tb« f.<: atnr< of TTOOLKItR A CO. «ncvcr> label. A J J I LYDJA E. PINKHAM’S VEGETABLE COMPOUND. Is a Positive Cura F.r all thoae Falafel Coasplaiat* «»<? Weakneese* a. eoaunon to our best female population. A Medicine for Womsn. Invented by a Woman. Prepared by • om&n. n>» Crsnlsnl Rsdleal IHwo—i-t Sl«* <‘ r nintolg. nrlt revives the drooping spirit*. Invigorates and hannomxos the organic functions, gives elasticity and firmness to the step, restores the natural lustre to the eye, and plants on the pale cheek of woman the fresh roses of life’s spring and early summertime. Use It and Prescribe It Freeh fS It removes faintness, flatul ency, destroys all craving for stimulant, and relieves weakness of the stomach. That feeling of bearing down, causing pain, weight and hackaehe, is always permaneotly cured by its use. For the cure of Kidney Complaint* of either sex this Compound is unsurpassed. 101 l F PINKHAM’S BLOOD PI RiriEK will eradieaie every vestige of Humors ll ‘£ Blood, and give tone and strength to the system, of TTikn woiiafci or child- Insist on iiMving it. Both the Compound and Blood Purifier are prepared at 233 and 23* Western Avenue, Lynn, Mass. Price of either, *L Six botfles for $S- Sent by mail in the form of pills, or of loaenges, on receipt of price, |1 per box for either. Mrs. Pinkham f?&ely answers all letters of inquiry. Enclose Set. stamp. Send for pamphlet. No famllr should l>e without LYDIA E. PINKHAM’S LTVEB PILLS. They cure constipation, tniiousness, and torpidity of the fiver. 25 cents per box. all Druggists.'»S O) Tonics At this season of the year when the greatest and most rapid changes are going on in the physical condition of our body, it is absolutely necessary to take a reliable strengthening tonic. The trouble heretofore has been to get as a tonic a medicine that was not com posed mostly of cheap whis key doctored with nause ous, disagreeable, and in compatible drugs. Brown's Iron Bitters 1 is a strictly scientific medici- nal preparation, recommend ed by the medical profession as a complete tonic, com posed of Iron —the great strengthened cinchona bark, and other valuable medi cines so combined as to be pleasant to take, thorough in effect,and free from all the ob jectionable features of othei Iron medicines. Brown’s Iron Bitters will not cause headache, constipation, and blacken the teeth as other Iron preparations w ill. Sufferers from weakness, lassitude, thin blood, sallow complexion, malaria, ner vousness, loss of tone in the muscles or digestive organs, stiff joints, pain in the back, or kidney diseases, torpid or inactive liver, will find Brown’s Iron Bitters a reliable and effectual cure for same. Sold at Ji.ooa 1 bottle by all dealers in medi® cine. I r IS A SURE CURE [ 4 for all diseases of the Kidneys and ■ j LIVER — b J Xt Las action on this xaost important L 4 orguix, enabling it tu throw off torpLlity and L J inaction, stimnlating the healthy secretion of F 1 the Bile, and by keeping the bowels in free { condition, effecting iu regular discharge. * fla|| to-*! a If'you are suffering from s ■wlC*ld » ■ d • maiana,have th? chills, 1 are bilious, dyspeptic, or constipated, Kidney - x Wert will surely relieve and quickly cure. , In the Spying to 'saase the System, every J one should take a thorough course of it. f SOLD BY DRUGGISTS. Price > . j Which bloos’ PARSOHS* PURGATIVE PILLS ! 1 , Btood. and will completely change the biconln th< < n i month. An» person wte> « j.: i„k P 1 ;« each n glu f- h, 1 to 1e » .k, ini , lx -,. d to *ound health. 11 meh s thing ti po«iiMe. Sold ev erywhere. or .eat by h-*:; tor M letter atampa 1. S. Jcnxsox & Co.. Ik* in. Kan . fonrie-.lv IU. gt>-. Me. DR. STRONG’S PILLS THE OLD WELL TRIED 3JEALTH onderful H RENEWING REMEDIES. i leading druggists. For circular® and almanacs w,Lfc sud particulars, add’ra* p O. Box4SG, X Y. City. DV Vdlfl Vd I I Mei’ COTT'fiJOi e I >rnr»lip. rirnee. Mil O K S a< O . A ttorney*, etc., ’ WfimucoTiijs. D. €.; Cuvjland tmio; Chic ago, 111. ; De iroit. Mich t Week .*n \r t ade ; n any '.ocaMTy. •i »>V > g ‘rjvn-w or«r’nt» tS.’UtJi tn W. IM K.IB AM AMusa ELEGANT PORTRAITS! Copy inr »n<i Enlarrln* FOItTK VIT». ordtit'Tri/ Fr-'-fiin. and Lsytlim-r**. Addr«M 6 CTknV.i A Co.. lUSk MGeneaec St. .Auburn. N Y FRAZER AXLE GREASE. thF VV orld. Gvt the genuine. £▼• »neun£e h»a onr Trade-murk and I. d . S.OI-D EVEK YW H I;KK. MAKE HENS LAY An English Veterinary Surgeon and Chemist, now ' trfvelX in this Country, say* that most of the and Cattle Powders are worth less trash. K» LvsthatSberidAn’sCondiyonPowdersMeateolutelv pure and immensely valuable. on kike hens lay like Sheridan s Condition Perdex I> ,Bft. one teaspoonful to one pint £>od - So e there or sent by mail for eight letter stamps. Lb. .1' fHNSUN A CO..Boston.Mass.. formerly Itancor,Me. BOWS' PctfialffiPais make new rich blood SUMMER ’"mX” 1 ’ ’xrISSEMBUES CB CnXTTVTTOXB, CANKOT PO BTTTIB THAN TO EX- APPROVX xND XDOFT DIT»OM * OO’« CHOI OH hues of Mraic Bo ks. SUNDAY SCHOOL TEACHERS cannot help b*dn« t&k’ D with our truly goiden trio of bunday Stnool . Bingers. Light and “ 35 CENT®. with th- ..Ife of R. M. McINTOSH. joyous Childhood. BANKER OF VICTORY. 1? nrwTH '■ 'h » shout by s, Lis i.. bapr-y vouuz slug- I ABBEY & MUNGER. |er»- Beacon Light. 35 CENTS. “ can be found any- TENNEY & HOFFMAN, where. SCHOOL TEACHERS WILL NOT TAIL TO TSE ® il, ifimts forC .mmon scb< da or Welcome : - SI > for High Schools. LOVERS OF GOSPEL MUSIC WILL LIKE MALE VOICE CHOIR (50ct*.). by Emrson. as hasac*pi:al set of tunes and hymn*, t-aey id Bing uad of moderate compass. LYON & HEALY, Chicago. OLIVER DITSON & 03., Boston. A GENTS (LADIES OR GENTS) MAKE MONEY FAST —Celling— OUR NEW BOOK. Invaluable to All Housekeepers. Useful, Practical and Popular. Addrcs* F- E. OWENS, ’ 530 Fulton Street. Chicago. RAILROAD GAZETTE. A JOURNAL OF TRANSPORTATION. Engineering and Railroad News. Publnhed st 73 Broadway. New Tork. >4.20 ner annum .postage free. Haneys fancy ai.ph abets for sign pairr r -«. ’ Standard Sign Writ-r, Stan dard Scroll H 'k. *l. Scrolls and Ornani-nts • Loudol- Phi »; Japan-s-OniamentatkHi. C 2. sign. Carriage. Car. Fr s< - b. u Decorative Painting. ’> cts. Cheap P • kof Alpha -a SUCM. Os booksellers and pa:nt er’s > ipplv siurci or by m*H. JEssE HANEY A CO., lit Nassau SL. N Y. THE SK LOUIS MIDLAND FARMER If rne oesr and eSffllpeM Agncnltura XL-ntlSv Nopre- D uno Noel s W- . mp'v a-K ccr.ri i M r cac.li fl'- r:;- .n Every Farmer wmpf it. Es*u'> shed uin* years Sample c py fbr S-ceht stamp. Address MIDLAND FARM EK, St. Eonta. Mo. L''b | jm.W‘23lg c Ki CURES AND *1 fe HEVER FAILS. ’’ErviH* SAMARITAN NERVINE I Cured m- of < nil pay and ncrrouF dt bUlty | E. B. Mh-lxx Scandia. R-jrabllcCj., Ksn •AM XKITAN NERVINE b Cured me of oonvnlrion. over fire years ag •. , W. F'-Ku. Wirt, Jefferson Co.. InA | SAMARITAN' NERVINE , Cured me of spasms. Mas. M. P. Rrcxxe. Davis Ml.lx la SAM ARITAN NERVINE Cuied my son of epilepsy E. L. Monoxs, ' W allcer. Mo. SAMARITAN NERVINE I Cured my daughter. Rgv I m. Kxxn No. 'y<9 Detroit S reel. Cleveland. 0. I SAM XRITAN NERVINE Cured my daughter of epll; psy. . James Mrsm. Cuba. BL SAMARITAN NERVINE i Cured me of ibeumatism. paralysis, general deWllty I and epilepsy. Jous Keithlv. Prlnslpo, lud SAMARITAN NERVINE Cured me of spasms. Emma B< swell. H -lyoke, Masi. SAMARITAN NERVINE Cured mr daughter of fits of many rears stand'nz. 3 J. Ari-xitsujs. Egypt. Kaufman Co lux SAM ARITAN NERVINE 11 Cured my of epilepsy ’ Rev p. P. Ishtelt. Lagrange, 18. d SAMARITAN NERVINE ■ Cured me of epilepsy WC. Baowvrwa, Attorney at Law, Indsoulx Ark. SAMARITAN NERVINE b Cured mv fol. Wu. e Taxx«k. . No, 86 i Iberty Street Dayton. 0. ‘ SAMARITAN NERVINE Cured my daughter. Aawup G-owell. Little River. Cal ' SAMAijjrrrtoE.KvnE IM FOR SALE BY L’KVggisTS ’ Or may he had,d:»-vt from u». fn -. h . r i n i<rrtn»- Lon inclose aranip for our Illuitra -d Journa. g ■ “I •vldence* of cures - »K M, A. RICHMOND CO., II Olid’s Epliepoc Institute. “ «T. JOSEPH. *3. J: K., S. Lk 76 * WHEN B *' teL Ts r st \