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HOME AND FARM.
—The exclusive fe, ding of clover O
cows give-; hard cheese and soft butter.
— N. Y. 11. raid.
—Oil of w ulergreen mixed with an
equal quantity of olive oil is recom
mended as a rheumatic painkiller.
—When extra sheep are mentioned
in market reports wethers a:e always
meant. Ewes never rank high in the
fat stock trade.— N. Y. Tunes.
.—For *'odder the yield of sweet corn
and sorghum is about the same. The
former, however, is better rel shed by
stock, while the latter endures drouth
better. Albany Journal.
When, on a hot day, from any cause
perspiration is suppressed, stop work
ing at one >, go under* the shade and
reduce your temperature by cold ap
plication to the head, or sunstroke is
imminent. —Cincinnati Times.
r o bleach cloth, put six cent’s worth
of oxalic acid into a gallon of boiling
water and pour over the cloth. Stir
them up and let them remain in it ti 1
the water is cold, and then iay them
out on the grass to bleach. They will
soon be as white as snow. —Boston
Globe.
—Orchard grass may be grown any
where in the country. It makes ex
cellent pasturage. The rapidity of its
growth is great. It makes flesh and is
very nutritious. From its appearance
it is sotn times called cock’s toot grass.
It thrives in some v hat shaded places.
Of course hay can be made from it, al
though it is very coarse, and it seems
never tired of growing either after close
cutting or after close pasturing. In
fact, it must be c ose fed. The time
for cutting is about the same time as
for clover. —Detroit Tost.
—The Poultry World says that the
difference between an egg laid by a
plump, healthy hen, led with good,
fresh food daily, and an egg laid by a
thin, poorly fed lion is as great as the
difference between good beef and poor.
A fowl fed on garbage and weak slops,
with very little grain of any kind, may
lay eggs, to be sure, but when these
eggs are broken to be use I for cake,
pies, etc., they will spread in a weak,
watery way over your dish or look a
milky white, insteady of having a rich,
slightly yellow tinge.
All About Horses.
“I suppose,” said a well-known
horse-dealer, “that, for carriage bosses,
there’s nothing finer’n r-uglish ‘Cleve
land bays.’ \Y r e have some in this
country, though they’re scarce and
gen’ally called coach hosses. They
are called as they are ’cause of their
bay color and black points, an average
of l(> to 17 hands high. The i rst one
I ever saw was in Canada, an imported
one. They are high steppers, have
small heads and arching necks, an’ are
of good style an’ appearance. Their
trotting action is from the shoulder,
and a pair of ’em ’ll rattle off a heavy
barouche in line shape, 1 tell you. A
good pair would bring from $ ,000 to
$4,000; but you can’t get many of ’em,
’cause they’re not to be had. Have the
right kind, mat lied up close, and they
would bring almost auy pri«. e -such
fellows as \ anderbilt would buy ’em.”
“Some peoplo say that the French
coaching stallions that are being
brought to this country have too much
of the i’ercheron, or cart-horse, strain
in them. Do you think so p ”
“hio, I don’t. There is no better
bred horse than a genuine French
coaching stallion, an’ 1 believe Dahl
man, of New York, has done as much
as any man in the count y to improve
American horses, both coach and draft.
He’s brought over this year thirty-one
coaching stallions, besides Ins Norman
stallions. They were mostly chestnuts,
aud very high knee actors, standin’ 16
to 16J hands h gh. He has ’em in
York State, Ohio, Illinois, and Michi
gan. They sold as high as $3,• 00
each. Dahlman bought ’em of the
French Government, for they are the
very best to be had. lie also brought
over thirteen mares. They arc such
hosses, you know, as you’d stop to look
at on the street: high knee action an’
lots of style, what the French like.
They was all blood hosses: every one
that handles hosses knows what they
are. When 1 was in New York 1 see
the French working stallion Incroya
ble, which Dahlman sold to Vanderbilt.
He was a three-year old, sixteen hands
high, gentle as a kitten, and as tine
a horse for his age as 1 ever saw in my
life. Good stallions don’t amount to
much, however, if you haven’t got good
mares. A good many people don’t
seem to bear that in mind.”
“How about lighter blooded stock?'’
“Well, some of the iinest 15 to 15.3
hand high horses for such vehicles as
T-carts, dog-carls, phaetons, etc., come
front Kentucky. They are better than
most of the others, because they have
the bio >d. That’ll tell, every ti re.
Some very fair ones of this class, cob
built, come from Maine. Everybody
likes that build of hoss if he has good
a tion. They are an easy kept hoss,
an’ a hoss that wea s be ter than these
long-legged, loose-ma le hosses. 'They
are worth from SBOO to $2,5U0 a pair,
according to style, action, and quality,
l or a lady’s phaeton you want a hoss a
little smaller, one about 141 hands high,
of Morgan build. A fast hoss that is
too small for racing is very good for
this purpose.”
“Too small?”
“Yes, a good many fast horses are
too small to stand the work of a race
course. You occasionally find very fast
small horses, but where you’ll find one
fast one 14 hands high, you'll find ten
a hand higher. They hain’t got the
foot to carry 'em; they can’t get theie
as a bigger hoss. Good looks is a
mighty important consideration in a
lady’s phaeton ho-s. A lady is sure to
want a hoss with a long mane an’ tail,
archin’ neck, silky coat, etc., an’ such
hosses is rare. Maine is a good place
to look for'em, and they'll bring from
S3OO to S6OO apiece.”
“How about trotting horses?”
“Well a man needn’t pay so much
for a trotter, unless he wants one that
can go bfcLcer’n 30. If he’s satislied
with one that will trot in the neighbor
hood of 2:45, he can get one for’ siuo
or Jess. When you get below 2:30 there
ain’t no regular price; it’s regulated by
the cus omer. Of course you know
some of the fastest of 'em have brought
enormous prices—as high as $50,000.”
—Boa'on Globe.
Blaiiic as n Know-Nothing.
With most of the Blaine organs the
' defense of that gentleman’s Know-
Nothing record is the statute of limi
tations. “It was a good many years
ago,” they plead. “It was before the
war” and “before tho Republican
party was fairly organized.” The Post,
of this city, sees, however, the weak
ness of this plea. It is astute enough
to comprehend that such a plea in be
half of a candidate exploited as the
friend of Irishmen should be accom
panied by evidence that Blaine’s
original views have undergone a
change. And, knowing that there is no
such evidence, it boldly takes the bull
by the horns, applauds Blaine’s Know-
Nothing record as published in the
Free Press, and begs us to “Do so
some more.”
It is a pleasure to oblige a contem
porary so desirous of information. We
give, therefore, some additional illus
trations of Blaine’s proscriptive spirit
toward foreigners, and especially
toward Irishmen and Catholics. One
of these is the palliation by the Ken
nebec Journal, then edited by Blaine,
of the burning of the Catholic Church
at Bath by a mob, tho ground of pal
liation Jbeing the alleged fact that a
carriage tilled with Catholic Irishmen
drove through the crowd and dis
turbed a meeting which was taking
place. Another illustration is the
Journal's approval in paragraphs
like the following of the doctrines
which Ned Buntline was then preach
ing:
No one who Is acquainted with the history
of this country and other countries can deny
that there is strong provocation lor Ameri
cans to claim the right to govern America and
to put foreigners upon such a probation that
they will have an opportunity to become
somewhat acquainted with our institutions
and forms of government before they lire re
ceived into a full and active participation in
its administration. Americans are put on
probation tor twenty-one years, and have to
undergo a constant training and education
into all the details of the theory and practice
of our republicanism before they are allowed
to vote or hold oilice, and yet many foreigners
are permitted to do the saino in live years
after they emerge from the darkness of
European despotism, and in some of the
Stales they have been smugg ed into oil the
rights of citizenship in much less time.
Blaine’s paper also copied with ap
proval the resolutions adopted by the
Know-Nothings at their Bangor meet
ing, one of which read as follows:
Eesolved, That native Americanism, anti
slavery and temperance are the foundation
siones of our order, equally deserving our
consideration, and that before giving our po
litical support to any man, for any office, we
will imperatively demand his entire commit
tal in favor of these great and cardinal prin
ciples.
During the session of the Maine Legis
lature in 18 5, while Blaine was in
control of the Journal, the bill which
we have already referred to was passed,
depriving the State courts of power in
naturalization cases. One of the
speeches in support of this bill, made
by a prominent Know-Nothing and
warm personal friend of Blaine, and
published in full by the latter, contained
the following suggestive passage:
Cl Rome's legions are among us, naturalized
and as free 10 vote as an American. And they
do vote. Whoever else may stay away these
will be sure to be at the polls. And did you
ever know a Catholic to go to the polls hesi
tating who he should vote tori' He always
votes from design and in accordance With a
plan well understood before going to the
place of voting, 'that plan contains a worm
out of sight, but it gnaws at the very roots of
American institutions, whose wilting, ns in
the esse of Jonan's gourd, is the first indica
tion tnat poison is secreted there. This power
has already to an alarming extent got control
of our schools. In many extensive and im
portant localities in this country the Protest
ant Bible is ignored in the schools. School
agents and teachers and superintending
school committees are elected by Catholic
votes and influence, and the school funds,
derived almost exclusively from Protestants
for literary education, is grossly perverted
and made ;to subserve Roman sectarianism
and anti-republicanism. * * * The Pope
has determined that the seat of power shall
be in the the United States of America. Our
institutions of to-day, with all their blessings
to us as Protestants and freemen, he has de
termined to make his institutions to-morrow.
Let not the American sentiment now aroused
subside. Permit it not to slumber.
Should our contemporary desire any
more light, either on Blaine’s connec
tion and sympathy with the original
Know-Nothing movement or upon his
more recent manifestations of the same
proscriptive spirit, it can be accommo
dated. But if it really has any faith in
its pretenses that Blaine is gaining sup
port from the Irish it should stille its
curiosity on this point until the cam
paign is over. —Detrc t Free Press.
The “Irish Undertow.”
One of Blaine’s leading organs, the
Philadelphia Press, has an editorial
headed “ The Irish Und rtow for
Blaine,” which undertakes to prove that
the great body of Irishmen will vote the
Republican ticket. The ligure, “Irish
Undertow,” is bad. The Press may ap
ply it to the Republican party, but it
can not consistently speak of the Irish
in this connection.
What is an undertow?
When the sea is calm and beautiful
above, when its appearance invites a
dip into its cooling waters, there is lurk
ing beneath a treacherous and deadly
current, and when the bather euters it is
the stealthy and unseen undertow that
carries him to his death. There is no
“Irish undertow for Blaine” or any
one else. The figure is false to the na
ture of the true Irishman. All nation
alities have their characteristics, hut
to liken the Irishman to that hidden
death of the sea, which is always called
treacherous, is an insult to his name and
a slur upon the island on which he was
born.
It is rather characteristic of the Irish
man to be like the bold billow of the
ocean, which can be seen of all: like the
waves whose breaking upon adamant
will at last wear it away; like the waves
which, when they give the blow, are
scattered, indeed, hut the broken rem
nants unite again and again roll upon
the rockv front, beating it slowly but
surely down. So has the Irishman
fought against tyranny; so as he fought
for right; so has he fought for Democ
racy. Openly, fairly, often recklessly,
yet always where he can be seen, he has
been like those billows whose heating at
last wears down the obstacle and opens
the channel to the haven of liberty.
No cant, no hypocrisy, no treachery,
no undertow in the true Irishman’s nat
ure. If there is such a thing as an
“Irish underthw” Blaine is welcome to
it. But there is a great Irish wave for
Cleveland —Richmond (Fa.) State.
Evidences multiply that the coun
try is ripe for a change. It demands
better government. That can only be
had by a change of executive and civil
service system. In short, the supreme
demand is a purer administration of the
Government.— Tndiana Sentinel.
POLITICAL ITEMS.'
Cleveland and Hendricks are
good enough for Indiana Democrats, as
Blaine and his gang of plunderers will
find out to their sorrow in November.
The National Republican Com
mittee has issued a circular calling for
campaign contributions. Ah, now die
poor Government employes will catch
it!
General Logan, the Republican
candidate for Vice-President, has com
menced the task—a fearful one—of de
fending himself. Richmond ( Va.)
State.
Governor Grover Cleveland is now
“at home” in New York, but the peo
ple will move him next November to
Washington, D. C. And let us not for
get it.
Republican steers arc jumping over in
to the Democratic pasture field, where
the grass is tall, and promises to be
taller.
Cleveland Herald, “the Republicans of
Ohio should not forget that they have a
State campaign of their own to look
after this fall. ’ This is a very solemn
truth. — Enquirer.
News the “cock-eyed goddess of re
form” is a “widder” “from Boston or
Massachusetts or somewhere down that
way.” If the “widder” hears of this
she will say something to tho Newt
man.
Nasby, who is still inflicting his
bad spelling on the innocent and help
less patrons of a country newspaper,
declares that John A. Logan's sen
tences are grammatical and forcible.
General Logan should have this certifi
cate framed.
So far as Blaine’s nomination
concerns himself it was the mistake of
his life. He could better have afforded
to go down into history wrapped in the
drapery of Garheid’s memory, than to
be known to future generations as the
defeated tattooed candidate for the
Presidency. —Richmond (Fa.) State.
The Republican party will cele
brate its thirtieth anniversary next
month. John A. Logan should be
present anil give a bit of his early
history. How many slaves did Logan
own thirty years ago and what became
of the cruel bill -which lie had passed in
the Illinois Legislature against the
negro? —Richmond (Fa.) Stute.
The Portland] (Me.) Advertiser,
(Ind.), published in Mr. Blaine’s State,
says; “.\ir. Cleveland’s strength as a
candidate consists in h s conservatism,
liis straightforward business methods,
his exceptional standing with the inde
pendent and reform elements, and his
ability to inspire people with the be
lief that he means to serve his party by
serving his country and not otherwise.
Some of the fault finding Repub
lican papers are grieved because Gov
ernor Cleveland does.not resign his
office. Mr. Cleveland has learned
something from Blaine's experience.
The last oilice Blaine held he resigned,
and he has been out of a job ever
since, with fair prospects of being a
tramp the rest of his political fife.—
Cincinnati Enquirer.
The work of collecting money
from Government employes goes right
on. This matter is chiefly noticeable
because the practice of thus raising
campaign funds is in flagrant disregard
of every profession of the party which
is engaged in it, and because it illus
trates the hollowness of Republican
promises. What is the value of parly
pledges which bind their authors not a
moment?
A dispatch to a Republican paper
states that Governor Porter (?) says:
“New York will go Republican by a
nice majority.” This is bringing it
down to a tine point. YY T e often hear of
overwhelming, immense, grand, great,
handsome and good majorities, but
wfcen c majority is whittled to a “nice”
one, we begin to think what a little
thing may overthrow it.— St. Louis lie
publican.
tail mashed that idential rodent was
YVilliam E. Chandler, putative Secreta
ry of the Navy, when he ventured to
controvert the" facts and conclusions
stated by Mr. Ileudriekrfin his recent
speech at Indianapolis. Mr. Heir tricks
re.oins and puts him to open and/vppar
ent shame. Mr. Chandler is complete
ly and forever knocked out. Ne*„:— St.
Louis Republican..
The Republican party has few
public men whose records are clean;
but it is conceded on all sides that al
most anybody the Republicans could
have nominated would have been less
ob ectionable than Blaine. Blaine’s
record can not be hid nor in any way
gotten rid of. The record is known
and read of all men, and thousands of
Republicans have already said: It will
not do. — Exchange.
“A prominent Democratic politi
cian said yesterday,” according to tin
Philadelphia Times, “on the authority
of a New York delegate who was one
of Cleveland’s warmest supporters in
the convention, that in the event of the
latter’s election Mr. Bayard would be
his Secretary of State and Samuel J.
Randall would be Secretary of the
Treasury. McDona’d would also, he
believed, fill a Cabinet position.”
Hon. William M. Evarts made a
speech in New York City at a Bla’ne
ratification meeting in which he spoke
with pride of the Presidential candi
dates whom he had supported from
Clay to Garfield. He, however, mod
estly refrained from mentioning his
eminent services in promoting the ele
vation of R. B. Hayes. Possibly he
may have a suspicion that Hayes was
not elected President. In this view the
omission in the speech of Mr. Evarts is
readily explained.
To claim that Mr. Blaine will
carry New England is not a very
startling campaign cry. New England
has been for twenty-five
years. That it is thought necessary to
assert such a claim now is more dis
couraging than assuring to the Repub
lican campaigners. It is, however, by
no means certain that Mr. Blaine will
cariy New England. The assumption
is disputed as to Maine, Massachusetts,
New Hampshire and Connecticut. He
will have to fight every inch of the
ground to carry either of these four
States, and the chances appear decidedly
against him in Connecticut— St. Lotus
Republican.
The People off Normandy.
The people of Normandy, as seen
from the car window, are an honest,
sober folk, little given to the vanities
and frivolities of life, and, in fact, seem
to have very little chance to know about
them —which is probably a fortunate
thing for them. The men wear broad
fiats and blue frocks when at work, and
wooden shoes or of leather with
wooden soles, some of which look like
heirlooms in their, owner’s family, as,
Indeed, their evident durability might
well cause them to be. They are not
handsome, but they are useful, and, I
doubt not, never afflict their wearers
with corns. The women wear a mul
tiplicity of spreading skirts, which make
them look like partially collapsed and
inverted balloons, and are imposing as
to their heads with huge, sky-menacing
caps, made of white linen or cambric,
and stilfly starched, and running up to
a point which bends forward high above
their brows like the haughty crest of the
helmet of Achilles. I can not imagine any
such imposing creatures being wooed and
won, yet they evidently are so—a fact
which shows that the sufficient spirit of
courage in the warriors of William’s
time has not altogether died out in their
descendants. Frequently one sees in
the field huge Norman horses, with
great, padded collars, dragging heavy,
two-wheeled carts behind them, and
occasionally a cure striding through a
meadow path, his black gown flapping
around him, a seeming larger brother
to the crows that feed unconcernedly on
either side. In other fields are flocks of
gray sheep, attended by the boys in
blue frocks, whom we have all seen in
the pictures by Jacque and other mod
ern painters, and in the wheat-fields
scarlet poppies in abundance, together
with other beautiful blooms in blue,
and purple and gold. The landscape is
cut up into farms, between which no
fences appear, but instead streams of
water and low, well-trimmed hedges.
The land is moist and loamy and
fertile, and over green meadow, and
black and white and brown and yellow
cattle, and weather-stained thatched
roofs and picturesque costumes and bits
of ancient ruin, lies a clear, gray sky,
which sheds a cool and mellow light
over all the p.ospect. —Boston Journal.
Sweet Sixteen.
“I wonder what my daughter is
about!” exclaimed Mrs. Fussenfeather,
jumping up and starting to go and inform
the young lady that young Crimsonbeak
was getting tired waiting for her to
make her appearance.
“You needn't mind Mrs.Fussenfeather,
I know what she’s about,” replied the
caller, rising and reaching for his
hat.
“What do you suppose my dear
sixteen-vear-old daughter is about,then,
Mr. Crimsonbeak?”
“What do I suppose your sixteen-year
old daughter is about?” came from the
youngman. “Well,l suppose iheis about
thirty-two!” is what struck the horrified
ear of Mrs. Fussenfeather, as Crimson
beak vanished through the pickets of the
front fence. Yonkers Statesman.
—There is a large petrified rock in the
shape of.a tree stump in front of C. O.
Whitcher’s residence in Easton, N. 11.
On one end can plainly be seen where
the tree was chopped, while the other
end seems to have been broken off. The
grain of the wood can be seen, and the
color is a yellowish gray. It is about as
heavy as iron ore. it measures about 2£
feet in diameter. —Boston Herald.
—Now comes the Iloosier School
master, and proves that it will take more
than 7,000 years to fill this new Sahara
Sea through the proposed canal, and
presumably more than 1,000 years to
get into it water enough to have any cli
matic effect. —lndianapolis News.
—A large balloon which broke loose
from its moorings in Pittsburgh recent
ly traveled 160 miles in two hours and
thirty minutes. —Pittsburgh Post.
No. 150,000.
This is the number actually reached
this week by the Mason & Hamlin Organ
and Piano Company in the regular num
bering of their world-renowned cabinet
organs. Having commenced business
in 1854, the average number of organs
produced per annum has been 5,000,
which is 100 per week for the entire
1,500 weeks of their business career. The
Mason & Hamlin organs have been sent
to every civilized country, and their sale
never was greater than at the present
time, averaging from 10,000 to 15,000
organs per annum. —Boston Journal.
THE MARKETS.
Cincinnati, August 18, 1884.
LlVESTOCK—Cattle—Cummons2 00 (@3 00
Choice butchers 4 25 © 5 00
HOGS—Common 4 75 © 5 65
Good packers 565 © 6 00
SHEEP —Good to choice 3 75 @ 4 50
FLOUR—Family 3 65 ©4 00
GRAlN—Wheat—Longberry red © 82
No. 2 red 80 © 81
Corn—No. 2 mixed © 56
Oats—No. 2 mixed 27
Rye—No. 2 © 56
HAY—Timothy No. 1 12 50 ©l3 00
HEMP—Double dressed 8 75 @9 00
PROVISIONS—Pork-Mess 18 50 @lB 75
Lard—Prime steam © 8 25
BUTTER—Fancy Dairy 18 @ 20
Prime Creamerv 19 @ 23
FRUIT AND VEGETABLKS—
Potatoes, new, per barrel... 1 00 © 1 25
Apples, prime, per barrel... 150 ©2 00
NEW YORK.
FLOUR—State and Western $2 65 ©3 30
Good to choice 3 70 © 6 00
GRAlN—Wheat—No, 2 Chicago. 85 © 85'4
No. 2 rod @ 8744
Corn—No. 2 mixed 5944© 6t(i
Oats—mixed “.... 36 @ 37
PORK—Mess @lB 00
LARD—Western steam © 7 95
CHICAGO.
FLOUR—State and Western $3 50 ©5 00
GRAlN—Wheat—No. 2 red 76 1 /,© 7714
No. 2 Chicago Spring 76*4© "614
Corn—No. 2 5144© 514 s
Oats—No. 2 25 © 2544
Rye © 56
PORK—Mess . ..17 00 @lB 00
LARD—Steam 7 5544© 7 70
BALTIMORE.
FLOUR—Family $4 00 © 5 00
GRAIN —Wheat—No 2 8744© 9044
Corn —mixed @ 53
Oats—mixed 33 © 36
PROVISIONS —Pork—Mess ©lB 75
Lard—Refined © 91^
INDIANAPOLIS.
WHEAT-No. 2 red J © 77
CORN—mixed © 53
OATS—mixed @ 25
LOUISVILLE.
FLOUR—A No. 1 $4 15 ©4 25
GRAIN—Wheat —No. 2 red 75 ©» so
Corn —mixed... © 55
Oats -mixed © 29
PORK—mess @l9 00
LARD—steam @ 914
English Trade-Mark*.
Mr. Edward Waters, Patent and Trade
marks office, 87 Bourke street, Melbourne,
Australia, writes: “One of my household
suffered with tooth-ache and rheumatism
and after trying numerous other remedies
without relief, tried Jacob’s Oil. It was
rubbed on the cheek and plugged in the
tooth, and well rubbed in for rheumatism.
In both cases tho cure was immediate and
complete, and in neither case has tho pain
returned.
A coachman is the saddest of aii men,
for his life is full of “whoa.”— Pittsburgh
Chronicle.
It Is No Wonder
that so many people sink into untimely
graves when we consider how they neg
lect their health. They have a disordered
Liver, deranged Bowels, Constipation,
Piles or diseased Kidneys, but they let it
go and think they “will get over if«” It
grows worse, other and more serious com
plications follow and soon it is too late to
save them. If such people would take
Kidney-Wort it would preserve their
lives. It acts upon the most important or
gans purifying the blood and cleansing
the system, removes and prevents these
disorders and promotes health.
Women do love one another. It is only
a woman who thinks of kissing a man for
his mother.
Cantion to Dairymen.
Ask for Wells, Richardson & Co.’s Im
proved Butter Color, and take no other.
Beware of all imitations, and of all othor
oil colors, for every other one is liable to
become rancid and spoil the butter into
which it is put. If you can not get it
write to us at Burlington, Vt., to know
where and how to got it without extra ex
pense. Thousands of tests have been
made, and they always prove it the best.
A dead give-away—Bequeathing your
remains to a medical college.
Ltdia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com
pound was first prepared in liquid form
only; but now it can bo sent in dry forms
by mail to points where no druggist can
readily be reached, and to-day the Com
pound in lozenges and pills finds its way
even to tho foreign climes of Europe and
Asia.
Why is a tight shoe like a fine summer?
Because it makes the corn grow.
ietto match that bonnet? Feathers,
ribbons, velvet can all be colored to match
that new hat by using the Diamond Dyes.
10c. for any color at the druggists. Wells,
Richardson & Co., Burlington, Vt.
The owl is a very small bird for its eye*.
—Burlington Ilavckeye.
A Nice Sewing-Machine Free.
Any lady can secure one by a few hours’
woi k. Write Chicago Scale Co., Chicago,lll.
Sea serpents—A faculty peculiar to con
firmed inebriates only.— Life.
Glenn’s Sulphur Soap
Is recommended for salt-rheum, itch, scald
head, Impetigo or any other skin eruption.
A sower trial—Testing an agricultural
implement.— Merchant Traveler.
Ten thousand dollaus would not pur
chase from me what Swift’s Specific lias
done for me. It cured me of Rheumatism
caused by malaria.”
Archie Thomas, Springfield, Tenn.
Good at figures—A dancing master.—
Burlington Free Press.
If a cough disturbs your sleep, one dose
of Piso’s Cure will give you a night’s rest.
A sign of good breeding—getting the
prize in a dog show.
Ik affiicted with Sore Eyes, use Dr. Isaac
Thompson’s Eye Water. Druggists sell it. 25c.
CATARRH HAY-FEVER
HI nai afflicted for
twenty years, during
the months of August
and September, with
Hay-Fever, and tried
various remedies with
out relief. I was in
duced to try Ely's
Cream Balm; have used
it with favorable re
sults, and can confi
dently recommend It to
all. Rohkrt W.Town
lky, (cx-Mayor), Eliza
beth, N.J.
Ely’* Cream Balm
Is a remedy based upon
ftj AY mC F %# BT IQ a correct diagnosis of
■ * ■■ w ha *\ this disease and can be
depended upon. 50 cts.
at druggists: 60 cts. by mail. Sample bottle by mall
10 cts. Ely Bros., Druggists, Owego, N. Y.
■ HOl ■ H ORB ■■ 8H ■ ■■ croup, asthma, bronchitis,
IhIIIHH £2 58 Ej H 1 HS Neuralgia, Rheumatism.
'■ Jg BHI JOHNSON S ANODYNE LINIMENT
g jiißF IggdSj Is HkJP j 8 gj g 9 (/or Internal and E.rtet nal Is. ) will in
gB Kj || BB Mg Kj jgTai fiS gpgt E» IS ti stantlv relieve these terrible d,se,<sis, amt
W 35 ga 1i H Ia e will positively cure nine nasi s out ~i ten.
BSjH BE gS H M HHy? -Si jJS BS nal a Information that will save many lives sent
Blair B B H B H b£ m ESafe IBfid OB tree by mail. Don't delay a moment. Pre
vention is better than cure. .JOHNSON’S ANODYNE LINIMENT CURES Influenza, Hoarse
ness. Hacking Cough, Whooping Cough, Diarrhoea, Dysentery, Cholera Morbus, Kidney Troubles, and
Lame Hack, Sold everyw here. Circulars sent FREE- I. 8. JOHNSON <fe CO., Boston, Mans.
CUT THIS OUT AND ( , 1 ) SEND WITH YOUB OBDEE.’
uG G 1 ST sSs>\
c Stores and
' lf they d 0 not haoe u ' 3end order direct •
jfpf-a a New and exceedingly Valuable Live \v° *Ua.< vC '<S
L, stook Doctor Book accompanies C^ct^e"* 0 ”
rTsfyAl. eaah Bottla.
STANDARD PRICE c.^ X
N> 1 - 00 - <* 0- ’
TIIKI AKfc TUK miDARU.
National Live Stock Remedy Co., 175 dearborn street, CHICAGO.
Nftty |S THE TIME.
To prevent and cure (ill “Skin
Dlmomi,” and to secure a whit •
f soft and beautiful Complexion, use
=BEESON’S=
——»d—a— ——— » » - '■*" —•
Aromatic Alum Sulphur Soap.
Sold by Druggist*. One cake will be sent on receipt
of 165 cent* to any address.
WM. DREYDOPPEL. Manufacturer, 308 North
Front Street, Philadelphia, Pa.
MfTCTand most economical Laundry Soap for
DbO I Washing, especially Mrrlno. Woolens and
Undergarments (clean* Perfect and easy; makes clothes
Bornx H.np el> “ DKEYDOPPEL’S
Sold hy all wholesale grocers aud first-class retailors.
Q.S.STANDARD, (j TO IT
,1 nw*? WAGON SCALES,
ww W■ 1 Idlllr Iron Levers, Steel Bearings, Brass
QP Tare Beam and Beau Box,
BnGHAMTOI S6O and
JONKS he pays th*freight- for free
Pries List mention this paper tod
g address JONES OF BIN3HAMTBN
wacr'Jn Biaghaaitua, 1%. Vi
A PCMTC Male or Female earn $23 to SSO a week sell-
HuLU I O invour <lools. Entirely new. Por samples
write MK9IUKI 4 I. CO., U Houat SI., Ciucmaati, O.
II B B 1% IF I(7* War. s sent c.o.p anywhere. Whol
e -lUL/Jw. Liood:.g'iar»n
--■ IWlllteed. B.C£XB«hl, 157Vabashav..Chicago.
The Harlem Railroad.
Valuable Suggestion of Interest to Mrm
Employed on nil Railroads—-Head It, ii
tou Would be lienetited.
COJfDtfCJTORS* Room, TTarLKM PkPOT, \
N kw York, Feb., 1884. )
Dear Sir: T tnko rlcaMUteln saving ft good word
for DU. KENNEDY’S FAVORITE REMEDY. 1 b*ve
used it for two years for Dyspopslo and derangement
of the Liver, and can say with cmphsals
ways affords prompt and complete relief. FA>UK
ITE REMEDY is pleasant to trie taste, thorough In
Its effects, never producing the slightest disiigrecaolo
or sickening sensation, TIiO^BBIDGE.
But Mr. Trowbridge Is not alone In his praise of Dr.
DAVID KENNEDV’S FAVORITE REMEDY. Fav
orite Remedy Is a positive cure for Malaria as well as
Indigestion. Read the following from R. A. Camp
bell, foreman of the sorting room In the Montgomery
Paper Mill!
MontgomWiv, Orange Co., N. Y., March d, 1884.
Dr. Kennedy, Rondnul, N. Y.:
I)fat; Sin: I have used for some tlmo your valuable
medicine. FAVORITE REMED Y, for Malaria, and it
has proved an effectual cure. After having tried a
great many other medicines for a disorder of tbi a kind
without avail. 1 find 1)11. DAVID KENNEDY 8 FA
VORITE REMEDY affords complete satisfaction, and
I do heartily recommend It to ail who sutler as I did.
U. A. CAMPBELL.
DR. DAVID KENNEDY’S FAVORITE REMEDY
Is a positive cure for Malaria, Kidney and Liver Dis
eases, and for al’ those ills peculiar to women.
Mata wan, N. ,T., March 3, 1884.
Dr. Kennedy, M. D. , Bondont, N. Y.:
Dear Sir: I have used your valuable medicine,
FAVORITE REMEDY, In my family for llverdiffl
cultles, and find it, nil excellent preparation, worthy or
the recommendation It bears.
MRS. MARGARET HAYES.
20 Years!
A CANCER FOR TWENTY YEARS.
•‘For twestv years 1 suffered from a Cancer on my
neck. ‘Patent Potash and Mercury Mixtures’fed In
stead of curing theCaneer. 1 lost the use of my anna
and the upper partof my body. My general health was
broken down, and my life was despaired of. S. b. S.
cured inc sound and well. This new lease of life r
gave to me can not iic measured by any monetary
value I owe my life and the support of my faintly to
Swift’s Specific.'’ W. 11. KOBISON. Davlsboro, Ga.
HOPES TO BE CURED.
“Mr. Brooks, near Albany, was hopelessly afflicted
with Cancer. It had eaten through hfs nose Into 111*
mouth and throat. The time of IDs death was only a
question of a very short time. He prayed for death,
hla suffering was so great. 8. S. S. has had a wonder
ful effect on hint. Ills improvemen Is so great that
we all feel sure of his br-i i g p rf ctly cured In time.
W. H. GILBERT. Albany, Ga.
Onr Treatise on Blood and Skin Diseases Dialled free
to applicants.
SWIFT SPECIFIC CO., Drawer 3, Atlanta, Ga.
N. Y. Office, 159 W. 23d St.; Philadelphia Office, 1203
Chestnut SU
*************************
* ..LYDIA E. PINRHAM’S » •
: VEGETABLE COMPOUND
* * * * IS A POSITIVE CL HE FOIt * * *
* /« Ail t ,lOK ® P ai " rul Complaint*
* . '-Mj * a „d Weaknesses so common*
X: * * « e * * to Our best ******
* * female population.* *
* / Prlee Hln liquid, pill or loicngcform*
* Its purpose is solel-j for the legitimate healing of
disease ami the relief *>f and thet it does all
it claims to do, thousands of indies can gladly testify. *
* It will cure entirely all Ovarian trouble*, Inflamma*
tionand Ulceration, Falling? and Displacements, and
consequent Spinal Weakness, and is particular!vndai-U
ed to the Change of Life. ***************
* It i*cmovos Faintness.Flfttulonrv, destroys all
for stimulants, and relieves Weak nosy of the Stomaen,
It cures BlorHini?, Headaches, Nervous Prostration,
General Debilitv, Sleeplessness, Depression and Well
grestion. That hearing? down, causing pain,
and backache, it ftlwvys yierinanently cured by its use.
* S-md sia»nn toLvnn. Mass., for pamphlet. Letters of
inquiry confidentially answered. For salcat druggist*.
************ *************
PIT ?(? RTGBINQ PILES.
Kg SH E*p nSa Syniptoms Moisture, Intense
5j S S 8
aaa^yjJsV;AyNE’SniNTftß : NTB»rc cure.
tt is EQUALLY EFFICACIOUS tn CURING ALL
such as Pimples, Blotches. Rash.
TYT Tetter. Itch, Salt Rheum, no mat
l* al * I*l ter how obstinate or long standing.
DISEASES
.A.kJ.Fwk^x-s-* 1 c-y ~a 5i.1.l by Druggists.
CURES WHERE ALL ELSu fAiLS. K]
ResK 'oughbyrup. Tastes good. 1^
LSI IJee in time. Sold by drugariats. |ar|
WFt, and Gentlemen in
■ E» **9 city or County to take light
work at their own Hornes. fcJJ to #4 a day
easilymade. Work sent by mail. No canvass
ing. We have good demand for onr work, and
furnish steady employment. Address with
stamp Crown M’ra.Co., 290 Race St., Cin’ti.O.
COShgtCu
Catalvju., fr,. . o»nWariL*,J'ttUbttrgh^?&^R?
OiniD (MC —DOUBLE Barrelßreoch
, I \ Vj K J.oaderH.RetHiundingLocks
111I 11U 3 UJlMßund Pistol (trip, with outfit,
■v %s 7 * w Ne * "complete. Send for price lim*
C. E. Overbaugh & Co. 285&287 Broadway. New York.
pftr A A MONTH. Ag ms V.'anled. 4>« bust
V/nil selling arthl-s in Hi world. 1 sample FREE.
wLI/U Address JAY BRONSON, Detroit, Mich.
Fast Potato Digging
THE MONARCH POTATO DIGGER
_ 4a Saypslt* cost yearly, rtvs times
m to cv< rv fanner Guar
- auteed to Dig Six Hundrei
SENT DuaUclsaDayl
t?T“Writo postal card for FKEB elpprantly
Illustrated Catalogue, in Six Itrllliant Colors,
that cost us |2OOO to publish.
Monarch Manufacturing Co., ch?caq%fu.*.
EDUCATIONAL. '
Atk a fS | PATS fnr a I,lf- Scholarship In the
v is II com: MAN BUS INKS* COLLEGE,
\ #lll Newark. Sew .ler-sey. Posit ions
&S >"U for graduates. National patronage. Write
we ■ wr for circular*. COLEMAN & palms.
YmmO' (Ulan X you want to become Tel
■ t/U!lg wlt/ll cgn.-.ti Operators, and
be guaranteed employment,address P. W.Kkam, Ada.O.
A. N. K.—E. 003
WHFN WHITING TO AI» VFRTINEIII
pleas** w»y JVM MH tlx# a4tvi la
Uilt
oil* REIBIIIKS NKVen VAIL.