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ffONDERFFL POPULARITY OF MB
RENOWNED MEDICINE,
The Greatest Carat Ire Succe** ot th* Ave
—A Voice troin the People.
No medicine introduced to the public
has ever met with the success accorded
to Hop known Bitters. curative It stands article to-day in the
best the
world. Its marvelous renown is not
due to the advertising it of has its received.
It is famous by reason inherent
virtues. It does all that is claimed for
it. It is the most powerful, speedy and
effective agent known for the building
up of debilitated systems. The follow¬
ing witnesses are offered to prove this:
What It Bid for an Old X.ady.
Coshocton Station, N. Y., !
December 28, 1878.
Gents—A number of peoplo had been
using marked your Bitters here, and with
effect. In fact, one case, a lady
of over seventy years, had been sick for
years, and for the past ten years I have
known her she has not been able to be
around hall the time. About six
months ago she got so feeble she was
sicians, helpless. bcinja; Her of old remedies, or phy¬
forty-five no avail, I sent to De¬
posit, miles, and got a bottle
of Hop Bitters. It had such a very
beneficial effect < n Iter that one bottle
improved herself her so she was able to dress
and walk about the house.
When she had taken the second bottle
she was able to take care of her own
room and walk out to her neighbor's,
and has improved all the lime since.
My wife anti children also have derived
great benefit from their use.
W. B. Hathaway,
Agt. U. S. Ex. Co,
All Knttiuslftfttlc Indorsement.
Gorham, N. II., July 14, 1879.
Gents—Whoever you are, I don’t
know; but I thank the Lord and feel
grateful to you to know that in this
world of adulterated medicines there is
one compound that proves and does all
it advertises to do, and more. Four
years ago J had a slight shock of palsy,
which unnerved me to such an extent
that the least excitement would make
me shake like the ague. Last May I
was induced to try Hop Bitters, l.used
one bottle, but did not see any change;
another did so change my nerves that
they arc now as steady ns they ever
were. It used to take both hands to
write, but now my good right hand
writes this. Now, if you continue to
manufacture as honest attd good an
article as you do, you will accumulate
an honest fortune, and confer the great¬
est blessing on your fellow-men that
was ever conferred on mankind.
Tim Bukoh.
A Huubamr* Tmtimony,
My wife moth was patches troubled for years with
blotches, and pimples on
her face, which nearly annoyed the life
out of her. She spent many dollars on
the thousand infallible (?) cures, with
nothing but injurious ( fleets. A lady
friend, of Syracuse, N. Y., who lmd had
similar experience and had been cured
with Hop Bitters, induced her to try it.
One bottle lias made tier face as smooth,
fair and soft as a child’s, amt given her
such health that it seems almost a
miracle.
A Member of Canadian Parliament.
A Klcli Lnily’H Fiueiience.
I traveled all over Europe and other
foreign dollars countries at a cost of thousands
of in search of health and found
it not. I returned discouraged and dis¬
heartened, and was restored to real
youthful health and spirits with less
than t wo bottles of Hop Bitters. I hope
others ntay profit by my experience and
stay at home.
A Lady, Augusta, Me.
Cleveland, O., Oct. 28, 1879.
with My better half is firmly impressed
the idea that your Hon Bitters is
the essential thing to make life lmppy.
She has used several bottles, and I
would like to have you send me a dozen
at lowest price.
B. Pom, Secretary
Plain Dealer Co.
Springfield, Ill., Sept. 3, 1879.
Gents—I have been taking your Hop
Bittern and received great help from
them. I will give you my name as one
of the cured sufferers. Yc ours,
Mrs. Mary F. Starr.
INVESTMENT BONDS.
Flint Gold Bonds
NorlKUtfo
7
Per Cent.
OF THE
Fort Madison & Northwestern Railway Co.
DATKD APRIL 1. 1880, AND DUE IN 1905.
BontU of $1500 and $ 1,000 each.
Principal uiul Interest York. Payable in Gold in
Jfcew
UNION TRUST CO., New York, TRUSTEE.
700,000, Length of lload. being IOO $7,000 miles; whole issue of Bonds,
Location of per mile.
Mississippi of Kiver, Hoad—from of City OscaU Fort Mmilgon, lows, on
to City tosrt, Iowa,
Interest payable April Is t and October 1st.
For ante ht 05 ntnl hoc until Interest.
fVltli each $500 ami *1.000 Iloiut there
Will be given ha a bonus $100 and $200
respectively the In full paid capital stock of
i oinpany.
Applications for Ponds, or for further Information
Circulars, etc.,should be made to
JAMES M. DRAKE & CO., Bankers,
Drml But Id l ug, ftt \V a 1 1 ML, W, Y,
_
RED RIVER VALLEY
2,000,000 Acres
Wheat Lands
bMfi in th * WerM, for taU by tlto
St. Paul, Minneapolis & Manitoba R1 CO.
TWro Aoil&n per acre snowed Pie settler fer break
lag and oaltiYaUoa. For parttoalars apply to
D. A. MoKINLAY.
PainlnlMu, M, r**l, ■tan.
THE BONANZA FOB ItOOK-AUF.NT*
l. Belling our two aiilrtuiullii iUwtrtxted Life of
GEN.HANCOCKii-&£ tan author of national fame), highly imlormt bv t«eu.
Hancock, the party leaders, and press t also Life ol
?EN. JrUbln irin GARFIELD author of iM* rtebrity). k£k a!s> Mronot!
aulorseii. Vint It onto ini, immensely popular, selltuk
Outfit* over 10,000 oOo. e»ch. a n For eck be-f ! Ajmts makfus: SIO orfut!
j»WL___HUBBARD Looks an 1 (■ rmr afi.lrea
11 KtI S.. Phi ladelphia. f».
ADR Ji7Sa.Y JPolDIied Free Granite bo*ril rh'p Monument.froa »nf of
on to jmrt Arneo
B». lu,cripUons accurate amt beautiful. Pl»ns .nd pricei
tfiB*. JOHN W. LKGGK, Sculptor, Ab«rd**n, Scofmd.
KIDIMEY-WORT
The Creat Remedy For THE LIVER,
THE BOWELS,and the KIDNEYS.
.These theSyjtem. great If onrairn they work ore well, the Natural health cleanser, of
foot, if they become clogeod, ii will be per
developed the blood readful diseases art*
because is poisoned with tlio
ona throw off the disease. Thousand have been
cured, and all may 1*^ K or sale by all Druggists.
Russian Superstitions.
A Moscow letter to the London Stand
ard and says: Many are the fantastical beliefs
cur’ous the remnants of paganism
still deeply rooted in the Russian peas¬
ant’s daily liie. They have their nympha
of the forest, nnd of the river; the spirits
of their de id ancestors haunt the dwell¬
ings ot the living; and every country
baba with whom I ever conversed has
seen the “ devil ” at least once in her
lifetime, and is able to give a minute
description of his appearance. Rich and
poor at time ot baptism receive a small
cross, which they wear for the rest of
their days round their necks, underneath
their clothing—not merely as a badge of
Christianity, the of the but evil as an amulet When to weaken sick¬
power one.
ness or misfortune comes tiie peasant
lias recourse to a witch-doctor, and goes
through a variety of pagan rites and in¬
cantations to ward off the evil; his re¬
ligion itself, his orthodox ctiurch pray¬
ers, the glazed look he bends on the
painted ikon, the countless genuflexions
and knockings on the church pavement
wilh his brown and wrinkled forehead,
all remind one rather of a native of
Africa addressing his fetich than of a
Christian in a house of prayer. Last
March the cattle disease made its ap¬
pearance in the village of Ozersk, gov¬
alaru ernment of rapidity Kalooga, and byre spread with
ing from to byre.
The Zemstvo veterinary surgeon lived
some miles away, and instead of seek¬
ing his advice the shape peasants hung little
amulets, in the of
bags of garlic, round their cows’
necks, and jumped foot, over their
prostrate forms lighted on incense one in holding a
censer with the oppo¬
site bend. Those measures proving of
no avail they were seized by a panic,
and called together a village assembly,
arguing long and loudly as to the best
means of frightening away the cattle
plague. It was decided that, according
to the traditions of their forefathers,
their women should march round the
village in at dead and of night, chase plow a furrow
the sand, so away the
plague. At eleven o’clock the men
were shut up by order of the starost, the
women and girls remaining the first out on the
village green. At stroke of
midnight, placed horse-collar a girl, chosen from her shoulders, the band,
a over
and allowed herself to be yoked to a
wooden piow; eithei two girls behind her laid
a hand under handle, two more
took up the place of the plowman and
guided the plow, while another marched
in front holding aloft a miracle work¬
ing ikon. The plow was also preceded
by a widow with a basket full of sand,
which she strewed quickly as she went
along to mark the line where the plow
should make the furrow. No light of
any kind was to accompany them, and
yet should the furrow deviate to the
right or left of the sandy Happily line the charm
would be broken. for the suc¬
cess of the undertaking the soil in Ka¬
looga is black, the sand white, and the
night, lotus hope, was crowd a moonlight one.
An immense female followed in
the rear, lids, beating furiously trying on make kettles, their
stove etc., and to
voices sound as like the howling of the
wind in a snowstorm as possible. Tito
procession marched first to the church
door, sang a weird, heathenish refrain,
went through the quick step and arm
waitings of an old national dance, and
then went on its way three times round
the villaire from west to east. The cere¬
mony over, another widow, with a pot
of tar, marked a biaek cross wit;.in a
circle on every door-post—a sacred sign
which bars the entrance to evil spirits.
Overtures of Blossoms to Insects.
I suppose even ttie general reader
would be insulted at being told at this
hour ot the day fertilized that all bright-colored
flowers are by the visits of
insects, whose attentions they are
specially designed to solicit . Everybody
lias lieard over and over again that
roses, orchids and columbines have ac¬
quired their honey to allure the friendly
bee, their gaudy petals to shapes advertise the
the honey, and their fertilization divers by the to ensure
proper correct
type ot insect. But everybody does not
know how specifically certain blossoms
have laid themselves out for a particu¬
lar species of fly, beetle or tiny moth.
Here on the higher down®, for in¬
stance, most flowers are exceptionally
large and brilliant; while all Alpine
climbers must have noticed that the
most gorgeous masses of bloom in
Switzerland occur just below the snow¬
line. The reason is that such blossoms
must be fertilized by butterflies alone.
Bees, their great rivals in honey-suck
inp, frequent only the lower meadows
and slopes, where flowers are many and
small; they seldom venture far from the
hive or the nest among tlie high peaks
and chilly nooks where we find those
great patches of blue gentian or purple
anemone, which hang like monstrous
breadths of tapestry upon the mountain
sides. This heather here, now fully
opening countries—it in the warmer still sun of the
southern is but in the
bud among the Scotch hills, I doubt
not—specially lays itself out for the
humblest bee, and its masses form about
his bullet highest flies—insect pasture grounds; that but they the
vagrants
are—have no fixed home, and they
therefore stray far abofe the level at
which bee blossoms altogether cease to
o w. — St. James Gazette.
The Fire Laws of .lapan.
The severity punished with who which have persons the in
Japan fortune are be burned is mis¬ fol¬
to out stated as
lows by the Scientific American:
If the house is occupied and is acci¬
dentally carelessness set on fire, the the fire person is through
whose started re¬
ceives ten days’ imprisonment inhabited and with
hard labor; if it is the
fire be produced by the proprietor, then
he is punished with twenty days; if the
tire spreads to other houses, the sentence
is forty days, and when anybody is
killed thereby, one degree heavier; but
if the person killed is a relative of the
first degree, the punishment is oue hun¬
dred days; if the house belongs to the
government, one hundred days; if a
temple, from sixty days it to happens one year, but
ten years are inflicted if to be
one the of the great temples of palace. Isle, or in If
precincts of the imperial
a robber sets fire unintentionally to a
house, he is punished with at least
three years imprisnment with hard
labor. Decapitation awaits incen¬
diaries, ten years renal servitude an at¬
tempt at arson, the punishment being
mitigated if the has would-be just received incendiary is
a servant who a sitarp
rebuke, or if the attempt be made on an
uninhabited dwelling. house, If a man sets
fire to his own ninety days, but
it the fire spreads to houses in the
neighborhood, penal servitude two for years life is and inflicted a half: and
if the
offender purloin profits by the opportunity of
tire to goons or property.
TIMELY TOPICS.
The Holyoke (Mass.) Gazette, says:
It is stated upon excellent authority that
in this neighborhood there is a lady
who has built a house cut of a fund
made by He selling rum to her own hus¬
band. is a drinking man, and so his
wife struck the bargain with him that
if he would drink he must agree to buy
all his liquor of her. She thus pocketed
the profit, instead of the regular rum
sellers. Such a plan put into general
practice would build many a home, and
we commend it to all the married
drunkards of the city.
The No r lhwestern Lumberman men¬
important tions an experiment results for which, lumbermen may have
and
grist-millers. Sawdust and bran com¬
pressed at little cost into a space which
will much reduce the cost ot their
transportation. Into a block of com¬
pressed sawdust an eight-penny it nail
was driven so firmly that broke in the
attempt to draw it. Yet the clock was
easily friable. Three pecks of bran
were compressed into a roll six inenes
long by six inches diameter, capable of
enduring much handling, yet easily
broken with the fingers. The process
will probably bedding bring sawdust and ivill largely into
use for horses, reduce
the cost of bran to consumers distant
from the mills.
At the woeful battle of Isandula two
British soldiers, Melville and Coghill,
were killed while attempting to rescue
the colors of their regiment. When the
ex-Empress land to visit Eugenie the place went where out to her Zulu
son
was killed, she carried with her two
wreaths sent by Queen Victoria to their
graves. Eugenie found their resting
place and tenderly fulfilled her mission.
An exchange says: She wrote after¬
ward a letter to the queen describing
the wild, grand spot where they are
buried, the heroic circumstances of their
death, as she had been able to learn
them, adding a few words of earnest
sympathy sovereign for them who and congratulation brave
for the had men so
to lose; all of which the queen copies in
her own hand and sends witli a letter of
earnest sympathy to the widows of the
dead heroes.
In Morgan county, near JIazle Green,
Ky., a most horrible outrage was com¬
mitted recently. A younc man aged
eighteen, named Buchanan Cay wood, a
resident of Hazle Green, induced a
young girl aged seventeen, named Esther
Jane Oldfield, to take a drink of peach
brandy which was so strongly im¬
pregnated immediately with cantharides seized with that
she was
vomiting; the interior of her
throat and stomach sloughed oft’,
and was thrown up, with great quanti¬
ties of blood, which caused her death in
a few hours. The young lady was of good
family and highly respected. Young
Caywood examining was arrested and tried before
an court and committed to
jail at West Liberty without bail, on a
charge of murder. The testimony
showed that he gave her liquid witli
moan intent and was aware of its fatal
tendencies, and said *• he didn’t care if
it did kill her.” At one time there was
some talk of lynching him, but better
counsel prevailed.
Changes of Flour in Becoming Bread.
In popular use, says Professor Horse
ford, we employ the word “bread” to
qualify loaves which are served in slices.
The rolls are much smaller. Both con¬
sist alike of crumb and crust. The
crumb is made up ofa multitude of cells
o thin walls containing carbonic acid
gas, the product of fermentation in the
These walls ol the cells contain
both gluten and starch and traces of
dextrine and sugar. As a consequence
of the treatment of water and appliei
tion of heat, the starch grains, which in
their normal condition are little sacs
filled with minute granules of starch
proper, have been swon not to burst.
Starch similarly treated by itself, as in
the preparation for stiffening linen in
the laundry, when dried in a thin layer
upon glass and plate, for example, glazed is trans¬
parent, presents a surface.
When this glazed material is removed
with a knife blade, it is seen to be stiff
and horny. The gluten, which is mixed
with it in the crumb of bread, ar.d which
may be conceived to be continuous,
however cell, thin throughout by the the wall o
the has been, process of
baking, which it dehydrated; had been subjected that is the has heat driven to
out a certain amount of water, which
chemically sustains something gluten like the
same relation to the from which
it lias been expelled alum that the water ex¬
pelled by heat from crystals sus¬
tains to the original body of alum. This
is the condition of the glut n from the
crumb in the interior of the loaf at the
instant of its removal from the oven.
On drying, it abstracts whi-h the is water from
the starch with it coated or in¬
timately mixed, as the roasted alum
absorbs the water that this is sprinkled being upon
it. The starch, by process
dried and stiffened, gives its supporting
the walls of the cell, and renders the
texture of the stale loaf more firm than
that of the fresh loaf.
Words of Wisdom.
Prefer loss before unjust gain, for
that brings grief but once, and this for¬
ever.
The modem majesty consists in work.
What a man can do is his greatest orna¬
ment, and he always consults his dignity
by doing it.
Title and ancestry render a good man
more illustrious, but an ill one more
contemptible. prince; Vice and is virtue infamous, honorable, though
in a
though in a peasant.
Where a man makes his money there
he should make his home, and, as a rule,
it will mainly be his fault and that oi
liis family if he cannot spend his iife
there with profit and satisfaction,
Without earnestness no man is ever
great or does really great things. He he
may be the cleverest man; he may
brilliant, entertaining, No popular, soul-moving but he
will want weight. painted that had
picture was ever not in
its depths a shadow.
Praise, like gold and diamonds, owes
its value only to its scarcity. It be¬
comes cheap as it becomes expectations vulgar, and
will no longer raise or ani¬
mate enterprise.
What madness is it for a man to
starve himself to enrich his heir, and so
turn a friend into an enemy. For his
toy at your death will be proportioned
to what you leave him.
Perjury is not only a wrong to a r»r
ticulary person, but treason against hu¬
man society, subverting public at once the
foundation of peace and justice,
and the private security ot every man’s
life and fortune-
LEE WAN’S FUNERAL.
How a Chinaman was Buried In a
Brooklyn Cemetery.
A funeral cortege that passed up
Broadway in Brooklyn toward Ever¬
greens cemetery was regarded with people curi¬
osity and interest by hundreds of
on the sidewalk, and many of the
gamins were overheard irreverently vehicles. ad¬
dressing the occupants of the
The faces seen at the carriage windows
were those of Chinamen. A consump
tive Mongolian sat upon the hearse
throwing slips of rice paper into the
street. The handsome walnut coffin
seen through the glass doors of the
hearse bore the name Lee Wan upon a
silver plate. The deceased was a dealer
in Chinese groceries, a native of the
flowery kingdom, No. Mott but ol Jafe New years York a
tenant at 4 street,
He died of heait disease. The proces¬
sion, alter turning through an avenue
of bper saloons and marble-yards, en¬
tered Evergreens cemetery at the same
rapid pace that had been preserved all
the way from the Broadway ferry. The
grave was in what may be termed the
German quarter of the cemetery. After
the Chinamen had alighted several and gathered
about the narrow pit, stalwart
drivers removed the coffin from the
hearse and laid it upon the trestle over
the grave, after which two German sex¬
tons lowered it. Some of the mourner s
then advanced and tossed in a few hand¬
fuls of earth, just as Christians do.
Then began the curious part of the
ceremony. Fagots of slow matches were
bound together and planted in a basin of
ashes and loose earth at the foot of the
oiuvo Or being ignited they sent up a
fragrant smoke. Red candles richiv
decorated with figures in gold, blue and
green were placed in a row near the
fagots, and quickly burned down to the
little 9tieks, on llie end of which ttiey
were fastened. The dead man’s clothes,
including a white shirt, somewhat the
worse for wear, a freshly laundered col¬
lar and handkerchief, a blue silk blouse
and a straw hat were then rolled into a
bundle and cremated near the grave,
and the brieht-eolored and gilded wrap¬
pings of the candles and slow matches
were added to the burning heap. A
cocoa-nut mat was then unrolled beside
the grave, and the Chinamen, coming
up one after another, took a formal leave
of the departed. This was done by
clasping the hands, lifting them to the
chin, and letting them drop, repeat¬
ing the operation three times. Af¬
ter this the mourners dropped upon
their hands and knees upon the mat, and
made a triple salaam, bowing their fore¬
heads close to the earth. Tea was
poured from a quaint little pot of blue
and white porcelain into minute cups of
egg-shell farewell china, and each man, as lie
bade to the dead, sprinkled
a Three spoonful of tea upon broiled the ground.
pans of rice, a chicxen
and a plate of mutton were allowed to
stand before the grave for some time
that the dead man might refresh himself
and prepare for his long journey. It is
customary to leave these dishes beside
the grave, but just before the cortege re¬
turned, a Chinaman whom opium had
bleached, bleared and sallowed into the
resemblance of a corpse, gave a sus¬
picious iilance at certain of the small
noys who had gathered about the place,
and shuffled them back into a tea box
whence he had taken them. Cigars
wire passed around, and then the yellow
faces were once more shut up in the
carriages, the drivers mounted to their
seats, cracked their whips, and the pro¬
cession disappe ired rapidly in the dmt.
The oldest friends are to-day the staunchest
friends of Dr. Bull’s Couali Syrup. They
have proven its great worth in all cases ot
Coughs, Colds, Hoarseness, Tickling in tht
Throat, Irritation ot the Bronchial Tubaa and
Lungs, etc.
Kobiu Bed*Breast.
The English robin, after whom our
robin is named, has some very pleasant
Iraits of character. For one tiling, he is
tender-hearted, and is often known to
feed and comfort suffering birds,
whether they are of his own kind or
not. Stories are toid of homesick birds
shut up in cages being visited by robins
and cheered up hv social chattering, and
also of their being supplied by the same
generous little creatures with worms
and other nice morsels of food. Young
birds which fall out of the nest before
they can fly seem to be the special care
of the robins. They will feed and care
for them, aid at last teach them to fly,
and fly away with the grateful young¬
sters. The bird we call a robin, tliougli
he is quite as interesting as the English
rabin, and has his own phasant, iive y
ways, has really no right to the name,
being in fact a thrush. Wtiateverwe
call him, he is a bright, intelligent fel¬
low. and nothing can be funnier than to
see him jerk a worm out of the ground
for hi i breakfast.— New Jerusalem Ates
se..ff r
'■More food and less medicine, more oi
nourishment and strong- b, less of the debili¬
tating influence ot drugs is what our exhaust¬
ed constitut oils require,” said Baron Liebig,
when he perlected the composition ct the
11 Malt Bitters,” prepared by Molt Bitters Co.
Toddlekins is a very stuail man in¬
deed, but lie said he never minded it at
all until his three boys grew up to be
tall, wife strapping young fellows, and his
began to cut down their old
clothes to fit him. And then he said he
did get mad.
Hay Fever.— Buy a bottle oi Ely’s Cream
Balm betoro the usual time hay lever makes
its appearance. At the first intimation of the
disease apply as directed in circular. In
nearly every ease the patient will find imme¬
diate and permanent relief. Price 50 cents.
Elizabeth, N. J., Sept. £7, 1879.
Messrs. Ely Bros., druggists, Owego, N. Y,
Gents.—I have been afflicted for the past
twenty years, during the months ol August
and September, with hay fever, and during
this time have tried various remedies sug¬
gested by my lriends ior its relief without
success. About a month since I was induced
by a triend who had been beueflted by its use
to try j our Cream Balm. I have used it ac¬
cording sults, to directions with very favorable re¬
aud can confidently recommend its use
to all who are similarly affleted.
Rober t \V. Town ley (ex-m ayor).
Are You Not In Oood Health 1
It the Liver is the source ot your trouble,
you can find an absolute remedy in Dr. San
ford’s Liver Invigorator, the only vegeta¬
ble cathartic which acts directly on the Liver.
Cures all Bilious diseases. For Book address
Dr. Sanf ord, 162 Broadway, New York.
Vegetine.— The great success of the Vege
tine as a cleanser aud purifier of the blood ii
shown beyond a doubt by the great number!
who have taken it, and received immediau
rolief, with sueh remarkable cures.
The Voltaic Belt Co , ttlarihalL Mich.,
Will send their Eleotro-Voltaio Belts to the
afflicted upon 30 days’ trial. See their adver¬
tisement in this papor headed, ‘‘On 30 Days’
Trial.”_________
Get Lyon’s Patent Heel Stiffeners applied
to those new bouts Ktore you run them over.
The Murderer’s Last Hours.
It is high time that the newspapers
rebuke the unhealthy curiosity death
•ibout criminals under sentence ot
by refusing to publish long accounts of
their last hours. F t two weeks before
an execution the unhappy man who is
to endure the supreme penalty ot the
law is paraded before the cammunity as
if he were a martyr calmly preparing for
a heroic death. The reports which fill
the newspapers are always harrowing
and often repulsive to persons of and
sensibility. This whole matter about
the treatment of persons about to be
hung needs a thorough overhauling in
the interests of decency and morality.
The kind and most considerate treat¬
ment of sue i men is to shield them from
public inquisitiveness. If sincere re¬
pentance characterize their last hours it
is a thing to rejoice in. tu" to make a
show of spiritual reformation under the
awful shadow of an ignominious death
is to invite disbelief in its genuiness.—
Christian Union.
The palm for the quietest convention
of tlie piesidential year has already been
awarded, by deaf general consent, in Cincinnati. to the
gathering of mutes
DrBULL’S
m 1 I
■ - .....>TT-T!>^'
• A
Yon have read this notice about twenty
times before. But 4id you ever act upon the sugges
lion so often made, namely: To ask any boot anti shoe
dealer for boota with Lroodrlch’s Patent Beane
nier Meel Itivet Protected hole 1 Guaranteed
to outwear any Sole ever made. If j’ou have not, do
th** very next time iron vou want boots or shoes with solei
that will wear like and save repairs, and don't you
buy any other.
My references are any Sewing Machine Company ot
their agents in this country.
II C. CJOODRICIT,
ID Church St., Worcester, Mass., and 40 Hoy no Ave.
Chicago, Ill.
FRAZER AXLE GREASE.
Aw.t is jOvTI '"an nuziRSMie l
I \ WHAT I SHALL J GREASLj/
00 AFTER THIS
ML -V, v.
’u: ■Cf£
: r
-
FOR *UiF RY ALL OFALPRS.
Award' d the MEOA J. OF HONOR at the Centennial and
l 'a f it tosil iom.
Chicago. FRAZER LUBRICATOR CO. NewYork.
SORE EARS, CATARRH l
Many peop’e are afflicted with these loathso loathsome <;;*«ase»
but ver y few ever get well ft out them; thb is ewf ikg V
impr si i treatment treatn only, ai they are rea lll: illy cura bio i.
p operly treat. ed. l’hla is i no n< Pile boast bu t a fact I hix’«
proven over an«t nd ove’- o again tiln by my treatn lent Send f«
my lltt • Book.yVe * ta off. it wil' tell you a:i ill about a tl aa»
matters and wno I am. My large Book, 379 pa*ef, octavo
price, VA by mail. Address
DU. C. £ 9HOLMAKKR, Amral Surgeon
Reniiiiift, Pa
CNCYCLOP/EDIA IfcTIOUETTEs
BUSINESS
Thi* is tlie cheapest and only complete and reliable
work on Ktiquettc and Business and Social Forms. It
te.ls how to perform P«- all the various duties of life, and
how to apnea the best &d vantage on all occasions.
Agents IVanti'd ■nd ford cttlars contaluirg a
fu l des* ript on ol’t <e wo ■» an I xtra terms to ; gen s.
Address National Pr hushing Co., Phila 'elpUia.Pa.
CAW RTAKE $3 PER DAI
SELLING OUR NEW
Platform Fr.mily Scale.
Weighs accurate y up to *A.» lbs
Its handsome apj earance s n Is it At
sight to hou-eki epers. Helall price
(>ther Family Seal s wt igh
y. A 1 ing 25 ibs caun ot be bought HOOfi for less
than A r#*gu ar
t OK A4«KNT».
Exclusive territory givv.i. •vivon Terms and rapid sales ror
prise old Age- ts Send for par.iculars. DOMKSTIC DC
SCALE CO.. IH7 W ."»tb St., (duclnnati. Ohio.
This Claim- 11 onto Established 1830.
PENSIONS
New IjRW Thousands of soldiers and heirs entitl I
Peokions date back to discharge or death. Time UmUed
Address, with stamp,
F. GEORGE 3A,>,_Washing £. I FflOI, ton, P. C,
O. Drawer
Republican Manual!
CAIUiMUill OF 1880- History. Principles,
Early Leaders, and Achievements of the Republican Party
with full biographies of G AItFILLII AND Alt
TItIJU A By K. V*. Smau.ky. of the New York Trthum.
book wanted by every inte.ligent voter. The best of
all arsenals from which to maw ammunition forcamt aign
use. An elegant cloth-bound volume at a fraction of ths
u*uM cost Price, 50 cents; postage, 7 cents. Circular
sent free. For sale by the leading booksel.er m every
town. AMERICAN BOOK EXCHANGE,
Tribune Building, New York.
RUPTURE
Relieved and cured v ithout the injury trusses inflict bj
Pr. J. A. SH'ERMAN’S system Office. 331 Broadway
New Yo k. IBs book, w th photographic likenesses ol
bad cases before and alter erne, mailed for lt» cents.
j YOUNG MAN OR OLD,
i Wli Brail*, or to thiCkoa. *tra*ttB*n >rJ V3k a|VHB
, sasi’iiSiaaxiiSr*^:
s END New $15.00 pursue Students E. for England to TOURJfiE, all $20.00 in otir the English Now for Conservatory Conservatory Music 20 Calendar branches lessons Hall, Course in of B free. classes. of Music. oston, can the
ON 30 DAYS’TRIAL.
We will send our Electro-Voltaic Belts and oth«
Electric Appliances upon trial for 30 days to those afflicted
with Nervous Debility and diseases of a personal nature.
A so of the Liver. Kidneys, Rheumatism, Paralysis, etc.
A sure cure guaranteed or no pay.
Address Voltaic Belt Co-. Marshall, Midi.
“.HSIACHEA^WHJSKERS S7isiS‘,
1 iJi°Ki;r£;^u;"4 , arai:
E^SS^ifcMiSSlSiS^BliMSTew.' Ho.1 pi*. Tr r*e *r„l, on t Mtomshr* B)l. K*»rr fail*.n«
usu,U { n.i* Kehiib*.)
VOUNG MEN iSffMf,
■ month. Every graduate guaranteed a pavtngsltu
otion. Address K. Valentine, Manager, Janesville, wit.
fimilBI Borphin* HikUCaraBlaU
Uf IUflVI Im .*> No *111 Cured.
1>R. J. STirntii s Ltb u apn. OBkx
S350 ^ Vs saiup.v?/r MONTH Best ee. Selling Jat I Articles Br AGENTS okso m, in Detro the WANTED! word; it, Mich. a
ARFNT^ 1 ° WANTFH For tide; a good fast selling profits; staple sample ar
free. Address MARSHALL k 00., Fremont. Q.
A WEEK in your own town. Terms and $5 Outfit
free. Address H. Uallxtt k Co., Portland. Maine
$5 to $20 HfiL-tti SSSTMWr-
Vegetine.
More to Me than Cold.
Walpole, Mass., March 7, 1?80.
Mb. H. B. Stevens : L has done* J
I wish to inform you what Veoetinr
for me. I have been troubled with Erysipelas
Humor for more than thirty years, in my limbs and
other parts Qf my body, and h <vp been a great suf¬
ferer. I commenced taking Vegktine oue year ago
last August and can truly say it has clone more for
me than any other medicin . I seem to be perfect¬ to
ly free from this humor and cau recommend it
every oue. Would not be without this raeniciue—
*tis more to me than gild - and I feel it will prove a
blessing to others as it has to me.
Yours, most resj eel fully,
Ml.8. DAVID CLARK.
J. BENTLEY, M. D., says:
Mt ha* done more good than all
Jiedical Treatment.
Newmarket. Out., Feb. 9, 1833,
Mn. H. R. Stevens, Bosron, M i s.:
Sir—I have sold during lue p Bt year a consider
able quantity of your Vkoetine, and I believe in
all cases it has g.veu satisfaction. In oue case, a
deUcate young lady of about seventeen years was
much benefited by its use. Her par. ms iniormed
me '.bat it had done her more good than all the
medical tr. atment to which she had previously
been su jected. respect fully,
Yours
J. BENTLEY, M. D.
Loudly in its Praise.
Toronto, Out., March 3.1330.
Dear Sir—Considering the short time that Vege
itne has been before the public here, it sells welt
as a blood purifier, and for troubles arising from a
sluggish or torpid liver it is a first-class medicine.
Our customers speak loudly iu its praise.
J. WRIGHT & CO.,
Cor. Queen and Elizabeth S'.reeU.
VEGHEJTINE c
PREPARED BY
H. R. STEVENS, Boston, Mass.
Veg etine is S old by ail Dru ggists._
a Y MU-MO 37|__
REMEDY FOR CURiNU
Comk Colli, Bronchitis, Altai
CONSUMPTION,
kc*i A'l Throat and Lung Affections. Indorsed b* tla
I*. Physicians* Clergy And Afflicted People.
TRY ITC 1
YOUU REMEDY 13
mis inc nun
Sold by all medicine Dealers.
> jo,
TT %
J •!- -& :
g. i
>*‘v; to
S‘g J *
*
SArONIFIER
• the “ Original - Concentrate* Lye and Reliable Family
>;>p Maker. Directions accompany eacbC an for making
3«js!, Soft and Toilet aoap quickly. SAPO*\T- It Is foil
.rightand strength. Ask your grocer for
l v K, an>. take nootberr.
ENN'A SA>-7 MANUFACTURING CO., Phila.
B. W. PAUSE & SONS, CORNING, N. Y.
Jl KHTAIIX.IMHBD 1H«0,
Patent Spark-Arrestlne En¬
gines,mounted and on skids.
Vertical Engines with wro’l
boilers. Eureka Safety pow¬
ers with Sectional boilers—
can't be exploded. All
with Automatic Cut-Offs,
from $150 to $2,000.
Send for Circular. State
where you saw this.
ItsSgJgfe
wmm
JJESTEY&C2 BrattleboroVi
Sfc
i Up :x • vdti v{*ly cul t Female WVakKm s.such as Fai*
i of *. In- W' tjnb. White*, Chccnk* imiaiumat !otj or
. .e»• ration of the he Womb. Incidental Hemorrhage or
'iocuiinj:, i’ainfu l, Suppres ^l and irregular 31ena
ruatlon, &< \ An old an«l ii i'ob* remedy, Bend pos
al card ;'.r< f >r a pamphlet, witli treatment, cures and
■•ert. me ates front physicians and purionrs to how*
f !i .‘i Hillard. Utica, NV. kw.d by u.!i L**
st vi *r«:- Pott.ti
I: tBwn 61 - CAB!
liBB.
Is the N**d ta the World. R is absolutely wire, It ■ Oto
beat for MedldBAl Pc• soft*. It is the b*sl for R ak: Rg tad
Alt Family t *«s. Sold by a! 1 Druggists asdGrocan.
PEWW’A SALT MANUFACTURING CO., PMt|
CELLULOID
EYE-GLASSES
representing the choicest selected Tortoise-Shell as 4
Amber. The lightest, handsomest, and strongest knewm.
Sold by Opticians and Jewelers. Made by SPKNCSB
0. M. GO., 13 Malden Lane, New York.
^GILBERTS
STARCH
PETROLEUM JELLY
Grand Medal Sliver Jfe.ir.
at Philadelphia »t Pai ls
Exposition. Exposition.
This wonderful substance is acknowledged remedy by physK dit
ians throughout the world to be the best
»vered for the cure of Wounds, Burns, Rheumatism, order
3kin Diseases, Piles, Catarrh, Chilblains, Iff Ac. and In ilff cent
that every one may try it, it is put up in
bottles for household use. Obtain it from your druggist,
and you will find it superior to anything you have ever
nsed.
DANIEL F. BEATTY’S
ORGANS
17-STOP ORGANS
$777 Outfit P. A YEAR O. V P-**. T trz and RBY expenses Addraas , Augusta. to agents Main*
S he !, t Portrait of Gen. Garfle’d. for prl-ters
■A. b aniple k t prices, 5c. Wm. H, Thompson Detro it .Mich.
S 72 ** ? “”UU tTM. $12 Addr,j a day at Thi home * da., easily infnsta. mada. Costly