Newspaper Page Text
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farm And garden,
—ls your spoons are stained from eggs,
. , rub them with a little common salt.
■ - v *■’—‘Use-of sulphur in bleaching evapo
rated fruit is deferred to by Green's Fruit
Grower as “at all times unsafe.” Better
hav£ darker color with flavor and heal th
rii Ifilness.
, ~rTo take rust out of steel, rub the
, steel with sweet oil; in a day or two rub
t with finely-powdered unslaked lime until
the rust all disappears, then oil again, roll
. in woolen and put in a dry place, especial
ly if it be table cutlery.
• • —Sponge Cake.—Two eggs and one
cup of sugar well beaten together, one
half cup of sweet milk; mix one teaspoon
baking powder or one-half teaspoon of
. soda and one teaspoon cream tartar with
i < one cup of sifted flour.
—Alum water will restore most all
# , faded colors; brush the faded articles
thoroughly to free it from dust, cover it
with lather of castile soap, rinse with
clear water and then with alum water,
and the color will usually appear much
f ,• brighter than before.
’■ —Beef essence should be made in the
oven. Cut one pound of good lean beef
into small square pieces. Put them in a
• brown jar; sprinkle them with a little
’ ’ salt and pour oa a teacupful of water. Tie
brown paper firmly over the top of the
jar, and leave it for five or six hours in
the oven until all the goodness has been
extracted.
•—Light and delicate dumplings are
made by this recipe: Half a pound of
beef suet, chopped extremely fine, ten
ounces fine bread crumbs, one large ta
blespoonful of flour, the grated rinds of
•• /twotemall lemons, four ounces of ffew
’ -fiered sugar and four eggs beaten very
r »’ flight. Mix thoroughly and add the juice
i ’ of two lemons. Divide this mixture
f* info four parts, tie in well-floured cloths
♦.< boll one hour in slightly-salted wa-
’" —Boiled Indian pudding is improved
Jfor some people if suit is added to give it
• JJ'fckness. Chop a quarter of a pound of
! . ,beef suet very fine, add an equal quan
,, K \tity of sugar, one teaspoonful of ginger,
\half a teaspoonful of salt, enough sweet
'Jfiilk to moisten the meal, and a teaspoon
", ful of baking powder, or about a cyp of
f* sour milk and a teaspoonful of soda.
‘Thia should boil in a bag for at least three
* tours’, and be served hot with sauce.
.« —Charcoal is often recommended for
*pigrauft fowls, but it is not generally
It a* ukidtfrstood that it is good feed for any
! 'a kiPd ’bf' stock fed with corn or other
healing material. There is a slight al-
* kaline effect from charcoal which helps
—4» correct-acidily of tho stomach. 11 is
exedlsat for mixing with the'food-of
aw&nnls UVut gre’ being fatted, experience
sowing thaj, the increase of fat is great- «
when, a proportion of charcoal is
rule, in regard to-qusntity of
' ' &>* Rpo'Hry is difficult to establish
* to.rely upon' because the ap
;k‘Ute.jtfI .«itl<,tck is hot always' the same.
AMt’igiven quantity for break
onrmoroiug and leave half of it the
Mature is the only infallible
jHhU. ,** A fowl is naturally .a most inces
sant feeder. Al liberty they are conlinu
ally of something |o eat In
dhirahement we should imitate nature as
in.caring for them.
not a chest or box
ib which to store away woolen goods out
of the way. of moths, a well-cleaned flour
l&rr?t .will answer, but should be care
fbily liped with newspapers pasted over
tfvery ojevioe, that none of th ■ pests may
find their, way Inside. The garments
rtsould bn well aired, shaken and brushed
tbd.rtuy soiled spot thoroughly cleaned
wtd.4ried. Then they should be folded
rmoothly, wrapped separately in fresh
mwspapora, tied around with a string,
•_ wt pinned, and be marked with a lead
tU J* Uc *l on * blank space in the paper, so
* the moment you lay hands on a package
i ysu know what it contains, in case you
fur any of them during the
iiWiri, The barrel should then be tied
*. or pasted over with newspapers and over
* IMha thick wrapping paper. If tho bar
jcdU to be exposed it may be made ini )
; article of furniture by cov
ering over the top with a square board,
< nftdtfch‘larger than the diameter of the
IsrirrL Tack around three sides of this
n of any pretty material. Cover
with the same, and finish with
* '-.bM® healed nail# or a full ruffle,—
Gnztttd
.4Ke venue Collectlem.
internal revenue
eight months of the
yw-- eaded June 30, 1885, were
affeito, 844,330,827;
mmOQB; from far
meatal liquor*, 811,686.071; from mis
eeUiweon* aouroee, >179,339, making a
Hil of 873,740,199, being a decrease of
m the wlteetion for the
k*. same period of the ptrevbua fiscal year.
I' Time was * deerewe at H 963,811 in
spiritn and 8190.096 in tobacco, and
■L iu«»* es >137,675 in fomented
H' liquors. The aggregate receipts for
H February,, 1885, were 8676,494 than
E Mnrmg-Fubmarv l&A
WIT AND WISDOM.
A EAHiROAd strike—a collision.
Tele type lighter—the proof-reader. ,
Never fret; it will ,only shorten your
days.
Never stand long at a corner of a
street.
Never abuse one who was once your
bosom friend.
Never reply to tho epithet of a fool,
or a low fellow.
Never speak in a contemptuous man
her of womankind.
Never taste an atom when you are not
hungry; it is suicidal.
Hailing cabs is a common thing when
it is hailing pitchforks.
Never spend many of your evenings
away from your family.
A chancery court is one in which jus
tice has an even chance.
Never anticipate too much; disap
pointment is not pleasant.
The English policy in Egypt -False
Prophets and quick returns.
Never speak of your parents as the
“old man” or “old woman.”
The “one more” drink has made a
hundred thousand drunkards.
A girl may be a good violin player
and yet not be able to draw a beau.
We propose that the phrase “money
no object” be amended to read “money
no objection.”
A poet sings: “The jocund spring in
here.” Yes; we never saw a more
joakin’ spring than this.
Professor : “Mention an oxide.”
Student: “Leather.” Professor: “Oxide
of what?” Student: “Oxide of Beef.”
Exit Professor.
An old friend is not always the per
son whom it is easiest to make a confi
dant of ; there is the.barrier of remem- •
bered communications under other cir
cumstances.
He was a likable man; sweet-tempered,
ready-witted, frank, without grins of
suppressed bitterness or other conversa
tional flavors which make hall of us an
affliction to our friends.
Lafayette had a greaf mind, and he
knew what he was doing when he as
sisted the ‘United States. France is
now getting large supplies of cannod
frogs from this country.
We often think we are of great im
portance to other people; that they must
be thinking of us and our affairs; that
they watch our actions and shape their
course accordingly. In general wo are
quite mistaken.
The craze for lady barbers is dying
out. After a man has his face cut bias,
his throat shirred and his hair pompa
doured and been talked to death, he
naturally returns to the male barber and
takes chloroform.
“Why do bees make wax ?” asks a
farm journal. We do not knew, unless
it is because no one has told them that
the honey manufacturers are willing to
make it for them out of paraffine.—
1 Philadelphia Call.
In a fashionable novel the author
says: “Lady Emma trembled, grew
pale, and immediately fainted.” The
printer, putting “p” instead of “f,”
rendered it, “The lady grew pale, and
immediately painted.”
An agricultural journal says: “Spring
is the best time in the year to move
bees.” It may be; but if a bee settles
on your neck, or any other portion of
your anatomy, in the fall, don’t wait un
til the spring to move it
A dogmatical spirit inclines a man to
be censorious of his neighbors. Every
one of his opinions appears to him
written, as it wore, with sunbeams, and
he grows angry that his neighbors do
not see it in the same light
The small boy tools that it is tempt
ing Providence for a leading grocery
firm to put large and luscious looking
oranges right out on the sidewalk and
label them: “Do not fail to try these
oranges; they arc very nice.”
The Coming Cattle Queen.
Among the droves who alighted from
a cattle caboose At the stock yard in
Chicago was a tall, majestic-looking
woman of about thirty years. Though
not a beauty, she would have com
manded attention in a metropolitan
throughfare.
“Men are all frauds,” she said, with a
laugh. “I wouldn’t marry the best one
of them that ever lived. I prefer to be
their superior by remaining in such cir
cumstances that I can always buy their
labor and esteem.” Miss Mary Meagher i
was the name to which the lady an
swered. In Washington Territory she
is known as the coming cattle queen,
the companion celebrity to Miss Iliff, of
Denver. In the train she had ten car
load* of cattle which had endnred
the experiment of a 2,500-mile ride.
She values the stock at 310,000, and
says if the trip is financially successful
•he will return very soon from Walla
WaUa with 400 additional bead. She
employs a number of cowboys and to
the owner of * large herd of cattle, to
the raising at. which aha giree her per
sonal attenUon.
A NEW THEORY.
“I tell you ail men are liars,
“Oh, not «o bad as that."
“Yea, sir; every one of them.*
“How alxxit George Washington I
“He told the troth just cuce, and it
wa* ao remarkable au act that they made
it a part of htoksry."— Chicago Senft.
DOMESTIC RECIPES.
Julia Corson Tells us How to Cook Fish.
Broiled Salt Mackerel with Butter
Sauce.—Soak a salt mackerel over :
night, laying it in plenty of cold water,
with the skin uppermost, so that the
salt may fall to the bottom of the water
after it is disengaged from the fish. In
the morning trim off the tail, fins and
point of the head; dry the mackerel,
put it between the bars of a double-wire
gridiron, well buttered to prevent stick
ing, and brown the fish over a hot fire;
while it is being browned boil some
potatoes, as directed in the following
recipe, and make a butter sauce; when
the potatoes and sauce are ready, serve
them separately in hot dishes, and serve
the fish with some slices of lemon, or a
few sprigs of parsley or watercresses, on
the dish, as a garnish.
Butter Sauoe for Broiled Macik
erel. —Put in a saucepan over the
fire a table-spoonful each of butter and
flour, and then stir them until they bub
ble; then gradually stir in a pint of boil
ing water, and when the sauce is smooth
season it with a level tea-spoonful of
salt, quarter of a salt-spoonful of white
pepper, and a table-spoonful of chopped
parsley or capers, if either to available;
after the sauce has boiled for two min
utes, add to it three table-spoonfuls of
butter, cut in small pieces, and stir the
sauce until the butter is melted; do
not allow the sauce to boil after the but
ter is added; when the butter is melted
put in the juice of half a lemon, and
serve the sauce at once with the
fish.
Boiled Potatoes to Serve with
Fish.—Choose small, smooth potatoes of
even size, wash them and then peH
them, taking care to remove only a very
thin paring and to keep them smooth,
and Lying each one in cold water as it
is peeled; when the fish to first put to
cook place the potatoes over the fire in
plenty of salted boiling water, and boil
them for ten minutes, or until they can
be easily pierced with a fork; do not al
low the potatoes to boil until they begin
to break, but drain them as soon'as they
are tender; after draining the po
tatoes cover them with a clean
towel, folded several times and place the
saucepan containing them where Jhey
will keep hot without burning until the
fish is done; the folded towel will retain
the heat and at the same time permit
the steam to escape, so that the potatoes
will be mealy and unbroken when they
are served. Potatoes may be boiled in
their jackets the same way, a thin ring
of paring being removed after they are
washed; as is the case with the peeled
potatoes, care must be taken to drain
the potatoes as soon as they are tender
enough to be pierced with a folk, and
ihey must then be covered with a folded
towel and allowed to steam.
The Last Cholera.
Tho last cholera, that of 1883 and 1884,
which we dread will be revived in
Europe this spring and summer, was
carried from India to Tonquin aud China
in 1881 and 1882, and was sent back to
France in 1883 and 1881. It was also
carried from Bombay to Damietta, in
Wypti hi 1883, and caused nearly forty
thousand deaths, when it died out com
pletely. From Ejypt it was carried
late in 1883 to Marseilles in France,
where it died out in the winter,. In
1884 it was brought from Tonquiu and
perhaps from Egypt, to Toulon, in
France, and was spread to Ilaly by flee
ing Italian laborers. It was sent from
France to Spain, and also up to Paris,
it caused about a thousand deaths
in October and November, 1881. Wheth
er it will commence anew in Europe
this year no one knows; but, with the
modern knowledge of the disease aud
sanitation, it will be disgraceful to all
concerned if it does. We do not know
whether it will reach this country; but
if it does, all large cities with good
boards of health and large and pure watej ■
supply will escape lightly. Dirty towns
and villages, where much animal and
human filth to stored, and where the
wells are contaminated, will suffer
heavily. The poison of cholera is all
contained in tho discharges, and if the
nurses aud attendants of the sick will be
careful to wash their hands after hand,
ling anything soiled by them, there
will be no danger, provided also all soiled
clothing and articles are washed and
and disinfected at once. It is the per
sons in the incipient stages of the dis
ease, those suffering with the premoni
tary diarrhoea, who sow the germs of
the disease everywhere and by hand
bag even bread or fruit or vegetables
contaminate them in such way that
i they become dangerous and infections
to others. Cholera progreeses slowly
in thto way, and is easily stamped out.
When the poison gets into drinking
water, numerous cases occur almost
instantaneously, and if the germs were
not very perishable, the whole race
would almost be exterminated.—J. C.
Peters, M. D.
Very Bad. -Another illustration of
what the bad sanitary condition of a
house will entail was afforded in Milford,
Mass., within a week or two, where four
children died from diphtheria, while the
life al the fifth and last child was saved
by being removed to another tenement
The sanitary arrangements of the chil
dren’s home were afterward found to be
bad in the
Thr prediction to made that the clock
the future will run perpetually, being
eonetructed that the elianges of tem
perature between night and day will
wind it up.
Mr. E. R. Hoyt, a mechanical engineer
at the New Orleans Exposition, was se
verely injured by a huge derrick pole
falling on his foot. He was conveyed to
his residence, and after only three appli
cations of St. Jacobs Oil, all the swelling
and pain disappeared, and he resumed
his duties.
A strange sight was presented in the
streets of Tucson, Arizona, one day last
month. A woman appeared carrying a
child’s empty coffin on her shoulder,
followed by a lot of little girls. Later
the scene was reversed, and the coffin
was borne by four little girls, followed
by several women. It is no uncommon
sight there to see a coffin borne to the
grave on the shoulders of a man, but a
woman rendering the service was a novel
spectacle,
I. « \
“Shoot Polly as She Dies,’'- ~
—Pop.
was the way it appeared in the proof-slip.
The argus-eyed proof-render, however, knew
the quotation intended and changed it to
read: “Shoot Folty as she flies. ''-—Pope. Os
course it was an error, yet how many are
daily committing much graver errors by al
lowing the first symptoms of consumption to
go unheeded. If afflicted with loss of appe
tite, chilly sensations. or hacking cough, it is
suicidal to delay a single moment the use of
Dr. Pierce’s “Gol len Medical Discovery,”-
the great and only reliable remedy yet known
for this terribly fatal malady. Send two let
ter stamps for Dr. Pierce’s complete treatise
on this disease. Address World’s Dispensary
Medical Association, Buffalo, N. Y.
When you retire to bed, think over what you
have been doing through the day. ,
PRETTY WOMEN.
Ladies who would retain freshness and vivac
ity. Don't fail to try “Weils’ Health lienewer.”
Conversation: —Hie idle man’s business and
the business man’s recreation.
Cremn and Cold Weather.
What a luxury is a bath in summer. Bnrely v
but a greater luxury is a clear head in winter:
just when almost everybody is sneezing ana
snuffing with a cold in the head. When you
are attacked use Ely’s Cream Balm. It cures
colds in the head, and what is better, it cures
the worst cases of Chronic Catarrh and Hay
Fever. Not a liquid, nor a snuff. Pleasant to
nse. Quick relief. Radical cure.
Some one says, “the smoking car must go.”
This is certainly true if it is coupled onto an
engine.
♦ * * * Delicate diseases radically cured.
Consultation free. Address, World’s Dispen
sary Medical Association, Buffalo, N. Y.
Your character cannot be essentially injured,
except by your own acts.
PRETTY WOMEN.’
If you are losing your grip on life, try “Wells’
Health Renewer.” Goes direct to weak spots.
If your hands cannot bo usefully employed,
attend to the cultivation of your mind.
Mensman’s Peptonized beef tonic, the only
preparation of beef containing its entire nutri
tious properties. It contains blood-making,
• force generating and life-sustaining properties;
invaluable for indigestion, dyspepsia, nervous
prostration, and all forms of general debility;
also, in all enfeebled conditions, whether the
result of exhaustion, nervous prostration, over
work or acute disease, particularly if resulting
from pulmonary complaints. Caswell, HazardS
Co., Proprietors, New York. Sold by druggists.
Charity:—A service that the receiver should
remember and the giver forget.
“ROUGH ON PILES.*
Cures Piles or Hemorrhoids, Itching, Protrud
ing, Bleeding, Internal, or other. Internal and
External Remedy in each package. Sure cure,
500. Druggists.
Satirists gain the applause of others through
fear, not through love.
“Lnujrh and Grow Fat,’*
is a precept easily preached, but not so easy
to practice. If a person has no apjietite, blit
a distressing nausea, stek-hoadache, dyspep
sia, boils, or any other ill resulting from inac
tion of the bowels, it is impossible to get up
such a laugh as will produce aldermani cor
pulence. In order to laugh satisfactorily you
must be well, and to be well you must have
your bowels in good order. You can do this
and laugh heartily with Dr. Pierce’s “Pleas
ant Purgative I'ei lets,” the little regulators
of the liver and bowels and best promoters of
jollity.
Good company and good conversation arc the
very sinews of virtue.
“Beeson’s Abomatio Alvm Svlfhvr Soap,”
beautifies and softens Face and bands, heals
nnd cures all skin diseases for sure. 25 cents
by by mail. Wm. Dreydoppel,
Confucius: To die well one must first learn
to live well.
“ROUGH ON ITCH.”
“Rough on Itch” cures humors, erndtions,
ring-worm, tetter, salt rheum, frosted feet,
chilblains.
Lowell: No man is born into the world whose
work is not born with him.
Importnnt.
When you risit. or leave New York eity, save heiwige,
expreeraari and *3 carriage hire, aid stop at the Grand
Union Hotel, opposite Grand Central depot.
000 elecant rooms, titled np at a coat of one million
dollars, ■ 1 and upward per day. European plan. Ele
vstor. Keetavrant a u ppi tod with the beet. Horse cars,
*ts<*s and elevated railroads to al! depots. Families
can live better for less money at ths Grand Union
Hotel than at any other first-class bote! in the city.
For Weak Women.
Mrs. Lydia E. Pin ch am: “About the first
of September, 1881, my wife was taken with
uterine hemorrhage. The best styptics the
physician could prescribe did not check it and
she got more and more enfeebled. She was
troubled with Prolapsus Uteri, Leu
con-Lea, numbness of the limbs, sick
ness of the stomach and loss of appetite.
I purchased a trial bottle of your vegetable
Compound. She said she could discover a
salutary effect from ths first dose. Now she
is com;<aratively free from, the Prolapsus
Stomach's sickness, &c. The hemorrhage is
very much better and Is less at the regular
periods. Her appetite is restored, and her
general health and strength are much im
proved. We feel that we have been wonder*
fully benefited and our hearts are drawn out
ingratitude for the same and in sympathy
for other sufferers, for whose sakes we allow
our names to be used.
“C, W. Eaton. Thurston. N. Y.”
* E Pounds Gained in Three Week*.
10 and Cl UKff of i'OMH .WPiIOX,
Messrs. Craddock A Co.. KtJ Bsre S ~ Phil*.. Ps.:
Gmlltmen— I’l'a»e send me twelve bottles of D*.
H. Jamas' Csxxabm Indic*, one each of Pills and
Omtnaent. for a friend of mine who is not expected
to live; and as yosr med c net cared me ol l’oss~
etewntion some three years ago,l want him to try
ttum I Kilned filteen pounds while takthg ths
first three bouses, and I know it is jest the tiiaj
for him. Rewectfnlly, J. v. HULL,
Lawrancob 7?g. Aaderaoa Co, Ky.
£>& Etafi Moles, Warts, Freckles, Moth. Red
• Nose. Acne. Blit Heads. Scars. Pitting
and treatment. Dr. John Wcodbary,
* e “ r l HL* ?*. >.
t ..vXt, Send luu for book.
we “buidW rammra she.
Mills, Store*. Hou'eo, lo ts, Mineral and Timber
Usf. J. if. wingfieLd a. kklsf.y. i»-
ssiani'e «utd Hcut kAiata Agesus, Ltbmy, V*
A Sew •**IP-lni**rwt«r in ll«nibJr Entry
.XX Rt r..- Ad-
tows CH xRi i.-S Cwk. 141 Fim Are . New York.
GteSS
Cures RHEUMATISM, NEURALGIA,SCIATICA,
n l-wmbaffOs Backache, Headache, Toothache,
Sore Throat, Swellings, S pre I ns, Ilruhes, Hurns, Scalda, Froul
Hites, and other rains and Aches.
Fifty Cents & bottle. At Drugstore nnd Denier®. Directiona In It Inneuneeg,
THE CHARLES A. VIHIELER CO., Baltimore, Md„ U.S.A.
French Wine Coca
' Strengthens and Exhilarates.
Sustains and refreshes, aids digestion, imparts
now energies to the worn or exhausted mind and
body, and excites every faculty to healthy action.
COCA.,
is a wonderful invigoratcrof the genital organs
and is a specific for£ll nervous complaints, such
as sick-headachk, neuralgia, wakefulness,
LOSS OF MEMORY, NERVOUS TREMORS, LOSS OF
APPETITE, DEPRESSION OF SPIRITS, ETC.
Pemberton’s Wine Coca
Will vltalifie your blood and build up your
health at once. Lawyers, Ministers, Teachers,
Orators, Vocalists, and all who speak in public,
will find the Wine Coca, taken half hour before
speaking, a specific for the voice.
WINE COCA.
is endorsed by over 20,000 eminent Medical Men
in the world, and Pemberton’s Wine Coca is
awarded the palm over all other invigorants by
physicians and people who have used it. There
IS HEALTH AND JOY IN EVERY BOTTLE.
FOR SALE BY ALL DRUGGISTS.
J. S. PEMBERTON & GO.,
Bole Proprietors and Manufacturers,
ATLANTA, GA.
CRE AM Y RmiVICAIAWj
Cleanses the Head.
Allays Inflammat lon. Hr
Heals the Sores. e "
stores the Senses of iy/S
Taste, Smell. Hearing, x yy/ea|
A POSITIVE CURE, X
Cream
ha. sained an enviable reptt-
tation wherever known, dig- QjJa. I
placing all other ptepara- »■ vr ■ •
HAY-FEVER
Pries fiOc. by mail or at druggist.. Send for circular.
ELY BROTHERS, Drnggigtn, Owego. N. Y.
BOOK AOENTS WASTED f<s
PLATFORM ECHOES
or LIVING TRUTHS for Head and Heart. NowseU
&SUSW Johns. Gough
Ministers »ay "Godspeed it." Every one laughg and cri«» over
it. Ten. otthon.ands are waitin’ for it, and Agents Bell 10 to 20
adav. C<o page*. 227 splendid Engraving’. Introduction
by Rev. LYMAN ABBOTT, I>. ». 1000 more Agent*
wanted on Very Special Ternt. Send for Circular*, etc., to
A. !>■ WOKTiriNtITBN Jk CO., Hartford, Conn.
Cash Wins.
I can save vou several
hundred doll are and hell
IP" t)le finest Engine or
l ist u&KT**"** 1 " Heller built in America.
MgcTaN j , Arid rex*
THOMAS CAMP,
11 ——Gen. Ag't, Covington, Ga,
has taken the lead la
the sales of that class of
remedies, and has given
almost universal satisfac
tion,
MURPHY
® has won the favor of
the public and now ranks
among the leading Medi
cines of the osidom.
A. L. SMITH.
Dradfonl. Fa.
Sold by Druggists.
Price Si ,<H>.
marFiFdowr^theplac!:togo i
Lea’s Springs, Grainger Co., K. Tenn.,
Elevated, romantic, cool, healthy. 21 miles from Knox
ville; only 11 miles from McMillan’s, on the E. T. A Va.
R. R., by daily hack. Chalybeate, White and Black
Sulphur Waters ; hot and cold sulphur baths : fine
mountain and cave scenery ; new additional buildings;
good table fare; reasonable prices; usual amuseme ts;
pleasant society. Send to M. J. Hughes, I’rop’r.,
for descriptive pamphlet.
R. U. AWARE
THAT 4
Lorillard’s Climaz Plug
bearing a red tin tag ; that Lorillardt
Rose Lens fine cut; that Lorillard*a
Navy Clippings, and that Lorillant’* Snufla,ar«
the liest ana cheapest, quulity considered ? ,
dHEA MOxNTH
Zgsfe sf and espeii.e. |>a»l miy ardi-.e turion ro «ett
0 our good*. No capital required. Salary fetid
tuoniidr. BgpsMW in advance. Full J>ar
ticuiar.FnEl. Wa mean n-bat we say. Standard Sliver
Ware Co., Washington St., Boston, Mass.
Profitable Employment
A«d light home work for Ladies, sent anywhere
bv mail. Simple and strictly bona-fide. No canvas*,
fag? no stamps. Address WILSON dk DAVIS.
Fall River, Mass.
Bd Phi tag Instruction Book on art of making
IwlaWV Paper Flowers and Tissue Paper
IV VW ■ Fancy Work for home decorations.
Tissues and Flower Materials sold.
RPinU Book and price list mailed. Wets.
hFoIIY LEWIS A CO , 2 East 14th
IILKW I street, New York.
S~;BFOR NOTHING
It tenches the stitches. Ribbon and Arrrneen
Embroidery. Lustre and Kensington Painting.
J** - Sead » U “>P to P»/ ixatsgo.
T. B.JPARKER, Lynn, Maes.
Dall* freal English Gout and
Dlmli S B IllSa Rheumatic Remedy.
Oval Hom, 31.00; round, 60 eta.
TWsWSJMOTBPOW®
Keeping Teeth Perfect and tJumo Healthy.
fti! nr Alinr forbYSPEFSIA and INDI
SURE
CARBS
FemalT
been m-H
--tug vour Female Regulator for ycara. and have had a
Bieftdily for it; tt the very
b*Ft satisfaction. I seH it to pfcyMctans
Mailed free.
BsAPnxLd Rsoclato* CO., Atlanta, Go.
All Sorts of
hurts and many sorts of ails ot
man and beast need a coding
lotion. Mustang Liniment.
; Narrow Escape. *
♦ ♦ * Rochester, June 1,1882. “Ten
Yeats ago I was attacked witlf the most
Intense and deathly pains in my back and -a
a / ‘ v >
“Extending to tho end of my toes and to
my brain I
“Which made me delirioiisf “
“From agony! I i 1 '
“It took three men to hold me on my bod
at times!
“The doctors tried in vain to relieve me,
but to no purpose.
Morphine and other opiates I
“Had no effect!
“After two months I was given up id
die! ! ! !
“When my wife « -
heard a neighbor tell what Hop Bitters had
done for her, she at once got and gave me
some. The first dose eased my brain and
seemed to go hunting through my system for
the pain.
The second dose eased me so much that I
slept two hours, something I had not done
for two months. Before I nad used five bee
tles, I was well and at work as hard as any
man could, for over three weeks; but I
worked too hard for my strength, and taking
a hard cold, I was taken with the most
acute and painful rheumatism all through my
system that ever was known.
“I called the doctors again, and after sev
eral weeks they left me a cripple on crutches
for life, as they said. I met a friend and told
him my case, and he said Hop Bitters had
cured him and would cure me. I poohed at
him, but he was so earnest I was induced to
use them again.
In less than four weeks I threw away, my
crutches and went to work light ; y, and kept
on using the bitters for five weeks, until I
became as well as any man living, and have
been so for six years since.
It has also cured my wife, who had been
sick for years; and has kept her and my chil
dren well and healthy with from two to three
bottles per year. There is no need to be sick
at all if these bitters are used. J. J. Berk,
Ex-Supervisor. (
“That poor invalid wife, sister, mother,
* "Or daugherl ! ! !
“Can be made the picture of health I
“with a few bottles of Hop Bitters!
I. - 1
genuine without a bunch of greed
Hops on the wh'te label. Shun all tho vil«,
poisonous stuff with “Hop” or “Hops’’ ia
their name.
OH! MY BACK
Every strain or cold attacks that weak back
and nearly prostrates you.
B« s pS] lifl I
IH Hll^ s
Illi illi
Ui W BEST TONIC ”
I Strengthens the Muscles,
Steadies the Nerves,
Fnrleh.es the Blood, Gives Netv Vigor.
' Dr, J. L. MYfhb. FMrfirfd. lowa, Rays:
. “Brawn’a Iron Bitters is the best Iron medicine I
i have known In my »> yenre’ practice. I have found
it specially beneficial in nervotfa or physical exhaus
tion, and m all debilitating ailments that bear so
i heavily on the system. Use it freely in my own family.”
Genuine has trade mark and crossed red lines on
wrapper. Take no other. Made only by
BROWN CHEMICAL CO., BALTIMORE, M».
Lannes' Hand Book— useful and attractive, con
taining list of prizes for recipes, information about .
•oina, cto., given away by all dealers in inodxdtw.'rtr
mailed to any address on receipt of 3c. stamp.
WEBSTER.
In Sheep, Russia and Turkey Bindings.»
Get th© Standard.'
IDFII Wobeter-it has 118,000 ’W’ofdfi,
UFJEI JL 3000 Engravings, end a New
Biographical Dictionary. «
Standard in Gov't Printing Office.
irHndCd 32,000 copies in Public.schools.
Sale 20 to 1 of any other eerier.
to make a Family intelligent
J&. Best help for SCHOLARS,
TEACHF2US and SCHOOLS.
Tho vocabulary contains 3000 more words
than aro found in any other American Dictionary.
The Unabridged is now supplied, nt a small ad-
- ditional cost, with DENISON’S -
PATENT REFERENCE
“The greatest improvement in book-making Uiai
has been mado in a hundred years.” *»
O. A C. MERRIAM k CO., Pub’rs.fipringfield. Maser
VIBRATING TELEPHONE.
Girt* iplendid satlifactica. No e»o*»
bitant rental fee to pay—Sold outright
Q and rutrantceet to work nicely on tinea
within it* compasi (» miles), or money
A ■feal.lßwl refunded. Constructed oa new and
eayfcM scientific principles; works entirely by
VWS. Jml vibratioa. Two or three months’ re«-
yMEtCvI tsl fee to the Hell Telephone will buy
VXt "I outright a complete prira'e line. It i*
Saw&ws Idg-W the only PR ACTICAL and RKLI
ABLE non electric Telephone made,
wßwJßkj Ilf and warranted to rive satisfaction, ar
tikJuffstl It I *»e»ry re/united. AGENTS ean
J . make Immense profits and get all th.
nKwa®!* 1 ! work they can do. No previous expe-
mßSw'' ricnce required. Where I have noagenta
Telephone* may M ordered direct totpilvr.e tiae. Circular*
IM IkDiriarcu SUMußslo. M.X
rrtO introduce and soil tire tred» tbo w«ll-kB”w,n and
L celebrated Cigar*of lh« MEW YORK i MAX ANA
OIG AR COMPANY. Liberal arrangamonta. Sai.altT
•r Commission paid to tire right men. For further
particular* and term* addre«e, at once.
The N.w
AfIffIDDUSAIE Chloral and
W! Ual 1 nIN EOpium Habits
EASILY CURED. HOOK FREE.
DR. L C. HOFFMAN, Jefferson, Wisconsin
PATCH | Elegant package* of bilks and Satins
IT 1 i sent lorEc_ Embroidery iillka, 10c.
** Q“ K- I doz. A. G. BASSETT, Rochester, N Y.
Vi 1 Wlwl Db. J. STr.rKS.xB, Lebanon. Ohio
A. N. U Twenty ’BS
Da. J. BsA»rntLD—l hare taken several battles ot
your Female Regulator for falling of the vromh and
other diseases combined, of 16 years standing, and
I really believe lam cured entirely, tot which please
accept my heartfelt thanks. I know vour uii bklne
saved my life, go yon see I cannot speak toAfaighly in
1U favor. Respectfully.
Mu' W. fl gwsstss, Rldje, Go.
j
Regulator!
The Mirror
13 no flatterer. Would you
make it tell a sweeter tale ?
Magnolia Balm is the charm
er that almost cheats the
looking-glass.