Newspaper Page Text
4
FOR THE FARM AND HOME.
To Revive Ury Trees.
Small fruit trees which have been
out of the earth a long time and have
become very dry can often be made to
live when one least expects it. I. 11.
Bailey, the veteran apple-grower of
Michigan, says that he once received a
lot of trees which had been delayed
for two months from the nursery, and
which were apparently dead. The
country was then new, and as no more
trees were soon to be had, he resolved
to set his dead trees. He first threw
them into a pond of water and let
them lay a couple of days. He then
set them, and nearly all lived. That
orchard for several years has taken
the first premium of the State Horti
cultural Society.
Distemper.
The trouble, says a writer in an agri
cultural paper, is avoided chiefly by
observing the rules of health, and
avoiding exposure to strong draughts
of cold air when in the stable, by
proper blanketing, etc. Sometimes
distemper or influenza becomes epi
demic, and scarcely a horse escapes,
but those that have been properly
cared for will suffer but little com
pared to those under neglect.
The first precaution I would offer
is, do no bleed* or give cathartics.
Make the stall in which the animal is
to be kept sweet, clean and airy, but
not chilly. Cool—not ice-cold—water
should be offered frequently, and two
drams of sulphate of iron given in a
pint of water night and morning, or
live to ten drops tincture of aconitum
in same quantity of water twice a
day. If the throat becomes sore a
counter-irritant is good on the outer
surface and alternate tincture bella
donna with one of the above, five
drops to a pint of water.
Feed bran or oat-meal gruel—no
corn. Good care is very essentia), and
with this the animal will not be likely
to remain idle for any great length of
time. If after three or four days
there is no improvement, but an in
clination to grow worse, a veterinary
surgeon should be called.
Preparing Potato Need.
Long before potatoes are to bo
planted the seed‘potatoes should be
got out of the dark pits or pins in
which they are necessarily stored
during severe weather. Exposure to
some time before planting is
very important. If the planting is to
be early the seed shpuld be cut at once
and spread thinly in a light, warm
room, to allow the cut surfaces to
harden. The seed will then be much
less Hable to rot if a cold, wet time
comes after planting. The dampness
in the soil will find its assaults on the
seed chocked by the dry, calloused sur
face over the cut. If the potatoes
are not to be planted until late, cutting
the seed should be delayed until a few
days before planting. It is a diilicult
matter to keep a large quantity cut
potato eeeojuat right for a long time.
If put in barrel| or biigs stpne.
of it will heat and spoil. If kept
very long exposed to light and air the
moisture will all dry out of the cut
pieces and they will appear like chips.
In a moist soil most of theso will
grow, but, should a dry time come just
after planting, there will be some
failures. But whether to be planted
early or late* seed potatoes should, from
this time on, bo exposed to light and
air. The vigorous green shoots which
will be just ready to push out when
the seed is put in the ground will be
so much gain, instead of a detriment,
us are the pale, thin sprouts which
push from potato seed in dark, warm
places, the latter robbing the potato of
the substance on which the young
plants must first depend before they
can put forth roots for their own sup
port —.l met-ioan Culti rator.
Farm »>i«l Aiardeia Note*.
The latest remedy for cabbage
worms is iee*water.
The friends of the silo are said to be
increasing in number.
Soil for asparagus should be rich
or made rich in potash.
Don't throw away the bones, but
convert them into fertilizers.
Linnt should never l*e ploughed un
der, but kept as near the top as
|H>x>dble.
"The English make.” it is told,
••their sweetest pork by feeding pota
toes ami barley meal"
Some of our farmers sow ashes upon
the wheat crop early in the spring with
a view to prevent rust and strengthen
the stalk of th? plant. ,
It is said that eggs from mature
hens are much better for hatching
purposes thin those from young ones,
as a larger proportion of them are
likely to prove fertile.
Rtspberrim and blackberries are
hardier if | lanted on light sandy loam
but if largo berries are desired a
mulch should be used in July. On
moist land mulching is not necessary,
but the. canes are more liable to be
1 winter killed.
’ One of the best preventives of the
chicken cholera is to soak corn in coal
’ oil and feed the corn to the fowls
three or four times a week. Another
1 method is to mix a tablespoonful of
coal oil with two quarts of corn
meal. Moisten the meal and feed
1 twice a week.
I
The straw from beans is a natural
food for seeep, and they are the only
stock which are fond of it. It is a
healthy food for them. Oat straw is
better for sheep than any unpalatable
hay. They will pick out all of the
leaves and heads of all kinds of straw,
but they do not like the coarse straws,
and will not eat t jiem unless forced to
by hunger. Straw, to be good for
sheep, should not be over-ripe, musty,
or full of ergot. On this account rye
is the poorest, and wheat next. To
give sheep a keen appetite, no more
should be given them than they will
eat up clean. They come to a sweet
smelling and fresh rack of food with
a relish.
The food of a horse is not designed
to make fat but rather muscle. Corn
and other heating food should not be
given when hard work is expected.
It makes fat which exercise runs off
as rapidly as it is made. As the
horse’s stomach is relatively smaller
than that of any other domestic
animal he needs little at a time and
often. When at hard work, grain or
meal is necessary, as hay alone is too
bulky and not sufficiently nutrious to
give requisite strength. Horses can be
kept on good hay alone, but a grain
ration daily is better economy. If
they are never fed grain their stomachs
become unduly distended. If an at
tack of heaves does not result, tho
animal will be incapacitated for doing
full work, especially on the road or
where activity is required.
Household Hints.
Allow one teaspoonful of tea for
each person and one for the pot.
A tablespoonful of vinegar in the
pot will make tough meat or chicken
tender.
To wash doubtful calicoes, wet one
teaspoonful of sugar of lead in a pail
of water; soak fifteen minutes before
washing.
Cold rain water and soap will take
out machine grease, where other
means would not be advisable on ac
count of colors running, etc.
Javelle water, often met with in
works or articles on cleaning and dye
ing. is made of one gallon of water and
four pounds of ordinary washing soda
Boil for five or ton minutes, then add
I
| one pound of chloride lime. Let cool,
i and keep corked in a jug or tight ves
sei.
An agreeable flavor is sometime,
imparted to soup by sticking some
cloves into the meat used for making
stocks. A few slices of onions fried
very brown in butter are nice. Also
flour browned by simply putting it into
a saucepan over the tiro and stirring it
i constantly until it is dark brown.
Hreipes.
S'teired Celery.— Blanch your celery,
boil in stock, and simmer in brown
gravy. Slices of truffles add immense
ly to the flavor.
jßfce Pudding.— Two quarts milk,
1-2 teacup rice, 1 teacup sugar, 1 tea
cup raisins, butter size of an egg. nut
meg. Bake 2 hours.
Suet Pudding.— One cup chopped
suet, 1 cup raisins. 1 cup mollasses, 1
cup milk, 3 cups flour, 1 teaspoonful
baking powder, 1 teaspoon fol salt. Boil
three hours.
2?rti-sse& Sprouts with Butter.— Glean
your sprouts carefully and boil in
boiling water and salt, drain them
thoroughly, and put them in a frying
pan with some fresh butter; when the
butter is melted, place them on a dish
and sprinkle with salt and pepper.
Potato Puffs. — Two cupscold mash
ed potatoes, one cup milk or cream
j two tablespoons melted butter, two
eggs beaten very light. Stir in butter
i first, then the eggs; when smooth add
I cream and a little salt; beat thorougt
' ly; pour into a buttered dish and hake
■ in a quick oven unt 1 a nice brown.
Bacon and Js'yys.-- A very nice break-
• List dish is made from this recipe:
I Cut some bacon into small,th in squares,
• put them into a saucepan and set over
: a gentle tire that they may lose >ome
of the fat. I‘hiee the dice on a warm
I dish and put a ladle of melted bacon fat
; into the saucepan. Set it on the stove
i and put in a dozen of the squares of
j l«aeon. Tilt the saucepan to one side
' and break an egg in it; manage this
I very carefully and the t-gg will soon
I I be cooked. It should be very round
I and the little pieces of bacon will stick
Ito it. Keep the egg on a hot plate
■ while you cock as many more as are
, | required.
POPULAR SCIENCE.
The new process of toughening timberj
by which white wood is rendered sO
tough as to require a cold chisel to split
it, consists in steaming the wood and sub
mitting it to an end pressure.
In the last volume issued by the Geo
graphical survey of India is an account
of a fiery eruption from one of the mud
volcanoes on Cheduba island. A body
of flame 600 feet in circumference is said
to have at one time reached an elevation
of 2,400 feet, petroleum being the
cause.
From some experiments made at the
university of Kansas it appears that the
average person can taste the bitter of
quinine when one part is dissolved in
152,000 parts of water. Salt was de
tected with one part in 640 of water,
sugar in 288 of water, baking soda in 48
of water. In nearly all cases females
could detect a smaller quantity than
males.
Rheem, of the Smithsonian institute,
has contradicted much of the popular
belief concerning snakes. The veno
mous hoop snake, which takes its tail in
its mouth and rolls along like a hoop,
and the blow snake, the breath of which
is deadly, exist only in the imagination.
The idea that serpents sting with the
tongue is erroneous. An impression pre
vails that the number of poisonous snakes
is great, but in North America there are
but three species—the rattlesnake, the
copperhead or moccasin, and the coral.
Snakes do not jump; they reach sud
denly forward, perhaps half the length
of their bodies.
The use of water in connection with
blasting in mines and quarries is rapidly
extending in this country and in Europe.
A tube filled with water is inserted in
the bore hole next the powder cartridge,
the tube being of thin plate, or even of
paper. The usual tamping follows, and
when the explosion occurs the tube con
taining the water is burst, the explosive
violence being increased by the presence
of water and extended over the enlarged
interior of the bore hole,due to the space
occupied by the water-tube. A much
larger quantity of the material to be
mined or quarried is thereby brought
down or loosened with asmaller quantity
of explosive used, while the heat of the
explosion converts a portion of the water
into steam, which, with the remaining
water, extinguishes the flame and ab
sorbs and neutralizes the gases and
smoko generated.
The disappearance of animal life from
earth must always be regarded with in
terest and concern. Apprehension is now
beginning to be felt that we are now
looking upon the final struggle for exis
tence of all the larger mammalia—the
elephant, the giraffe, the bison, the
whale, the seal, and many others—which
must soon be extirpated unless protected
from being hunted to death. An inter
esting case of animal extinction is found
in “‘Stoller’s sea-cow,” lately referred to
by Mr. Henry Woodward before the
London Geological 'society. This great
animal, which has been variously classed
with the whales, with walruses and seals,
and with elephants, was a toothless
yegctable-feeder, living along the shore
in shallow water, and often weighing
three or four tons. It was seen alive and
described in 1741, but in 1780 it ap
peared to have become entirely extinct.
This creature belonged to the order
“birenin,” and Mr. Woodward looks
upon it as a last surviving species of the
great group of Sirenians which lived in
the tertiary age of geology.
- •1 ■" ■ - ■'«
Human Wings.
A great difficulty in adapting wings to
any human figure is in the attempt to
proportion them to the body. To make
them of sufficient size really to support
it is artistically out of the question. The
wings that would be longenough to bear
up even a child would be so preposter
ously in the way as only to call attention
to the outrageousness of the fanev. Even
in nature the wing of a swallow, or gull,
or any swift-flying bird, looks foolish so
soon as the creature is aground. Ac
cordingly we find that, in art the most
successful results have been reached
where there has been no attempt to make
the wings mechanically adequate, but an
endeavor only to proportion them to the
size and shape of the figure, without any
regard to its weight. One may suppose
them features which, through disuse,
have dwindled to proportions possible in
art. Indeed, some of the very happiest
wing are the most rudimentary. The
tiny Cupid’s wing, just budding from his
cherubic shoulder, seems to belong more
intimately to it than any other form of
wing yet invented. The Renaissance
version of this fledging feature is some
times as beautiful as it is suggestive.—
-Iri Journal.
The Cochineal.
The cochineal used to be an extensive
article of commerce and brought a reve
nue of several millions to Guatemala
every year, but the cheapness of the ana
line dyes has driven it out of the market,
and nowadays it is cultivated only for
local consumption, and extensively used
by the natives, whose cotton and woolen
fabrics are gayly dyed, and the colors
will stand any amount of water or sun.
The cochineal is a larva l which feeds
upon the pulpy leaf of that species of
cactus known as the “nopal.” and in its
natural state looks like froas or mold.
The natives carefully scrape it off into
gourds, and the cells being full of purple
blood it makes a liquid of the deepest
color, when the mass is crushed. For
200 years it was the base of dye stuffs all
over the world, and thousands of people
were engaged in its cultivation. Until
1870 the shipments from Guatemala
amounted to 300,000 or 400,000 pounds
each year, but in I*B4 the export had
fal en to 1,800 pounds.— Chicago Inter-
Ocean.
An Emperor Turned into Soap.
A parallel case to “Imperious Casar,
dead ami turned to clay,” stopping a
hole to keep the wind away, has been
found in Rome this year. The ashes of
an Imperial Caesar, Piso, were lately era
ployed for the lye of a Roman woman’s
washtub upon the discovery of the urn
in which thev had reposed for eighteen
centuries. “They were so white an I
clean"’ explained the workman, “that I
gathered them together in a basket and
sent Hum to my wife to make soau for
washing. ”
BARTHOLDI’S BIG GIRL.
The Prejudices Met By a Canvasser for the
•a; . Pedestal FuncL .
The Barthdldi pedestal filnd is fioarly com
plete. . The statiie has arrived and sdori New
York harbor will be graced by the most mag
nificent colossal statue the Worid has ever seed,
“Liberty Enlightening the World?” What
ii priceless blessing personal liberty is; It is
the shrine at which people, ground under thd
heel of tyranny in the older worlds, worship
with a fervency that Americans can scarcely
realize; it is a principle for which Nihilists
willingly die the death of dogs; and fit and
proper it is that at the very entrance of tho
Bay of New York this emblematic statue
should flash a welcome to the world.
The press is entitled to the credit of this
achievement Mr. Philip Beers, who has
been making a circuit of the country on be
half of the Pedestal fund, says that the fund
will certainly be raised, as the World does
not know the word fail.
Mr. Beers says that he has found the most
pronounced generosity among those of for
eign birth. They seem more appreciative df
liberty than do our native born. Moreover;
among some a strange prejudice seems to ex
ist.
“Prejudice? In what particular?”
“I have ever found that however merito
rious a thing may be, thousands of people
will inevitably be prejudiced against it. I
have spent most of my life on the road and I
know the American people ‘like a book.’ In
1879 a personal misfortune illustrated this
prevailing prejudice. I was very ill, had suf
fered for several years with headache, fickle
appetite, dreadful backache, cramps, hot
head, cold hands and feet and a general break
down of the system. I dragged
myself back to New York, seeking
the best professional treatment. It so
happens that among my relatives is a dis
tinguished physician who upbraided me
roundly for preaching so much about my
own case. Finally, with some spirit, I re
marked to him:
“ ‘Sir, you know that much of your pro
fessional wisdom is pretense. You are con
trolled by prejudice. You cannot reach a case
like mine and you know it, can you?’ ”
“I had him; and he finally conceded the
point, for it was bright’s disease of the kid
neys which had prostrated me, and the school
men admit they cannot cure it. Having cured
myself, however, in 1879, and not having seen
a sick day since, my relative finally admitted
that Warner’s safe cure, which accomplished
this result, was really a wonderful prepara
tion. Had President Rutter, of the Central-
Hudson used it, I am certain he would be
alive to-day, for he could not have been in a
worse condition than I was."
“I have found similar prejudices among all
classes concerning even so laudable a scheme
as this ;>edestal fund.”
Mr. Beers’s experience and the recent death
of President Rutter, of the Central-Hudson
railroad, of an extreme kidney disorder,
proves that tho physicians have no real
power over such diseases, and indicates
the only course one should pursue if, as the
late Dr. Willard Prfrker says, head
ache, sickness of the stomach, dropsi
cal swellings, back ache, dark and
offensive fluids, prematurely impaired eye
sight, loss of strength and energy occur, for
they unmistakably indicate a fatal result, if
not promptly arrested.
“Yes, sir-ee, every cent needed for the pe
destal will be raised. Os course it will be a
great triumph for the World, but would it
not have been an eternal disgrace had our
people failed to provide for this pedestal?”
Truth is said to be precious as a dia
mond ; but it has a valve that no dia
mond can have—the power of continually
unfolding into new and higher forms.
We cannot compute its worth and lock
it up like a precious stone; we may
rather regard it as the seed that contains
within itself the promise of continuous
harvests for the ever increasing needs of
future generations. ♦ Frugally should we
preser.e it, liberally should we dispense
it, prizing it for what it has been and is,
but still more for what it is capable of
producing.
“C’oiißutnption Core,”
would be a truthful name to give to Dr.
Pierce’s “Golden Medical Discovery,” the
most efficacious medicine yet discovered for
arresting the early development of pulmon
ary disease. But “consumption cure” would
not sufficiently indicate the scope of its influ
ence and usefulness. In all the many dis
eases which spring from a derangement of
the liver and blood the “Discovery” is a safe
and sure specific. Os ail druggists.
Man is made out of the dust of the earth, and
some of them are terras all their lives.
An Only Dnu<hter Cured of C'onsnmptlnn.
When death was hourly expected from Con
sumption, all remedies having failed and Dr.
H. James was experimenting, he accidentally
made a preparation of Indian Hemp, which
cured his only child, and now gives this recipe
on receipt of stamps to pay expenses. Hemp
also cures night sweats. nausea at the stom
ach, and will break a fresh cold in 24 hours.
Address Craddock & Co., 1032 Race street,
Philadelphia, Pa., naming tins paper.
Cicero: To live long it is necessary to live
slowly.
We Cnution All Agninftt Them.
The unprecedented success and merit of Ely’s
Cream Balm—a real cure for Catarrh, hay fever
and cold in the head—han induced many ad
venturers to place catarrh medicines bearing
some resemblance in appearance, stylo or name
upon the market, in order to trade upon the
repntation of Ely's Cream Bairn. Many in yonr
immediate locality will testify in highest com
mendation of it. Don’t be deceived. Buy only
Ely's Cronin Balm. A particle is applied into
each nostril; no pain -, agreeable to use. Price
50 cents; of druggists.
Franklin: An investment in knowledge always
pays the best interest
Rupture. Breach or Hernia
permanently cured or no pay. The worst
cases guaranteed! Pamphlet and references,
two three-eent stamps. World's Dispensary
Medical Association, 663 Main street, But
falo, N. Y.
‘The Mite’y Dollar”—That made up of chin ch
collection pennies.
ir'
IB
-"j fv J
VU L Ki
Copyrighted.
Ayer’s Sarsaparilla,
Prepared by Dr. J. C- Ajtf |* Qo., ly DruSKMU. Price <1; six bottles, »5.
How often is the light of the household
clouded by signs of melancholy ot irritability
on the part of the ladies. Yet they aTO not
to be blamed, for they are the result of ail
ments peculiar to that sox, which men know
slot of. But the cause may be removed and
joy restored by the use of Dr. Pierce’s “Fa
vorite Prescription,” which, as a onic and
nerviiie ffir debilitated women, is certain,
-afe find pleasant. It is beyond all compare
the great healer of WorrieiJ.
The tlussian platinum mines are said to be
the most valuable in the world.
Hay Fever.
I Ifttve been a great sufferer from Hay Fever
for 15 years. I read of the niahy wondrous
cures by Ely’s Cream Balm and thought I would
try once more. In 15 minutes after one appli
cation I was wonderfully helped. Two weeks
ago I commenced using it and now I feel en
tirely cured It is the greatest discovery ever
known or heard of.—Duhamel Clark, Farmer,
Lee, Mass. Price 50 cents.
ConfticiuS: To die Well one must first learn
to live well.
For uisPEPSiA, ijfbiotSTios, depression ot
spirits and general debility in their various
forms, ;dso as a preventive against fever and
ague and other intermittent fevers, the “Ferro-
Phosphorated Elixir of Calisaya,” made by Cas
well, Hazzard & Co., New York, and sold by all
D ruggists, is the best tonic ;and for patients reco v
eriug from fever or other sickness it has no equal.
Lowell: No man is born into the world whose
work is not born with him.
Important.
When yon visit or leave New York city, save bsctarage,
expressage and $3 carriage hire, and stop at the Grana
Union Hotel, opposite Grand Central depot.
POO elegant rooms, fitted up at a cost of one million
dollars, $1 and upward per day. European plan. Ele
vator. Restaurant supplied with the best. Horsecars,
st ages and elevated railroads to all depots. Families
can live better for less money at the Grand Union
B otei than at any other first-class hotel in the city.
If any one speaks evil of you, let your life be
so that no one will believe him.
Vnrietyßtlie Spfce of Life.
There is a variety in tho letters received by
Mrs. Lydia E. Pinkham, testifying to the
cures effected by her Vegetable Compound
and the great relief afforded to thousands of
women in all sections. Mrs. C , of
Toronto, says: “I have taken three bottles
with very gratifying results.” Mrs. Stephen
B , of Sheffington, Quebec, says: “I am
now using the fourth bottle and have derived
great benefit already." Sarah C , of
Eugene City, Oregon, says: “It is the best
medicine for the female sex I have ever
found.” Mrs. C , of Santa Fe, says:
“Your Compound has done mo a great deal
of good. ” Mrs. H. S. D , of Portland,
Me., says: “It has done for me all it claimed
to and I cheerfully recommend it to all suf
fering as I have done.” Mrs. D. H. E ,
of Lexington, Va., says: “I have taken one
bottle and I assure you I feel a great deal
better, I feel strong as ever and I’ve never
felt a pain in mv back since the second dose.’
Morphine Habit Curea in HI
fflI? days. No pay till eared.
wB IVlIi I>b. J. Stkph«ns. Lebanon. Ohio
HAY7ii7ESrnr^. RR Tj
I can recommend Ely’i I ™ St II
Cream Balm to all Hay-Fe
ver sufferers, it being, in my
opinion, founded on experi
ence and a sure cure. I was cURreCOLww
afflicted with Hay-Fever for *I HFt n 1
twenty-five years, and never
before found permanent re- FH/mVERWO
lief.—Webster H. Has
kins, Marshfield, Vt.
Crea m Balm
lias gained an enviable repn-
tstioii wherever known, dis- KaMaß- V/y USA, I
placing all other prepara- .... ■——l
tious. A particle is applied a|a a, ITlfm
into each nostril: no pain; Ml fl V■l*P VFK
agreeable to use. 11 MI IhVLlt
Price ftllc. by mail or at. druggists. Sand so- circular.
ELY BROTHERS, Druggists, Owego- N. Y,
D!|la Great Engiith Gout and
Diail S riSISa Rheumatic Remedy.
Oval Bpx. Sl.OOt round, go eta.
IXST
Twelve horse-power Engind, either portable or do
uched. Price, SSOO.
Adapted to threshing, ginning, grinding, sawing
and all similar work. Strictly first-clues, cheap
only in pries. Other size engines at corresponding
prices.
The “Self-Tramping Cotton Press.” complete, self
supporting, ready for belt. Price, 8130. It saves
one-half of the labor, is quickly and easily erected,
takes little room, is simple, strong and durable. The
cheapest, as well as best Cotton Press made. General
machinery for sale.
PROGRESS MACHINE WORKS,
MERIDIAN, MISB.
MEDICAL DEPARTMENT OF THE
Tulane University
„ OF LOUISIANA.
(Formerly. IM7-IBM. tne University at Louisians.)
Pnsaecses unrivaled advantages for practical instruction,
since the law secures it superabundant materials from
the great. Charity Hospital with its 7W beds, H.OOO sick
admitted and 10,000 visiting patients annually. Students
are freely admitted to and are taught at tbe bedside of
the sick, na in no other institution. For circular or ad
ditional information, address S. E. OHAILLE. Dean.
P. O. Drawer 361, New Orleans, La.
I for Endowment Insurance Poiieies’
PAID I Brecklcsbv, Hartford, Connecticut.
COLUMBIAATH/ENEUM
c ?U nn • Handsome Ground* (22 acres)- Capacious Buildings, well lighted, heated and ventil
ated; Fine Library, Apparatus and Equipment; Seventeen Teachers; Thorough and Complete Course
of Instruction, Painting, etc. «o Sectarianism. 34th Annual Session begins Monday, September 7th, 1885.
Prices Reasonable. Illustrated Catalogue Free.
“That Minds Me,”
Says Sandy, “o’ that awfu*
Eczema I had, before I left
home, in Scotland. I was maist
covered wi’ eruptions, when I
saw an adverteesment o'
Ayer’s Sarsaparilla
in a Glasgow paper. The itch
in’ fairly drove me mad, but I
took the Sarsaparilla, an’ it
worked like magic. Man, it
wrought a perfect cure.”
Several rears ago I was troubled with
Nettle Rash, which itched so badly I could
not rest day or night. A few boules of
Ayer’s Sarsaparilla entirely cured me.—
John Lehmann, Editor and Proprietor
Freic Presse, Crown Point, Ind.
I have had a dry scaly humor, from
which I suffered terrtblv. ’ As my brother
an<l sister were similarly afflicted. I pre
sume it was hereditary.' Last winter Dr.
Tyron, (of Fernandina, Fla.), said to me:
“ Take Ayer’s Sarsaparilla, and continue
it for a year.” For five months I took
it daily; and, had you seen mv condition
before! commenced its use, I would travel
a thousand miles to show you the wonder
ful effects of your remedy. I have not a
blemish upon my body.and I attribute my
cure wholly to Ayer’s Sarsaparilla. T. E.
Wiley, 146 Chambers st., New York City.
Take all in all.
—Take all the Kidneys and Liver
Medicines.
—Take all the Blood purifiers,
—Take all the Dyspepsia and Indigestion
cm res,
—Take all the Ague, Fever, and bilious
specifies.
—Take all the Brain and Nerve force
revives.
—Take all the Great health restorers.
In short, take all the best qualities of all
these and the— best,
—‘Qualities of all the best medicines in the
world, and you will find that— Hop
—Bitters have the best curative qualities
and powers of all— concentrated in them,
—And that they will cure when any or all
of these, singly or— combined. Fail!!! 1
—A thorough trial will give positive proof
of this.
Hardened Liver,
Five years ago I broke down with kidney
and liver complaint and rheumatism.
Since then I have been unable to bo about
at all. My liver became hard like wood; my
limbs were puffed up and filled with water.
All the best physicians agreed that nothing
could cure me. I resolved to try Hop Bitters;
I have used seven bottles; the hardness has
all gone from my liver, the swelling from my
limbs, and it has teorked a miracle in my
case; otherwise I would have been now in my
grave.
J. W. Morey, Buffalo, Oct 1,1881.
Poverty and Suffering.
“I was dragged down with debt, poverty
and suffering for years, caused by a sick fam
ily and large bills for doctoring.
“ I was completely discouraged, until one
year ago, by the advice of my pastor, I com
menced using Hop Bitters, and in one month
we were a'l well, and none of us have seen a
sick day sincq, and I want to say to all poor
men, you can keep your families we’l a year
with Hop bitters for less than one doctor’s
visit will cost. I know it.”
—A Workingman.
tsJ“None genuine without a bunch of green
Hops on the white label. Shun all the vile,
poisonous stuff with “Hop” or “Hops” in
their name.
Pl" ■" ’ to Soldiers & Heirs. Seßdstainp
for Circulars. COL. L. BRNO
« W3H dlwalw HAM. Att’v, Washington. D. C.
dyspepsia
Is a dangerous as well as distressing complaint. If
neglected, it tends, by impairing nutrition, and de
pressing the tone of tho system, to prepare the way
for Rapid Decline.
j
|l I
wW I
BiwflSlfii
= = 111 g
BESTTONIC. ?
Quickly and completely Cures Dyapepaia in all
its forms, Heartburn, Belching. Taatfug.tbe
Food, Ao. It enriches and purifies the blood, Mima
iates the appetite, and aids the assimilation of food.
Rrv. J. T. Kobsitek, the honored pastor of tli*
First Reformed Church. Baltimore, Md.. says:
“Having used Brown’s Iron Bitters for Dyspepsia’
and Indigestion, I take great pleasure in recom
mending it highly. Also consider it a splendid tonic
and invigorator, and very strengthening."
Genuine has above trade mark and crossed red lines
ou wrapper. Take no other. Made only by
BROWN CHEMICAL CO., BALTIMORE, MH.
Ladixs' Hand Book—useful and attractive, con
taining list of prizes for recipes, information about
coins, etc., given away by all dealers in medicine, or
_ mailed io any address on stn.mil.
OTB Mini&m Ladies can do their stamp
Isl Wf Uli'S for nothing. Pattenw
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ww WII II ■ for embroidery and paint
ing. Set of 28 Initials, 2 inches high. Book
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telling how to stamp Plush, Felt, Ac., teaches the
Kensington Ribbon Plush and other stitches: how
to do Kensington and Luster Painting, Flitter
Work, Ac. Pries List of Embroidery Materials,
Books, Ac. By maiL SI.OO.
T. K. PARKER, Lynn, Maas.
■ aw sales, and 300 perct.
aS is s® fl K ■ fl profit made by men
! Ki IS B Bfl and women with our
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wJy H ffis Wk Agent writes: “Your
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making less than |4O per week should try onr
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xperience unnecessary;no talking. Writs quick and se
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PENNYROYAL
7 ‘CHICMESTER'S ENGLISH'*
The Origrlnal and Only Oeaaine.
•aft sa« always reUaMe. Bswsn st WevthlsM Imitations.
"Chlshestar’s English* era the best mags. IsSlapcarakla
TO LADIES. r»«S»e4«.<alaa»pa)ferwwtleulars,t«tl-
SMalsls. ew., A Utter sewtyeu by roHMSI fl dh ■
ILLS II
VantVdoc
fcv Deg Buyers* Raids,W
a eeleved plaue.l OOoa- ■
yv< 2 X- 7 /7/- > ’ltr»vla<«etdlKer«»lbr«da,prioeeK
Z worth, and where *e bar V
NBLmWU Jr tt>eak - AIM CuU,f rsrsleMag 0
««eod* st all kinds. DhecUona ftrK
MjWflX aod Braedlng Ferrate.K
MTV& rfteM fer 16 Cwkta. V
Cash Wins.
JM I can Sara vcu several
hundred dollars and sell
*1 you the finest Engine or
Roller built in America.
Address _ , „„
thomakcampi
pen. Ag‘t, Covington. O*.
R. U. AWARE
that
BgOP Lorillard’s Climax Plug
bearing a red tin taf; that Lorlllnrdll
Mary Cllepiage, aod that Lorlltards Snaffa,Mi
Use beet sad ofaapest. quality considered ?
dMfe. Faee, H unde, Feet, and all their Im
perfections, including
meat. Birth Marks, Moles, Warts. Mo®,
wF ® Freckles. Red N««e. Acne. Bl’k Heads,
M.i’/Ta Se«™- Plrt'tS an< * th^ r „ t E eat ?^ nt
MJWnft W”
MORPHINE.',M
EAMIEY CIRBn. BOOK FREE.
OR. J. C. HOFFMAN. Jefferson. Wisconsin
S’« TO S2O A BAY madevrtU
Ml 0 Bit? 17 outfit* for manufacturing Strueth
Um ¥ K*’*' Checks *ad Rebber £*““£!!■
11l 1119 11 I Catalogue free. S. M. bPKNCKIy.
ItlUlVll A lh Washington St., Boston. Mask
mu HABIT. Sure cure in 10 IB
R* a B * **W - days, "amtariura treatmeat
MSTOTSSIfOOTHPOWDEII
Keeping Teeiti Ferlect and f.ume lleaithr.
. ed.ngAJ to DR. KhXXEDY. Auburn. MV.
JATE fU T>2 Or,ta;ue.t. >• nd stamp tor
y* A I El n I L. Buitl-
ka n, Patent laswyer. Waiiiingtan. D. C. .
WIZ* D ***•
V IVeV FC Clria . Aaaarr. i«5 resins -1.. Saw T«h
A. N.' V. ...’.77.7...............\Tweety-Eigbt.’is